The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, May 15, 1969, Image 8
PAGE 8 — The Newberry Sun, Newberry, S. C., Thursday, May 15, 1969
Your Social
Security
H. M. Spiller, Social Secur
ity Field Representative for the
county, stated that today, chil
dren of parents who are de
ceased, retired, or disabled can
continue to receive social se
curity benefits until age 22 as
long as they are full-time stu
dents at an approved school,
and are unmarried. In addition
payments can be made during
vacations from school as long
as the student is not out of
school over four months.
“Children currently receiving
benfits need to let us know if
they will continue to attend
school after their 18th birthday,
Mr. Spiller added. Students not
receiving social security pay
ments who feel they may be
eligible for them, are urged to
contact the social security re
presentative in Newberry for
information. The representative
will be at the Courthouse every
Thursday between 9 a.m. and
3 p.m.
BROTHER DIES
Herman Lee Gatlin, 68, of
Greenwood brother of Luther
Gatlin of Newberry, died Sun
day at his home.
Funeral services were held
Monday in Galloway Methodist
Church. Burial was in Green
wood Memorial Gardens.
RITZ
THEATRE
THURSDAY
They Came To
Rob Las Vegas
Gary Lockwood
Elko Sommer
Lee J. Cobb
FRIDAY, SATURDAY
The Stalking
Moon
Gregory Peck
Eva Marie Saint
»
MONDAY, TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
Rachael
Rachael
Joanne Woodward
Estelle Parsons
THURSDAY, FRIDAY
The Heart Is A
Lonely Hunter
Alan Arkin
Sondra Locke
CLOVER LEAF
DRIVE IN
FRIDAY and SATURDAY
In Cold Blood
Robert Blake
Scott Wilson
SUNDAY
FIRST RUN
Where Angels
Go, Trouble
Follows
Stella Stevens
Rosalind Russell
Always A Color Cartoon
HAPPY
BIRTHDAY
May 11: H. T. Wike, Eleanor
Amick, Mack Amick, Wallace
Moore, N. B. Warren, Jr., Mrs.
Ruth S. Dickert, Irvin Attaway,
Alice Price, Susie Ogle.
May 12: Lottie Boland, Mit-
zie Ann Stoudemire, Janet Senn
George D. Hentz, Miss Ther
esa Lightsey, Clarence Duncan,
Sr.
May 13: Mrs. Lois W. Huck-
aby, Mrs. Pressley N. Boozer,
Eleanor Kirkegard, Kibler Wil
liamson,, Derryll Satterwhite,
Rhoda R. Boozer.
May 14: Mrs. Floy Hancock,
Alfreda Hipp, E. C. Rinehart,
Connie King, Harry Hughes,
Phyllis Boozer, Carol Ann Wat
ers, Patricia Shealy Pryor,
Kirk Beckwith, Clifford T.
Smith, Deedle Wilson.
May 15: Mrs. Frank Lomi-
nack, Jr., Toby Willis, Charles
Senn, Sarah Scarborough, El
mer W. Mayer.
May 16: Miss Pearl Amick,
Mrs. J. W. Warner, J. Fred
Epting, Jr., Mrs. H. L Boul-
ware, Jocelyn Darlene Atta
way, Mrs H. W. Dipner, Jr.
May 17: Bonnie Boland, Lin
da Allen Martin, Jerry Alewine,
Gertrude B. Force, Mrs. For
rest Boozer, Jewel Connelly,
R. E. Hanna, Jr., Eleanor Am
ick, Karen Atkison, Aldon E.
Bedenbaugh, Jr.
BAND CONCERT
(Continued from page 1)
rating at the State Marching
Band contest last fall it won
an Excellent rating in concert
competition at Rock Hill and
placed high in all other con
tests entered.
Individual members of the
band have also brought home
honors. Seven were selected
over keen statewide competi
tion to play in All-State bands.
Twenty-one of the musicians
were members of the Palmetto
Conference Band ten of them
holding first chair positions.
Two band members received
Superior and two Excellent rat
ings in State Solo competition,
and the band’s brass sextet re
ceived an Excellent rating in
State Ensemble competition.
Several band members form
the Pep Band which plays for
basketball games at the school.
They are Foster Busby, Sandy
Fretwell Leslie Hipp, Cliff Wait,
Rick Nelson and Bobby Wes-
singer.
Members of the Stage Band
are Patricia Leslie, Benny
Bartley, Charles Park, Randy
Berry, Foster Busby, Robert
Raffield, Carl Setzler Tim Park-
man, Cliff Waits, CUff Phillips,
Charles Setzler Rick Nelson,
Bobby Wessinger and Conii
Sanders. All play the same in
struments in stage band as in
regular band with the except
ion of Rick Nelson who plays
string bass, Foster Busby who
plays guitar, and Conii Sanders
who plays piano in the stage
band.
Band officers are: Flora Gil-
fillan and Cliff Waits, co-capt
ains; Rick Nelson and Debbie
Sligh, Lieutenants; Patricia Les
lie, First Sergeant; Ellenor Mc-
Caughrin, Sergeant; Sandy
Fretwell Leslie Hipp, Cliff
Phillips, Kathryn Ragland,
Mike Bryan and Tim Parkman,
Corporals.
ring the recent illness Du fo
During the recent illness of
Miss Paris, the band has been
under the direction of Mrs.
Maurice M. Moseley, who will
direct the concert. Miss Paris
today expressed appreciation on
behalf of herself and her stu
dents to Mrs. Moseley for the
excellent assistance she is ren
dering to enable the band to
have its annual concert.
Mrs. Shealy, 87,
service Friday
Mrs. Elizabeth S. Shealy, 87,
of Little Mountain, widow of
Irvin Luther Shealy, died on
Thursday morning at the J. F.
Hawkins Nursing Home after a
lingering illness.
Mrs. Shealy was bom in Lit
tle Mountain, daughter of the
late Benjamin F. and Mary
Elizabeth Shealy. She was a
member of Mt. Tabor Lutheran
Church.
She is survived by four sons,
Clarence E. Shealy of Little
Mountain, Evans F. Shealy of
Anderson, Herman L. Shealy of
Joanna and Lewis J. Shealy of
Newberry; one daughter, Mrs.
John F. (Mary) Wheeler of
Prosperity; ten grandchildren,
and eight great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were held
at 4 p.m. Friday at Mt. Tabor
Lutheran Church by Dr. H. A.
McCullough and the Rev. J.
Pierce Evans Interment was
in the church cemetery.
REALTY
TRANSFERS
Newberry No. 1
Alva M. Mays Bodie to Lila
M. Leopard, one lot, 1417 Jef
ferson Street, $5.
Ralph E. Miller to George
T. Kennedy and Betty Jean S.
Kennedy, one lot and one build
ing, Wells Heights, $5 and other
valuable considerations and as
sumption of a mortgage.
Howard Richards and Reba
J. Richards to James R. Wick
er, one lot and on building, $5.
Spencer Wilson, Jr. to Willie
Mae Ellison, one lot $10.
W. Fulmer Wells to Lutheran
Church of the Redeemer, one
lot, $5.
Newberry No. 1 Outside
Rufus E. Amick to Steve D.
and Alien A. Reeves, one lot,
$5 love and affection.
Rufus E. Amick to J. Ralph
and Katherine A. McEntire,
two lots, $5 love and affection.
Mary Emma Koon and Mar
ie K. Brown to Interstate Sta
tions, Inc., two lots $5.
Mrs. Cornelia B. Graham to
Greenwood Bottling Corpora
tion, two acres $5.
Guy V. Whitener, Sr. to
Wayne L. Mitchell, one lot, $5.
Little Mountain No. 6
Elbert J. Dickert, Mary Lay-
ton Dickert and Josephine H.
Layton to Ira T. Cousins, Inc.,
four lots $5.
Prosperity No. 7
Ted R. Surrett to Barbara
Scott Surrett, one lot, $5.
Bryan C. Forsyth and Cora
M. Forsyth to James Chapman
and Ethel Chapman, one lot,
$5.
S. C. Electric & Gas Co. to
Dewey E. and Doris H. Josey,
.42 acre, $1.
City Building
Permits
City building permits issued
last week:
Bessie Thrift, 1405 Dray
ton Street, repairs, C. G. Grif
fin, 1909 Rivers Street, repairs;
Miss Pauline McMeekin, 1210
Langford Street, repairs, T. J.
Vines, 403 Rodelsperger Street,
repairs; Anderson Shoe Store,
1215 Main Street, repairs; H. B.
Kirkland, 1218 Glenn Street, re
pairs; Lucia McGill, 1715 Har
per Street, repairs.
Construction value $2,355.
Rubber Stamps
THE SUN Office
Marriages
Raymond Charles Ellison and
Frances Carol Mars of Whit
mire were married in Joanna
on May 3rd.
Herman Gilliam and Mildred
E. Coats of this city were mar
ried here on May 3.
Johnnie Emlon Metts of Lit
tle Mountain and Janis Carol
Dominick of Prosperity were
married at Little Mountain on
May 3.
Kenneth Wayne Sligh and De
borah Ann Fowler of Newberry
were married here on May 3.
Cyril Wayne Sheppard of Sil-
verstreet and Linda Ann Krell
of Prosperity were married on
May 4 at Prosperity.
George Hallman Sligh, Pros
perity and Mattie Dovie Suber,
Newberry, were married here
on May 4.
Joey B. Knight and Brenda
King of Laurens were married
in Newberry on May 6 by Pro
bate Judge Frank H. Ward.
Fishing tips
for anglers
Water conditions are return
ing to normal and fishing, es
pecially in the rivers, is im
proving.
Hartwell and Wateree Reser
voirs report excellent fishing
and good catches of stripers
are being taken in the Santee,
Congaree and Wateree Rivers.
Blue fish have been school
ing along the entire coast and
Cobia are starting to bite in
Beaufort.
Trout fishing in mountains:
Trout fishing continues to be
good in mountain streams us
ing com and worms. Large
mouth bass are biting good in
the Keowee Toxaway Reser
voir using minnows and spring
lizards.
Lake Greenwood: Fishing for
bass is good using black plastic
worms and bass are averaging
from two to five pounds. Crap-
pie good, having moved back
toward the banks, taking them
on minnows and Mepps Spin
ners. Catfish good, taking them
in day time, while fishing on
the bottom with worms. Bream
falling off. White bass haven’t
started yet. Water level down
a foot and half. It’s murky but
should be clearing up by next
week and fishing conditions
should be good.
Lake Murray: Water condi
tions returning to normal and
fishing should be good for the
weekend.
Large mouth bass fishing is
fair to good using plastic worm,
Rebels and jigs around points
and in coves.
Crappie are biting fair on
live minnows and jigs in both
shallow and deep water.
Bream fishing is fair using
worms and crickets and should
improve considerably as bed
ding occurs.
SUMMERLAND FOLK
TO HAVE REUNION
Alumnae of Summerland Col
lege have scheduled a reunion
at Newberry College Saturday,
May 17. Summerland, a wo
men’s colleg at Leesville, mer
ged with Newberry in 1931.
Mrs. J. H. Cobb of Leesville
heads the Summerland reunion
committee. Mrs. Henry Brooks,
Newberry, is chairman of a
local committee arranging a
coffee hour which will open the
reunion at 10 a.m. in Smeltzer
Hall.
A musical program and bus
iness session in Wiles Chapel
will precede a noon luncheon
in Kaufmann Hall. Dr. A.G.D.
Wiles, president of the college,
will speak.
The invocation will be given
by the Rev. J. Virgil Long of
Newberry, son of a former
Summerland College president,
Dr. J. J. Long.
LADY MAJOR
ATTENDS MEET
SANFRANCISCO—Major Ka
therine I. Shealy, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Shealy,
Sr., 1315 Pearl Street, attend
ed the 40th Annual Aerospace
Medical Association m eeting
just concluded in San Francis
co.
Major Shealy, a member of
the U. S. Air Force Nurse
Corps, was among 1,500 active
duty and reserve officers of
the Air Force Medical Service
who participated in a series of
programs on the latest ad
vancements in the medical as
pects of aviation and space tra
vel.
The major serves at Andrews
AFB, Md. as a nurse advisor
to the First Air Force Reserve
Region.
A graduate of Newberry High
School, the major attended col
lege at Newberry. She receiv
ed her training from Columbia
Hospital School of Nursing, and
earned her B. S. degree in 1963
from the University of Mary
land.
CHILDREN CAN
REJECT VIOLENCE
Are children today really victims of society?
Do many of them simply reflect the
violence, anger, and frustration they see
on television or witness in the home?
Not necessarily. Thousands of families are
finding that children can just as easily reflect
• the love, peace, and satisfaction of their
creator, God ... if given the chance.
How? Listen this Sunday to a program entitled
“Helping Children to Reject Violence."
It is part of the Christian Science Radio Series
Heard each Sunday on Two local stations:
9:00 a.m. WBLR—1430 KC-A.M. & 92.3 mc-FM
Sponsored by Christian Science Society, Saluda
Sunday Church Service at 11 a.m.
THEnini ["SPEAKS
DIDLCtoyou