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1 Thursday, March 27, 1952 THE CLINTON CHRONICLE ✓ C. E. Saint-Amand, Newberry Attorney, In Solicitor Race •Srt'- Several County Candidates Expected • C. E. Saint-Amand, of the New-' _ » berry bar, has announced his candi-1 With the date of this summer s dacy for the office of solicitor of i J iearer ! ^ , ex * the Eighth Judicial Circuit in the 1 P« cted tha J candidates for various coming election. The circuit is i °ff !ccs will soon be making their composed of the counties of Abbe-! announcements, ville, Greenwood, Laurens and Marshall Abercrombie, Laurgns at Newberry. Mr. Saint-Amand has practiped law In Newberry for the past seven years, being a meanber of the firm torney, stated early in the^week that he will probably be a candi- circuit. Following him closely, So- Ike Denounced By Demo Leader Washington, March 24. — House Democratic Jeader John W. McCorm ack denounced Gen. Dwight D. Eis-j enhoWer today for “campaigning” ‘ for the Republican presidential nom ination while still in uniform. He called on the general to resign “at once.” The Massachusetts Democrat ^^ r f*as:e Sere* i i FARMS AND FOLKS By J. M. ELEAZER Clemson Extension Information Specialist of Blease & St.-Amand, the senior licitor Hugh Beasley in Greenwood Lespedeza Likes It Lespedeza hay and seed crops date for solicitor of the 8th judicial I charged that Eisenhower’s “dual po-l are often very short or lost from announced that he will be a can didate for re-election. Others who have been mentioned as possible candidates are William T. Jones s of Greenwood and C. E. Saint-Arm- and of Newberry, who announces today. Robert C. Wasson, at present a member of the house of represen tatives from this county, has adr mited that he is considering the race for congress against the in cumbent, Joe R. Bryson. It is pre sumed that Mr. Bryson will run again. Sen. Ralph T. Wilson is a known candidate to succeed himself. Rep resentatives Justin Bridges and Tench P. Owens are expected to e##er again. Former Representative ’0 member of which is Eugene S. Blease, former Chief Justice of the South Carolina Supreme Court. Mr. St.-Amand joined Judge Blease in his practice following the retire ment of Judge Steve C. Griffith as a partner of Judge Blease, upon Judge Griffith’s election to the of fice of Circuit Judge. Prior to that time, for several years, Mr. Saint-Amand practiced law in Goffney. Mr. Saint-Amand is a graduate cf Duke University Law school, Durham, N. C. His father, C. E. Saint-Amand, Sr., was born and reared in Charleston. His grandmother was the former Miss Corrie Blease, a sister of Judge "Blease? HTs "moth- er was a Miss Flagler of Williams burg county. Mr. Saint-Amand married Miss Alice Littlejohn of Gaffney, who, for several years, was a teacher in the Greenwood city schools. Mr. Saint-Amand has two children, a son, Nathan, and a daughter, Emil- Mr. Saint-Amand*-has had much experience in the practice of law in ajl the courts of the state, Pro bate, Circuit, and in the Federal courts. He is exceedingly success ful as a lawyer in the Court of General Sessions. He has been called upon often not only to defend persons charged with crime in that court, but also with assisting in the prosecution of criminal cases. At present My, Saint-Amand is active attorney for the City of Newberry. During his residence in Gaffney Mr. Saint-Amand was at- ... TL | C torney and Recorder of that city; W IlM Irlfc blC*K and he was also attorney for the Town of Blacksburg. Also during his residence in Gaffney, he repre sented Cherokee county as a mem ber of the House • of Representa- Uves. Chas. L. Milam has been spoken of as a candidate either for the senate or the house. At least a two-man race for sher iff is seen. Sheriff C. W. Wier has said that he will offer again. For mer Highway Patrolman W. A. Lowery has authorized the state ment that he will be in that race. Clerk of Court W. E. Dunlap and Commissioners Clyde T. Jones and W. J. Henry are expected to run aagin. Joe F. Smith has already an nounced his candidacy for a full term as coroner. Definite information as to wheth er or not the game warden’s office is to be filled in the primary under the new game laws was still not available yesterday. All magistrates will presumably rtm again. sition” as presidential candidate and drought. Rut let a year of good commander of North Atlantic Trea- [ s P nn £ aT \d summer rainfall come ty forces is “unfortunate - in fact, a [ on « and you won t see daylight inconsistent and indefensible.” He ? hinm « trough the cracks of tne bam following the winter. Nor insisted that Eisenhower is an active candidate, no matter what his sup porters claim. McCormack agreed with Sen. Rob-i ert A. Taft (R-O.), an announced GOP residential aspirant, that “Gen. Eisenhower should at once re lieve himself of his command and be a candidate for president, instead of being both a candidate and the su preme commander of NATO at the same time.” “Gen. Eisenhower is campaigning for president in the uniform of our country which should not be the clothing of "polltics7 r ‘"'lSIcCoFS^ck' said. The last word from Eisenhower on will you see a season of short les pedeza seed crops. Rutledge Connor, Jr., from down at Eutawville, Orangeburg county, tells me they got excellent results from irrigation on lespedeza last summer. Otherwise, lespedeza there amounted to very little, due to the drought. By irrigating lespedeza there they cut two good hay crops. They left a high stubble. It came out a third time, and produced a good seed crop too! By, the yield potential that irri- i tirm" 'KnlrTc V ^ nr ‘' 1 J ’ r gallon holds! And what an economic loss it is to let drought continue to take its his possible return to this country dreadful toll so often here, espec- out of uniform was a letter he wrote ially on those fields where water is to 19 Republican congressmen on the eve of his triumph in the New Hampshire primary. He said then that only a “com pelling call or relief by higher au thority”— President Truman—would cause him to step down. Otherwise, he wrote, he saw no “personal or political circumstances” which war ranted his departure from Europe in the immediate future. Eisenhower also said there was no question in his mind about the “pro-! easily at hand! Canning Aid The past year the home demon stration agents over the state help ed 8,893 families with home can ning problems. With high priced foods,_ interest In canning will likely grow. The home agents have many helps along this line, and they are at your service. Grazing Tip Cattle like a little dry feed, es pecially if* they are on tender green Since coming to Newberry Mr. priety” of accepting a Republicani ~ ^ national convention call to the pres-i graZ ! n | f . At f L he u ^ ld H a Exp ^ 1 * idency. But he said it would be “an men St , at ! on , they sho ^ ed + us cattle u .1 wuum ue, dn . on tender green oat grazing that actually lost a little weight while grazing there. On an identi cal pa|tpre, where some rough dry hay was made available to them, entirely different thing to leave a critical assignment” to boost his po litical prospects. Dispatches from Paris said Eisen- iia llluvtv v hower is preparing a television re- |h e y made good gains. And they port to the American people on April didn’t eat much hay either. But ^ which will clear the way for his that little seemed fo them a lot of Paul Gwinn, Jr., of Laurens, is a patient at the Blalock clinic. ' . . .., . — - — - — - — Dr. F. L. Webb is a patient .t | IST JLS? .SSSS'- tJSZJZ Hays hospital. of Miss lone Workman —Saint-Amand has been active in! Hill, is a patient at Hays hospital. n . .. , . _ • its commiiniTv Itfgr- -He--*~tumem-1 Clifford Kuykendall is a patient Last Kites Held For ber of the Baptist church, vice- chairman of the Lions club and a former District Chairman of the Boy Scouts. _ IF YOU DON’T READ THE CHRONICLE YOU DON’T GET THE NEWS at Hays - hospital-. Mrs. Maggie Sutton of Joanna, is a patient at Hays hospital. Mrs. James Creswell is a patient three speeches dealing with"foreign they scoured rather badly. Where i domestic, policies,- - - - the dry feed was svaTtatoiF-ro- ThemT ■ ‘' they didn’t. Corn and Hogs Corn and hogs are two things at Hays hospital. Friends of John Laugston of Laurens, whp has been a patient at the Blalock clinic, will be inter ested to know he has been trtens- NOTICE OF MEETING OF STOCK-; ” nvale ** nt ho,ns at HOLDERS Mrs. Carlisle Neely is a patient NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that at Hays hospital on April 7, 1952, at 11:00 a.m. 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 CUNTON PAPER BOX Mrs. C. P. Satterwhite has re turned to her home in Mountville after being a patient at the Blalock clinic. Mrs. Martin Milam is recuperate CO., for the purpose of considering a * home following a tonsilec- 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 tomy at the Blalock clinic Mrs. Ellie Seymour of Whit mire, patient at the Blalock clinic., i * SAY: “I SAW IT IN THE CHRONICLE” THANK YOU * William L. Evans that just go together. Throw some) ^ green grazing in and a little pro- William L. (Bill) Evans, 52. died ' eed arld you have a P ro(itable i".!'!' “Experience shows that the best Clinton Mills community after sev eral months illness. Funeral services were conducted Sunday afternoon from Caivary Baptist church with the Rev. Chas. Williamson and the Rev. W. T. Ter ry, Jr., officiating. Interment fol way to feed corn is just as it is, in the field preferably. But you can’t feed it all that way, for hogs have to eat all seasons. But it pays to hog off all you can. I‘attended the hog sale of Tom Moss at Cameron ns/on c in early February and noticed his ‘ < 7 dd f h ° S r T« ont , (ine hogs were still living out of an f !?! hermg ot ,nmis at,end -1 unharvested com field. ing the rites Active pallbearers were Estess Campbell, D. C. Whitman, J. R. Hamrick, Glenn Downs, Roy Holtz- claw and J. D. Stone After corn is gathered the best way to feed it is right in the ear, unshucked. The hogs won’t pay you for shucking and shelling it e And if you happen to have shelled T r ^ p corn, feed it that way. They won't S Daib D^n-n ^T^n ’ r W for the grinding. They will S. Bailey. Dr. D. O. Rhame, I>r. E. tn N. Sullivan, J. C. Lowe, Joe P. Terry, John H. Ballew, O’Dell Lam- gam. a little faster, according to tests at the Ohio experiment sta tion, but they will eat more. Un- bert, S. B. Hames, Woodrow Camp- , , . bell, William Samples, John Moore, i are h y 1 MnrcVioll Cowirwlno Two Con, C'-.ttrtU meiTl, 1061^ - 1 i: — Lovely Montag Stationery % In varied sizes, colors, and weaves. All the highest quality fashionable writing paper—Pound Paper, Infor- mals. Thank You Cards, Bird Print Notes. Chronicle Pub. Co. Stationery Department is no use grinding it And, by the way, now is about time to plant on early field of corn Mr" Evens was born in Pelzer, a for i } 0 &' n Z °“ ,hia .““"'"'"l, ’ can beat the Com Belt to that by about two months. And the early Marshall Samples, Joe Sam Caugh man, Roy Stockman and George Huguley. son of the late L. M. and Mattie Cooper Evans. He had been a resi- . u ,, ,, , . dent of Clinton for the past 41 faU Hogs ^suaHy ^seH beri. years, and had been employed by the Clinton Cotton Mills in the de partment of spinning for about 10 years citizen of the community, and a a small tractor, going round and around, as they used to do with a mule. They alsoi do considerable irriga tion of grazing crops for their da iry herd. And droughts have not been able to cheat them out of needed grazing in recent years. Boys Ar* Thai Way j We nuever had a boat. But al ways wanted one, even though our tumbling creek had little place to use it. Back of the mill dam was a con siderable hole, where the water swirled and foamed. We wanted to set one of our fish baskets in 1 there, but could not get to the pil-1 ing back of the dam to tie it. So 1 we tried to improvise a boat. That, water was deep and dangerous, I and we were told that there was a j “suck-hole” in there. ■ We didn’t-have"any boards—ttH make a boat out of. But still we prospected around. We found an | old abandoned buggy body down in the briars below the blacksmith 1 shop at the foot of the hill. There | was an idea for a boat. We unbolted the iron stirrups from it, and also the whip holder and the dashboard. We chinked the cracks with rags and cotton and smeared pine tar on them frewn the j j outside. Soon we thought it sea- li worthy and carried it a mile downji to the creek. It would float but wanted to tilt i to one side. One of us was about to try it, but that tilting fright-1 ^ ened us a bit. So we decided to try a rock in it first. We grappled with one about our weight, and finally, got: it in.— We tied a bul- lice vine to the boat and shoved it out from shore. It tilted, the -rock’ rolled to the side, and down went boat and rock. We trid to pull it from the bottom. But the vine came loose, and that’s the Ikst we ever saw of our boat. Missionary Union To Hold Meet In Rock Hill April 18 The annual meeting of,the North ern Division of the Baptist Wo man’s Missionary Union will bo held with the Oakland Baptist church’ of Rock Hill oji April 18th. The. program theme will be ‘Be hold. Him, Crown Him." Speakers on the program will be Mrs. Gordon Maddrey, President of the Womah^s Missionary Union of North Caro lina: Mrs. D. C. Bomar, president of the Woman’s Missionary Union of South Carolina; Miss Theresa An derson, missionary to the Philippine Islands and Miss Vivian May Tin- dal. Young Peoples secretary of South Carolina Woman’s Mission ary Union. An offering is to be taken for mission work in the H- bomb area around Aiken and Barn well. DR. L. B. MARKIN NATUROPATH Res. Phone 939 500 South Broad St. Dr. Fred E. Holcombe OPTOMETRIST Offices at 200 South Broad St. Phone 658 Office Honrs 9:00 to 5:30 WE DO ALL KINDS OF PRINTING — —EXCEPT BAP -1 CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. WE SELL ROYSTER GUANO ONE POUND TO A TRAIN LOAD H. J. PITTS New Tractor Job County'Agent Bull of. Abbeville, tells me that Hannah Brothers, «• t :rc£ltI‘ r Ti d i ^»5r.»tr h< ss-« s member of Calvary BaptW church. 8 ‘»' ‘ h , eir own S > TU P.. ^ • u;!: Kir-., pull the old-time syrup mill with- Survivors include his wife, Mrs. o? tS£2f’ no. running for three sisters, Mrs. J. L. Arnold, Mrs. Carrie Bell Poteat and Mrs. Joe Campbell, all of this city. HEALTH it your bait • If you possess health you can overcome any obstacle, meet situa tions with calm confi dence. Guacd this most precious of all posses sions. Visit your Doctor regularly for a careful check-up. Accept his experienced counsel— and when he gives yoa a prescription, bring it to us for compounding. McGEE’S DRUG STORE Phone No. 1 President Six-Inch Sermon and we're not kissing babies (under 1 16), but what we are doing is just about as foolish. \ One table will be'^piled high with all kinds of items, ffom brand new men’s underwear to fruit jar rings, and priced at 19c per item. Beats the grab box—you see what you get! The boss wants to sell his 1946 “ I wish I could get away from it all!” So do many cry in the face of life’s hard and bitter reali ties. Human nature is always in revolt against the unpleasant ^and Uhe difficult. But wisdom teaches , , _, ... there is no escapf from life. If Pl3rra0 “?„. d T must be faced realistically and-L cav e a . l ‘ >' ou , r Home ex- courageously. ' cept 5550.00 for this cai\ New tires, The cry of the escapist is actual-! t0 °- , . ly the cry of selfishness. Only those Tde missus in your house will love hate the world who are too wra- j the china closet we re offering lor ped up in themselves. There is $35.00. mych sin, hatred, greed and oppres-1 Old Man Moses told us just before sion everywhere. There is degre-, he kicked the bucket that he sure dation and poverty on all sides, would like for one of his pictures to When our lives are touched, even be put in one of our picture frames, in a small degree, by this vast and Priced from 15c to $15.00. The 15c multiple evil, the first thought is ones will probably all be gone before how to separate ourselves from # it. yoh get here, so bring at least a A man so tempted might think quarter along. Lay $24.00 on the to hide himself in solitude, to fly barrel head and take a sewing ma- from those whose lives see 'One chine—that works—home with you. long struggle for worldly posses sion, power or fame. Were he to attempt such a solution, however, he would quickly find that it is im possible to cut himself off from the world. Instead, he would come in tiihe to discover that the thing that caused his revolt was something Baseball bats, only 25c. The merchandise in the store has been re-arranged, and so has the dust. Come by and see if it ain’t prettier. Maggie thinks so. Planters and flower pots are here. Everybody ought to have a good book, and at The Wheel that’s only a quarter. lacking in himself. The something j 5 Pack a picnie- Lunch, Bring the the core of all escapism is ex- p am iiy an( j Spend the day at cessive self-love. The escapist is always the egotist He is the man| who thinks only of his own happi ness and has no true love for 1 his, fellow human beings. He is not humanity-conscious. The WHEEL Open Sundays at 2 pan. or that fast Joanna Highway WEDDING INVITATIONS ANNOUNCEMENTS CALLING CARDS - INFORMALS High quality engraving on the loveliest papers . . . styles to suit the most dis criminating. It would be a pleasure for us to look after your requirements. CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. Stationery Dept.