The Alvin Sun (Alvin, Tex.), Vol. 71, No. 58, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 6, 1961 Page: 6 of 8
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PAGE SIX
SUN, ALVIN. _1
Experiences I
* tasks
4
A
I|
act
1C y
— what did all of them have in
fr’s Silver A
59c
J. H.
lb.
For IV1
RUMP ROAST ^j,eTheF
55c
Lb.
Bai
^9c
Ul
L E. “Gene”
McLLORINE 1/2 gal. 49c
< '5-i
Ire. BREAD
2 for 41c
F
s
L
Iff I
al Insurant
I
a
i extra-cost option—Chevrolet air conditi
OWN PRODUCTION
10
«S
i'
f
is th--
or trade
I
i
L
eg:
■■
eh
HI
T. A. G. S A L f
-and the
SUS-
ON
USED APPLIANCES
■-^vrolet dealer v-ill look after the rest nicely, ‘thank you. Jct-SlllOOtll Chevrolet
s
169.95
The climate couldn't
149.95
0
89.95
«ic
1
I
3 lbs. $1.00
lb. 79c
Q
Chery Conair Monza Club Coupe
Clyde Thomas Is Installed To
Head Rotary Club For Next Year
V
COM ARE OUR MEAT PRICES WITH THE LOCAL
CHAIN STORES OR THE DISCOUNT HOUSES.
SAVE 20c TO 30c Per Lb USE OUR BUDGET PLAN.
WE OPERATE OUR OWN SLAUGHTER PLANT
LOCKER
PLANT
MARKET
PHONE CL 8-2861
Freezer
Ready
essence of
of buy i
250 Lbs. fo 300 Lbs.
Half or Whole
111 w. Willis
Owners
D e
FURNITUP.
615 S. Gordcr St.
B Alvin
- AUTO — LIFE
-'iced Our Own
8* CON lb. 55c
i
Cello Bag
WIENERS
ROUND STK.
Tenderized Free
Ground
MEAT
FRYERS
The Pearland P-TA
[ elected new officers.
They are: Mrs. Tom Alexan-
der. president: Mrs. W. T. Smith.
%
3 lbs. $1.00
lb. 29c
Boneless Pikes Peak
ROAST |b. 59c
.........
Reg. Price
199.95
al
169.
139.
129.1
591
Freezer Ready
CALVES
V -:-J
SHOULDER STK. lb. 49c
V. al
CROWN ROAST lb. 49c
Baby Beef
HINDQUARTERS
oon <.nd 1
■ i rfla
r
I
' ard betw.
In th, u,.
I
of their i
in A reception ’Hie
jmmunf v Room ment
rnd fl
WITT J
Pwsl
Houston. Te«a«
7900 S. Multi. Ml
common? An unquenchable thirst
for FREEDOM
The quest for freedom has mov-
ed entire nations from one loca-
tion to another, impelled men to
forsake all that they held near
and dear, led individuals to offer
their own lives for its possesion.
Why? Because man is basically
. a part of the Divine nature of
God, and Divinity knows no bon-
►.
P - The engagement
tyh ifley Ann Hall 1
■noticed by her mot
■pws are to be exch
yr in the First Methoc
. the son of M
Lin.
is painting of a bridge to keep from ■
.. ... j corros-
ion may »-e a help to the traffic
the moving over it. hut this fact does
M. G. OBER
113 N. HARDIE
169.95
.cellent Condition and Carry Warranty.
owner-! I
4
n Attended 1
of freedom is the most vital as-
pect of human existence; with it
civilizations rise from greatness
to immortality — without it, his-
ange
Refrigerator
1—-RCA TV With Base
The Above Are In Ex,
r* r!
11
cf parts, had no more in divis- manner that no one
sjon of victails and cloaths, than any group of them can alter at
hi that was weake and not able will. Man can suffer the conse-
nt doe a quarter the other could: quences of breaking divine law. ... r ...
this was thought injustice . . but he can never rewrite divine name of a corporation? Does not j
“ And for mens wives to be com-
protection. These are
goods and services with which
are concerned. Now what
meant by proper means?
*
5? ■ ■
fmpala Convertible
L# -
■Ck-C/
*■
■ -■ ■
'a
JI
tnU
C7HJ
V s5K4 t«" *0
GEORGE GALKINS
Installed
George Calkins was
""fN Muni
Summertime-and the savin is easy’
to own a lot of car at an easy-to-own price. ChX and you7 JUSt aI°nff your desire
I ei.111 T- -T *. . . . * W . -Ml —HRff""^IHI
J < iTfinoir^
PEARSON CHEVROLET COMPANY
»T5 GORDON STREET ALVIN I
---------------- ALVIN OL 8-2526
< LI'OE TIIOHAS
Installed
Tli Rev. Clyde E. Thomas, pas-
tor of the First Methodist Church,
was installed Thuisday night as ti
president of the Alvin Rotary Club, i
f«.. .u? • ‘
dinnei was held at Alvin Country
Club
R. ' -rint; Presiderf Tom Blake-worked in Bavfon.
n i ted as mas’er of ceremonies industry.
aid proented attendance awards, Mr. 'spencer, who now lives
a id neniberships ; in Dickinson with his wife and
M .lx I-hip pins we . present- four children has been active in
cd 1 n-" ”-----1 ” ......
Goff.
Dr !, Jernigan. Ben Huser, political responsibilities
and -’ohn Neves.
Perfect attendance tabs went to:
B ll 1 jsvh'udUiu ami Strgay Goff,;
one year; Tom Blakeney, five!
year'. Arthur N. Christianson,
's: and Ne«l M. Nelson, i
Crusader held in thongs in a
Saracen jail; the prisoner of Zen-
da, the Man in the Iron Mask;
I the Pilgrim Fathers making pre-
| parations for a hazardous trans-:
, atlantic voyage in a cockle shell
-;
I
"Service With Every Sale"
NEVES & WOOSTER APPLIANCE C
Phone OL 8-2361
John Neves HI W. Willis ,
d»*l
Tess up
°ur home
ith...
will always lead nu fo
I think back, 1 really
the 4-H leaders, agents
have <ione for me and n
and for other 4-H’ei<
When I first joined 4 I
very little about how |<>,.
can. and freeze foods M
. who is very skilled al th
‘decided it was tini<- 1
• For at one lime she
4-H’er and is now an .id .
■ and she knew it wa < i
ganization.
So. at the age of 10. I
s. Sewing
of these. I have made
blouses, skirts, dress.-
the fullest of his or her native
abilities. Like any other machine
' of marvellous conception, it re-
quired that certain care be taken
in order to keep it running at
peak efficiency. Like any truly
permanent structure, it was based
on tremendously strong founda-
tions. We are going to look at
these foundations of our Free En-
terprise system. We shall study
them in sufficient detail to recap-
ture the moral and spiritual for-
ces behind each one. In so doing
• we shall reaffirm our faith in its
logic, revere the minds that
brought it about, and pledge our-
selves to do all in our power to
guard it. foster it. practice it and
defend it against all who would
take it away from us, by what-
ever means
First of al . let us examine some
of the records from our own his-
tory. The following account is tak-
en from the journal of Governor
Bradford, the first governor of
Plymouth Bay Colony in 1622. Most
of us have forgotten that when the
Pilgrim Fathers landed on the
shores of Massachusetts they es-
tablished a C ommunal system. Out
of their common product and
storehouse they set up a system
of rationing, though it came to
' but a quarter of a pound of bread
each day to each person.’’ Even
when the harvest came, ‘ it arose
but a little.' A vicious circle seem-
ed to set in. The people complain-
ed that they were too weak from
want of fexx! to tend the crops
as they should. Deeply religious
though, they were, they took to
stealing from each other. “So as
it well appeared,” writes Governor
Bradford, “that famine must still
insue the next j ...
in some way prevented.”
colonists, he continues. ‘
to thinke how they might raise’
as much come as they could, and
obtain.' a b-iter crope than they!
had done, t’ ‘
'still languish in miserie. At length',! 1
after much debate of things, the 2
Gov. (with the i ’ ’ - - •
chtcfr-,t amongest them) gave’
vav that they should set corne 3.
‘ ’.«■ man for his owne perticuler. I
and in that regartl trust t “
' And so assigned to;
•vts s !;.] y ; parcel! of land . . .! '
i > had veiv good success; !
0 ■ r ie i 1 hands very indus-
■iious. so as much more come,
was planted than other waise
v i •! i have bene by any means the
economic
we
is ____urc. ____...______
.... . , . - . - H a Commandments on (hieven" and not make for marketing. The real:
Wiiat are these foundations — on existed alone, rather than coveting. „v“ UIH ‘ -x -* ...
part of society, there would taking the life of another
'Jy one way. lvI
1. He would have to produce definition
u;— ,iz tv. . . — ....... muoiu un wuaii,,-
IS we have examined so far Moral-‘v,ccs‘ If
11- I,- • . .1- ... . m-lll-nf
(Editor's Note
held before the installation.'?ries of articles about
hour sented here. This matt
provided to The Sun
Uharline Lejsal of p. <ii:
WHAT 4-H MUAVS TO Ml
By (MARLINE; Li ls,!
“To make the lx <t
These few words for
he cannot do so with what is
-J by the government. Can
a person in Russia, for instance,;
’’ ’ •- ’ , jn j The Four Pins.
No.
that birth itself is a purposeful
---.... ..... .V. To prove Ibis to yourself „ „
fare of things was changed, to * f , actions of any newborn rate ownership?
the rejoysing of the harts of many, *** ’* ****** -*
Save-a-bundle buys on Corvairs, too' r •
ft n Uvf°r g,?tting in‘° °ne of these' juicy'JulyTu';;
■e more be sa d. Tour Chevrolet dealer is the man to talk to.
on five great foundations
sumptions. These assumptions ...
lik five great pieces of timber,
so laid as to form a pentagon.
Even if the pieces are carefully
cut so as to fit each other per-
fectly at their edges, we know
that the base so laid out will not
witlistand any outside force un-
lessi the five pieces are perma-
, •—\ | nenrly bonded together. This bond-
year also, if not ing agent, this cement that holds I
revpntcd So the the base together, is called Indivi- 1
■ begane.dual Responsibility, or personal ■
acctpteance of these five assump- ’
(ions. 11
muvi uupv man meyi W ‘ ‘
’hat they might not they are: ■ as a
" he right to life ! bo only
The right to sustain life by
rAn’ noimal instal
prs°f HoustoijN;
M and contemptora
Flue black o.- dt
A MON
I month for each add
185 years ago as the rights to until it has been consumed, or
"Life, Liberty and the pursuit of loses its worth for some other
Happiness" — which phrase, inci- reason. Thus the producer be-
dentally, was originally written in come; the rightful owner, at the
th-. ZZ~, --zzZ' -
perty”. Let us examine these five i keep it for a minute,
foundations or assumptions in de- a year .. — —
tail, so that we may know why posin; of it to some other per-
our system of Free Enterprise son. who then becomes the right-
has been so successful. ful owner. The producer may sell
1. THE RIGHT TO LIFE his [reduction or he may give
If I were to draw a gun at it away. So we see that the three
this instant and shoot our esteem- proper types of private property
ed Principal, everyone here would which sustain life have their
be shocked beyond measure. If foundations in the right to have
the event appeared in the news- what one has produced. These
papers, all who read the story three are:
would be equally shocked. Why? It j VTrat one has produced for his
must be because they would all own ?onsumption.
accept my first assumption: A 2. What one has received in ex-1
person has the right to life. change for what one has produced,
I am here using the term "right"! 3. What others have given him
person's natural or in-1 from what they have produced 1
4. THE RIGHT TO PRIVATE
human: OWNERSHIP OF PROPERTY '
a
lion to the inborn agents like anti- ownership in society. As Dr IT Tillison with 142.
i bodies in the blood for the upkeep ' ton Trueblood once" said' "Steal-
of health, one has sufficient food ing Is evil, because ownership i,
good.” You will find these rights! *osiiW '* tn the attacks of
to private property and one's own ' ■ ’ - / - --
production clearly implied in ' - - - - -
Bowling League
Pearland's Junior High School
Bowling League at Aivin Bowling
a u Lanes is in full swing and sixJ<1®
buy oatmeal ’with "the ,eams l>la>' earh othcr ever>'
;e ~ . . ThiircHay aftemOOn.
teams are: Gutter Four, other items. M, i
land Pins. Gutter Dusters, and ( ount> Fairs, and
and received ribbons <
In first place are the Gutter^was a,lo,ber skill I hav-
7___ *ias aIways been on<
Alexander. Marsha Swenson, Caro- {a'’or*t'?s, so I naturally
' Frigidaire Refrigerator
1—RCA Whirl Pool Washer
•—Frigidaire R
1—Admin ’
fo| which they blessed God. And
the effect of their perticuler plant-
ing was well scene, for all had,
ort? way and other, pretty well •
to bring the year aboute, and
some of the abler sorte and more I
in liustrious had to spare, and sell!
’ to others, so as any general want:
or famine hath not been aniong-
es( them to this day.”
Thus did the earliest settlers I
on a Communist type of system S^Porated this concept into the sell his ‘‘share of ownership
We can think of our Free Enter-i Dec,,aration of Im pendence by common” in the collective? Nu
prise system as a structure based; .J*10 r’Sht! l? ?° we, see ,hal if one is not free! ™th Members being Cindy
1 a thing, one dot's not *"" x_/a&v-
„ ,„j aejd j'l.vn Tillison, and Don Carbone • d_easily^ sil'ee. 1 have :
" . _:_r. ,,2, • Boys h! ■ individual game was' — ■
of us is then, government ownership fails ',h<’ ISn ro“e<i by Chester Robin-
. '? "••?! ~~ r.qui...,,f per-'son aiw‘ s,'fOn<l Place was Don
as a gift from our Creator sonal rights to property. .Carbane’s 142 pins.
2. THE RIGHT TO SUSTAIN What is our conclusion then’ . Miss Dixie Gr‘mes- "ith bas
LIFE BY ALL PROPER MEANS That pi vate ownership of proner h‘”h lnd,v,dual score fo1' ,he l*ls:
Life is sustained only if. in addi ty is the onlv moral basis for ,n second P,ace « Miss Caro-'
>■"" — ....... ..........’r"—
bodies in the blood for the upkeep ton Trueblood
THE ALVIN SUN. ALVIN. TEXAS thursd v
Pearland l-II t;irl l{e| J
^T-'-T.InCluh.a
■kJ
||Many hare J
° lan and hj
k 'l < " -f ar my J
■ 1rom any employt
NATurai g
A Guy Crouch, a past president,
wnducted the installation cere-‘ „ „UUIalI „M1„™ lu
mon' .ijt the R< \ Mr. Thomas an oar in a Roman trireme: the
and i is officers who include C. | ’ - --
B Roland, vice president; George !
Mart':, treasurer; Bill Rosen-!
b«tum. secretary; and Lawrence
Nd'-'?. Dr. Beryl Cline. J. D.
Blackweil and Boone Thompson!
members of the Board of'
4. He r 4 ’ •'
someone who has produced them.
The last of these — theft
must be eliminated, along with
; cannibalism, zs 2
of sustaining one’s life in s»
Can you imagine how long
Principal and I would last i
only means of sustenance
what we could manage to steal
from each other? It is i
therefore, to exist on the life*
the livelihood of another
jhis will.
i Life and livelihood .
intertwined that they
'or ,!Jactical P“>- ‘"R and 'selling.
poses. Whether I stole or
your sense of shock at these things occurred ~
^'<!()1adng.'TkJhr cL"0^ . »' Soods
I same basic right. This is a.,
yet another Commandment
us Thou shall not steal."
Gifts are a proper source of transfioriation
sustenance. I believe, because giv- to a 1—:.-
Vt't sense’ ls entir<!ly vol- constitute
unary Volunlarv giving does not a t:_j. t
have the suicidal effect on pro- from a plant to
duction that theft has In fact, pro- not
duction ls stimulated bv the urge
to give - as any of you will
confirm, who have labored extra
so that Mom or Dad could have
that special present'
3. THE RIGHT TO WHAT ONF
HAS PRODUCED
To deprive a man of his
tetunce is to deprive him of life
Hence, a man producing or havin’
access to a source of sustenanc?
certainly has the right to keep
that sustenance. In order to under-
stand the very basic nature of this
mon!' !u “ 'ma8‘nc, for a mo-
mmt that nobody has any right
to what he has produced, which
is the concept of socialism or
communism. If this is so. vou sav
«h> produce anything al all? But
let s say that a person would go
on ptoducing. even though he
knows full well that he would not
ha5? anv right to it. To use his
production, according to this code
thnnd ,hm lx? '"’Proper. How
then, could one subsist ’ Onlv bv
theft—only by taking what others
We tt be posse
Wc for him to survive. Fantas-
' H to the Point where it
IS difficult to visualise. But this
is precisely what absence of the
right to what one has produced
would mean. That is the meaning
wh fiocI,al,sm and communism
"hwh dentes these rights of man'
And it shows how theft is me
moral and leads rapidly to de-
struction of those who practice:
. Now, once anything is produced
and has acquired a worth, it be-
comes the property of someone
j
I 1
are so closely ty at will. This u
must lx* con- marketing — a busim
”■’""”.1 pur- ing and selling.
killed, only ociur After
for I would 7"~' ■
case, the services should r
• also why With some of the device c— '
warn., monly used to move goods from I
one place to another.
of farm
as well in one about tes< "f any marketing function is
life of another person ;simply this: Is there or is there:
Let us, therefore, construct a not a comP|e,ely free and volun-i
—.'—.;„.i of theft, based on what lary ,''l','an"e os goods and ser-j
since he i- we have examinixl re far 'ihvT • vit’<s'> " s0- I13'1' a free:
Per- ly, theft is the taking from another malket ~ " n0*' do not
are possible "a'S K™’"' against his "llL of anv-’ Tl’esc J*”?' *"-v friends are lh<''
9 ij „ - u thing which he has produced -m(| 8reat and fundamental concepts.!
excharU’ haS choscn ,0 kecP or which was and foi,ndat»ons or assumptions I
O , 1 iiredu kl then n<' ' S "iven him 'O’uwarilv. or which T" "h', h °"r 'abu,°"5 s>'s,('m 1
ei- aw,v , I , >,ad'' Or 3 Ho , Cara“’ 10 *"m bv a pro, -. Of of ’•merica'l Free Enterprise was i
du’,d. or whaAn^-hX f"™ someone'wtX t'<^ mX^^n^ S X^a™n^“'
Thi.se are the rights spoken of ^n»one who has produced them 5. THE right to SFLLoJenv’ of ,he <’nli,'t' ''orl<1 S “I
— TRADE OH GIVE AV.AY O.NFS fOll:'! ,hat each of ,hese concepts'
:'h:OWN PRODUCTION OR pro iiips in th,“ recognition that God I
one s hf„ m so,-,,.,. ,0 ■ Lift, Ijlx,,.ty and (he
your NON-OWNERS suit of Happiness", let us again I
This filth foundation is really the1 list lhem
_ ;„r our system's operational i °Km:
inqmoper. u'requir.^ j
life or market. V market, as I understand
against it, is am place where owners sell
Gov. or any othcr could use, and
saved him a great dcall of trouble,
and gave far beter contente. “The
ivomen now wente willing! v into
' he feild, and tooke their litle-ons
with them to set come, which be-
fore would allege weakness, and
inabilitie; whom to have compell-
ed would have been thought great
jyranie and oppression.
“The experience that was had
in this commone course and con-
dition. tried sundrie years, and
that amongst godly and sober
men. may well evince the vanitie
Of that conceite of Platos and
Iither ancients, applauded by
tome of later times; — that the
iking away of propertie, and the
bringing in communitie into a com-
one wealth, would make them
lappy and flourishing: as if they
a ere wiser than God. For this ' to denote a i
Communitie (so farr as it was). herent right, not something that |
’*as found to breed much confusjwas granted him by a
ipn and discontent, and retard agency. Thus this right has a If (ne can be entitled to what
much imployment that would have divine origin, and cannot be eith- one has produced, he is also en- George Calkins was installed!
b 'en to their benefite and com- er granted or taken away by titled to keep it. What is the dis- |asJ wcek as Worshipful Master of
forte. “For the young men that one’s fellow man. It recognizes, tincticn between these two rights? ! ‘ * --- -
were most able and fitte for la- thus, that the only sovereign po- The light to keep is based on
hour and sen ice did repine that wer is God, and not any collec- the right of one’s own product-
they should spend their strength tive agency of human creation, ion: now, ownership may pass
end time to worke for other mens ' It also assumes th existence of from one person to another. So
“Life, Liberty and the
-suit of Happiness”, let us
we have studied |
L The right to life.
2. The rigid to sustain life bv!
■ all proper means. * 1
. . — 3 The right to what one has
or exchange their prix ate pi oner i l>r"d"ct’d
tv 1.1 win «... ...^ prop"' 4. rhe right to private owner-!
I ship of property
can 3 T,lc ri’ht ,0 or trade!
or gixe away one’s own product-'
I?1.- Property, without restraint
------- ..„.a non-owners 1
A .’HLETE'S FOOT GERM I
HOW TO KILL IT,
IN 3 DAYS.
nred,,,-. P'*'1"'1 Hi,b Strong, in-I.H -
K 2 ry"5 T+L' >'«" «e bark al
US,, o ’n> ;s,ore- Wal>'b infccnxi;
rry refricCTato^; Sk‘n Sl°U“h off Wa,ch *®ilthy j
a warehouse does Le" ^^odayV^ i
,ia"k"""-' cm DRUG STORE
185 years ago as
I.ui, Giutnj anu ---- — —---- -
Happiness” — which phrase, inci- reason. Thus the producer be-
...come; the rightful owner at the
this form: “Life, liberty and pro-, instant of production. He may
—.«----«— I.---u tttt. ? n>in»ie> a week or
before consuming it or dis-
to keep or which was
. or which,
, , — -j a process of
'oluntan- exchange. Any attempt
to mnrfii'v fh-v rL.
• —.....'-'’H signifi-
cantly would also be an attempt to
" esc rights
SELL OR
■7 ONE'S
OR PRO. i
society OR INTERFERENCE
your NON-OWNERS
11 our This filth foundation is reallv the
were basis for ■
success. If we admit of Fhis'right'
It rpninnwi . . •
: all
market. V market.
Marketing
production has
and Or in,erfcrence from
not be confused i
he rln,-;..— com ;
Thus the I
metropolitan center das
Hute marketing The
truck to carry refrigerators
constitute
one way.
.'U.-OIUIII me IJV ‘ ■■•<>.4X4 Iiai
aavice of thej morally consistent means in a lhvni I’bnsclf. But.
t thmnt SOnietv a person in a s<x.il>ty of
The right to what one has sons- these three additional
produced are possible:
to them- 4. The right to private ownership
sH-n.^t tn Of property
The right to sell
■ Directors.
Ed Webb, program chairman.
I introduced the guest speaker who
I was F. J. Spencer, a native of
I Bombay. India, who is associated
I with the Research Department at
MMras^JrXt! Ca aP'lnt . , aI1“ 1™>W'S ™ '«n
college n a,l®nde<l school and dage brooks no prison, accepts
frem L ?- graduating no slavery - EVER! Possesion
from the University of Bombay m - -
j 1946 with a bachelor’s degree in
| chemistry. After serving his in-
: dustrial apprenticeship in Bom-
to *'wnrk fhTthJ* E^St. I ,or>’ records yet another society
Comnanv te X'"’«''tIran,an 011 that perished in the toils of its
| HcP ca’me to the t'S States eCOn°mic and [,oli,ical s,av'
gredu^tedfOin Tand «**‘eS‘ S,XiaI miracIe °f
v ^iri Anlh?m .i h L modem times has been the Free
, klah0™a.wl h a .mas‘, Enterprise System, established in
1 in' WM? n„C^'1Ca eng'nT lhe United States °f Am«-i« de-
c- hile on the campus, he cades ago The men that craftnd
Cluk^reTa^ *^f’^‘"UMCA “i b‘CSSed With lh“ wisdom
|Steering Committee, chairman for of maTs^Teeoki
For the event, a 'ladies night” I ?a ]oin^“= !^^.^id“a!.,^
• cal Company in 1950 at the Spring-
! field. Mass, plant anti has also
■ ... Ohio for that
Ft ted as mas er of ceremonies industry.
, Mr. Spencer, who now
I in Dickinson with his wife
Bill Rosenbaum Sergay the fields of education, citizenship
’.:<a Bartash. David Flora. I development. Americanism and
J.-rn....... Iton J3
’> •x,eves ; years in the United States, he has
appeared before more than 300
iibaum and|Strgay Goff, civic, church, professional and fra-
ternal associations as a speaker.
The text of Mr. Spencer's ad-
■ dress is herewith given:
The slave laboring under the
weight of a rock destined for the
Pyramids; the Nubian chained to
j Whirter, secretary; Mrs. B. D
What. then, about government
ownership’’ Is it not like corpo-
No. Ownership
,ns],,i’</n\l-v ^n’”- by goxemment is a violation of , i it
private property rights because, rearland Has
... ,, , , ■ , - although seemingly acting as agent
5g_I?:_tan?“..?nd hls ^P^d'mts for the individual persons, govern-
ment is quite different in this
respect from a corporation. A
person can sell his share of a
eorpor.-.tion, sever his participa-
tion. and buy oatmeal with the!'*®"15 play <’a<'1’
proceeds, if he so desires. But' Thursday afternoon,
he cannot do so with what is Th<‘ ..... .™...
,lre 3t.lul.ls Thc Founding Fathers, in the owned by the government. Can pin Buslers- Confederates. Pear- *, enuieu in the
in this great land turn their backs early his,ol>’.of ltlis nal.‘on. in-
. Vewsmiiuui.-H III bysieill. I . r . , ..... ......... wvruciaill
We can think of our Free Enter- Declarat|o'1 of Independence by common" in the collective?
nWM'I'JlTnina Iirt *.i 4i_. . -e
or as-l lberty and lhe bursilit of Happi- to sell a thing, one does
are!ness" Thcy dec,ared these rights really own it. That is the
to be self-evident, as something test of all ownership. Bv this test*'
that each and every one cf us is ’hen. g nemme.-.t ‘ ‘
already bom with and possesses to meet our requirements of
sonal rights to property.
What is our conclusion, then0
—t private ownership of projXT-
‘ ' r moral basis for
Alvin Masonic Lodge, No. 764 in (
the Masonic Temple. MISS LEJSAL
A covert'd dish supper for Ma ^ H Chib
sons, their familites and friends (Editors Note \nolh
—..... «..v hv.uw.. u..V(..k<. .»v h ij kpforp thp installation series of articles about
wives and children, without any a divine law that controls the whatever is obtained through free * remonv and refreshments were worlt m Brazoria < our’
recompense. The strong, or man, consequences of men’s acts in a exchange and inluntarv giving.!. ,d during the social ‘‘ ‘---- "
“ ‘’“J----“ -------- i- of them, or as well as what one has hmiself: h folloWed.
produt ed, is properly the object A
of pri- ate ownership of property rn .
How about ownership in the J CUrkinCl I • 1A
iiv van ncwi ivwuur uivinv name mi a vui pwi a unit: uuvs I1UI j ZAPP*
law in any degree. Under this cor- this lind of ownership violate OitlCCFS
manded to doe sen ice for other cePt °ne is morally bound to personal rights to property” No ... V4>urK anH
men. as dressing their nieate. Proclaim for all others the same This is not a violation of private .^he. 1 carland P-TA recently . and th< . ,l:
wishing their cloaths. etc., they ri^'bt.s that he claims for himself property rights l>ecause corpora !
deemd it a kind of slaverie. neith Each of us was born with a tion officials, who serve only by
er could many husbands brooke an(i a r’^,t to con- consent of the stockholders, act r---------------------------
it ... . tinned life. Why do 1 believe that? as agents for the individuals who VIC? president: Mrs. I. U. Mc-
“Bv this times harvest was Because I think it only logical own the corporation. Whirter, secretary; Mrs. B. D
come, and instead of famine, now 'Jat birth i,seif is a P«n>osefid what, then about government <roasuren Mrs. Iterry Mill
God gave them plentie. and the {° prove th,s 10 yourse». ownership " Is it not like corpo-^r' E 1 2a;,a?> and MrS A
. . . * wot/41 „— —.i--- .. . i L. Benson, historian.
I infant ; _
gles for continued life. As the in-j
font grows, every ael of provid- although"siSni^ly acting
JIA*. Tilt’ I'..' ■ a. - -
is again a fulfillment of this glor-
ious, God-given right to life.
The same right lies behind the
Commandment: "Thou shalt not
kill” and its likeness in moral
codes which have guided all civil-
izations.
■HM
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Bowen, A. E. The Alvin Sun (Alvin, Tex.), Vol. 71, No. 58, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 6, 1961, newspaper, July 6, 1961; Alvin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1255495/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Alvin Community College.