The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, March 10, 1966, Image 4
PAGE FOUR
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 1966
Convention set
for Legion and
auxiliary
The South Carolina Depart
ment of The American Legion
together with the American
Legion Auxiliary will hold a
joint Spring Rally in Columbia,
March 14-15, Department Com
mander A. B. Fennell and De
partment President Mrs. James
K. Ewart have announced.
The highlite of the entire
Rally is scheduled for 12:30 p.
m. on Tuesday when National
Commander L. Eldon Jones of
Virginia will address a joint
session of the South Carolina
Senate and House of Represen
tatives in the House Chamber.
This will be attended by dele
gates to the rally from both
organizations.
The American Legion Auxil
iary will open its activities
with an Executive Board meet
ing at 3:30 on Monday. The
American Legion Department
Executive Committee will meet
at 8:00 pm. on Monday in the
Moultrie room of the Hotel
Wade Hampton.
Other activities for Tuesday
include registration for both
The American Legion and The
American Legion Auxiliary in
the foyer of the Wade Hamp
ton. The $4 registration fee
■will include all events of the
rally.
At 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday both
organizations will call their
business sessions to order. The
American Legion in Ballroom
No. 1 and the Auxiliary in Ball
room No. 3. The latter will have
as their guest speaker the Nat
ional president of the American
I^egion Auxiliary, Mrs. Walter
H. Glynn of Iowa. The Ameri
can Legion will hear the State
winner of their High school
Oratorical Contest present the
winning oration
Climaxing the Spring Rally
will be the joint Banquet on
Tuesday night at which both
the National Commander of
The Legion and the National
President of the Auxiliary will
be the honored guests with the
National Commander as Guest
speaker.
Forest Fire
danger noted
Newberry County Ranger
James Lee Mills of the S. C.
State Commission of Forestry
reports that during the month
of February Newberry county
had only one forest fire which
burned two acres of woodland.
Ranger Mills urges everyone
to continue to be careful while
burning. High winds are ex
pected for the next few weeks.
This is an especially dangerous
time for burning.
Only with the cooperation of
each person in the county can
the forest fires be kept to a
minimum during this season.
Mrs. Clamp dies
at age of 101
Mrs. Ida L. Clamp, age 101,
widow of G. L. Clamp, died
Sunday at a local nursing home
here after a lingering illness.
Surviving are one son, Ray
Longshore, of Belton; three
grandchildren, Charles Long
shore of Alabama, Mrs. George
Hammett of Belton and Mrs.
Carlton Simons of Charleston;
and six great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were con
ducted Tuesday at Smyrna
Presbyterian church by the
Rev. Walter Ronald Case. In
terment was in the church cem
etery.
GOOD CONDUCT MEDAL
Fort Hood, Tex.—Army Spec
ialist Four Harry L. Amick, 23,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Jasper C.
Amick, Route 1, Prosperity,
received the Good Conduct
medal February 28 while as
signed to the 2d Armored Div
ision at Fort Hood.
Specialist Amick received the
award for exemplary conduct,
efficiency and fidelity as a sol
dier in active military service.
Amick, a chaplain’s assistant
with Headquarters Company of
the division’s 3d Brigade, en
tered the Army in March 1964
and received basic training at
Fort Gordon, Georgia.
Grand, Petit
jurors chosen
A Grand Jury to serve for
1 1966, and a petit jury for Gen
eral Sessions court which con
venes March 21st have been
drawn by the jury commission
ers of the county.
Holdover members of the
Grand Jury to serve another
year are Adam B. Mayer, Rich
ard L. Baker, Robert H. -Beden-
baugh, Major Burton, Robert
Lee Ruff and Luke B. Hart.
New on the jury will be Bobby
Gene Lester, Henry F. Mills,
William D. Montgomery, James
B. Torrence, Ralph Bedenbaugh,
John Alfred Bundrick, A. F.
McCarty, Andrew L. Chapman,
Buddy Ellison, Lonnie R. Am
ick, Eugene Reeves and J. N.
Beard.
Drawn as alternates were
Marcus W. Todd Jr., J. Leroy
Wessinger and Charles J.
Lake.
Grand Jurors will report at
9:30 a.m. March 21st.
Petit Jurors, who will report
for duty at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday,
March 22, are:
B. C. Nichols, J. Rudy Sheely,
Herman G. Stockman, R. C.
Hamby, Jones M. Bedenbaugh,
Cleveland A. Brannon, G. H.
Fulmer, Loyd E. Schmid, John
E. Farmer, Curtis Livesay,
James Andrew Riddle, Morris
J. Johnson, James M. Bannister,
Hawkins S. Bedenbaugh, C. W.
Jones, Jr., J. B. Davis, Jeffer
son E. Boozer, Burnest Wilson
Neel, W. E. Taylor Jr., David
Ruff Jr.;
Also Clarenc j Mangum, So
ber Ray Amick, John Lewis
Leonhardt, Drayton Moore
Cook, Robert E. Bartley, Ellis
D. 'Boland, Ralph Waldrop, Eu
gene Eichelberger, Alvin D.
Adams, Johnny Eddie Chap
man, Harry F. Davis, Harold
N. Bowers, W. E. Spearman Jr.,
Ernie M. Counts, Robert Wayne
Boozer, Carl Sam Burns, Thom
as E. Hunter, Herbert Stutts,
Charles T. Gregory, B. F. Poole.
ETV program
is scheduled
M. Q. Roberts of the Newber-
xy County Health Department
announced today that a state
wide educational television pro
gram will be conducted for
management, supervisors, and
key personnel of all types of
food service establishments on
March 14. #
The class will be conducted
at various schools across South
Carolina who are hooked up
to the South Carolina Educa
tional Television Network. For
information concerning the
schools to be open in each area,
interested persons should con
tact Mr. Roberts at the Health
department.
The presentation of the
course has been prompted by
request from hundreds of food
service managers and local
health department sanitarians.
The content of the course will
be “How to Routinely Comply
with the 1964 South Carolina
Food Regulations.” Food ser
vice managers, as well as health
department and public health
service personnel, will take part
on the program under the pro
duction and direction of the
South Carolira Educational
Television Program.
All food service managers,
supervisors, and key personnel
I
Candidate Cards
FOR HOUSE OF
REPRESENTATIVES
I hereby .announce myself a
candidate for re-election to the
House of Representatives from
Newberry County and pledge
myself to abide the results of
the Democratic primary elec
tion..
D. P. (Jabbo) FOLK
FOR PROBATE JUDGE
I hereby announce myself a
candidate for re-election to the
office of Probate Judge, and
pledge myself to abide the re
sults of the Democratic primary
election.
FRANK H. WARD
FOR COMMISSIONER NO. 1
I hereby announce myself a
candidate for re-election to
the office of Commissioner of
District No. 1 and pledge my
self to abide the results of the
Democratic primary election.
BEN F. DAWKINS
from restaurants, drive-ins,
school lunchrooms, hospitals,
nursing homes, industrial
plant feedings, vending mach
ine comissaries, college and in
stitutional feedings, and all
other types of food service es
tablishments are urged to be in
attendance of this important
meeting.
SO LIGHT! PET
COTTAGE CHEESE
2 delicious kinds — Regular and
Garden Salad. Pet, you bet!
MILK COMPANY
DAIRY DIVISION
Dooley runs...
(Continued from page 1)
hours came out to the House
with the “Caucus Plan”, a plan
which received the approval of
the House and the Court has
indicated that the 46 member
caucus plan was the type that
will have to be adopted for
1968.
Rep. Dooley is married to the
former Connie E. Spoon, of
Newberry, they have three chil
dren. The Dooleys live at RFD
4, Lexington, on the ‘Old Two
Notch Road,” where Mr. Doo
ley has lived most of his life.
He is a member of St. Da
vid’s Lutheran Church, between
Lexington and West Columbia,
having served as Sunday School
Superintendent, Young Adults
Teacher, Church Council and
other positions. He is now serv
ing as Assistant Teacher, and
member of the Church Council.
Mr. Dooley is a member of, and
active in the -Lions Club, Wood
man of the World, Chamber of
Commerce, Lexington, Masons,
Lexington Merchants Associa
tion, Lutheran Church Men and
others. He helped form the
Lexington Little League Foot
ball organization and received
much praise for his interest in
the youth of the Lexington
area.
When questioned about his
candidacy Dooley said, I believe
that my eight years preparation
in the House of Representaties
has given me invalauble meas
ure of know-how that can be
used to the benefit of the new
Senatorial District of Lexing-
ton-Newberry-Saluda. During
the coming two years there will
be a cry for young experienced
men to come to the front in the
Senate and I believe my exper
ience with the re-apportionment
will help our district put its best
foot forward. My experience
with my committee work and
my desire to get along with
people, all people, will help the
people of this District.
About other issues, Dooley
was willing to discuss, but he
felt that another issue would be
needed to express all his hopes,
wishes and desires for the new
District. He did say that Lex
ington County should make
plans for some hospital facility,
rural fire system such as New
berry County has, that the
counties should be released from
the control of the Senators, in
cluding himself, that each
County should function on its
own, under its present form of
government, and work to gether
on all state matters and matters
of common interest to each
county in the District.
By Carol Bennett, Teen Consultant,
Breck Halt Care Center
* Watch Out For ESP
There’s your hair, quietly
growing half an inch a month,
nicely controllable and then you
wake up one morning, gaze into
the mirror and it looks—horror
of horrors!—too long. It’s going
every which way, doesn’t take a
curl, resists all efforts to be kept
in trim. You get a determined
look in your eye and a slight
quiver in your chin. You’ve
reached what is called the ESP—
the Exasperated Snipping Point
—that awful time when you de
cide you must cut your hair or
die of shame!
You can overcome ESP in sev
eral ways. Try a new hair style.
If you feel a compulsion toward
scizzoring cut little wispy bangs
or side guiches. Buy a wiglet to
help you over the hurdles of the
in-betweeny length. Or perk up
your hair with a jazzy temporary
rinse, Mother—willing.
Whatever you decide to do,
look upon the whole episode as a
battle. Either you’ll control your
hair, or it’ll get the better of you.
Enlist in your arsenal a hair
spray like Breck Hair Set Mist.
The unique new filtered formula
was devised especially to make it
the best controller the hair ever
had. And good news too is that
the Hair Set Mist prevents spray
build-up and formation of dull
ing film that mars the shine of
naturally clean hair. Gone is the
“goo,” because the Mist sprays
on almost dry!
If you’ve just about reached
your ESP and are heading for a;
rendezvous with the shears catch
yourself before it’s too late. Once
cut, your hair takes its own
sweet time about growing back,
but once controlled, it’ll always
know who’s boss!
VA office open
on Saturday
Veterans in South Carolina
unable due to their work sched
ule, to seek personal assistance
from the Veterans Administra
tion, will now have that op
portunity each Saturday, Stan
ley Zuk, Manager of the VA
Regional Office, Columbia, said
today.
Beginning, Saturday, March
5, VA Contact assistance will be
available at 1801 Assembly St.,
, Columbia from 8 a.m. to 12
noon, with a staff on duty to
handle any claim or to supply
any information or assistance,
Zuk said.
These special duty hours,
apart from and in addition to
the regular workweek, are be
ing placed into effect as a
means of improving the service
provided by the Veterans Ad
ministration and in keeping
with the President’s program to
make government services more
accessible to the public.
Mr. Zuk said the widows of
veterans, veterans’ dependents,
or representatives of the var
ious organizations working on
behalf of veterans may also
take advantage of the special
new office hours.
Incoming telephone calls may
be made to 254-3129.
City native
rites today
Our Health
by i. M. Amberson, M.D.
Winter Health Hazards
Although we enjoy the invig
orating cold snap in the air, and
the exhilarating sports of the
season, winter is rife with health
fc 11 hazards. \
Skis, skates,
m
I and sleds can
spell fun, but
t they also can
' : be potential
ill dangers. Falls
and spills are
^ common after
a year of inactivity. Don’t spoil
your winter with recklessness.
Shoveling sidewalks to make
them safe for others can mean a
health hazard for you. Slipping,
naturally, is the prime danger.
But muscle and, more important,
heart strain are unfortunately
too often the result of this ‘do-it-
yourself’ attempt. You may find
it cheaper in the long run to pay
a local teenager to do the chore
‘for you. .
Upper respiratory infections'
(URI) are the most common
health hazard in winter. In a re
cent year, nearly 200,000,000
acute respiratory illnesses re
quired medical attention, not to
mention the hundreds of thou
sands of cases never attended to
’by physicians.
Now that winter is in full blast,
you may be interested in learning
about a new oral anesthetic solu
tion which is available in phar
macies without a prescription.
•Called Chloraseptic, clinicians
have found it quite effective for
relieving the pain of a sore throat
due to cold — often pain relief
achieved is within seconds after
spraying or gargling.
Let me caution you, however,!
that Chloraseptic or medicationsi
like aspirin should be used when
there are no complications such as
high fever, malaise, or if the sore
throat only lasts for a brief time.
If you have a high fever or other
complications, or if the cold or
sore throat seems to linger on for
more than 3 days you should see
your physician.
A minor sore throat is usually
of no great consequence, but a
physician’s rdvice is needed to
make certain that it is a minor
sore throat and not a more uan-
gerous illness.
Mrs. Ora Hazel McCraw, 49,
of Harris, died early Tuesday
morning in a Durham, N. C.
hospital after three months of
illness.
Born in Newberry, daughter
of the late W. L. and Bessie T.
Hazel, she has lived in Green
wood 16 years, moving from
Greenville. She was chairman
of the nursery department of
ttarris Baptist church.
Surviving are her brother,
Boyd L. McCraw, a daughter,
two sons, four sisters and three
brothers.
Funeral services are to be?
conducted today ( Thursday) at
2 p.m. at Harris Baptist
church.
New book at
regional library
Adults
Deighton, Len—Billion Dollar
Brain.
Capote, Truman — In Cold
■Blood.
Howard, Elizabeth Jane—Af
ter Julius.
Lelhic, Violette—La Batarde.
Mclnnes, Helen—The Double
Image.
Maddux, flachel—A Walk In
The Spring Rain.
Tuchman, Barbara — The
Proud Tower.
Tyler, Ann—The Tin Can
Tree.
Updike, John—Of The Farm.
Vale, Eugene—Chaos Below
Heaven.
Yerby, Frank—An Odor Of
Sanctity.
W. E. Seim’s
cow sets record
W. E. Senn has recently re
ceived recognition from the
American Jersey Cattle Club
for production records complet
ed by 17. cows in his registered
Jersey herd. The production
records attained by these cows
far exceeds the average of all
U. S. dairy cows.
AVELEIGH CIRCLES
MEET NEXT WEEK
Circle No. 1 of Aveleigh
Presbyterian church will meet
Tuesday of next week at 10:00
A.M. with Mrs. Richard Ander
son. Other Circles will meet
on Monday as follows:
No. 2 with Mrs. J. "L. Keitt
No. 3 with Mrs. H. W. Swind
ler at 4:00 P. M.
No. 4 with Mrs. W. W. Ben
nett at 8:00 P.M.
No. 5 with Mrs. Lenon T.
Wright at 8:00 P. M.
Smokey Says:
TEAM!
fi
;
- '• ’ n-esi-e? j
■ i ■ - ■ i — ^
You can call the siraals!
RITZ
Theatre
THURSDAY
Violent Beyond Belief ... Yet
Beautiful Beyond Comparison.
We Dare You To See . . . An
Incredible Orgy Of Sights And
Sound.
“ECC0”
FRL, SAT., MON., TUBS.,
WED. & THURS.
The Ugly
Dachshund
Dean Jones, Susanne Pleshette
ALSO — WINNIE THE POO
FRE^E! — FREE! — FREE!
All aluminum dog house will be
given away to the lucky winner.
Drawing will be held on the
last day of “The Ugy Dach
shund”. Ask for your blank at
box office.
Mother church
to observe
anniversary
Plans for a year-long observ
ance of the one hundredth an
niversary of Christian Science
were' announced today by The
Christian Science Board of Di
rectors of The Mother Church,
The First Church of Christ,
Scientist, in Boston, Mass.
Major events will include a
world-wide public speaking
aour of the Editor in Chief of
The Christian Science Monitor,
publication of a new book titl
ed “A Century of Christian
Science Healing,” and the start
of work on a new “Church
Center” construction program.
The Centennial stems from
events in 1866 which marked
the turning point in the life
of Mary Baker Eddy and began
her pioneering of aworld re
ligious movement.
Centennial activity within the
church will come to a focus at
the annual meeting in Boston
on June 6. Land clearance will
begin that day for construction
of an expanded 15-acre Church
center, while members gather
to consider their movement’s
progress and spiritual mission.
Officials are looking upon the
Centennial observances primar
ily as preperation for “the sec
ond century” of Christian Sci
ence. They feel that the con
cepts of the religion—consider
ed so revolutionary during its
first 100 years—will be more
widely and readily underjstofcd
in the years ahead.
Today, the Church has a
healing ministry carried on by
more than 7,000 full-time pub
lic Christian Science practi
tioners in over 40 countries.
Cases brought to them cover
the whole range of humanity’s
problems and conditions, moral
and physical, and they are just
as apt to be dealing with alie
nation, injustice, poverty, or
criminal habits as they are
with sickness. Health is looked
upon in its deepest sense as
spiritual wholeness.
There is also an extensive
network of public Reading
Rooms maintained by branch
churches; a Board of Lecture
ship that delivers more than
4500 lectures a year around
the world; an international
daily newspaper that is gener
ally ranked among the top
newspapers in the world; a
radio series that is broadcast
over some 950 radio stations in
several countries; an Armed
Services ministry that includes,
447 lay workers as well as
commissioned chaplains; and
student organizations in more
than 400 colleges and univer
sities.
Honor students
at Newberry
Thirty-six Newberry College
students were named on the
Dean’s list for the fall semes
ter. To be eligible for the hon
or a student must maintain
above a “B” average.
The list includes 10 seniors,
eight juniors, six sophomores
and 12 freshmen. Sixteen are
men students and 20 are wo
men students.
The honor students from this
county are:
Roberta Cooper, Ruth Dale
Kinard, Barbara Clarkson, Hen
ry B. Summer, Mary Ruth
Armfield, Cecil G. Fulmer, Lar
ry W. Smith, Martha J. Bowers
and Jacob S. Montgomery.
STOP STOOPIai*,
WITH AMAZING. HER * \£{
Pi PtWt
Shoulder Brace
Corrects posture in*
stantly, comfortably. TW,T *J^,
Supports sagging
Shoulders. Improves appearance, gives you
a new feeling of confidence. No fitting.
Highest quality ventilated - for - comfort
cushioned material. Arm
bands softly padded.
Can't be detected under
light clothing. MEN—
Measdre around chest.
WOMEN—below bust
Only
Kendall plans
expansions
Boston, February 28. — The
Kendall Company plans to make
1966 expenditures in the range
of . $12,000,000 for plant ex
pansion and modernization^
Harold T. Marshall, president^
announced today in the release
of the company’s 1965 annual'
report. Similar expenditures
in 1965 were just under $8,000,-
000.
In an earlier release, Ken
dall announced that its earn
ings of $8,425,000, or $2.67 per
common share, for 1965 were up
17 per cent on sales of $163,-
533,000.
Major projects include fur
ther expansion of Kendall’s
cloth-finishing plant at Bethune
and its plant at Toronto, Can.
Kendall will also be completing
a major expansion of capacity
for producing nonwoven fab
rics at Windham, Conn., and
for the bleaching of cotton fab
rics at Walpole, Mass. In ad
dition, the company expects to
spend $5,000,000 for the mod
ernization of a spinning and
weaving plant at Pelzer.
NEWBERRY DRUG CO.
Newberry, S. G. 29108
IS IMPROVING 1
Tommy Lewis is reported to-
he improving at the Columbia
hospital where he has been a
patient for about two weeks.
A treasure to own, a pleasure to give ! t Beautiful
Wedgwood ware has graced fine homes for more
than two centuries and today, more than ever, its
exquisite design axld superb craftsmanship are
appreciated for all the elegance they add to a table
setting...to a room! When you come in, ask to see:
Fine English bone china
Black Florentine
GOLDEN AGE FELLOWSHIP
TO MET MARCH 16.
The Golden Age Fellowship
will meet in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. E. Kirby Lominack,
1817 McHardy street, on Wed
nesday, March 16 at 3:30 p.m.
Mrs. Lominack will be hostess.
Turner &
MAIN STREET
Howard Turner—Gerald Taylor
c
onveniently yours
SIC IN
in
ertty
Drive-In
Theatre
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
The Ghost and
Mr. Chicken
Don Knotts, Joan Stanley
SUNDAY
BILLIE
'• •v - . ‘ ^
Patty Duke, Jim Backus
Always A Color Cartoon
JJI8 Harrington St.
1119 Boyce St.
for AUTO LOANS
• • •
Convenient location . . . friendly atmosphere
people who care ... AND low cost auto loans are
yours at SCNe
Whether you want a new or better car, get it with a
quick-n-easy auto loan from SCN, a vital part of your
fine community.
SOUTH CAROLINA NATIONAL
*/Ae Rcuth fpi Coesuthodtis
THERE’S AN SCN OFFICE NEAR YOU
member foic