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I „ - - 5. Page Four THE CLINTON CHRONICLE alip (Clinton QllfronirU Established 1900 WILSON W. HARRIS, Editor and Publisher HARRY* C. LAYTON, AssisUnt Published Every Thursday By THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING COMPANY Subscription Rate (Payable In Advance): One Year $2.00 - Six Months $1.25 Entered as Second Class Mail Matter at the Post Office at Clinton, S. C, under Act of Congress March 3, 1879. The Chronicle seeks t te cooperation of its subscrihars and readers— the publisher will at all time^ appreciate wise suggestions and kindly advice. The Chronicle will publish letters of general interest when they are not of a defamatory nature. Anonymous communications will not be noticed. This paper is'hot responsible for the vi_ews or opinions of its correspondents. MEMBER: SOUTH CAROLINA PRESS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION Exclusive National Advertising Representative GREATER WEEKLIES New York Chicago Detroit Philadelphia THE CHRONICLE TO PUBLISH PICTURES OF LOCAL CHILDREN IN FORTHCOMINO ISSUES License Fees For County $43,603 feeiJzb... Bill Removes r CLINTON, S. C . THURSDAY, MARCH 25. 1948 The Foster Story It is the custom of the The Chron icle at Christmas and Easter to print passages, from the Bible. Today we print the marvelous sto ry of he resurrection of our Lord, as feeorded in the New Testament. John 20:1-18 i According to the King James Ver sion) _ The first day of the week comet’i | Marv Magdalene early, when it the ages. Men can form peace organ izations like the Holy Alliance, the League of Nations and the United Nations, which, if given a chance, could solve the issues which create war. But though we know how to mix the right prescriptions, we are unable to properly administer them. Man’s greed and selfishness, and craving for power, is the reason for our failure,^ What will the future hold? Columbia, March 23.—(Special to , THE CHRONICLE wants a photo-Ido not have to he a reader or sub- The Chronicle)..—The state highway graph of every youngster in this ^ scriber of this newspaper. If you department collected $670.50 in li- I trading area for publication in a 1 wish to, you may purchase prints of! C en^e fees from Laurens county mo- ! forthcoming feature titled-“Citizens!your children by arrangement with! - - ■ - • > —x- - ^ of Tomorrow.” ! the studio when you select the pose! “It is a grand idea,” sefcins to be! you want published. But that is; concensus of ppinion voiced by par- entirely up to you, for there are no ents of this community since our i obligations of any kind—now, then or 1 previous announcement as quoted 1 h ere< ffi er . Appointments are not nec-' above. “It certainly ‘clicks’ with! ossary. All children, however, must J .me,” said one mother, who plans to'be accompanied by a parent or an bring her youngsters to the special adult. , children’s photographer in the Clin- ;ton Hotel on Thursday, April 1, from 1 am. to 8 p m . . j Fishing Restrictions ' Unuform size and good photograph-j ^ ^ ' iv reproduction quality is of vital j importance to a newspaper feature, u |so arrangements were made with e conic e) I specialists .n this I,eld. If 110 " h , as 'ntroduced a i ^, . , „ , 'house of representatives to provide ; ^ ne Studios of Des Moines, p rov i S j ons j n the South Carolina Iowa, nationally known childrens code of laws prohibiting fishing at photographers are going to take the! certain times in certairr^vaters pictures. These are the facts and only ^AuThiWren in this trading area’ T J e t biU s . ,ates tbal ‘‘‘V is deemeb are eligible. There will be no charge! f k rudent . and .f xdcdlent ,0 . s “ s P end i the provisions pertaining to fishing restrictions “for the year 1948, and Thursday; March 25, 1948 torists during pie month of Febru ary,-malt mg/d total qf $44,274 col-^ lected fronrr the county on the 1948 license issue. Lausens county resi- derjtd spent a total of $43,603.50 on 1948 licenses between September 15, 1947, and the first pf February, 1943.' SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRONICLE Columbia, March 23.^-(Special to The Laurens dele- bill in«the in game zone two be suspended during re_ 1 the year 1948. of any kind. There are no strings. Nothing need be subscribed for; you NAMED AT WINTHROP Miss Myra Adair, sophomore at Winthrop college, has been elected as one of the junior class representa tives of next year’s judicial board. C an ! She ,is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. civilization endure wdth powerful . , destructive forces again put into use? w;. S ycidark. unto the sepulchre, and; Thjs big Ume , question . The scetn the Slone taken away from the, answer „ a „j, bodys gues5 . Certainly. the picture before us is a gloomy! R. C. Adair of this city. sepulchre Then she. runneth Simon Peter, and to cipie, whom Jesus loved, unto them, Tney and cometh to . , . , „, t , , , tone. Lessons we need to learn are] ' e 0 ! 5 r ] ignored' or, too soon forgotten, and' . , 531 because of this fact there is the prob- have taken aw-ay r _ , , j i ability that w r ars will be continuous, the Lord out of the sepulchre, and we know not where they have laid] !Man must overcome selfishness binl I and develope a more efficient “think- Peter therefore went^ forth, and ,in 8 apparatus” one capable, maybe,' that other disdiple, and came to thel of substituting brotherly love Jor sepulchre [hate, of assimilating the lessons So they ran both together: and the I w hich Christ taught and which are other disciple did outrun Peter, and, only ultimate solution to end war. came first to the sepulchre. And he stooping down, and look- What Faster Means ing in. saw the linen clothes lying; Easter should mean much to every v£t .weal Jae not ..m —... . man-,-> women—and—child-^because- it Then cometh Simon Peter follow- stands as the sacred commemoration ing him. and went into the sepulchre, of the resurrection of Christ. It means and see:h the linen clothes lie, His triumph over the grave, it tells And the napkin, that was about that Christ did not die on Calvary, it hi:-, head, not lying with the linen 1 means more thin eternal existence, s i n clothes, but wrapped together in I I 1; a ! it means resurrection from through the ever-living Christ. There is another thought that comes from nature at this time. Spring is here. We see its signs ev erywhere. Following a dreary winter, ace by itself. Then went m also that other dis ciple. which came first to the sep ulchre.’and he saw, and believed For as yet they knew n-jt the scrip-, tine tnat he must r’se again from the' we look out at this beautiful season ' - Jand see the birds and hear their Then the disciples went away again sweet music, the trees coming to life unto their homes. again, the plants spring up in the But Mary st,ood without, at the garden where a few weeks ago all sepulchre weeping; and as she wept, | was desolation. This message be- sne stooped down and looked into speaks new life, nature teaches us the sepulchre. J that anything that is valuable lives And seeth two-angels in white sit- in some form. And it teaches the one at the head, and the above all else, that the most ■ vital the feet, where the bo ( dy of thing in all the world is human per- : sonality. her, Woman, saith unto! Easter gives us a faith in the triumph cl Jeru." had lam And they say unto why weepest thou” She tnem, Because they have taken away my Lord, and I know not where they have laid him. And when she had thus said, she turned herself back, ■ and saw Jesus look forward, not st-nd.ng. and- knew not that it was* faith and courage Jesus. Join -sa.th unto her, Woman, why 1 u” whom seekest thou? strong renewed of good over u cepes evil, ultimately life over death. If it does not teach us this, then it is meaningless. It is the season, above all others, when all mankind meeds to backward,, with [ in Divine plans rather than man’s plans and schem-j ing. .1—’ : a. e:. ho SUppO: s.i. ;h b Vie ng him to be the gard-, Baptist Juniors To Have unto him. Sir, if thou r 11 1. C *. J n.m hence, tell me where tQQ hunt batlirday laid him, and I will take' ^ •h'.fi has h.m away 1 An Easter egg hunt has been plan- Je.'Us saith unto her, Mary. She ned for j un i o r department of the M :a d he: self, and saitk unto him, ’ First Baptist church Saturday after- R.ioDon:: whieft is to say, Master . 1 u.' saith unto her, Touch me i) ’: P>r 1 am not yet ascended to my Father but go to my brethren, and say unto them, I ascend unto my Father, tmd your Father; and to my God and your God. Mary Magdalene came and told the noon at four o’clock. Those attending are asked to meet at the church WINTHROP GIRLS AT HOME The large number of Clinton girls attending Winthrop college i will ar rive today to spend the spring holi days at their homes. They will return d.sciples that she had seen the Lord, L [ ^ and that he had spoken these thing.^f ’ unto her. Will Mankind Ever Learn i We were told that we fought World M ar No. 1 to make the world safe f( : democracy. Well, we failed. And then came recent War No. 2. Did it make the world safe for de-[ mocracy? The answer is a loud no. I Look at the world tdoay, at the threat; of Soviet aggression into Western Eu- ( rope. The American people have lit- ; tie. if any, faith in the Soviet Union. For our part we would trust the Ger- 1 mans as quickly, probably more so, | than the Russians. They would seize ’and dominate Europe ,and,will be icsponsjble for War No. 3 if it comes- (God forbid). W’ill mankind ever learn its lesson? Tne answer is always no. Not before - the arttial cbnforthatiori ol the human soul has changed.' For if another war eorr.es and the atom bomb or some other scientifically evolved agent de stroys three quarters of the earth’s p vulation, those who are left will band together and continue the saiqe old tame. We must judge the future by the past. It visn’t the desire to fight which brings on wars; it is the fact that the human brain is incapable of control ling those great waves of “mass emo- tio’i” whicl) have been accountable for so much destruction throughout l-l ir Your Prescriptions r . filled just as ordered by -your- “ PHYSICIAN YOUNG’S PHARMACY Walgreen Agency Phone 19 We Deliver year particularly as to Lake Greenwood.” The bill adds that it will be lawful at any time during the year to fish in any lake in game zone two, subject to other provisions of the code of laws. STAPLING MACHINES—Arrow and Markwell, and staples. Chronicle Publishing Co., Stationery Dept. REPEAT SALE! 51-Gauge, 20-Denier Beautiful NYLONS $1.33 pair (ACtUfil $1.98 value) , "v . . . First quality, cabinet sheer nylons — leg flattery in every pair. Exquisite full-fashioned. You’ll love the smooth fit, the beautiful quality. Choose from these new spring and summer shades: Morning Mist, Glace Mocha, Town Smoke, Navy Lustre. Sizes 8V2 to 10 1 /.*. JOIN OUR HOSIERY^LUB— When You Buy 12 Pair the 13th Pair Is Free! Belt’s... “Savings Great In ’48” Clintons Shoe Headquarter s Also Reds, Greens, Brown and White, and Navy. Sizes 4 to 10. Widths AAA to C. Shoes fitted by experts anc checked by X-Ray—no guess work. . as seen in Vogue-and Charnv fwt violets end datasl WerteffllHth y®6f vivid prints and rrisp taffetas, your crepes and sheers...now and right through Summer. Sandals tr stings, with and without platforms in many styles and heel heights. s \