The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, August 02, 1962, Image 3
THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1962
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
PAGE THREE
HOSPITAL
PATIENTS
Mrs. Mazie J. Gregory, 1801
Montgomery street.
Little Miss Jane Lynn Leitzsey,
Route 2 r Pomaria.
Graham S. Dellinger, Route one,
Pomaria.
Mrs. Ruth E. Shealy, Route 3.
George Attaway, 2801' Clyde
avenue.
Mrs. Ruby A. Bedenbaugh, 2009
Montgomery street.
Sam Cook, 1508 Lindsey St.
Robert P. Craft, Route 1.
Miss Teresa Coward, 1520 Clark
son avenue.
Hugh Chapman, Route two, Po
maria.
Mrs. Mary Cromer, Kinards.
Mrs. Ursula Dominick, Route 2,
Prosperity.
Mrs. Eva S. Dowd, Route three,
Prosperity.
Mrs. Eva Fulmer, 1409 Poplar
-street.
, Ralph Epting, Route 1, Chapin.
Mrs. Sara Hendrix, Route 3.
Mrs. Lottie Rinard, Route 3,
Prosperity.
Mrs. Ada Kinard, College St.,
Extension.
Mrs. Doris F. Lutz, 1836 Smith
Road.
Mrs. Nettie B. Lester, 1225
Hunt street.
Mrs. Jacquellin Lever and baby
gir,l Route 1.
Mrs. Julia Lake, 2900 Milwood
avenue, Columbia.
Jimmy W. Lester, 2544 Fair
• Wedding Direction
• Free Diamond Inspec
tion and Cleaning
avenue.
Mrs. Elizabeth Longshore, Rt.
three.
Miss Ellenor McCaughrin, 1208
Calhoun street.
Louis Morris, 2012 Main St.
Miss Elizabeth Maw, 1124 Hunt
street.
Mrs. Sally Moore, Route one,
Prosperity.
Mrs. Sudie Metts, Route 2.
Mrs. Sayra Nicholls, 2301 Hen
ry avenue.
Mrs. Patsy Lee Nichols, 1626
Bodie street.
Mrs. Annie M. Padgett, 2327
Vincent street.
Mrs. Della Parrott, Route 1.
Roger Trammell, Route 1.
I. T. Timmerman, 1831 John
stone street.
John L. Whitman, Route two,
Prosperity.
Joe R. Wheeler, Route 5, Saluda.
Mary Alice Harmon, Route 2.
Rex Anthony Maybin, 515 Gall-
man street.
Barbara Henderson and Baby
Boy, Route 4.
Hixsey Carol Burton, Route 1.
Beulah Mae Cromer, Route 1.
Christine Epps, Whitmire.
Permits To Build
July 25—Farmers Tee and Fuel
Co., one 20x30 addition to storage
house, 618 Drayton St., $600.
July 26—Leo Hendrix, one four
room brick veneer dwelling on
Langford St., $4500.
July 26—Odel Ruff, add one
room to dwelling, 845 Baker St.,
$900.
• Jewelry Repair
• Re-mountings
• Engravings
• Watch Repair
Luther Shealy
Service Friday
Luther P. Shealy, 80, of Route
2, Newberry, died Wednesday
night at the Newberry County Me
morial Hospital after a short crit
ical illness.
Mr. Shealy was born and rear
ed in the St. Phillip’s section of
Newberry County, a son of the
late William and Anna Leitzsey
Shealy. He had spent his entire
life in the St. Phillip’s section
where he was a farmer and a
member of St. Phillip’s Lutheran
Church.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs.
Lalla Wicker Shealy; two sons,
John Henry and James R. Shealy;
one daughter, Mrs. C. J. (Erline)
Meetze, all of Rt. 2, Newberry;
nine grandchildren and one great
grandchild.
Funeral services were conduct
ed at 3 p.m. Friday at St. Phillip’s
Lutheran Church by the Rev. Clar
ence L. Richardson. Interment
was in the church cemetery.
Active pallbearers were James
Wicker, Ben T. Wicker, Gene
Shealy, Beamon Summer, Aubrey
Wicker and William Shealy.
PERSONAL
Mrs. E. A. Carpenter and dau
ghter, Mrs. -A1 Fischer and child
ren, Bert, Lila and Lisa, spent
last week in New York where
Mrs. Carpenter purchased Fall
merchandise to add to Carpenter’s
stock.
Forrest Carpenter of Orlando,
Florida, spent the weekend here
with his mother, Mrs. E. A. Car
penter on Calhoun street.
Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Harmon and
son, Mike, spent their vacation the
week of July 16 at Oconee State
Park. They were accompanied by
Mr. Harmon’s cousins, Sheri and
Linda Reeffer of Orlando, Fla.
Little Laurie Brannon of Co- f
lumbia, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Luke Brannon, spent last week
here with her grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. D. O. Carpenter.
Holland Paysinger of Miami,
Fla. and Augusta, Ga. is spending
three weeks in Newberry. While
here, he will stay at the Wiseman
Hotel.
Mrs. J. M. Hove returned to
Newberry Friday after a week’s
visit in Hagerstown, Md. with her
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. M. S. Moseley and her new
grandson, Merriett, who was born
July 9. The Moseleys have two
other children, Bette Lynn, 10
years old and Cathy, 7 years old.
TAKES TRIP TO
WORLD’S FAIR
Mrs. Louise C. Derrick has re
turned to her home in Little
Mountain after attending the
World’s Fair in Seattle, Wash. En
route, she visited Mexico, Nevada,
and other points of interest.
“...FOR LIFE,
HEALTH
AND
And Now Fennell’s Announce The
Addition of a New Monograming Press
Fennell's can print as many as three lines on items
such
Stationery
Pens & Pencils
Leather Goods
Match Book Covers
Cocktail, Wedding
& Dinner Napkins
Place Mats
Coasters
When it comes to service there is no comparison
with what FENNELL’S JEWELER has to offer.
ISOS Main St.
Phone 35-W
- WANTED -
Fennell’s Jeweler
Your Store For...
• % v ? • *
WASHINGTON AND
| "SMALL BUSINESS"
By C. WILSON HARDER
The 19th Century French
writer Honore Balzac once
wrote that all politicians seek
to get cheap bread for the
farmers while getting high
prices for the farmer.
• * *
Today, many in government
are seeking to get cheap medl-
cin e for a
large seg
ment of the
nation, and
at the same
time hope
that the
American
standard of
medical prac
tice remains
high.
* * * C. W. Harder
It is unfortunate that the so-
called medicare plan, opposed
by nation’s independent busi
nessmen through polls by Na
tional Federation of Indepen
dent Business, should have un
leashed so many attacks against
the American doctor who com
prises a voting minority.
• * *
While others spend all their
time in college studying how to
sway the masses, the aspiring
doctors must spend all their
time learning how to heal the
sick, repair the broken. No
medical school has a course In
demagoguery.
* * *
Perhaps not ,*11 doctors are
winged saints. But there is
some question Pearly Gates
will fly open for every politician
and bureaucrat. All in all, level
of American medical practice
is world renowned.
* * *
But far greater than this fac
tor is the old Arab proverb
against letting the camel get
his nose in the tent. Once So
cial Security gets in the prac
tice of medicine, not only is
'£) NOIniml frptlt'rtMim rt ItirtfOfpilfiQ Bu»lnp*«
the quality of American medi
cal practice doomed, b it there
will be constant increases in
social security taxes.
* * *
The Wyoming Automobile
Dealers Association has de
veloped some interesting fig
ures on how Social Security has
operated over the years.
* * •
One Wyoming dealer who
has averaged 60 employees
since SS started in 1937 has
seen his taxes for the program
jump during this time from
$800 per year to $8000, or a
900% increase.
♦ * *
Due to extending coverage,
since 1950 when 961 million dol
lars was paid out by Social
Security, the total by 1961 had
grown to 12 V4 billion dollars.
Due to these revisions it is es
timated that the present bene
ficiaries, on the average, paid
for only about 5% of the bene
fits they are now receiving.
* • *
The auto dealers of Wyoming
also point out as significant the
fact that six of the seven ex
pansions of Social Security
since 1949 were voted into ef
fect in election years.
* * *
Thus, from watching the
track record since Social Secur
ity started, the nation’s doctors
know that once the bureaucrats
establish a beachhead in med
ical matters, it will not be
long until they take over the
entire practice of medicine.
* * •
So. there is a lot of innuendo
today being released against
doctors to agitate mass against
class. Presumably, In time if it
is deemed politically effective
to extend Social Security to
offer free beer to the populace,
and brewers object, the nation
will he surprised to hear what
rascals the brewers are.
SCOTT AFB, III.—Colonel William W. Riser Jr. (right) of New
berry, received the United States Air Force Ccmm 'o t-'t'en M dil
in a ceremony here. Making the presentation is Brigadier Gen
eral Norman L. Peterson, Air Weather Service commander. Colonel
Riser was awarded the medal in recognition of his meritorious serv
ice as deputy chief of staff for materiel, Air Weather Service.
Son of Mrs. W. W. Riser Sr. of 3917 Ridgewood, Columbia, the
colonel is married to the former Mary Clary of 1321 Wheeler SL,
Newberry. They have two children. The colonel attended Newber
ry College and Clemson College.
Scout Promotions!
Troop 66: Bob Brooks to Firs*]
Class.
Merit Badges
.Troop 101: Ronald Richardson,
Fishing.
Troop 06: Bob Brooks, Cooking, i
Fishing, Home Repairs, Painting;
Cavanaugh, Life Saving*
Swimming; Rusty Cul.;erc.>on,
Citizenship in the Nation; Ronnie
Kyzer, Soil and Water Conserva
tion; Jim Kinard, Poultry Keep
ing; Kenneth Pruitt, Citizenship
in the Home; Raymond Ruff,
Swimming; Ben Stewart, Hbme
Repairs.
CAROLINA METAL WORKS
Sheet Metal - Heating - Air Conditioning
COLLEGE ST. EXTN. TEL. U5
A. G. McCAUGHRIN, President * Treasurer
you purchas* a ptaotoua diamond » »
from us. Our remarkably low
prices are constantly the same.
Every diamond, small or large, is
fairly and honestly priced, always!
POSITION OPEN
PRIVATE SECRETARY—(ajfe 30-45) for large firm.
Previous experence in shorthand, typing, &.\d business
machines. Excellent working conditions, top salary,
free insurance, vacations and other fringe benefits.
Send complete work resume to Secretary, P. O. Box
429, Newberry, S. C.
EASY CREDIT TERMS
1-4 Carat 1-3 Carat 1-2 Carat
$89.50 $135.00 $200.00
RELY ON US
TO DELIVER
Black Walnut Logs and Timber
Hightat prices paid for logs delivered our yard on 321 By-pass,
Winnsboro, S. C. Log buyer on yard every other Thursday,
8-12 A. M.
FREE ESTIMATE ON STANDING TIMBER
For more information call or write:
WOOD MOSAIC CORPORATION
Bo* 6234. A.kpvlllo, N. C. ALpIn. 3-8491
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0 v
Day and night* yaur horn# and possessions,
property you have worked hard to accumu
late, are subject to fire, theft or damage of
some kind. In case of a loss; your first thought
Is of your Insurance, the second, your agent.
We wear a 24-hour hat, subject to call day
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collect. We invite your business.
We Handle ALL Types of Insurance
1418 MAIN STREET PHONES 197 OR 76
$25.00 Down $40.00 Down $50.00 Down
$5.00 per Mo. $7.50 per Mo. $10.00 per Mo.
W. E. Turner
- JEWELERS -
$5000 GUARANT1
Newberry Lumber Co., Inc.
Authorised Representative For
TERMINIX SERVICE
TELEPHONE 56
We supply you with a complete line of
top-quality Sinclair Petroleum Products
for your fantiLgasolinee, motor oils, trao L
tor fuels, lubricants, greases, oils
and kerosene i i
r -•.'**» * '* - ‘* » ' - • *
We deliver promptly, as promised. You
can count on us. Call us today and you’ll
aee —At Sinclair we care...about you
about your farm*
FARMERS ICE & FUEL CO.
—DISTRIBUTOR—
Phone 154 Newberry, S. C.