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0 Paee Four THE CLINTON CHRONICLE * r “tr Thursday, March 26, 1953 i • 1 _ . . . * (Ulintnn (H^rnnirU Established 1900 WILSON W. HARRIS, Editor and Publisher HARRY C. LAYTON, Assistant Published Every Thursday By THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING COMPANY Subscription Rate (Payable In Advance):' One Year S2.50 Six Months $1.50 Entered as Second Class Mail Matter at the Post Office at Clinton, S. C., under Act of Congress March 3, 1879. The Chronicle seeks the cooperation of its subscribers and readers— the publisher will at all times appreciate wise suggestions and kindly advice. The Chronicle will publish letters of general interest when •hey are not of a defamatory nature. Anonymous communications will not be noticed. This paper is not Responsible for the views or opinions of its correspondents. MEMBER: SOUTH CAROLINA PRESS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION / National Advertising Representative AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION New York Chicago Detroit Philadelphia ^LINTON, S. C., THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1953 ! co-workers and by groups in the; gent apt>eaI ^ made £or CO ntribu- rural areas and among the colored j tions since only a few days remain residents. They ask that anyone) in which to complete the raising who has not already made a dona- of funds w tion please do so by contacting the I following are captains Response to the annnual Re d | canvasser in their ward ^ Cross Fund Drive, which is being K ^ ga i n K ca 3 ed t0 i f3Ct ^ 4 1 ^ i t j * conducted throughout the month of th ^ blood banks would be possible Mrs. Edgar Taylor, Jr ; ward 3., Red Cross Drive Lagging In County _ for Attention | wards and rural areas : Ward 1, Miss Ruth Bailey; ward 2 March, has been slow in the city and county and will have to be j much better if the goal of $12,400 is reached, it was stated by Dr. *J. j W. McCullough of Laurens, cam- j paign chairman. Contributions to date were not announced. Hr McCullough pointed out that Jhe ''quota was made larger this | year in an effort to se9ure blood, banks for the county at ah esti mated cost of $2,610. If the quota is reached, the Red Cross blood- mobile will visit the county once a month and blood banks will be set up at hospitals in Laurens, j Clihton and Joanna, he said. Attention was called to the fact that the 1952 drive fell short of the goal and that consequently the chapter had to fall back on a re serve. left from the 1951 drive to; make ends meet. Demands have 1 only if the quota is met. An ur-1 Mrs. Kay Mills; ward 4, Mrs. Rob ert P. Hamer and Mrs. Carlisle Neely; ward 5. Mrs. Wm. Black- well and Mrs. W. C. Shealy; rural— Renno, Mrs. James M. Copeland; Hopewell,, Mrs. D. L. Monroe; Long Branch, Mrs. Joe Poole; Hurricane, Mrs. Mace Young; colored resi dents, Benjamin Thompson and Mattie Evans. TLtn Ffnrnnl Plnn ^ es and other during this : been greatly increased, because of i ne eternal nan period are $3 million. the Korean war, and the people of The death of our Lord Jesus was Santee-Cooper is taking a free , the county will have to respond ret simply an accident. From the 0n ^ 0 f the people of more generously this year than merely human viewpoint it was the South Carolina. The governor, the ever if we are to meet our responsi- ( imax of the hatred and deliberate ]ogis] a ture and other spokesmen bilities to the soldiers on the bat- planmpg of His enemies, vi’ho long £or t h e people can do them a great i tlefront and to their families, he before had decided that it was wise service by putting a bridle on San- said. The Red Cross is now also 1 hat He should die rather than that tee-Cooper and taking the saddle ' supplying globulin, serum taken they should lose their place of lead- o£ f t he people.—The News and from blood for treatment of polio < rship in the nation. They wanted Courier. / | victims. r.o rival, and did not like ’ to see The Clinton quota is -$4,635, multitudes following Him. They a p UDDe f Pnccpc (which is 38 per cent of the total did not like to see Him doing things ^ » uaica I countv goal, for needy people which they could The death yesterday of Klement | „ ori , r Jl0 t do. Gottwald, Moscow’s Gaulieter for ...New Classified Section wmmm %« But " also need to remember Czechoslovakia is rich m irony. On that this was the eternal plan bv \ he * asls sim P 1 y of . the , offl <? ia which man could’ be saved. Jesus death announcement it is plain that came and lived as a man. He Mr Gottwald found Mo. cow s at- showed bv His life how we should ^sphere a source of mortal dan- live. a perfect example. He show- S er - tak , m e the verted form in this cd far more than this, what God ca f e of pneumonia and pleurisy, is like. If we want to know what Thos <i vvho remember Gottwald s God is like, we see the love, sym- j ole in fusing, directly or indirect- pathy, helpfulness, power, sinless- 1 >’- the death of Jan Marasryk may ness, goodness, truth and other like Ie £a r d this as idling retribution. : ttnbute.s of Jesus Christ in the The canvasing is being done in Clinton by ward captains and their Birth Announcements EDWARDS Mr .and Mrs. V. E. Edwards an- ; nounce the birth of a son, Carl Leon,! March 21 at Hays hospital. Mrs. Ed-; I wards is the former Miss Minnie t Ironical, too, is the fact that Got*-, Gladys Black. •esh. That was one reason for the wald died 50 s(>0 " aft , e /^ e h ? d sen i fe of Christ as a man among men, to tbeir deaths Rudolf Slansky and that people who saw Him might see i he Father. But the greatest others of his closest collaborators in the coup of February, 1948. Inevitably the question will arise i |— - WALKER j Mr. and Mrs. P. L. Walker, of Greenwood, announce the birth of a daughter March 23, at Blalock clinic. Mrs. Walker was formerly Miss Leila! yonr next TELEPHONE DIRECTORY 'AS reason for be- ..-v • coming a mah was to die for us 1 . He whether ihis puppet actually GEDEIST died of natural causes. True, it iS| „ i u u j u i ! Mr. and Mrs. Howard S known he. .had-beerv m -poor-hea+th-^— ; v—r -tt-—; n Jr-, announce the birth c must have a human soul and a hu- > die. Thg-hu- tnan soul lives -forever, as also in a higher sense does the eternal Spirit. In death the human soul would be separated from its body, and for a time at least, the Son for some time, and the illnesses said to- have-eQuoeA-hifr-cteainia—at Gedeist, j can a son, Howard Stafford 3rd, at Hays' hos- 1 pifimsfr"MaTTh. Mb§r~Gedgist Ts be most deadly for a man pSst , he forn)er Miss ' Sadie Mar i en0 prime who has Gottwald s re- c; rnnvin ly bad medical history. But k EVANS should be separated from the Fath-' ^ he [ re< - world—and the people of Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Evans, of c-r by the cloud of our sins. Jesus, Czechoslovakia themselves* can' j oannat announce the birth of a son, the Son of God, was decreed to be bardly ^o remember ^bat fireat j ani6s on March 24, at Hays the Saviour of man. Through the oropbasis had been placed recently death of Jesus the penalty for sin u P on nodical murder. At the trial is paid in full and man is released of Slansky he was made to confess from its bondage. This is the ,hat he had collaborated with a atonement. This was the purpose doctor in trying to shorten Gott- for which He came, to bring be-! wald ’ s lif ®- ^ January 13 Mos- lievers once again into fellowship cow announced that the highest with God. The death of Jesus was Kremlin physicians had murdered a voluntary act, a gracious work for * w0 Politburo members and at- hospital. Mrs. Evans is the former Miss Frances Marjorie O’Dell. WE DO ALL KINDS OF PRINTING —EXCEPT BAD CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. The new telephone directory now be- numbers of business subscribers, alpha- ing prepared will contain a ’Yellow Jbelically-arranged under headings gen- erally descriptive of their business, pro fession, or the commodity or service *' they sell. Business telephone subscribers de siring representation may have it for a nominal cost. Call the Business Office for details.—Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company. Page’ section just like directories in the large metropolitan cities. — — You will find the Yellow Pages a quick, easy wayto find who buys, sells, rents or repairs—a convenient source of buying information on products or services you need. This section will list the names, addresses and telephone THEUE’S NO SHOPPINC GUIDE LIKE THE CLASSIFIED! us who believe. He is due our un dying devotion and gratitude. —Reprinted from The Associate Reformed Presbyterian. Put a Bridle On Santee-Cooper Perhaps it is only a straw in the wind, but even straws are welcome. tempted to murged the highest So viet military leaders. In any case Gottwald’s death so soon after- Stalin’s demise and so j soon after his return from Moscow seemsfitting punishment from his tory for his crimes. In the halcyon days immediately after World War II he led the Communist party of Czechoslovakia in its deceptive campaign to convince that coun We are talking about a meeting of ; the -advisory board - of Santee- f P e .°P le . that could Cooper which Gov. Byrnes ralled , ^ ‘r^d to work with others for last Friday. This long-dormant board, this the good of the nation as a whole. Hypocritically he collaborated with Benes and Masaryk and helped fancy bit of window-dressing has propagate the notlon that there escaped public notice. The gov-! could be a Cze choslovak road to so- * rnoi has sensibly suggested that it c i a ij sm which need not be that of stuit to function or be abolished. . tbe Soviet Union nor traversed un- On this slender straw we hang a der dom ination. He went hope for revival of a movement to so far even as to support c^hc- um the- lights on Santee-Cooper. Slovakia’s participation in the Mar in its dark corners interesting facts dark corners interesting facts lie hidden. shall Plan, until Moscow’s veto caused him to reverse himself. But Power companies must lead an then in February, 1948, when it be- open life. Their affairs are clpsely : came plain that the new national regulated by the South Caroliffa | election in the offing would mate rially reduce Communist power in the Government, he and Slansky led the coup which brought death not only to the country’s independ ence, but to Benes, Masaryk and thousands of other lovers of free dom. Like us of the free world, the people of Czechoslovakia have no reason to weep at this death of a tyrant’s willing tool. Unfortun ately, however, Gottwald’s passing no more means the end of Com munist enslavement in Prague than did Stalin’s death end the bondage in Moscow. The new rulers in the Kremlin have an abundance of am bitious would-be Gaulieten from whom to select their new chief puppet in Czechoslovakia. The competition between these ambit ious figures may well even worsen the present oppression. This possibility is not heartening; yet there is a symbolic import to this latest death which can help fortify our optimism for the future. Just as Stalin and Gottwald have proved more mortals who must re turn to the dust fom whence they came so, too, totalitarianism cannot last forver and must some .day crumple.—The New York Times. Public Service Commission. Santee- Cooper has no such check rein. It js a law unto itself. '« The advisory board which Gov. Byrnes 'called on to function has never, so far as we know, function ed. It is composed of state execu tive officers. The Legislature, too, has allowed Santee to run itself. Its general manage^ is a powerful member of the Legislature. -Do state officials know what con tracts and commitments Santee- Cooper has made? Do they know whether Santee is a department of state government or an indepen dent public corporation? Does any body know? Who authorized Santee-Cooper to borrow $14 million from Wall Street to build a steam plant? Who makes its rates and supervises its services? These and other business of what is supposed to be a public agency are carried on in strict pri vacy. The privately owned public utilities are not allowed privacy. The words “public” and “private” have got so mixed up that they no longer make sense. Santee-Cooper is almost the private property of its management—much more free ly operated than the privately fi nanced power companies. If Santee-Cooper had been a pri vate company of equal capitaliza tion, it would have paid taxes in the years of its operation totaling $25 million to state, • county and federal treasuries. Actually its tax- Say— ‘T SAW IT IN THE CHRONICLE’ Thank Yon WE DO ALL KINDS OF PRINTING —EXCEPT RAD . CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. 4 powerful reasons why you get more of what you want.. more engine power! Advanced Loadmaster engine- standard equipment on 5000 and’ ► 6000 Series heavy-duty and for ward-control models, optional on 4000 Series heavy-duty trucks. more braking power! In 1953, all Chevrolet trucks up to 4000 Series heavy-duty models have “Torque-Action” brakes. Series 4000 and above use extra- large ‘Torque-Action” brakes in front, “Twin-Action” type in rear. more staying power! Now, heavier, stronger, more du rable frames increase rigidity, add to ruggedness and give more stamina than ever to all 1953 Chevrolet trucks. more economy! The new stamina of Chevrolet trucks, plus extra gasoline econ- • omy in heavy-duty models with improved Loadmaster engine, re duces hauling costs per ton-mile. CHEVROLET (Continuation of standard equipment and trim illustrated is dependent on availability of material.) COES CHEVROLET CO. Inc West Main Stmt CBatoa, 8. C,