The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, April 24, 1952, Image 10
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Page Two
THE CLINTON CHRONICLE
Thursday, April 24, 1952
A delicious way to serve »pinach
is to make a sauce by blending a
tablespoon of flour into a table-
fjpoon of butter which h,ai been
melted. Mix in 1-2 cup soured
cream and cook until thickened.
Add 2 cups cooked, drained spinach
£rd with a dash of nutmeg.
• Yes. everyone knows
that we are Prescription
Specialists. So we’ll only
remind you that here
skilled Registered Phar
macists are always at
your camsand. Each com
pounding step is checked
for accuracy, and every
prescription fairly priceu.
McGEE’S
DRUG STORE
Phone No. 1
As Washington Sees It...
[HE HATONAl SCENE
; Special to The Chronicle.
I Washington, Aoril 20.—With pass
age by the senate of the bill to give 1
the oil-rich under sea lands to the,
adjacent states, despite two deei-:
sions of the United States supreme;
court that the federal government
has paramount jurisdiction over,
these areas beyond the low tide [
j mark, this congress has again put
: the matter up to President Truman.,
I It will be remembered that the i
OPEN YOUR
EARS
President vetoed such a measure in
1946, and he is expected to do soj
again.
The senate turned down any com
promise on the matter, such as a,
split authority between the states
and the federal government and
turning the royalties into an educa
tional fund for the public school
• system. Vote on the measure was
50 to 35. Certain exceptions were
set up in the measure providing
that states which had not already
done so might extend their bound
aries to the three-mile limit. In
the case of the gulf coast of Flori
da and the coast of Texas, the
| boundaries were recognized as
' three Spanish leagues (10 miles)
seaward. Title to the land further
i out on the continental shelf was
not decided by the measure.
~. • *
The Senate has approved a bill
to increase the base pay of all arm
ed services personnel by three per
!cent' and allowancs by varying
amounts and to provide a $45-a-
month combat pay for fighters in
Korea. The bill was a complete re
vision of a house-passed measure
which permitted a straight 10 per
cent increase in all pay and allow-
. ances without addition to combat
pay. Total cost of the senate ver- j
sion is expected to be $471,000,000
annually, while the house bill was;
estimated to cost $850,000,000, Sen
ator Richard B. Russell, Georgfa,
chairman of the armed services
committee said, the senate measure i
was designed to meet the increased |
cost of living without changing the |
basic pay system fixed by congress
in 1949.
* * t
The Senate also passed a bill in
creasing monthly rates of compen
sation and pensions to veterans and
their dependents. The measure
would provide a 15 per cent in-
that he would go into Judaea, to
the grave of Lazarus, it was Thom
as who said to the other disciples:
“Let us also go, that we may die
with him.” Eight days after Res
urrection, when Jesus appeared a
second time to the assembled dis
ciples, and invited Thomas to touch
evidence that he paused to accept
the wounds of Calvary, there is no
the invitation. In the presence of
the living Lord there was no
need to test the proofs of his death.
And he said unto Jesus: “My Lord
and my God.”
But Thomas asked for the low
est order of proof, that of the
senses. He asked to see that he
might believe. But in the presence
of the Lord, he learned that believ
ing is seeing. Spiritual things are
spkitually discerned. Let us aban
don the yardstick in trying to meas
ure eternal Verities. Only the eye
of faith can see the unseen.
Fish Hatcheries
Planned At Lake
Two natural fish hatcheries. on
Lake Greenwood are Under consid
eration by the State Game depart
ment, it was learned this week from
Sydney A. Lee, state game warden
stationed on the lake.
Mr. Lee said that an investigator
from the department has made sev
eral trips to the lake studying the
possibilities.
The plan, as he understood it, was
to build dams at narrow necks on
the lake so that water would be held
at a constant level behind them to
allow fish to spawn and-the eggs toi
hatch. — '
There would be openings in the
dam for water to flow in or out as
needed. k
” Without constant level waters, Mr. i
Lee pointed out, the fish nests would
dry out when the water level falls,,
which is inevitable in hydroelectric
lakes.
The two dam sites now being
studied, he said, are in narrow necks
on Cain Creek near the Seaboard i
trestle and at the back water ofj
Rabun Creek near Todd’s quarjpr.
The propagation would be from 1
fish already in the lake, Mr. Lee
added, although he said he was not
familiar with the details.
The lakes would also serve as
feeding grounds for ducks.
herein collectively denominated as
John Doe, whose whereabouts or
the fact of whose death is unknown
had died before the said intestate
Delaney Floyd.
J. HEWLETTE WASSON,
Probate Judge.
April 18, 1952 6c-w-May 29
CITATION TO HEIRS
State of South Carolina,
County of Laurens.
In the Probate Court
In Re The~Estate of Delaney Floyd.
To all persons interested in the
estate of Delaney Floyd, as heirs at
law, and distributees of their per
sonal representative, known or un
known, herein oollectively de
nominated as John Doe.
You are hereby summoned and
required to show cause before the
Probate Ju4ge of Laurens County,
S. C., on the 4th day of August
A.D., 1952, at 10 o’clock in the fore
noon, why the Administrator of
said estate should not be decreed
to distribute * said estate as if the
said person, or persons unknown
NOTICE OF MEETING OF STOCK
HOLDERS OF DAPPER HOSIERY
MILLS, INCORPORATED
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
on May 3, 1952, at 11:00 am., at the
ofTices of Dapper Hosiery Mills, In
corporated, 110 Henry Street, Clin
ton, S. C., there will be held a meet
ing of the stockholders of DAPPER
HOSIERY MILLS, INCORPORAT
ED, for the following purposes:
(1) To consider a proposal to in
crease the amount of the capital
stock of said 'Dapper Hosiery Mills,
Incorporated, to the amount of One
Hundred Pifiy Thousand ($150,-
000.00) Dollars to be divided into
fifteen thousand (15,000) shares of a
par value of Ten '(SI0.00) Dollars.
(2) To consider such other busi
ness as may come before the meet
ing.
C. W. ANDERSON, President.
GARY LEHN, Secretary.
April 7, 1952. . ' l-4c
TIME TO ADD
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GIVES RENEWED LIFE
AND MOTH PROTECTION
^ 1 *>
We have recently added a rug cleaning
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our customers.
WE ARE EQUIPPED TO RENDER
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A
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Clinton, S. C.
crease in Compensation for service-
connected disability to veterans of '
all wars who are rated between 50
and 100 per cent disabled, and aj
five per cent increase for those rat
ed between 10 and 49 per cent dis- 1
abled. A house-passed bill did not(
include veterans of the Spanish-'
American, Civil and Indian wars. [
Another veterans increase measure
was passed by the senate on voice
vote, after already having passed
the house, which would increase,
the annual income limitations gov
erning payments of pensipns to
veterans with non-service-connect
ed disabilities. The measure raises
the income limitations from SI,100
to $1,200 for single persons and
$2,500 to $2,600 for married per
sons.
• * • *
After beating down all efforts to'
increase funds, the house passed
the army civil functions appropria
tions measure just as it was rec- j
ommended by the appropriations'
committee, carrying $492,434,900
for fiscal year 1953. It gives the
corps of engineers $472,295,400;
quartermaster corps $4,000,000. The
Panama Canal $16,139,500 and the
corps of engineers fund was broken
down into $221,232,400 for flood
control projects and $187,450,000
for rivers and harbors projects.
The house even rejected, in the
face of the disastrous Kansas-Mis-
souri floods, funds to start the Tut
tle creek reservoir in Kansas, rec
ommended by President Truman in
his Jan. 21 budget message.
The House agricultural commit-'
tee recommended the agricultural j
department appropriations bill, cut-'
ting only three per cent from re
quests of the department, for a to
tal appropriation of $724,003,699.
The committee rejected recommen
dations of the American fann bu- !
reau federation and the national'
funds grange and allowed ynost of
the - funds requested for soil con- j
servation. The committee warned'
that the country would face a se
rious food shprtage in 1975 if con
servation activities we-e not
strengthened. The farm bureau had
recommended that the budget re
quest for $256,500,000 for conserva
tion payemnts be cut to $100,000,-
000 and the committee allowed
$250,000,000.
Six-Inch Sermon
By REV. ROBERT H. HARPER
THOMAS AND THE RISEN
LORD
John 11: 14-16; 14: 1-6; 20: 24-29
Golden Text: John 20: 9
Through the ages, one of the dis
ciples has been called Doubting
Thomas. When Jesus, in the upper
room, promised that he would go
to prepare a place for the disciples
and said to them that they knew
where he was going, and the way.
Thomas said: “Lord, we know not
whither thou goest; how know we
the way?” Then, in the evening of
the Resurrection, when the disciples
told Thomas, who had been absent,
that Jesus had appeared unto them,
he stoutly affirmed that he would
not believe unless he could thrust
his fingeif and his hand into the
wounds of Calvary.
Yet this man was so devoted to
Jesus that when the Lord declared
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• .