The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, July 01, 1965, Image 3
THURSDAY, JULY 1, 1965
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
PAGE THREE
Marriages...
Joseph B. Davis of Alcolu and
Bobbie Jacqueline Earle of An
derson, were married on June 19
by Rev, J. Melton Frick.
James Ray Sexton of Joanna
and Linda Estelle Satterwhite of
Newberry, were married by Rev.
Thomas George Dawn at New
berry on June 20.
Arnold Duane Miller and Mor
ris Linda Lee of Newberry were
married on June 19 at Newberry
by Rev. Michael B. Fryga.
Linward Chapman Jr. and
Brenda Diane Caldwell of Whit
mire, were married on June 12 at
Whitmire by Rev. Billy Ray Ow
ens.
Virgil Counts and Julia Ann
Cromer of Newberry, were mar
ried at Pomaria by Rev. John P.
Griffith on June 19.
George Decatur Rast Jr., of
Cameron and Carolyn Mae Shealy
of Chapin were married on June
13 at Chapin by Rev. John D.
Ziegler and Paul G. McCullough.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
All persons having claims
against the estate of Wilhelmina
Baxter, deceased, are hereby no
tified to file the same, duly veri
fied with the undersigned, and
those indebted to said estate will
please make payment likewise.
MAGGIE BAXTER
1441 Whitener Rd.
Newberry, S. C.
Administratrix
June 24, 1965 ll-3tp
County Permits
Franklin Somers, erect dwelling
on Ebenezer Road.
Rev. J. C. Collier, repairs to
dwelling, 412 Boundary street.
The Jaycees, repairs to build
ing bn Glenn street.
T. H. Crooks, repairs to dwell
ing, 1608 Nance street.
John H. Farrow, repairs to
dwelling, 703 Caldwell street.
Harold E. Koon, erect building,
1314 Summer street.
Carl Amick, repairs to dwelling
1811 McHardy street.
Henry Dodgen, erect building,
1105 Hillcrest Road.
Total for above permits $19,-
479.00.
Registration
dates given
The Board of Registration of
Newberry county will meet on the
following days.
Tuesday, July 6—9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Thursday, July 8—9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Friday, July 9—9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Saturday, July 10—9 am. to
12:00 noon.
PROPERTY
TRANSFERS
Newberry No. 1
0. F. Armfield Sr., to Patricia
Clamp, one lot and one building,
$5 and assumption of mortgage.
The Citizens and Southern Nat
ional Bank, Trustee, to Fay Mur
ray Gray, two lots on Harper
street, $5000.
Jack F. Young and June J.
Young to Jim Nelson and Jean C»
Nelson, one lot and one building,
$10.00.
Newberry No. 1 Outside
Eleanor W. Paysinger, Executrix
of Estate of Carrie B. Weir, to
Henry E. Jennings, two lots $5.
William H. Carter to Henry
Jennings, one lot $5.
Whitmire No. 4
Mrs. John (Wilma R.) Miller to
Julia Miller Alexander and Mary
Ellen Miller Young, one lot $5.
Robert C. Lake Jr. to Ethel H.
Ginn, one lot and one building $10.
Whitmire No. 4 Outside
Alfred P. Gilliam and Maude
C. Gilliam to Bascom H. Maness,
one lot and one building $5.
Little Mountain No. 6
J. Noah Hamm to H. Leslie
Miller and Mary Jo Miller, one
lot $150.
Ross Wilson to William Brad
ley and William W. Richbough,
one lot $250.
: MANION :
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••••••••••••••••••*•
In the catalog of crimes, the
most horrendous of all is suicide.
Suicide is an unpleasant topic,
particularly when it concerns the
self-destruction of a great nation.
Nevertheless, when we contem
plate the defeat and destruction
of the United States, we are con
templating suicide because nobody
can defeat and destroy this na
tion except ourselvqs. Abraham
Lincoln once said: “If destruction
be our lot, we must ourselves be
its author and finisher. As a na
tion of free men we must live
through all time or die by sui
cide."
Political materialists, some
times referred to as “Modern Lib
erals” are convinced that with
plenty of your tax money and un
limited centralized government,
they can prosper, pacify, perfect
and ultimately unite, all mankind
in a virtual heaven on earth. For
them, the patriotic American
dream that Lincoln talked about
is a very bad dream, which dis
torts their bright vision of human
perfection with such corny con
cepts as national sovereignty.
Constitutional limitations, and the
religious principle of personal
responsibility.
Consequently, with the enthu
siastic help of the Communists.
Liberals have made a fetish of
surrendering our national inde
pendence. They are determined to
dissolve all limitations upon Fed
eral power and to impose ever-
increasing restrictions upon the
constitutionally reserved power
and independence of the several
States. When these objectives are
attained, the American Republic
will have died by its own hand.
The most concise, categorical
denial of this hedoristic ideology
is in the Constitution of the Unit
ed States, but unfortunately, a
thoroughly liberalized Supreme
Court now changes the Constitu
tion to suit every twist and turn
of the liberal line.
This makes a mockery of those
politicfd institutions which Lincoln
described as more conducive to
liberty than anything that had
gone before them in histoxy.
In defense of liberty, Christ
Himself had highlighted the mor
al limitations that rest upon the
powers of every civil government
when He told his interrogators to
render to Caesar the things which
are Caesar’s and to God the things
that are God’s.
In 1885 John Fiske wrote: “If
the day should ever arrive (which
God forbid) when the people of
the different parts of our country
should allow their local affairs to
be administered by prefects sent
j'rom Washington ... on that day
the progressive political career of
the American people will have
come to an end and the hopes
that have been built upon it for
the future happiness and pros
perity of mankind will be wreck
ed forever.”
And on that said day, the suici
dal self-destruction of the United
States will have taken place, and
! liberalism will proceed to make
way for Communism, here and
all over the world.
“Right-to-Work” Law in Danger
One of the most controversial
measures considered by Congress
during the current session is the
proposal to repeal the so-called
“right-to-work” laws, authorized
under the Taft-Hartley Labor law.
“Right-to-work” laws are en
acted by States to provide that
no person can be required as a
condition of employment either
to belong to a union or not to be
long. It guarantees free choice in
the matter.
A union and an employer may
agree that nobody but union mem
bers shall work in a particular
plant and when such agreement
has been reached, membership in
a union may then be a condition
of employment, in states that do
not have right to work laws. The
provision of the Talf-Hartley law
simply gives this particular part
of an employment contract to
the States.
Almost all the demands for re
peal of the the “right-to work”
provision of the Talf-Hartley law
come from top union officials and
union organizers, who find it
convenient when they can force
workers to join a union. A union
official would have little trouble
with his members if those who
are displeased with the way their
union is performing, were not
permitted to drop out without giv
ing up their jobs.
If the right to work laws are
vacated by Congress, an employee
who knows that his union is dom
inated by Communist leaders,
would be required to continue to
pay dues to support that union,
regardless of his own feelings a-
bout it. Some time ago, for ex
ample the Teamsters Union was^
A beautiful future is worth a few
sacrifices. Open a savings account
with us and add to it every
payday. It’s the best way to get the
things you want most out of
life for your children.
BRANCH OFFICE—BATESBURG, S. C.
AVI AT as AJVD Loa.IT ASSO CIA TJOJV
DIRECTORS
JOHN F. CLARKSON
M. O. SUMMER
W. C. HUFFMAN
J. K WILLINGHAM
E. B.‘ PURCELL
G. 1C DOMINICK
NEW CHURCH PRESIDENT
Mrs. Frances S. Wells, a
Christian Science teacher and
practitioner from San Antonio,
Texas, was named president at
the June 7 Annual Meeting of
The Mother Church, The First
Church of Christ, Scientist, in
Boston, Mass.
expelled from the AFL-CIO for
what was called corruption in its
leadership. Even under such lead
ership, members in the States
having no right to work laws,
were forced to continue paying
dues to those leaders, and this
same Teamsters Union is in the
lead now to persuade Congress
to repeal the right to work pro
vision of the labor law.
A recent Gallup Poll, and other
nationwide .surveys have shown
conclusively that the majority of
the America npeople want to re
tain the right to work laws. In
spite of this, and because of the
extremely great influence union
resources, union money, and un
ion officials have over elective of
ficials, many representatives ol
the American people in Congress
feel they cannot afford to risk
opposing the union demands for
repeal of the right to work laws.
Congressmen are weighing the
effect of the union leader’s sup
port of their election campaigns
against the popular opposition to
the repeal of this section of the
Talf-Hartley law, and if the gen
eral public is sincerely opposed to
the repeal, now is the time to let
elected officials in Washington
know about it.
Anderson at
music camp
Robert W. Anderson, son of Dr.
and Mrs. E. M. Anderson of New
berry, left Saturday, June 6th to
attend an eight week summer
school at world-famous National
Music Camp in Interlochen, Mich
igan.
Founed in 1928, National Music
Camp has developed into the
world’s largest and best known
summer school of the arts. Rob
ert, a music major and rising jun
ior at the University of South
Carolina, is in the University
Men’s Division at Interlochen.
A pupil of James Pritchard,
Robert has qualified himself as an
outstanding clarinetist by placing
as one of the four finalists in the
Concerto-Aria Competition held at
the University last April 28.
Taz W. Wood
rites Monday
Taz W. Wood, 68, of 1308 Milli
gan street died suddenly Saturday
afternoon.
Mr. Wood was born in Saluda
but had spent most of his life in
this county where he was employ
ed by Oakland Mills. He was a
member of Epting Memorial
Methodist church and a son of the
late Luther and Lou Pitts Wood.
Mr. Wood is survived by his
wife, Annie King Wood; one dau
ghter, Mrs. Sudie Mae Jones of
Newberry; two sons, L. M. and
Earl E. Wood, both of Newberry;
two brothers, E. B. and John W.
Wood, both of Newberry.
Funeral services were held on
Monday at Epting ‘ Memorial
church, conducted by Rev. M. B.
Lee and Rev. J. A. Grigsby. Bur
ial followed in Baxter cemetery.
Christian Science
lecture at Saluda
“The Healing Way of Christ”
is the subject of a free lecture on
Christian Science to be given on
Sunday afternoon at Saluda.
The lecturer will be Florence
C. Southwell of Orlando, Fla. in
the school administration building,
300 N. Calhoun street at 3 p.m.
The lecture is being sponsored
by the Christian Science Society
of Saluda. A cordial invitation has
been extended to the public.
Mrs. Leaphart
killed in wreck
Mrs. Maude Hite Leaphart, 60,
of Route 2, Lexington, was killed
Saturday night in an automibile
and truck collision four miles
south of Lexington on Highway
378. Among her survivors are
two brothers, Brenton and Eugene
Hite of Prosperity.
PARAER FOR WEEK
O God, we acknowledge that
all our toil and work are in
vain without Thy blessing and
aid; and we beseech Thee to
assist us patiently to fulfill our
calling, and faithfully to ac
complish our work, to Thy
praise. Amen.
Forrest Boozer
died Saturday
D. Forrest Boozer, 83, died sud
denly early Saturday morning at
his home in the St. Luke’s section
of the county.
Mr. Boozer was born and reared
in the St. Luke’s section of the
county. He was a member of St.
Luke’s Lutheran church and a
former member of the church
council. Mr. Boozer was a re
tired farmer.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs.
Viola Morris ‘Boozer, Prosperity;
two sons, N. Virgil Boozer, and
James William Boozer, both of
Prosperity; two daughters, Mrs.
Bradley Bowers, Prosperity, and
Mrs. Ira Taylor, Newberry; one
brother, Norman Boozer, Pros
perity.
Clinton Harley
• \i r
passes in N. t.
Clinton Harley, 64, died last
Thursday at Gross Nore, N. C. He
was a native of Aiken county and
had lived in Newland, N. C. for
the past 10 years.
Graveside services were held at
10:30 a.m. Saturday in Beth-Eden
Lutheran church cemetery near
Newberry.
Anti-communist
rallies planned
for upper state
Speaking at three anti-Com-
munist rallies to be held in this
area, former Havana trial attor
ney and veteran Cuban-American
patriot, Dr. Fernando Penabax
will deliver an eye-witness account
of Castro’s rise to power and a
revealing iasight into the Cuban
dictator’s current acts of com
munist subversion within the
United States and the Western
hemisphere. The rallies will be
held in Anderson, Tuesday, July
13 at 7:30 p.m. in the County Ag
ricultural building; in Spartanburg^
Thursday, July 15 at 7:30 p.m. in
the Hillcrest Friendship Room,
Hillcrest Shopping Center; and in
Greenville, Friday, July 16 at 7:30
p.m. in the Morningside Baptist
church. These rallies are spon
sored by Christian Crusade, the
anti-Communist ministry of Billy
James Hargis with headquarters
in Tulsa, Okla.
Penabaz was born in Baltimore
and was taken to Cuba by his
parents when he was only four
years of age. In addition to his
schooling in Cuban schools, he
received his Bachelor’s Degree at
Duke University, Durham, N. C.
Later, he received a Doctorate in
Law from the University of Ha
vana. After graduating from the
Havana University, he was named
editorialist for the Havana Post,
Cuba’s oldest English language
paper, and was Professor of his
tory at Ruston Academy.
At the age of 23, Dr. Penabaz
established a law firm in Santi
ago de Cuba, capital of Oriente
Province. There he was consul
for the Republic of Costa Rica.
In 1947, he organized the first
anti-Communist movement in Cu
ba, and became the spokesman ir
governmental circles for the fierc-
ly patriotic farmers of Cuba. In
1956, he opened his law firm in
Havana, and became a radio and
television commentator over CMQ,
Latin America’s largest television
and broadcasting enterprise. He
also held a professorship in the
Cuban Ministry of Education but
resigned as soon as Castro took
power. Dr. Penabaz became in
ternationally famous defending
the anti-Castro Cubans during the
bloody trials in 1959.
Carpenters
NEWBERRY, S. C.
Vacation Flash!
First and Second floor has been busy specially
pricing our merchandise for you and your vaca-
*
tion enjoyment . . .
Slacks . • . for the cool evenings . . •
Shorts . . . for the hot ones . . .
Shirts . . . ’cause you gotta have a top • • •
Bathing Suits ... for swimming or sunning . .
Dresses and Skirts ... for the places pants
won’t go . . .
Childrens Clothes • . . ’cause they will vacation
with you!
SOME REDUCED 50% AND MORE . . .
P. S.:
Yes! a few of the new fall clothes are
now arriving. ;
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