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THURSDAY, JULY 4, 1963 THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA PAGE THREE I Kv Newberry Men In Service At Stations Around The World FORT LEAVENWORTH, KAN. (AHTNC)—Army Majors Harry L. Dukes Jr., and Howard Parks from Newberry, completed the 38- week regular course at the U. S. Army Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, Kan., June 14. The course is resigned to pre pare select officers for duty as commanders and general staff of ficers at division, corps and field levels. In addition to U. S. Army branches of the U. S. Armed forces personnel, officers from other and allied , nations attended the course. Major Dukes, son of Mrs. Harry! ry L. Dukes, 1809 Harrington St., is a 1946 graduate of Newberry High school. He received his B. S. degree in 1952 from Clemson col lege and his M. S. degree in 1957 from Georgia Institute of Tech nology in Atlanta. Major Parks, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thoms N. Parks, Route four, is a 1945 graduate of Newberry high school and received his B. S. degree in 1950 from the U. S. Mil itary college at West Point, N. Y. supply point for ships and air craft of the Sixth Fleet in the Meditterannean. FORT HOOD, TEX. (AHTNC) —Army First Sergeant Julius W. Koon, 49, son of J. Pat Koon, 1318 Silas St., qualified as expert in firing the M-14 rifle at Fort Hood, June 11. Koon entered the army in 1934 and is first sergeant of Headquarters Battery, 1st Bat talion of the 1st Armored Divis ion’s 73rd Artillery. He attended Chapin high school. His wife, Patricia, lives in Kill een, Texas. USS SPRINGFIELD (FHTNC) —Bennett C. Dennis, seaman ap prentice, USN, son of Francis A. Dennis of 1103 Purcell St. is serv ing aboard the guided missile light cruiser USS Springfield, for merly the flagship of the Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean, and now undergoing yard overhaul at the New York Naval shipyard, Brooklyn. ROTA, SPAIN (FHTNC) — second class, USN, son of Mrs. Lellie S. Metts of Route 3, Pros- Marvin S. Metts, commissaryman perity is serving at the Spanish- American Naval Base in Rota, Spain. The base is located on the Bay of Cadiz and is a principal VIRGINIA BEACH, VA. (FHT NC))—Forrest W. Connelly, chief electronics technician, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. George H. Con nelly of 1504 Nance St. was ad vanced to the present rate recently while serving at the Oceana Naval Air Station, Virginia Beach, Va. Advancement is the result of passing a Navywide competitive examination after meeting pro fessional and military require ments. The air station is one of the largest master jet bases on the east coast. GREAT LAKES, ILL (FHTNC) —Ross D. McLeod, 17, son of Joe I. McLeod of Route 1, is under going nine weeks basic training at the Naval Training Center, Great Lakes, III. During the train ing period recruits receive tests and interviews which determine future assignments in the navy. Upon graduating they are assign ed to service schools for technical instruction or to ships or shore stations for on-the-job training. BIRTHS « BOOZER Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lee Boozer of 2104 Adelaide street announce the birth of a seven pound, four ounce son, Lee Vernon, on June 19 at Newberry Memorial hospital. Mrs. Boozer is the former Onie Theressa Shealy. SENN Mr. and Mrs. George Sedley Senn of Route 3 announce the birth of a six pound, 10 ounce daughter, Christiana, on June 20 at Newberry County Memorial hospital. Mrs. Senn is the former Florence Corine Walker. COLEMAN Mr. and Mrs. Red Lucious Cole man of Route 5, Saluda announce the birth of a nine pound, four ounce daughter, Tanga Malinda on June 21 at the Newberry County Memorial hospital. Mrs. Coleman is the former Peggy Jane Fulmer. Was Successful Businessman William M. Scurry, a native of Newberry county who died recent ly, was a successful businessman and outstanding citizen of Atlan ta. A resume of Mr. Scurry’s ac tivities was given in an Atlanta newspaper, as follows: “Mr. Scurry, chairman of the Board of Fulton Federal Savings and Loan Association . . had lived in Atlanta most of his life. He attended Hollowoy Prep school and Georgia Tech evening school. He was a member and elder in the Peachtree Presbyterian church. “Mr. Scurry was one of the founders and the first executive officer of Fulton Federal, and served as president of the asso ciation from 1942 until 1959 when he became chairman. ROTC commandant of the Uni versity of Kentucky and had spent several years in newspaper adver tising and insurance and mortgage loan work. He entered the building and loan business in the 1920s with the old First National Build ing and Loan Association. He was an officer during world war one. “A former president of the Atlanta Savings and Loan league and a former director of the Geor gia Savings and Loan league, he was in 1961 named “Pioneer of the "Vear” by Atlanta capter 99, Am erican Savings and Loan Insti tute. “Mr. Scurry was a former di rector of the Henry Grady hotel and the Peachtree Bank and Trust company, now the C&S Bank of Atlanta.” Among Mr. Scurry’s survivors is a brother, Beaufort M. Scurry of Newberry. Straight Talk. largest tmrmitm control organization $5000 GUARANTEE Agcdntt hthnro TomUto Damage b BtfntuM MfionOy fcy twr 1800 tnnbv Newberry Lumber Co., Inc. Authorized Representative For TEKMINIX SERVICE 913 CLINE ST. TELEPHONE 56 Olin Wessinger Service Friday James Olin Wessinger Sr., 70, of 1606 Evans street died last Wednesday morning at the New berry County Memorial hospital, following several years declining health. Mr. Wessinger was born and reared near Peak in this county, a son of the late J. E. and Elizabeth Miller Wessinger. He had spent most of his life in Newberry where he was a member of the Lutheran Church of The Redeem er. He was connected with the Smith Motor company for over 30 years until his retirement eight years ago. He was a veteran of World War I, serving in France and Germany with the 343rd Field Artillery, and was a member of American Legion Post No. 24 in Newberry. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Jessie Hill Wessinger; two sons, James Olin of Marianna, Fla., and Hugh E. of Newberry; two sis ters, Mrs. W. E. Bickley of Clem son and Mrs. Ethel Hollingsworth of Newberry; one brother, Miller Wessinger, of Newberry and seven grandchildren. Funeral services were conducted at 11 a.m. Friday at the Lutheran Church of The Redeemer by Dr. Henry A. McCullough. Burial was in Newberry Memorial Gardens. Active pallbearers were C. M. Smith, Bunyan Ringer, Ben Chap man, Harry Mayer, Robert Wes singer, and Charles Bickley. Honorary escort was composed of Forest Miller, O’Dell Wilson, Jake Wise, Cannon Campbell, Dr. J. Richard Lominick and the mem bers of the Men’s Bible Class of the .Redeemer church. How Well Will Yours Stand Up? In any claim for damages due to an auto mobile accident, your insurance is your first line of defense. How well your policy per forms depends upon the specified limits and the company with which you do business. It makes good sense to buy only the best in protection when huge sums of money are in volved. It's good sense, too, when you che~ . with us. Mrs. Webb Dies In California Mrs. Shelby Jane Kibler Webb, 25, native of Little Mountain died Monday afternoon in Carmel, Cal. Mrs. Webb was bom and reared at Little Mountain, a daughter of Mrs. Martha Shealy Kibler Mar tin and the late A. C. Kibler. She had made her home in Carmel for the past five weeks where her hus band was a member of the U. S. army. Prior to moving to Califor nia she made her home in Colum bia for several years. She was a member of St. Jacob’s Lutheran church near Chapin. Mrs. Webb is survived by her husband, Captain James Carroll Webb of Carmel, Calif.; her mo ther; two brothers, Kemper Shea ly Kibler of Newport News, Va. and Ronald Counts Kibler of Cha pin; her grandmother, Mrs. Nettie Kibler of Pomaria; her grand father, Roscoe Shealy of Little Mountain; her step-father, Gary R. Martin of Chapin, and one half- brother, Gary Mitchell Martin of Chapin. The body will be returned here and funeral arrangements will be announced later. by V 1418 Main Street Phone 276-1422 Call To Prayer Grant us, O God, to hear Thy voice; and in hearing Thy voice, to love Thy word; and in loving Thy word, to do Thy will. Through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen. Almost 200 years ago when our nation was being taxed and perse cuted beyond endurance and some other faint-hearted Americans were crying peace at any price, a Virginia patriot named Patrick Henry arose and said: “They tell us, Sir, that we are weak—unable to cope with so for midable an adversary. But when shall we be stronger? Will it be next week, or the next year? Will it be when we are totally disarm ed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house. Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? Shall we acquire the means of effectual resistance by lying supinely on our backs and hugging the elusive phantom of hope, until our enemies shall have bound us hand and foot? Sir, we are not weak, if we make aproper use of those means which the God of nature hath placed in our pow er. “Three millions of people, arm ed in the holy cause of liberty, and in such a country as that which we possess, are invincible by any force which our enemy can send against us. Besides, Sirs, we shall not fight our battles alone. There is a just God who presides over the destinies of nations, and who shall raise up friends to fight our battles for us. The battle, Sir, is not to the strong alone; it is to the vigilant, the active, the brave. Besides, Sirs, we have not election. If we were base enough to desire it, it is now too late to retire from the contest. There is no re treat but in submission and slav ery! Our chains are forged. Their clanking may be heard on the plains of Boston. The war is in evitable; and let it come! I repeat. Sir, let it come! “It is in vain, Sir, to extenuate the matter. Gentlemen may cry, Peace, Peace!—but there is on peace. The war is actually begun! The next gale that sweeps from the North will bring to our ears the clash of resounding arms! Our brethren are already in the field. Why stand we here idle?What is it that the gentlemen wish. What would they have? Is life so dear, slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! or peace so sweet, as to be pur chased at the price of chains and I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me liberty or give me death!” Their Lives, Their Homes, Their Sacred Honor When the “extremists” who wrote the Declaration of Indepen dence assembled in Philadelphia from over the 13 colonies, the first thing to greet them was an anonymous note found on the Speaker’s table: “Take care. A plot is framed for your destruc tion and all of you shall be des troyed.” When the final vote was taken in Independence hall in Philadel phia on July 4th, every man who signed the Declaration took his life in his hands. If Washington’s ragged, outnumbered army could not repulse the British, every signer would be tried for treason to the British crown. Their signa tures could, win or lose, mean that their homes could be burned. If Washington lost, their wives, children, farms would be lost. Have you ever wondered what happened to the 56 men who signed the Declaration of Indepen dence, pledging their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor that this nation, under God, would not perish from the earth?. Five were captured and tortured by the British. Nine fought and died from wounds or hardships of war. Twelce had their homes pillaged and burned. Two lost their sons in battle. Another had two sons cap tured. John Hart was driven from his wife’s bedside as she lay dying. Their 13 children fled for their lives. His mill and fields were laid waste. For more than a year he lived in forests and caves. He returned home to find his wife dead and children vanished. A few weeks later he died from exhaust ion and heartbreak. Norris and Livingstone suffered similar fates. Carter ’Braxton of Virginia, a wealthy planter and trader, saw his ships swept from the seas by the British navy. He sold his home and properties to pay his debts and died destitute. Vandals and soldiers looted the properties of Ellery Clymer, Hall, Walton, Gwinnett, Heyward, Rutledge and Middleton. At the battle of Yorktown, Thos. Nelson Jr. urged General Wash ington to open fire on Nelson’s home, which had been taken over by the British General Cornwallis for his headquarters. The home was destroyed, and Nelson died broke. Francis Lewis’ home was des troyed and his wife jailed. She died a few months later. Who were these “super-pat riots”? Twenty-four were lawyers and judges. Eleven were merch ants. Nine were farmers. They all signed the Declaration of Inde pendence knowing that the pen alty would be death if they were captured. I can’t help contrasting them with the fatcat who says he can’t afford to get into this fight to save our Republic from Social ism and surrender, because if and when the comrats take us, he’s hoping they will still let him run his business That’s par for his course. Why could he be expected to save the country NOW? He couldn’t find a uniform to fit him during World War II. When ever any shooting starts, he‘ll always get “deferred.” God Give Us Men! As Churchill said. “If you will not fight for the right when you can easily win without bloodshed— you may have to fight when there is no chance of victory, because it is better to perish than to live as slaves.” Some people seem to think we have a permanent patent on free dom. Have we become a nation of mental midgets who’ve sold out our freedom birthright for a mess of pottage, who have so long shunned our responsibilities as free citizens that we are now trembling weaklings, brainwashed into self-imposed inferiority com plex, happy-pilled into becoming a nation of sheep, ignoramuses and ostritches, intimidated into a complete lack of faith in our own mental health, lied into accepting what power-mad incompetents say “must be”? Are we to grovel on our knees before amoral agnos tics, avowed atheists, and one- world socialists merging us into a “one-world” with God-hating ty rants ? Are we co cower in palsied ter ror before a dictator? Are we to surrender our lives, our fortunes —our sacred honor, and our children to history’s most anti- God tyranny, while treason marches on? Let us, as free peo ple, now never to bend to any threat, cower before any master, within or without. God grant that we will LIVE free or DIE try ing. God give us MEN! PATIENTS IN THE HOSPITAL NEWBERRY COUNTY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Mrs. Bell L. Bouknight, New berry James Thomas Bouknight, New berry Mrs. Mary Burnette, Newberry Mrs. Bessie Clary, Newberry Mrs. Lillian Clayton, Woodruff Mrs. Mamie L. Clary, Newberry Miss Christine Derrick, Pros perity Mrs. Lila H. Dublin, Whitmire Mrs. Clara Dawkins, Newberry Mrs. Floree Davis and baby boy, Newberry Mack Eargle, Pomaria Miss Mary Evangeline Frick, Newberry Mrs. Cora S. Fellers, Prosper ity Mrs. Katherine Garner, Bates- burg. Wayne Edward Hawkins, New berry Mrs. Peggy Hawkins, Prosper- ity Mrs. Grace Harvey, Newberry Miss Perene Kyser, Newberry Noah Kirkland, Newberry Luther Edgar Long, Newberry Louis Morris, Newberry Master Steve Allen Morris, Prosperity Jim Miller, Newberry Mrs. Joyce Pitts, Newberry Mrs. Grace E. Pitts, Silver- street Mrs. Lucy Rivers, Prosperity Mrs. Dorothy Stoudemire, Cha pin Miss Jacqueline Tarlton, New berry Mrs. Christine Turner, Newber ry Jacob Warner, Newberry Hattie Mae Culbreath, Newber ry Inez Howard, Newberry Moszello Nelson and baby girl, Newberry Artie Moon, Prosperity. MILLS CLINIC PATIENTS Baby Margaret Rinehart, West Columbia Mrs. Ruby Sawyer, Lexington ' Mrs. Margie Steel and baby boy, Batesburg Miss Bessie Long, Prosperity Mrs. Victoria Stockman, Pros perity Miss Lalla Martin, Newberry Monroe Garvin, Batesburg Mrs. Vernelle Hoover, Gilbert Mrs. Lois West, Leesville Mrs. Verdie Wise, Newberry Effice Metts, Little Mountain Louis Long, Chapin Baby Boy Garland, Newberry Mrs. Alice Kinard, Prosperity. PROPERTY TRANSFERS Newberry No. 1 Eugene S. Blease and Steve C. Griffith Sr., to Jesse L. Dickert, one lot and one building on Main street (drug store), $5. W. Fulmer Wells and Henry B. Wells to Mrs. Fay M. Gray, two lots on Hillcrest Road $5. Ralph B. Baker to Eddy Mae Baker, one lot and one building, on lower Main street (Firestone building) $5 love and affection. R. B. Baker to Eddie Mae Baker one lot and one building on Mc- Kibben street (Newberry Auto Supply) $5 love and effection. R. B. Baker to Dr. Ralph P. Baker, one lot on McKibben St., $5 love and affection. William F. Austin, receiver for Citizens Home Insurance Co. to Myrle H. Purcell, four lots and four buildings in Coateswood place, $5 and other valuable con siderations. Katherine A. Wicker, executrix of the estate of Carrie Barnes At- taway to Charlie G. Bouknight, one lot and one building on Pop lar St., $5. NEWBERRY No. 1 OS Edna H. Paysinger to Virginia T. Paysinger, 2.3 acres and one building( store building) $5. SILVERSTREET Nck 2 Olin P. Davenport and Minnie W. Davenport to Charles M. Thomas and Beatice S. Thomas, .38 acre, $5. Bush River No. 3 Helen H. Epting to J. D. Ep- ting Sr., four acres, $5 love and affection for son. Whitmire No. 4 Thomas Malone and Hethaleen G. Malone to Clarence R. Wilker- son and Myra A. Wilkerson, one lot and one building, $10 and other valuable considerations and ex change of property: Dorsey B. Lawson and Clarence J. Lawson Jr., to Dorothy S. Ba ker, one lot and one building $10. Clarence R. Wilkerson and My ra A. Wilkerson to Thomas Malone and Hethaleen G. Malone, one lot and one building, $10 and ex change of real estate. Andrew Sims to C. B. Jeter, two lots and one building, $10 and cancellation of a mortgage. POMARIA No. 5 U. S. of America, Acting Chief, Forest Service, Department of Agriculture to W. F. Rutherford, 5.20 acres, quit claim, $1. Prosperity No. 7 Ruth Moore Vinge to Leon B. Wessinger, 1.64 acres $5. John D. Pruitt to J. P. Ford, one lot, $900. Lyon C. Fellers to L. Glenn Fel lers, two acres, $5. Recent Marriages Ralph M. Yarbrough of Whit mire and Judy Woodward of New berry were married on June 22 at Whitmire by Rev. K. W. Bed- enbaugh. Robert Wayne Ware and Con nie Maxine Knight of Newberry were married at Greenwood by Rev .Eugene L. Farmer on June 29th. Joby Romaine Shealy and Pat ricia Gayle Boozer of Prosperity were married on June 28 by Rev. Thomas *F. »Suber at .Newberry. Allen Eugene Nichols and Car olyn Janet Richardson of Prosper ity were married June 29 at Pros perity by Rev. L. Grady Cooper. Claude Vincent Fowler of New berry and Colleen Jones Rikard of Whitmire were married at Union on June 22 by Rev. Joe W. West. Mr. and Mrs. fcric Steve Davis of 1505 Nance St. announce the birth of a seven pound, 14 ounce son, Brent Steve, on June 28 at Newberry County Memorial Hos pital. Mrs. Davis is the former 1 Pearl Floree Guinn. SYDNEY E. CARTER, M. D. announces the opening of his office for the practice of General Medicine on July 8, 1963 Office Hours: 10-1; 3-6, Moiiday-Friday 10-1 Saturday 1321 Hunt St. Phone 276-5539 FARMER Mr. and Mrs. George William Farmer of Route 2, Kinards an nounce the birth of a six pound, 10 ounce son, George William, Jr., on June 27 at Newberry County Memorial Hospital. 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