The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, January 24, 1963, Image 3

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1962 THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA Page Three CAROLINA METAL WORKS Sheet Metal - Heating - Air Conditioning COLLEGE ST. EXTN. ' TEL. 276-3216 A. G. McCAUGHRIN, President & Treasurer. TRAILER - MOBILE HOME REGISTRATIONS DUE JANUARY, 1963 These may be acquired at the office of WALTON HALF ACRE, Tax Collector, Court House Newberry, S. C. for $2.00 each. Violators will be prosecuted after Febru ary 1,1963. t/S, ■/:*»*- CALL nmm Bruce-Terminixf "World's largest termite control organization $5000 GUARANTEE Against Mere Termite Damage Rearaseoted BafioaaQv bv otv 1800 NpNf Newberry Lumber Co., Inc. Authorized Representative For FKRMINIX SERVICE 913 CLINE ST. TELEPHONE 56 AUDITOR’S 1963 TAX ASSESS MENT NOTICE I, or an authorized agent, will be at the following places on the dates given below for the purpose of taking tax returns on all per sonal property, boats, motors and trailers, real property, new build ings and real estate transfers. I Persons owning property in more 1 than one district must make re turns for each district. All able-bodied male citizens be tween the ages of twenty-one and sixty are liable to $1 poll tax. CHAPPELLS Monday, January 7, 1963, from 10 until 12. SILVERSTREET Monday, January 7, 1963, from 2 until 4:00. WHITMIRE CITY HALL Tuesday, January 8, 1963, from 10 until 3:00. JAMES HOMER CROOKS STORE Wednesday, January 9, 1963, from 10 until 12:00. ARAGON-BALDWIN MILL Thursday and Friday, January 10 and 11, 1963. POMARIA Monday, January 14th, 1963, from 10 until 3:00. BANNIE CATHCART’S STORE Tuesday, January 15, 1963 from 10 until 12:00 A.E. & R.E. REESE STORE Tuesday, January 15, 1963, from 2 until 4:00. G.M. & R.E. NEEL’S STORE Wednesday, January 16, 1963, from 10:30 until 12:00. PEAK Thursday, January 17, 1963, from 10 until 2:00. LITTLE MOUNTAIN Friday, January 18, 1963, from 10 until 3:00. ST. LUKE’S Moore’s Store, Monday, Janu ary 21, 1963 from 10 until 12:00. O’NEAL Sinclair’s Store, Monday, Janu ary 21, from 2 until 4:00. MACEDONIA Stockman’s Store, Tuesday, Jan uary 22, 1963, from 10 until 12:00. DEHART’S STORE Tuesday, January 22, 1963, from 2 until 4:00. KINARDS Oxner’s Store, Wednesday, Jan uary 23, 1963, from 10 until 12:00. CAUSES’ GROCERY Thursday, January 24, 1963, from 10 until 12:00. PROSPERITY Black’s Store, Friday, January 25, 1963. RELY ON US TO DELIVER At the Auditor’s office to Mar. 1st., after which a penalty of 10 per cent will be added. RALPH B. BLACK, Auditor Newberry Co. Mrs. J. E. Wiseman, Sr. return ed to her home at the Wiseman hotel after spending two weeks at Fletcher Sanitorium, N. C. "BUILD THEE MORE STATELY MANSIONS, 7/ O MY SOUL, AS THE SWIFT SEASONS ROLL!" — Oliver Wendell Holmes Most often it is only on spe cial occasions that we note the fact that time seems to slip away from us almost unnoticed. Sud denly we realize that it wasn't yesterday, but a year ago, or longer, that we did this or did that. We realize— and re member for a short time ——that "the swift seasons roll "on and on. Our life upon earth is short. The span of time from birth to death is infinitely small in the scheme of things. We should re member this always and find time every day of our busy lives, to do something for the good of the soul. This Sunday, attend the church of your choice. Seek out God’s purpose for your life and time can bring you only greater strength and happiness. Died Sunday In Prosperity Mrs. Tula Hunt Vines, 79, died early Sunday at the home of her sister-in-law, Mrs. J. D. Hunt, of Prosperity, whei-e she had lived for the past several months. She had ben ill for some time. Mrs. Vines wah born and reared in Prosperity, a daughter of the late Henry and Ellen Kunkle Hunt. Most of her life was spent in Newberry and she was a member of the West End Baptist chui’ch and a retired employee of New berry Mills. Her husband was the late George Vines. Funeral services were conduct ed Monday at the McSwain Funer al home by Rev. Ralph E. Rhyne. Burial was in Rosemont cemetery. Pallbearers were Rex Lee, Jack Carter, Red Minor, Harold Leop ard, Colie Hogge, Eugene Taylor and Larry Spotts. Mrs. Wheeler Of Saluda Dies Mrs. Sally T. Wheeler, 88, of Saluda died at Self Memorial hos pital in Greenwood Sunday of last week. She was a daughter of the i late George and Annie Kempson Turner, and widow of W. C. Whee ler. Among her survivors is a daugh ter, Mrs. John Teague of Chap pells, and two other daughters, Miss Louise Wheeler of the home, Mrs. A. P. King of Ninety Six. Funeral services were conducted Tuesday from the Trinity Lutheran church, with interment in the church cemetery. Bernard Ezra Shealy of Hamlet, N. C., formerly of Little Mountain, died last Wednesday in Richmond, County hospital, Rockingham, N. C. Funeral services were held last Friday from the Lutheran church in Hamlet with burial in Richmond County Memorial park. Mr. Shealy had been with the Seaboard Railway in Hamlet for 35 years, and was an assistant signal supervisor. He had been in Hamlet since 1925. He attended the University of Sheffield in England, and was a graduate of Newbery college. Bernard Shealy Dies In Hamlet Smokey Says: Notice AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS ON JANUARY 31, 1863 A 2 per ct. Penalty WILL BE ADDED TO ALL UNPAID 1962 STATE AND COUNTY TAXES. J. Ray Dawkins, Treasurer It PAYS To Trade In Newberry Selections are GOOD... Prices are REASONABLE... Auditor’s 1963 Tax Assessment Notice Returns of personal property, boats, motors and trail* ers, real property, new buildings and real estate transfers, and poll tax are to be made at the County Auditor's Of fice beginning: JANUARY 2nd., 1963 through 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 see —At Sinclair we care... about you... about your farm. FARMERS ICE & FUEL CO. —DISTRIBUTOR— i ^ d of Dimes M@k@s Smns in Birth _ cople say everyone talks about the weather but no c.ie does anything about it. Until just recently, a similar observation could have been made about birth defects. Not only had no one done anything much about the problem but, in truth, people have always been re-<? "Wait! We Still Have a Fight on Our Hand 71 R. N. Palmer in the Springfield (Mo.) Leader & Press. luctant or afraid even to talk about the subject. The tragedy of this affliction has beset mankind since the dawn of recorded history. Yet no organized attack on birth defects was launched until 1958 when The National Foun dation-March of Dimes entered this medical area. The reason for this historic decision was that birth defects constitute the world’s greatest unmet childhood medical prob lem today. Meeting the p: ob- lem, moreover, entailed and raising on the same m .nmil- lion scale as was re^ ^red by the long, costly but successful fight of the same health organi zation against polio. Marks 25th Year The March of Dimes, now marking its 25th anniversary, last year appropriated more lhan $4,000,000 for research in birth defects, arthritis — an other baffling disease which is the nation’s No. 1 crippler— and on certain aspects of polio and other virus diseases. On birth defects research alone, the March of Dimes approved grants totalling $1,200,000, with about another $800,000 ear marked for regional treatment centers. Directly financed by March of Dimes chapters, these “grass roots” centers today number 31 and are located across the nation. The need of funds for these March of Dimes-financed treat ment centers, particularly in the area of birth defects, is urgent. In the 50 states, the full extent of the problem was not appreciated until March of Dimes medical advisers re ported that about 250,000 in fants were born yearly in this country with significant birth defects—almost 700 a day, or one every other minute. Birth defects cause at least 21,000 deaths each year. The chief requirements in the battle to save these lives in the future, and to lessen the damages that birth defects as well as arthritis inflict, are trained manpower, equipment and time—and, of course, the substantial funds that these de mand. Research into the physical calamities that birth defects represent costs stupendous sums. The cause of a type of disaster that has bewildered mankind for uncounted cen turies is unlikely to be ex plained overnight at bargain- sale prices, or its prevention quickly found. In the areas of birth defects, arthritis and virus diseases, scientists supported by the March of Dimes were respon sible for important research advances during 1962. For ex ample, in birth defects: • Certain white blood cells in the mother were found to enter the infant’s blood stream be fore birth. The possibility ex ists that such ceils may harm the baby later in life. This was reported by Drs. William P. Creger and Rejendra C. Desai of Stanford University. Nucleic Acid and Protein • Belief that the hereditary material called nucleic acid carries the blueprint for the production of protein was con siderably strengthened. (Pro tein is the basic stuff of living material.) This was reported by Dr. Norton Zinder of the Rockefeller Institute. • Experiments with pregnant guinea pigs established that certain hormones (such as hydrocortisone) can provoke birth defects in offspring. This was demonstrated by Dr. Rich ard M. Hoar of the University of Cincinnati. • Further evidence on hor mones, obtained by dipping unhatched eggs in a hormone solution, led Dr. Gregory Pin- cus of the Worchester Foun dation for Experimental Biol ogy to conclude that the problem of what causes some infants to be born with mixed- up sex characteristics may be a matter of hormones rather than heredity alone. In arthritis: • Key evidence was uncov ered by Dr. Robert A. Good at the University of Minnesota that the mysterious thymus gland, situated behind the breastbone, is responsible for the functioning of the body’s immunity defense mechanism. Abnormal working of the im munity mechanism is believed involved in rheumatoid ar thritis. • The discovery that there is a similar ground plan of chem icals in the connective tissue of many animals ranging from the horseshoe crab to man was reported during the year by Dr. Albert Dorfman and his as sociates at the University of Chicago. This means that re search in the connective tissue of animals can be related closely to connective tissue diseases in man, such as arthritis. In vL . diseases: • Studies of a tumor-causing virus disclosed how it changes normal cells, in tissue culture, to cancer cells. This significant finding was reported by Dr. Renato Dulbecco of California Institute of Technology. The ultimate significance of these and numerous other March of Dimes-financed re search studies may not be fully apparent now. But these find ings are valuable clues to fu ture progress. If no one does anything about the weather, at least something important is being done today about dis eases that cripple children. FEBRUARY 28th., 1963 All able-bodied male citizens between the ages of twen ty-one and sixxty are liable to $1.00 poll tax. ure to make return calls for penalty as prescribed by law. All returns are to be made by Tax Districts. Your falf- RALPH B. BLACK, Auditor Newberry County Don't overlook the agency which over looks no opportunity to furnish its customers with the latest information on new policies and new rates when ever it adds up to better coverage at a lower cost. We Handle ALL Types of Insurance 1418 Main Street Phone 276-1422 PHONE 276-3020 NEWBERRY, S. C