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4 •7 A V. t\ . “ i\ Page Four & THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Thursday, March 20, 1952 (jit?* (Ulinton (Ehronirl* Established IMt WILSON W. HARRIS, Editor and Publisher VYTON, HARRY C. LA Assistant Published Evei-y 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 Offioe at Clinton, S. C n under Act ol Congress March 3, 1879. The Chronicle seeks Ue cooperation of its subscribers and readers— the publisher will at all times 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 not responsible for the views or opinions noen of its correspondents. MEMBER: SOUTH CAROUNA PRESS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION National Advertising Representative AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION New York Chicago Detroit Philadelphia again and Kefauvex wins the Dem ocratic nomination — we are in for four more years of the Fair Deal, extravagance, debt, socialism, high all know that the President knew nothing about Russia because of the fact that he never studied anything about Europe or about Russia, and taxes, handouts, waste, scandals j somebody in the state department, and corruption. But we need not 0 r in the group around him, had evi- CLINTON, S. C., THURSDAY, MARCH 20. 1952 Clubs Meet Saturday The machinery for holding this year > primary will be set in mo tion Saturday afternoon when the ties in rural Clarendon county . „ where the case originated* on action j Kus sia. by Negro parents at the instigation of Northern agitators. become excited over what has_hap- pened in the small state of New Hampshire, for national conven tions are controlled t by machines and politicians, not by the voters. The country needs an able, hon est man at its head the next four years who will fight Trumanism in the open as Senator Taft is doing. We have had enough of the corrup tion and mediocrity which the Tru man administration typifies. Kefau- ver’s statement showed the-way he is leaning and the hope he no doubt has of winning the support of the so-called Democratic organization. Says Truman Feared England and France Above Soviet In 1945 Washington, March 18. — Senator ( Capehart (R-Ind.) told the senate today that President Truman said in 1945—before the Potsdam conferenc es—that he was “more afraid of England and France than he was of dently given him the wrong infor mation with reference to Russia and the Communist crowd.” He added that if Truman “had fol lowed the advice that was given to him at the time by Senator Wheeler and concurred in by the rest of us and had stood up to Russia at Pots dam, we would not be in the mess we are at this time.” A Democratic leader, who occom- panied Capehart, Wheeler and for mer Senator Hawkes (R-NJ) to the White House on the 1945 visit, told reporters he couldn’t remember whether Wheeler made the state ments attributed to him by Capehart. Later Wheeler confirmed the con versation as reported by Capehart. Wheeler, how a Washington attor ney, told a reporter he thinks Presi dent Truman was “misled by the state department” into trusting the Russians at that time. But he added that the President later “changed his mind” and once complained to him that “these Rus sians won’t even live up to their written agreements.” NOTICE OF MEETING OF STOCK HOLDERS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on April 7, 1952, at 11:00 ajn. at the offices of the Clinton Paper Box Co., E. Carolina Ave., Clinton, S. C., there will be held a meeting of the stock holders of CLINTON PAPER BOX CO., for the purpose of considering a proposed increase In the amount of the capital stock of said Clinton Paper Box Co., to the amount of Fif ty Thousand ($50,000.00) Dollars. T. E. ADDISON, President. L. N. WARREN, Secretary. March 6, 1952 3-4c McIntosh shoe SHOP » Doing Business at the Same Old Stand . . . 203 Musgrove St Phone 76-W GOOD WORKMANSHIP GOOD MATERIALS Capehart toW his colleagues that former Sen. Burton K. Wheeler, I. Wp said that, thp rpppnt ruling^! ^ ontana Democrat, advised Truman : -Democratic ciub^uLlhejcounty_ w wouW '_ n t sa ^ sfv thos pressing «- aftcr a tour of EuroP 0 b y four sena-i meet for the purpose of ^orglni-t.. Mr . PraMehl, you hac. better zation. Tiio call for the meetings. * 1 , ctnnH im tn ha, been issued for all counties m > following the second ruling in our, stand up to Russia t _ tp - t state. The same association has s L . . . . 1 given notice it will appeal the fed- The purpose of the meeting, js f^i era i CO urt ruling in spite of the re-orgamze with the election of officers, the electing of delegates 4o the approaching county conven tion, who in turn, will name dele- unanimous decision. This . shows Jhat the agitators win not -be satis fied, though the greater part of the sales tax is now being allocated for gates to the state con\ention to pe i improvement Q f Negro schools, held in May. Qualifications for - s not equalizing of school facili- votmg are found elsev here m to- tj e s they are fighting for. Rather days paper. i their goal is for mixed schools in In the past ^the club meetings ^ the‘state which would be a detri- have been attended by only a, ment to both races handful of citizens. - This • -year- tH- — 1 should be different, there should be Klope It Helps Capehart, one of the four; said, j “the President replied that he was; more afraid of England and France 1 than he was of Russia.” ~ “'^Sem Wheeler then said to him, tMr. President, you are too optimis tic about Russia.’ The President | shook his head vigorously and said, | ‘No, I’m not’.” ' * ' Capehart’s statement was made in commenting on a passage in a new' book,. “Mr. President,” which says: Truman noted in his diary. that he was not impressed by the views of : four senators who had reported to, Another scandal in the internal him on a European survey. a full turn-out. The big issue be fore the American people today! being “Trumanism” and what stands themselves. Anti-Truman voters collector in New York city because so man y U p S an d downs that T am should attend the club meetings what officials called irregularity. not impressed with the cursory glan-I it j revenue department was revealed, The President was represented as is for—voters should express yesterday with the ousting ot tht\| sa yj n g that Europe had been through [selves. Anti-Truman vo t e r s collector in New 3 York city because i so mai and insist on representation at i n one bis personal income tax county conventions which will se nd i returns. He was the eighth collector strong anti-Truman delegates to| 1° be fired in the current investiga- the state parley in Columbia. There, tion of scandals in the. nation’s tax are no state races this summer, I collecting service. Dowling, the with local interest centered on a number of county races. But the issue of paramount interest will be tfttr presidential election! This is no time for compromise and we should refuse to be sucked in by party leaders. We should stand firmly for the principles in which South Carolinians believe. Prin ciple should be put ahead of par?y, hand-outs and jobs. In the club meetings ’'grass roots” democracy has a chance to begin functioning and make itself heard. Therefore voters should at tend the, injtial meetings set for Saturday afternoon. New* York man fired,, is .a Negro, ‘ terence: ces of oratorical members of the fa mous ‘Cave of the Winds' on Capitol Hill.” Capehart said Wheeler told Tru man in the 1945 White House con- and was appointed last August by President Truman to take over. trom another ousted collector, who is also a Negro. So the story goes— one exposure after another, with scandals, tax evasion, corruption and favoritism through political- in “Get out your little memoranda book and write - down what I am tell-' ing you today. You are too optimis tic about Russia.” “Of course,” Capehart said, “we NOTICE OF SALE fluence reports from all parts of the country ' The State °* South Carolina, Time To Stop Dodging Sen. Richard Russell announced yesterday that he will expand his bid for the Democratic presiden- tian nomination into an all-out na tional campaign. That is proper if he has any hope of securing the nomination. In many parts of the country his announcement was ac cepted as merely a protest against Truman in the hope that the latter will not run. The South Carolina senators, congressmen and*t>ther offioe hold ers have come out strongly en dorsing Russell who is a capable senator and ranks high in the esti mation of the party, especially in the South: It is being predicted that the Georgian w’ill sweep the South, with the proviso usually added—unless Truman runs again. Our congresional delegation has gone to- the bat for Russell there by taking the pressure off them selves on the Truman issue. But what the voters want to know is: If Truman wins the Demo cratic nomination, what w’ill they do? Will they support him under the label of party loyalty as they did tw’o years ago when Governor Thurmond was making a gallant fight against the present Adminis tration and what it stands for? What did they do then—they fol lowed the Truman crowd. What the voters want to know Tax collection—the nation’s big gest business, has now been taken out of politics by Congress and is about to be converted into a civil service career business. The step is being made to purge the bureau of graft and politics by taking the district collectors’ offices out of pol itics and putting them under the civil service merit system. A num ber of Southern Senators, includ ing Maybank and Johnston of this state, were lined up with the oppo sition to the measure. Senators “love” patronage power. The American taxpayers who are putting up the money have little faith in the present Administration which is ear-marked by corruption on the part of many government employees and high-ups. Turn all of the rascals out, we say, regard less of who it hits. Will this change improve conditions? Will it con tribute to a clean-up? Will it cre ate public confidence? Millions of oppressed taxpayers hope and pray that it will. The call for a house cleaning in Washington rings loud from every housetop. Reorganiza tion and civil service cannot them selves jcjeaiL out corruption. They can, how’ever, contribute to a clean-up by discouraging corrup tion and influence. A Fair Dealer Like Truman The big news of the past week w’as the stunning Eisenhower and Kefauver victories in New Hamp shire’s nationally important presi dential primaries to give a surging momentum to their campaigns. Eisenhower won over Senator Rob ert Taft by a margin of several thousand votes and made a clean lr tho^e who are now loudly TVGOP delegates. The dorsing Russell—how will they! General had the Republican ma- stand after Russell is defeated for' c ^ ne 3 ^ a ^ e ^ r0 ntgovernor on the nomination as he will be?. Will! down active in his support which they vote for Truman if re-nomi nated as party followers, or Will they rise as Americans and cast their ballots as independent vot ers? That is the 64-dollar question which they have all evaded thus far, and we guess, will continue to dodge. A Unanimous Decision This column commented last week „ on the three-judge federal court in Virginia unanimously up- in a large measure was responsible for the result, coupled with popular support from his party. The big upset was Senator Ke- fauver’s decisive victory over Pres ident Truman and he thereby greatly increased his stature at a time when many political observers were inclined to count him out. What kind of a showing he will make in other states will now be the big question to settle whether he is likely to prove a national fig ure in the campaign. This newspaper is against Ke- holding the constitutionality of law’s of that state requiring sep- j fauver because he is a Fair Dealer, arate public schools for whites and We are opposed to anybody that Negroes. The case was brought, as was recently done in this state, by spokesmen of the National Associa tion for the Advancement of Col ored People. Since then a similar court in Charleston has ruled again in ef- endorses Truman and is not willing to come out in the open and make an aggressive fight to defeat “Tru manism” once and for all. Here is what he said after the result was announced: “I am entirely elated over the results. I don’t think this feet, that racial segregation in is a protest vote against President South Carolina’s public schools does not violate the United States constitution. It denied a~ request for an injunction abolishing segre gation in the publ : c schools, but it reiterated an order directing the equalization of educational facili- Truman, because in general I agree with Mr. Truman. My domestic and foreign thinking is practically iden tical with Mr. Truman.” This means he is a Fair Dealer, and that if the President finally sees the handwriting and does not offer County of Laurens. In Court of Common Pleas M. S. Bailey & Son, Bankers, vs. Plaintiff. William B. Dillard, (Mos^s Dillard, Julia Dillard and Robert M. Vance, Defendants. Pursuant to a decree of the court in the above stated case, I will sell at public outcry to the highest bid der, either in or in front of the Court House, at Laurens, S. C., on Salesday in April next, being Monday, the 7th day of the month, during the legal hours for such sales, the following described property, to wit: All that piece, parcel or lot of land situate, lying and being on the east side of South Bell Street and on the south side of D Street in ‘the Town of Clinton, in Laurens County, State of South Carolina, bounded on the north by D Street, onf hundred and forty (140) feet, more or less, there on; on the east by lot heretofore sold by William B. Dillard and Moses Dillard to Bertha Ferguson, one hun dred and five (105) feet, more or less, thereon; on the south by lot now or formerly of estate of Jesse Thom as, one hundred and forty (140) feet, more or less, thereon; and on the west by South Bell-Street, one hun dred and ten (HOy feet, more or less, thereon. Said lot of land is all of the parcel of land heretofore devised to us (William B.' Dillard and Moses Dillard) under the names of William B. Dillard and Moses J. Dillard, by the terms of the last will of their uncle, Moses Dillard, deceased, with the exception of a portion thereof heretofore sold and conveyed by us (William B. Dillard and Moses Dill ard) to J. D. Henry by deed dated June 6, 1950, and recorded in Deed Book 98, at page 250, in the office of the Clerk of Court for Laurens County, South Carolina, and with the further exception of a portion thereof heretofore sold and conveyed by us (William B. Dillard and Moses Dillard) to Bertha E. Ferguson by deed dated May 9, 1951, and record ed on May 11, 1951, in Deed Book 103, at page 79, in the office of the said Clerk of Court. Terms of Sale: Cash. The success ful bidder, other than the Plaintiff herein, immediately upon the con clusion of the bidding, shall deposit with the Clerk of Court the sum of ten (10%) per cent of the amount of his or her bid as a guarantee of his good faith in the bidding. The same to be applied to the purchase price upon his complying with the terms of sale, otherwise to be paid tp Plain tiff for credit on the indebtedness. In the event the successful bidder should fail to make such deposit, or should fail to comply with the terms of sale, the said lands shall be re sold on the same or some subsequent Salesday on the same terms, at risk of the defaulting purchaser. The purchaser to pay for papers, stamps and recording. W. E. DUNLAP, C. C. C. P. Sc G. S. Dated March 15, 1952. 3-3co HAVE VOU FORGOHEN SOMETHING? * i y i < ROGERS See What 25c Will Buy At Rogers! CS APPLE SAUCE 2 ss 25c Lima BEANS Cream CORN c Orange Juice DINNERS REDGATE TENDER CUT REDGATE GREEN & WHITE REDGATE GOLDEN CS BLENDED or GRAPEFRUIT 12-OZ. CANS 12-OZ. CANS 17-OZ. CANS 17-OZ. CANS KRAFT’S DELICIOUS MACARONI & CHEESE 25c 25c 25c 25c 2 25c NO. 2 CANS Tomato Ketchup HEINZ 14-OZ. boil Salad Dressing MOTHER’S 25c Tender Dressed and Drawn BELTSVII.LE TURKEYS Sweet Juicy Florida VALENCIA ORANGES 4 to 6 lbs. 11 / avg. wt. ID* A >9c 5 S’ 25< c Chefs Pride—Btffer Mild SAUSAGE, lb. .. Cy .... 55c Firm Green CABBAGE, 3 lbs.... . 12c Green Headless Medium SHRIMP, lb. ...... .... 45c Extra Fancy Green • CORN, 3 ears 29c Headless and Drawn WHITING, lb. ..... .... 17c Fancy Green Top CARROTS, 2 bunches 17c