The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, June 09, 1960, Image 3
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THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1960
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
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PAGE 8
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SHEEN GABARDINE
Prints and Solids
42” and 44” — 79c
CAROLINA REMNANT SHOP
a vote for
THURMOND
- m.
RE-ELECT
OUR HUMBLE EDUCATED
SUPERVISOR
\
S. W. Shealy
BECAUSE:
He has the EDUCATION he re-
ceived on the roads.
BECAUSE:
He has been equally fair to all,
serving all sections of county un-
biasedly.
BECAUSE:
The roads he maintains are in
better condition than ever before.
BECAUSE:
We owe him our gratitude for a
job well done.
(Paid for by friends interested in good roads)
is a vote for
STATES' RIGHTS
Here's the Thurmond record:
► 37 years service to his state
► led the States' Rights ticket in
1948
► drafted original Southern Manifesto
signed by 101 Southern Congress
men
► talked continuously over 24 hours
against "civil rights" bill, 1957
►' ranked as No. 1 Democratic Sena
tor in economy voting
► has fought against waste, extrava
gance, and socialism
\
► a leader in the fight to protect the
working people and the public from
racketeering by labor bosses
► Senate's foremost advocate to pro
tect our textile, and plywood in
dustries from low-wage foreign
imports
► 100% record attendance on votes
and quorum calls (1959^
• decorated World War II veteran-
staunch advocate of strong mili
tary defense
*
» active Reserve Officer
► named "most Southern" of all Sou
thern Senators (Cong. Quarterly)
A strong vote for
Thurmond
strengthen the
South's case in
the U. S. Senate.
See Thurmond on o
statewide TV network
9 pm, June 13
Political ad paid for by
friends of Senator Thurmond
RE-ELECT
William Hunter
TO THE
House Of Representatives
FARMER • BUSINESSMAN
LAWYER
£
*'?■ •" •» : >’
Served six years in the House of Representatives
Member of the Ways and Means Committee
A.B. degree, Newberry College; Law degree. University of
South Carolina
Your Vote & Support Will Be Appreciated
.•
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PUPPY LOVE . . . Clifton Bus
sell of Memphis gets a kiss of
gratitude from this poppy he
adopted after seeing his pic
ture in a local newspaper.
WANTED BY THE FBI
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this week’s/^
>/ patte
,V _ ^ BY AUMIYLANI
rns
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1469
10-20
U
Oran Pattern No. 1469 Torrlfic foam
—Boauiif'jlly fitting shoath ond mandarin-
stylo cropped jacket. Period teamwork
for tho spring season.
No. 1469 is in sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18,
20. Bust 31 to 40. Size 12, 32 bust, dress,
3'/ 4 yds. 35-inch/ jacket 1 % yds. Our
PHOTO-GUIDES you all the way.
Needlework Pattern No. 151—Trim
pillowcases or guest towels with this pret
ty morning-glory stamp-on/ odd a cro
cheted edge/ presto—lovely linens. No.
151 has color transfer/ crochet diredions.
Send 35c for each dress pattern, 25c
for each needlework pattern (add 10c for
each pattern for first class mailing) to
AUDREY LANE BUREAU, Dept. "NWNS,”
367 West Adams Street, Chicago 6, III.
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JOLLY HEADS, OF STATE . . . President Eisenhower, left, and
Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev are portrayed ir; papier-mache
at Viareggio, Italy, for a carnival float titled. “Ease of Tension.”
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JOSEPH CORBETT. JR. ‘
Corbett, one of the FBI'* 'Ten
Mo*t Wanted Fugitives," is wanted for
escape from the California Institution
for Men, Chino, Calif* where he was
serving a 5 years' to life sentence for
murdering an Air Force sergeant. A
Federal warrant was issued at Los An
geles, Califs on March 21, I960,
charging him with unlawful interstate
flight, to avoid confinement for murder.
A white American, born on October
25, 1928, ot Seattle, Wash., Corbett
is 6 feet I inch to 6 feet 2 inches tall
and weighs 160 to 170 pounds. He
has light brown hair, hazel eyes, a fair
complexion, a medium build, and has
worked as a clerk-typist, laborer,
warehouseman, laboratory technician,
and alkyd-resin cooker for a paint
manufacturer. His two upper front
teeth slant inward and he wears
glasses, reportedly being extremely
nearsighted and capable of seeing
only close objects without them. He
has a mole under his chin and a C-
shaped scar on his right thumb.
Corbett, once a premedical student,
is interested in scientific matters,
avidly reads technical and travel
' books, and is intensely interested in
firearms and target practice. \He re
portedly has a superior general in
telligence and generally lives quietly
and neatly but becomes erratic when
drinking alcoholic beverages.
Convicted of second-degree murder,
he is considered armed and dangerous.
Anyone having information con
cerning him should immediately notify
the nearest office of the FBI, the
telephone number of which can be
found on the first page of local
telephone directories, apo 661200-m
Back in the days when men were bold and the sfaognm was law,
Wichita Cowtown was a welcome sight to traU-weary cattle drovers.
Shown above is the first permanent dwelling building in Wichita,
erected in 1869-1870 near the banks of the Little Arkansas River,
by D. S. Monger. Practically all of the building materials-—cotton
wood logs, squared off, and wooden floors of walnut-—came from
trees along the rtver. Monger burned his own lime for plaster, using
a kiln on the river bank. He used buffalo hair to bind it together.
Windows and window frames were imported from Emporia. The
house was a two-story affair with a one-story addition. Soon after
its completion there tvas a demand from travelers for room and in
order to let out upstairs rooms without discommoding the family, an
exterior stairway was added from the second floor to the ground.
For a time, it served as the town’s postoffice, with Monger serving
as postmaster. Daring another period, it was used as a hospital,
with reports indicating that the living room was filled with wounded
cowboys from the cattle drover's crew who had met opposition on
the train west of Wichita.
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Gary, Indiana was unheard of a half century ago but today calls
itself the nation's “largest 20th Century tfity ... a city of sweat
and steel bom amid a babel of a half a, hundred tongues, a melting
pot of races and nationalities . . “ ftf America.
Today Gary is the Herculean
hub of northwestern Indiana’s
fabulous Calumet region—70
square miles of concentrated
heavy industry.
Fifty-four years ago, the Calu
met area was an inhospitable
stretth of sandhills, and sloughs,
scrub oak and brackish streams.
Its only city was Hammond, pop
ulation 12,000; East Chicago and
Whiting were villages; Gary did
not exist. One can scarcely con
ceive a less likely spot to build
a city.
Yet, chosen it was, becanse
Judge Elbert H. Gary, board
chairman of the U.S. Steel Cor
poration, and his colleagues were
men of vision. In 1906 they bought
np thousands of acres of this
wasteland and started to build
the greatest steel plant in the
world. '
Today,, Gary is known as the
site of one of the world’s largest
fully integrated steel mills, and
one of the world's largest cement
producing plants; location of the
world’s largest mill producing
■fe.hSH
-
a main crossroads of America
both sheet metal and tin prod
ucts; and one of the nation s
largest concentrations of corpor
ate industrial might.
In 1919, Gary had a pop
of 16,060; 'by 19*0, over
Today, nearly 500,000. Indiana’s
second largest city, Gary is
young sad so are Hs oeople. 10
was recently estimated
25 per cent of all Garyttes
over 45. The citizens ire
ingly alert to civic ai d social re
sponsibilities. 7
A city with next to no tradition,
almost without a past; Gary is,
however, a lusty symbol of
American enterprise For its
whole areas of some 42 square
miles is almost entirely a crea
tion of the 20th Century.
Only a short distance from
Chicago, the rail hub of the con
tinent, Gary is a thriving in
dustrial center, a prosperous
community whose income from
industrial operations alone av
eraged more than $23 million
monthly during most of 1959.
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CAROLINA METAL
Sheet Meial - Heating - Air Conditioning
COLLEGE ST. EXTN. • TEL. 115
A. G. McCAUGHRIN, President A Treasurer.
IN
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ism.
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Yon Will Find
Man ThatB
Qualified
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With The Ability To Get Important
Done
A Man With A Proven Record
>•
Of Accomplishments Who Will
Represent YOU!
ON TUESDAY, JUNE 14th - ELECT
Wmi
BERGEN
To
the
State SENATE
I’tA
FOR 4 YEARS OF PROGRESS
Stick With Bergen