The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, May 01, 1952, Image 16
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Page Eight
THE CLINTON CHRONICLE
Thursday, May 1, 1952
Boys’ Leader
Testifies
Girls' Softball
League Begins
Summer Schedule
The Piedmont Girls Softball
League opened April 14 and will
continue through July 31, all games
at 4:30 p. m.
Eligible are girls 17 years of age
As Washington Sees It...
THE NATIONAL SCENE
Special to The Chronicle.
Washington, April 30.—The seiz
ure of the steel mills by President
Truman set off a barrage of crit
icism in the United States congress
from strictly partisan sources. And
much of the criticism against the
President’s action in taking over
; and under. There are five teams in; the mills came from many big spon
| the loop-Laurens. Clinton, Joanna, sors of radio nad television shows.
: Whitmire and Watts. Richard Du- However, one Republican in the
; Bose of Whitmire, is president, Mrs. Senate, conceded to be the
J. c. Lambert of Joanna, secretary, constitutional lawyer in that body,
| The schedule for the remainder j took his colleagues to task. He was
Senator Wayne Morse, Republican
of Oregon. Nobody disputes con-
stiutional law with Senator Morse
MR. PERRY NIX
Took Ix>ts of Soda Hoping
To Find Relief—Other Medi-
ines Failed Too. Feels Fine
Since Taking Scalfs Indian
River Medicine. Tells of Case.
Prominent men and women from
all walks of life are gratefully
writing letters hoping to let oth-
; of the season follows:
Thursday, May 1
Laurens—Bye
Watts at Clinton
Whitmire at Joanna
Monday, May 5
Watts—Bye
Joanna at Laurens
Clinton at Whitmire
Thursday, May 8
Joanna—Bye
Whitmire at Watts
Laurens at Clinton
Monday, May 12
•Whitmire—Bye
Clinton at Joanna
Watts at Laurens.
Thursday, May 15
Clinton—Bye
Laurens at Whitmire
Joanna at Watts
ers know ho\v Scait;tJnd;aii. River ; Monday ^ ay ig
and gets very far with it. Said Sen
ator Morse in part: N
“I should like to suggest to those
who I have heard today express
themselves on constitutional law,
whose views in my opinion would
be laughed out of any freshman
of our law schools, that they will
“I repeat, I hope when a Repub
lican president occupies the White
House—and I trust it will be in No
vember, 1952—he will not fold his
hands and fail to act when the boys
in Korea are about to be jeopard
ized by failure on the part of the
steel unions and a group of steel
companies to keep the steel mills of
America rolling.
". . . Until the supreme court
hands down a decision—and such
opinion would be the first of its
kind in all our history—that all tbe
dicta that have appeared in the de
cisions to date are not applicable—
I shall continue to say that it is the
duty and the responsibility of tne
President of the United States in
an hour of great crisis to proceed
by executive action to protect the
security of the nation.”
Some of the steel mill executives
have told the American people, that
the President’s action was unprece
dented, when the fact is that such
Presidents as Andrew Jackson,
Thomas Jefferson, Abraljam Lin
coln, Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow
Wilson and Franklin D. Roosevelt
that members of the senate sub
committee investigating his fitness
to serve as a member of the United
States senate were “stealing tens
of thousands of dollars” and “pick
ing the pockets of the taxpayers’’
in their investigation of him. Re
sult was Senator McCarthy was
slapped down by a vote of 60 to 0
in a senate veto of confidence in
the investigating committee and
authorizing the committee to pro
ceed with its investigation.
Senator Gillette of Iowa, chair
man of the committee, a rather
meek individual, reflected the bit
terness when McCarthy has stirred
up when he declared that in his
entire public life he had never
been subjected to “more vicious,
vile and vindicitive insinuations”
against himself. Senator A. S.
Mike Monroney of Oklahoma, who
cut his eye-teeth in politics as a
newspaper reporter, declared Mc
Carthy’s attack would “destroy the
very power, integrity and dignity
of government.
Medicine brought prompt relief
from their suffering For example,
Mr. Perry Nix, of 16 ..East 8th St.,
Greenville, S. C. Mr. Nix is a
farmer by occupation but is also
doing-textile .work. He is a - leader
of the junior boys and works with
-the BTU in the Woodside Baptist
church of which he is a member.
Mr. Nix says:
never live so long as to read a de-j actions and no court
course in constitutional law in any' would uphold an injunction against
cision of the United States supreme! their authority. ^ ^
court holding that in this land i n S „ „ * * * i
time of great national peril, the j finally Senator Joseph McCarthy
President of the United States does j has b * e n brought to censure by his
not have the inherent power under colleagues in his assault on in-
the constitution to protect the safe-' dividual and personal liberty and
ty and security of the nation, until I *ne very integrity of his govern-
Congress j-gts aLUU-haunches and.‘ n^nt. The senator from Wisconsin
proceeds to meet its constitutional ; atta cked the motives and intent of
Laurens—Bye
Clinton at Watts
Joanna at Whitmire
Thursday. May 22
_ Watts—I^ye —1_ . —
Laurens at Joanna
Whitmire at Clinton
Monday, May 26
Joanna—Bye
Watts at Whitmire
Clinton at Laurens
“I am' indeed thankful for what ^
Scalf's Indian River Medicine has Thurrday. May”29
done for me. Off and on for six) Whitmire Bye
years I suffered dreadfully from j oanna at Clinton
gas on my stomach after meals— Laurens at Watts
sometimes my stomach would ache Monday, June 2
and burn until I couldn't rest orj Clinton Bye
sleep and gas pressure was so great Whitmire at Laurens
I felt like I_ would srryither. I took Watts at'Joanna— “
medicines and lots of soda hoping Thursday. June 5
-to find relief, but Scalf’s Indian Laurens Bye
River Medicine was the one treat- Watts at Clinton
ment that seemed to bring results. Whitmire at Joanna
1 have taken six bottles of Scalfs Monday. June 9 '
Indian River Medicine now and I Watts Bye
feel like a different man. The Joanna at Laurens
tired, weak, rundown feeling is j clinton at Whitmire
gone and I can eat heartily with- ) Thursday. June 16
out a worry about gassy stomach | whitmjr' p yiT
ooceryh I h -p^ m,. kller will be. Cinton at Joanna
obligations and performs its duty
“Mr. President, I am becoming a
little weary of hearing politicians
in an election year proceed to at
tack the--Pr-esidefrt of the United
States because they dislike his par
tisanship, when they themselves
have yet to take action under the
Constitution of the United States
as it is their clear duty to take, if
they do not like the kind of action
the President of the United States
is taking in the exercise of his in
herent power.
five of his colleagues by charging
——— 1> ,
SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRONICLE
“The Paper Everybody Reads”
DR. L. B. MARION
NATUROPATH
Res. Phone 939
500 South Broad St.
Wit eft efliirged to show detail
J. C. THOMAS, Jeweler
“It’s Time That Counts”
CLINTON AND JOANNA
helpful to others. rr-j- Watts at Laurens
Scalf's Indian River Medicine is Thursday. June 19
time-tested fifty years, is guaran- Clinton—Byp
teed to please you or your money { at Whitmire
refunded on the first bottle, uet. j oanna at Watts
your bottle from your druggist to- Monday. June 23
( d a >’. Laurens Bye
CITATION TO HEIRS ~ a't Whitmire
State of South Carolina, Thursday. June 26
County of Laurens. Watts—Bye
• In the Probate Court Laurens at Joanna
In Re The Estate of Delaney Floyd, i Wbitmire at Clinton
To all persons interested in the Monday, July 7
estate of Delaney Floyd, as heirs at
law, and di^ributees of their per
sonal representative, known or un
known, herein collectively
nominated as John Doe.
You are hereby summoned and
required to show cause before the
Probate Judge 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
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
Dr. Fred E. Holcombe
OPTOMETRIST
Offices at
200 South Broad St.
Phone 658
Office Hears 9:00 to 5:30
Joanna—Bye
Watts at Whitmire
Clinton at Laurens
de- [Thursday. July 10
Whitmire—Bye
Joanna at Clinton
Laurens at Watts
Monday. July 14
Clinton—Bye
Whitmire at Laurens
Watts at Joanna
Thursday, July 17
Laurens—Bye
Watts at Clinton
Whitmire at Joanna
Monday. July 21
Watts—Bye
Joanna at Laurens
Clinton at Whitmire
Thursday, July 24
Joanna—Bye
Whitmire at 'Watts
Laurens at Clinton
Monday, July 28
Whitmire—Bye
Clinton at Joanna
Watts at Laurens
Thursday, July 31
- Clinton—Bye
Joanna at Watts
Laurens at Whitmire
Make a
DATE
• How about that
health check-up ? Better
call oa your Doctor
withooC delay. And if
he givM you a prescrip-
tion-»w«Jl, we are hop
ing you will bring it
here for compounding.
McGEE’S
DRUG STORE
Phone No. 1
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
offices 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 Fifty Thousand ($150,-
000.00) Dollars to be divided into
fifteen thousand (15,000) shares of a
par value of Ten ($10.00) Dollars.
(2) To consider such other busi
ness as may come before the meet
ing.
C. W. ANDERSON, President.
GARY LEHN, Secretary.
April 7, 1952. 1-4 C
Dr. Felder Smith
Optometrist
Laurens, S. C.
U$ EAST MAIN STREET
South Side Public Square
HOURS FOE EYE
EXAMINATIONS:
•:M to $4$
Wedneodays »:## to 1X4$
Phono 794
MORRISON —
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