The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, November 11, 1965, Image 4
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PAGE FOUR
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1965
Taculty women
host husbands
On Saturday evening, Novem-
l>er 13, the Newberry College Fac
ulty Women’s Club will be hostess
to the men of the faculty. The
meeting will be held at 8:00 p.m.
in the Conference Room at Wes-
sells Library. The entertainment
committee under the chairmanship
of Mrs. Dennis Sanderson, will
present a skit on the history of
the college. It will be a comical
and informative “This is Your
Life” show.
All members and their bus-
hands, and the single men of the
^faculty, are urged to be present.
Mm. Robert Brown is in charge
of the hostess committee.
which will be presented at the
chapel program November 19.
Congratulations to Miss Paris
and the bands for such an excel
lent halftime show at the last
football game. Also at halftime
the band presented Miss Paris
with two books of poetry, “Rain
bows” and “The Greatest of These
Is Love.”
Until next week remember: “Be
fore you give anybody a piece of
your mind, be sure you can make
out with what you have left.”
CAMPUS
COMMENTS
Well, the football season is
over and basketball season is well
on its way. The girls’ basketball
team has already begun practic
ing and the boys’ team will begin
practice Monday, November 15.
This week is National Education
“Week. The Future Teachers of
America Club has made posters
and displayed them in classrooms
and the halls. This club also writes i
a short poem for each teacher at
the high school and attaches it to
an apple. These poems are given
to the teachers during the week.
All students were urged to
watch a spee.al television program
on Tuesday night, November 9.
The program was entitled “Citi
zen’s Test.”
The Glee Club is working on a
special Thanksgiving program
CALVIN CROZIER
UDC MEETS WITH
MRS. S. D. PAYSINGER
The regular meeting of Calvin
Crozier chapter of the UDC was
held November 2 at the home of
Mrs. S. D. Paysinger. The asso
ciate hostesses were Mrs. W. H.
Tedford, Mrs. W. O. Miller, Mrs.
P. D. Johnson Sr., Mrs. L. G.
Eskridge and Mrs. Geneva Bicker-
staff. These served delicious re
freshments upon the arrival at
the meeting of the members.
The President, Mrs. James
Smith Sr. was in charge of the
meeting. After the opening ritual
Miss Dorothy Buzahrdt and Mrs.
J. L. Feagle conducted a beautiful
and impressive memorial service
for Mrs. Ethel Bowers Fellers, a
charter member of the chapter.
Miss Clara Bowers, a sister, was
present for the occasion.
Mrs. W. H. Tedford, the histor
ian, introduced Mrs.. 0. 0. Cope
land, who gave a paper on “Wo
men’s Role In The Confederacy.”
The speaker gave highlights of
some of the women whose role was
especially noteworthy. Some of
those whose contributions were
discussed were Varina Howell
Davis, Mrs. Juliet Apie Hopkins,
•Belle Boyd, Mrs. Rose O’Neal
Greenhow, Antonia Ford, Mary
Boykin Chestnut and Mary Green.
Throughout the ruin and devas
tation of the war, and its after-
math, the unfaltering faith of
Southern women remained stead
fast.
Mrs. A. T. Neely Sr., and Mrs.
J. F. Hawkins reported on the
69th annual State Convention
which was held in Columbia Oct.
13-14. They were the chapter del
egates.
Mrs. Smith in closing reminded
the members of the annual
Christmas Supper to be held on
December 7 at 7:30 at Wiseman
hotel.
Mrs. Ann Moore,
was 91 at death
Mrs. Ann King Moore, 91, wid
ow of Duncan Moore, died Sunday
at her home.
She was bom in Bethune, a
daughter of the late William Hen
ry King Moore and Cornelia King.
Surviving are a son, Butler A.
Moore of Newberry; a daughter,
Mrs. D. M. Lewis of Newberry;
two sisters, Mrs. W. R. Barnes of
Conway and Mrs. Henrietta Paris
of Graham, N. C.
SPEERS STREET PTA
MEETS TONIGHT
The Speers Street PTA will
meet for the second time this
school year on Thursday (today),
November 11 at 7:30 P.M. in the
school cafetorium. The Executive
Committee meeting will be at 7:00
P.M. in the schoolroom directly
across from the Library. Mr. Jim
Parr will present the program en
titled “Citizenship.” All members
are invited and urged to attend
this meeting.
J
A Cordial Invitation
is extended to visit our
Renovated Offices
1107 Boyce Street
Bowers & Floyd
LOUIS G FLOYD, Manager
INSURORS
REALTORS
paid for
With his Christmas
Club check from
m
mm
Open your Christmas
Oub account now
at SCN.
Deposit
Get at End of Year
Weekly
(50 weeks)
% .50
$ 25.00
1.00
50.00
2.00
100.00
3.00
150.00
5.00
250.00
10.00
500.00
Open one for shopping,
one for year-end bills!
SOUTH CAROLINA NATIONAL
Batik loti CuatuJtodit'
.SitUX
183*
THERE’S AN SCN OFFICE NEAR YOU
MEMBER FDIC
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Fashions at the window have done an about face—from
stark simplicity to the opulent elegance popular years ago.
But the room-muffling yards of damask draperies used then
have been replaced by drip-dry <{>-
synthetics and other .practical
materials that have a lovely,
deceptively fragile, appearance,
but never fear the washing
machine.
Drapery linings, too, are back
in the fold as part of the richer
look. With the extra body a
lining gives, draperies hang
better and provide more pri
vacy. Roc-Ionized, or self-lined,
draperies are the newest fash
ion at windows; they have all
the luxury of separate linings,
at budget prices. These self
liners are a combination of
chemicals bonded right to the
back of-the fashion fabric to
keep sun and dampness away
from the decorative face. And
because they’re insulated, the
new self-linings help control
the temperature on the room
side of even the biggest picture
window.
Not all windows are easy to
decorate in style. And the new
wide windows that need insula
tion can be particularly tricky.
Dramatic effects, however, can
camouflage odd-shapes. Treat
overly narrow windows by ex
tending curtains across the
wall. An awkwardly wide
window looks narrower when
flanked with a pair of shutters
inside the window frame. Then
curtain between the shutters.
Undersized windows . assume
importance with a frame of
decorative plywood.
If your room colors are un
related, a print curtain will
bring them together. And for
the custom look, add fancy
braid or fringe to ready-made,
self-lined draperies. It’s fash
ionable to dress up your
window areas, for nothing ex
presses the special feeling and
personality of a room like an
elegant way with windows.
Mrs. J. E. Camion
died at Lowman
Mrs. Ella Aull Cannon, 89, died
late Thursday afternoon at the
Lowman Home after a long ill
ness.
Mrs. Cannon, widow of James
Edward Cannon, was born in this
county, a daughter of the late
Adam and Lilly Kibler Aull. She
had spent most of her life in Col
umbia and was a member of the
Lutheran Church of the Ascen
sion.
Survivors include one son, Ed
ward O. Cannon of Newberry;
five daughters, Mrs. C. J. Rice,
Mrs. Mark J. Danaldson, Jr., Mrs.
Florence C. Hamm, Mrs. Margu
erite McLean, all of Columbia,
and Miss Mary Cannon of the
Lowman Home.
Also surviving are five sisters,
Mrs. Blanche Bundrick of Colum
bia, Mrs. J. A Huffman of New
berry, Mrs Frank Metz of Spar
tanburg, Mrs. Rufus Putnam, of
Greenville and Mrs. Carl Shealy
of Little Mountain; also, two bro
thers, Luther Koon Aull of Po-
maria and Roscoe Aull of Aiken,
Funeral services were conducted
Saturday in Dunbar Funeral Home
Chapel with Rev. Kenneth Webb
and Rev. Herman Cauble conduct
ing the services. Interment fol
lowed in Elmwood cemetery, Col
umbia.
WARN OF DANGER AS
HUNTERS GO AFIELD
Hunting season is here and a
large number of people will be in
our forests in the next few weeks.
With the coming of this season,
Mr. Legare M. Duke, District For
ester of the South Carolina State
Commission of Forestry, urges
everyone to be extremely careful
with fire while hunting.
Early frost and a lack of rain
over the past few weeks have
caused the danger of forest fires
to increase sharply. Only with the
cooperation of every one can wild
fires be held to a minimum, stated
Mr. Duke.
Persons planning to burn fields,
hedgerows and trash should be
extremely careful. If burning must
be done, burn late in the after
noon while there is no wind.
Anyone discovering a fire should
report it immediately to Silver-
street Fire Tower, telephone 276-
1730 or County Ranger James Lee
Mills, telephone 276-3823.
RITZ
Theatre
THURSDAY
Bunny Lake
Is Missing
Laurence Olivier, Carol Lynley,
Keir Dullea
FRIDAY — SATURDAY—
MONDAY — TUESDAY
James Caan, Laura Devon, Gail
Hire, Joan Crawford
Red Line 7000
This picture filmed at Darlington,
Charlotte, Atlanta and Daytona
Beach Speedways.
COMING SOON
MARY POPPINS!
Drive-In
Theatre
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
Young Fury
Rory Calhoun, Virginia Mayo
SUNDAY
:rs*
Paradise
Cliff Richards, Susan Hampshire,
The Shadows.
ALWAYS A COLOR CARTOON
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BRITISH
STERLING
Exclusive
Toiletries For Men
A smashing after shave and a
cologne that lasts from dusk to
dawn... British Sterling. From
$3.50 to $10.00. i
W. E TURNER
Jeweler
Scouts Promoted
Bart Cotchcroft, Troop 101,
First Class.
William Renwick, Troop 66,
First Class.
Earl Thomasson, Troop 101,
First Class.
Randy Cotchcroft, Troop 101,
Star.
MERIT BADGES
Ralph Bryan, Troop 66, Home
Repairs.
Foster Busby, Troop 66, Cook
ing.
Billy Joe Duffie, Troop 101,
Home Repairs, Fishing.
Mike Duffie, Troop 101, Citiz
enship in Nation.
B. A. (Sandy) Fretwell, Troop
66, Animal Industry.
John Nelson Fraser, Troop 66,
Forestry.
Vernon Koon, Troop 101, Wild
life; Forestry.
Butch Mills, Troop 66, Safety.
Bobby Phillips, Troop 101, Wild
life; Nature.
William Renwick, Troop 66,
Animal Industry.
Mrs. Bessie Mills
dies in 81st year
Mrs. Bessie Lathrop Mills, 81,
died Friday afternoon at Mills
Clinic in Prosperity. She had been
in declining health for a number
of years.
Mrs. Mills was born and reared
in this county and was the daugh
ter of the late George and Rhoda
Merchant Lathrop. She was a
member of Ebenezer Methodist
church.
Mrs. Mills is survived by four
step sons; Pink Mills and Doc
Mills, both of Prosperity, Pat
Mills, Newberry and Cyril Mills,
Columbia;; one step-daughter,
Mrs. Grace Boozer, Prosperity.
Funeral services were held on
Sunday from Ebenezer church
with Rev. Dewey Brazil and Rev.
Harry Grout, conducting the ser
vice. Burial was in the church
cemetery.
Active pallbearers were J. D.
Schumpert, Edward Mills, George
Mills, Ray Lathrop, Jack Lathrop,
and Daniel Lathrop.
Trains with
Leathernecks
USS KITTYHAWK — Chief
Storekeeper Lloyd A. Forsyth,
USN, son of Bryan Forsyth, of
Route 1, Prosperity is serving a-
board the attack aircraft carrier
USS Kitty Hawk, which sailed for
Hawaii October 19.
The carrier will undergo her
Operational Readiness Inspection
in Hawaiian waters, after spend
ing most of the summer training
for her deployment to the West
ern Pacific sometime in Novem
ber. Kitty Hawk is the United
States’ first guided missile air
craft carrier, and was commiss
ioned in 1961. The carrier carries
a crew of more than 5,000 men.
I, he later achieved considerable
success as an investor in real es
tate despite his handicaps. His
gift to the Government, he said,
in his will, was his thanks for the
help he had received.
DISABLED VETERAN
MAKES WILL TO VA
A disabled World War I veteran
who for years received disability
compensation payments from the
Veterans Administration has will
ed a fortune to that agency to
show his gratitude to the United
States, the VA revealed today.
Charles R. Ennis of San Diego,
California, who recently died at
the age of 68 bequeathed $122,000
to the Veterans Administration.
The money will go to the VA’s
general fund to be used for normal
VA operations and activities, said
Stanley Zuk, Manager of the Col
umbia VA Regional office.
Severely disabled in World war
NO TRESPASSING— HUNTING,
fishing, woodcutting, dumping, or
trespassing in any manner on the
property of the undersigned, lo
cated on the Belfast road, is
strictly forbidden. Violators will
be prosecuted to the full extent of
the law. STANLEY C. BAKER,
JR.— R. C. FLOYD. Nov.4-ll-18c
IF carpets look dull and drear, re
move the spots as they appear
with Blue Lustre. Rent electric
shampooer $1. Whitaker Floor
Coverings.
RUPTURE-EASER
TJteJjB, U-S. ft*. OH. (A flptr tract ftctfccQ
Right or Uft
SMo
$495
1103 Caldwell St. - Newberry, S-C.^
Double $6.95
No Fitting Bequlrtd
A strong form-fitting washable support for
. reducible inguinal hernia. Back lacing ad
justable. Snaps in. front Adjustable leg
strap. Soft, flat groin pad. For men,
women and children. Mail ordersi give
measure around lowest part of abdomen.
Specify right, left or double.
NEWBERRY DRUG CO.
944 Main St.
Newberry, S. C. 29108
Build Your
Future On
Savings
So many of life’s better
things depend on saving. A
new home, for example.
Saving will help you but it,
and furnish it to your taste.
Begin building your future
now by saving regularly
with us for your new home,
or whatever major goal you
have in mind.
STATE
Building and
Loan Association
1117 Boyce Street
Newberry, S. C.
Dial 276-5660
DIRECTORS:
Ralph B. Baker
J. Dave Caldwell
Pinckney N. Abrams
Louis C. Floyd
Thomas H. Pope
R. Aubrey Harley
Kibler in Medics
2D INFANTRY DIV, * Keren,
Nov. 1—Staff Sergeant Delbert E.
Kibler, son of Mr and Mrs. John
nie C. Kibler of Harrington street
Newberry, is presently assigned
to Company C, 2nd Medical Bat
talion, 2nd Infantry Division, Ko
rea, as an ambulance platoon
Leader of Company C.
Sergeant Kibler arrived in Ko
rea in June of this year from his
assignment at Fort Hood, Texas.
He had entered the army March
of 1953. Sergeant Kibler attended!
Newberry High school. His wife,
Lavone, resides with his parents
on Harrington street.
NOTICE OF JURY DRAWING
We, the undersigned Jury Com
missioners of Newberry County,
shall, on Wednesday, November
24th, 1965, at 9 o’clock A. M. in
the office of the Clerk of Court,
openly and publicly, draw the
names of forty (40) men to serve
as Jurors for the Cpurt of Com
mon Pleas (Civil), which will con
vene in the Newberry County
Courthouse on Monday, Decem
ber 6, 1965 at ten o’clock, A.M.
Burke M. Wise, Clerk of Court-
Ralph B. Black, Auditor.
J. Ray Dawkins, Treasurer.
MEETING OF
BOARD OF ADJUSTORS
Date: November 11, 1965
Time: 7:30 P. M.
Appeals in the case of the below listed
property:
Leland Lively, 337 Player St.
City Hall, Council Room
Interested Citizens Invited
R. H. SHEALY,
Building Official
c
Reduce Your Monthly Payments
WITH A 1st or 2nd MORTGAGE DEBT CONSOLI
DATION LOAN ON HOME OR BUSINESS
EQUITY. F.H.A. & VA RESIDENTIAL LOANS
AVAILABLE. COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL
$100,000.00 Up. We specialize In hard to place
loans.
Write R. R. BAXTER
P. O. Box 1351,
Greenville, S. C.
fife
NOW—you need the help
of a good insurance agent
If he Is independent he will be at your side im
mediately with professional skill and suggestions.
He will make certain you are paid promptly and
fairly.
Don't wait until you have, a loss* before you check
on your protection. See us now so you can benefit
from our help when you need it the most.
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'YOUR PRIVATE BANKERS'
1418 Main Street Phone 276-1422