The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, December 02, 1965, Image 4
PAGE FOUR
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1965
PATIENTS IN
THE HOSPITAL
Miss Nellie Boozer, Prosperity.
Mrs. Elvina Bouknight, New-
*berry.
Mrs. Magdalene Bowers, Pros
perity. ,
Mrs. Bessie Buzhardt, Newberry.
Miss Mary Frances Bowers,
Prosperity.
Miss Annie Bynum, Newberry.
Miss Carolyn DeHart, Newber
ry.
Mrs. Barbara Dominick, New-
3>erry.
James Dominick, Prosperity
Mrs. Pearl Dominick, Newberry.
Wilbur Epps, Newberry.
Miss ’Betty Jo Farrow, New
berry.
Miss Willie Lee Gary, New
berry.
Mrs. Eline Geiger, Newberry.
Mrs. Hazel Gilfillan, Newberry.
Mrs. Susie G'enn, Newberry.
Mrs. Alice Guise, Newberry.
Mrs. Genell Hazel, Newberry.
James Hyler, Newberry.
Miss Monica Lynn Jolly, Joanna.
Robert Johnson, Newberry.
George Johnson, Newberry.
Mrs. Ada Kinard, Newberry.
Mrs. Betty Koehl, Newberry.
Albert Koon, Chapin.
Jesse E. Longshore, Newberry.
Mrs. Alivia Moye, Newberry.
Mrs. Helen Morris, Newberry.
Mrs. Beulah Morse, Pomaria.
Mrs. Rachel Preston, Newberry.
Mrs. Ola Riley, Saluda.
Holland Ruff, Newberry.
PRECIOUS GIFT FOR CHRISTMAS
REN
Mother will love the smooth expressive
writing that flows from the precious
metal point But it’s more than a pen —
it’s a personal accessory with feminine
styling and fashion-coordinated colors.
Refills quickly, cleanly with < Skrip’®
cartridges. Choice of styles, colors and
points, the personal gift—Lady
Sheaffer Pen. Handtomaly gift casad
Pans from
Turner & Taylor
Next to County Bank Howard Turner—Gerald Taylor
LOAN AGENT WANTED
FO MAKE 2nd MORTGAGE DEBT CONSOLIDA
TION EQUITY HOME LOANS. FULL OR PART
TIME. GOOD FOR $10,000.00 COMMISSION PER
YEAR. Write
w *1 «i .
CAMCO,
P. O. Box 1351,
Greenville, S. C.
When You Choose An Insurance Agent
Make certain he handles all lines, not fust a
few of the popular risks.
Be sure he is fiercely independent, and rep
resents many companies, not just one.
Be sure he has a background for fair deal
ing and prompt settlements, is available on
a 24 hour basis. Add everything up and
yot/II find it spells, "local, independent in
surance agent". That's usl
"YOUR PRIVATE BANKERS"
1418 Main Street Phone 276-1422
Mrs. Mellette
League Speaker
Mrs. Russell R. Mellette, third
vice president of the Garden Club
of South Carolina, of Aiken, was
the featured speaker at the reg
ular meeting of the Newberry
Civic League held at the Com
munity Hall Tuesday afternoon of
last week. Her subject was “Gar
den Design Around The World”
and she used slides to illustrate
her talk.
Prof. F. Scott Elliott Sr., pres
ident, presided.
Mrs. Richard L. Baker, program
chairman, enumerated some of
Mrs. Mellette’s accomplishments
at the local, state and national
levels, especially in the area of
garden club work, as she intro
duced the speaker to her audience.
Her husband was also introduced
as the past president of the Ca
mellia Society of South Carolina.
The speaker began her talk
with the grounds of Hampton
Court, which is located about 30
miles from London and overlooks
the river Avon. Here one finds
boxwood trimmed to the shape
of a peacock, which is tradition
ally a sacred bird. She showed
beautiful scenes of the Eliza
bethan Gardens, built by Cardinal
Looking A. head
C
V ... by Ur. G«org« S. Benson
PRESIDENT—NATIONAL
EDUCATION PROGRAM
Seerey, AtIumm
IGNORE THOSE CAMPUS
CAPERS?
Readers with long memories
cancite a whole list of crazy go
ings-on, from goldfish swallow
ings to dormitory raids to recent
lie-downs for teach-ins. And now
the draft-card performances, with
pyromania. It's easy to class these
things as campus foolishness.
Readers with memories and a
concern for history, however, can
make some rather sobering inter
pretations. Such readers are those
who remember the discovery of
active Communist cells in our
colleges and universities in the
late 1930’s and 1940’s. Socialist
clubs were fashionable, and some
scholars of reptite turned out to
be either card-carrying or fellow-
traveling devotees of Marxism.
The pacificists were there too,
with their petitions and pledges.
How inconsistent Marxism is with
pacificism some did not bother to
think, then as now.
They’re At It Again
Wolsey for Henry VIII. She also Some readers will reflect that
showed pictures of the beautiful the Fab,an 80claI,st -"ovement «>
Chelsea rock - gardens with many
plants and small pieces of sculp
ture.
Moving on the Ireland, she
displayed a scene of the peren
nial border o fthe Botannical
Gardens at Dublin, which is wide
and colorful. There one finds the
Victorian lily, which is six feet
across and resembles a platter
England in the last century found
its most profitably strength in
the academies and graduate
schools. A few intellectuals they
had, some of them writers and
professors. But only a few of
these went a long way toward
swinging the intellectual commun
ity into receptivity. Then, after
the Russian revolution, their at
tention was drawn to Marxist ac-
She also showed the Blarney Cas- „ . . . ...
tie, where one kisses the Blarney a "<} eve " America was inf.l-
stone.
Crossing the North sea to Swe
den, Mrs. Mellette next discussed
and illustrated Swedish gardens
made beautiful by a variety of
flowers, and frounds beautified
around the barns. There was a
scene of the ’Blue Hall in Stock
holm, where the Nobel prizes are
awarded each year. Then she
moved on to Switzerland with a
view of the mountains and the
waterfalls at Lucerne.
There was a picture of the
Rhine river at Mozelle with the
vineyards and castles, the Lorelei
Rock and the Heidelberg Castle.
Then she proceeded to France
and showed beautiful scenes from
the Gardens of Paris, where trees
and sculpture are accented. Per
haps the most famous gardens in
the world are those at the palace
of Versailles, where one finds av
enues of trees and formal gardens.
Mrs. Mellette then took her
audience to Spain and showed
gardens in Seville which are made
in patios because of the lack of
rain. She showed the Rock of Gil-
braltar and the lighthouse at
Tangiers. She depicted how the
waterfall, the bridges and the
moat are used in the formal gar
dens of Japan—most of them
symbolic, like the Meditation gar
den, the lanterns, rocks and de
signed paths are restful.
At the end of her presentation,
Mrs. F. Scott Elliott presented an
appropriate gift from the Civic
League.
As those attending the meeting
arrived, just before the program
began, Mrs. W. Roy Anderson,
hospitality chairman, and Mrs. L.
Hart Jordan, served cheese bis
cuits, cookies and coffee.
After the meeting had adjourn
ed, a period of fellowship was
held.
Marriages...
Stephen Eugene King and Joan
Claire Epting of Newberry, were
married on October 31 at Silver-
street by Rev. Robert Fraser.
Terrace Wayne Brummett of
Kingsport, Tenn. and Donna Ruth
Jeremias of Newberry, were mar
ried by Rev. Neil E. Truesdell at
Newberry on November 24.
Luther Morris Robertson, of
Newberry and Dorothy Louise Ri-
kard of Whitmire, were married
on November 3 by Rev. Vernon
N. West.
Thomas Ira Long of Pomaria
and Anita Louise DeFreest of
Kinards, were married November
2 lat Clinton by Rev. James D.
Medeley.
Lance Reid, Newberry.
Mrs. Amelia Shannon, New
berry.
Mrs. Ellen Shaw, Newberry.
Harry Shealy, Newberry.
James Sims, Newberry.
Mrs. Eva Swittenberg, Chapin.
Mrs. Carrie Whitener, Newberry
Miss Anna Wicker, Prosperity.
Mrs. Loretta Wicker, Newberry.
John Williams, Pomaria.
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measure around lowest part of abdomen.
Specify right left or double.
NEWBERRY DRUG CO.
944 Main St.
Newberry, S. C. 2S108
trated through articulate writers,
professors, lecturers, and period
icals. The campuses were being
prepared, right here in America,
for the stronger meat of socialist
and communist action.
What of today? Well, Herbert
Aptheker, No. 1 Red thought
leader in the U. S., in September
told as rabid a crew of deluded
socialist professors and fellow-
travelers as have ever assembled
at Columbia University that
“Watts (the Los Angeles riot)
was glorious!” He was wildly ap
plauded. From dozens of ivied
private colleges and tax-supported
institutions, these socialist sch
olars came to exchange views a-
bout socialist advances, to attack
U. S. institutions, to deride Am
erican decadence, and to urge
more public ownership and econo
mic planning.
Taking The Line Home
A Yale professor, no novice in
his work with and for subversive
groups, demanded that the soc
ialist scholar should now he ready
to devote himself “to the juglar”
and man the barricades to bring
on the revolutionary victory in
America. Perhaps it was no sur
prise that Aptheker should tell
these “intellectuals” in a final
session that five steps were re
quired to move America toward
“radicalization.” These, he said,
were the battle against war in its
“peace” activities; the utmost uni
fication of the Left; the Negro
movement, in which the Reds had
already played a decisive role;
more Marxist radicals in the
South under the Red leadership;
and violence from revolutionists
in their resistance to opposition.
These left wingers have now
returned to their respective cam
puses. There, we presume, they
will set about “implementing” the
line they heard at Columbia. They
will doubtless become greatly ex
ercised about academic freedom
on their campuses. This is pure
sham, for they are concerned only
in getting their side across and
will in fact silence their opposi
tion at every opportunity. Under
freedom in their classrooms and
out, we presume, they will go
about the job of radicalizing as
many students as possible.
The Dedicated Ones
Finally, readers seeking full
comprehension of this Fall’s cam
pus capers will recall the directive
sent down from Communist party
headquarters in Moscow a few
years ago, in which young people
were named as the big target. The
Communists have found, as Dr.
Stefan T. Possony, a leading
scholar of their techniques, re
cently told U. S. News and World
Report, that this is one of the best
ways to make trouble for the U.
S. while at the same time recruit
ing the very small percentage that
they wish to train as revolution
aries for the Communist America
they confidently expect tomorrow.
This can prove, he said, to he
America’s “time bomb.”
The bulk of this nation’s, fine
students and facilities are loyal,
they are not draft card burners or
Marxist firebrands out to destroy
American institutions. But it is
the few dedicated ones; the acti
vists who are appearing on the
scene (some as second generation
Reds), who already contribute, as
Dr. Possony observes, to the
build-up of Communist revolution
ary potential in America.
ONE of the finer things of life—
Blue Lustre carpet and upholstery
cleaner. Rent electric shampooer
$1. Whitaker Floor Coverings.*
Celebrate 63rd
Anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Williams of
Newberry observed their 63rd
wedding anniversary Tuesday,
November 23, at their home, 2123
Harper street.
The couple were married Nov
ember 23, 1902.
They are life-long residents of
Newberry county. Mr. Williams
is 84 and Mrs. Williams ; is 80.
Mr. Williams was reared in the
Bush River community, the son
of the late Seth and Fannie Johns
ton Williams. Mrs. Williams, the
former Mattie Elizabeth (Lizzie)
Hendrix is the daughter of the
late James Henry and Emma
Swindler Hendrix.
The Williams are the parents of
three sons and a daughter: David
Williams of North Augusta, Har-
ace Williams of Brunswick, Ga.,
and Cecil G. Williams of Newber
ry, and Mrs. C. Walter Lovette of
Lovette, Ga. They also have six
grandchildren and seven great
grandchildren.
SCOUT PROMOTIONS
Troop 66 Merit Badges: Peter
Bryan, animal industry; Foster
Brown, home repairs; Ralph
Busby, cooking; William Renwick,
Citizenship in the home; Kenneth
Pruitt, cooking; Carl and Charles
Setzler, animal industry.
Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Hawkins Jr.
have moved to 1201 First street.
Mr. and Mrs. William P. Miller
have moved to' 1202 Speers St.
TRACT 10
NOTICE OF CONDEMNATION
The State of South Carolina,
County of Newberry.
ROUTE NO.: ROAD S-475
TO: Mrs. Marie B. Fant, Address
Unknown,
and John and Mary Roe repre
senting all unknown heirs at law
or devicees and all other persons
claiming by, through or under
Mrs. Marie B. Fant if she be dead
and all other persons claiming in
terest in the within named prop-
fjrty#
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE.
That the South Carolina High
way Department requires a right-
of-way for a public highway
through and across lands in which
the above named person, firm or
corporation claims title or some
interest. Said lands being located
in the County and State aforesaid
as shown by plans of the State
Highway Department for the
construction of a section of Road
S-475 between S. C. Route 71 and
Survey Station 12x17.4 known as
File No. 36.381—Project C-381.
All that strip of land within
20 feet of the centerline of the
survey on the left, between
approximate survey stations
6x51 and 8x90 and being bound
ed on the north by lands of
Elmore F. Suber, on the east
by 'other lands of Mrs. Marie
•B. Fant, on the south by
lands of Charles Cromer and
on the west by road S-475.
The above described property
will be condemned and a right-of-
way established by the State High
way Department, and
YOU WILL TAKE FURTHER
NOTICE, That a public hearing
will he held at 1:00 P.M. on the
9th day of December, 1965 at the
Court House in the Probate Judge
Hearing room, Newberry, to as
certain the amount of damages
in excess of benefits as a result of
using said lands for the proposed
highway improvement.
SOUTH CAROLINA STATE
HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT
By J. L. Walker, Right-of-Way
Engineer
By S. M. S.
Columbia, S. C.
Date: November 18th, 1965.
Nov. 24; Dec.2
RITZ
Theatre
THURSDAY — FRIDAY —
SATURDAY — MONDAY
TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY
HARUM
SCARUM
Elvis Presley, Mary Ann Mobley,
Fran Jeffries
Drive-In
Theatre
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
McHale’s Navy
Joins The Air
Force
Joe Flynn, Tim Conway
SUNDAY
Mister Moses
Robert Mitchum, Carroll Baker
ALWAYS A COLOR CARTOON
R. J. Nelson Dies
In Wisconsin
Robert J. Nelson, 87, a resident
of Clinton, Wisconsin, died Sat
urday in Beloit, Wise., after a
short illness.
Mr. Nelson was born and rear
ed in Denmark but had made his
home in this county for over 65
years.
He is survived by three sons;
Louis Nelson, Newberry; Harry
Nelson and Carl Nelson, both of
Delavan, Wise.; one daughter, Ag
nes Nelson of Clinton, Wise.; one
brother, Fulmer Nelson of Dela
van; three grandchildren, Miss
Cora Marie Nelson, June Louise
Nelson and Mary Ann Nelson, all
of Newberry.
Funeral services were held in
Clinton, Wise.
NO TRESPASSING — Absolutely
no hunting, fishing or otherwise
trespassing on property of the
undersigned. Trespassers will be
prosecuted. Lucy Senn, James
McCord, George P. Boozer.
32-4tp.
|
FOR SALE TO HIGHEST BID
DER— (3) 1964 Pontiac Catalina
4 door sedans (Model Number
2369). Power steering, Power
Brakes, White, very clean. Must
be seen and driven to appreciate.
Contact Alvin Jackson, City Ga
rage, Power House Road, New
berry, S. C.
Sealed bids will be received
until 10:00 A.M., December 13,
1965 and will be publicly opened
at that time in City Council
Chamber.
Dealers welcome. Bid form
will be furnished.
CITY OF NEWBERRY
Dec. 1&8.
COUNTY AGENT SAYS . . .
Having a good pecan harvest?
Fine, but don’t forget to feed
those pecan trees for a good crop
again next year.
Pecan trees easily get into the
habit of bearing every other year.
This is due primarily to the av
ailable food supply in the soil
being depleted during good crop
years, leaving too little food sup
ply for the next year’s crop.
Anytime from now on until the
spring is a good time to apply
fertilizer to pecan trees. Two im
portant points are to use adequate
fertilizer and apply it over the
entire root zone.
HOLIDAY LIGHTING
You can give Christmas an
addod “glow” by lighting
up your holiday decora
tions. For axamplo, try
placing sovoral dichrolc
floodlights at tho base
of your troo.lf you’vo
trimmed it with gold and
sllvor balls, watch thorn
glittor and so# tho marvol-.
ous varicolored shadows!
thoy cost.
Highlight a rustic Na
tivity scon# on your
mantla with a tubular
showcase bulb. Lo
cate it behind the val-
Idnce and it will be
out of sight from most
angles.
Finally, for an unusual out
door affect, cut out a couple
of carolers or a smiling.
Santa Claus—paint thorn in
gay colors—and stand thorn
up on your front lawn. Con
ceal a pair of Sylvania Par
lamps in tho shrubbery and
shine tho beams of light di
rectly on the cutouts.
i
f
4 *
''dr"
vy w
ONE MONTH FROM NOW, we will pay hundreds of thousands
of dollars to our investors. You can still invest by the 10th of
December and earn a Dividend on December 31st. This applies
also to those who add to their present savings accounts.
YOUR SAVINGS ARE INSURED up to $10,000.00 by the Federal
Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, Washington, D. C. and
earn Dividends at the rate of 4% per annum, compounded
semi-annually. ^
OPEN AN ACCOUNT TODAY—as little as $5.00 will do it, and
you may add any amount at any time.
\
BRANCH OFFICE—BATESBUR6, S. C.
1
^ .’ j;
AVTjros and Loan Asso ciation
A V I N O S | N
-* * I T U T I O M 1-0
U N U L O I 3 5
' a
DIRECTORS
JOHN F. CLARKSON
M. O. SUMMER
W. C. HUFFMAN
J. K WILLINGHAM
E. B. PURCELL
G. K. DOMINICK