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5^ PAGE TWO THE NEWBERRY SUN THURSDAY, SEPT. 4, 1958 5$UW 1218 Colkfe Street NEWBERRY, S. C. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY 0. 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 Since the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Louis calls for immediate integration in schools I quote a resol ution of churchmen of North Carolina. This resolution clear ly distinguishes between spiritual and physical affairs. “(The following is a statement of principles adopted by Concerned Churchmen, a group of laymen and clergymen of the Protestant Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina. Active in the group is the Rev. James P. Dees, rector of Trinity Episcopal Church, Statesville, N.C.) 1. We believe that the sphere of Church pronounce ments should be that of the Faith and the gospel as set forth in the Bible and Book of Common Prayer. 2. We believe that the Church has no prerogative to speak with authority nor to bind or attempt to persuade its mem bers with respect to any racial, political, social, or economic or legal philosophy, and that the Kingdom of God can be identified with none of them. 3. We believe that every free’man in a country has the right to decide for himself and speak for himself on racial, political, social, economic, and legal philosophies, but no man has the right to use the Church, its organization, its funds, or its facilities, to promote any such philosophy. 4. We are concerned about the acts^and pronouncements of some churchmen in falsely substituting the physical as sociation of men for the spiritual brotherhood of man in Jesus Christ. 5. We believe that the races of man, having been created by God, are favored in the sight of God, and that the Church should not seek to destroy by physical association and am algamation that which God has created. 6. We believe that men of each race, as men and as mem bers of their God-given race, are entitled to seek and, God willing, to receive, the love of God and of men, the forgive ness and mercy of God and of men, and everlasting life. 7. We believe that persons of any race, worshipping and working together with persons of their own race, may call on Christ as Lord and Savior, and by doing so can best serve Him. “(News & Courier 8/14) The News and Press of Darlington has a clear editorial Here’s why your Fire Insurance costs have been increased Fire insurance rales are based primarily on the ratio of. fire losses to premiums paid. This is known as the burning rate. When the burning rate is high, rates go up. When if is low. rates go down. Insurance companies use experience over a five year period as a basis for rates. When the figures for the years 1952-1956 became available they showed that South Carolina’s insured fire losses dur ing the period were $42,100,000. This increase of more than $19,000,000 over the years 1947-1951, plus increased operating costs made the recent rate in crease necessary. This was the first increase in South Carolina’s fire insurance rates since 1948. During this 10 year period, rates had been reduced eleven times because of the low burning rate. Even with the recent rate increases, South Carolina’s fire insurance costs are still 18% below those in effect in 1948. ,8 SOUTH CAROLINA INSPECTION & RATING BUREAU Hospital Patients Legare Ammons, 621 Drayton St. Jesse O. Bundrick, Chapin. Henry R. Boozer, Player St. Mrs. Louise Davis, 816 Pauline St. Walter Frick, Chapin. Charles Force, 1518 Harrington St. Mrs. Sue Inabinet, 943 Cline St. Mrs. Annie Mae King, Chap pells. Miss Annie Knotts, Prosperity. Mrs. Elizabeth Longshore and Baby Boy, Rt. 3. Mrs. Eula E. Langford, 603 Boundary St. Mrs. Azile McLeod, Rt. 3. James Martin, Kinards. Mrs. Estelle Marlowe, 1519 Harrington St. Mrs. Euna Mize, Rt. 1. Mrs. Frances Oswalt, 338 Mag nolia St., Joanna. Mrs. Shirley Perry, 1903 Mont gomery St. Baby Girls Rhodes, Rt. 4, Sa luda. Mrs. Anna Shealy, 1309 Jeffer son St. Henry H. Sims, 1209 Third St. John G, Watts, Box 14, Whit mire. Mrs. Julia Wise, Wiseman Ho tel. Baby Sherman Louis Long, Satterwhite St., Whitmire. Viola Saddler and Baby Girl, Rt. 3. Will Smith, Rt. 1, Kinards. Frank Nelson Saddler, Rt. 3. Mildred Simpkins, 1603 Vincent St. John Henry Turner, Rt. 1. MILLS CLINIC PATIENTS Mrs. Frances Epting, Newberry. Carl Epting, Prosperity. Church Services LUTHERAN CHURCH OF THE REDEEMER 10:00 a. m. Sunday School, all ages. 11:00 a. m., Worship. Sermon by Rev. J. Benjamin Bedenbaugh, a professor at the Lutheran Theological Seminary, Colum bia. 11:00 a. m., Church Hour Nursery. EPTING MEMORIAL METHODIST CHURCH 10:00 a. m., Church School, all ages. F. O. Fulmer, General Supt. 11:00 a. m., Worship Service, Rev. B. B. Blakeney, Minister. 7:30 p. m., Evening Worship. 7:30 p. m., Wednesday, Mid week prayer service. AVELEIGH PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 9:45 a. m., Sunday school, all ages. 11:0(^ a. m., Worship Service, Dr. N. E. Truesdell, Minister. 11:00 a. m., Church Hour Nursery. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 10:00 a .m., Sunday School, all ages. 11:00 a. m., Worship Service. Rev. Kenneth B. Wlson, Pastor. 11:00 a. m., Church Hour Nursery. 7:40 p. m., Evening Worship Serv- Mrs. Violet Marrier, Spring Hill Apts., Newberry. Mrs. Minnie Reagin, Newberry. Leroy Bobb, Rt. 3, Prosperity. Mrs. Janice McCormick, Ridge Spring. Loretta West and Baby Boy, Bateeburg. Aaron Boyd, Little Mountain. on that subject: “Churches On Segregation The American Council of Churches at its recent conven tion adopted a resolution on racial segregation which is based on sound thinking and which truly mirrors the view point of all calm, sensible Americans. The American Council of Christian Churches in empha sizing that Christian principles should govern the conduct of all believers, regardless of their race or color, declares that so-called liberal Christianity today and the program of the National Council of Churches, calling for a non-se- gregated world does violence to the true Gospel of Jesus Christ. Segregation within the church on racial, linguistic, and national lines is not unchristian nor contrary to the specific commands of the Bible. An avalanche of propaganda spon sored by modernist church leaders now in control of eccles iastical machinery is being deliberately directed against the South. The religious shibboleth the integrationists use is not even found in the Bible. The so-called universal Fatherhood of God and brotherhood of man was repudiated by Christ and has been rejected by historic Christianity which makes the clearest distinction between tne saved and the lost, the children of the Devil and the children of God, and maintains that man must be born again in order to become sons of God. At stake in the present conflict is true Christian doctrine, as opposed to a ialse Christianity being subtly substituted. To make integration the standard of Christian conduct and to hurl the charge ‘unchristian’ against conscientious, God-fearing men of both races who desire to maintain a social pattern in their churches and communities in keeping with the principles of States Rights and their convictions and faith, stimulates bitterness and strife and denies the liberty that every believer has in Christ. The propaganda of the National Council of the Church of Christ in the U.S.A. for integration will destroy not only our races, but Christianity itself. Only the Christian faith which generates real love among men can give mutual respect and proper relations be tween the races as each carries on its work for Christ ac cording to its convictions. The attempt of church bodies to tell local congregations and individual Christians that they cannot use their local properties for private or religious schools is simply an ex pression of the growing authoritarianism in American Prot estantism and which denies to the individual Christian their rights in Christ. It is time for Christian people to repudiate this false Christianity which is attempting to take from them their churches, their liberty, and ultimately their Christ.” DEED TRANSFERS Newberry No. 1 Willie Frank Lester' and Edith L. Lester to Bobby L. Yochem, one lot and one building, 1302 Jef ferson St., $5.00 and other valu able considerations. Amos S. Wells et al to Beale H. Cromer, one lot, $550. W. Fulmer Wells and Henry B. Wells to William Darr Wise, Rt. 3, Newberry, one lot on Reid St., $5.00 and other valuable consid erations. j Newberry No. 1 Outside Hazel W. Halfacre to Johnny S. Stribble and Betty D. Stribble, one lot on Player St., $400. Alma Dominick to Lewis Shealy, one lot, contains one acre, $100. O. L. Dominick to Trannie P. Shealy, four lots, $600. Chris Dawkins to Bennie and Jeffries Rutherford, 120 acres, $5.00 and other valuable consid erations. Elsie D. Dickert to Robert Liv ingston, .233 acres, $5.00 and other valuable considerations. Irene R. Lominick et al to John F. Lominick Jr., 190 acres, $5.00 and other valuable considerations. Silverstreet No. 2 W. Scott Farley, receiver, to W. A. Epting, 24 acres, 27.09 acres, and 16.99 acres, $425. W. A. Epting to C. Boyd Epting and W. Holland Epting, 57.8 acres, $5.00 love and affection. W. A. Epting to C. Boyd Epting, I. 66 acres, $5.00, love and affec tion. W hitmire No. 4 R. A. Nelson to Jack Ammons and Betty Ammons, one lot on New St., $5.00, love and affection. E. Maxcy Stone, Probate Judge to Regina W. Sartor, one lot on New St., $200. Charles M. Hardin to Jack T. Hardin, one lot and one building on North Main St., $10.00 love and affection. Whitmire No. 4 Outside Ben S. Wren and Christie S. Youngblood as trustees of the estate of Mary S. Holt, to L. J. King, 1.7 lacres, $100. Pomaria No. 5 Eva Price Ringer to Anna E. Noryell, Marietta, Ga., .38 acres (Willie Jason Ringer property) $5.00, love and affection. Little Mountain No. 6 J. N. Hamm to Roy Yarborough and Lillian Yarborough, .58 acres, $5.00 and other valuable consid erations. Prosperity No. 7 Bertha E. Amick to Harry W. Wicker, 12 acres, $5.00 and other valuable considerations. D. L. Bedenbaugh to Ernest A. Brooks, 26.85 acres, $10.00 and other valuable considerations. David E. Bedenbaugh and Earl J. Bedenbaugh to Ernest A. Brooks, 26.85 acres, $5.00 (quit claim). Mrs. Suber, 90, Rites Sunday Mrs. Mary Anna Stuck Suber, 90, widow of William Henry Su ber, died suddenly early Satur- deiy morning at her home in Peak. Mrs. Suber was born and rear ed in Richland County near Peak, the daughter «f the late George M. and Elizabeth Wes- singer Stuck. She had spent most of her life in Peak and was one of the oldest citizens of the sect ion of the county. A charter member of Mt. Hermon Luther an Church, member of the ULCW, she was the oldest member of the church. Surviving are one son, H. Lionel Suber; two daughters, Mrs. C. H. Bost, Mrs. C. A. Pin- BOYS ARE THAT WAY By J. M. ELEAZER Local Women To Participate In Fall Seminar The Fall Education Seminar of the Greenwood District Wom an’s Society of Christian Service will be held at Cambridge Meth- bdist Church, Ninety Six, on Sat urday, September 6. Registration will begin at 9:30 and the pro gram at 10 a.m. The meeting will end with lunch. The missionary studies for 1958-59 will be presented under the direction of Mrs. W. E. Bes- inger, district secretary of Mis sionary Education. Mrs. L. E. Gatlin, district secreftary of Spiritual Life will present the _ study of Isiah. Mrs. F. Scott Ell-^ iott, district president, will pre side over the opening exercises. Mrs. A. E. Shinn is Zone 3 leader and urges good attendance by the societies. As kids, we found our fun in the Stone Hills of the Dutch Fork, where we roamed. I said we found it. More accurately, we made it. The past two weeks I’ve told of our games of “green” and “tag”, that we played a lot. They required no equipment and entailed a lot of running, which we liked in itself. Another of our games, “fox”, was a running game too. We’d elect one of the boys to be the fox. He’d get an armful of small limbs from some definite sort of tree. We’d all turn our backs and shut our eyes, while one of us would start counting, usually up to 100. Then we, the dogs, could go. The “fox” was to drop one of the small branches about every 100 steps as he ran. That was our trail. We’d fan out ner Sr., all of Peak; three sisters, Mrs. George A. Swygert of Peak, Mrs. George Derrick of Lancast er, Mrs. R. L. Coner of Clare mont, N~. C.; five grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Funeral services were conduct ed Sunday at 3 p. m. at Mt. Her mon Lutheran Church by Rev. C. L. Richardson. Burial was in Peak Cemetery. looking for the first branch. The one who found it w r ould open up like a hound dog, barking on the hot trail. Then the others would all merge on the trail there with him. But it was not always easy to find the next limb he drop ped. The canny “fox” would run the hard places and try to throw us off the trail. But we could always hold onto the last branch and know the next one couldn’t be too far from there. You might think the fox would not have played it fair and would fail to drop the prescribed limbs. But he never would. It was a sort of trust and we al ways lived up to it. In the swampy places it was slow go ing, like a dog trying to get a rabbit out of such a place. But as soon as we routed him there and he had to take to the open woods, it was a chase for fair. We didn’t have to look for the trail then. We chased the actual “fox.” Sometimes, if we had selected the best runner to be the “fox,” he’d run us all down. Then we’d have to frame up on him. We’d push him hard, just two or three of us, while the others rested. He couldn’t go too far without circling some. Those who rested could be guided by the barking of those on the trail and could cut across when their time came. But even with this, sometimes a chase would last an hour or so. It was quite a thrill to catch that “fox” akin to the real thing with actual dogs and fox in later life. costs little Parr Herd Holds Record An average production of 9,539 pounds milk containing 517 pounds butterfat per cow is the accom plishment of the registered Jersey herd of Headsprings Farm, owned by H. L. Parr, Rt .3, Newberry. The herd of 79 Jerseys recently completed a 12-month test period on Herd Improvement Registry. The official test was made under the supervision of The Clemson Agricultural Colieg • W« Fir FREE sstHwti vMIfit lb* HptfM CJUi 993. ' Whitaker Floor Coverings 1011 Caldwell St. Newberry, S. C. CAROLINA METAL WORKS Sheet Metal - Heating - Air Conditioning COLLEGE ST. EXTN. A. G. McCAUGHRIN, President A Treasurer. “The million-member United Steel-workers began collect ing- an automatic pay increase of about 20 cents an hour back on July 1. Ever since, manufacturers across the country have been braced for higher steel prices. Last week they got them. And on the eve of another raise for aluminum work ers, producers also met higher costs with higher prices. About the only thing unexpected about the new steel price increase (the eleventh since World War II) was that Armco, the No. 7 producer, led the parade this time, and not U. S. Steel, No. 1. But within 48 hours after Armco had added $4.50 a ton to the price of its sheet and strip steel, produ cers up and down the line followed suit. The same sort of chain reaction started after Alcoa added seven-tenths of a cent to the price of a pound of its aluminum. Within 24 hours, Aluminum, Lt., the big Canadian producer, had passed the same word to its U. S. customers, and aluminum users as sumed Kaiser, Reynolds, Revere Metals, and Olin Mathieson would do likewise before very long.” Someone has offered this information as to the steel in various articles: In an automobile, $188; in a refrigerator $12; in a washer $14; in a tractor $112. If steel advances, so must everything containing steel; and that means that after a while other things must go up, in cluding labor. Flower Show Program To Be Presented The Council of Newberry Gar den. Clubs invites all garden club members to attend an interesting program on “The Do’s and Don’ts of Flower Shows” which will be presented by Mrs. W. Jack Bryant ant of Orangeburg, at 10:30 a. m. September 1 at the Community Hall. Mrs. Bryant, ardent gardener and club woman, is currently ser ving as Awards Chairman for Na tional Council of State Garden Clubs. A member of the Orange burg Garden Club, she has given freely of her time in working with projects of the group, which in cluded Flower Show Schools, Flower Shows, Garden Center specialized programs, etc. Mrs. Bryant has served as Di rector of the West Low Country District, State Garden Club Pil grimage Chairman, State Flower Show School Chairman and State Garden Club President. She has since served the National Council of State Garden Clubs as Nation al Scholarship Chairman and as National Program Chairman. Oth er affiliations include interest and service in the American Legion Auxiliary, the South Carolina Daughters of The American Rev olution and The Dames of The Court of Honor. Mrs. Bryant is also a life mem ber of the National Council of State Garden Clubs. All of the garden club members of Newberry are urged to attend this informative program on Sep tember 10. There will be no admission charge. Recent Marriages Olin Robert Morris and Helen Dominick of Newberry were mar ried on August 23 at Chapin by Rev. Robert L. Swygert. John Thomas Kinard and Mary Janet Murphy of Rt. 1, Po maria, were married by Rev. M. T Cullum on August 21 at Pomaria ice. 8:00 p. m., Broadcast over WKDK begins. The Friendliest Spot On The Street... Yes, that’s what we try to make Newberry Federal. The very friendliest place on our street. You are always welcome, whether you come on business or not, makes no dif ference to us, we are happy to see you. Make it your headquarters when you are in the city. If you are tired from shopping, drop by and rest in our lobby. NEWBERRY Federal Savings & Loan Ass’n “Use our Modern Night Depository for after office hours business.” ‘‘NEWBERRY’S LARGEST SAVINGS INSTITUTION” ■. M