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t Page Eight THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Thursday October 30, 1952 ■ - i How To Cast Ballot Tuesday Senator Byrd Says He Can't Endorse Adlai Winchester, Va., Oct. 17 —Senator If you live in this county or Harry F. Byrd, Virginia Democrat, | elsewhere, you will get a secret 1 broke his silence in the presidential j ballot. If you want to vote for— 1 campaign Friday night by saying hC| STEVENSON. Vote the left hand could not endorse the Stevenson-] column, labeled Democrat (Ste- Sparkman ticket. * , I vonson electors are Bennett. Hall, Byrd devoted a state-wide broad-!' Hallman. Pritchard. Riley, Spivey, cast to an attack on “Trumamsm” | Suber and Wheeler.) anc ^ sa i d had looked in vain for i EISENHOWER: vote the right; any signs of independent action by, hand column labeled Nomination Gov. Adlai Stevenson, the Demo- • bv Petition. (Eisenhower electors eratic presidential nominee. j in the right hand column are Book-j Byrd made no mention in his; or Coker Manning. McDonald, 1 speech»of Gen. Qwight D. Eisen- Quattlebaum, Reamer and Weh- hower, Stevenson’s Republican op- man j ponent in the presidential race. WARNING If you want vour The senator’s announcement that] Eisenhower vote to be effective,!^ cannot endorse the national Dem-j don’t vote for the Eisenhower | ocratic ticket was bound to boost! electors in the middle row. labeled, the hopes of Eisenhower supporters, R t that traditionally Democratic Vir-! ' ,p Explanation of Warning !ginia could be swung into the Ropub- The Eisenhower electors in the column this year, middle row of the paper ballots! has long been leader of the originally put up bv the state OT e»n‘ zal ‘<>" t ‘h v ‘ r 8' n ‘ a Republican party! State goP and. ha, many supporters in the Vadcrs have now announced they South and elsewhere 11 support electors put up by However, Gov. John S. Battle of School Amendment To Be Voted Upon Sou 1 h' Caro 11 nIans 'Tor Etoenhoww. '''■•ginia. a close associate of Byrd, So a vote for the Middle Men" “ «W>® r * ,n * and f"*, -.1* other state party leaders, including \%ont be effective. . Sen. ulks Robertson. Byrd said in the address he pre pared for radio delivery that in his | judgment "Trumanism is the domi-, ’ nant issue” in the presidential cam- SpUth-Carollna'votero on Nov -l P a l*n. Me "sold he .tlad hoped that will vote on a c b ,, s U 1 u t i 6 n a 1; S'evenson would glve assurance that.l amendment regarding provisionsi‘f elected, he would change the; tor a public school system. The course of Trumanism. amendment would remove from ."l have looked m vain for any. signs of such independent action, | said Byrd, long a sharp critic of New) Byrd said, however, that “I do* REGISTER NOW FOR FREE TELEVISION! OCTOBER HARVEST SALE PRICE-SMASHING MONTH-END CLEAN-UP! the Constitution the provision re quiring the state to provide a free M t*, omenH Beal and Fair Deal policies public shool system. The amend-, _ , . . , K ,. . _ j k r-,.,.ornrtri Bvrd said, however, ths ment was proposed bv Governor I , . . . . . , „ . ' f ^ rvavcciVvika n ot fool, it Incumbent upon me to United Stales Supreme Court ru l., urge the people to vote for my candi- the I mg against segregation in . .. schools. Advocates of the amend- 1 ^ , , , 4 .. * I know" of no people anywhere ment dedau.* t at i u " more competent to act wisely in the possible an arrangement for com public int 7 rest than the voters 0 f tinuing segregation in ie s Virginia, but I feel it my clear obli- .f the cour S C ° U , r i gation as the candidate of the Demo- against the State of South Caro lina. Those who endorse the amend- cratic party of Virginia for the United States Senate to discuss with the utmost candor reasons that have ‘no.’ ment advocated by Gov ®- vrne '’: prompted me in the decision I have will vote ‘‘yes,” those who °PP ose - made '. | He went on to say "I will not and l cannot in good conscience, endorse 1 the Democratic platform for the j Stevenson-Sparkman ticket. En- j dorseme&t means .to recommend, and this I cannot do.”' He concluded by saying: “Always I have been a Virginia Democrat; always I will remain one.” Byrd summed up his description Russia Turns Deaf Ear To Korean Issues United Nations, N. Y., Oct. 25.— Russia has turned « deaf ear to be- hmd-the-scenes U. S. pleas for an --^derttandmg-Tnr a'RomiTr "3Tirri!^tOT TFCBftanism By saying it is “a tiee, American sources in the UN | definite, precise trend towards so- reported today as the Korean cbn-icialism and away from the ftee en- flict entered its 29th month. jterprise system. Debates on the Korean question! “In brief, Trumanism is contrary were recessed in the Assembly to the basic principles upon which Political Committee, but American America was founded and upon sources said that approaches were ^hich it has growm great.” made to the Russians here during In declaring he had seen no signs the last eight months as well as!of independence in Stevenson, Byrd through diplomatic channels in said: Moscow To those who sa >’ that ^ ov - St e v -, Thev had no result, these sourc«fs^nson wil1 reform the Democratic' yic j • party from within and will change '‘While the enure UN waited to 1 ‘he trend Irom Trumanism, I ask hear the Ruslan answer to Secre-l‘hat one single measure be named tary of State Doan Aeheson’s do-! ^herein there ex,sts a difference in tailed history of UN efforts to get.T™™" and Gov Stevenson." | peace in Korea-which referred to Byrd said that, since the cam- Cut did not elaborate on the secret P a 'B" S ‘ ev , c " s0 " ^s come informal talks - the Assembly °“ ^ re ^ al ° r lhe Taf-Hartley a . . anv iHpa Act » has endorsed a compulsory fair rejected overwhelm ngly any pracUces bill, and also of seating Red China during ‘ ha advocaled a change in Senate ru|es i urrent Assembly sessmn. ^ ^ (o p(mnt , Byrd said that in his successful campaign for renomination earlier The vote was 42 to 9 absentions, to heed the plea of U. S. delegate Ernest this year he had repeatedly stated He toid the 60-na ion ‘ 'that he was a Virginia Democrat and I is our contention that the Commu- not a Truman ^mocraX. I . n u S „L r l 8 !m e ,.°i«K . He added that in that campaign these halls with bloody hands. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Vishtnskv and his chief deputy. he made “definite commitments w’hich to me are paramount obli gations and which transcend in im- Andrei A Gromyko, staye 1 portance any other obligations that Irom the Assembly and e e may ex j st j n determining my atti- Soviet bloc fight for Red C inu in presen t presidential the hands of aides. campaign.’’ He was scheduled for a con t . Byrd outlined many of the issues once today with Mrs. v ijaya Uak- on ^ich he has differend from shmi Pandit, glamorous leadei " President Turman and took sharp the Indian delegation who strongK j j ssue w j tb statements the President hinted at delicate, secret ne S otia ' has made in his campaign for Stev- tions now going on. enson. At a late hour Saturday, Vishin-j ^j e T rurnan had called a sky had given no indication he was ••damn liar” anyone w'ho argued that ready to take the floor to answer billion dollars being spent Acehson when the Political Com- on ,^6 military services could be nuttee resumes its Korean debate cut without impairing the national Monday afternoon. defense. Committee officials said that nO; “He may not have directed his re-, other delegate had yet indicated] within the category of his attack.” j any desire to speak. It appeared m arks to me,” said Byrd, “but I come that everyone was waiting for the; •phe ranking Democrat on the only answer to be considered au- Senate Armed Services Committee, thoritative, that of the Rusians. Byrd said that he could prove that ® “if the waste is eliminated from SAY: Jhe military expenditures, billions “I SAW IT IN THE CHRONICLE” can be saved and we will still get as THANK YOU much military equipment and have Do You Want- Heaters Heater Grates Electric Cooking Range Leonard Refrigerators DuPont Paints Browning Automatic Guns Brass Andirons Wire your House or Clothes Pins You Will Find It At— COPELAND HARDWARE SUPPLY CO. Telephone 15 as large an army. Jumping on Truman and Steven-] son for advocating repeaf of thej Talft-Hartley Act, Byrd said Jie could confidently predict that if The labor act were wiped off the books' “nothing will be put in its place to curb the powei^of the labor bosses.” He noted that Stevenson has said he is opposed to the injunction fea ture of the Taft-Hartley Act and Byrd described this as “the only protection that the people of Amer ica have today in nation-wide strikes.” If the Taft-Hartley Act were re pealed, Byrd said, the nation would be at the mercy of "arrogant labor leaders of this country who have so often abused their power.” SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRONICLE "The Paper Everybody Reads" MEN’S Winter SUITS 19.98 Reg. $29.50 Value Gabardines and worst eds, all new stock. Guaranteed fit—regu lars, longs, shorts and stouts. 35 to 46. Men’s 100'; Wool FALL SUITS 29.00 You’d expet to pay $39.95 for these suits. All sizes, double and single breast. All wanted colors. ( lose-Out! 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