The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, June 10, 1965, Image 2
PAGE FOUR
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1965
1218 College St., Newberry, S. C. 29108
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
O. F. Arrnfield, Jr., Owner
Second-Class Postage Paid at Newberry, Soutti
Carolina.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $2.00 per year in ad
vance :Six Months $1.25.
Bruce Saxon
dies in Miss.
T. Sgt. Bruce E. Saxon, 34, died
Monday at a field hospital in Bi
loxi, Miss.
Born and reared in Joanna, son
of the late B. L. and Ruby Sewell
Saxon of Newberry. He lived here
before entering the Air Force 16
years ago.
Surviving, in addition to his
parents are his wife, Mrs. Vir
ginia Reese Saxon; three sons,
Timothy, Johnathan, and Hayes,
of Keesler Field, and a daughter,
Barbara Saxon, also of Keesler
Field.
Funeral services will be con
ducted Friday at Central Metho
dist church by Rev James O. Gil
liam and Rev. S. M. Atchinson.
Burial will be in Rosemont cem
etery with Masonic rites by Am
ity Lodge AFM and full military
rites by a detachment from Shaw
AFB, Sumter.
Mrs. Fellers died
in Columbia
Mrs. Minnie Lane Fellers, 86,
widow of J. A. (Gus) Fellers, died
Monday morning in Columbia af
ter several years declining health.
Mrs. Fellers was born in New
berry county, daughter of the late
John and Elizabeth Buzzard Lane.
She was a member of St. Paul's
Lutheran church.
Funeral services were conducted
Tuesday from the Whitaker Fun
eral Home by Rev. Harry Crout.
The interment was in Rosemont
cemetery.
Servings as active pallbearers
were Otis Whitaker, Ralph Whit
aker, Roy Whitaker, Paul Whit
aker, Dell Wilson, John Huffman,
Bill Turner, and Marvin Wilson Jr.
Wm. E. Koon, 88,
of Pomaria dies
William E. Koon, 88, of Pom
aria, died Wednesday, June 2 at
the Columbia hospital after a
lingering illness.
Mr. Koon was born in New
berry county near Pomaria, the
son of the late W. P. and Rebecca
Cromer Koon. Before his retire
ment he was a slesman at the
Farmer’s Market. He was a mem
ber of Pomaria Lutheran church,
He is survived by two daugh
ters, Mrs. Tom Vines and Mrs.
Grace Bouknight, both of New
berry; one brother, E. H. Koon
of Pomaria; two sisters, Mrs. Al
ice Kinard and Mrs. Julia Werts,
both of Prosperity.
Graveside services were con
ducted Thursday at the old Koon
family plot near Koon’s Trestle,
near Pomaria by Rev. Elford B.
Roof and Rev. J. Harry Crout.
Who’s Watching The Store?
The Department store owner chid
ed the personnel manager: What’s j
the idea of hiring a cross-eyed I
man for a detective?. Just look
at him, the manager replied, can
you tell whom he is watching ?
NEWBERRY AWARD RECIPIENTS—Four Newberry College
graduates received sptcial senior awards at commencement exer
cises last week. They are, from left, Fred Schott, Columbia, Cromer
Award; Jimmy Park, Newberry, Trudy Koch, Walhalla, American
Legion awards; and Reed Charpia, Jr., Summerville, Laval Trophy.
Col. Buzhardt
back from Pacific
Col. Harry Buzhardt, who has
been on duty in Okinawa for the
past year, returned to the states,
and to Beaufort the first of May
where his family have made their
home while he was overseas. His
mother, Mrs. Epsie Buzhardt, of
Newberry, joined them at Beau
fort to attend the graduation ex
ercises of their daughter, Miss
Ruth Buzhardt at Beaufort High
school. Colonel Buzhardt and fam
ily, accompanied by his mother,
are spending this week in Wash
ington, where Col. Buzhardt will
be stationed for the next 3 years.
Mrs. Zimmerman
passes Monday
Mrs. Elizabeth Dominick Zim
merman, 47, widow of Sam R.
Zimmerman, died suddenly Mon
day, May 31 at her home.
A native of Chappels, daughter
of the late Elliott Snowden and
Minnie (Epting) Dominick, Mrs.
Zimmerman lived in Greenville for
20 years.
She was a member of the First
Presbyterian church. Her husband
died here in November 1962.
Surviving are a stepdaughter,
Mrs. Jack Charlotte of Green
ville; a stepson, Sam R. Zimmer
man Jr of Greenville; three sis
ters, Mrs. Lonnie Frazier and
Mrs. Y. T. Dickert of Newberry
and Mrs. Ray Chiles of Green
ville; four brothers, Virgil E.
Dominick of Colorado Springs,
Colo., J. S. Dominick of Rock Hill,
Guy W. Dominick of Cayce, and
Hugh A. Dominick of Newberry.
Southland Life Agent
HURLEY E. THOMAS
has a
Because he cares so much
about planning the best
insurance programs pos
sible. He spends endless
hours of continuous study
on all phases of insurance.
He's professionally trained,
highly qualified, exception
ally dedicated ... and ready
to give you “He?rt of Gold”
service.
See ahead with
Southland life
INSURANCE [SLj COMPANY
District Office: Greenwood
Nursing Home
be dedicated
next Sunday
The public is cordially invited to
the dedication services of the
Newberry County Nursing Home,
to be held at 2:00 p.m. Sunday,
June 13. The Nursing Home was
designed by Lyles, Bissett, Car
lisle and Wolff, of Columbia and
built by Cannon Construction Co.
of Newberry. The home was con
structed at a cost of $312,000.00
and is considered the most up-to-
date nursing home in the state.
Mrs. Evelyn H. Hayes, R.N., of
Route No. 2, Newberry has ac
cepted the position as superinten
dent of the home. The employees
have been under a training pro
gram at the home since June 1
and the first patients will be ad
mitted on the 15th day of June
with a maximum capacity of 40
residents.
The Nursing Home Commission
is composed of Hubert M. Beden-
baugh as chairman, Dr. P. H. Senn
of Silverstreet as vice chairman,
Robert C. Lake Jr. as secretary
and J. W. Wood, James N. Beard,
Cecil Berley, Clyde N. Merrit and
Charles Gray as members. This
Commission has been working for
the past two years on this pro
ject and it is felt that an excellent
job has been done and that the
people of Newberry county should
come out and look at the beauti
ful building which will be a won
derful home for the nursing home
residents of Newberry county.
The nursing home has only pri
vate and semi-private rooms. The
monthly charges are $200.00 for a
semi-private room and $250.00 for
a private room. The home is air
condiitoned throughout and fur
nished with the most attractive
furnishings to give a home-like
atmosphere.
The services of dedication of the
home, which will be named, “The
J. F. Hawkins Nursing Home”
will be held at 2:00 p.m. on the
13th of June and the home will
remain open for inspection from
2:00 p.m. until 5:00 p.m. on that
day. The employees of the home
will be on hand to answer ques
tions and conduct the tours thru
the building. So come out and see
what a wonderful addition has
been made to Newberry county.—
Robert C. Lake Jr., secretary.
••••••••••
Dean Manion
THE
MANION
FORUM
Many of us are disturbed about
the reports we hear and read of
campus “sit-ins”, Free Speech fra
cases and other demonstrations on
college campuses. This kind of
demonstration has been going on
for years in foreign countries as
a thinly-masked form of Commun
ist agitation. Many wonder if this
is what we are getting now.
Teachers and textbooks probab
ly play a more important role in
molding political thought among
students than any other particular
thing. Students have to attend
classes, and they have to read
textbooks. If a strong liberal point
of view can be presented in the
classroom, and if there is enough
of it, the student is going to be
brainwashed.
It is believed that at least 75
per cent of faculty members in
colleges and universities profess
the Liberal point of view. Many
student groups are organized by
left wing organizations, such as
the W. B. Ek DuBois Clubs, the
newest of the large Communist
front groups. The DuBois Clubs
are described by the head of the
F.B.I. as the most ambitious of
the Communists youth movement
in recent years. DuBois, for whom
the group is named, was a Com
munist.
To combat this communist
threat on campuses, the Young
Americans for Freedom have set
up the College Conservative Coun
cil and will attempt to have at
least one member of the Council
on each campus to coordinate Con
servative action and philosophical
discussion on the Conservative side
among college students.
One of the purposes of the Coun
cil is to see that all college stu
dents, not just those of the Con
servative mind, hear the Conser
vative point of view. A number of
seminars will deal with things that
are of interest to all students and
a series of bedates on college cam
puses are being arranged. In this
way students can make up their
minds, after hearing both sides.
The left-wing groups on cam
puses talk a lot about “academic
freedom”, but to have such free
dom it is necessary that the stu
dents hear both sides, not just
the Liberal viewpoint held by too
many professors.
The future belongs to the young
people and it is important that
their elders give them every help
possible in their battle to preserve
our way of life for their own and
future generations.
PROPERTY
TRANSFERS
Newberry No. 1
William S. Allen and Minnie
Mae Allen to Jesse L. Dickert, one
lot and one building on Douglas
street, $5.
Walter H. Beck and Ruth Smyre
Beck to Ruth Clary McCord, one
lot and one building on Evans
street.
Albert Lyles to Pearl Copeland,
one lot and one building $5.
J. F. Wheeler and Mattie B.
Wheeler to William E. Harmon
and Dorothy Wheeler Harmon,
one lot, $5 love and affection.
Newberry No. 1 Outside
Edgar Dominick and Lula B.
Dominick to Lee D. Chappell and
Patricia D. Chappell 93-100 acres,
$5 love and affection.
Lee D. Chappell and Patricia D.
Chappell to Lula B. Dominick, one
lot, $5 love and affection.
Silverstreet No. 2
Lola Floyd Price to William C.
Floyd, 112 acres $5.
Whitmire No. 4
Helen S. Kibler to John Ward-
law, one lot and one building on
Main street and R. R. Ave. $10.
Whitmire No. 4 Outside
Johnnie Thomas and Blanche
H. Thomas to Jerry C. Thomas,
one lot $10 love and affection.
Drifford Helms, Bernice Brad
ley and Elsie S. Chastain to Sadie''
Gambrell, two, acres and one
building $5.
Margaret H. Clark and Cora
Helms to Sadie Gambrell, 2 acres
and one building $5.
Pomaria No. 5
William B. Potts to Ray E.
Weideman, 90 acres and two
buildings $5.
Little Mountain No. 6
Richard M. Brown to James W.
Hamm and Ruth Brown Hamm,
one lot $5 love and affection.
J. N. Hamm to J. Haskell Long,
one lot $5.
Prosperity No. 7
Ralph A. Finley to Mrs. Bessie
Couch, one lot and one building,
$5.00.
John H. Nunnley to Glenn L.
Hamm and Jeanette K. Hamm, one
lot $5.
Murray Lumber Company to
Jonell R. Wise, four lots and one
building, $5.
Clarence Robert Koon to
Glenn R. Boulware and Bessie D.
Boulware, one lot, $5.
Looking A bead
...by Dr. G«org« S. Btnson
PRESIDENT—NATIONAL
EDUCATION PROGRAM
SMrcy, Arktrtus
NO THANKS TO THE
FAINTHEARTED
President Johnson’s willingness
to confront the Communist push
for world power with the best
talking point available to him—
military supremacy—has really
seperated the boys from the states
men. Even some of those who vow
fuH support for the President have
been sniping and yiping about how
close it is to the brink. Others
are citing the horrors of a nuclear
holocaust and urging more ac
commodation with Communist
countries, the very enemies who
have vowed to destroy us one
way or another.
As the cold war became hot in
South Vietnam and the Dominican
Republic, the words also flew like
the bullets. Propaganda does not
necessarily equal reality, but the
fact of utterance may bring real
confusion. Such statements as
these were read in newspapers and
heard on the air: Because of his
Vietnam policy, which is both
“immoral and godless,” President
Johnson may become “the most
discredited president in American
history.” Another voice said the
Pentagon officials who ordered
the atomic bombings of Japan
were looking at Vietnam as a
new “proving ground for other
kinds of weapons.” Readers may
recognize the first voice as Sena
tor Wayne Morse of Oregon, the
second as Nikolia Federnko, Sov
iet delegate to the UN.
These comments offered little
choice. Then, as U. S. Marines in
South Vietnam began to skirmish
in late April, both Piotr Demichev,
a Communist Party official in
Moscow, and Senator William J.
Fulbright, chairman of the Sen
ate Foreign Relations Committee,
were calling for coexistence. In
adjacent columns of the Arkansas
Gazette for April 23, one was say
ing: “The policy of peaceful co
existence . . . presupposes a rebuff
to aggression and support for peo
ples fighting against alien domi
nation,” and the other “The build
ing of bridges between East and
West . ; . is the only way we can
have some hope of ending the ap
palling danger of nuclear war”
Only the Red aggressiveness be
trays the first quotation as Demi-
chev’s.
The minds of the people who
show that they are unwilling, to
stand against Communism, any
time or .anywhere, _have .never
grasped the basic political reality
of our time: that the evil of in
ternational .Communism .is. the
ticourge of civilization as we have
know it. With carious blindness
they would have the U. S._ hand
over South Vietnam to become an
other Communist state. Make an
other Cuba of the Dominican Re
public, it matters not to them.
This is surely a strange morality
that would urge such black im
morality upon the leading nation
of the free world.
These comments are not meant
to characterize the Johnson for
eign policy, so recently and quickly
emerging, as perfection in toto.
There is perhaps still too muhh
waiting for the polls, too much
vacillation while the natiunal pulse
is taken.
We must have firmness of prin
ciple. If there is nothing to nego
tiate about, then you cannot have
the “unconditional” discussions
later suggested. It would be well
to restate our allegiance to the .
Monroe Doctrine, for these emer
gency actions are not without pre
cedent.
No Bargaining For Freedom
Some citizens are wondering why
Averell Harriman, a specialist in
setting up neautral or coalition
governments should be asked to go
to Southeast Asia, where he will
probably frighten the loyal Viet
namese with neutralism/ No one
the government should at this
time reduce the spirits of the
South Vietnamese with such ideas,
vfhen the U. S. has so well dem
onstrated its willingness to protect
its friends who do not wish to be
communized. Such confrontation
is the only way to show Moscow
and Peking that their so-called
wars of liberation must come to a
halt.
The President’s offer to buy
friendship in Southeast Asia with
a billion dollar spending program
was a mistake. We cannot buy
either peace or good will with our
foreign aid. But this may have
been the politician’s manner, to
use the carrot as well as the stick.
Nevertheless, we must keep to
principles that are right. When
America is always choosing the
right we shall not be fearful of
the arms of our enemies or the
viewpoints of our friends. We
should let the Communists deal in
phony world opinion, even if it in
cludes stoning embassies. If the
U. S. always stands firmly for the
right, these things will do us no
harm and the Communists no
good.
The heart works harder in hot,
humid weather to keep body tem
peratures normal. Ease its woric
by avoiding exercise of exertion
in the hot sun.
Sports
Afield
By Ted Resting
Successful bait fishing is not
just a matter of luck. There are
many fundamentals involved, not
only in choosing the right tackle,
but in the bait itself.
Any angler who sticks doggedly
to any one bait throughout the
year, even when fishing in one
limited area and for one species
of fish, is probably handicapping
his chance for success. Become
a “fish-diet detective”—learn spe
cific baits each specific species of
fish you are after is partial to in
the specific waters and at the
specific time of the year you in
tend to fish—and learn how and
where to obtain these “best” baits.
Remember, you can determine
which is the best bait in at least
three ways: (1) by test fishing
with a variety of baits; (2) by ob
serving baits being used by other
successful anglers; (3) by Analy
zing the stomach contents of fish.
Most often the best bait can be
easily obtained in your local area.
Heat is the biggest enemy of
most baits. Earthworms, night
crawlers, crayfish, salamanders
and hellirammites can usually be
transported long distances and will
keep almost indefinitely if the
containers in which they are car
ried are kept in your portable ice
box. Most insect baits, such as the
crickets and grass hoppers, keep
best in a wire cage in a cool place.
And nearly all prepared baits will
remain fresh if kept cool.
Remember, there is little sense
in going to great lengths to get
a bait to the stream or lake alive,
then fishing it dead or half-dead.
Hook large minnows, salamanders
and frogs through the lips so they
will stay alive longer. Hook small
er minnows through the back half
way between the tail and midsec
tion, using great care not to
pierce the backbone. Worms and
night crawlers should be placed on
the hook so that plenty of each end
is left free to wiggle. Crayfish
should be hooked through the tail.
When a live bait dies, put another
live one on the hook. “Keep chang
ing prepared baits at frequent in
tervals, for your chance of a
strike is best with a fresh bait,”
suggests Col. Dave Harbour in
the current issue of Sports Afield
magazine.
EDDIE WELBORN
UNDERGOES SURGERY
Edwin Olin (Eddie) Welborn,
twin son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe H.
Welborn, College street, under
went orthopaedic surgery on his
legs in the Greenville General
Hospital last Wednesday. This is
the third in a series of operations
Eddie has undergone.
Eddie returned to his home on
his 7th birthday, Sunday, June 6,
and is getting along nicely, al
though he will have to remain in
casts from six to eight weeks.
County Permits
Central Drug Store, repairs,
1207 Miin street.
Floyd Frick, repairs to dwelling,
1904 Milligan street.
O. A. /imick, repairs to dwelling
2034 Mower street.
Hayes Singley, repairs to build
ing on Main street.
Eugene Griffith, erect dwelling
on Glenn street.
Mrs. Stewart, repairs to dwell
ing, 3217 Harrington Street.
Tom Chalmers, repairs to dwel
ling, 1519 Caldwell street.
Mrs. Allan Lester, repairs to
dwelling, 1519 Caldwell street.
Roger Bauknight, erect dwell
ing on Bay street.
Allan Reighley, repairs to
to dwelling, 1720 Lindsay srteet.
Total for above permits, $28,-
811.00.
WILLIAM ALEXANDER WATTS
Mr. and Mrs. Alec Watts of
2294 Parkway East, Memphis,
Tenn. announce the birth of a
son, William Alexander, born on
June 2. The Wattses have a dau
ghter, Elizabeth Ruth who is two
and one-half years old. Mrs. Watts
is the former Gloria Parks of this
city.
Exercise improves the heart’s
efficiency,, the South Carolina
Heart Asociation points out. The
athlete's heart pumps more blood
with fewer, but stronger, strokes
per minute than the loafer’s—
saving a bit of wear and tear over
the long haul.
Save by the 1 Oth
Earn from the 1 st
WE ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE
The Payment of Our
60th SEMI - ANNUAL DIVIDEND
-T00UR-
9,800 INVESTORS
ON JUNE 30,1965
Amounting To
. $375,000,00 ...Sfil
If you requested that we mail your Dividend, you
will receive it on June 30th, otherwise it will be added to
your account and will be compounded f not withdrawn.
You are a part of this association, and we want
you to know that its success has been due to your pat
ronage and friendship.
BRANCH OFFICE—BATESBURG, S. C.
•Tsasv, MB was BBT* B.
DIRECTORS
JOHN F. CLARKSON
M. O. SUMMER
W. C. HUFFMAN
^ J. K WILLINGHAM
' E. B. PURCELL
G. K. DOMINICK
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