The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, January 03, 1952, Image 2
Pane Two
BRIEFS.. ABOUT
PEOPLE YOU KNOW
VI ,,t, WITH
Mrs S. K
Mr. and
Charleston,
THE CLINTON CHRONICLE
Friends d Mrs J. A Black will
interested to know she is a pa-
1 a nt at Hays hospital.
Mr and Mrs Kay Mills and chil-
dien retunuNl Tuesday from a
■weeks visit with the latter’s broth-, ..
er. Earl Tarre, and family m Jack-1 at The Citadel, Mr. and Mrs. W. D.
sonvile. Fa
t'neir paiVnts, Mr. a
Martin, m Cray Cou
Mrs. 1). B. Howard i
were wuck-end ttuest."
of Mr and Mrs. Rufus Sadler.
Little Eddie Osborne is conva
lescing at home after an illness and
stay at the Blalock clime.
Dr and Mrs. F. K. Shealy and;
grandcl mghter, Angela Clements,!
will retur.fi Saturday from Vero
Beach, Fla., where they spent sev
eral weeks at their winter home.
Mr and Mrs. Floyd Hitt of Spar
tanburg* their sou, Bobby, student i
BATTLE WILL BE WON BY PEOPLE
WHO CARE
By CONG. WALTER H. JUDD, of Minnesota
Before National Editorial Association in Chicago
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Brown of
lexington. N C, and Mr. and Mrs. i
Fuller Reese and children of El- j
l-erton. (Li. visited iclativts here,
during ttie holidays.
Mrs I.ykivs Henuorson and chd
ihtn left today fur Columbus. Ga., :
to m'c her mother, Mrs Ruth Mo>
< ■. enn 'Lite to Japan. 1
Dr and Mia. A 1). Salter' and ,
( hddren spent Tuesday in Savan j
rah. (bt . with relatives They
were aco't.npanieT home by the for-
ji * i s mother, Mrs W L, Salter.
Miss Katrine Martin, Mr. and |
Mia. H. A Bauknight and daugh ;
t» r. Cathy, have returned from a j
Armystrong of Gray Court, their
son, Pvt Bill Armstrong, of Fort
Jackson, were recent guests of Mrs.
Eugene Hitt
Mrs. Jeanne, McMaster Ford re
turned yesterday to her home yi
Win'nsboro after being thl^guest foi^
several days of Mr. andJ^vlrS 1 . Mi
chael Tu rnei
Mr and Mrs E Tho'ttipson
were week-end guoi^ of the for
mer’s sister, Mrs. i^ng Oliver, and
Mi Oliver u/ M^^on
James AbstidTChandler has re
turned to hij^posiiton in Denver,
Colorado, afipr a visit with
mother, Mar J. A. Chandler.
• The plainest thing about today’s i talking to them. They were never
wor\d is this: That we are approach-j democrats. You can’t find that in
ing \he end of one period of human their own writings. People said they
histoty and the beginning of another. | can't make soldiers out of the Chi-
We are in the twilight zone between nese; you can’t convert the Chinese,
them.. We thought the kind of se-jinto communists. They haven’t con-
cure, stable, orderly decent worldjverted the Russians into coihmunists!
that you and I were brought up^We think in terms of trying to per
il! and which we took for granted ; suade 51 per cent of the people to[
would Automatically, of coupe, en- join a party so as to vote for them
cure. It .is ceasing to exist .right be-jin free elections. They don’t want
are not! 51 per cent of the party. They only ',
fore oui
equipped
THE CASINO
NEW LOW’ ADMISSION
PRICES AT THE CASINO
9c and 30c
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY,
January 2 and 3
TALES OF
ROBIN HOOD
(Thrilling Adventure)
With ROBERT CLARK and
MARY HATCHER.
Feature: 3 25, 7-00, 9:27.
Plus .
STAGE TO
BLUE RIVER
lectern)
With WTmHYILScXN
Feature 4:32 aTvd 8:32
ROAR OF THE IRON
HORSE, Chap. 14
9c and 30 •
FRIDAY AND SATl'RDAY,
January 4 and 5
LAW OF THE
BADLANDS
(Western)
With TIM HOLT
Feature
Friday 3 25, 7-10, 9 19
i^turday 1:55, 4-14, 6 33, 8 52.
Also.
TAHITI HONEY
(Musical)
With DENNIS O’KEEFE
Feature:
Friday 4 19 and 8 29
Saturday. 2.49, 5.0ft, 7
9e and 30c
9 46
Please Note:
Effective beginning next
week, the Casino Theatre will
only be open on Fridays and
Saturdays until further no
tice.
Miss F$yc Todd and Mrs. Ella
Wolfed'Greenville, were guests
Sund$'> of Mrs. Ray Todd.
MiLk ‘Ella Little McCrary has re-
turj^ed from a visit with her sister.
R P. Kapp, and Mr. Kapp in
lumbia.
Friends of Mrs. W C. Neely will
e interested to know she is a pa-
|tient at Hays hospital. v
^ Mrs. John B. Pittman and chil
dren returned yesterday to
home in Rncjungham, N. C., after a
eyes. And we
to intelligently deal with^ want three, foi* or five per cent. They
y,- vfcorld which is coming into^ want a little handful at most,
being, however much we dislike it.” “WeVe got to have better under-
This was'Congressman Judd's in-| standing of our own country and of
tr^ductioiy ti\our role into jlDday’s' our own form of government than
world as expressedbSftD NEAMmeet-' we have had—a better understand
ing attendants. jjf j ing of the struggle that is going on
into| in fbe wqfld between the only two
t be- lyf )es of government that ever exist!
Id of —one government'from the top down
nder- 1 aod one government from the bot-
esent lorn up.
j "Somehow, also, we have to pay
ween more attention to > sha11 I say the
Id of emotional nature of man, the heart
well as the mind. Ladies and
u *g i gentlemen, the battle will be won
had
He then swung imrnediatf!
his twin themes that Ve rry
come more expert in \he f
his diplomacy and that we ftaus
stand history and apply i\t
day events \
He fiiade the comparison
England and America in the
diplomacy, pointing out that
land almost every aspiring
man for 500 years has bee,
lenged to go into some sort o
matic or foreign service bqpau]
land was an island. T&e
people have always «how
their everything stands or
well they handled
with the rest of the
visit with her mother, Mrs. John W
Little Mr. Pittman accompanied ; In America, by co
them here for several days last ed to master, the p
week.
Mrs. Eunice Wilson of the State
is
home. Our youths
to become engineer
Training School staff,
at the Blalock clinic. t ciers. If we contindjK however, to
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Bowman and have frequent or exhlusting wars or
children of Alto, Ga , were guests Mull mobilization for iwars, not one
last week of Mr. and Mrs. S. B. \of America’s domestic! gains is going
Loitis. Nannete Loftis returned t 0 long be worthyhila ‘‘We discov-
home with them to spend the e red belatedly that w|p are just an
week-end. i island, too,’ ’he. assert
Dr. and Mrs. E. N. Sullivan and „ part Qf he busin j^ of comin3
ions were guests Tuesday of the' , . , . . v;XL ol
atter's sister, Mrs. Hugh Black, in t0 understan ^ international relations
reenville. | ls , , .
Mrs. Lvkes Henderson and chil-'^f- and there t a « a \ n We P aid t0 °
m left yesterday for a visit with attention to history. We didn t
r rnother, Mrs. I C Moyer, in Co-| nee ^> Wc looked ahead. T e
- — Chinese are a wise people. They
by the people who care. The com- 1
mumsts care about their lies. Why
oon’t we care about the truth? We
must have a devotion to the truth!
't’Cli | that matches their monastic devertioni
how! 10 the dogmas or'falsehoods and lies.]
"Miss Elizabeth Bentley was be-j
fore a congressional committee. She'
was asked this questidn: ‘Why did !
you turn against our government?
You aren’t one of the minorities. You
weren't persecuted. You have come
from a privileged home. You went
Iglish:
relations
jorld. !
r
fast, we want-
lems here at
re challenged
They expect to leave
Major Henderson in
scientists, or
a patient'ganizers of great companies, finan- t0 Vassar. Your county did for you
1 '~ *" things that not other country would.
Why did you turn against them and
try to destroy them?’
“He said, T don’t know, unless it
was this. I can’t remember all during
my school days ever hearing any
body say anything good about the
American system. »I heard about the
slums and the Jim Crow laws and
the one-third ill-housed and ill-fed
and I saw that. I didn't see the other
side. I heard about the Utopia and
nobody ever said anything about
the good in our system, especially
that under our system we could do
The “Go” sign is still on for the thrifty. There’s still
time to join our mtique club. And through it you will
find the way to a Merry Christmas — a holiday without
worry and a new year without bills. Let Santa direct the
way to happiness—it’s just inside our door and it’s called
“Christmas Club.”
M. S. Boiley & Son
BANKERS
Established 1886 Capital and Surplus $600,000.00
Member F.D.I.C. — Our 65th Year
/
have a saying that man lives in the
'"i present and plans for the future but! something about this condition andj?t
Miller are ' learns from the past. / j with the others you couldn’t.’ |g
Newburgh,! I studied European history in) .‘T am not trying to scold you. It;
h
lufnbus, Ga
soAn to join
Jap^n
Mr. and Mrs. Frank
spending ten daws in Newburgh,! 1 studied European history in
N. Y . with their daughter. Mrs Ed-I high school, 'but it never occurred hope you won't think that. What!
Ward Felknor, and Capt Eelknor to me that maybe the study of Euro-1 I am trying to do is tell you from
Mrs. Manning Merchant has re- pean history would be the most im-jfhere I sit, and you know it, that
turned to her home at Joanna after } pnrtant thing in the life of my seif j bur couxUry^
a stay at the Blalock clinic. and my kids. And it never occurre^
Mrs. Eugene Hitt was in Gray ; to me that I should study"~xjiw.ioiy,T ■’■fijr*
Court Thursday to attend the fun-j not only in terms of studying the.]”
past but in terms of understanding! iim IS ©UR TOWN
the people as they are in order lb 'j| e u ne
•3K
trouble. I am ap-
for help.’’
A
'BRomm.
CJheaXhe
eral of her cousin. Mrs. Janie Hen
derson.
■ Mrs. J<*hn W. Little was the re-
i cent guest of relatives in Winns-
boro for several days.
Mr. and Mrs. W R. Anderson
Box Office Opens 2:45
Saturday 12:45
Shows Ran
Continuous
deal with ttem intelligently in
present and in the future.” ReadingNew Year Res
it is Dr. Judd’s contention that) effit^ons, Hopes and Wishes
vve matie an awful miscalculation be-[M r . HarrMhof The Chronicle:
have returned from a visit with the : cause we failed entirely to und^a^, “To pubMf^a paper, clean, gooiJ;
latters sister, Mrs. J. C Bell in stand the Russian people and Rus-plk arid nu
Eustace, Fla. ! sian history. From this history ema-! ^hoping thaWSkwon’t h^
Mr. and Mrs. v\ H Shands were : na tes the unceasing expansion into 1 TEktax to the®Eice.’
recent guests of their granddaugh- 1 ot her countries and other peoples, 1 Mr. Wung, of thWjLieatres:
ter, Mrs. Albert H Ford, and Mr. w hich has been mastered today by | "To best of gY abilitj
the Communists. The Communists 1 a ctean show7
have perfected the technique of get-1 With Auch app|S?ciatioj
ting another people to destroy their j folks if they’ll g6
own country's independence, as the j Mr. Thomas, jewelefi
Chinese work and fight to destroy ‘-Sure, I’ll slide down on|
the independence of China. novelties there
People who want to stay free from if folk will only buy my'
the communist growth
Thursday and Friday, January 3-4
Mrs.
j Ford an Georgetown
I Mrs. Platt Prather, Jackie
: Franks, Mrs. GeorgeyR. Holland
j and grandson, George Holland.
1 spent Tuesday with their mother
and grandmother, Mrs. F. A. Buch
anan, in Swannanoa, N. C. Friends
of Mrs. Buchanan will be interest
ed to know she celebrated her
83rd birthday January 2.
to tack
[produce
prices of
liamonds
OFFICE SUPPLIES
Complete line, all the tittle items
needed for the office.
CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO.
Phone 74
WEDDING
ANNOU
CALLING CARDS — INFORMALS
High quality engraving on the loveliest
pajiers . . . gtyles to suit the most dis
criminating.
w It would be a pleasure for us to look after
your requirements.
r
CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO.
Stationery Dept
must erect
barriers to expansion. We failed en
tirely to understand and profit by!
j this in two World Wars—by failing
to set up a “good” and also a strong
Germany as a barrier against that
expansion into western Europe.
Congressman Judd also contends
that our State Department failed
miserably when they did not' hold
up the barrier on the south, Turkey
and Persia.
The barriers in the far east to the
Russian octopus, China, Japan and
Korea are pow a vital point endan
gering the free world. "In the case
of China, which in the long run is
going to be the key area, we spent
our time expalining why we couldn’t
correct that situation. Asia can be
compared to a giant hand .China is
the palm, and you have twelve fin
gers. Afghanistan, Pakistan, India,
Burma, Indo-china, Siam, Malaya,
the Philippines, Formosa, Japan and
Korea—890 million people in this
crescent—these twelve fingers. We
in the free world are about 890 mil
lion. These “twelve-finger” people
control the balance of power. This
is the Var (in China) which we
said we didn’t want to be bothered
with because of the rottenness and
corruption, but the Kremlin was de
termined to win. They said, Td i^
the key to • all problems’—I repeat,
‘of all problems on the international
front’.”
We are fighting in a finger—in
Korea. If we hold this finger and
drive the Rusians back, I feel
they can come right back the minute
we turn our back. “Th£y are never
going to go home until you do some
thing about the hand.’’
“We insisted on projecting our
decent ideas (in dealing with the
Soviet Union), and in a sense we
are the victims of our decency. I am
glad we are the kind of people that
we are, that we aren’t sitting down
and cold bloodedly and mercilessly
planning to destroy other people’s
freedom. But that is no excuse not
to recognize that there are other for
ests in the world that are burning.
“I was a prisoner of the Chinese
communists for eight months in 1930
MMORE
and most of their leaders have been
in my hospital. T spent many hours
t takes
’»
articles
sight.”
r s:
Lee Belk’s is al-
»r,
slk’s does, I can
to wear.”
Mr. Smith, of Belk’s:
“Strive to please, tho
working early and la
And always have ma
for a dollar
Mr. Jordan, of Pen;
“I’m undecided,
most next
Yet whatevc
do eV^fhore.’
Mr. Andersqrwof the schools:
‘Try to Jral^e 1952 the best year
yet,.
We cap, if all will get up and
gef
r, of Bank of Clinton:
to take in money by the
k,
I 0so hope I’m handed no bogus
check.”
iur pastors, of all our churches:
’s have in 1952 a church going
town,
Let’s try the Lord’s way of keep
ing transgression dqwn.”
leaders of. women’s groups:
have the church women one
hundred per cent W. M. U.,
jx do this by enlisting you,
■qu, and you.”
B T. U. le&^s:
’To see all at churches on Sun
day nightly
And working?
itual might
Grade and high sch
“To do everything
er
To pass m^nupils at
. hour.” ^
Weave room,boss:**
“Make our cloth without stain
flaw,
Let the Golden Rule be our daily
law.”
Mr. Blakely, of the farms: ^
“To plow a furrow, straight and
true,
To make all I can for myself and
you.”
The school boy and girl:
“To study harder, work harder
each day.
With a teensy, weensy time too,
for play.”
All the rest of us: ~ Y
“If we failed to wish, pray do
weep,
We can use last year’s
failed to keep!”
Saturday, January 5 (One Day)
IRON
MAN
mnwim-Evom KEYES's™ femur
iROCK HUDSON -X^HOUENm^ mw.ina ok
MahaftOaUM- *** JOSEPH HSEUfiEKd wtaMte
Monday and Tuesday, January 7-8
JOSE FERRER
Academy Award Winner
MALA POWERS