The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, January 11, 1968, Image 7
The Newberry Sun, Newberry, S. C., Thursday, Jan. 11, 1968—PAGE 7
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Cromer baby
service held
William Allen Cromer, two-
day-old son of W. Larry and
Rita Eargle Cromer, died early
Saturday morning at Newberry
County Memorial hospital.
Besides his parents, he is
survived by his paternal grand
parents, Mr. and Mrs. William
A. Cromer; maternal grand
parents, iMr. and Mrs. J. A.
Eargle, all of Newberry; and
great-grandparents, C. 0. Ear
gle of Newberry and Mrs. Lil
ia Derrick of Columbia.
Graveside services were con
ducted at 3 p.m. Sunday at
Newberry Memorial Gardens by
Rev. Ernest Burns.
JERSEY COWS
RECOGNIZED
Nine Jersey cows owned by
W. E. Senn of this county re
cently received special recogni
tion from the American Jersey
Cattle Club for production rec
ords completed. The production
level far exceeds the. average
of all U. S. dairy cows.
S'"ATE of SOUTH CAROLINA
COUNTY of NEWBERRY
In The Court of Common Pleas
F. H. RINEHART,
Plaintiff
vs
ERNESTINE P. RINEHART,
Defendent
SUMMONS FOR RELIEF
(Complaint Served)
TO THE DEFENDENT
ABOVE NAMED:
You are hereby summoned and
required to answer the Com
plaint in this action, of which
a copy is herewith served upon
you, and to serve a copy of your
answer to the said Complaint
on the subscribers at their of
fice, 210 State Bank & Trust
Building, Newberry, South Car
olina, within twenty days after
the service hereof, exclusive of
the day of such service; and if
you fail to answer the Com
plaint within the time afore
said, the Plaintiff in this
action will apply to the Court
for the relief de; landed in the
Complaint.
(s) HARLEY & PARR
Attorneys for the Plaintiff
Dated January 5, 1968
at Newberry, South Carolina
TO THE NON-RESIDENT
DEFENDENT, ERNESTINE
P. RINEHART:
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE
that the original summons and
Complaint in the above capt
ioned suit was filed in the of
fice of the Clerk of Court for
Newberry County on the 8th
day of January, 1968, at 11:10
o’clock A. M.
(s) HARLEY & PARR
Attorneys for the Plaintiff
Janll-18-25
THE
M ANION
FORUM
By MARILYN MAN ION
A growing uneasiness per
vades America.
No matter what the socio
logists have “discovered” about
its causes, or how much the
politicians try to make hay
from its fears, it abides. Des
pite the frenzied pleas for us
all to forget about it, and to
please understand that the rea
son we are uneasy is that we
“misunderstand the underpri
vileged,” nobody forgets.
In plain words, millions of
people in thousands of cities
are afraid to go out of their
houses alone after dark. They
fear a new breed of criminal—
the kind who knows that the
law and the Supreme Court
will protect his “rights.”
A good many of these mil
lions have modified their fears
by taking defensive precau
tions; Books on self-defense are
best sellers. The hatpin indus
try is enjoying an unexpected
resurgence—hatpin being rec
ommended equipment for . ladies
who are forced to embark on
such dangerous ventures as a
two-block walk to the grocery
store after sundown. Tear gas
guns, battery-powered pocket
sirens, and other such unlikely
items are becoming standard
furnishings for the 20th cen
tury American home. And
quite a few individuals are pre
pared for the worst with fire
arms.
Heretofore, the Federal
courts have been the villians
in the eyes of those law-abiding
citizens who wish to keep their
property and tneir skins in
tact. But the courts’ opinions
have seeped down—unless it is
merely a coincidence—to the
police departments which pro
tect the people. A case in point
is the new penal code which
becomes effective in New
York state this month. A rec
ent guest on the Manion Forum
radio and television programs
was a New York City police
man, Robert B. Walsh. Here
is some of his uncomforting
testimony:
“The use of force is some
thing which should concern
everyone. Let us say that you
as a homeowner, while asleep
in bed, hear glass tinkling
from a broken window or a
forced door. You awaken and
look down the stairwell to
find someone dumping the
silverware and family jewels
into a pillowcase. The inten
tion, of course, is to burglarize
the place.
“Now, as long as Mr. Thief
does not present a threat of
violence by brandishing a wea
pon, or advance toward you
to offer physical harm, you
are not empowered by this new
law to avail yourself of a
weapon in order to stop him.
If you have a shotgun hanging
on the wall or a licensed pistol
under your pillow, woe be unto
you if you use it against him.
“On the subject of juvenile
delinquency, the new penal law
under a title called ‘Infancy,’
categorically states that no one
under the age of 16 is capable
of committing a crime.”
There is much, much more.
But the above examples should
suffice. Beware, gentle-reader,
of using undue force when
you find an intruder in your
bedroom at midnight. Remem
ber that HE, not you, must
make the first move.
And if it’s not too late by
the time he’s made his first
and fatal move, do recall that
if he is not 16, he isn’t even
capable of doing wrong. You
might ask him—nicely, of
course—for his birth certifi
cate.
He, of course, might sign
your death certificate. But
those are the chances you take.
Sweet dreams!
Mothers Escalate Birth Defects War
In Nationwide March of Dimes Drive
A nationwide march,
calling for escalation and
all-out efforts to win a war,
is planned for the week of
January 21. Feelings run
high in favor of this cause
and none will oppose it.
Everyone is a hawk in the
battle against crippling birth
defects which strike a quarter
of a million newborn babies
every year in the United States.
This year, more than a mil
lion mothers have volunteered
to serve the March of Dimes
in its continuing fight against
the heartbreak of birth defects.
Marching Mothers know that
March of Dimes funds con
quered polio in the 1950s and
freed them from fear of this
childhood crippler.
Now, determined that chil
dren handicapped by birth de
fects be given a better chance
in life, and in the hope that
unborn generations will be
spared, volunteers will march
through their neigborhoods on
behalf of the 1968 March of
Dimes campaign.
They will urge people to
contribute to the important
work carried on by medical
teams at 100 March of Dimes
birth defects centers and to
support the voluntary health
organization’s research and
education programs.
For the fifth consecutive
year, actress Jane Wyatt is
serving as national chairman
of the March of Dimes Moth
ers’ March on birth defects.
As in the past, Miss Wyatt
will personally lead the drive
in her Southern California
community, calling on her
neighbors to ask them to give
to the March of Dimes.
A frequent visitor to birth
defects centers around the
country, Miss Wyatt is staunch
in her belief that the fight can
be won if enough support is
given to those wh,o are leading
the way.
March of Dimes-financed
Centers conduct a triple attack
on birth defects—the Great
Destroyer. In addition to,diag
nosis and treatment, scientists
are studying the causes of de
fects and ways of preventing
them.
No birth defect ever touches
one person alone. One Ameri
can family in 10 knows the
tragedy of a child with con
genital handicap, either men
tal or physical. For this reason,
the March of Dimes pays close
I||gpp55
ITS NO SECRET that actress Jane Wyatt again will lead more than
one million volunteers in the national Mothers' March for the 1968
March of Dimes campaign against birth defects. The happy fellow
learning the good news is National Poster Child Timothy Faas of
Whittier, Calif.
attention to educational ef
forts which bring greater un
derstanding of the problem to
more people.
Mothers’ March volunteers
also want parents and future
parents to know about sound
health practices which can
mean everything to their
children.
This year they will carry a
personal message, “For Wom
en Only,” from Dr. Virginia
Apgar of The National Foun
dation-March of Dimes. An in
ternationally recognized med
ical authority, she developed
the “Apgar Score,” widely
used throughout the world to
determine the condition of an
infant immediately after de
livery.
In a personalized note, Dr.
Apgar begins with the impor
tance of prenatal care. She
urges mothers and future
mothers to have a complete
physical check-up and to talk
their husbands and fiances into
doing the same. Health his
tories and any family back
ground of birth defects should
be given to the doctor and his
advice followed faithfully dur
ing pregnancy. Dr. Apgar
warns against taking any
drugs or medication—even as
pirin—during pregnancy with
out a doctor’s approval.
To mothers marching against
birth defects, it is not enough
to be concerned for just one
week in January. The March
of Dimes, and all who are as
sociated with it, have a two
fold purpose. They want every
child born with a severe
handicap to lead a happy,
useful life in a society which
fully accepts him. Beyond
this, they are working to keep
such blows from striking
others. The task calls for wide
support.
You aren't going to believe it...
when we tell you we were once a big swamp/
Most folks think of swamps as “damp, wet, boggy low land ... unproductive
and filled with water, rats, snakes, and useless undergrowth.”
That’s right for most swamps. But in 1934 the S. C. General Assembly
changed one swamp in our state.
Santee-Cooper was created.
And where we had an unproductive swamp, look what’s there today.
It’s a recreational paradise with striped bass and catfish and crappie fishing
so good it’s frightening.
It’s over two billion kilowatt hours of potential annual electrical power gen
erating.
It’s providing electricity for millions of tourists at South Carolina’s Grand
Strand resort area.
It’s mammoth industrial firms attracted to South Carolina by low-cost power.
It’s several hundred thousand smiles of rural South Carolinians enjoying
modem conveniences.
It’s S. C. owned, created for "all the people” and every dime in payments,
revenue, equity and benefits are returned to South Carolinians.
Doesn’t fit your idea of u swamp, does it?
©(Q)® IP IE IB
SOUTH CAROLINA PUBLIC SERVICE AUTHORITY
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