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I THE CHRONICLE Strives To Be A Cleon Newspaper, Complete Newsy and Reliable ©te (mutton (Cljnmtrk If You Don't Read THE CHRONICLE You Don't Get the News Volume III Clinton, S. C, Thursday, March 29,1951 Number 14 Two Clinton Boys Complete Naval Training Two Clinton seaman apprentices, USN, Joseph D. Oakley, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Oakley, of Route 3, and Marvin E. Tumblin, son of Mr. and Mrs. James C. Dean of Route 1. recently comnleted recruit train ing at the Naval Training Center, San Diego, Calif., and have been assigned to a fleet unit or to one of the navy’s schools for specialized training. TO CONDUCT PANEL' AT JOANNA Boris Sablin Boris Mokriixky Mrs. L. Southern Rose Ste/iluUf SilueA. Open Stock [Pattern! Place ► i • Salad Fork • Soup Spoon • Butter Spreader • Knife • Fork • Spoon ★ Regular $27.50 Special Price Convenient Credit Terms: $1.00 Down $1.00 Week PER PLACE SETTING J. C Thomas, 9 eu ^ 1 'It’s Time That RUSSIAN PANEL SET FOR JOANNA FRIDAY NIGHT - ♦ — Group Escaped From Behind Iron Curtain To This Country to Describe Soviet Worker's Life. As previously announced, three Russians with their Rusian-bom interpreter, will discuss “What is life really like for the working people inside Russia,” and other questions at the Joanna school house Friday evening at 7:30. For the panel discussion, sponsored by the Junior Chamber of Commerce, tickets will be available from mem bers of the organization. The Russians are sent out by the Research Institute of America with the object of giving Americans first-hand information about the people who have lived there, rather land behind the Iron Curtain by than from Russian propogandists. Those who will compose the pan el are: BORIS SABLIN Foreman Boris Sablin. 4t years old and a native of the Ukraine, was a fore man in a machine tool factory. He was not a Party member In August, 1941, the Germans occu pied the cttv in which he was work ing and ordered all men to stay on i their jobs until October. 1943. at which tune the entire civilian popu- i lation was evacuated west Into slave tabor Remaining In Ger- 1 many after the end of the war. he refused to return to Russia He has I been m the United Slates shout B year and is working for a firm w Newark. N J. ANDREI HAVDENOV row fifty pervisor m a Clinton High Honor Roll For 6-Week Period Ann Cole, Velma Cox, Ruby Jo Darr, John Davis, Mae Edens, Cath erine Eichelberger, Betty Jean Fo- shee, Sara Hollingsworth, Joan Lehman, Sybil McCoy, Dorothy Mason, Louise Meadors, Ted Meats, Sally Pitts, Peggy Sease, Linda. Smith, Frances Winn. “I SAW IT IN THE CHRONICLE”' 8th Grade—June Adair, Linda Adair, Jackie Franks, Ann Johnson, Eloise Marshall, Phil McGee, Ruby Meadors, Rose Moore Nettles, Jen nie Payne, Jane Ray, Nancy Simp son, Bobby Pearson, Joan Ray, Orin Nabors. 9th Grade — Helen Anderson, Kathleen Dees, Deborah Dixon, Ada Furr, Emma Gray, Rivanna Hill, Margaret Mitchell, Peggy McLen- vaille, Chris Patte, Nancy Simmons, Barbara Whitmire, Martha Wilson, Patsy Windsor. 10th Grade—Kenneth Baker, Mil dred Brown, Shirley Campbell, William Coats, Dorothy Cobb, Mary Ann Copeland, Grace Danhoff, Mary Darr, Paul Foshee, Melvin Fran- zen, Ellen Fraser, Dorothy Haup- fear, Joann Johnson, Barbara Liv ingston, Jolene McGee, Corinne May, Jerry O’Shields, Tommy Sease, Marvin Stuart, Bobbp Tin man. Claudette Parrish, Doris Phil lips, Maudsline Young. 11th Grade—Catherine Anderson, Joan Barron, Tommy Boyce. Con stance Burts, Dorothy Carr, Kitty Delany. Inez Farmer, Hoyt Hanvey, Myrtis Rhodes, Terry Thomas. Joan Vaughan, Doris wehunt, Frank Young. 12th Grade—Neely Bigham, Jo ■—■■■WWWWWRWBRRIMIRRWllHlinHIWUMKaaumWgaiKRRIIj* Savings Accounts 3%—DIVIDEND—3% We invite savings accounts from the people of CHnton and vicinity. Yon will like oar friendly and efficient ser vice, and you will receive your dividend promptly each January 1st and July 1st. Any amount — from $1 up — opens an account. Each account is insured up to $10,000 by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. Two people may have up to $30,000 fully insured. Accounts by mail promptly acknowledged. Chartered and Supenrised by the United States Government Laurens Federal Savings & Loan Association Telephone 22271 LAIRENT LARGEST RAVINGS INSTTHTION 104 Went Main Street Laurenn, 8. C employed In a City Moknuky. 43 Hussion, wss a rank file worker m • sugar refuting plant I in the Ukraine Inducted at the outbreak of war. be was taken by the Germans but man- I escape and return ot his home town after six and a half months in a German camp In 1943 the Germans, who had occu pied his home town, sent the en tire population West as slave labor He refused to return to his home land and has been in the United States about five months working in the bakery of Horn and Hardart in New York City. ADA SIEGEL Ada Siegel, Russian by birth, is the daughter of one of the non- Bolahevik Ministers in the first Soviet government. His resignation I within six months and persecution ! until he fled the country in 1921, marked the destruction of the last legal party outside the Bolsheviks in Russia. Mrs. Siegel worked for the U. S. Office of War Information during the war, edited several national magazines and has had a number of articles published, the most re cent in the Amercian Mercury on the character of the "New Soviet Man.” She is the translator of “Why I Escaped,” by ex-Soviet flier Peter Pirogov. MRS. KSENIA KONDRATYEVA Ksenia Kondratyeva stems from the Cirema, is 44 years old. She has vbeen married for 20 years. In the Soviet Union she worked as a typist in the regional office of the Railroad Trade Union. When the Germans invaded Russia she found all her superiors gone one morning, leaving the office and its employees at the mercy of the in vader. In 1943 the Germans shipped the entire civilian population west to slave labor camps where Mrs. Kon dratyeva remained until liberation in 1945. She and her husband then refused to go home. They came to the United States about a year ago. has been working in a factory and is now employed a cook. 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