The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, December 14, 1961, Image 4
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1<
donations for hospitalized ▼«
ans be sent and reminded mei
who could, to be at the Vet
Hospital for gift-wrapping on 1
cember 11, and at the Christ!
Party on December 18.
Gifts and donations were col-
lected for this party.
Mrs. C. A. Dufford, Sr. read
the Christmas Message from
National President, Mrs. J.
ward McKay, and stated
Freedom Bricks for the V,
Forge Foundation would be
by Unit 24 from January
February 14. She also re
that Mrs. McHardy Mower
be in charge of refreshm
the Legion Hut on Decern
at the American Legion Po
Christmas Party. The _
be at 7:30 p.m. Legionnaires
asked to bring a gift for an AttX-gg|"pgpi
iliary member; Auxiliary members ISrcg P:%
are asked to bring a gift for a
,
Clary Child
Died Saturday
Tini , Marie Clary, eighteen
months daughter of Sgt. and Mrs.
Calvin E. Clary died Saturday
morning at the Fort Bragg Stat
ion Hospital, Fort Bragg, N. C.,
after an illness of several days.
Tini was born in Columbus, Ga.
and was the daughter of Sgt. Cal
vin E. and Mrs. Margaret Ha-ris
Clary.
Besides her parents she is sur
vived by two brothers, Bennie
Boyd Clary and James Allen
Clary, both of Fort Bragg; her
grandparents, Mrs. Bessie Clary
of Newberry and Boyd G. Harris,
Phoenix City, Ala.; and a num
ber of other relatives.
Funeral services were held Fri
day afternoon at the graveside
in Baxter Cemetery with Rev.
O. C. Brown conducting the ser
vice.
Mrs. Martin’s
Father Dies
Edward E. LaRoche, 91, the fa
ther of Mrs. Abigail LaRoche
Martin of Newberry, died Thurs
day at a Charleston Hospital. He
was a retired . farmer of John’s
Island.
He was born at John’s Island,
the son of the late Richard J. and
Abigail Jenkins LaRoche. He was
a member of St. John’s Episco
pal Church of John’s Island. ' ?
Besides Mrs. Martin, the survi
vors include his widow, Mrs. Sa
rah Grimball LaRoch§; another
daughter, Mrs. W. L. Hi.rt of
John’s Island; two sons, Edward
E., Jr., of John’s Island and
Evans A. LaRoche of Clemson.
Funeral services were conduct
ed this past Saturday at St. John
Episcopal Church, with burial in
the churchyard.
Brantley Leavell Pelham, was Laurens; eight grandchildren, and
oorn in Newberry and had lived three great-grandchildren.
in Easley for the past 12 years.
She attended the Newberry City
Funeral services were conducted
at 3:30 p.m. Saturday at Summer
schools and was a graduate of i ^j emor j a j Lutheran Chi rcn by
;ho College for Women in Co- Rev A _ Kenneth Hewitt. Burial
iumb.a. She later attended the was in the Newberry Memorial
conservatory of Music in Ralt 1- 1 r.a r< ip n «;
more, Md., and was a member ’
of Easley Presbyterian Church, j Active pallbearers were Oku
Surviving are three sons, Alan i Garmon Jr., Wyman Shealy,
McCrary Johnstone of Orange-i ^ ames J° nes > Randell Jones, Earl
burg, Thomas K. Johnstone Jr
Mrs. Evelyn Taylor, Miss Pauline
Singley, Mrs. Hattie Dorn, Mrs.
Bryan Livingston, Mrs. Marie
Reeves.
•••••••••••
X Dean Manion
Mrs. Johnstone
Died Wednesday
Mrs. Jeanne Pelham John
stone, widow of Thomas K. John
stone, Sr., died at her home in
Easley Wednesday.
Mrs. Johnstone, a daughter of
the late William Ellerbe and
of Greenville and Ellerbe Pel-
lam Johnstone of Charlotte, N.
C.; three daughters, Mrs. Stokes
3. Alexander of Easley, Mrs. W.
C. Breazeale of Asheville, Mrs.
D. W. Hancock of Ft. Monmouth,
N. J.; and 17 grandchildren.
Funeral services were conduct
ed Thursday at noon at Robinson
Funeral Home by Rev. Cecil Call-
is, Rev. J. S. Edwards and Rev.
Samuel C. Smith. Burial was in
the Johnstone family cemetery in
Newberry.
Mrs. Martin
Dies Thursday
Mrs. Lillian Shealy Martin, 73,
wife of Jesse Hamit Martin, died
Thursday at the Newberry County
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Martin was born in Lex
ington County, the daughter of the
late Titus Davis & Florence Koon
Shealy. Before her retirement she
was employed by the Mollohon
plant of the Kendall Company.
She was a member of the Sum
mer Memorial Lutheran Church,
had taught the joint men and wo
men’s Bible Class for 30 years,
and had been active in other
phases of church work. She was a
life member of the United Luth
eran Church Women.
Besides her husband, she is sur
vived by two sons, Jesse Boyd
Martin and William Ruddolph
Martin of Newberry; four daugh
ters, Mrs. Reedy (Leoro) Smith,
Mrs. Fred (Vivian) Cook and Mrs.
Carl (Doris) Livingston of New
berry and Mrs. Joe W. (Marjorie)
Swindler of Albany, Ga.; five
orothers, C. C. of Prosperity, Q.
L. and O. H. of Newberry, T. D.
of Norfolk, Va., and Leroy Shealy
of Aiken; six sisters, Mrs. Willie
Bozard, Mrs. Walt Jones, Mrs.
Henry McCardy, Mrs. O. Q. Har
mon and Mrs. Hiram Franklin of
Newberry and Mrs Cora Stagg of
Bozard, and T. D. Douglas.
Serving as honorary pallbearers
were W. H. Tedford, Tom Fellers,
Dr. E. J. Dickert, Heyward Jack-
son, James D. Brown, S. W. Shea
ly, Ned Purcell, Ernest Layton,
members of the Council of Sum
mer Memorial Lutheran Church
and the members oif the Men and
Women’s Bible Class.
Roland Rites
Were Tuesday
Daniel C. Roland, 79, died late
Sunday night at the Newberry
County Memorial Hospital after a
short illness.
Mr. Roland was born in Lexing
ton County, the son of the late
Solomon and Martha Ann Dooley
Roland. Until his retirement he
was employed by the Newberry
Mills, Inc. He was a member of
Calvary Baptist Church.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs.
Mary Ann Warren Roland; seven
step-sons, H. L. Jones of San Die
go, Cal., Burley Humphries and
Marvin Humphries, both of Joan
na; Bailey Humphries and Char
ley Humphries, both of Newber
ry, Leroy Humphries of Peoria,
111.; and Joe Humphries in the U.
S. Army; one daughter, Mrs. Mel
vin Davis of Newberry; four step
daughters, Mrs. Luther Wells of
Columbia, Mrs. Lizzie Krell of
Johnson City, Tenn.; Mrs. Sadie
Wright of Atlanta, Ga., and Mrs.
Betty Corley of Joanna; two half-
brothers; three half-sisters, and
one grandchild.
Funeral services were conducted
at 4 p.m. Tuesday at the Whitak
er Funeral Home by Rev. Ralph E.
Rhyne, Rev. Paul Petty, and Rev.
C. K. Derrick. Interment was in
West End Cemetery.
Active pallbearers were John
Taylor, James Rister, Merle Bobb,
Jake Livingston, C. E. Dorn and
Casper Berry.
Assisting with the flowers were
THE
MANION
FORUM
Tuesday Rites
For Mrs. Shealy
Mrs. Josephine Hawkins Wood
Shealy, 75, wife of Jesse E. Shea
ly, died early Monday at the New
berry County Memorial Hospital
after a short illness.
Mrs. Shealy was born in Rich
land County, the daughter of the
late John Thomas Insley and Sus
an Jones Hawkins. She was a
member of Summer Memorial
Lutheran Church.
Besides her husband, she is sur-j Modern politicians are confused
vived by two sons, Gilbert Thomas | and uncertain. They are not even
Wood of Brandon, Fla., and John sure about the meaning of the
•••••••••••••••••••*
By Clarence E. Manion
All political soundings indicate
that a big current of Conservatism
is running through the United
States today. Whom will it serve
and what does it portend for the
United States and for mankind?
H. Wood of Newberry; two step
sons, O. E. Wood of Newberry and
R. L. Wood of Tifton, Ga.; two
step-daughters, Mrs. J. J. Kibler
of Newberry and Mrs. Thomas
Price of Ninety Six; three broth
ers, John Hawkins, Sam Hawkins
and Wttliam Hawkins, all of Co
lumbia;* three sisters, Mrs. Flor
ence Coward and Miss Cleo Hawk
ins, both of Columbia, and Mrs.
Sam Longley of Amarillo, Texas;
word “Conservative.” For the su
perficial, it has something to do
with clockwork. Liberals who are
vexed about the Conservative pol
itical soundings are sure that
Conservatism is a whimsical wave
of nostalgia, ridden by those who
wish to return to the 19th or
even to the 18th Century.
But no one is confused and all
agree when the talk is about
“Conservation.” Quite clearly a
six grandchildren and one great- Conservationist is one who is in
grandchild.
Funerffcl services were conducted
at 2:30 $.m. Tuesday at the Whit
aker Funeral Home by Rev. A.
Kenneth Hewitt Jr. and Rev. Paul
Petty. Interment was in Rosemont
Cemetery.
Active pallbearers were Frank
E. Culclasure, Henry Mills, De-
Witt Mills, Earl Bollinger, Talley
Timmons and Leland Wood.
MILLS CLINIC PATIENTS
Mrs. Corrie Davenport and baby
boy, Prosperity
Mrs. Vida Thomason, Prosperity
Miss Florence Miller, Pomaria
Mrs. Violet Marier, Newberry
Mrs. Elmira Griffin, Newberry
Miss Lalla Martin, Newberry
Bobby Gene Lester, Newberry
Hugh McCartha, Chapin
Sara Perry and baby boy, Bates-
burg ...
Marian Labrew, Columbia
Laura Neal and baby boy, New
berry
Juanita Boyd and baby boy.
Prosperity
*• • V:
ggjafeasivi
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ii
m
Zippo Lighters
Boxed Cigars
•k
Kaywoodie
Pipes
5.00 to 12.50
PIPE RACKS
2.98 to 4.95
His favorite Smoking
Tobacco—lbs. & 1/2 lbs.
TOBACCO POUCHES
50c to $3.50
3.50 to 6.00
25 or 50
CAMERAS-Flt/M
mBBac
REVLON GIFT SETS
1.35 to 12.50
DUBARRY GIFT SETS
3.00 up
EVENING IN PARIS GIFT SETS
1.00 to 15.00
TUSSY GIFT SETS
1.00 to 5.50
AMITY BILLFOLDS, Mens or Ladies .|2.95 to 7.50
Am
■ y %>
TIMEX WATCHES, Mens or Ladies . iL95 to 15.00
Jewelite
HAWKEYE FLASH CAMERA • HAWKEYE
FLASH OUTFIT • STARFLASH OUTFIT
MlilMT
OLD SPICE GIFT SETS 1.00 Eo 10.00
YARDLEY GIFT SETS from 1.95
COMB AND BRUSH SETS
2.00 to 10.00
You will find our store stocked
with many, many more preferred
gift items. Come in and choose
gifts for everyone in your list.
Free Gift Wrapping on Items Purchased at our Store
CALL 124 FOR 24-HOUR PRESCRIPTION SERVICE
r
Wide Selection of Hollingsworth, Whitman and
Pangburn Candies
Main Street Pharmacy
1212 MAIN STREET
NEWBER RY, S. C.
PHONE 610
terested in preserving our store
of natural resources—the minerals
and top-soil, forests, water, and
wild-life of our country. The dif
ference between Conservatives
and Conservationists is in their
respective inventories of valuable
natural resources that they desire
to see conserved and defended
1 against exploitation.
Conservatives have added to
this list the irreplaceable spirit
ual and legal resources of our
country that are found in our
Declaration of Independence and
in the American Constitutional
system.
W-chout these resources, our
material and physical assets
would never have been prosper
ously developed, nor could they
now be safely preserved for our
selves and our descendants.
The greatest natural resource
we have is the heritage of God-
given liberty embedded in our
Constitutional system, and this
is precisely the resource that
has suffered disgraceful wastage
and exploitation by a political
generation of neo-liberalism. To
day popular opinion has turned
strongly against the continuation
of this short-sighted spoliation of
our time-tested system of Con
stitutional government. Millions
of Americans now know that the
inflexible objective of Commun
ism is a one-world Socialist state,
ruled by a band of Godless gang
sters.
More and more of us are be
ginning to see that the progress
ive Socialism and centralism of
our government, accompanied by
the continuous surrender of our
national independence to various
agencies of Internationalism, is
conditioning the United States
for a quick Communist take-over
of our country.
Local government is controll
able by the people who are sub
ject to it. This is why the fram
ers of our Federal Constitution
were careful to provide that only
certain specified powers would be
exercised by the Federal Govern
ment which, for practical pur
poses, is beyond the reach of the
average citizen.
To clinch the conviction that
the bulk of our government should
be kept close to those who are
governed, the final article of the
Bill of Rights provides that: “The
powers not delegated to the Un
ited States by the Constitution
nor prohibited by it to the States
are reserved to the States res
pectively or to the people.”
Strict enforcement of this Tenth
Amendment would make it im
possible for our central Federal
Government to control local po
lice forces, impound ballot boxes,
nationalize industry, abolish reli
gious services, change the laws
of private property ownership,
and assume management of all
education and information media.
Those are the things chat Com
munist conspirators always • do in
the final processes of capturing
their target countries from the
inside. It is what they plan to do
to the people of the United States.
If the swelling tide of Ameri
can Conservatism is to wash its
way into Washington in time to
save the Constitutional resources
of this country, the millions of
apprehensive people who compose
that restless tide must pin their
hopes upon Congress and they
must do so in a concert of co
ordinated intelligent action.
The only question about the j
big wave of popular ConservaUsm !
has to do with its effectiveness.
Will it spend itself in wetting the i
grass roots of popular opinion,!
or, for instance, will it frighten !
official Washington into a realis
tic appraisal of the Communist
conspiracy against us?
Organized Conservative Clubs
all over the country could lead to
the peaceful liberation of man
kind and the restoration of those
precious American resources
which we now stand to lose for
ever.
(Readers interested in from-
i*g their own Conservative Clubs
may obtain instructions, free of
charge, by writing to Dean Man-
ion, South Bend, Indiana.)
Mrs. McKittrick
Died Monday
Mrs. Mary Elizabeth (Lizzie)
Miller McKittrick, 78, widow of
John Madison McKittrick, died
early Monday morning at the Bap
tist Hospital in Columbia after
several years of declining health.
Mrs. McKittrick was born and
reared in Newberry County, a
(laughter of the late John Frank
and Alice Dominick Miller. She
had spent most of her life in the
Bush River section of Newberry
County where she was a member
of Bush River Baptist Church and
he~ husband was a farmer. She
had made her home with her
daughter, Mrs. W. A. Black, 719
Skyland Dr., Columbia. Her hus
band died in 1968.
She is survived by two sons, J.
Frank McKittrick of Chappells
and A. J. McKittrick of Laurens;
three daughters, Mrs. W A. Black
and Mrs. O. B. Chandlei, both of
Columbia, and Mrs. Robert C. Hol
land of Bolling Green, Ky.; one
brother, J. Frank Miller of Salu
da; two half-sisters, Mrs. C. E.
Rauch of Columbia, and Mrs.
Daisy Johnson of Kinarda; two
half-brothers, T. J. and Free John
son, both of Kniards; 12 grand
children and two great-grandchil
dren.
Funeral services were conducted
at 3 p.m. Tuesday at Bush River
Baptist Church by the Rev. Arden
J. Stewart. Interment was in the
church cemetery.
The American Legion Auxiliary
Unit 24 met Thursday, Decem
ber 7 at the home of Mrs. T. M.
Fellers with Mrs. J. N. Nicosia,
Mrs. Frank Sutton and Mrs. Hus
ton Long, associate hostesses.
Following regular order of bus
iness, reports of officers and
chairmen, Christmas Child wel
fare and work for veterans was
discussed. Mrs. L. G. McCullough
is Unit 24 chairman of Child Wel
fare.
Mrs. Ray Schumpert, Unit Re
habilitation chairman, was in
charge of the program. She read
the letter from the Department
chairman asking that gifts and
.
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Legionnaire.
Give a
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CLASSIFIEDV ' S
AOS . ■ " ^
“NOAH’S ARK” — Beginning our
20th year in business. Bigger
than ever. Large new room full
of merchandise just opened. Two
New Loads in last month. Ship
ments arriving regularly. Noah’s
Ark, Abbeville, S. C. 32-3tc
WANTED AT ONCE — Man or
Woman to Supply families with
Rawleigh Products. Consumers
write us for Products. Many
Dealers earn $50 weekly part
time—$100 and up full time.
Write Rawleigh, Dept. SCL-
361-1, Richmond, Va. 33-2tp
A reflection of your good
taste, an affirmation of your
sound judgment. Nothing matches
the gentle eloquence of their
tailored styling, or the bench-mad*’
quality of their woriunsnship
that represents the highest
achievement of the
jewelry craft
Styles from
$50 to $5000.
*
/* AS LITTLE AS
vmt tw* it
with beaut
let.
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Matchiftf
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.A WEEK
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FENNELL’S
Jewelry Store
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Maxwell Bros. & Lindsay
I
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