The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, March 24, 1966, Image 3

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/ / \1 / THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1966 THE NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA PAGE THREE WmL m. wm MISS LU ELLEN NEEL Mr. and Mrs. Richard Clark Neel Jr. of Silverstreet, announce the engagement of their daughter, Lu Ellen to Douglas Morrow Robertson, son of Mr. Harold Joseph Robertson and the late Mrs. Robertson, of Miami, Flor ida. Miss Nee 1 is a junior at Newberry College. Mr. Ro- ibertson is also a junior at Newberry College where he is [a member of Phi Tau Social Fraternity. The wedding s planned for May 27, 1966, in the Silverstreet Evan- relical Lutheran Church, Silverstreet, South Carolina. Final rites for Mrs. Summer Mrs. Louise Elvira Summer, 59, died Friday afternoon at a Columbia Hospital after a long illness. She was born and reared in Newberry County and was the daughter of the late Pinckney and Frances Cole Summer. She was a member of St. John Lu theran Church. She is survived by one son, Lewis Summer, Pomaria; two brothers, W. D. Summer Sr., Pomaria and Otto F. Summer, Highlands, N. C.; one sister, Mrs. A. J. Wilson, Pomaria, and a number of nieces and neph ew’s. Funeral services were held at 4 p.m. Sunday from St. John’s Lutheran Church with Rev. Donald Loadholt conducting the service. Burial was in the church cemetery. Active pallbearers were W. D. Summer Jr., A. J. Wilson Jr., George B. Fulmer, W. L. Mathis, A. M. Johnston, and J. B. Berley. Honorary pallbearers were Council of St. John’s Lutheran Church. P. M. DeImis , father dies Addison Malachia Dennis Sr., 90, father of P. M. Dennis of Newberry, died Saturday at Tourney hospital in Sumter after a sudden attack at his home the previous Thursday. Mr. Dennis was the oldest resident of Turbeville. Funeral services were held Monday at Olive Grove Free Will Baptist church of Turbe ville. A. Y. Teed, 71, dies Saturday Adelbert Y. Teed, 71, of Lit tle Mountain, died Saturday at the Veterans’ Hospital in Co lumbia after a long illness. He was Born in Kansas, a son of the late Adelbert E. Teed and Mrs. Grace Alice Getchell Teed, and was a retired employee with the C. N. & L. Railroad in Little Mountain and the South ern Railroad in Newberry. Mr. Teed was a member of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Little Mountain, and was a veteran of World War I. Surviving are his widow, Ber tha Hall Teed; a son, Ronald E. Teed of Hickory, N. C.; two brothers, Ed Teed of 'Birming ham, Ala., and Milton Teed of Sulphur Springs, Ark.' Funeral services were held at 3 p.m. Sunday at the Holy Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church, conducted by the Rev. Garth L. Hill. Burial was in the church cemetery. Active pallbearers were W. H. Caldwell, A. L. Layroe, Car- roll S. Kempson, O. T. Stoude- mire, C. Albert Frick, Murray Counts, George M. Stoudemire and B. M. Wise. Haltiwanger, 86 rites Tuesday Jobe Olander Haltiwanger, 86, retired farmer and sawmill operator, died Monday of last week in a Chapin nursing home. Funeral services were Tues day at Mt. Horeb Lutheran church with Rev. Everett Dash er and Rev. J. S. Wessinger conducting the last rites. Bur ial was in the church cemetery. THE ALL NEW Mrs. W. 0. Pitts service Monday Mrs. Mary Lee Stilwell Pitts, 74, wife of W. Oscar Pitts, died Saturday at the Newberry County Memorial Hospital after a lingering illness. Mrs, Pitts was born in New berry County, the daughter of the late Dantzler H. and Sallie Boozer Stilwell. She was a member of Smyrna Presbyter ian Church and had been avtive in every phase of church work. •Besides her husband, she is survived by three sons, William Pitts and Harold Pitts, both of Newberry, and T. D. Pitts of San Diego, Calif.; two daugh ters, Mrs. Van (Sarah) Walton of Charleston, and Mrs. J. M. (Dot) Buford of Columbia; one brother, Thomas Stilwell of In man; five sisters, Mrs. Mannie Epting of Newberry, Mrs. Nan cy Putman of Laurens, Mrs. Pauline Crisp of Miami, Fla., Mrs. Bernice Boozer of Chap pells, and Miss Vera Stilwell of Greenville; ten grandchildren, and ten great-grandchildren. Funeral services were con ducted at 2:30 p.m. Monday at Smyrna Presbyterian Church by the Rev. Ronald Case. Inter ment was in the church ceme tery. Active pallbearers were the deacons of Smyrna Presbyter ian Church. Serving as honorary pallbear ers were the elders of Smyrna Presbyterian Church. MATTRESS and BOXSPR/m Now! THE ALL NEW SERTA PERFECT SLEEPER IS HERE! Years in the making— and now in our showrooms! The best of both worlds for sleepyheads who’ve dreamed of luxurious comfort and firm. the only mattress and box spring that give you the right combination of comfort and support! restful support. Here is a mat tress and box spring combination that will make all the difference between day and night in the way you sleep! Come in and see for yourself—when we say Perfect Sleeper, we mean it! ACCEPTED M V* McCalfc £52 mv V' PERFECT SLEEPER MATTRESS & BOX SPRING' «SSC . i T//FALLMW SPUTA PERFECT SLEEPS# ST/LL 7050 f Each Ma+triicc r\r D .Mattress or Box Spring Full or Twin Width Firm or Extra Firm Regular or Extra Length Innerspring or Foam Latex* AT MQ EXTRA COST! •Foam latex mattress sold only with matching foundation Queen-Size 2-Pc. Set, $199.00 Mattress and Matching Box Spring King-Size 3-Pc. Set, $299.00 Mattress and 2 Matching Box Springs MAXWELL & 1326 College St (Our New Location) NEW! TWINEDGE SUPPORT! A border within a border! NEW! SYNCHAO- FLEX COILS! Provide deep cushioning fpr a sound night's sleep. NEW! SCIENTUUC- ALLY DESIGNED BOX SPRING! Precise coil on coil action. f*WWV NEW! SERTALINEK CONSTRUCTION,! Distributes your weight evenly! LINDSAY Newberry, iSouth Carolina Indians name Co-Captains Two rising seniors, Roy Sol omon of Jacksonville, Florida, and Tommy McAdams, Green ville, will be co-captains of the Newberry College Indians for the 1966 football seasbn. They also may be co-terrors to opponents’ offense teams. Solomon, an all-state guard last season, is expected to an chor the defensive line at mid dle guard. The 5’8”, 195 pound Florida native, was the out standing defensive lineman for the Indians last year. He was second only to all-conference, all-district linebacker Pat Mer rick in total unassisted tackles. Solomon attended Bolles School prior to entering New berry College. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. George B. Solo mon, Jacksonville, Fla. McAdams, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. K. McAdams, Green ville was an outstanding cen ter for Coach James ‘‘Slick” Moore of Greenville High school. He is a three-year let- terman at Newberry and has the -task of replacing Merrick at center and linebacker. The 6’2”, 215 pound Greenville na tive P*me into his own last season, teaming with Merrick at linebacker. He also is an efficient blocker as a center ion offense. Sports camp applications being taken By Coach Horace Turbeville Does your son have the ad vantages and opportunities of learning about sports and phy sical fitness? Physical fitness is a very intricate part of our lives. It is our responsibility to give our young boys every opportunity to achieve physical excellence. The Indian Sports Camp can help him toward these goals. All of us are proud of our athletes and we have a right to be. Almost every day our super stars in track, swim ming, baseball, football, and basketball are breaking records. We are the world’s champions in almost all of our favorite sports. Doesn’t that prove that Un cle Sam’s is the most physi cally fit nation in the world. It doesn’t! It merely proves that we have the greatest athletes. What about the rest of our nation—the 90 per cent who never go out for sports? How physically fit are they ? This will surprise you—recent tests prove that the average boy in the United States is weaker, less agile, less endur-. ing, than the average boy in most other countries. When I these facts were made public, it | shocked the nation. We could not understand it. Weren’t our J boys bigger and heavier N than! ever before and weren’t our ath- ' letes the greatest. These facts j are true, but the fact remains | that our non-athletes, the great j majority of boys were no long-1 er keeping physically active. What can we do as adults do to help? We can encourage and help our young boys to learn and participate in sports and physical fitness activities. For applications and infor mation on Indian Sports Camp activities write to Indian Sports Camp, Newberry, S. C. or call Coach Horace Turbeville at 276-1109. She was bom in Georgetown, Hauehter of the late J. W. and Beulah Smith Folk. She w*e RL member of the First Baptist Church. Survivors include two sisters, Mrs. J. R. Long and Mrs. J. B. Coward, both of Newberry. Funeral services were con ducted Tuesday at 3 p.m. in Dunbar Funeral Home, conduct ed by Rev. R. Archie Ellis, DD. Burial was in Elmwood Ceme tery. Local women’s •v ' sister dies Mrs. Edythe Folk Green of Columbia, widow of N. C. Green, died Monday in a Colum bia Nursing home. dies at age 84 Miss Addie Simpson, 84, died early Friday morning at the Al ta Vista Nursing Home in Eas ley after several years illness. Miss Simpson was the daugh ter of the late George and Sa rah Evelyn Quinn Simpson ami had made her home in Green ville and Newberry before mov ing to Easley. She was a mem ber of Aveleigh Presbyterian Church. Miss Simpson is survived by one sister, Mrs. Leone Swind ler Paysinger, Newberry; one brother, Lance Swindler, Green ville, and a number of nieces and nephews. Garden dubs, of district to meet here The members of the federat ed garden clubs of Newberry and the East Piedmont District are in for a treat at the an nual East Piedmont meeting of the Garden Club of South Car olina which will be held at the Newberry Country Club Wed nesday, March 30. Fred Murff will present a fashion show during the Dutch luncheon. Many lovely spring and sum mer fashions will be modeled, and a beautiful spring outfit will be given away. Mrs. J. E. Nichols, Council President, and the / steering committee composed of Mrs. Richatd L. Baker, Chairman, | Mrs. Clem Youmans, and Mrs. Hart Jordan, have requested that anyone planning to attend the Dutch luncheon at 1:00 p. m. (Wednesday, March 30, send their reservations to Mrs. Louis Floyd, Drawer 189, New berry, by Saturday, March 26. Luncheon tickets are $2.50 each, and it is requested that a dheck for that amount accom pany each reservation. Another treat in store for those attending the affair is a visit to the Carter & Holmes Orchid greenhouse immediately following the other scheduled events. Mrs. Baker especially hopes that there will be a large at tendance from Newberry at this meeting since the Council of Newberry Garden Clubs is hostess for the event. She said that this will also be an excel lent opportunity for Newber- rians to meet Mrs. S. Wayne Gamble, President of the Gar den Club of South Carolina, whom the Council is honored to have visit the City of Friend ly Folk. SU8S5 INSURED ■ ■ dividends paid by South Carf* 1 ina Savings and Ic n i Associations last year! An extra “payroll” of $15,000,000 South Carol in ian$ can spend to benefit themselves and boost the economy of their state! Smart Carolinians know that it makes sense to keep their savings money at home where hometown savings and loan associations pay a fair return on savings dollars while they use these dol lars to help move South Carolina ahead. BRANCH OFFICE—BATESBURG, S. C. ’avtjvos ajvj) LoAjr Association r, mmvBummv. •. •* DIRECTORS JOHN F. CLARKSON M. O. SUMMER W. C. HUFFMAN J.K. WiLUN&HAM E. B. PURCELL G. K. DOMINICK a /■A