The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, December 21, 1961, Image 4
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1218 College Street
NEWBERRY. S. C.
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
O. F. Armfield, Jr.. Owner
Second-Class postage paid at Ne' , ''n*y, South
Carolina.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $2.00 per year in ad
vance: sfr months. $1.26.
TAX NOTICE
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THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1961
—
C
• ?v : A
After The Close of Business
JANUARY 2nd, 1962
ONE PER CENT
PENALTY
WILL BE ADDED TO ALL
UNPAID 1961 TAXES
J. RAY DAWKINS,
County Treasurer
m»{
In 1897, a young girl sent a letter to a great New
York newspaper, asking whether there was a Santa
The editor of this paper responded with the most
famous editorial ever written, "Is There a Santa
Claus." The following is a paraphrased version
of that editorial: vi'- ^
IS THERE A SANTA CLAUS?
Daughter, your little friends are wrong wthen they say
there is no Santa Claus. They have been affected by the
skepticism of a skeptical age. They do not believe except
what they see. They think that nothing can be which is
not comprehensible by their little minds. All minds, daugh
ter, whether they be men’s or children’s, are little.
Yes, daughter, there is a Santa Claus. He exists as cer
tainly as love and generosity and devotion exist, and you
know that they abound and give to your life its highest
beauty and joy. Alas! how dreary would be the world if
there were no Santa Claus! It would be as dreary as if
there were no children. There would be no childlike faith
then, no love, no beauty. We should have no
except in sense and sight. The eternal light with which
childhood fills the world would be extinguished.
Not believe in Santa Claus? You might get your papa to
hire men to watch all the chimneys on Christmas «*e to
catch Santo Clans, but even if they did not see Santa
Claus coming down what would that prove. >iobody sees
Santo Claus, but that is no sign that there is no Santa
Clans. The most real things in the world are those that
neither children nor men can see. Nobody can conceive
or imagine all the wonders that are unseen and unseeable in
the world. . *» - ' —
You tear apart the baby’s rattle and see what makes the
noise, but there is a veil covering the unseen world which not
the strongest man, nor even the united strength of all the
strongest men that ever lived, could tear apart. Only faith
can push aside that curtain and view and picture the eternal
beauty and glory beyond. Is it all real. Ah, daughter, in
H»iq world there is nothing else real and abiding.
No Santo Claus! Thank God he lives, and he lives forever.
A thousand years from now, daughter, nay ten thousand
years from now, he will continue to make glad the hearts of
childhood.
T. ROY SUMMER, Inc.
The Man's Shop
Rev. Wood!*, 91,
Dies
News has been received
of the death .„p£. Bay. Albert D.
Woodle, fatlf^ of'klrs. Allen W.
Murray of Newberry, at the home
of his daughter in McRae, Geor
gia last Sunday morning, in his
sleep.
Rev. Woodle, age 91 was a re
tired Baptist minister and a na
tive of Bennettsville. His wife was
the former Mdry Prances Arring
ton of Greenwood county, who died
in 1950. VVM#
Rev. Woodle served a number
of pastorates in South Carolina,
Georgia and ^Florida. ’
He was a graduate of Furman
University .Mid of the Southern
Baptist TheologicaK^lleminary
He is survived by five children,
Mrs. A. W. Murray, Mrs. Adolpho
R. Chappell v of Prosperity, Mrs.
Clinton E. Hendrix of Estil, Mrs
Edgar B, Smith of McRae, Ga.,
and AlbertVm*Woodle, Jr., of Sa
vannah, Georgia. Seven grand
children amk^pur great - grand
children so’survive.
Funeral sarvjces were held on
Sunday aftfcWioOn at the Baptist
church in McRae, Ga.
Babson Forecast
American business has no more
inspiring personality than Roger
W. Babson, internationally-known
business commentator and invest
ment adviser. An outstanding fea
ture of his philosophy has been his
lifelong insistence on the import
ance of both religion and adver
tising in business.
zrr
PARRI SISLAND (FHTNC) —
Marine Pvt. Carl E. Epting, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph. E. Epting
of Little Mountain, completed re
cruit training, Nov. 23, at the
Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Par
ris Island.
The 12 weeks of intensive train
ing include drill, bayonet training,
physical conditioning., parades and
ceremonies, the M-l rifle and in
struction in other basic marine in
fantry weapons.
New marines will next report to
Camp Lejeune, N. C., for combat
infantry training.
Recent Marriages
Oscar W. Frye, Rt. 1, Newberry
and Eleanor M. Hunnicutt of
Whitmire were married at Whit
mire on December 2nd by Rev. B.
R. Nichols.
James Albert Lusk of Newberry
and Ruth Adelaide Hart of Troy,
were married on December 10th
at Troy by Rev. E. F. Gettys.
Curtis Leonard Taylor and Ned-
ra Faye Maness, pf Whitmire,
were married by Rev. Horace E.
Weathers at Whitmire on Decem
ber 8th.
Herbert F. Cockrell of Route 2,
Saluda and Evelyn Elizabeth Le
ver of Rt. 3, Clinton, were married
on Dec. 1 at Clinton by Rev. J.
Richard McAllister.
Roger W. Babson
Born and reared in an old-faah-
ioned atmosphere of hard work and
hustle on a farm in Gloucester, M.r
Babson went to the Massuchusetts
Institute of Technology. Upon
graduation, he turned instinctive
ly to financial and business activi
ties in which his father was en
gaged.
His exertions, however, under
mined his health; he contracted
tuberculosis and was sent West
“as good as dead”! It was while
he was convalescing from this
dread malady that he worked out
some of the possibilities and prob
lems of business forecasting. His
weekly releases are used by over
400 newspapers and his financial
reports by 20,000 corporations and
estates. His research work is car
ried on by a large staff of ex
perts.
Mr. Babson founded Babson In
stitute for Men; and, in coopera
tion with the late Mrs. Babson,
developed Webber college for wo
men—both nationally-known edu
cational institutions. Here young
men and women may concentrate
on the fundamentals of honest and
efficient business administration.
Later, he founded a Midwest Insti
tute of Business Administration;
located in Eureka, Kansas, the cen
ter of the United States. He has
be^n active also in the establish*
ment of other mediums of service
to the public, such as the Gravity (
Research Foundation, located at
New Boston, New Hampshire.
Mr. Babson has probably done,
more than any other man to create
among his millions of newspaper
readers an interest in simple bus
iness problems, and to instill a
broader vision in business, enab
ling them to meet the ups-and-
downs of the business cycle.
The Newberry SUN will pub
lish “Babson’s Business and Fin
ancial Forecast for 1962” next
week. It will be found on page one.
A careful checking of the Bab
son predictions made in the Fore
cast for 1961 upholds the remark
able average of the past years by
being/ 83 per cent correct. The
score for the last 20 years holds
the best and highest record for
Annual Forecasts on U. S. Future
Business.
Students Of
Expression
In Redtal
Mrs. Harry Hedgepath present
ed her students of Expression in a
Christmas Recital on Wednesday,
December 13 at the Community
Hall at 7:30 p. m.
The following program was giv
en:
Welcome by Susan Schumpert,
Audrey Fennell and Sloan Wal
lace.
Part 1, Humorous, Jolly Christ
mas, sung by group; I Am A
Christmas Tree, Stuart Whitener;
Christmas Angel, Brenda Lea veil;
Jest Fore Christmas, Henry Parr;
Little Bessie’s Mother at the En
tertainment, Trudy Todd; Scrapin’
The Pan, Marcus Lester; Christ
mas Stockings, Sandra Brooks; All
Wrapped Up In Christmas Sloan
Wallace; His Truly Name, Alyce
Youmans; Angel Wings, Paula
Cuthbertson; Molasses Candy for
Christmas, Bob ’Brooks; The Trou
ble With Turkey, David Reams;
Ma Makes Merry, Becky Williams;
Carol Sings a Carol, Jo. Ann
Smith; The Night Before Christ
mas, Anna Hawkins; The Morning
of Christmas, Mary Parr; The
Night After Christmas, Harriette
Hedgepath; Jingle Beils, by group;
Merry Christmas, Susan Schum
pert and Audrey Fennell.
Part II, Religious: Scripture by
Bob Brooks; There’s a Song in the
Air by Alyce Youmans, Sandra
Brooks, Paula Cuthbertson, Jo Ann
Smith, Trudy Todd, Stuart Whit
ener and Becky Williams; The
Light of The World, Kathryn Rag
land; The Little Christ Child,
Susan Schumpert; The Best Day.
Audrey Fennell; The Birth of
Jesus, Stuart Whitener; When the
King Came, Jo Ann Smith; The
Babe of Bethlehem, Becky Wil
liams; The Saviour’s Birth, Trudy
Todd; The Christmas Story, Mary
Parr and Harriette Hedgepath;
CHRISTMAS, Brenda Leavell and
Sloan Wallace; The First Christ
mas Tree, Henry Parr; Long Ago,
Anna Hawkins; In Far Away Je
rusalem, Alyce Youmans; The
Shepherd Boy of Bethlehem Mar
cus Lester; The Stars Celebrate
Christmas, Sandra Brooks and
Paula Cuthbertson; What Is
Christmas For?, David Reames;
The Sweetest Story EVer Told, by
Group.
Readers were Anna Hawkins,
Harriette Hedgepath and Mary
Parr.
Soloists: Trudy Todd, Jo. Ann
Smith, Brenda Leavell, Paula
Cuthbertson, Stuart Whitener,
Harriette Hedgepath and Alyce
Youmans.
Prayer by Bob Brooks. Accom
panist, Mrs. Earl Willingham.
Ushers, Bob Brooks, Marcus Les
ter and Henry Parr.
Mrs. Chapman
Dies At Church
Mrs. Amelia Derrick Chapman,
81, wife of J. J. Qhftpm&n of Cha
pin, died of a heart attack at 11:15
Sunday morning while attending
services at Mt. Horeb Lutheran
Church.
Mrs. Chapman was born near
Peak, Oct. 31, 1880, the daugh
ter of the late Paul and Happy
Shealy Derrick. She was a mem
ber of St. John’s Lutheran Church
near Pomaria, a life member of the
United Lutheran Church Women
and a member of the Ladies Aid
Society and a member of the Cha
pin Garden Club.
Survivors include her husband;
one daughter, Mrs. George W.
(Ollie Mae) Addy of Little Moun
tain; three sons, Csrl B. and Jos
eph E. Chapman of Chapin and
David Harold Chapman of Cayce;
seven grandchildren, and four
great-grandchildren.
Mrs. Chapman was the last sur
viving member of her immediate
family.
Funeral services were conducted
at 3 plm. Tuesday from the St.
John’s Lutheran Church near Po
maria by her pastor, Rev. Alvin
Fulmer, assisted by Rev. E. A.
Dasher. Interment followed in the
church cemetery.
horsepower m» k ' ’
High HP Purelube Motor
Oil, with its additive dis
covery, gives you fast starts
and a cleaner, smoother
running engine.
Newberry Oil Co.
TELEPHONE 200
Newberry Men In Service At
V Corps, GERMANY (AHTNC)
—Army PFC Leroy C. Pugh, Jr.,
whose parents live in Prosperity,
recently participated in Exercise
Main Barge, a V Corps field train
ing exercise in central Germany.
The exercise, which involved 28,-
000 troops, was designed to test
small unit leadership and main
tain the corps! ability to conduct
sustained land combat in time of
war.
Pugh, a forward observer in the
48 th Infantry’s Headquarters
in Worms, entered the army in
August 1960, received basic train
ing at Fort Benning, Ga. and ar
rived overseas in January 1961.
The 24-year-old soldier is a 1955
graduate of Prosperity high school
and was employed by the Carlisle
Finishing company before enter
ing the army.
.•ass
V Corps, GERMANY (AHTNC)
—Army Specialist Four Joe E
Dowd, son of Mr. and Mrs J. C.
Dowd, Route 3, Prosperity, rec-k
ently ’ participated in Exercise'
Main Barge,, a V Corps field train
ing exercise in central Germany.
Specialist Dowd, a member
the 69th Engineer company
Frankfurt, arrived overseas <—
this tour of duty in January 1961.
The 25-year-old soldier is a 1954.
graduate of Little Mountoii. high
school. His wife, Brenda, is with
him in Germany.
MAYPORT Fla. (FHTNC) —
James O. Wilson, airman, USN^
son of Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Wilson ij
of Rt. 1, Sihrerstreet, is sei
aboard the attack aircraft ca**«»
USS Franklin D. Roosevelt, which
returned, Nov. 30, to its Mayport,.
Fla., home port from a 10-day
cruise in the Caribbean.
The carrier, with other ships
was sent to cruise off the coast
the Dominican Republic during
recent political crisis in that
tion.
HOSPITAL
Newberry County
Memorial Hospital
Miss Lenore Brcaddus, 1614
Boundary St.
Charles Bedenbaugh, College St.
Ext.
Mrs, Mary Brank, Whitmire
Mrs. Alma Cook 1213 Academy
St.
Mrs. Annie B. Crews, 826 O’Neal
St.
Carroll DeVore, Rt. 1, Kinards
Mrs. Ethel Fellers, 900 Bound
ary St.
Oscar W. Harmon, Rt. 3, Pros
perity
Miss Ruth Jean Jenkins, Rt. 1,
Whitmire
Mrs. Mary Long, Rt. 1, Prosper
ity
Mrs. Elsie Nichols, 2061 Smith
Rd.
Benny Eugene Parrott, Rt. 2,
Prosperity.
Mrs. Annio Mae Pappas, 23?6
College St.
Mrs. Mittie Summer 1523
Boundary St.
Mrs. Helen Scarborough, 1240
Calhoun St.
Clarence Satcher, Ward
Jacob Eugene Stockman, Nance
St. Ext.
Colie Wessinger, Rt. 3, Prosper
ity;
Mrs. Elizabeth ’Baker, Rt. 1,
- - ■ ~ —u. ———
Whitmire
Mrs. Rosa McElveen, 3102
lege St.
Clyde Smith, 2539 Fair Ave.
Miss Mary Sue Sherbert,
Nance St.
Clifton Shealy, 1516 Trent St.
Little Sharon Ann Hen<
Rt. 4
LeRoy Adams, 1504 Glenn St.
% Willie M. MendenhaU, 910 St
set Ln.
Anthony Brooks, 911 Gilder
Lilia Bishop, 1 Vincent St.
Annie DeWalt, 2851 Emory
Morris LeMont Davis, Rt. I
La T al Epps, 123 Duckett
Whitmire
Josephine Johnston, Rt. 4
Ola Peoples, Rt. 2, Blair
Rufus Rhodes, Rt. 4
Sofiner Suber, Pomaria
James Sims, Rt. 4
Bill Turner, Rt. 3.
MISTLETOE MYTHS
Uke;
also i
mas, mistletoe was
for its
The
afttri
^
effective against diseases, poi
sons, and witchcraft. To
Emgemeat wti
its berries was
the best
■■ w-simr- ^
ROCK HIt&£-itfiss Karen May
er of Mid-Ca^plina high school.
Prosperity/'] bn^been . selected as
the 1962 Miss- Hi Bfiss by the
senior class and faculty <of her
school. AV
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs,
R. Herman Mayer of Little Moun
tain, she will be honored in the
special Miss Hi Miss edition of
The Johnsonian, Winthrop college
student newspaper, which will be
published February 16.
The honor senior girls from
South Carolina and North Caro
lina high schools will be guests
of Winthrop for a weekend March
23-25.
Miss Mayer is treasurer of the
Beta club, a member of Student
Council and a senior superlative.
She served as a junior marshal
for the class of 1961.
Miss Mayer plans a career in
business.
The Miss Hi Misses are selected
from each high school on the
bases of scholarship, character,
leadership and personal attrac
tiveness.
PERSONAL
Mrs. Margaret Bobo of Aiken
spent. Saturday here with her par- 1
eints, Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Chalmers.
Mr. and Mrs. McBeth Sprouse
and sons, Kerry and Randy of
Knoxville, Tenn. will arrive Sat
urday to spend the Christmas and
New Year holidays with Mrs.
Sprouse’ parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin O. Summer on Harper St.
Mr. and Mrs. D. Hugh McHargue
and son Jlanny of Statesville, N. C.
will be^vn Newberry Friday and
will spend the Christmas holidays
with Mrs. McHargue’s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Armfield Sr.,
and other relatives here.
Susan and Edward Cousins of
Jacksonville, Fla., spent last
wekend with Mrs. C. A. Reeder on
Jessica Ave. and visited other
friends. Also visiting Mrs. Reeder
during the weekend were Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Hutson of Columbia.
The Hutsons, Susar and Edward
and Mrs. Reeder lef f; Saturday to
spend Christmas wich Mr. and
Mrs. Lcvns Davis i:i Jacksonville.
Mr. anO Mrs. Ace W. Watkins
moved Tuesday to Columbia to
make their home. Their daughter,
Margaret, a student at Newberry
College, will stay in the dormitory
next term.
BIRTH OF A SON
Rev. and Mrs. Kenneth B. Wilson
announce the birth of Kenneth
Boyce, Jr., at Newberry County
Memorial Hospital on Sunday,
December 3rd.
NOVEMBER SAVINGS BONDS
SALES
Combined E and H Savings
Bonds sales for November in this
county totaled $24,950.00 reports
Joe M. Roberts, County Savings
Bond chairman.
■ W* ■ ■ w . ■ ■> -■ j
We Are Pleased to Announce Our
Semi-Annual Dividend
Payable as of December 30, 1961
AT OUR
Current Rate of
Per Annum
Each account is insured up to $10,000.00
by the Federal Savings & Loan Insurance
Corporation
Member Federal Home Loan Bank'
Building and Loan Association
1117 Boyce Street
Phone 189
Newberry, South Carolina
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS
R. B. BAKER, President
J. DAVE CALDWELL, Vice-President
PINCKNEY N. ABRAMS, Secretary-Treasurer
lOM^3 H. POPE
AUBREY HARLEY
LOUIS C. FLOYD
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