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PAGE TWO THE NEWBERRY SUN THURSDAY, AUGUST 21, 1968 1218 College Street NEWBERRY, S. C. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY O. F. Armfield, Jr., Owner Entered as second-class matter December 6, 1937 at the Postoffice at Newberry, South Carolina, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $2.00 per year in ad vance; six months, $1.25. COMMENTS ON MEN AND THINGS By SPECTATOR The genius of Mr. Walter Regnery is presenting the prob lems of his great enterprise always commands my admira tion. He does not theorize or strain points, but with most attractive clarity he tells his co-workers exactly what’s what and how the condition may be treated so that all may enjoy the result. Consider this: “Who Decides Our Profit ? Do company officials decree our profits every year? Some people think they do. Actually, it doesn’t work this way at all. You can’t decree profit, for profit is the end-result of business, not the beginning. First, management estimates how much it will cost to make and sell our products. They get this figure by tallying all the wages, taxes, material costs, repairs, and other costs of production. This is the least they can charge and still break even. But you can’t stay in business or grow just breaking even. So they add to the cost a profit that will give them money to plow back into company growth and also give shareholders a fair return for use of their money. That’s the price they’d like to charge. But competition has to be considered. The customer will buy the best product he can get for his money and often a company can’t charge the price it would like to charge. So management, the members of the manufacturing team, the advisory committee members—yes, every Joanna em ployee who is intrested in his future well-being—must con tinually look for ways to cut production costs so we can give customers more and more for their money and keep them buying our cloth. If our costs in the end prove to be higher than our sales, our end-result is a loss rather than a profit and we go into debt to keep in business. Management never decreed a profit in our free enterprise system, Customers, competition, and the efficiency of opera tion determine profit.” You can’t improve on that for lucid, convincing presenta tion. And there was another signed article which shows Mr. Regnery as the comradely manager who talks to his people frankly: “As announced on the bulletin boards recently, Joanna employees will have a holiday with pay on Labor Day, Sep tember 1. However, the Labor Day Barbecue and Fun Day held annually for the past three years will be omitted this year, we regret to say. No doubt you will approve our action in withholding this expensive treat, the cost of which runs into thousands of dollars. Understanding the seriousness of the recession in the textile industry, you will prefer, we f^el sure, that we practice every economy possible at the moment in order to keep Joanna Cotton Mills competitive. Our machines will keep humming, furnishing steady employment for all, only so long as we can sell a good product cheaply enough to at tract buyers in a glutted market. Management is working day and night to solve our prob lems. Management is counting on you to do your part, too. Together we can and will weather the storm of recession. Though things look gloomy now, we are fortunate in hav ing a strong basis for recovery with our combined efforts. Over the years you have developed skills in producing spec ialty goods which, manufactured in high quality at reason able cost, will be in demand above ordinary goods. We have good machinery and the knowhow to do* a good job. Too, the many improvements suggested and put into effect through our advisory committees—and the additional help we expect in the future from these excellent sources—are a new stronghold. Add these—valuable skills, know-how, good machinery, and excellent committee suggestions—to our de termination to do our best day in and day out, and we have an unbeatable combination. We will win. Confident of your interest and best efforts, and with faith in the future of Joanna Cotton Mills Company, we are looking forward to a better year with increased job-secur ity and full-time employment for all Joannians.” Do you wonder at the admirable spirit of that splendid or ganization? The late William H. Regnery built an enduring monument in his sons, all of whom have his spirit and his great quali ties. Mr. William H. Regnery and Mr, James C. Self were among the great men I have had the honor to know. A timely emssage to the people by J. Clifford Miller, Jr. I quote in part: “The complexity and size our National government pre sents a frighteningn threat to the future of a free America. And the most dangerous feature of this situation is the fact that the average citizen is either wholly unnformed of this peril or is selfishly indifferent to it. Whether the Government itself has a definite idea of its size is doubtful. Recent reports by Congressional Commit tees dealing with this feature show variances that are not easy to reconcile. However, we do know that this organiza tion we call the Federal Government now has more than two a&d a quarter million employees who receive a total annual DEED TRANSFERS Newberry No. 1 Forest E. Miller and Lillian M. Miller to Beth Eden-St. James Lutheran Church, one lot, $900. Ruby D. Trice and Blanche D. Dickert to Paul Kemper Fuller and Joan I). Fuller, one lot on Wheel er St., $5.00 and other valuable considerations. Thelma W. Robertson to Alma Robertson, one lot and one build ing-, Caldwell St., $5.00 love and affection. Newberry No. 1 Outside Raymond L. Suit and Estelle S. Hendrix to Leila B. Suit, one lot and one building 2-3 interest in estate of Estes L. Suit, $5.00 love and affection. Preston F. Smith to Harold E. Smith, .58 acre, $5.00. Preston F. Smith to Mrs. Doris Smith Marlowe, Augusta, Maine, 3.71 acres, $5.00. Delia A. Bradley, Benjamin Bradley Hope, Martha Bradley Rayeland, Charles W. Bradley to Maggie Turner and John Turner, one acre and one building, estate of Ben W. Bradley, $4,200. Silverstreet No. 2 D. L. Hamm Jr. to Rose Hamm, 42 acres, $857 and other valuable considerations, 1-4 interest reserv ed, one acre. Pearle Hamm to Rose Hamm, 42 acres, $541 and other valuable considerations, 1-4 interest and part of consideration, reserved one acre. Whitmire No. 4 E. Maxcy Stone, P. J., to Le- nora Williams Jeter Underwood, one lot on Gilliam St., $1000. F. P. Nance to Admar D. Ma- hess and Addie W. Maness, one iot and one building on Grant i»t., $3,500. Admar D. Maness and Addie W. Maness to Joe H. Boland, one lot and one building on Grant St., $705.12 and assumption of mort gage. C. B. Jeter to Andrew Sims, two lots and one building on Jeter St., $1,850. W hitmire No. 2 OS W'alter Samuel Baker to Broad- us Allen Baker et al, four acres, $5.00 love and affection. Earl Whitmire to Arthur G. Brank and Pauline E. Brank, one lot on Whitmire-Clinton Highway, $500. Pomaria No. 5 Lee Olin Crumpton to Willie Hugh Livingston, one acre, $5.00 and other valuable considerations^ Prosperity No. 7 Perry Lee Halfache to Mrs. Martha E. Wilson, 1.01 acres, $75, on Jolly St. Road. Virgil Hawkins to John R. Fra zier, timber deed, consideration, $1400. Vera Sligh Richardson Robinson to Gussie Mae Sligh, one 16t just north of city limits, $400. C. S. Holland to Alvin A. Ful mer, one lot, $5.00 and other val uable considerations. compensation in excess of eleven billion dollars. This state of affairs is the direct product of a policy that has multiplied the powers of the executive branch of the government and placed the Nation under control of a colos sal bureaucracy.” “There have been many changes in our government in its transition to a bureaucratic dictatorship, but none so notice able as its ‘zeal for the rights of the people’ of other na tions, all at the expense of its own people. As a result, we are burdened with a national debt of $280 billion; a tax take that borders on confiscation; and we are hemmed in by regulatory bodies which exercise controls over our lives and property. This federal monstrosity, which has been created largely as a resule of our inordinate desire to be ‘kept’ now functions in an atmosphere reminiscent of conditions that caused our fathers to charge: ‘He’ (George III of England) ‘Has erected a multitude of new offices, and sent hither swarms of offi cers to harass our people, and eat out their substance’.” An editorial by Thurmond Sensing is timely and all should ponder it well: “Conservatives—among whom we are proud to be numb ered—are often termed reactionary and opposed to change— and therefore against ‘progress.’ It is not logical, of course, to take the position that change necessarily means progress —but that is the line the liberals take. However, let this conservative state here and now that he believes the time has come when we need a complete change, when we need another revolution in this country— not a military revolution this time, but an economic and political revolution. Out of our original revolution, highlighted by the adop tion of our Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1775, was born the greatest free nation known to man. For the first time in the history of nations was founded a government that belonged to the people rather than a people who belonged to their government. Under our American free enterprise system, which means that a man is free to make something of himself if he has the enterprise to do it, we developed the greatest produc tive capacity and the highest standard of living the world has ever known. Under that system, the people took care of the government. But having reached this position of affluence and abund ance in our cycle as a nation, we have, as has so often been true of other nations in history, become apathetic and soft. We have accepted overwhelming taxation and bureaucratic domination of our affairs until the Spirit of ’76 is no longer with us. Now, instead of taking care of our government, we want the government to fake care of us. If we are ever to regain the spirit that made us a great nation and that is necessary if we are to remain a great nation, we must have a complete overthrow of the existing order—a strange thing for a conservative to say. But we do say it—and this change must come in both our national economy and our national politics. We must once again start paying our debt and living with in our income. Otherwise, we are headed for disastrous infla tion that will destroy our economy and we shall see ourselves weaken as other nations have weakekned that have not had the stamina and fortitude to stop this insidious process. Our national debt is now more than $275 billion and is headed steeply higher—a debt the like of which no nation on the face of the earth has ever known. We could commit a no more dastardly crime than to pass this debt on to our children as if we were in no way responsible for it—and yet that is what we give every indication of doing. We have balanced our national budget in only 6 of the last 28 years—and in at least two of these more or less by inadvertance. In other words, our government has spent more than it has earned, has lived beyond its means, in 23 of the last 28 years. We are now faced with a budget defi cit for the current fiscal year of between $10 billion and $12 billion—the highest peacetime deficit in our history.” Hospital Patients Legare Ammons, 621 Drayton St. Jesse O. Bundrick, Chapin. Mrs. Nettie Bobb, Rt. 3, Pros perity. Henry R. Boozer, Player St. Mrs. Otis Cathey, 1511 Calhoun St. Ben F. Dawkins, 2130 Nance St. Vernon Frick, Little Mountain. Mrs. Ethel Holloway, Box 124, Chappells. Mrs. Helen Hancock, Rt. 4, Sa luda. Mrs. Martha Humphries, 1804 Piedmont St. Donald Lee Knight, Rt. 1. Sonia Kolodij, 708 Amelia St. James Koon, 409 Wright St. Miss Annie Knotts, Prosperity. Mrs. Vivian Long, 1127 Hunt St. Mrs. Kathryn Mills, 1133 Hunt St. Mrs. Helen Morris, Rt. 3. A. W. Murray, 2203 Johnstone St. Mrs. Grace Mills, Box 94, Pros perity. Mrs. Estelle Marlowe, 1519 Harrington St. Mrs. Euna Mize, Rt. 1. Mrs. Gaynell Powell and baby boy, 1212 Third St. Mrs. Jessie Phillips, 1300 Sec ond St. Mrs. Catherine B. Pittard, 925 Confederate Ave., Salisbury, N. C. Twin Girls Rhodes, Saluda. Euston Sons, Little Mountain. Mrs. Dorpthy Senn, Silverstreet. Henry H. Sims, 1209 Third St. James E, Wiseman, .Wiseman Hotel. Mrs. Neta L. Wilson, Newberry. John G. Watts, Whitmire. Mrs. Julia Wise, Newberry. Irene Davis, Rt. 3, Box 186. Colie Dean, 824 Wise St. Laura Mae Daniels 1124 Long St. Bettie Jean Dawkins and baby boy, Rt. 1, Box 86—A. Eugene Hill, Planter Hill, Whit mire. Elizabeth Hair, Rt. 1, Box 13-B, Chapells. Lola Joyner, Whitmire. Anna Kinard, Route 1. Baby Sherman Long, Whitmire. Hattie Mayer, Route 3. Donald Ruff, 2342 Holloway St. Rosalie Sligh and baby girl, 837 Oil Mill Avenue. Lawson Suber, Whitmire. Frank Sadler, Route 3. Mildred Simpkins, 1603 cent Street. John Turner, Route 1. Vin- Recent Movings Mrs. Mary B. Rossiter has mov ed to 1923 Harper St. in one of the Senn apartments. Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Davenport moved Wednesday to their new home on Jessica Ave. Building Permits Aug. 12: Harold Stockman, one shed, 15x8 ft., wood, frame, 711 Wright St., $25. Aug. 13: Henry Montgomery, repairs to dwelling on McKibben St., $350; Henry Singleton, re pairs to roof on Nance St., $200. Aug. 14: Agnes M. Crooks, one 8x10x7 concrete block building, 1915 Lucas St., $200. NOTICE OF SALE State of South Carolina, County of Newberry. In the Court of Common Pleas As you may know, I make a weekly talk over eight ra dio stations. During July and the first week of August I missed some of the Stations. That was not because of the heat, but because of some little confusion in schedules. I greatly enjoy my radio brethren and my radio “fans” and hope they will bear with me. Regina W. Sartor, Plaintiff —vs.— Ernest Carter, Jr. and Fanny S. Wideman, Defendant. Pursuant to an Order of the Court of Common Pleas issued in the above entitled cause, I shall sell at public auction the real property hereinafter described at 11:00 A. M. Monday, September 2, 1958 at the Newberry County Court House. The terms of the sale shall be cash. The successful bidder shall be required to deposit ten (10%) per cent of the bid im mediately after the sale and pay the balance within ten (10) days thereafter. The deposit shall be forfeited upon the successful bid der’s failure to comply with his bid within the time specified. The purchaser shall pay for the cest of the deed and documentary stamps. All that lot or parcel of land- _known as Lot No. 22 of the J. F. McPherson Survey, lying and being situate in the Town of Whitmire, Newberry County, State of South Carolina, being fifty feet in width and facing on New Street, being one hundred and fifty-two feet in depth and being bounded by Lot No. 21, Lot No. 19 and Let No. 23, the same being the identical lot of land conveyed to H. L. Parr by deed of Ida Sanders and An- dersons Sanders, recorded in the office of the Clerk of Court for Newberry County, in Deed Book 32 at page 41, and being the identical lot of land conveyed to Mary E. Sartor by Deed of H. L. Parr said Deed being record ed in the office of the Clerk of Court for Newberry County in Deed Book 32, at page 69. E. MAXCY STONE, Master 16-3tc. Recent Births Recent births at the Newberry County Memorial Hospital in clude: Hugh Anthony, eight pound, one ounce son, born August I to Mr. and Mrs. Marion Ever- ette (Clara Cornelia Mills) Pitts Route 3, Newberry. Ellen Annette, four pounds, se ven ounces, and Ella Jeanette, four pounds, four ounces, born August 6 to Mr. and Mrs. Ollen Columbus (Ella ELfrieda Samp- ert) Rhodes, Route 4, Saluda. Euella Mae, five pound fifteen ounce daughter born August 7 to Mr. and Mrs. Glenmore (Doris Gwendolyn Collie) Shirey, Route 2, Box 159-A, Newberry. Delma Day, eight pound, seven ounce daughter born August 7 to Mr. and Mrs. William De- Werts (Dorothy Day Wheeler) Stone, Saluda. Billie Rae, nine pound, two ounce daughter born August 8 to Mr. and Mrs. Billy Edward Route 1, Silverstreet. Douglas Perry, seven pound, 14 ounce son bom August 9 to Mr. and Mrs. Virgil William (Dot- tye Rachel Wicker) Cook, 1225 Kinard St. William Robert, eight pound, ounce son bom August 11 to Mr. and. Mrs. William Taylor (Linda June Hanna) Thayer, 1725 Harp er steet. William Steven, seven pound II ounce son born August 11 to Mr. and Mrs. Alan Repworth (Carolyn Joy Chester) Perry, Mr. and Mrs. John C| Bush of Little Mountain announce the birth of a five pound, 15 ounce daughter, Elizabeth Carol, on August 13 at Newberry Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Bush is the form er Mary Elizabeth Robbins. Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Kinard of 1502 Nance St. announce the birth of Tamela Chaney, weigh ing six pounds, 12 ounces, on August 14 at the local hospital. Mrs. Kinard is the former Betty Jean Duncan. Recent Marriages Ernest C. Crumpton and Ray- nell Rinehart of Newberry were married July 26 at Newberry by Rev. Edward W. Gott. Jacob Earl Lindler of Little Mountain and Maggie Cannon of Chapin were married at' Chapin by Rev. John D. Zeigler on July 20. Edward W. Melvin of Norfolk, Va. and Mary Helen McCord of Newberry were married at New berry on August 2 by Rev. Neil E. Truesdell. Coke Smith Dannelly of Ehr- hardt and Sally Elizabeth Teague of Newberry were married by Rev. Phil M. Jones at Newberry on August 3. Billy R. Gibson and Sylvia Boozer of Newberry were married on August 7 by Rev. Otis C. Brown. Robert E. Crenshaw of Whitmire and Joyce Hill, Rt. 2, Clinton were married on August 16 at Newber ry by Probate Judge E. Maxcy Stone. MILL SCLINIC PATIENTS Mrs. George H. Caldwell and baby girl, Saluda. Mrs. Francis Epting, Newberry. Mrs. Yvonne Gantt, Batesburg. Carl Epting, Prosperity. Mrs. Corrie Hiller, Newberry. Mrs. Minnie Reagin, Newberry. Curtis Griffin, Newberry. Mrs. Frances Oswalt, Joanna. Virginia Herbert and baby boy. Prosperity. Willie Pearl Davenport and baby girl, Prosperity. Gridiron Qucats Available To Indian Club members are re minded by F. D. Mac Lean, execu tive secretary of the club, that they are entitled to first choice of football tickets to the home games of the Fighting Redskins. Tickets will be reserved for club members through September first, after which they will go on sale to the general public. Applications and $2.50 per ticket should be sent to L. C. Graham, Public Relations Di rector, Newberry College. The games are as follows: Oc tober 4, Lenoir Rhyne; October 11, homecoming game with Carson- Newman; October 25, East Caro lina; November 15, Wofford. All home games are set for 8:00 p. m. Youth Dies As Result Of Head Injury Robert Wade Willingham, nine, died early Thursday morning at Columbia Hospital from injuxie* received Wednesday afternoptl playing baseball at West End School grounds. He attended West End School and was the son of Andrew O. Willingham of Newberry. Besides his parents, he is sur vived by one sister, Nancy Wil lingham, two half-sisters, Barbara Willingham and Vickie Willing ham, all of Newberry; his grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Wil- lingham, Mr. and Mrs. Bass Pad gett and great grandfather, R. C. Hamilton, all of Newberry. Funeral services were held a% 5 p. m. Saturday from McSwahfc Funeral Home with Rev. R. E. Rhyne and Rev. William A Jack- son conducting. Burial followed in Rosemont cemetery. C. Active pallbearers were Dallas Willingham Jr., Donnie Willing ham, Jack Ripley, Larry Thomas, Del Rowe and Steve Willingham;* Flower attendants were Mrs. Curtis Wicker, Mrs. Maggie WB* lingham, Miss Clara Jean Wfllhkg^ ham, Mrs. Ruth White. £•£ Honorary escort was composed of Curtis Wicker, Wilbur Mffle*i Edgar Hiller, Charlie Davie, Jafce Livingston, Judson Jones, ' Joins Evans and J. E. Cox. <• Young Wade was reportedly struck in the head during a base^ ball game Wednesday afternOOtt. He was canted to Newberry CbUJir ty Memorial Hospital, and rushed to Columbia Hospital where "im emergency operation was perform ed late Wednesday night. ^4^ Bond Sales Series E and H. Savings sales for the month of July Newberry County totaled reports Joe M. Roberts, County YOU LO VE YOUR • • • WHY NOT MAKE IT More Lovable... with a Home Improvement Loan from New berry Federal? You may borrow from us to improve your home regardless of the na- lure of the improvements, including heat- mg systems, etc. Payments as low as $8.00 per $1,000 per month. We make loans on homes lor any purpose you might desire. See us today. NEWBERRY Federal Savings & Loan Ass’n “Use our Modern Night Depository for after office hours business. r* u NEWBERRY’S LARGEST SAVINGS INSTITUTION” *