University of South Carolina Libraries
PAGE FOUR THE NEWBERRY SUN THURSDAY, JULY 16, 195^ Yarborough Dies At Hospital George W. Yarborough, 67, of 412 Glenn St., died Friday after noon at Newberry County Mem orial Hospital following two weeks of illness and 13 years of declin ing health. Mr. Yarborough was born and reared in Salisbury, N. C., a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Yarborough. He had spent most of his life in Newberry, where he was employed by the Mollo- hon Plant of Kendall Mills until he retired a number of years ago because of his health. He also made his home in Clinton for sev eral years. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Louise Mack Yarborough; three aons, George W. Yarborough Jr., and James W. Yarborough, both of Newberry, and Virgil Yarbor ough of Joanna; two daughters, Mrs. Evelyn Harmon of Whit mire and Mrs. Ruth Livingston of Prosperity; two half-sisters, Mrs. Mary Golden of California and Mrs. Alice Harrison of Jo anna; three half-brothers, El liott and Fester Yarborough, both ot Asheville, N. C., and Charlie Yarborough of Washing ton, D. C., and 11 grandchildren. Funeral services were neld" at 3 p.m. Sunday from the Church of God on College St. by Rev. Jack Dean and Revv. L. O. Prosser. Burial was in Baxter Memorial Cemetery. Industry Film To Be Shown A movie entitled “Gold Mine on Main Street,” sponsored by the South Carolina National Bank, will be shown by the Prosperity Community Chamber of Com merce at 8 p.m. Thursday ( to night) at the Town Hall in Pros perity. The movie presents ideas concerning industrial development and is one-half hour in length. The public is invited. No admis sion will be charged. Building Permits The following building permits were issued during the past week: Mrs. I. H. Wilson, general re- <y. f r- ■ y. i ; Not too EARLY - Not too LATE to purchase a well-located burial lot in SPRINGDALE CEMETERY A number of nice lots are available . . . NO ADVANCE in prices . . . twelve months to - pay ... no interest charges . . . and Deed to lot furnished FREE. SPRINGDALE CEMETERY CORP. R. Derrill Smith, Pres. NEWBERRY, S. C. Phones 88 or 338 for Appointment BIRTHS* Recent arrivals at Newberry Memorial Hospital: Julia Anna, five pound, 13 ounce daughter born July 7 to Rev. and Mrs. George Benet Shealy, Box 21, Silverstreet. Mrs. Shealy ^is the former Gloria Cleo Hawkins. Mona Rebecca, six pound, eight ounce daughter born July 7 to Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Lee Hilley, 2709 Digby Ave. The mother is the former Hazel Jean Farmer. Cynthia, seven pound, eight ounce daughter born July 8 to Mr. and Mrs. Paul Miller Jr., 332 Cros- son St. Mrs. Miller before mar riage was Ncla Patricia Rikard. James Nance Jr., seven pound, 13 ounce son born July 9 to Mr. and Mrs. James Nance Parr, 1800 Harper St. Mrs. Parr is the far mer Betty Jo Poston. Crystal Leigh, five pound, 14 pairs to dwelling, 940 Cline St.; Bernard Nichols, one six-room brick-veneer dwelling on Hill- crest Drive, $10,400; Melvin Da vis, repairs to dwelling, 421 Green St., $400; Colie Bedenbaugh, re pairs to dwelling, 600 Wright St., $600; Also, Eddie Rodelsperger, add carport to dwelling, 609 Amelia St., $700; John W. Wehunt, re roof dwelling, ]J207 Charles St., $400; O. F. Armfield Sr., one four-room wood frame dwelling on Drayton St., $3000, and one four room wood frame dwelling on corner of Wright and Charles Sts., $4000; J. E. McConnell, re pairs to porch of dwelling, 1310 Jefferson St., $60. ounce daughter born July 10 to Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Wendel Hite, Rt. 2. Mrs. Hite before mar riage was Edith Ruth* Connelly. Delene, six pound, 14 ounce daughter born July 12 to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Daniel Chappell, 800 Pope St. The mother is the former Carolyn Joyce Shealy. , • Steve Hays, seven pound, 10 ounce son born July 13 to Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hays Kesler, Rt. 1 Silverstreet. Mrs. Kesler is the former Addie Carolyn Cromer. Dom Doesn't Like Butler Congressman William Jennings Bryan Dorn, in a House speech called for the resignation of Demo cratic National Chairman Paul M Butler. Representative Dorn ac cused Butler of being anti-south ern and creating discord and agi tation within the Democratic Par ty. Dorn lambasted Butler for at tacking Speaker Sam Rayburn and the Democratic leadership in Congress who are trying to pro mote harmony in the face of grave national and international prob lems. I. D. Long and daughter, Gayle of Pulaski, Virginia, spent a few days last week with Mr. Long’s sister, Mrs. Colie Dowd and Chief Dowd. RITZ Theatre THURSDAY Aldo Ray, Cliff Robertson, Raymond Massey, Lili St. Cyr The Naked and The Dead FRIDAY & SATURDAY Michael Landon, Jo Morrow, Jack Hogan The Legend Of Tom Dooley MONDAY & TUESDAY Tab Hunter, Gwen Verdon, Ray Walston Damn Yankees CLOVER LEAF DRIVE-IN Theatre THURSDAY Rally Round The Flag Boys Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward Added Color Cartoon—Witch’s Cat FRIDAY & SATURDAY The Sheriff Of Fractured Jaw Jayne Mansfield, Kenneth More Added Color Cartoon—Sleepless Night SUNDAY, MONDAY & TUESDAY Omar Khayyam Cornel Wilde, Debra Paget Added Color Cartoon—What’s Sweeping r.-. \ - |, ONE OF THE 7 BIG BESTS CHEVROLET GIVES YOU OVER ANY CAR IN ITS FIELD Take it, not from us, but from official results of this year's Mobilgas Economy Run: Chevy’s pennypinching 6 delivers the most miles per gallon in its field. For a pair of these Chevrolet sixes with Powerglide walked away with the first two places in their class, get ting the best mpg figure—a whop ping 22.38—of any full-size car. And here are more expert, impar tial opinions and on-the-record facts backing us up on Chevy’s other six bests: BEST TRADE-IN Check the figures in any N.A.D.A.? Guide Book. Chevrolet used car prices last year averaged up to $128 higher than comparable models of the “other two.” BEST STYLE It’s the only car of the leading low-priced 3 that’s unmistakably modern in every line. “In its price class,” says POPULAR SCIENCE magazine, “Chevrolet establishes a new high in daring styling." BEST BRAKES In direct competitive tests of re peated stops from highway speeds, conducted by NASCARt, Chevro let out-stopped both of the other leading low-priced cars—and why not: Chevy brakes are far larger, built with bonded linings, to help lengthen brake life by as much as 66%. BEST ROOM Official dimensions reported to A.M.A.t make this clear. For example, Chevy front seat hip room is up to 6.9 inches wider than comparable cars. BEST ENGINE Every motor magazine has given Chevrolet’s standard and Corvette V8’s unstinted praise. As SPORTS CARS ILLUSTRATED puts it: “Indeed this device is surely the most wonderfully responsive en gine available today at any price.” BEST RIDE MOTOR TREND magazine calls Chevy “. . . the smoothest, most quiet, softest riding car in its price class.” You'll be able to tell this yourself, instantly. And your Chevrolet dealer can tell you about a long list of other advantages besides these 7 big ones! * National Automobile Dealers Asso ciation fNational Association for Stock Car Advancement and Research XAutomobile Manufacturers Asso ciation £ . t i Make sure you get the most for your money—visit your local authorized Chevrolet dealer! KEMPER CHEVROLET COMPANY 1515-1517 MAIN ST. NEWBERRY, S. C. PHONE 982 Straight Talk (by TOM ANDERSON) “What Can I do?” That’s the question more and more patriotic Americans are asking. “What can I do to i save my country from bankruptcy, defeat and slavery?” You can do plenty. If America can be saved from becoming a socialist-labor-welfare dictatorship it can only be saved by a revolu tion from the grassroots. Our na tion can be saved the same way it was founded, by rebellious pa triots demanding a return to home rule. Our state governments have almost lost their sovereignty and have become weak, hungry, com peting panhandlers for the federal personal income tax. This is one most vital thing we can do. It would automatically solve many of our problems. The federal income tax law threatens to lead us to complete federal dictatorship, yet the left wingers say maybe we haven’t raised enough taxes. The same New Deal Socialist crowd who ar gued for years that we could spend ourselves rich now believe we can tax ourselves richer. Sell to the highest bidder the 700 federal, tax-free, rent-free, interest-free corporations! which lose 10 billion dollars a year. Limit the peacetime debt now. If they can’t tax it or borrow it, they can’t spend it. Compel an annually balanced budget and re tire the national debt. Curb the Supreme Court. Drastically reduce U. S. aid to friendly foreign countries. Eliminate it to enemies like Tito, Russia’s Trojan Horse. A friend bought is not worth the price paid. Kill federal grants-in- aid to state and local governments and substitute state grants-in-aid to the Federal Government. Dras tically reduce aid to veterans not disabled in war. Reverse the trend in Legislative, Executive, and Ju dicial branches of the Federal Government to take over and sup plant local self-government, with a federal bureaucracy so vast that it is beyond the understanding and the reach of the people. Pro tect the rights of the states to run their own affairs. Pay-As-We-Go Kill the present Social Security System and install in its place a pay-as-we-go Social Security Sy stem. Do away with Postal Savings System, which competes unfairly with banks, and save $6,300,000. Demand return to a stable and sound dollar. Increase Parcel Post rates to cover indirect costs and save $50,000,000. End the loans for college housing, thus saving $146,910,000. Set up a single, ci vilian-manned commission to buy all non-combat materials for all three branches of the armed ser vices. Centralize control over dis posal of government surplus. Give up our pet projects: pos tal subsidies, business subsidies, airport subsidies, highway subsi dies, veteran subsidies and so on, until we can pay-as-we-go. Protect us from treaties, exe cutive agreements, and secret di plomacy by passing the original Bricker agreement. Get the feder al government out and set the farmer free. Give Red Chinia a seat in the United Nations—our seat. Outlaw the Communist Par ty. Communism is a godless re ligion, a conspiracy which mas querades as -a political party. Re duce the military establishment drastically, at home and abroad. Sixteen thousand Pentagon jobs are doubled-staffed, for instance. Cut off trade and relations with Communistic nations and their sa tellites. Form new clubs for speci fic purposes, like Robert Welch’s CASE (Committee Against Sum mit Entanglements). Subscribe to libertarian publi cations like American, Mercury American Opinion, National Re view, U. S. News & World Report, Freeman, and Human Events, and don’t renew subscriptions to pub lications which promote the so cialistic-labor-welfare state. Support Patriots Support the advertisers in the libertarian publications and help conservative commentators like George Sokolsky, Fulton Lewis, Dan Smoot, Wayne Poucher, and Dean Manion remain on the air by your contributions or your pur chases of the products they adver tise. What a man says he is, is not what counts. Practically every lawmaker says he’s against infla tion, against socialism. A look at their voting records makes fools, cowards, liars, or voting booth prostitutes out of most of our law makers. Why not send to officeholders for whom you have a right to vote a list of things you’re for? Tell them you’ll be watching their votes carefully. Demand that they state clearly how they stand on each issue listed. Kill Civil Service, so millions of unneeded government workers can be fired. Insist that the labor union monoply be end ed and that unions be placed und er the same anti-trust, anti-rack eteering, taxpaying laws as are businesses. Limit the time any congressman can serve to, say 12 years. Too many of them get so cynical, so important, and so stricken with Potomac fever that their main ob ject in life is to stay in Washing ton. We have tried the little-prun- ing-here-and-there method. And the bureaucratic wilderness gets larger, denser, wilder every year. We need to dig up by the roots entire agencies, bureaus, and ac tivities. This nation was founded by men who believed in God, in in dividual freedom, in high moral values, in personal responsibility. Whether we survive as free men or slaves depends on whether we can resurrect our moral strength. We must fear slavery more than we fear war. The wages of wealth are comfort, complacency, caution, and cowardice. Missile strength, manpower strength, H-bomb strength get the headlines. Few ever mention the greatest weapon: spiritual stren gth. Who—we or the Communists —have the fanatical zeal neces sary, to survive? Which will make the most sacrifices and the least compromises ? We are in a war for survival. And we are losing. Lincoln said, “Our safety, our li berty, depend upon preserving the Constitution of the United States as our Founding fathers made it, inviolate. The people of the U. S. are the rightful masters of both Congress and Courts, not to over throw the constitution, but to over throw the men who pervert the Constitution.” Let’s start over throwing now. daugltter of Blacksburg, Va., Mr. and Mrs. James D. Senn and fam ily of Seneca, and Dr. and Mrs. T. L. Senn and sons of Clemson. Friends and relatives joined them on Monday for a family reunion and barbecue. NOTICE OF CITY DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY Notice is hereby given that a Municipal Primary will be held on TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1959, for the purpose of nominating the following officers to serve the city of Newberry two years respective ly: Alderman Ward No. 2; Aider- man Ward No. 3. The polls will open at 8 a. m. and remain open until 4 p. m. A County Registration Certificate is a requirement for voting but if you have misplaced your Certifi cate you may present yourself at your polling place, and cast a bal lot if the managers are satisfied as to your identity. The following have been select ed to act as managers of election for the various wards: Ward 1—Marion Baxter, Dolph W. Whitaker, Mrs. James Ab rams, Clerk. Voting at City Hall. Ward 2—Coke S. Dickert, Mrs. Butler Holmes, Mrs Ruby S. Sum mer, Clerk. Voting at Smith Mo tor Company. Ward 3, No. 1 •— Mrs. Cyril Hutchinson, Clerk; Mrs. Tom Summer, Tom Wheeler. Voting at Boundary Street School. Ward 3, No. 2—J. Ed. McCon nell, Clerk; C. A. Shealy, Ham mett Martin. Voting at Mollohon School House. Ward 4 No.. 1 — Miss Clara ■Bowers, Tom Wicker, Mrs. John A. Senn. Voting at Old Court House. WarcT 4, No. 2—Pete Parrott, Mr.s Woodie Livingston, Mrs. J. L. Burns. Voting behind Layton’s Store. Ward 5—Edgar Hiller, Clerk, Mrs. O. S. Goree, Mrs. Fred Jones. Voting near Corley’s Bar ber Shop. Ward 6—Mrs. Gordon Clarkson, Clerk; Mrs. E. D. Hart, Mrs. Ben Stewart. Voting at former E<L- Young Buick Co., Main Street. Voting is city-wide for all can— didates. SAM A. COOK, Chairman, ' O. F. ARMFIELD, Secretary. 12-3tc. ELECTRIC MOTORS NEW - USED—REBUILT Bought, Sold, Exchanged We Repair All Types Satisfaction Guaranteed Mann Electric Repair Co. 2329 Main St. Columbia, S. C. MANAGER WANTED Local Business Honesty and reliability more im-r- portant than past business exper ience. Full or spare time. $1960.00 CASH REQUIRED SE CURED. This opening pays excellent week ly income. (Not vending ma chines.) Will stand your Banker'* inspection. Write Territorial Sup ervisor, 806A West Main, Okla homa City, Okla. . 12-lfp- BLUE Lustre not only rids carpel* of soil but leaves pile soft and lof<M ty. Richard L. Baker Furniture Co~ FUNERAL HOME r! A PHONE 270 • • Camp Transfers To Spartanburg Wallace J. Camp, Soils Scientist, Soil Conservation Service, Green wood, is being transferred to Spartanburg on July 27. This transfer has just been announced by Dr. T. S. Buie, State Conserva tionist, SCS, Columbia. Visiting in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Tyrus M. Senn and sons over the weekend of the Fourth were Mrs. George W. Senn, Dr. and Mrs. A. S. Williams and DURING OUR JULY SALE of Infant through Pre-Teen Dresses You may Buy one Dress at the regular price ... and select another one, of equal value For only $L00 Also, during our sale ALL PLAY CLOTHES MAY BE PURCHASED AT ONE-THIRD OFF REGULAR PRICE Tots To Teens MAIN STREET NEWBERRY, S. C. Men who appreciate the finest Will find it hard to resist a ward robe from ... ROY SUMMER, “THE MAN'S SHOP” OWN Your Own Home! LOOK WHAT YOU CAN GET FOR ONLY A SMALL DOWN PAYMENT IN Coateswood Place On Lot 48—Dominick Avenue Brick Veneer—Three bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen and dining area. Two ceramic tile hatha, storage room and carport. Disappearing stairway, spacious closets, and kitchen cabinets. Ducted gas heat. On Lot 46—Clarkson Avenue Brick Veneer—Three kedrooms, living room, kitchen and family room with dining area. Two ceramic tile baths. Ample closet and kitchen cabinet space, carport and storage room. Disappearing stairway, ducted gas heat. On Lot 67—Hutto Avenue Brick Veneer—Three bedrooms, living room, dining room and kitchen. Two ceramic tile baths. Ample closet space and kitch en cabinets, carport and storage room. Disappearing stairway, ducted gas heat. FHA Approved and FHA Financing Arranged SMALL Down Payment Call 242 or 2110 for Complete Details CITIZENS HOME INSURANCE COMPANY