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t THURSDAY, JANUAh / 26, 1961 RV T«R WAY . . . (Continued from page 1) Th* final argument of the so- fcalfed “liberals” in our midst to these threatened changes to our Onnstitutional systems runs to this effect: That when there is a conflict between State authority and “Federal law,” the power of the Government at Washington must prevail. But, we submit there is no “Federal law” involved here. No Uw h* been passed by Congress oh the subject of integration. The Federal courts are merely making the law by injunction. No one questions the authority of the Federal Constitutional pow er, or that it is /pre-eminent over the Constitutions of the several states. What we do question sharp ly, however, is the application of Federal power in an area in which the United States Govern ment has no controlling statute, and where the several States do have prevailing laws. Nor is there any provision in the Constitution of the United States, or the Constitutions of the several states, justifying the act of legislating by the judiciary, either Federal or State. This pow er is reserved, both in the Fed- end and State Government, to the elected representatives of the people—and only to them. Article IV of the. Constitution of the United States says: “The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Repub lican form of Government.” When the words “United States” are used in the Constitution, they mean the authority of the Federal Government. ■When the words “Republican form of Government” are used, they mean that the people of Georgia, or any other State, have the right to self-government—to expiet the help when asked, and not the hindrance, of Federal pow er in the course of the operations of the State Government. These are a few facts of the school crisis, which we believe to be.of overriding importance. And yet they are patently being ignor- «4 by the so-called “liberals” who seem to find little wrong with the Ray McCarley Fatally Hurt In Accident Ray McCarley, 22, a native of Newberry, was fatally injured in the crash of his small foreign car and a pulpwood truck south of Louisville, Ga., Wednesday night. According to reports, Mr. Mc Carley, driving alone, struck the rear of the truck which was mak ing a left turn off U. S. One about a mile south of Louisville. He died in the Jefferson County Hos pital about 30 minutes after the wreck. Mr. McCarley was -the son of Mrs. Clyde McCarley of New berry, and the late Mr. McCarley, a former Chief of Police of New berry. Surviving in addition to his mother is his wife, the former Miss Sarah Ann Nichols, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Nichols of Newberry. Also surviving are a number of uncles and aunts. He attended Clemson • College and at the time of his death was employed by Morse Sewing Mach ine Corp. of Greenville. He was a graduate of Newberry High School, and was a member of Clemson College Lutheran Church. He made his home in Pickens. Funeral services were conducted at 3:30 p.m. Friday at McSwain Funeral Home by Dr. Neil "E. Truesdell, Dr. Paul L. Grier and Rev. Enoch D. Stockman. Burial was in Newberry Memorial Gar dens. idea of Federal power usurping the right of State authority in the conduct not only of schools ; but gradually of all other domestic procedures. Today, Georgians are being fondly patted on the head by those who see a “brave new world” in compulsory race-mixing and the destruction of State authority. We gag in protest. Because our eyes are open, and we can see the blackjack and the whip all the way from here. Fred Pitts, 73, Service Friday THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA : i *— Schumpert Straight Talk -HAfWV WALSH—* < “Now maybe John will believe me when I tell him a new car, financed by Purcells would save us money.” Come to tiiink of it, why wait to tell John. I’ll start looking around for , that new car myself. PURCELLS “YOUR PRIVATE BANKERS” 1418 Main St Newberry Fred Weber Pitts, 73, died on Wednesday afternoon at the New berry County Memorial Hospital after an illness of four months and a critical illness of four weeks. Mr. Pitts was born in New berry County, the son of the late Madison and Sarah Longshore Pitts. Before his retirement, he served as ticket agent and tele graph operator for the Southern Railroad for 38 years. He was a devoted member of Silverstreet Evangelical Lutheran Church, a former member of the church council and a member of the men’s Bible Class, l He is survived by one son, Fred Weber Pitts Jr. of Den mark; one daughter, Mrs. P. M. (Elsie Nichols) of Newberry; one brother, J. Ray Pitts of Newber ry; one sister, Mrs. J. Robert Hendrix of Newberry; six grand children, and five great-grand children. His wife, the former Olive Floyd, died in 1954 and a son, ago. Funeral services were conduct- Madison, also died several years ed at 4 o’clock Friday afternoon at the Silverstreet Lutheran Church by the Rev. George Ben nett Shealy. Interment followed in the church cemetery. Active pallbearers were Madi-* son Pitts, Fred Pitts, Rev.L. E. Cumby, Jr., Colie PittSj Burton Reeder, and Reuben Floyd. Serving as honorary pallbear ers were the members of the Men’s Bible Class of the Silver- street Lutheran Church, Otto Nichols, J. V. Kneece, C. C. Dun can, Claude Slaton, Wm. S. Wertz, Doyle Long ,Bennie Bum, E. G. Cope, Tom Neel, Ernest Clary, Vernon Carlton, Dr. B. M* Montgomery, Dr. V. W. Rine hart, Dr. R. P. Baker, Ray No bles, James Dennis, John L. Long, James Price, Robert L- Bennett, David R. Son, W. M. Millet, Harper Wherry, Earl Stevens, George W. Boland, Charlie Brooks and Harvey Kirkland. Assisting with the flowers were Mrs. L. E. Nobles, Miss Gayle Pitts, Miss Myma Pitts, Mrs. Faye Cumby, Mrs. Patricia Pitts, Mrs. Priscilla Pitts, Mrs. Odell Wilson, Mrs. Floyd Dennis and Mrs. Virginia Berley. Mrs. Sue Coleman Schumpert, 76 ,wife of Daniel Edward Schum pert, formerly of Newjjerry, died Sunday afternoon after a long ill ness at the home of her son, John Richard Schumpert* in Conway. She was borp in Saluda County, a daughter of the late R. P. and Carrie Huitt Coleman. iShe was is member of Central Methodist Church in Newberry. Besides her husband surviving are two sons, John Richard Sebum pert of Conway, and Edward Stu art Schumpert of Cheraw; two sisters, Mrs. J. W. Hipp and Mrs. “BETTER be Red than dead.” That’s the new “National Pur pose” of the Appeasers. Appeas ers are people who feed a croco dile hoping it’ll eat them last. Co existence is immoral. A gutless, impossible d e ^ us ^ on an< ^ fraud. Our “National Purpose,” if we are to survive as a free people, must be to free the enslaved peoples of the world and destroy that or- nized religion of hate, commun- in. In the co-existence compro- mifee between right and wrong, evil wins. In a compromise be- Harold Hipp, both of Saluda, and] tween food and poison, death two grandchildren. Funeral services were conduct- Communists, we must abandon . ~ * ' 1 -.J-V . . . .. ed at 2 p.m. Monday at Whitaker Funeral Home by Rev. Carl Par ker. Burial was in Rosemont Ce metery. Active pallbearers were J. C. Nichols, Joe W. Hipp Jr., Claude Lester, William Hunter, M. 0. Summer, and John Clarkson. Serving as honorary pallbear ers were Jesse Frank Hawkins, Ned Purcell Louis i Floyd, Pete Parrott, Richard Clark, A. P. Werts, George Palmer, Cliff 'Booz er, Norman Long, Doggett Whit aker, Eqrl Bergen, Robert Schum pert, Robert Clary, Raymond Les ter, G^ne Lester, Brabham Gog- gans, J. W. Schumpert, A. M. Summer Sr., and Roy Clary. Assisting with the flowers were Miss Bertha Nichols, Mrs. J. C. Nichols, Mrs. W. D. Moore, Mrs. Adelle Nichols* Mrs. George Black, Mrs. Joe W. Hipp Jr., Mrs. George Palmer and Mrs. Brab ham Goggans. Nephew Of Mrs. Smith Dies Scout Promotions Troop 1: Dav id Folk and Tom my Henderson, Second Class. Troop 66: Ronnie Kyzer to First Class. Troop 101: Mike Bostic and James Ray King to First Class. Troop 66: Walter Summer, Star; Leonard Half acre, Life; Parker Martin, Eagle. Merit badges, Troop 66: Russell Culbertson, Scholar ship; Charlie Epps, Firemanship; Leonard Halfacre, Citizenship in the Nation, First Aid; Alan Ives- ter, Citizenship in the Home; Parker Martin, Citizenship in ‘the Home, Public Health; George Park, Firemanship; Alan Paysin- ger, Animal Industry, Citizenship in the Community; Henry Sum mer, Firemanship; Walter Sum mer, Firemanship; James Wil liams, Rabbit Raising, Citizenship in the Home. Donald McRae IV, 17- year-old nephew of Mrsi Claud C. Smith of this city died of a heart block Jan. 7th while watching friends play .basketball at Irving Park playground, Greensboro, N. C. He was the only - child of Mr. and Mrs. Donald MacRae of 1203 Country 'Club Drive, Greensboro and Linville, N. C. He was the grandson of the lute Donald an4 Cary Davis MacRae and the great- grandson of the late Hon. George Davis of Wilmington, N. C. Surviving in Addition to : hijd parents is his grandmother, Mrs. j Olin Vinson Ward of Asheville, N, 0. Funeral services were held Jan. 9th at St. Francis Episcopal Church, Greensboro, N. C. Inter ment was in the family plot in Oakdale Cemetery, Wilmington, N. C. wins. To win the war against the ‘^containment,” renounce “peace ful coexistence,” and reject a sta tus quo based on millions now en slaved. by . the Communists. We cap coexist with the Communists just Jike the lion and the lamb Coexist. All that is necessary is to pitch a fresh lamb into the cage each morning. Attack us? The Communists are not insane enough to attack us. They are winning without it. And they want our cities, our indus tries; our youth intact. They can win without changing their tac tics. We can’t win without chang ing ours. Termites on Our Payroll It was at the multi-million- partnient people without think ing more of Joe McCarthy. Our overseas employees, like State Department people here, and like groups anywhere, can’t accurate ly be lumped into one category. Some are dedicated patriots. Some are One-Worlders, international Socialists, people who’ve long since lost their patriotism, if they ever had any. Some are people who like to live abroad because they can live better than they ever lived before and can' enjoy all the privileges and few of the resporisibr* ies of their American citizenship. Some are dupes and do-gooders who are serving the Communist cause unwittingly by following the Communist line. Some are merely gutless traitors who’d “rather be Red than dead.” Many of these people, deliberate ly or not, are delivering Us to the enemy. A news service recently car ried the story that the United States had just made a grant of $350,000 to Yugoslavia “to aid that country’s development of atomic energy for peaceful pur poses.” That’s like giving a sup ply of hunting knives to Jack the Ripper on his promise to use them only at his dinner table. I think it would be near treas on to sell our surpluses to Poland dollar United States Embassy and other enemies. But we don’t building in Stockholm, Sweden. They were having a small cock tail party for our little group ac companying Secretary of Agri culture Benson on a Trade Devel opment Tour. As I joined a group of a dozen or so standing in a cir cle, one of our Employees glibly expounded: “This ain’t bad duty now that McCarthy is dead.” Quick as you could say Alger Hies or Phillip Jessup, I politely in quired: “How’ve all you pinks, punks and perverts been getting along since the Senator passed away?” Uninsulted, he answer ed: “There are just as many of us and we’re getting along bet ter than ever.” I don’t see how any red-blood ed American could mix with our foreign service and State De- do that. We give it to Tito who sells it to his people, who never know where it canpc from. In Poland, guess who’s one of the men in charge of giving away rificed. Japan is moving toward the Communist camp. Laos is on tho brink. Cuba is now being for tified by the enemy. Central and South America are Communist infiltrated. Africa may be lost. England and other European al lies. are talking neutralism more and more. And more of the Amer ican people, a survey shows, know who said “Hi, ho, Silver!” than who said “Give me .liberty or give me death!” More are inter ested in losing five pounds than in losing Qtiemoy. Finding a park ing place ts more important than who promoted Peress or who’s on the World Court. Who—we or the Communists— have, the necessary courage, the dedication, the fanatical zeal ne cessary to win? We will soon Know. It depends on you. What can one person do? One man, Nathan Hale, brought chills to the spines of generations of pat- riots . with his statement just be fore he was put to death: *‘T only regret I have but one life to lose for my country.” (Is U-2 spy Powers the modern Nathan*Hale? Powers claimed he didn’t know what he was doing, though he got $30,000 a year for it, and would n’t have done it if he had. You Are the Answer What can one person do? One man, Adolph Hitler, cast the de ciding vote in a beer hall putsch that set the world on fire. One man’s vote kept us from killing compulsory military training— three weeks before Pearl Harbor. One man’s influence led to giv ing China to the “agrarian re formers.” That man was not a foreigner, but an American. What can one person do? One person, unknown today, fired the shot heard ’round the world. He didn’t worry about it hurting his •••- ‘ Applications for family vaca tion cabin reservations in South Carolina State parks for the 1961 summer season are Ubw being re ceived by the S. C. State Com mission of Forestry in Columbia, according to State Forester Chas. H. Flory. Demand for these vacation fac ilities has been high for the past several years. In order to give every family an equal opportun ity to obtain a cabin, reservations, for June, July and August are made each year by means of a pending on location, facilities, ter March first,*. Mr. Fiery said. There are 67 cottages in nine state parks located £rom the mountains to the seashore. Sum mer rentals are by the week only and rates are from $24 to $46, de public drawing held shortly af- and cabin capacity. Most of cabins accommodate six according to the Cabins for white families A£e located at: Cheraw, Givhans ry. Hunting Island, Myrtle Oconee, Poinsett, Santee and ble Rock. There are Negro families at Pleasant in the mountains of Grc County, and on the coast at ing Island State Park near fort announcement IP* m "mM your farm surpluses to the enemy ? An old New Dealer who’s been business. He didn’t check to see if listed on more Communist fronts of the House Un-American Acti vities Committee than Tommy Manville has had wives. Our lef ties are now trying to kill the House Un-American Activities Committee so our Communists and fellow travelers can be made to feel more at home here. They ARE Burying Us We are in a war for the world, and we are losing. The Commun ists have taken half the world. Berlin is precarious. : Formosa (Nationalist China) may be sae- the leaders approved. He Was neither paid cash nor guaranteed any benefits by his government. He just did what his conscience told him to do—for his country. You are but one. So were Carrie Nation, and Joan of Arc, and Pat rick Henry. What can one person do? One man, Karl Marx, was a ne’er-do- well. But his religion. Communism has enslaved half the world. What can one person do? St. Paul was an emaciated epilep tic. Hitler^ was a psychiatric pa* Families may apply for by writing to the S. C. Commission of Forestry, Box 357, Columbia, March first. Letters cate whether for family and give p ference and as many choices as possible. State Park Director C. cocks. Regular applies cabin folders, and formation are a Forestry Commissi ' '■ ■MM «M— PF IS 7' —- perhanger. Are we them—or even to ciples—before they cated men? It's vp T A Ian. Clearance Permits To Build Jan. 18: Miss Bessie L. Camp bell, repairs to dwelling 809 Boundary St., $125. Jan. 19: Roy Whitaker, add one room to Whitaker Funeral Home on College St., $1,500. Truesdell Is Re-Elected Dr. Neil E. Truesdell of New berry was re-elected President of the Christian Action Council for 1961 at the recent Annual Meet ing held in Columbia. This will be the 2nd year that this well-known Presbyterian leader, a native of Bethune, lias been the Council head. Purposes of the Christian Ac tion Council include ■ promoting “education and action for the mor al and social welfare of South Carolina.” It has especially be come known throughout the state for its objective reporting and in formation related to legislative matters and in its program of Christian citizenship. liiisiii One Rack JR. DRESSES & SKIRTS 50% OFF Boys , SPORT COATS TROUSERS CAR COATS One-Third OFF SPRING WOOLS Beautiful light colors to inspire your Spring Sewing! One Table DARK COTTONS — wash and wear. Were 69c yd. 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The Young Man's Shop Avuvas and Loan Association A SAVINGS INSTITUTION FO 1223 COLLEGE STHEBT, NEWBERRY, S. O Branch Office: Batesburg 1 , S. C. Directors J. F. CLARKSON M. O. SUMMER G. K. DOMINICK J. K. WILLINGHAM E. B. PURCELL W. C HUFFMAN m i AS, jfdl 13 ■