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\ / —t f / i The Chronicle StriTes To Be A Clean News- • paper, Complete, Newsy, and Reliable ®hf (Elintmi (ttljnmirlf If You Don't Read The Chronicle You Don’t Get the News Volume LI 11 Clinton, S. C, Thursday, October 30, 1952 Number 44 Returned To Clinton REV. E. K. GARRISON was re turned Sunday to the pastorate of Broad Street Methodist church for his third year. The appointment was made at the closing session of the annual conference in Green ville. Mr. and Mrs. Garrison have made many friends in the city during their residence here. The an nouncement that he has been sent back to his present work will be one of interest to their friends of all denominations. Changes Made In Pastorates By S. C. Conference At the closing session of the an nual South Carolina conference in Greenville on Sunday afternoon, the Rev. E. K. Garrison was re turned to Broad Street Methodist The Rev. Joe W Giles, pastor for the past 'four years of Epworth church at Joanna, was transferred to the Ifcwprth Children’s Home, Columbia. Hie many friends of Mr. Giles in Joanna and here, win learn with regret that he is trans ferred from the Greenwood to the Columbia district. Mr. Giles is succeeded by the ReV. P. W. Turner, transferred fom McCormick. The Rev. J. E. Kinard was re turned to the Hopewell-Kinards c harge for a third year. Rev. C. B. Word was assigned to Lydia Mills-Sandy Springs as ac cepted supply. The Rev. John M. Shingler, who has served the Greenwood dist- trict as superintendent the past year, was returned to the district which includes churches of this area. The Rev. H. O. Chambers, a for mer pastor here, was returned to the Anderson district as superin tendent. The Rev. J. H. Kohler, also a for mer pastor here, was returned to Lions Club Broom Sale Begins Today The Lions club will begin a broom sale today, it is announced in an ad vertisement in today’s issue of The Chronicle. The sale, which will be a house- to-house canvass will last a full i week, officers of the club state, and the people of the community are asked to respond favorably. An effort will be made to seiriSOO brooms at $1.50 each, and a few rubber door-mats are also to be of fered at $2.50 each. The proceeds will be used in the club’s sight con servation work in the community. The brooms are bought from the South Carolina Association for the Blind, which is sponsored by the Lions clubs of the state and is the chief project of the clubs in their work. ,. The city has been divided into wards, each under a ward leader with a crew of Lions to make the canvass. Teams have also been as signed to Lydia and Joanna. Ward leaders are: ward 1, Harry McSween; ward 2, L. S. Reddeck; ward 3, R. S. Truluck; ward 4, T. E. Addison; ward 5, Harry Baldwin; ward 6, R. P. Hamer; Lydia, George Cornelson; Joanna, J. B. Hart. Bill Abrams and Tommy Hollis are co-chairmen in putting on the sale, and if any homes are missed during the week, householders are requested to call either of these men. Abrams can be reached at Howard’s Pharmacy and Hollis at Center Ser vice Station. X-Ray Unit Coining to City The Lions, while making broom sales, will also inform householders 'of the coming visit of a mobile chest X-ray unit to be here for about three weeks beginning November 21. Clinton residents are urged to avail themselves of this service, which will be free, and is done under the direction of the TB association. At the same time, a free blood test will be given Jo eyei^ftO£ d,e&iring_ il by the state board of health, a unit be ing here along with the X-ray unit. United Gov. Byrnes Says Demo Party Has Deserted Principles INCREASE SHOWN IN COUNTY TAX BILL THIS YEAR Notices Mailed Out Total $652,347, An In crease of $109,000 Over Last Year. Charlotte.—Gov. Jaimes F. Byrn es of South Carolina is supporting Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower for president because he says the Democratic party has deserted its fundamental principles. “I have not deserted’ these prin ciples, the life-long Democrat as- j serted in a political speech here last night over a television and j radio netw r ork. The former secretary of state in 1952. President Truman’s cabinet is sup ; The notices total $652,347.47 he porting th(^ independent i reported, approximately $109,000 more than the total mailed out las': Laurens—Treasurer Sam Leamon has completed the mailing out of county and school district taxes fo Community Chest Drive Gets Off To Good Start W „ ■ III I ■ ■■ — I" Team Solicitors Opened Campaign Among Business Firms To Raise $7,200 In Advance Gifts. General Solicitation Drive Next Week,. Has Goal of $4,800. David S. Cook, Textile Leader, Claimed By Death Clinton’s first annual Red Feather drive, off to a fast start with the advance gifts campaign this week, Scouts (Blue Ridge Council)— $1,200; Local Youth Work—$2,5(f0. The fund for local youth work will move Into Us general K>Uctta-j » 1U | ^ “““ to defray expense of tions phase next Monday to round local Scout troops. Cub Scouts, out the quota of $12,000. Advance gifts leader R. S. Truluck announced yesterday preliminary re ports from the workers indicate a “very .good respone” which points to the committee’s reaching its quota of $7,200. At the same time. Campaign Chairman J. C. Thomas completed plans for pushing the general solici tations drive forward next week. A kickoff snack of coffee and dough nuts is scheduled for Hotel Mary David Singleton Cook, a resident of this city the past four years, died Thursday night at the General hospital in Greenville following ajMusgrove Monday morning at 8 two weeks illness. The announce- a . m All workers connected with ment of his passing came as a shock and brought genuine regret' to Campfire Girls and Bluebirds. An emergency fond 6f $r;000 also is m* Carolinians for Eisenhower tick et, thus placing. he explained, ‘loyalty to country above loyalty to a political party'* “Some of the carpetbaggers now in control of the National Demo cratic party have caused the party to desert” its fundamental princi ples, he declared. He attacked the Truman Administration for “bun gling . . . corruption . . . unethical conduct . . . the trend toward so cialism.” Eisenhower Is needed, he con tended, to “restore confident' in government” and help put an end to the Korean war and avoid World War III. Byrnes said Eisenhower’s prom- j ise to visit Korea in an effort to end the war therq Is “heartening to the mothers of America." Referring to Democratic candi date Adlai Stevenson s label of “embittered apostates” for South ern Democratic governors who are supporting Eisenhower, Byrnes said name calling will hurt none of the three—Byrnes, Kennon of Lpuisiana and Shivers of Texas. He teed off on the Federal Fair Employment Practices law pro posals of the Democratic adminis tration, saying they would force those who knew and admired him. 'The funeral services were con ducted Saturday morning from the First Presbyterian church here by his pastor. Dr. W. R. Turner. In terment followed Sunday afternoon in West Point, Ga. The services were attended by a large gathering of friends and associates with many beautiful floral tributes banked upon the grave indicative of the esteem in which he was held. Pallbearers were: P. S. Bailey, George H. Cornelson, Robert M. eluded in the budget, to be used locally and administered by the executive committee of the Com munity Chest. Another $750 has been allotted for administration and campaign funds. Truluck announced the following persons had served as workers on his advance gifts committee: Lynn W. Cooper, J. R. Cox, W. C. Bald win, R. W. Boland, C. C. Giles, Thurston Giles, W. W. Harris, Hubert Boyd, I. M. Adair, Mrs. Perry Moore, John Jordan, Van Jones, R. P the committees for canvass of the HanK:ri H arrv Wilkes, Dr. George residential areas and of business | Blalockt Y oung, C. T. Thom- house employees are invited to at- on( w M shields, S. W. Sumerel, tend this meeting where they will | c w Anderson> Tommy Hollis, H. Bethel church, Chester, for a fourth Vance, George H. Huguley, W. year. Carlisle Neely, Bailey Williams, The Rev. P. L. Bauknight, who a. C. Young, Jr., and J. B. Tem- has served St. Mark’s church. Sum- pieton. ter, for the past two years, was Mr Cook was bo rn in Washing- transferred to the Mauldin church tonf Ga f and his boyhood receive final instructions. Mrs. C. E. Galloway and Robert Wysor III, re spectively, are chairmen of these two committees. The goal of these two groups is to raise the $4,800 necessary to place with the advance gifts quota in order to achieve the total of $12,000. Clinton’s Red Feather drive is of ficially named the Community Chest of Greater Clinton, Inc. Its single united appeal operates in conjunc- L. Eichelberger, L. E. Cason, W. R. Anderson, Hugh Jacobs, Dr. Mar shall W. Brown, D. A. Yarborough, and Robert Johnson. Mrs. Galloway released this list of her main assistants in the neigh borhood drive, with the names of others to be announced later: Ward 1—Mrs. Charley Cooper; Ward 2— Mrs. Lawrence Plaxico; Ward 3— Mrs. John T. Young; Ward 4—Mrs. W. P. Jacobs; in College View in the Greenville district. Open House For Hart Clinic Nor. 6 Dr. C. J. Hart, well known Lau rens Chiropractor, said yesterday that he is planning “open house" for his new clinic on Thursday, day, November 6. The modern clinic is located at 205 Church St., just across from the Laurens high school. Guests will be received and welcomed from 10 a. m., to 8 p. m., during which time they will be shown through the building by those who will explain items of interest. The name of the clinic is The C, J. Hart Chiropractic Clin ic. CLUB SPONSORS PARTY The Long Branch Home Demon stration club is sponsoring a Hal lowe’en party for benefit of the school Saturday, Nov. 1, at 6:30. The public is cordially invited to attend. at West Point, Ga. He was a son of the late Rev. Ellison R. and Martha Terrell Singleton Cook. Following the death of W. J. Bailey in 1948, Mr. Cook came to Clinton from Talladega, Ala., to become vice-president and gener al manager of Lydia and Clinton Cotton Mills. Long prominent in .textile manufacturing circles in the South, Mr. Cook began his ca reer with the West Point Manu facturing company at West Point, Ga., Pepperell Mfg. Co., at Ope lika, Ala. He then was transfer red to the Pepperell Mfg. com pany. New York office, and was hianager of the Pepperell plant at Biddleford, Maine. Later he was associated with the Highland City Textile company at Talladega, Ala., until he came here in 1949, to accept an executive position with the two local mills. tion with these charitable organiza- Heights—Mrs. W. M. Shields; Ward tions with the following individual quotas: American Red Cross—$2,500; Cancer Society —. $1,750; Crippled Children—$1,200; Salvation Army— $700; Heart Society—$400; Boy 5—Main Street section, Mrs. Brax ton Dutton. Assistants for the business houses committee under Wysor also will be announced later. Receives Bronze Star FOOD.... Is An Important Item With Housewives You will find helpful Gro cery and Market News in THE CHRONICLE every week from leading food stores in the city. Read the advertisements reg ularly— they tell you about changing prices each week and where you can supply your needs and buy to advantage. Survivors include his widow, “/t, Gn S e , Ab . bot co° k (ormeriy fa fa m0 ,y Tonight of New York; two daughters, Miss 7 ® Grace Terrell Cook and Miss Nancy Abbot Cook, both of this city; two sisters, Mrs. L. K. Rob erts of Savannah, Ga., and Mrs. Willioughby Kennedy of Oeplika, Ala., and three brothers, FYank, Edmond and Ellison Cook, all of West Point, Ga. Blue Hose-Furman Tickets On Sale T.wkets for the annual PC-Fur- man game will go on sale this af ternoon (Thursday) for the con venience of all who expect to at tend the game. The game will be played in Greenville on the night of November 8 at 8 o’clock. Seaboard To Feature College On Menus '—’ You may be having Presbyte rian college with your breakfast the next time you take a railroad trip. The institution will be featured on menu cards of the Seaboard Air Line Railroad for a period during November and December. It is part of the company’s program to recognize the outstanding univer sities and colleges within the Byrnes in anticipation of a posible Southern states it serves. A line drawing of Neville Hall and a brief article will tell the the period Oct. 19, 1951, - April 23, Presbyterian college story on the 1952. He performed particularly outside back cover of -each menu, good work, the citation says, in es- tablishmg a civilian restraining PTA C*nrnivstl line and eliminating the threat of TIM carnival enemy infiltration. Col. Wmgard received his army discharge a few months ago. He Southern cotton mills to employ Negroes to work side by side with white women and white men. Ste venson, he said, advocates such a federal law, while Eisenhower be lieves in leaving such legislation to the states. He noted that this type of legis lation twice has been defeated in Illinois, and once voted down by the people of California. Stevenson has “completely sur rendered to Mr. Truman,” the gov ernor said, and “would have to continue the policies and appoin tees” of the administration. Eisenhower, he insisted, is "in accord with most” of the anti- administration platform of the South Carolina Democratic party. He reminded his listeners that, as members of the South Carolina Democratic party, they are free to maintain good \ standing in the state party and still vote for Eis enhower. A resolution of the Au gust re-convened state Democratic convention permits this, he noted. Byrnes pooh-pooed the claim of Democratic campaigners that elec tion of a Republican president would deprive Southern Democrat ic senators and representatives of congressional chairmanships. The chairmanships depend upon the composition of the House and Sen ate, he explained, not on who is in the White House. The governor scored what he called Democratic scare talk, the election of a Republican would bring on another depression such as occurred under the last Republi can administration. when $499,T(>2.30 was collecfe i and $35,174.11 in unpaid taxt' was turned over to the delinquent tax collector The total to have been, collected last year was $534,475.0> before taking into account duplicates, nulla bonas and delinquents. The total levy on which this year’-; taxifrs are being collected is 53 mills with the exception of those school districts which have transferred to Greenwood and Greenville county districts. The 53 mills is made up of 23 mills county wide for general pur poses, 27 mills for School District 55, and three mills for school bonds. The school levy for Bethany and Fountain Inn 3B which went into Greenville county Is 42 mills and Wave Shoals 51 (Sullivan 2, 3 and 7, and Waterloo 1 and 7) which went into Greenwood county is 42 mills. Ware Shoals 51 also has an extra levy of 1 3-4 for the county education board. None of the dis tricts which went out of Laurens county carry a school bond levy. The county-wide 23-Tnill levy is the same as last year although the individua 1 items are. different. Last year’s individual items were ordi nary county 11 mills, bonds (county t 8 mills high school 3 mills and hos pital fund 1 mill. This year the Items are ordinary county 15 mills, bonds (county) 7 1-2 mills, high school, none, and hospital one-half In 1951, according to the pub lished notice, five mills were levied for school bonds in Laurens 7 (Watts Mills), 11 mills in Laurens 11 (Lau rens City), li mills in Youngs 7 (Youngs), 6 mills in Sullivan 17 (Hickory Tavern), and 10 mills in, Hunter 5 (Clinton City). Citizens in Laurens School District No. 55, formerly embraced in Lau rens No. 11, will pay two mills less than last year lor all purposes. Meet Friday Night In Homecoming Game~ The proceeds will go for the or ganization’s projects in the school. Tickets may be secured at the door. A battalion review of Presbyte rian college’s ROTC unit last Fri day morning served as the occasion j for presentation of the Bronze Star f\_iL to Lt. Col. Barringer F. Wingard of UinfOII, 1101160 rOIll this city. Brig. Gen. Ansel B Godfrey of this city, commander of the 51st National Guard Artillery Division, made the presentation at special ceremonies. I C _ 0 ! n W:nEA:d ” as cll ' d [ or Clinton high's Red Devils, with mentor,ous servKe while m act,on ^ amJ four losses dalc L , "? , w ,h , Arl, crv He “^ uar J observe their annual homecoming ten,. 3rd Infantry D.vunon. during ^ Friday nigW at „ 0 . clock The game marks the final home game against Honea Path high’s school. Guests will be received and undefeated Stingers. The game marks final home ap pearance for 13 seniors 1 and pits Clinton’s tackle. Tommy Sease, against Honea Path’s quarterback. Jimmy Coleman. Both are being mentioned for South Carolina’s Shrine Bowl Team. Clinton’s seniors include Rudy Hamrick, Billy Watkins, Billy Moore. Tommy Sease, Boyce Wil son, William Qromer, Marvin Stewart, Larry Harrelson. Ken Mc Crary. Alvin Hampton, l^ibby Joe Galloway. Dick Lukstat and Chas. Oxner. Homecoming festivities: will in clude the crowning of Miss CHS. Mary Sue Darr, during the half by the president of the Student Coun cil. A gala parade in the afternoon will include Miss CHS and her at tendants, sponsors of the senior players, the band and cheerleaders. Polled Hereford Sole November 3 The first polled Hereford cattle sale to be held by J. T. Addison. R. F. Lawson and S. G. Dillard is announced to be held next Mon day, November 3, at the Laurens county fair grounds. The sale, con sisting of six bulls and 44 females, will be conducted by Auctioneer Col. Walter Britten of College Sta tion, Texas, with a large number of Hereford Association and livestock specialists represented. Messrs. Addison, Lawson and Dillard have issued attractive booklets to farmers and others in terested in registered stock to at tend this first annual cattle >ale they are conducting All cattle to be offered for sale are guaranteed to be breeders, the owners state Local Residents Drawn On Jury • The October term of common This evening at 7:30 at the Ar-jj s now connected with Headquar mory the annual Hallowe’en carni-iters .No 228, AAA Group, South val sponsored by the Florida St. I Carolina National Guard, as ad- , , „ . , ■ m * n ‘ stra l ive officer, with offices school Parent-Teachers association ^ and in Newbe will be given. Movietime Tour To Include Clinton Booths, games, a costume pa rade, cake walks and many other Hallowe’en entertainments are be ing planned for both adults andj j t ^ children, as advertised elsewhere in | ( Gn November 12 a Hollywood today s paper. troupe of two or three personali- A special feature of the carni*! ties will visit Clinton which was val this year is an enlarged re *, recently selected as one of the cit- freshment booth where those at-j ies j n ^tate to be included on tending may get supper. this tour. The group will arrive in the city about 2 p. m. and will be here for an hour. More details will be announced next week. pleas or civil court is m session t week in Laurens. Jurors drawn from this section to serve are: J. William Johnson. William R. Pitts, Lonnie O Hiers. O. C. Woodruff, Raymond John son, Richard F. Buford. L E. Cas on, D. B. Wehunt, and W E Bragg of Clinton: J. A. Rogers, Lydia Mills; David Glenn, Renno. J H. Jacks, Joanna: R. C Oxner. Clin ton; G. W. Morse, Joanna. J N. Corley, Joanna; Joe S Caughman, Clinton Mills. *: READ THE CHRONICLE ADVERTISEMENTS REGULARLY EACH WEEK It will pay you. It's thrifty to shop tint In this newspaper, then in the stores as prices change and new merchandise is received and displayed. BE WISE— READ THE ADS