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PAGE TWO
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1962
' O
W\
#t*n
1218 Golksr© Street
NEWBERRY. S. C.
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
0. F. Armfield, Jr., Owner
Second-Class postage paid at Ne ‘ ^rry. South
Carolina.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $2.00 per year ;n ad-
vance. nix months. $1.25.
COMMENTS ON MEN AND THINGS
The New Year finds some folk
planning for various things. What
are your plans? What is your pro
gram? Is it a new car or a long
trip? In the back of my mind I
^hink of travelling around the
tip of Africa, passing thru the.
Suez canal, stopping at Athens,,
Naples, Rome, visiting Spain and
trying my Spanish on the sons of
Iberia, then re-visiting France,
England and Scotland.
All that is in the back of my
mind; as I sit here/today, a crip
ple and an imposition on all my
people I hope that during 1962 I
shull walk again and rdnew the
zest of brisk walk.
If you are in the full enjoyment
of your limbs, your hands and
your brains you are mere .blessed
and more fortunate than t ou think.
Have.you thought of that?
Remembering some of our friends
who have plenty of money yet
have to submit to milk and crack
ers, wouldn’t you like to have a
two-inch steak set before you and
be able to stow it away with
keen relish and gustatory exhilar
ation? Well if you can muster the
price of that steak, and enjoy it
with a hearty sense of well-being,
you may well be thankful for the
vigor of your body.
And if I could not sit here and
read and write how utterly wret
ched I should be.
It isn’t the steak or the travel
I crave at the moment; if only I
could step out!!
If you are untrammelled, think
it over. If I co. Id walk with the
grace of John M. Rivers! My! My!
Or if I could go to “the lake”
as will my,old Comrade, Alex San
ders.
and surround a great fish supper.
It makes me think of that stur
dy old Editor of lengthy stride
who has one foot in Allendale and
the other in Hampton—“Stone
wall” O’Connor. By the way that
appellation “O’Connor” is not
Spanish.
Speaking generally we have too
much government; too much
snooping; too much petty inter
ference; too much meddling with
other Nations and peoples.
Let us confine the Government
to the United States; and let us
encourage and stimulate growth
and development here.
- We are wasting time and bil
lions of dollars pretenain£ to up
lift the down-trodden Africans,
Asians, South Americans.
Let us be strong here and t h e
world will respect us.
Why do we rush into print with
everything? No nation need main-
' tain a spy-group here; it is suffi
cient to read our news releases
from Washington. Recently I read
over and over again that we were
activating divisions in the army
and the new divisions would have
so many men.
We just give everything away,
don t we ? ?
We need a practical man at the
head of our government, i wish we
had a president who would think
of the United States and the tax
payers of this county first, last
and foremost.
I wish we would withdraw from
the United Nations and the Nat
ional Council of Churches.
I think occasional meetings of
delegates to discuss relevant prob
lems or questions might be whole
some and helpful—a mere study
of problems, but without execu
tive functions and without any
secretariat.
America must be for America;
■we can’t regulate or promote the
development of all the backward
nations or tribes.
We should not be giving planes
and war vessels to other nations,
nor should we sell them.
Remembering wdiat Japan did
id pur fleet 20 years ago it seems
foolish to sell or give away either
war-planes or warships. Any plane
vean <dp harm; therefore it is
Worth having; any warship capa
ble of doing damage in 1942 is
worth having even as junk.
Look about you; do you think a
resourceful commander could not
enter Charleston harbor and toss
bombs all over the city? Even a
big ship of 1940 could be worth
something at or near the entrance
to the harbor.
We seem to have substituted a
lot of mush for brains. Rather
than nothing the equipment of the
Civil War might justify its exis
tence.
It seems to me that we should
build our strength to the invinci
ble status of an impregnable for
tress constantly improving our
weapons, but retaining and storing
all that we have.
We should build our forces and
make ourselves invulnerable at
h6me. All this building of bases
abroad only means the loss of all
that.
Now that we can quickly trans
port planes, men and anm ment
let’s build our strength at home.
We are exposed to attack all
along the Atlantic, the Pacific and
the Gulf.
Any nation that could not find
undefended areas on our coasts
must be devoid of all the sublety
of a great commander. The Japa
nese even uncovered our weakness
with a great American fleet ob
viously protected by some shore
batteries. If not, why not? Sup
pose the Japanese had attacked
five or six great American ports?
• -
America should turn her gaze
inward. Our taxes are swelling and
our liberties are shrinking.
It is so late that almost any
plan for dealing with Cuba may
resylt in another fiasco.
U !u J ° 0k at the Problem we
rf,h Wlth . , ; e « ;a ' d 10 Cuba. That
uba 16 within 70 miles of the tip
f hlonda may make us uriegsy
but that little fr«^ of geography
just itself does net justify an in
vasion by us. We don’t plan to in
vade Canado or Mexico. So prox-
^ * lone is beside the point.
If Mexico or Canada should
turn Communist would we seize
those countries'?
One of the weaknesses of our
pohey is that we usually jump on
the small Nation while tolerating
abuses by big nations.
Now, then, what has this little
fellow done? Now we come to the
milk of the cocoanut.
Cuba has seized hundreds of
millions of dollars of American
investments.^ What have we done
about it ? \\e wrote some notes.
I admit that we should have a
special interest in Cuba because
we drove the Spaniards out and
gave, yes, gave, Cuba to the Cu
bans. .
We may have treaties that
guarantee this or that but who re
spects treaties ?
Instead of invading Cuba, pos
sibly repeating that Boy Scout
expedition, we might have block
aded the ports of Cuba qnd by
sheer naval force brought Castro
to his knees. W e could do it now.
Not one Cuban need be killed by
us.
I would earnestly advise such a
course without the sounding brass
and tinkling cymbal.
Why do we rush into print all
the time? Everybody in Washing
ton lets the cat out of the bag all
the time. Before we fully decide
on a course Kruschev knows all
about it.
I am, of course, interested in
the dissemination of news, but a
little reserve is frequently advis
able.
I should like to i^ad some
morning: American fleet sailing
around Cuba, just outside of Cu
ban waters and an American De-'
stroyer is at anchor at every Cu
ban port.
W 7 e have piddled along, wasting
time and opportunity. By our di
latory course we have let others
intervene by -outspoken opinion.
W T hat we neeu is a man of ac
tion!
Pressure groups are a problem
to legislators. Enough pressure
can almost be persuasive most of
the time.
WTiat is a pressure group? If
tw^ty five men and women from
each County go to the State
House that multitude of eleven
hundred and fifty men and women
will create the impression that the
whole State is aflame and that
their zeal is b.'t a token of the
irresistib’e demand of all the peo
ple.
It so happens that we have more
than two million people in* South
Carolina. Eleven hundred or elev
en thousand are just a drop in the
bucket.
Although I am in touch with the
State, not only through the Coun
ty papers but by correspondence,
I don’t know any issue before the
General Assembly which is sup
ported by a majority of the peo
ple of the State. However, nearly
every organization strives to make
it appear that the whole state is
aflame with zeal for their cause
or program.
So far 3s zeal is manifested
the people of the State, as well as
of the Nation are eager to see the
cost of government reduced.
HOSPITAL
yt'
NEWBERRY COUNTY
| MEMORIAL* HOSPITAL
Mrs. Elizabeth Baker, Rt. 1,
W hit mire
Mrs. Edna Bepty. loll Miligan
Sc.
Mrs. Alma Cook, 1213 Academy
| St.
.Mrs. Mary Lee Dominick, Rt. 2,
j Prosperity
Miss Maude Lee Franklin, 1812
Milligan St.
Mrs. Letha Freeman, Rt. 1,
Batesburg ► - ’ %
Mrs. Hattie W. Hendrix, Rt. 3
Mrs. Pauline J. Hall, 1133 Hunt
St.
Mst. Harold Richard Lee, 124
O’Dell St., Whitmii^
ForregfV Longshore, Silverstreet
John Oxner, Rt. 1
•Claui^e E. Porter, 23if0 Henry
Ave. ».
Lance Reid, Ejiawkins Boarding
House
Mrs. Sudie Roton, 220 Green St.
Jimmie I^e, ^Rt. 3.
Yancy CLvIY Riser, Poinaria
Mrs. Bobbie Smith and Baby
girl, liq^ ; Fa% i .St.
S
Mountain.
Mr^/2|t0bei JC, .Shealy, Kinards
Mis£$Mary Sue' Sherbert, 2545
Nance .St. >.•. . •
Jacob Biigi^/'Stiockman, Nance
St. Ext:^
* Miss Claire Sligh. 1814 College
St- v,\. .
Mrs. Dorothy'Turner and Baby
_ . y *
J ^ t * "■
If alt'-the people who earnestly
wish less bureaucracy, less pres
sure on the Legislature were
counted the Starte House and all
that area of Columbia could not
accommodate the crowd.
The pressure groups wouldn’t be
one tenth of one per cent of the
intelligent people of the State, but
they rpqk^ £s7 mqiph noise as a
hundred • and • ten percent of the
citizens.
Shealy,* Little
girl, Rt. 4 i
Mrs. Nora West, Rt. 4, Lees-
vUle
Mrs. Ann Wessinger, Rt. 4
Mrs. Willie Mae Wicker, Rt. 2
John Berley Morris, 110 Cald
well St.
Mrs. Bessie Boland, little
Mountain *
Mrs. Janie Mary Franklin, 824
O’Neal St. y •
Mrs. Mary Merchant and baby
girl, 412 Green St.
Wallace Werts, Rt. 2
Robert G. Pasour, 2012 Harper
St.
Colored Patients
Lessie Clark, 678 McSw r ain St.
Joseph 3obb, Rt. 1, Silverstreet
Baby Girl Cooper, Rt. 1, Po-
maria
Orlander Davis, Rt. 3, Prosper
ity , .
Morris LeMont Davis, Rt. 3
Josephine Johnston, Rt. 4
Bill Turner, Rt. 3
Rillie Mae Wise, Rt. 3, Prosper
ity.
MILLS CLINIC PATIENTS
Baby Padgett, Batesburg
Mrs. Anna Long, Porharia
Mrs. Edith Boland, Newberry
Mrs. Nellie Bowick, Newberry
- Mrs. Maggie Bell Sommers, Po-
maria
Miss Lalla Martin, Newberry
Mrs. Shirley Oswald and baby
girl, Leesville
Mrs. Annie Rikard, Leesville
Bobby Summer, Little Mountain
Mary Lee Smith and baby boy,
Batesburg.
BIRTH OF SON
T/Sgt. and Mrs. James Virgil
Taylor announce °the birth of a
son, James Lamar, on January 11,
1962 in Clovis, New Mexico. Mrs.
Taylor is the former Nancy Davis,
daughter of Mr. and Mfs. Charlie
L./Davis Of Newberry. Mr. Taylor
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe S
Taylor of Newberry. They have
two other children, Barry and
Cindy.
ACROSS
IDEAS
FROM
OTHER
EDITORS
From the Waverly Sun, Wavel*
ly. New York: Wish you had a
million dollars? A recent survey
by the Internal Revenue Service
repjorts 244 taxable incomes of a
million dollars or more. But even
millionaires have problems: tax
rates zoom all the way to 91 per
cent on the highest income
brackets.
Yet even at these high tax
rates, the taxe^ actually paid by
the millionaire group are Just
enough to run the federal gov
ernment for only a little more
than one full day (25% hours).
The Citizens Public Expenditure
Survey, a tax research group,
notes that if the tax rates on this
highest group were raised to
a full 100 per cent~complete con
fiscation—the added income would
merely keep the federal govern
ment running for another 14 -
hours.
Let’s-go one step further. After
‘hese l dl 2 hours, the next tax
group pays the cost of running the
federal goyemmer^t until its paid
time runs out. . . and so on down
the line. And that is just what’s
happening these days. The in
come tax fs not solely the “rich,
man’s tax” as it was billed in its
infant days.
Now it reaches past the top in
come brackets, squeezes middle
income people, dips deeply into
the pockets of the low income
groups and threatens to widen,
taking more all along the way.
But it can’t get much more from
the middle and upper bracket tax
payers. There are so few of them
that the total amount left after
present taxes would pay for only
a few more hours of greater gov
ernment spending. As govern
ment spending jumps, forcing
taxes higher, the bulk of the
money will have to come from
lower- income groups. Excluding
our
mean- von.
ir;
The University of California
Established March 23, 1368 as a one-campus land-grant institution,
the University of California in less than a century has grown into a
statewide system comprising seven campuses, six major research
stations, hine agricultural field stations, fifty-two agricultural exten
sion offices, and a number of other sub-units located throughout the
state.
The University of California has
the largest full-time enrollment
among the nation’s universities.
University of California students
during the Fall semester, 1960,
numbered 49,179—at Berkeley, Los
Angeles (UCLA), Santa Barbara,
Davis, San Francisco and La Jolla
campuses.
The Berkeley campus, oldest
member of the University family,
is the hub of a community some
times called the “Athens of the
West.” Courses are offered here in
virtually every academic subject,
with course titles ranging from
accounting to zoology. There are
five academic colleges at Berke
ley—Agriculture, Chemistry, En
gineering, Environmental Design,
and Letters and Science—and nine
professional schools — Business
Administration, Cnminology, Edu
cation, Forestry, Law, Librarian-
ship, Optometry, Public Health
and Social Welfare.
Scientific research, an impor
tant part of the University’s con
tribution to mankind, is conducted
on the Berkeley campus. It was
on this campus in 1930 that the
late Ernest O. Lawrence, then Pro
fessor of Physics, invented the
“atom-smasher,” or cyclotron
Among many significant achieve
ments: the first isolation of a
virus, including the one casing
human polio; discovery of a num
ber of pituitary hormones, among
them, ACTH; participation in the
discovery of all of the ten arti
ficial elements heavier than ura
nium, including plutonium; the
first use of radioactive tracers in
the study of a cell; and a great
many more.
The University performs many
putJlic services in addition to its
regular program of education and
research.
TRANSFERS
OF REALTY
Newberry No. 1
Mrs. T. O. Stewart to Mattie H.
Sterling and Richard L. Sterling,
one lot on Orchard St., $5 and
other valuable considerations.
Mrs. T. O. Stewart to Clara Os
wald Stewart, one lot on Harring
ton St., $5, love and affection.
Keitt Purcell to ^Eunice H
Hawkins, one lot and one build
ing on # Clary Drive, 85 and other
valuable considerations.
J. F. Hawkins to Pauline W.
Livingston, one lot and one build
ing on Hunt St., $5 and other val
uable considerations.
/ Newberry No. 1 Ouaside
Luther H. Fowler to Vera H.
Fowler and Debra Ann Fowler,
one acre and one building, $5, love
and affection.
Dorothy H*. (Mrs. Wilton «A.)
Kilgore to Dessie Kilgore Kesler,
three lots on Ebezener Rd., $5 and
other valuable considerations.
Silverstreet No. 2
• Andrew Floyd Jr. and wife,
Cynthia Floyd to Wise Homes,
Inc.) of Spartanburg, one lot, S10
and other valuable considerations.
Bush River No. 3
Clarence V. Matthews to BuSh
River Fire Station, Ire., one lot,
$5 and no consideration.
. Whitmire No. 4
Pomaria No. 5
R. Aubrey Harley to Martyn J.
Cavanaugh, 5.52 acres, $5 and
other valuable considerations.
Joe H. Bonds to Thomas Bum-
gardner, one lot and one building
on Cemetery Drive, $10 and ex
change of mortgage.
Thomas Bumgardner to Joe H.
Bonds, one lot and one building,
$10 and exchange of deeds.
Little Mountain No. 6
Olin D. Abrams to William F.
Sinclair Jr., one lot, $100.
Prosperity No. 7
Minnie Lee Bowers Haynes, Del
la Bowers Hunter, Bessie Bowers
and S. Lusi.nell Bowers to Ezra A.
Counts, 7.42 acres, $5 and other
valuable considerations.
Permits To Build
. , . \
Jan. 9: Newberry College, one
classroom building, brick, steel
and concrete on College Campus,
$352,000.
Jan. 13: J. P. Hyler, repairs to
dwelling, 700 Clara St., $1050.
: i
BETTiR
By C. A. DEAN, M.D.
MEDITORIAL: Sinco that im
portant year, 1922. when insulin
was first isolated from the pan
creas and successfully used to
treat diabetes, the exact cause of
this chronic disease has not been
proven. It has long been thought
that the pancreas, which makes
and then secretes insulin into the
blood stream, becomes underae-
five for one of several reasons,
and produces an inadequate sup
ply.
Insulin is actually a hormone
whose function is to metabolize
or change carbohydrates (sugars)
in the blood into energy. Without
insulin the blood sugar builds .up
and is finally spilled out through
the kidneys.
Recently there has been some
doubt placed on the theory that
diabetes results from a pancre
atic insufficiency. The new idea
is that there may be a substance
in the blood stream known as an
insulin antagonist, which destroys
part of the insulin after it has
been produced by the pancreas.
The tendency to have these antag-
mists in the body vtould probably
be inherited.
Research has shown that the
insulin antagonists are present in
abnormally high amounts in the
)lood of patients whose diabetes
las not shown up i yet. With this
ligh level of antagonists the pan
creas is forced into producing
more insulin to overcome adverse
effects; it ultimately-breaks down
under the terrific strain, and dia
betes results. The time in life of
onset would depend on the degree
of antagonism and on the forti
tude of the pancreas.
The interesting fact of this new
theory is the.possibility of finding
a new and better treatment for
the millions of diabetic patients
in the world.
Recent Marriages
James William Kibler of New*
berry and Carolyn Irene Connelty
of Prosperity were; married on
Jan. 14 at Rt. 2, Prosperity bj
Rev. Thomas ,F. Suber.
Melvin Ray Dominick of Pros
perity and Tobie Ranee Stribble
of Newberry wer# married at New
berry by Rev. George E. Strait on
Jan. 12.
SENATOR
STRO
HURMOND
Reports
PEOPLE
1962—A Most Decisive Year
THE YEAR 1962 will be par
ticularly important to Ameri
cans. Many critical decisions
will be made in the areas of both
domestic and foreign affairs.
AT YEAR’S END we should,
have a better idea as to how we
stack up against the forces of
world communism. Will we
employ the necessarily bold ac
tions to call communist bluffs
and begin the long-awaited roll
back of communist aggressive
gains ?
WE SHOULD ALSO have
better insight into the progress
of the gradual evolution of our
government into a socialist wel
fare state. Will we by year’s
end have reached the point of no
return, where we will be so de
pendent on big government and
so subjected to centralized con
trol we cannot regain our lib
erties absorbed by big govern
ment?
EVERY ACTION I take in
the Senate this year will be de
termined primarily by my con
cern for winning the cold war—
not just reeling and reacting to
communist probes and pressures
—and in preserving our liberties
and our free enterprise, capital
istic system against the subtle
advances of socialism.
MANY PERSONS, however,
fail to perceive at times that
some ^ne item of legislation in
which they are interested can
carry with it another nail for
the coffin carefully prepared for
the system of government which
has made us. the freest and most
prosperous people the world has
ever known.
WHAT THEY FAIL to real
ize—and it is easy to overlook
—is that the key to effecting a
socialist state is centralization
of power, the No. 1 enemy of
personal liberty. Our govern
ment was fashioned to, promote
liberty by keeping most of the
power in the hands of the peo
ple. Today the American peo
ple, without full realization, are
exchanging their personal lib
erty for personal security.
PERSONAL SECURITY is
the come-on of a socialist state,
which promises cradle-to-grave
security. This is what the Rus
sian people have today. There
the government makes all the
decisions for them. All they
have to do is conform.
FEW SOCIALISTS in this
country have the courage to ad
vocate socialism aboveboard.
Presidential Adviser Arthur
Schlesinger, Jr., however, has
mustered enough courage to
speak out for what he calls
“democratic socialism.” He has
pointed out tnat it must be
slipped over on the people grad
ually by “a series of New Deals,”
adding that “a measure of lib
erty” must be preserved for
the people. In other words, lib
erty is to be a matter of govern
ment grace rather than by vir
tue of the guarantees by the
Constitution of these inherent
rights of the people.
ON THE WORLD scene, we
have been losing respect be
cause we have not demonstrated
a will to win tie cold wnr—and
to win this conflict communism
has forced upon us we do not
have to initiate a hot war. Any
significant losses to communism
this year could further lower
our world respect to a point be
yond which we could not re
cover. We must, therefore, ini
tiate a rollback of the commu
nist tide this year, and we can
begin by a gigantic campaign to
sell freedom and our system of
incentives. Psychologically, the
best actions we could take would
be to call the communist bluffs
at every turn. To do so may
involve a risk now and then, as
it may have in providing the
vital air cover in Cuba or in
tearing down the wall in Berlin.
The overwhelming majority of
Americans would have taken
these risks.
THE TIMID TOMS of the
State Department have fallen
for the communist line of caus
ing people to fear that we
would “escalate into a nuclear
war” if we take any actions
that would oppose communist
aggression. On the other hand,
the same rule does not apply in
pushing the overthrow of anti
communists, such as Batista,
Trujillo and Tshombe.
THE Y r EAR 1962 will be most
important. In these 12 months
our fate as a nation could well
be decided forever. We could
go beyond the point of no re
turn, or we could regain the of
fensive for freedom, both at
home and abroad.
Sincerely.
dtisCevrc* ‘t&juLnsrtfiJbTuL
WASHINGTON AND
"SMALL BUSINESS’
By C. WILSON HARD
Traditionally, the word “ex
tortion” has always held a
somewhat sinister meaning.
* *- +
However, it now appears
there would well be a new type
of terminology for the Word,
and that there will now be set
op tbe^rmjnegml
At least
that appears
possible un
less Congr
takes some
action t
clean house
in the Nation
al Labor Re-
1 a t I o n s
Board. There
has been cj.
some suggestions that as long
as it seems, in some quarters,
perfectly fine to give the com
munistic government of Yugo
slavia jet planes, perhaps as
additidqal help to Tito, it would
be well to ship him several car
loads of NLRB people.
* * *
The latest off-tackle slant...off
W
worker In a
left tackle sf course, by NLRB
Is to establish the edict that a
non-union worl
He just gives the same
each month to the onion. IPs
called unloose "
a so
Basically, this is just another
move by a government bureau
to encroach further into the af
fairs of individual states. .Some
states have “right-to-wotk”
laws which makes it illegal to
require union membership to
hold Job. : . . .
♦ e * . •
These laws, of course. Irri
tate the • loaders of m
labor organizations,
course, nothing grieves
NLRB official quite as much
as an irritated labor leader,
unless it Is the thought of gpt-
(j) Ngtlnnal Fedfratlon rrf Independent BOttMM
monopoly
And >v of
ting off the government payrO’iJ
and having to go to work,
e e «
But in this situation, they
come up with a most curious
ruling. In these particular
States, * worker does not havd
to belong to the unton. But he
does have to fork over
ating to dkis job
amount of money
union
An
lt to
• * *
area of economic
for enterprising people. Hood
lums should no longer demand
yoffs, which is extortion. In
stead, they now should be able
to seek plate glass security
payments. In fact, this could
probably go a long wsfy to alle
viate the national crime prob
lem. If some nice terms can
be found to be used for other
forms of extortion, for armed
robbery, et at, then there
would be let* criminal offenses
throughout the land.
« e e
It now appears that this
whole question of unbridled li
cense given a few labor lead
ers win be a major issue in
the forthcoming session of
Congress. Bven Congressmen
with heavy labor constituencies
report three-fourths or more of
their people are demanding
corrective steps- V
e e e
Senators Thurmond and Aft
Clellan, Congressmen Alger,
Santangelo, Heistand, and
many others, are either writ
ing bills, or working with other
legiAlaiors, on bill* that will f
curb the powers of these labor
csartLln thrir inauguration of
ye created a
ent situa
tion, held dewtt the economy,
and hampered aafttenal defense.
There la growing demand the .
system be changed back to.
■m
r#
CHANNEL.
AlHiUSTA • GEORGIA
7:S0
8:00
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2:00
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 21, 1082
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co in TO* Homs
allsy Fowisr Siiow
isacts of owartsts”
N —Lewis Family
PM—Sports Clubhouse
it Outreb
6:30
7:00
7:25
7:30
8:25
8:30
9:15
8:30
10:00
10:30
11:00
11:30
12:00
12:30
12:55
1:00
1:25
1:80
2:0C
4:00
4:30
MONDAY THRU F1UDAY
AM—Continental Classroom
AM—Today
AM—Local Weather
AM,—Today
AM—Local News
AM- Today
AN ha Dabble Drake Show
A ours For A Song
.jay Whoa
AM—Play Your Hunch
AM—Price Xs Riga!
AM—Concentration
N —Your First Impression
PM—Truth or Consequences
PM—NtfC News
PM—Day In Court
PM—Midday News
PM—Make A Face
PM—Jana Wyman
PM—Loretta Young Show
PM—Quean For A Day
PM—Who Do You “
PM—American:
PM—Hare's Hollywood
PM—NBC Afternoon Newe
PM—The Three Stoogee
6:80
6:35
6:45
7:00
7:30
8:30
9:00
10:00
11:00
11:05
11:10
11:15
1:00
MONDAY, JANUARY 22, 1882
9 PM—Quick Draw McCraw
I PM—Royal Mounted
Police
PM—Weatherman
PM—Evening Edition
PM—NBC News—
Huntley-Brlakley Report
PM—The Everglades
PM—Cheyenne
PM—Price Is Right
PM—87th Precinct
PM—Thriller
PM—News
PM—Weather
PM—Sports Life
PM—Jack Pasr
AM—Sign Off
TUESDAY. JANUARY 23, 1062
5:30 PM—Amos 'n Andy
6:u0 PM—Le Fevres
6:30 PM—Weatherman
6:35 PM—Evening Edition
6:45 PM—NBC News—
Huntloy-Brinkley Report
PM—Car 54. where Are You?
PM—Laramie
V
7:00
7:30
8:30 PM—Rifleman
8:00 PM—Dick Powell Show
10:00 PM—Cal:s Hundred
Ia.^U —..v,
11*v-l P.**—«««n.t_er /
11 ;1 J pfr-— — fe
11:15 .-j* '* '
1:00 Alu—Sign Uu
WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 24, ICS*
5:*>»j , m
nr w «,«» .
r , -
6:*,d w .X-On
Jr......
deport
7:ou r**— t
/«•*«# df'^***—— « « ^ r- A-w-ff-T-
8:«a jt.'*—...0-3
8:w0 x'...—. .. .
1 u:wj a*.*.—■—w... ......— *». • -a
14:JJ ,
11.05 W»—er
liao Pm—np— u» *dta
11:14 Pm—
1:08 AM—tttwa Ou
THURSDAY, w AND ARY 25. 1342
5:30 PM—Amos 'a Aa*y
S;<M Jr**.—fe»MCaue4*«M.« x Nounfi
> 8f*0 Pm— v, ux <
8:eS Pw«—Evtuong caution
8:48 FM**MBC Hews—
Hun^ey-nrlnkiey Report
V 0Q PM—Wmrieyolrds
7:80 PM—My Three Sons
8:00 PM—Donna Reed Snow
8:MI PM—Ree* McCoys
8:00 PM—Shannon
8:80 PM—Margin
. 10:00 PM—Untouchables
11:00 PM—News
11:08 PM—Weather
11:10 PM—Sports Life
11:13 PM—Jack Paar Show
1:00 AM—Sign Off
FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1882
5:30 PM—Amos ‘a Andy
6:00 PM—Yogi Bear
6:30 PM—Weatherman
6:38 PM—Evening Edition
6:45 PM—NBC News—
Huntley-Brinkley Report
7:00 PM—National Velvet
7:50 PM—Sea Hunt
8:00 PM—Mrs. G. Goes to College
8:30 PM—Alfred Hitchcock
8:00 PM—77 Sunset Strip
10:00 PM—Target Corrupters
11:00 PM—News
11:05 PM—Weather
11:10 PM—Sports Life
11:15 PM—Jack Paar
1:00 AM—Sign Off
SATURDAY, JANUARY 27, 1881
7 00 AM—The Story
7:30 AM—Farm 8k Home Hour
8:00 AM—Sheriff Johp Presents
Tafcsan .
9:30* AM—Pip The Piper
10:00 AM—Shari Lewis
10:30 AM—King Leonardo and ZDs
Short Subject
11:00 AM—Fury
11:30 AM- Make Room For Daddy
12:00 N —Top Ten Dance Party
1:00 PM—Pro Bowling
2:30 PM—Basketball
4:30 PM—Big Time Wrestling
5:00 PM—All Star Golf
0:00 PM—NBC Saturday News
0:15 PM—Saturday Edition
6:30 PM—Ossie 4t Harriett
7:00 PM—Hazel
7:30 PM—Wells Fargo
8:30 PM—Tall Man
^:00 PM—Lawrence Walk
1 ):00 PM—Defectives
11:00 PM—Outlaws
12:00 M —Sign Off
Schedule Subject to Last Minute
Changes Ssnd Corrections.
/1
I
(iVot printed at government expense)
Auditor’s 1962 Tax Assessment Notice
Returns of personal property, real property, new build-
ings and real estate transfers, and poll tax are to be made
at the County Auditor's Office beginning:
JANUARY 2nd, 1962
through
FEBRUARY 28th, 1962
** f - v • r kj •
All able-bodied male citizens between the eges of twen*
ty-one and sixty are liable to $1.00 poll tax.
All returns are to be made by Tax Districts. Your fail
ure to make return calls for penalty as prescribed by law.
• RALPH B. BLACK,
Auditor Newberry County
. -1
my
A.% a i fe t I** .*■ .J
W* if*'..