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/ Page Six THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Thursday, April 26,1951 WELCOME Hotel Mary Musgrove We rejoice that your formal opening is to be held Friday, and we join with many other friends in wishing for you every pos sible future success. , Royal Cleaners // Beautiful Dry Cleaning'' Phone 77 Congratulations Hotel Mary Musgrove This modern, beautiful and well equipped hotel will fill a need in our city and community. We wish you every suc cess and a fine opening Fri day. A CIIAIt fO •OWtH CAAOUMA Corner E. Main and Brood Congratulations TO CUNTON AND Hotel Mary Musgrove Accept our best wishes for the success of this com munity effort, of which we are all proud. Maxwell Bros. &• Wilkes Furniture Congratulations Hotel Mary Musgrove We welcome you as a neighbor in our business block. j. i We hope you will have a grand opening and success in all Hie years that lie ahead. Blakely-Burton’s Hardware & Seeds TYPICAL BEDROOM Above is one of the typical guest rooms with twin beds and complete furnishings Dulles Doubts Russia Wants War At Present led by the state tax commission, but the state doesn’t gel any money. The revenue—some estimates put it at about $3,000,000 a year, al-| though there are no central records on its yield—is collected and spent locally. Coming imposition of the three per cent general sales tax July 1 has ' Tokyo. April 23 —Special Ambas- glven im P etus t0 floor tax reli e f talk sador John Foster Dulles told the Senator Berr y* of Richland, intro- ' Japanese today there is ’ some risk duced an unsuccessful resolution to| of general war but I per sonally j ,et the assCT ^ bl y re P«* al the tax if it doubt that the rulers of Russia now wants to The authority would have ! want it." Instead, he said, the evidence that the Kremlin is using the threat of war mainly as a weapon in its campaign of world conquest by in direct aggression. The United States will not aban don Asia, but intends to stand flrm- jly against aggression in this part of I the world, he told the United Na- ;tions Association of Japan. been obtained through a constitu- 1 ( tional amendment. But the senate * s ' has shelved the resolution in its fin ance committee. Senators McFaddin, of Clarendon, and Morrison, of Georgetown, saw their bill to have the tax assessed locally, shelved until next year. The people who want the floor tax removed claim, among other things, that South Carolina never will de- . . velop any merchandise distribution Th;. detcmm. .on I, provod. he U| contmu „ idded. bj , recent lncre.se of Amer- Th( . v cv «. rybodT who c.n-from ican power in the Pacific and con- * small independent merchants to N. Brood Street Phone 188 crele step, to build up a multipower chain store# _ whittIej hij , tock tQ security arrangement. a minimum at assessment time. Dulle. i. chief architect of the pro- Thf , e who want ^ Ujt u . jected Japanese peace treaty and the uy the floor Uj( rate. for. ,n pol.c, pl.nncr charted ».th too hl(h ramp , r ^ . lu> U , M on !.d..on:nl . rnu.u.1 d.!«u. .U»n. „„„ „ You dtoukln-. pcn.|. T P.ciflc n.uon. af , nwchwil ,u,t b.cu« hTu . .. m . ,od *T w “ mcr hem. Ihc.r .r(un»nt run.. !the puol.c highlight of a special vi^t; .. _ . * here to auure the Japanese that MdTaddin mm! he saw no reason General MacArthur. dismissal lo r«"«ve the tax enUrely And he 'would not change plans for an early that his local merchants Japanese peace treaty. ** re **i ***** ahould be taxed Dulles recalled the Russian war scare that swept Europe in 1943 Senators Wallace, of York, and and again the next year, when the Williams, of Lancaster, both mer- N’orth Atlantic pact was formed. chants, were among those opposing • Some timid souls, 1 * he said, were the McFaddin-Morrison bill. Wallace peralyied with fright and saw, in argued that local county officials! nightmares, the Red army marching lack both the staffs and knowledge .nto Western Europe. Those who to do a good job at assessing inven- A‘ere calmer and more experienced tones saw that the Red armies would not The tax study committee may! march on the oasis of some legalistic come up with something that will pretext." win legislative approval next year. Tncn he added: There is always But the tax will stay as It is at least 1 a danger of war when there are am- onq more year. bitious despots who control a great — - - '■ — military eftaolishment . . . However, COMMERCIAL PRI’TTING the e.idence to date suggests that This completely equipped combi line pre.-ent program for world con- nation Newspaper-Commercial Print- quest .s primarily the program of u»* plant ran serve yen better. Ow I the Communist party, that is being teal Is te give ear customers the kind pursued primarily by methods of in- service they want—to give Clin too direct aggression, and that the fear • BETTER NEWSPAPER. at direct aggression and armed at-] ' ' j tack is being spread to frighten the i j free peoples into a condition which 1 j will make them vulnerable to con- j quest from within." Dulles mentioned some Asiatic fears that “the power to possess will, only be used to protect the members of the North Atlantic pact, leaving Asia in a position of neglect. That suggestion is wholly without founda tion.” In proof of continued American determination in Asia he pointed out: j 1. A large part of American armed forces stationed overseas is in Asia. •Hie Far Eastern air force has been expanded, and two infantry divisions are to be stationed in Japan. The United States intends to maintain armed forces on Okinawa where new construction is underway. 2. The United States has offered Japan a bilateral security arrange-! ment and is prepared to conclude aj mutual defense arrangement with j Australia and New Zealand. 3. President Truman has reiter ated that an armed attack on the Philippines would be regarded by the United States “as dangerous to its own peace and safety.” 4. Great American power, notably strategic air forces, could ibe hurled from bases in the United States to the aid of any country ip the world. Attempts To Have Merchant's Floor Tax Repealed Fail Columbia, April 22.—Nothing will be done about the merchants’ inven tory, or floor tax this year. This is obvious as the general as- semlbly nears the end of its session. Attempts to lay the groundwork for removing the tax completely and to revise the method of assessment, failed. Instead, a legislative commit tee was created with orders to study the tax and report next year. The floor tax is on merchants’ in ventories as of January 1. It is lev- GOLD THEATRE JOANNA S. C. Memlng Show*—1# A. M. Monday, Wednesday. Friday Matinee—S P. M. Monday, Wedneoday, Friday Night Shows—6:3# and t:St Every Night - Admission 40c (U« pins 7e tax) Children under lt-9o Thur.-Fri. April 26-27 Pagan Love Song Eater Williams, Howard Keel Saturday April 28 Bandit Queen With Barbara Britten Also “HOLIDAY RHYTHM” Mon.-Tues. Apr.30-May 1 Bird of Paradise Louis Jordan, Jeff Chandler In Color Wednesday May 2 Kina' Shark Also CASH NIGHT Next— Highway 301 With Virginia Maye Compliments of Roy E. Hitchcock ARCHITECT For the New Hotel Building Congratulations To the New and Lovely Hotel Mary Musgrove Our very best wishes to this noteworthy addition to our city. Gulf Oil Corp. J. A. Addison WELCOME! Hotel Mary Musgrove e We wish for you a suc cessful opening and future We are happy to have you as a neighbor in our busi ness block. Broadway - Casino Theatres Congratulations To the New, Beautiful Hotel Mary Musgrove We extend our best wish es on your Grand Opening and future. Prather Simpson Furniture Company 'The Home Makers" .‘d J . r ► Soy "I Saw It In The Chronicle" — Thank You! r . V