The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, August 16, 1962, Image 3
THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 1962
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
PAGE THREE
POSITION OPEN
PRIVATE SECRETARY—(ag:e 30-45) for large firm.
Previous experence in shorthand, typing, and 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.
CAROLINA METAL WORKS
Sheet Metal • Heating - Air Conditioning
COLLEGE ST. EXTN. TEL. 115
A. G. McCAUGHRIN, President A Treasurer.
24 HOUR DUTY
5
Day and night, your home 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
or night by our customers. Prompt action may
reduce a loss, prompt service will help you
collect. We invite your business.
We Handle ALL Types of Insurance
1418 MAIN STREET
PHONES 197 OR 76
RELY ON US
TO DELIVER
TO YOUR FARM
We supply you with a complete line of
top-quality Sinclair Petroleum Products
for your farm: gasolines, motor oils, trac
tor fuels, lubricants, greases, heating oils
and kerosene.
We deliver promptly, as promised. You
can count on us. Call us today and you’ll
aee — At Sinclair we care... about you.
cbout your farm.
FARMERS ICE & FUEL CO.
—DISTRIBUTOR—
Phone 154 Newberry, S. C.
n'^ce 0F SALE
Pursuant .. the Last Will and
Testament Thomas E. Davis,
deceased, Mrs. Mildred P. Davis,
as Executrix of such estate, here
by offers for sale the following
real estate located on the Xewber-
ry-Pomaria Highway, near Inter
state 2b, about two miles East of
the city limits of Newberry, South
Carolina.
A tract containing 553 acres,
more or less, and consisting of ap
proximately 150 acres of good pas
ture land, the balance in timber,
the entire tract being under fence.
The property includes a modem
completely - furnished granite
dwelling house, completely air-
conditioned and centrally heated,
with elevator, having four bed-
i-ooms and four baths, overlooking
a fifteen-acre lake, with granite
dam, well-stocked with fish. Place
also includes two large metal cow
barns, horse stables, heated five-
room dwelling and other outbuild
ings.
Timber estimates by qualified
forestry consultants, blueprints
and aerial photographs are avail
able to interested purchasers at
the offices of Thomas H. Pope and
Robert D; Schumpert, Attorneys,
Newberry, South Carolina.
Sealed bids will be accepted on
entire tract and also separate seal
ed bids will be accepted on the
entire tract divided into three par
cels, as follows:
1. Tract 1, containing approxi
mately 182 acres, more or less,
and consisting of 106 acres of well-
sodded pasture with plenty of run
ning water, and the remainder of
such tract in timber on which are
located dwelling house, barns,
stables and outbuildings.
2. Tract 2, containing 192
acres, more or less, on which are
located the modem completely
furnished dwelling house, as set
forth above, with the necessary
outbuildings and the fifteen-acre
lake.
3. Tract 3, containing 178 V2
acres ,more or less, being com-
1 pietely covered with timber and
growing timber.
Sealed bids will be opened at
■ twelce o’clock noon, on Satur-
I day, September 15, 1962, at the
offices of Messrs. Pope and
Schumpert, Newberry, South
Carolina, and all bidders are re
quested to forward bids in care
of such attorneys, in sealed enve
lopes, marked “Bid” end all bid
ders are invited to attend the open
ing at the offices of the undersign
ed attorneys.
The successful bidder or bidders
will be given a period of ten days
from the bid date within which to
comply with bids and upon failure
to do so, the property will be re
sold at bidder's risk. Possession of
the premises will be given on Oc
tober 1, 1962.
The seller reserves the right to
reject any and all bids and fur
ther reserves the right to sell the
entire tract as a unit or As three
parcels. Successful bidders will be
this week
/ patterns,
\ BY AUDREY lANf * >
Make It Now
All Through The House
Drmss Pattmrn No. 3251. Mak* It Now.
Sloevoloss sheath with plunging neckline
front and back; will prove a star in your
wardrobe. No. 3251 comes in sizes 12,
14, 16, 18, 20 and any of its sizes may
be made from just 3 yards of 35-inch
fabric.
Needlework Pattern No. 459. All
Through The House. Every room in the
house can use slip covers, and No. 459
tells you how to use your ingenuity to
make them for living room, bedrooms,
etc.
Send 35c for each dress pattern, 25c
for each need'ework pattern (add 5c for
each pattern for third doss mailing and
10c for each paftorn for first class mail
ing) To AUDREY LANE BUREAU, Box 1490,
New York 1, N.Y.
required to pay for all documen
tary stamps to be affixed to deeds
which will be furnished by seller.
Taxes for 1962 will be prorated
as of October 1.
Anyone desiring further infor
mation about this property may
contact the undersigned attorneys
at their offices during business
hours.
THOMAS H. POPE,
ROBERT D. SCHUMPERT,
Attorneys for Seller.
Newberry, S. C.
August 2, 1962 16-6tc
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’ oaten, i3ovs Go i. jLiKc A.
erse And Carriage” At Boys* Clubs
Eiguxfcs recently released by tke Boys’ Clubs of America indi
cate women in cities and towns throughout the country are play
ing an increasingly important role in that organization’s con
tinuing battle against juvenile
delinquency.
Today, some 35,000 dedicated
ladies offer daily proof of the
value of “the woman’s touch”
among more than 600,000 de
serving Boys' Club members.
In a heart-warming display of
feminine resourcefulness and
ability, these distaff members of
the Boys’ Clubs organization
serve the cause of “Juvenile
Decency” in a truly surprising
variety of jobs.
They coach swimming, serve
un boards ox directors, teach
painting, ceramics and lithog
raphy, raise funds, sew cur
tains, bake cakes and cookies,
teach cooking, tutor boys who
are behind in school, collect books
for Club libraries, and do hun
dreds of things vital to the suc
cessful operation of a Boys’
Club. Most of them are volun
teers who assist full-time, paid,
professional Boys' Club workers.
But many *re paid, profession
ally trained workers in such
fields as social service, stenog
raphy, .tarsing, psychology, dra
matics, public relations and ad
vertising. And a few actually
serve as executive directors of
Boys’ Clubs (a job normally
reserved for men).
Others assist at dances as
chaperones, at Open House
even+s as> hostesses, appear on
radio and television, direct
choirs, organize women’s auxil
iaries, teach remedial reading or
other subjects, and many times
fill a gap in a boy’s life as “sub
stitute mother.”
As John M. Gleason, national
director of the Boys’ Clubs ob
serves, “it is literally true that
without the devotion of these
good ladies, many Boys’ Clubs
could not continue to operate at
peak efficiency.” He must have
read somewhere that one should
“never under-estimate the power
of a woman.”
5H£'S EXTREMELY CHAQM/NG,
WITTY AND ATTRACTIVE.
I CANT STAND HER.
MAMQNE 3 /-
CAUTIOUS HANDSHAKE . . . Heavyweight champion Floyd Pat
terson, left, smiles grimvy as he shakes hands with challenger
Sonny Liston after signing a contract for a title bout before
Con* on
4
By Thomas Collins
RETIREMENT SHOULD BE
PLANNED FOR IN THE SO’s
ONEY business.
Specifically, the money busi
ness of a man and wife, both 52
years old, who intend to retire at
age 62:
Month
Husband’s Social Security $100
Wife’s Social Security 80
Husband’s pension 70
Husband’s profit-sharing plan 25
Total $275
The couple owns two small
houses, side by side. They live in
one and rent out the other for $60
a month. At the moment they have
$10,000 in savings. Their aiLi is
$15,000 before they are 62.
“We nedrer made an attempt to
keep up with the Joneses,” the
wife says, “so we don’t have their
headaches. We buy a new station
wagon every - three years, and our
furniture is sturdy, late grand
mother, immediate aunt, early
auction ... and paid for.”
There is one child, married and
well-established.
What are the leaks in this cou
ple’s retirement plan?
A couple of 52 planning retire
ment at 62 is sniffing the roses of
a 52-year-old garden. At 62 the
garden has different flowers. It is
difficult for people to understand
this.
But a couple must plan. And
age 52 is nc-. too soon for it. So
what, beyond money, should be
added to the roof to prevent the
leaks?
HEALTH—The cemetery is
crowded with men and women
who died between ages 52 and 62.
A couple at 52 should go to a doc
tor, even before counting the
money, to find what they can do
to prolong their lives into their
60’s and longer, and what they
can do to keep from being invalids.
SEX—At 62 it is not what it is
at 52. The couple—or more likely
the male part of the couple—often
contends with a fading vigor in
the early SO’s and tends to asso
ciate retirement with rejuvena
tion. Retirement at 62, whatever
vigor might remain, should be for
other things.
STATUS—There is a bit of it at
52, much less of it at 62. Youth is
still associated with the early SO’s
and there are jobs in the church,
civic affairs, the company that
can be had. Especially in the com
pany, because in the mid-SO’s or
late SO’s many men hit their peaks
in careers. So a certain amount
of glamor attaches to the man
who still may go somewhere.
Therefore the couple of 52 who
plans retirement at 62 should
know they will not be as desirable
to others when retirement cornea
as they are now, and develop some
thing within themselves that will
give them the status they want
ENERGY—Much of it gets up
and goes between 52 and 62. The
couple at 52 should plan activities
—and learn to be content with
activities—that they see 62-year-
olds following. There are many
of them, and they are good. But
they aren’t the demanding doings
of the early SO’s.
For a copy of the new Golden Tear*
booklet by Thoma* Collins, send 3S
cents in coin (no stamps) to Dept.
NWNS, Box .1673, Grand CentrrJ Sta
tion, New York 17, N. Y.
AMERICANA ' ^ College Notebook
Franklin and Marshall College
Franklin and Marshall College, a privately endowed liberal arts
college in Lancaster, Pa., often called “the old colonial college for
men,” is the third oldest institution of higher learning in Pennsylvania
and the fourteenth oldest in the nation. Franklin College, founded in
1787 because of the interest which Benjamin Franklin and others had
in the education of the German-speaking settlers in the Lancaster
section of Pennsylvania, was merged with Marshall College, named
in honor of Chief Justice John Marshall and founded in Mercersburg,
Pennsylvania, in 1836, to form the present Franklin and Marshall
College in 1853.
The first president of the board
of trustees of the newly merged
college was James Buchanan, a
citizen of Lancaster who was to
become the fifteenth president of
the United States. The priceless
heritage of the interest and active
participation of a number of
America’s historical figures in
the development of Franklin and
Marshall College is recognized
by the College’s varsity athletic
teams being called “The Diplo
mats,” an indirect acknowledge
ment of the statesmen whose
diplomacy produced so much good
will toward the struggling young
Republic.
In the twentieth century the
College remains a college for men
only, limited to a student body not
to exceed 1600 by 1970. It offers
the Bachelor of Arts degree for
undergraduates and the Master of
Science degree in its Evening
Program for graduate students of
chemistry or physics. The college
maintains a 1:14 faculty-student
ratio, insuring the maximum op
portunity for the close relation
shio between student and teacher,
and insists that its teachers con
cern themselves with research
and publication, and participation
in the affairs of learned societies,
as well as with the dissemination
of knowledge within the classroom
and laboratory.
Each year more than half of
the graduating class enters the
graduate and professional schools
of the nation, and Franklin and
Marshall stands in the upper 2%
among over five hundred ac
credited colleges of the arts and
sciences as the baccalaureate
origin of students awarded the
doctorate in the sciences, and in
tiie upper 12% among over nine
hundred similar institutions as the
baccalaureate origin of students
awarded the doctorate in the arts,
humanities, or sociU sciences.
Franklin and Marshall con
tinues its historic relationship as
a church-related college. It re
tains a connection with the mod
ern Evangelical and Reformed
Church, now a part of the United
Church of Christ, and prides itself
on being a liberal Protestant in
stitution. _