The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, September 26, 1963, Image 4
PAGE FOUR
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
1218 College Street, Newberry, S. C.
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
O. F. Armfield, Jr., Owner
Second-Class Postage Paid at Newberry, South
Carolina.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $2.00 per year in ad
vance :Six Months $1.25.
•••••••••••
2 Dean Manion
THE
MANION
FORUM
••••••••••••••••••••
Months of demonstrations, re
crimination and violence have
thrown more heat than light on
the tortured subject of civil rights.
Technically a civil right is a priv
ilege conferred by the civil law.
Once established, the Constitution
requires that the privilege must
be administered by responsible of
ficials without discrimination on
account of race, color or creed.
What the current demonstrators
are demanding, however, is not in
discriminate enforcement of exist
ing civil rights, but for new civil
rights to be created by new laws
which would make it illegal for
certain persons to discriminate a-
gainst certain ohtre persons.
This demand is the proverbial
“wolf in sheep's clothing.” It is
called the Civil Rights Act of
1963, but it is ten per cent rights
and 90 per cent extension of Fed
eral executive power at the ex
pense of states, municipalities and
individuals.
If you are a home owner, it will
tell you to whom you may rent
a room or the house. If you are a
business man offering goods or
services to the public, it will tell
you how to operate that business.
If you have a child in school you
will be affected.
If you borrow money from a
bank that is insured by the Fed
eral Deposit Insurance Company,
an agency of the Federal govern
ment, Or if you have a loan under
the Small Business Administra
tion, or if you are a farmer hav
ing anything to do with Farm
Credit, Soil Conservation, Rural
Electrification or any of the doz
ens of other governmental agen
cies, then you will be told whom
you may hire, or fire, or promote
or demote.
If the proposed Civil Rights Act
of 1963 should be enacted into law,
it will amend over a hundred ex
isting statutes now on the books.
The next step to a complete and
uncontrolled dictatorship of any
government is the control of the
voting and of the electoral mach
inery. In 1961, the United States
Commission on Civil Rights rec
ommended that the federal govern
ment should take over and super
vise the qualifications of all vot
ers, the registration of voters, the
establishment of voting districts,
the holding of elections and the
counting of votes, and the estab
lishment of electoral districts. The
proposed Civil Rights Act of 1963
would take over for the Federal
government at least two of these
steps. It would fix qualifications
for voters, contrary to the United
States Constitution, and would
transfer, under the circumstances
stated in the Act, the right of reg
istration of voters.
In giving control of the hiring,
firing, promoting and demoting of
employees, the proposed law
would give authority to the Fed
eral government to destroy the
seniority system of unions.
Unless you want th<e_ Federal
eyes looking down your throat
and the Federal hand to grasp you
around the neck, then you Should
ask your Representatives and Sen
ators to vote against this legisla
tion.
No one disputes the need for a
thorough search for a wider and
more charitable conception of hu
man equality and fair treatment,
but a good end can never justify
a bad means. Federal absoluteism
will not protect the civil rights
of anybody. On the contrary, it will
end by destroying the natural,
God-given rights of everybody,
and will not improve the condi-
SENATOR
STRO
HURMOND
Reports
PEOPLE
Red Carpet for
Red Dictator in Washington
ONE OF COMMUNISM'S
craftiest and most successful
old revolutionaries has achieved
a long time objective—an invi
tation to be wined, dined, toast
ed, and embraced in the best
red-carpet treatment which the
Kennedy Administration can
provide.
JOSIP BROS, alias “Tito,”
Red Marshal and Dictator of
Yugoslavia has finally received
his long-sought invitation to
Washington. Paradoxically, his
October visit with the U. S.
President, and stay at the re
decorated “Blair House,” will
take place only weeks after
Tito gave tjie red-carpet treat
ment, complete with bear hugs
and kisses, to the butcher of
Bucharest, Nikita Khrushchev,
in Tito's serfdom of Yugoslavia.
TITO, IN the best tradition
of gangsterism, has, in recent
years, attempted to purchase a
cloak of “respectability” with
the power and wealth he cap
tured in years of blood-letting,
gutter fighting for communist
causes. He makes no attempt to
hide his devotion to atheistic
communism, but merely to hide
his bloodstained hands and con
spiratorial heart by posing as
the ultimate contradiction and
impossible quantity, a “good”
communist.
TITO IS A contemporary of
Stalin. He fought with the
communists in Russia from 1917
to 1921. After that, he returned
to Yugoslavia, and rose in the
ranks of the party. He fought
in the International Brigade
with the communists in Spain.
In 1937, he became Secretary of
the Yugoslavian Communist
Party. During World War II,
Tito organized and led the “par
tisans,” or communist guerril
las, in Yugoslavia. In October,
1944, Soviet troops, under Mar
shal Tolbukhin, installed Tito
in power in Yugoslavia, with
the acquiescence of the Allied
Powers.
IN 1948, Tito began his dis
guise as a “good” communist,
“independent” of Moscow. Tito
ostensibly made a decision in
defiance of Moscow to close
Yugoslavia's borders to commu
nist guerrillas fighting in north
ern Greece, depriving them of a
“sanctuary,” so that Greece,
with U. S. help, could win the
guerrilla war. Milovan Djilas,
then a high Yugoslavian com
munist diplomat, now imprison
ed in one of Tito's dungeons,
says that he personally heard
Stalin, himself, give the orders
to end the war in Greece.
GENERALLY, western Na
tions accepted Tito's ‘‘independ
ence’' as legitimate. He became
the symbol of the mythical
“good communist.”
IN 1946, Tito laid down his
future policy for communist
Yugoslavia. He stated: “The
capitalist forces constitute our
natural enemy despite the fact
that they helped us to defeat
their most dangerous represen
tative. It may happen that we
shall again decide to make use
of their aid, but always with
the sole aim of accelerating
their final ruin . . .”
IN DECEMBER, 1962, just
after the Cuban crisis, when
asked to compare his foreign
policy with that of the Soviets,
he stated: “We aspire toward
the same goal—building of a
new society of socialism and
communism. On the question of
war and peace, peaceful coexist
ence, disarmament, liquidation
of colonialism, the German ques
tion, and other problems which
trouble the world today, our
points of view are either identi
cal with or close to one an
other.”
TITO'S Yugoslavia has never
opposed the Soviets on a major
policy question in the U. N.
Tito did not even criticize the
Soviets for the slaughter of
Hungarian* 5 in 1956, nor for
breaking t:.e 1958 nuclear test
moratorium, although he bitter
ly criticized the U. S. for test
ing. With U. S. foreign aid
money, Tito is now building
ships and critical materials for
Khrushchev.
NOW TITO’S apologists in
the U. S. State Department
have arranged for “Moscow’s
Trojan Horse” to arrive—at the
White House and respectability.
HOW WILL playing host to
the devil's angel affect the U. S.
image as a God-fearing, liberty-
loving Nation in the eyes of the
people of the captive nations,
particularly Yugoslavia?
Sincerely,
ARE YOU In Advanced
LISTENING?
BY
EARL
WILSON
“Come out from among them
and be ye separate.” Corinthians
6:17.
These words, when first written
to the church at Corinth, were a
challenge to keep themselves free
from the sins of the world. God
has always spoken to his follow
ers in this vein of thougght. He
spoke to Abraham and said, ‘“Get
thee out of thy country.” And it is
his word for today. There are
things in the world with which the
Christian cannot associate himself.
But Christians disreggard this
word completely because they have
no desire to be separated from
the ways of the world.
It may mean a change of trade.
In the days of Paul a Christian
stone mason could not carve out
an idol god for the temple. A
Christian tailor could not fashion
a robe for a heathen priest. And
there are business practices today
that a Christian should not be a
part of.
It may mean a change in your
social life. The early Christians
were not to associate with thosse
who would sacrifice to idol gods.
Today there are social norms of
which the Christian must not be
a part. Our social morals are dis
integrating, but the standards set
by Christ are still “high and lift
ed up.”
Being a Christian is a hard task.
Regardless of how we feel, it will
always be true that there are
some things a Christian will not
do. The bright lights, the soft
music, and the excitement of sin
soon wear off, and then you must
face the Saviour. How much bet
ter it is to listen to His words and
separate ones self from the ways
of the world, than to be reminded
that your sins will surely find you
out.
Are you listening?
Study Group
One hundred and ten Winthrop
College freshmen have exempted
some of their basic courses this
year, the first year of the college’s
advanced placement program. The
new program,, permits students
with strong backgrounds in cer
tain subjects to receive college
credit without taking the intro
ductory course at Winthrop.
Two students were successful in
exempting four subjects, seven ex
empted three subjects and 21 ex
empted two subjects. In the latter
group is Patricia Anne Raffield of
Newberry, who exempted biology
and English 101.
BOUNDARY PTA
MEETS TONIGHT
The Boundary Street PTA will
meet tonight (Thursday) at 8 p.m.
in the school auditorium. Executive
officers and committee chairmen
are T equested to meet at 7:30.
PROPERTY
TRANSFERS
i
Newberry No. 1
Vertie B. Singley to E. P. Payne,
one lot and one building, 520
Floyd St., $5.
Frank H. Ward, Probate Judge
to Murray Lumber Co., one lot
and one building, 1819 Vincent St.,
$5.
Murray Lumber Co. to Pearl
Boyd, one lot and one building,
1819 Vincent St., $5.
Roy D. Bickley to Zeda Arlene
Bickley, one lot and one building,
85 Berry St., $5 love and affect
ion.
Newberry No. 1 Outside
Guy V. Whitener, Sr. to Herman
W. Dennis et al, one lot, $450.
Wilson L.,, Moore and Elizabeth
M. Watters to Walters Duffie,
2.4 acres, $10.
Bush River No. 3
V. E. Shealy, Sara W. Shealy
and Kathryn Shealy to Ray E.
Hartley, one lot, $150.
Whitmire No. 4
Brunell Stone to E. R. Baker,
one lot and one building, $10.
J. Thomas Malone and Katha-
leen G. Malone to Richard E. Chap
man and Bobbie Dean V. Chap
man, one lot and one building, 32
Union St., $5.
Whitmire No. 4 Outside
Emma H. Cathcart, Minor Cath-
cart, Bannie Cathcart and Bernice
C. Burrell et al to William Catb-
cart, 6.01 acres, $5 love and af
fection.
Little Mountain No. 6
Mary E. Owens to Rev. C. W.
Barnes, three lots and one build
ing $10.
H. B. Shealy and W. K. Swygert
to Ford G. Bailey, one lot $5.
Prosperity No. 7
G. S. Long to Arthur L. Long
2 1-2 acres $5.
L. W. Ruff to Jesse Boyd Mar
tin and Carl Edward Livingston,
two lots $5.
congressmen
Rated By ACA
United States Senator Strom
Thurmond received a perfect rat
ing of the 88th Congress by Am
ericans for Constitutional Action.
Congressman Robert T. Ashmore,
William Jennings Bryan Dorn and
Albert Watson also received high
ratings.
The ratings for the entire South
Carolina delegation to the Con
gress of the United States are as
follows:
Sen. Olin Johnston 18 p.c.
Sen. Strom Thurmond 100 p.c.
Rep. Robert T. Ashmore 67 p.c.
Rep W. J. Bryan Dorn 87 p.c.
Rep. Robt. Hemphill 7 p.c.
Rep. John L. McMillan 43 p.c.
Rep. Mendel Rivers 31 p.c.
Rep Albert Watson 87 p.c.
According to ACA Senator
Thurmond and Representatives
Ashmore, Dorn and Watson, have
voted for Sound Money; for a pri
vate, competitive market, for Nat
ional Sovereignty and for Local
Self-Government. The remaining
South Carolina delegation has vot
ed the majority of the time for
inflationary measures.
In issuing these figures, Chas.
A. McManue, ACAs’ Executive Di
rector, said, “These scores are un
official and have been calculated
from the votes contained in ACA’s
Congressional Record Digest and
Tally. The official ratings will not
be compiled until Congress ad
journs for the First Session ahd
will be published in the ACA-IN-
DEX 1963.”
Americans for Constitutional
Action is a nonpartisan political
organization which recently honor
ed 154 Democratic and Republican
members of the United States
Congress for their notable voting
records in support of legislative
measures which serve to sustain,
strengthen, and defend the spirit
and principles of the Constitution
of the United States as these were
defined by the Founding Fathers
of our Republic.
ACA’s Board of Trustees is
composed of such prominent men
as Admiral Ben Moreell, Chair
man of the Board and organizer
and Commander . of the famed
World War II SeaBees; the Hon
orable Herbert Hoover, 31st Pres
ident; Charles Edison, former
Democratic Governor of New Jer
sey; Edgar Eisenhower and other
nationally known Americans.
Twenty-eight Senate and fifteen
House votes on issues, which in
ACA’s opinion have a bearing up
on safeguarding the God-given
dignity of the individual and pro
moting sound economic growth by
strengthening constitutional gov
ernment are, included in this pre
liminary evaluation. Such issues
as Expansion of the Rules Com
mittee; Mass Transportation;
Youth Conservation Corps; Feed
Grain Program; the Debt Limit
Increase; authorization of an ad
ditional $455,500,000 for Area Re
development Act and Foreign Aid
were used in the analysis.
The ACA anaylsis reveals a ra
ther irregular voting pattern by
Congressman Hemphill. On a cru
cial vote for the purpose of reduc
ing foreign Aid by $585 million,
Congressman Hemphill voted a-
gainst the motion to reduce, yet
on final pasage he voted against
the Foreign Aid Assistance Act
tions of those it is advertised
widely to be protecting.
The legislation proposed has
been carefully and skillfully drawn
by excellent Constitutional law
yers. It is designed to destroy
every check and balance on Fed
eral power. It will bring every
profession and every business,
lawyers, doctors, realtors, restau
rants motels, lodging houses and
innumerable others, under Federal
control.
Don’t be misled into thinking
that this is simply a bill to give
equal rights to Negroes and other
minority racial groups. It goes
much further than that. Be sure
that you read the bill in its entire
ty and understand exactly what
it is letting us all in for, before
you decide whether it is good or
bad legislation. Then let your de
cision be known to those who will
have the vote in Congress.
of 1963.
ACA’s Executive Director stat
ed: “Perhaps the strange pattern
of voting both side of an issue is
to confuse the electorate. It is
imperative therefore, that the el
ectorate of the members of Con
gress know how their Senators and
Representatives are voting on all
issues which have a direct bearing
upon their family budget, their in
dividual freedoms and the future
of their children.
“With this information they can
determine whether their represen
tatives are fulfilling their cam
paign pledges.”
Newberry No. 1 Outside
Lester Longshore to Mrs. Inez
Owens McCary, three fourth of an
acre, $150.
Little Mountain No. 6
Hattie S. Boozer, et al to Mary
L. Shealy, eleven acres and one
building, $5.00 love and affection.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER \ ‘ '963
THE NEW FORDS
Total performance in a complete
ly restyled package, with three
distinctive new roof lines and a
roomier interior, keynote the Ford
for 1964.
“All 16 models in the 1964 Ford
lineup—including the uniquely
styled 4-door hardtop models —
are designed to combine an exter
ior look of greater luxury with
still more of the luxury engineer
ing features that have made the
1964 Ford our best seller,” said
E. F. Laux, Ford Division general
marketing manager.
Mr. Laux said the vehicle has
been redesigned inside as well to
reduce the front compartment tun
nel size by one third and to in
crease head room and seat height
over 1963 by as much as an inch.
“Fords are up in sales 28 per
cent over a year ago and account
for better than one out of every
two cars we sell,” Mr. Laux point
ed out. “We believe we are proving
that buyers of low-priced cars re
spond to the extra value we call
“total performance’. The 1964 Ford
line expresses our conviction that
more car for the money—in terms
of total performance—is the key
contested low-priced field.”
to sales leadership in the hotly
1964 FORD FAIRLANE
From a full range of Indianapo
lis-proved engines to action-keyed
new styling, the 1964 Fairlane of
fers more than ever a full meas
ure of performance and economy
in a family-sized package.
“Fresh styling for 1964 may
give some the impression that the
Fairlane has become a bigger car”
said Donald N. Frey, Ford Division
assistant general manager. “Ac
tually, it retains its original size—
about equal to the 1956 full-sized
Ford outside and comparable to
the 1959 Ford inside.”
The dynamic new lines of the
1964 Fairlane are complemented
by a selection of five engines,
three of which are of the same
basic design as the V-8 which
powered the Lotus cars to second
and seventh place finishes in the
1963 Indianapolis 500-mile Mem
orial Day Classic.
“Combined with five transmis
sions for 1964, they offer a full
line of performance and economy
choices designed to meet the re
quirements of nearly any driver,”
Mr. Frey said.
Included in the line-up are 170-
and 200-cubic-inch six-cylinder en
gines and 260- and two 289-cubic-
inch V8s. Transmissions available
with designated engines include 3-
speed manual the Fordomatic two-
speed automatic, over-drive, four-
speed all-synchromesh manual
floor shift, and a new Dual Range
Cruise-O-Matic automatic.
The 1964 Fairlane model lineup
includes 2- and 4-door sedans and
a 4-door Ranch Wagon in the
Fairlane Series. The Fairlane 500
series includes 2- and 4-door se
dans, a 2-door hardtop, a 2-door
sports coupe, and a 4-door Cus
tom Ranch Wagon.
1964 FORD FALCON
Completely restyled for the
first time since its introduction
four years ago, the Ford Falcon
for 1964 combines a new look of
action with a more spacious inter
ior, added economy and a dramat
ically smoother new ride.
“The 1964 Ford Falcon’s new
look of ‘total performance’ is the
product of Ford’s experience in
open rally competition around the
world,” said O. F. Yando, Ford
Division general sales manager.
“■But along with its new ^styling,
the Falcon adds new comfort and
convenience for 1964 to offer still
more of its traditional big car val
ue in the handy compact size.”
Taller and shorter drivers alike
will find the 1964 Ford Falcon
easier to drive and easier to get
into and out as a result of new
interior design, Mr. Yando said.
Steering wheelg, brake pedal and
accelerator have been relocated
and seat travel has been increased.
The instrument panel has been
attractively redesigned with a
larger glove box and controls
which are easier to operate and
more convenient to the driver, Mr.
Yando added. The 1964 Ford Fal
con also will feature new vinyl
headlining as well as all-new in
terior trim styles.
1964 FORD THUNDERBIRD
Ford’s Thunderbird — already
noted for a decade of styling lead
ership-offers more industry firsts
for 1964 in both design and func
tion.
“Underneath the most famous
roofline in America is all-new
styling to give the 1964 Thunder
bird a fresh, new personality of
its own,” said Lee A. lacoca, Ford
Motor Company vice president and
Ford Division general manager.
“But the new styling of the Thun
derbird, in classic car tradition, e-
PATIENTS IN
THE HOSPITAL
Mrs. Cynthia C. Gladden, Pros
perity.
Miss Annie Bynum, Newberry.
Mrs. Gertrude Brock, Newberry.
Mrs. Carrie Bedenbaugh, Pros
perity.
George B. Brehmer, Kinards.
Mrs. Mittie Bodie, Nqwberry^,
Mrs. Ella K. Cook, Prosperity.
Mrs. Dollie Jean Colson, Saluda.
Mrs. Lois Cannon, Newberry.
Mrs. Mary DeHart, Newberry.
Mrs. Janie Mary Franklin,
Newberry.
Mrs. Billie *B. Gregory, New
berry.
Mrs. Sula Gibson, Newberry.
Mrs. Bessie Hendrix, Newberry.
Mrs. Gwendolyn R. Hipp, New
berry.
Mrs. Helen W. Harris, Newber-
ry.
Thomas Pike Jones, Newberry.
Mrs. Mary Kirkland, Saluda.
Julian C. McLeod, Newberry.
Mrs. John A. Mayer, Pomaria.
Miss Ann Mills, Newberry.
Louis Morris, Newberry.
George Ellerbe Miller, New
berry.
Robert Carl Oxner, Newberry.
Mrs. Lola B. Reeves, Newberry.
Mrs. Bobbie Jewel Smith, New
berry. -
Tyrus Senn, Newberry.
James T. Wicker, Newberry.
Claudia Lee Bates, Newberry.
Vanesse Ann Brown, Whitmire.
Sherrie Ann Cromer, Pomaria.
Elizabeth Cannon, Newberry.
Annie Dew Newberry.
Ollie Mary Heller, Pomaria.
Irene Jeter Hawkins, Whitmire.
Bluford Hunter, Newberry.
Bennie Jones, Saluda.
volves from the character and out
standing features of its predeces
sors.”
The 1964 Thunderbird has been
given a longer hood and a shorter
roofline, while the all-new body
side panels are highly sculptured.
The front end features a more
forceful power dome, wider spac
ed and higher set headlights, and a
fully integrated bumper and grille.
Completely new in interior styl
ing too, the 1964 Thunderbird fea
tures a cockpit styling motif . in
the driver’s compartment. Instru
ments are set in separate pods
and the speedometer has been re
designed for easier reading. All
major controls are illuminated by
a soft green light for night-time
operation.
Appreciation
For Cooperation
Is Expressed
The recently completed Exercise
Swift Strike III was of such mag
nitude as to require the combined
efforts of thousands of persons,
both militaiV and civilian.
The contribution of the citizens
of South Carolina, North Carolina
and Georgia was of significant im
portance and I am taking this
means of expressing my sincere
thanks to each and every one who
cooperated with our military for
ces. Your cooperation and gener
osity in the use of your land are
particularly noteworthy.
A total of 50,434 permits, re
leasing more than five and a hgalf
million acres for military use, was
obtained from public-spirited cit
izens. Without these releases, the
training exercise could not have
taken place.
The willingness of so many civ
ilians to participate as a partner
With their armed forces in this
maneuver is indeed gratifying to
me personally. This letter is in a
small measure my attempt to ex
press the gratitude I so sincerely
feel for your, cooperative efforts.
Private citizens, city, county and
state officials all made significant
contributions to the success of the
vital training maneuver. On behalf
of Third U. S. Army I would like,
to assure you of our continued ef
forts to merit your support in fu
ture exercises.
ALBERT WATSON, II
Lieutenant General, USA
Commanding.
Call To Prayer
Our Heavenly Father, we bow
before Thee humbly, reverently
and thankfully, for Thou are
great and holy and good. For
give our sins for Jesus' sake,
and by Thy Holy Spirit take
away our love for sinning that
we may be able and willing to
do Thy will. Amen.
Amy Myers Morganu, Saluda.
Sophie Miles, Saluda.
Mary Wilson Ruff, Newberry.
Berley Rabb, Saluda.
Albert Singley, Silverstreet.
Torrance Tribble, Kinards.
The ’64s from Ford are here:
The Year of the Test Drive starts today!
Ford cars have changed. Only a test drive can tell you how much.
Races and rallies, economy runs, braking and acceleration tests have
bred into our 1964 models the kind of total performance you just can’t
create on the test track alone. They are hard-muscled, fast-moving,
sure-footed. Open competition helped make them that way.
They offer you substantially more car than anything at
their price. You don’t have to take our word for it.
We’re willing to rest our case on our cars.
TRY TOTAL PERFORMANCE
FOR A CHANGE!
FORD
Falcon • Fairlane • Ford • Th; mdcrbini
1964 SUPER TORQUE FORD
Strongest, smoothest, steadiest car in its
field—by hundreds of pounds .. . More
steel in frame and suspensions . . .
Unique suspension lets wheels move
backward as well as up and down to flat
ten bumps...Distinctive new rooflines.
1964 FAIRLANE
Unique combination of family-size
room, sports car feel and modest price
... Optional 289-cubic-inch V-8 so lively
it was adapted for famous Cobra sports
car . . . Five engine choices, six trans
mission choices, eight different models.
1964 FALCON
All new except the economy that made
Falcon famous.. .Falcon’s Six still holds
all-time Mobil Economy Run record for
Sixes or Eights . . . Plushest ride ever ,
built into a compact car... 14 models—
plus 3 extra-duty wagons.
SHEALY
NEWBERRY, S. C.
MOTOR COMPANY
PROSPERITY, S. C.