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V i Page Four ^L THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Thursday, Oftober 15, 1953 &{}* (Elinton (ihruntrlr Established 1900 WILSON W. HARRIS, Editor and Publisher HARRY C. LAYTON, Assistant 1 Published Every Thursday By THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING COMPANY Subscription Rate (Payable In Advance): One Year $2.50 - Six Months $1.50 Entered as Second Class Mail Matter at the Post Office at Clinton, S. C., under Act ot 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 they are not of a defamatory nature. Anonymous communications will not be noticed. This paper is not responsible for the views or opinions cf its correspondents. ■, ' , MEMBER: SOUTH CAROLINA PRESS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION National Advertising Representative , AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION New York Chicago Detroit Philadelphia .1 , The cold-blooded woman in the Yam Pie Is ! case has a disgraceful record and ^ | is described by the law as a heavy CaOOd EQuIIQ i drinker and trouble-maker. Our [ courts no longer hold terror for From the Cajan coi^ntry right in ! criminals .who would destroy the the heart of Louisiana comes this law. There are too many * light mellow pie for your Sunday din- sentences, too many suspended sen-, ner. It is something new to most tences, too many lawbreakers who of us. have learned that by putting on a Yam Coconut Pia show of good behavior they can be (Makas 9-inch Pia) paroled after serving a short time; One and one-quarter sups mash- of their sentence. Many of our ed, cooked Louisiana yams, 3 eggs, most dangerous criminals are pa- beaten, M cup sugar, 1-2 teaspoon rolees back in trouble when they salt, 1 cup toasted, shredded coco- should be in the penitentiary, or nut, 1-2 cup chopped peanuts, 2 pay the supreme price as a protec-1 cups scalded milk, 1 9-inch unbak- . tion to the public. ed pie shell. The Missouri state probation and 1 Combine yams and eggs; beat ; parole bohrd cannot escape the well. Add sugar, salt, coconut and charge of contributing to the brutal peonuts; mix well. Gradually add cream, 11-2 tablespoons lemon juice. .< Combine sugar and water and heat, stirring only until sugar is dissolved. Boil until syrup spins a thread. Beat egg whites with salt until stiff. Pour syrup slowly over egg whites, beating continuously. Continue beating until cool. Mash well-drained peaches to make 1 cup pulp. Whip cream until stiff. Fold peach pulp, lemon juice and whipped cream into egg white mix ture. • Pour into refrigerator tray, place in freezing compartment with con trol set at lowest temperature and freeze until firm without stitring. Reset temperature control to nor mal. murder of this little boy. Supreme Court Convenes New Term Under Warren miuk and stir until all ingredients 1 are combined. Turn into unbaked pie shell and bake in Hot oven (450 degrees F.) 10 minutes; reduce-heat! to 325 degrees F. and bake 40 min-; utes, or until silver knife, inserted l LINTON S. C., THURSDAY. OCTOBER 15. 1953 An Old Argument ! Washington. — The Supreme in cent e r comes out clean. Court scheduled the first business Pa “ ait session of its 164th term Monday (Makes 1 quart) with action expected on movie cen sorship and dozens of other consti- 1 tutional issues. . peach With new Chief Justice Earl War-' Two-thirds cup granulated sugar, I 1-3 cutwater, 2 egg whites, fewi It', 5 to 6 canned cling lalves, 1-2 cup whipped ! lected more than a million dollars, . . . • , - i i n ransom. The kidnaping and kill- ren presiding, the court was due ^ .ij . • * . [tTy few of us Realize how much mg of Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr., in announce which of nearly 400 pend-j ilOmeCOming At -.niev we are forced to pay p tax- 1932 brought a wave of public out- in g appeals it will consider this i Dunmn'^ Creel _ Tha tnr nilorl lln " O VrfICCK too reason that so large a ragei anc j pr0 p er iy s0 anc j a new The petitions for review piled up part of the tax burden is indirect. j aw enac t e d bv Congress eivine th rt iduring the summer recess and the , , , ^ ■ Vh, ,. .c , thousand? of hidden tax- fbV LrlX,ion in kidnaping 8 have been busily sifting I Cr ^^' homing at Duncan's .vc absorb daily. < authorizing the death penalty. Thi them in private conferences *»» ^h*h2^n»i2^# The National Association of Man-. law proved effective as shown by Warren was sworn in last Monday. | fourth c linfla .. in thic Juu »;facton-rs has done seme research, the fact that the FBI has had only The court accepts only those cases, aching services at^ll a m At on the rubieet, using government one ransom kidnaping case since i which pose vital constitutional ques-1. ‘ statistics and other reliable data 1938. , Hions or which call for intcrprctaUonlS- i.h ^ il. re > what :t believes average Last week the nation was shock- of federal statutes. j f r i en( j s n f .l,, ..hiir-T m. tit t* i.tn , ;e> m insisted income brack- e d by one of the most sordid, kid- Appeals are before the court in t be day i ie or vis pay; napings in U. S. history—demand- two censorship cases. The movie in fer ihousand dollars—$1,093, or ing an unprecedented ransom of dustry is hoping for far-reaching de- 27 3 per cent of income; $7,500— S600.000 and got it. Only ( half the Visions that will cut down still mor -$2.7rti, or 36.9 per cent of income; high'-hahded money steal been the power of states to ban movies,] $10.000—S4.005. or 40 per cent of recovered. "Ifj- i n 1952 the court ruled in “Thel int ome. ~~ The man Hall who plotted the Miracle” case that censors may not All taxpayers should keep these■ kldna P in S and Has lived lav-jf orb id the showing of a film on 1 figures in mind. We often hear the 1S ^^ 4 and is a heavy drinker, had g roun d s it is sacrilegious, hoary old argument that only the as his accomplice a 41-year-old After announcing its decisions on well-to-do and the rich need really | ^° man * a hard-drinking divorcee, petitions for review, the court will worry about taxes. That is decep- t00 / c little lad from a pn- s t ar t hearing arguments in cases ac tive. The millions of small tax- vate school by a lying Plol- They ice p te{ j j ate j ast term Three schedul- payers are the workers who carry and killed and buried the lad, e( j s t ar ^ i a ^ e Tuesday are of great the real load. - and then set out through ne g°t ia - 1 interest to the sports world. They • — lions with the Childs- parents by test , he .. reserve clause ., m ;0 „ traats TliP rhpcf Annpnl IT and teleph0ne and collKtecl now in force between owners of I he Lhest Appeal th t™, nS ,T' E , DI u , baseball clubs and their players. The! Clintons second annual Com- With the FBI hot on their heels, „„„„„ , fi J munity Chest drive to raise $15,000; they have now quit lying and ad -jmem vinlat/- g fh^ chrr G arrang ®"l got a good start Tuesday morning mit they are guilty as they face the; . „ rman a a tl_ with a kick-off breakfast for the’death penalty. Such brutes must 1 ' t>ser e ” a de ” team workers. With the organiza- ! have a swift death as a warning to ; n _ 1°^ thei , r ^ aVQr wo , ud throw or ~; lion perfected and the community 1 ethers. For such a vicious crimed! ganized baseball into ehpos. t divided into busines and residential j stealing away a small boy and mur- * erm s most historic cases, sections, the workers immediately dermg him in cold blood and then dealmg with-racial segregation- in began- their work to put the cam-i collecting big ransom from his P UDllc schools, are set down for ar- paign over the top. wealthy parents, the gas chamber g um ent the week of Dep. 7. Residents of the community will is too good. In cases of this land, ot' asked to contribute liberally in if we would go back to the old pub- R|,ej n p 5 «- Wnmon'c k the hope of completing,the canvass lie hanging as a warning to other D H5 , ne55 WOiTien S VpIUD I short order. To ao this there horrid persons who may be tempted Giving Broadcasts st be a full cooperation and gen- to follow the same racket—would • 3 „ _ crous response on the part of our be a good idea. While there is a T he B&PW Huh hrnarfrastin* People. . heavy pall ot sorrow by the Amen- from WLBG twlce t £ s we ek m ob ; can people for the parents in 4 their S ervance of National Business great sorrow and grief, the law Women’s week. m should move swiftly, without any postponement or loopholes, to claim the lives of this despicable pair who had hoped the Federal Bureau of Investigation would fail to solve This morning the program was a discussion concerning club work by Miss Mary Ann Craig, Mrs. Nathan Brazil, Mis Marie Weir, Mrs. Ken neth Haselden and Miss Rebecca Speake.. Friday at 9:05 a. m., their broad cast will be ,a resume of the proj ects of the club, past and future, by Mrs. Dan Yarborough, club presi- The Community Chest plan com bines various‘drives into one, thus i liminating frequent drives and so- iM-itations by the usual group of men and women who are called up- : n to do the work. The Chest belongs to all of us and all of us benefit. Whether the one of the most cold-blooded crimes gift be large or small, we should 1 of our times. We should all, es- accept our share. There is ho com-! pecially parents of little children-r pulsion on anyone. Rather, it is a | thank God for Edgar Hoover and voluntary appeal to open our hearts: his organization, ever busy running •and pocketbooks and give to the; down criminals as a protection to | dent. L“eiTa‘ Johnson wiU sing Ked Feather organization. The society. I the club song funds raised help the welfare of | The man-and, woman now held zl the entire community. In a sense i n jail for killing the child, with therefore, a contribution is a busi- [ criminal records — should never ness investment which helps the have been at large. Hall had been community to progress. , convicted as a robber and of bad Each of us will be asked to do our character and sentenced to four fair share, and those who dodge the jj ears in the penitentiary. He was responsibility will make it harder released in April this year on pa- fcj those who do their part. In role, after serving just a little over short, there is a responsibility for 0 ne year. Officers had said he was eu: h of us to assume. ja very dangerous character and * - some day he would commit Truman Still Talking some awful crime. And yet he was Ex-President Harry Truman has NEW LIQUID DETERGENT turned loose by a kind-hearted, broken loose again, caling upon his weak-kneed board. Had justice fellow Democrats to set their own “ n d Punishment been sure, little. “house in order” to go forth “in , Bobby Greenlease would be alive the next election and save this na- Marshall, the man whom _ . or _ _ _ _ t»on from retrenchment and re - H a ^ Reused of having a part in QTQDI7Q trt , at - > j- the kidnaping, is another parolee ™ I** a Does he know another good joke u bo has been in trouble since 1934. i record ^n^^hqw^ tatfing^^up! g*"*""*"*""*"**********^^ Joanna, S. C. where his predecessor left off, he K has largely been responsible for S raising the national debt to an all-jg time high where if now stands at S $275,000,000,000. When Truman saw g the hand-writing and did not offer for re-election he passed this hot potato on to President Eisenhower and the American taxpayers. He] charges that despite the real per-1 sonal decency of President Eisen- J bower, the country is being sold out to “big business”, and only the, Democrats (so-called) can give the, government back to the people. He is :fhe ex-president, aided by his eronjes and high spenders, who took the government away from the people and now atempts to put the! blame on the new administration., | The country was “wrecked” while; be was in office as the record shows, ] and only partisans will accept his exaggerations. Truman wants to exercise active leadership. And that is a catastro phe we hope the American people can escape. Swift Death Deserved The most despicable crime that can be committed is the kidnaping of a little innocent, helpless child. Back in the thirties kidnaping for ransom was at its peak in this country when a number of profes sional gunmen set out to prey on rich men and ■ their children. In e is :: BUY NOW AT MILL PRICES! FIRST QUALITY FABRICS SALE THROUGH OCTOBER Rice Stix Drapery Materials Values from $2.50 to $4.50 Sale Prices 69c fo $1.69 COTTON PRINTS 3 Yds. for $1.00 CHAMBRAY 4 Yds. for $1.00 PLAIN PERCALE 4 Yds. for $1.00 BROADCLOTH T 75c Yd. DOTTED SWISS 59c Yd. FINE SATINS 98c Yd. NYLON HANDBAGS v $1.25 Each™. ERWIN SPORT DENIM 59c YdT^S RAYON DRAPERY LINING 19c Yd. UNBLEACHED DOMESTIC 19c Yd. PAJAMA MATERIAL 22c Yd. RAYON TAFFETA and SATIN 49c Yd. TABLE CLOTHS $1.25 to $1.59 NAPKINS 75c Dozen MILL1KEN WOOLENS AT LOW PRICES Textile Remnant Shop 1825 Wade Hampton Bird. (Directly Across fro GREENVILLE, S. C. , ,. (Directly Across from Bob Jones University) seven years during that period j j: gangsters through kidnap mgs col-, K W H W KIW IF YOU DON’T READ THE CHRONICLE YOU DONT GET THE NEWS ‘l ALL NEXT WEEK! The State Fair In Columbia - October-19-24 DAY AND NIGHT Agriculture. Cattle. Swine Shows — New $30,000 Cattle Barn — Marching Band Festival — Industrial and Edu cational Exhibits — Machine to Test Your Driving Skill. NEVER A DULL MOMENT AT THE 1953 STATE FAIR! Tuesday, FFA-JHA Day; Wednesday,” 4-H Club Day; Thursday, Football Day; Friday, School Day—All School Children and Teachers Absolutely Free—Not Even Tax —on School Dav. : TOPFLIGHT GRANDSTAND SHOW. LARGEST MIDWAY ON EARTH! THE BIGGEST OF THEM ALL! THE STATE FAIR ALL NEXT WEEK IN COLUMBIA Rose’s Manager’s Harvest Festival OF VALUES! THREE BIG DAYS — OCTOBER 15 -16 -17 mm CHOCOLATE COVERED PEANUTS Double Dipped Special! Reg. 60c Pound Pound CHOCOLATE DROPS Regular 29c Pound Special! Lb. Hallowe'en COSTUMES 6 Characters to Choose From Sizes $’ S-M-L 1.98 Pure SUk NECKERCHIEF Size 18x18 1 Ac Assorted Colors — Reg. 25c|jVaIue Infants' Training PANTS V Double Thickness LW 4 for $1.00 //Std* i Ladies’ Nylon Mm 1 * 1 HOSE a - 4 An Ne ™ Colors All Sizes — 1st Quality * Y 51 Gauge — 15 Denier jfy ^ 2 pairs $1.37 r, : CHINA TABLE LAMP C A Bar ^ a * n Vf Ml • S3.49 i DISH TOWELS Household Size — 25c Value 5 for 49c Girls' Bobby ^ SOCKS /x 4 Colors —V / Sizes 9 to 11 . y Special! 39c pair Ladies’ Rayon Brief PANTIES With Nylon Trim jh 2 Styles l _ Jw White, pink, blue, and maize 3 for $1.00 MEN’S WHITE HANDKERCHIEFS 6 for 39c 10c Value BABY DIAPERS Birdseye — Full Size Dozen $1.88 • -j HARVEST of VALUES Big Savings! J CLNTON’S I MOST POPULAR SHOPPING SPOT V C. w. Seal, Mgr.