The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, April 21, 1966, Image 4
PAGE FOUR
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1966
Wallace dies
in Allentown
D. R‘ Wallace of Allentown,
Pa., 71, a native of Newberry
County died at an Allentown
hospital on Thursday, April 14.
He was a son of the late W. H.
and Corrie Cleland Wallace of
Kinards.
Survivors include his wife
and one daughter, Mrs. Mattie
W. Gaumer of Allentown; three
grandchildren; three brothers,
C. C. Wallace of Newberry,
Ralph W. Wallace of Cameron,
N. C., and Lewis Wallace of
Sumter; also, two sisters, Mrs.
S. Harris and Mrs. John
Epps, both of Newberry; and
a number of nieces and neph
ews and other relatives.
Funeral services were con
ducted at 9:30 a.m. Saturday in
Allentown.
Youth held in
break-ins here
A JL6-year-old Negro boy was
arrested here at 2 p.m. Monday
and charged with a series of
breakins at four Newberry
homes since January.
City police officer Bob Counts
said Norman Lee Mathis was
being held in the county jail in
lieu of $3,000 bond on the fotlr
charges of housebreaking and
larceny.
Counts said two of the break-
ins occurred Friday. About $60
and a few articles of minor val
ue were taken in the four day
time breakins, Counts said. The
officer said he and Policeman
Eddie Corley made the arrest.
Tryouts for
boys baseball
to be Monday
All interested in trying out
for, one of th^ six Little Boys
Baseball Teams are asked to re
port to the Lktle Boys Base
ball Field (behind Boundary
Street School) on Monday, Ap
ril 25 at 4 p.m.
Boys between the ages of 8
and 12 aa of August 1st are
eligible.; This means that any
boy who is- § years old by July
SP, LS. eligible- <AH boys who will
be 13 aftfe^'j$.ugust 1st, are eli
gible. BAjpiw&o have taken part
in any jfrf&its before will not
have to tryout again.
; There will be a Little ‘Boys
Training League for all boys,
in the above stated ages, who
do not makje one of the six
teams.
On conunittees
of USSLL
Chicago, 111.—John F. Clark
son of Newberry Federal Sav
ings and Loan Association, and
Pinckney N. Abrams of State
Building and Loan Association,
Newberry, have been appointed
to - '1-966 Committees of the U
S. Savings-and Loan League.
Mr. Clarkson will serve on
the Insurance’ Committee and
Mr. Abrams will serve on the
TYehda and Economic Policies
Committee.
The appointments were an
nounced today by C. A. Dun
canof Nevada, Mo., presi
dent of the U. S. League, which
is the national trade organiza
tion for the savings and loan
business and represents more
than 5100 savings associations
and cooperative banks.
The Insurance Committee
studies and reports on the lat-
( est developments in the insur
ance field of interest to the
savings and . loan business.
The objective of the Trends
and Economic Policies Comm
ittee is to encourage the dis
semination of factual and in
formed opinion on the policy
phases of the savings and loan
business, and the committee al
so serves as the coordinating
committee for the broad re
search activities of the League.
NOTICE
(April 15,1966)
The City Council, after the second
and final reading-, Tuesday, April 12,
1966, voted to change the Zoning Map
as per Advertisement in the local
newspapers on March 28, 1966, April
7,1966, and April 8,1966. The chang
es are on file in the office of the
Building Official.
R. H. Shealy
j
Building Official
..fi'
County native
dies Monday
UNION—Mrs. Cleo S. Little
john Farr, 38, wife of Franklin
Marion Farr of Fifth Street,
Ottray, died at home Monday
after a sudden illness.
Native of Newberry County,
daughter of D. S. and Mrs.
Ellen Palmer Sanders of Union,
she was a member of McCut-
cheon Memorial Presbyterian
Church.
Surviving also are two
daughters, Mrs. Sandra L. Hol
combe and Mrs. Elaine Jennings
of Union; three sisters, Mrs.
Lula Mae Childers of Green-
son would need at least 5 years
of work under social security
during the 10 year period that
ended when the disability be
gan. The above rule applies to
all persons with the exception
of anyone who became totally
blind before age 31.
For further information on
the disability provisions of the
social security law, as well as
any questions concerning social
security, any interested person
is invited to contact the Social
Security Office at 219 Magnolia
Avenue in Greenwood.
Woman's Club
hears program
by Mrs. Carter
The Newberry Woman’s Club
met on Thursday, April 14 at
the home of Mrs. D.W.A. Nev
ille, with Mrs. F. Scott Elliott
presiding. During the business
session it was decided that the
money raised from the club’s
recent sale of S. C. cards be |
used to purchase another filing
cabinet. The cabinet will be
placed in the Newberry-Saluda
Regional Library to house rec
ords and scrapbooks belonging
to the club.
A special invitation was ex
tended the club to attend a tea
to be given jointly by the Lit
erary Study Club and the Fine
wood, Mrs. Jesse Lee Berry of Arts Club on Wednesday, April
Union and Mrs. Helen Ivey of
Greenville; a brother, W. S.
Sanders Jr. of Union; and two
grandchildren.
Disabled may
get benefits
Social Security has included
protection against the loss of
earnings because of disability
since 1954. Through the years
there have been several changes
in the requirements for quali
fying as a disabled person. One
of the most recent changes is
one that changed the definition
of disability under social sec
urity. Previously this benefit
was limited to persons who
were permanently disabled. Now
a person may qualify for dis
ability benefits if the disability
is expected to last (or has last
ed) 12 months and if the con
dition prevents him from ANY
substantial work. However, no
matter how disabling a condi
tion may be, no disability can
be paid unless a person had
worked recently under social
security when he became dis
abled.
To meet this requirement of
recent work, the disabled per-
20, at 4 p.m. in Recognition of
Library Week.
The Club. went on record as
supporting '‘Keep S> C* Beau
tiful”, a program recently en
dorsed by the governor, and
plans are to be presented at the
local meeting of this group on
Monday, April 18.
Program leader for the after
noon. was Mrs. Sydney E. Car
ter, her topic being “Modern
Southern Poets”. Mrs. Carter
stated that the program com
mittee asked her to emphasize
two recent poets—John Crowe
Ransom and Allen Tate.
In reviewing the life of John
Crowe Ransom, poet, critic, ed
itor, and University Professor,
she stated that he set off a
literary revival in the South.
Born in 1888, in Pulaski, Term.,
the son of a Methodist minis
ter, he was from a family deep-
rooted in the South. A graduate
of Vanderbilt University, he
later became a professor there,
where he remained for 23 years
and gained for the university a
national reputation as a center
of English studies.
This poet, along with six
other Nashville residents—all
Southern writers, organized a
discussion group and called
themselves the Fugitives. They
f t r
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believed in a return, especially
for the South, from an indus
trial to an agrarian economy.
The magazine they published
was called The Fugutive.
Ransom's first acquaintance
with modern poetry came in
1910 while on a Rhodes Schol
arship at Christ Church College,
Oxford, at which time he be
came a close friend of Christo
pher Morleys.
The poems that he contribut
ed to The Fugutive were later
collected in Chills and Fever
(1924) and Two Gentlemen In
Bonds (1927), and contain most
of his literary output.
Theregional qualities of this
poet are to be found in his
style and his vision rather than
in his subjects. The outstand
ing feature of his style is his
ability to combine serious con
tent with wit or irony. Most
of his ideas appear to be hid
den. The dualism of his vision
is reflected in his method.
Perhaps it is as a critic that
he is best known, but most
scholars feel that his reputation
as a poet, which is high, will
continue to rise.
His own critical thought was
revealed in The World’s Body
(1938). He conte nds that where
science appeals to the reason,
poetry and other fine arts sat
isfy the whole man. In The New
Criticism (1941), he says that
a poem consists of two elements
—1. structure (its argument,
meter shape) and 2. texture
(its sound, subject, diction and
imagery), and that the success
of any poem depends upon the
niceness of balance between
these two elements.
His Selected Poems, first
published in 1945 and revised
in 1963, are by far his best, and
for which he is noted.
From 1937 to 1958, Ransom
was Professor of Poetry at
Kenyon College in Gambier, O.,
where he now" resides. Although
he has retired,' he remains pro
fessor emeritus and editor
emeritus of the Kenyon Review
which he founded and edited for
20 years. He is married and has
a daughter and two sons.
John Crowe Ransom’s honors
have been numerous. He was
awarded a Guggenheim Fellow
ship, the Bollengin Prize in
Poetry and the Russel Loines
Award in Literature, the Fel
lowship Prize of the American
Academy of American Poets,
and the National Book Award
in 1964. Amember of Phi Beta
Kappa, he serves the Library
of Congress as Honorary Con
sultant in American Letters.
Allen Tate, American poet,
essayist, .biographer, and nov
elist, was born in 1899, in Clark
County, Ky., a descendant of
three officers of the American
Revolution. His early education
consisted of only 12 years of
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schooling, including college.
Like Ransom, he graduated
from Vanderbilt, magna cum
laude, and was also a member
of the Fugitive group.
Tate is a Borderer, a man
who seems torn between con
flicting loyalties to region and
nation, but who has managed
to find a coherent set of values.
In 1924, he went to New
York, determined to make his
way as a poet, and soon was
in the company of such writers
as Hart Grade, Kenneth Burke,
Slater Brown, Scott Fitzgerald,
John Peale Bishop, and Mal
colm Cowley. This same year
he married the novelist, Caro
line Gordon.
Thefirst version of his best-
known poem, “Ode to The Con
federate Dead,” was written in
1926, but was not completed
until ten years later.
In the earlier poems he wrote
—from 1922-1938, there is lit
tle sweetness or warmth of
“personality” or “participation”
as with Hart Crane, T. S. El
iot, and Ransom, the poets he
most resembles.
His dominant themes in all
his work have been the Civil
War, and “Life’s mortal idiocy”.
He is a cerebral writer, incisive,
pugnacious, scholarly, and
witty.
Tate has written two biogra
phies: “Stonewall Jackson—
The Good Soldier” and “Jeffer
son Davis—His Rise and Fall”;
two short stories “The Migra
tion” and “’The Immortal Wo
man”; a volume of Collected
Essays; and a novel, The Fa
thers, which is considered
“beautifully written and pro
foundly searching.”
All of his “Sonnets at Christ
mas” are excellent. And the
real capstone of his career to
date is “Seasons of the Soul,”
depicting the four phases of
man as the four seasons. Both
of these are included in the re
vised edition of his -Poems
(1960).
Tate has taught at the Wo
man’s College of the University
of N. C., Princeton, N. Y. Uni
versity, the Kenyon School of
English, and the University of
Chicago. He has been editor of
the “Sewanee Review” and has
been heard on the air as a par
ticipant in the scholarly dis
cussions called “Invitation To
Learning.” Listed among his
awards are the Bollengin Prize
in Poetry, the Brandeis Award,
the gold medal award of the
Dante Society of Florence, and
the $5000 award of the Acad
emy of American Poets in 1963.
- Since 1951 he has been a
professor“ of English at the
University of Minnesota. His
first marriage ended in divorce.
In 1959 he married the poet
Isabella Gardner.
In closing, Mrs. Carter fit
tingly touched on the life of
“one who has rightly attained
prominence in the field of
‘Modern Southern Poets’—the
club’s president, Rosalie Conn
Elliott.” Mrs. Elliott is a mem
ber of the National League of
American Penwomen and she
has had her poems published in
the S. C. Magazine as well as
in several volumes of the Nat
ional Poetry Anthologies. She
has been listed in Who’s Who
of American Women and Who’s
Who in the South and South
west.
Mrs. Carter’s talk was inter
spersed with the reading of
several poems by Ransom and
Tate, arid concluded with ons
by Mrs. Elliott.
returns are audited before the
refund is issued while others
are audited after the refund
has been sent.
You should receive your re
fund check, or a letter about
it, within six to eight weeks
after you filed.
Q—‘When do you start with
holding at the new rates?
A — Graduated withholding
goes into effect on wage pay
ments made on and after May
1. To see how it \yill affect you,
ask your employer for a copy
of our Document No. 5642.
Q—I got my refund yester
day but it was different from
the amount I expected: Why
was that?
A—It could be that you made
a mathematical error. You
should receive an explanation
in the mail within the next few
days stating why the refund
was different from the amount
you applied for.
Q—I forgot to claim my mo
ther's medical expense when I
filed my return. Is it still pos
sible to claim it or have I lost
this deduction ?
A—You may still claim what
ever you are entitled to for
1965. Take another Form 1040
and mark it “amended return”
at the top. Then fill it in com
pletely, showing all the infor
mation required as well as the
deduction you omitted on your
other return. File y9ur amend
ed return as soon as possible.
Q—I’m filing an amended re
turn which gives me a lower
balance due than the first re
turn I filed. What should I do?
Stop payment on the first
check and send another?
A—Do not stop payment on
the first check. If your amend
ed return is accurate, you will
receive a check for the differ
ence between what you paid on
the first return and the correct
balance due.
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLE
MENT
I will make final settlement
of the estate of Anna Kinard
in the Probate Court for New
berry County, S. C., on Friday,
the 20th day of April, 1966 at
10 o’clock in the forenoon, and
will immediately thereafter ask
for my discharge as Adminis
trator of said estate
WOODROW GOGGINS,
P. O. Box 124
Aaministrator
March 28, 1966 4th
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Income tax
information
This column of questions
and answers on federal tax
matters is provided by the
local office of the U. S. In
ternal Revenue Service and
is published as a public ser
vice to taxpayers. The col
umn answers questions most
frequently asked by tax-
• payers.
Q—How long will my refund
take? I got my return in just
under the April 15 deadline.
A—If your return is complete
and accurate, and is not select
ed for audit before the refund
is issued, then you should re
ceive it within 6 to 8 weeks
from the date you mailed it.
(Remember, however, that it
could take longer, depending
upon how many people waited
until April 15 to file).
Q—My brother-in-law filed
his return a week after I did
and has already received his
refund. Mine hasn’t come yet.
Why?
A—A number of reasons are
possible. Your return might
have been incomplete or incor
rect and is therefore in the
process of being perfected. This
would be the case if, for exam
ple, you did not list your Soc
ial Security number or entered
an inaccurate one.
Another possible reason for
the delay in your refund is
that it might have been select
ed for a pre-refund audit. Some
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NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that
the City of Newberry, South
Carolina, will accept sealed bids
until twelve o’clock noon on
April 25, 1966, when said bids
will be publicly opened in the
Council Chambers of the office
of the City of Newberry, South
Carolina, for the sale of the
following described property:
All that piece, parcel or
lot of land in the City and
County of ^lewbenyy South
Carolina, fronting East on
College street for a dist
ance of one hundred twenty"
three and seven-tenths
(123.7’) feet, bounded on
the North by Tench Street
for a distance of two hund
red twenty-one and four-
tenths (221.4’) feet, bound
ed on the West by Caldwell
Street for a distance of one
hundred thirty - seven
(137.0) feet, and bounded
on the South by property
of J. C. Long for a distance
of two hundred sixteen
(216.0) feet; all of which
will more particularly ap
pear by reference to a Plat
made by W. H. Nobles, Jr.
March 29, 1966, recorded
in the office of the Clerk
of Court for Newberry
County in Plat Book W at
page 41. Copies of this plat
may be had at the office of
the city manager, Newber
ry, South Carolina.
The above described property
is located in Fire District No-
1 and is zoned at a B-2-A Dis
trict (Central Business Dis
trict). This means that the
property may be used for any
legitimate business use.
The chain link fence and play
ground equipment and proerty
which is on this property will
remain the property of the
grantor.
Each bidder shall be required
to accompany his bid with a-
cashieris check, certified cheeky
or cash, in the amount of ten
(10) per cent of his bid, and
the successful bidder will be
notified of the acceptance
his bid within a reasonable
time after the 'bids have been
opened and after said bid has-
been accepted by the City Coun
cil. In case the successful bid
der fail to pay the balance of
his bid within ten (10) days
from notification of acceptance^,
the ten (10) per cent accomp
anying his bid will be forfeited
as liquidated damages.
The City of Newberry re
serves the right to reject any
and all bids.
The City of Newberry wilt-
fumish a general warranty fee
simple deed to the successful
purchaser, but all revenue
stamps, State &*FederaI, shall
be paid for by the successful
bidder.
Each bid must be sealed in ai^
envelop together with the ten.
(10) percent of the bid as
aforementioned and plainly
marked on the. outside of the
envelope “Bid for The Marioa
Davis Park Property.”
For further information please
see or call the undersigned.
The Mayor and City Council*
and Kenneth W. Riebe, City
Manager, The City of
Newberry, South Carolina.
Apr 7,14,21-66
RITZ
Theatre
THURSDAY, FRIDAY ANI>
SATURDAY
Dean Martin, Stella Stevens*
Daliah Lavi, Cyd Charisse
The Silencers
MONDAY & TUESDAY
Marshall Thompson, Kiva Law
rence, Richard Jordahl
To The Shores
Of Hell
Drive-In
Theatre
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
The Hallelujah
Trail
Burt Lancaster, Lee Remick
SUNDAY
Marriage On
The Rocks
Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin &
Deborah. Kerr ... . .. . .
Always a Color Cartoon