The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, November 06, 1952, Image 10
Page Two
THE CLINTON CHRONICLE
r~
Thursday, Novembe^ 6, 1952
SIMMONS
State of South Carolina,
County of Laurens.
In Court of Common Pleas.
MARY P. JONES, Plaintiff,
vs.
PEN CLAYTON JONES, Defendant
TO THE DEFENDANT ABOVE 1
NAMED:
YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED
fmd required to answer the com
plaint in the above stated action,
copy of. which is herewith served 1
upon you, and to serve a copy of | ing for. Any plan of government
your answer on the subscriber at his which cost the blood and treasure of
cffice, 703 Grier Building, City of our people is worth fighting for. But
Greenwood, South Carolina, within'men in all generations seem more
TWENTY (20) DAYS after the ser- 1 ready to sacrifice their lives than
\ .ce hereof, exclusive of the day of'their money, or the hope of gaining;
.<.ich service, and if you fail to an-j wealth. Our American form of gov-|
swer within the time aforesaid, the eminent is more’ than a “form." i
plaintiff herein will apply to the When our Constitution guarantees to'
Court for the relief demanded in every State
said complaint. ■»
by private enterprise.
“Congress has never at any time
authorized federal construction at
the Roanoke Rapids site. Not a nick-
that the whole F.E.P.C. scheme is
repugnant to our Constitution.
We must not try to crystallize in-
The truth is always worth fight-
el in benefits ever was claimed for to statutory law all our preferences,
the site by Arpay engineers for flood
control, navigation, fisheries or rec
reation.
The Secretary here is urging that
all major streams everywhere, re
gardless of their relation to naviga-
I tion or flood control, should be re
garded as federal property. By the
same line of reasoning, no vein of
coal or acre of farm land is safe;
there is no stopping point short of
complete federal ownership of all
natural resources,
to the sea.”
foibles and prejudices; nor must we
permit the courts to arrogate to
themselves the. right to read into the
Constitution the hysterical fancies of
the shallow, scheming, wild-eyed
dreamers of the moment.
SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRONICLK
"Th* Paper Everybody Reads'*
birthright.
A. R. McELHANEY,
Attorney foi\ Plaintiff.
Greenwood, S. C.,
October 20, 1952.
TO THE DEFENDANT ABOVE Frequently I have called a.tention
NAMED - ! t0 tlie Truman purpose to nationalize
_. .u . .. the power business of the nation:
IAKL NOTICE that ttic summons tliat j he hopes to so many
n the above entitled action of which bUc r projects ^ evcnt ual-
,he foregoing tea copy, together with j thc ivate Companie s will be
‘ ‘ e complamt therem was filed in the c lled to sell out to thc G overn-
. Lee of the Clerk of Court of Com-: leaving the Government in
on fleas in the County of LaurensJ o , e control of the T business .
State of South Carolina, on the 18th, , ,
<ray of October, 1952, the object and —the control of power by
What is the F.E.P.C.?
^ __ I have contended for years that
a Republican form of! this is a mere piece of political clap-
government” it is concerned with the | trap and quakery for the sole pur-
• form", but much more with the es-lpose of winning votes. The F.E.P.C.
sence of liberty and general freedom : would be in complete violation of
which isf a part of every American's! the Constitution and of men’s basic
1 rights. It is not a matter for the
prayer of which is to obtain a decree! that is at stake, the power bus-
i iness is just, the first business that
! our Socialists wish to absorb and op-
• f divorce:
A. R. McELHANEY,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Greenwood, S. C.,
October 20, 1962.
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
> ate of South Carolina,
County of Laurens.
In Court of Common Pleas.
MARY P. JONES, Plaintiff,
vs.
HEN CLAYTON JONES, Defendant.
lerate, with a swarm of bureaucrats,
i The Socialists, who call themselves
j “planners”, hope to control banking,
nearly everythin* else. But they |
have made a great beginning with
the Government's building enormous
States or any other unit of govern
ment: it is utterly wrong.
Well, what is it? The F.E.P.C., in
effect, means that a business or in
dustry in employing labor must em
ploy all on equal terms, taking them
as they come, and without any right
of choice by the employer. If in any
community there should be White
men — White men from England,
Germany; Russia or Italy; Colored j
men, Chinese; Japanese, Hindus, Ko- f
reans and others — an employer
must employ them withbtit any right
of preference. Tell me, would you
like to be compelled to employ peo
ple on that basis?
Has the employer no rights? Cer-
i to choose his. “help” that a man has
to refuse to work. Just as it is a card
inal principle of law that no men
shall be compelled by a court to
. , , , , . . , court to work, so it is the clear, in-
I condemn the sale of anything by ( escapab i e corollary, that no man may
the Government to any preferred, be com^n^ t 0 employ anyone ex
dams and selling power to a special
group of consumers.
class. I have farming interests: farm
,, „ . . *•«■*•* . . - . . ! cept of his own motion. All the po-
It appearing to my satisfaction from, ir>g and what comes out of it is my | lit i cal twadd i c about Fcd eral or
:r>e affidavit of A. R. McElhaney, At-, principal interest and most of the State pEPC is a repudiation of
:orneyfdr the Flam tiff, that the above hard earnings of my life are invested | our American freedom It is a lot
t-ntitled action has been commenced in land; but I know something of of Communism which has come to
..nd is now pending, and that a cause the long fight of mankind through us from the long-haired ne’er-do-
' 1 action exists between the above ( the ages and I know something of ’
Lined parties as is fully set out in
wells of Europe, born in the garrets
Always in good taste...
Coca-Cola with your meals
e for the purpose of securing a di- j republics today. I know that we are
'ree and that the defendant is a trying to adopt a system of planning
. . oper and a necessary party to the which will ultimately mean the full
• id action; that the said plaintiff is flower of Socialism, or its devastat-
^hable, with due diligence, to make ing effects, on the greatest nation
service of the summons and complaint and thc greatest people ever to il>-
:n the said action upon the defendant lustrate the bounty of Jehovah in
:n this State. jail His merciful provision for hu-
NOW, THEREFORE, on motion of!inanity
PI R t T c f h * oc) ' - Attorney tor the 0ur - Government should treat all
am.. , i is . us a ^ e and aban don this scheme
ORDERED that the service of the of coddling us in order to magnify,
summons in said action upon the de- an d aggrandize a gigantic bureauc-
iendant be made by publication there- racy.
of in The Clinton Chronicle, a news- A 5^ cialism j auote a p rofes .
paper published in the Town of Clin- A , ° 1 qUOte a , ° ,
i ^ .. sot of Oxfordi G)n my recent trips
Covinty ot I-Winrcris # Sl&to of Sou.i^i . 04t
, V .i . 1 to the United States, I have found
( arolina, once a week for three weeks,
parties as is fully set out in, other countries and other govern-1 o{ starvation bv the self-idverticeH
:d complaint, the grounds of whichi me nts of Europe and the American| apostles of ^.called Liberalism.
All this agitation for F.E.P.C.
springs from the bid for the Colored
vote; it is typically a political treach
ery to American fundamental law, in
the weak disguise of a broad human
itarian idea.. You might just as well
compel every man to join a church:
many people would advocate that,
thinking it would be a good service.
But such people are wiser than the
Great Jehovah and very impatient
with his slow and gradual .processes
of redemption.
I feel honored to have a letter
from John W. Davis, the eminent
lawyer of New York, long regarded
as one of the most brilliant advo
cates appearing before the United
States Supreme Court, in which Mr.
Davis expresses his concurrence!
with my contention in Spectator
whkh newspaper is published in the
County where the action is brought.
That the first publication of the said
summons be made In the next issue
of the said paper after the date of
this order. That on or before the date
an uncomfortable feeling that some
thing is happening in American so
ciety which is familiar to me because
it happened in Great Britain.
There seem to be in American col
leges these days many teachers who
speak of the virtues of a centrally
of the first publication of said notice, , , ... ..
■•he plaintiff shall deposit la Post T? .*?! S ‘,T7.
* iffice a copy of the summons and
complaint securely enclosed in an
envelope and postage thereon duly
prepaid, addressed to the defendant
a? his last known address.
W. E. DUNLAP,
Clerk of Court for Laurens
County.
Laurens S. C*
October 13, 1952.
CITATION FOR LETTERS OF
ADMINISTRATION
The State of South Carolina,
County of Laurens.
By J. H. Wasson, Probate Judge:
Whereas, Agnes Bobo and Florence
Bobo made suit to me to grant them
Letters of Administration of the es
tate and effects of William R. Bobo
and Sallie Clifton Bobo. _J .
These are, therefore, to cite and ad
monish all and singular the Kindred
and Creditors of the said William R.
eyed enthusiasm and the almost
touching innocence regarding the
realities of economic life which were
so apparent in British universities
between the wars. There seems to
be a growing contempt for profit
making, a growing irritability with
| the pains of readjustment which a
system of free enterprise makes in-
! evitable as, in the course of progress
6-3c it continually bursts out of the skin
! to make a new form. And I begin
to ask myself: is it conceivable that
i the American people, having provid-
| ed so strong a proof of the virtues of
j a free economy, are gradually be
coming unaware of, or indifferent to,
the secrets of their own greatness?
Perhaps I am all wrong about this
—I profoundly hope so. It would be
tragic if Socialist ideas, like the
movements of men, were destined to
travel westward.”
We Americans, applying all that
! the Socialists have conjured out of
For just your family or for anybody you entertain,
vou can serve Coca-Cola as the meal-time bever-
1
4
,. r f ~ .
age and be sure it will always be welcome. People
like it right in its own sparkling bottle. And that
makes Coke so easy to serve. It’s easy to get, too,
by the carton or the case—at your favorite dealers.
lOTTlCD UNDet AUTHOWr OF THi coca-coia company »t
GREENWOOD COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO., Greenwood, S. C.
O »•*. THI COOUCOU COOP AMY
Make
“"““yT. g.«
CHEVROLET
mm.
Bobo and Sallie Clifton Bobo, deceas-; .l, • l ,, • a a
, u ’ ! their shallow imaginations, find our
' d, that thev be and appear before me /. . , . .
,,J, . .j u , Government plunging headlong, as!
n the Court of Probate to be held at 1 d a > >. . f „ , .
r r- . u r e The Reader s Digest tells us. I quote
Laurens Court House, Laurens, S. C., D . , M XT
i r. , ’ from The Readers Digest for No-'
•>n November 6, next, after publica- 1 ... ... ... ,
u • .u * i vember, an illuminating article by.
•;on hereof, at 10 o clock in the fore-
t non, to show cause, if any they have,
■ hy the said Administration should
itot be granted.—
Given under my hand this 22nd day
of October, A. D., 1952.
J. HEWLETTE WASSON,
6-2ew J. P. U C.
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Dr. W. W. Adams
VETERINARIAN
614 Musgrove Street
Clinton, S. C.
Phones:
Office 958
Residence 99I-W
Gray
Funeral Home
Clinton, S. C.
FI NERAL DIRECTORS
...and...
EMBALMERS
Phones 41 and 399-J
AMBULANCE SERVICE
L. RUSSELL GRAY and
V. PARKS ADAIR, Gen. M^rs.
Jack Kilpatrick of Richmond:
“Taken as a river, the Roanoke is
not much. It rises in the Blue Ridge*
Mountains, meanders sluggishly
across the flat tobacco country of
Virginia and North Carolina and fi
nally empties , into Albermarle
Sound 380 miles from its source. In
its lower reaches, it is navigated by
an occasional blatbottomed scow and
timber barge; above Palmyra, it is
a river made largely for catfish and
rowboats.
Yet this winter the Roanoke is
likely to become the most important
river in the country. If the extreme
theories advanced by the federal
government for the Roanoke River
are upheld by Congress and the
courts, nobody but the federal gov
ernment will ever again build a
power plant on any important stream
in the United States.
Shall the Virginia Electric & Pow
er Co., known locally as VEPCO, be
! granted a license to construct a hy-
drfoelectric dam at Roanoke Rapids,
N. C.? Yet the outcome is so vital
to the administration’s dream of na
tionalized power that for four years
the U. S. Department of the Interior
has sought to paralyze the company’s
plan. In one of the most bitter-dog-
in-the-manger actions ever prose
cuted, the Department has presented
the Government’s official position
that it would be better that the dam
never be built than for it to be built
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