The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, September 03, 1959, Image 9
J
Thuraday^September .1. 1959
THE CLINTON CHRONICLE
URMOCD
RLE
SO-CALLED CIVIL RIGHTS
The radical drive to ram another
so-called civil rights bill through the
Senate will probably pick up extra
steam this week with the ^congres
sional adjournment date now coming
into focus. Unless the radicals win
approval of a bill extending the life
of the Civil Rights Commission it
will expire on November 9, 1959.
There, is a very strong possibility,
however, that it will be ruled out of
existence earlier by the courts be-
, cause it is unconstitutional. I told
the Senate in my 1957 extended
address against the so-called civil
rights bill that the integrationists
would be back in 1959 trying to keep
alive the Commission and agitating
for more anti-South legislation. I also
told the Senate that the 1A57 bill was
unconstitutional. Since that time a
federal judge has held the com
mission’s rule of procedure and its
actions thereunder to be constitu
tional. A three-judge panel will rule
soon on the constitutionality of the
1957 act which established the com
mission. If this case finally finds its
way to the U. S. Supreme Court, the
court will be forced to declare the
Commission’s rules of procedure to
be unconstitutional, if the court ad-
THANK YOU
On September 3, my eighty-third
birthday, I want to thank all friends
and relatives who have been so
'sweet to me since I have been a
‘shut-in.” Every card, letter, gift
and visit is sincerely appreciated.
Love to each of you.
—MARY SCOTT DUNCAN,
(Mrs. W. J.)
Rest Haven.
Spartanburg, S. C.
heres anywhere near closely to its
recent decisions on “due process”
and “individual rights” in the Com
munist cases.
I intend to vigorously oppose all
so-called civil rights proposals which
are designed to impose the will of the
do-gooders and the integrationists on
the people of the South. The people
of South Carolina did not send me to
the U. S. Senate to permit northern
politicians to remold the South to
conform to an integrationist philoso- i 0 f the eligible land,
phy which the people from the North
60 Conservotion
Reserve Sign Up
Farmers who wish to put cropland
in the Soil Bank's 1960 Conservation
Reserve must ask the county ASC
committee to set a basic annual rate
j per acre for the offered land, Hugh
: B Workman, chairman, Laurens
| C o u n t y Agricultural Stabilization
and Conservation Committee, said
today The period for filing such re
quests is from August 24 through
September 10. No such requests will
be accepted after September 10.
.In setting the basic annual per
acre rate for land offered, the county
committee will take into considera
tion the productivity of the land and
the rate will be limited to the local
fair rental value of the land based on
the crops harvested from it during
the past five years. When all the el
igible crop land on the farm is offer
ed for the Conservation Reserve,
the rate will generally be set 10%
higher than the rate for only part
TO CONDUCT REVIVAL
of legislative favoritism One can
only hope that il the House of Rep
resentatives should pass matching
legislation that the President will
veto H.
The public should understand that
it is wrong in principle to confer on
peacetime soldiers the benefits given
veterans of shooting wars! There is
no reason why public funds should
be spent to provide educational and
vocational training, plus various
loan guarantees for purchases of
property, for those young men who
have simply discharged their obli
gation to their country.
The 19-year-old youth who spends
a year or two in one of the services
isn't undergoing any suffering or fi
nancial loss. The Selective Service
System has worked out plans so that
young men can perform their mil
itary service with a minimum of in
convenience. Indeed many thousands
QfUommbuU
Office Hour? 9-5:30
200 South Brood St.
PHONE 058
DR. FRED E. HOLCOMBE
and other areas are not willing to
accept for themselves.
NORTHERN SEGREGATION
Up North they have a segregation
system which is much different from
that which we have in the South.
Ours is an honest above-board and
definite system which is regulated
by law as well as custom. The north
ern segregation system is founded
on hypocrisy and deceit, and funda
mentally on geographical separation
which is either total or as near total
as the Northern ingenuity can make
it in the face of mounting Negro
immigration. The prevailing pattern
in the north is segregation by flight.
The Negro is told that he is equal,
that he has all his rights, and that
he will not be discriminated against;
then he is simply avoided. The
whites flee to the suburbs, and
through the housing pattern, a de
facto segregation is maintained, ex
cept in a few unfortunate fringe
areas which degenerate into centers
of racial tension and crime and
whose whites leave just as soon as
they can accumulate sufficient
REV. ALTON BROWN
Revival services will begin Sep-j of young men profit immensely from
tember 4 at the Lydia Mill Pente^ military service. As the recruiters
costal Holiness Church. Services will | say, “they see the world,” thereby
be conducted nightly at 7:30 p. m. gaining an education worth large
After the basic rate has been de- 7^j e Rev Alton Brown, general evan- sums In addition, they attend ser-
termined, the farmer may apply for gelist of the Pentecostal Holiness vice schools in which they learn sub-
ate. but it will net he *** than S360
million a year.
The United States it hard preaa- j
ed. in this inflationary period, to
find the funds to maintain adequate
military defeases The service* say
they need more for ground divisions,
ships, planes, and missiles If this is i
true, then money should be spent
for these purposes, not for special
privileges to ex-servicemen.
There is yet another aspect to this
matter Ceratinly. it is no. favor to
youth to add to the firqs of inflation
and increase the public debt of the
United Staets, which is what the pro
posed law would do
If the country is to keep faith with
its youth, thel present older, genera
tion must make every effort to keep
the country out of bankruptcy What
youth will need in the years ahead
are not new burdensome public
a contract at any figure below the Church, will be the speaker
basic rate established for the land
offered in the request for rates. If
necessary, a priority system will be
used to determine which offers are
accepted.
Contracts under the Conservation
Reserve may run for as long as 10
years. During the time of the con
tract, the farmer will receive an an
nual rental payment on the reserved
Unfair To
American Youth
By THURMAN SENSING
Executive Vice President
Southern States Industrial Council
No patriotic American wants to
jects such as electronics which are
valuable to them, in civilian life.
The facts are clear: If anyone
owes anythng. it is the young men
who owe something to their country
—not the country to its military age
youths.
Even if these facts were not estab
lished, other sound reasons exist
: why peacetime servicemen should
land for the life of the contract and . ~ not receive special privileges. No
. ... ne contract, ann deny help to his fellow countrymen . ... ...
he will receive cost-sharing help ,n | who hav 'been injured in the defense one can be sure of ,he ultimate cost
establishing an approved conserva- of countr> , in t i me 0 f war soi. of the program passed by the Sen-
tion practice. w v diers, sailors and airmen wii© shed!
or auren ^ bounty, the basic their fighting this country’s
ptr acre ra e of payment under the enemies are properly aided by vet-
960 Conservation Reserve is $12.50. erans . legislation . B ut this should
Uie same as under the 1959 program. not ^ the cas€ with peacetime ser-
e en a i\e acreage goal for the vicemen who have never heard a
state is 88,000 acres, subject to con- ^ ot fired i„ ang e r ,
sideration and recommendation by
Yet the U. S Senate voted recent
ly to confer a wide range of educa
tional benefits on these servicemen.
Senate Bill 1138. an extension of the
so-called GI bill of rights, was pass
ed by a vote of 57 to 31. Tile House
has not yet approved a similar bill,
and the White House has expressed
disapproval
It u with disapproval that the en-
ATHLETE S FOOT GERM
HOW TO KILL IT.
IN 3 DAYS, If m« delighted with
the State ASC Commtitee
As in former years, there will be
two types of payments under the
program—a cost-share payment for
carrying out a conservation practice
on the reserved land and annual
funds By and large, the northern rental payments during the 3- to 10-
system is eminently successful. It y ear of /he contract Land
may be ruthless.t it may be hypo- bought since December 31, 1956. is
critical and deceitful; but it works. 501 eligible for a contract, and land
The drive for what they term *hich was not farmed in 1958 and l| re country .should view this piece
“civil rights” legislation has a duai 1958 * s not eligible for a contract
motivation on the part o* th» inte
grationists: first, there is the po- Mrs. Roy Garre ft
litical factor which offers as a re- Gray Court—Mrs. Lydia Riddle STRONG. UMUatdrvtog T4-L m
ward the powerful minority bloc Garrett, 83. wife of Ray Z Garrett oM. >««r «8r bwrk n aa> drag sure,
votes which can awing a Mate or and a lifelong resident of the War Verted shia %uwi
local election or tip the scales in a nor Creek community. dWd sudden!) t******
presidential election by throwing the at her home early Friday morning MMrrrodnoR iw-g»r»
large electoral vote of a key state She was n daughter of the late He seetbiac preSretioa TODAY m
like New York to the more radical Allen and Maggie Lance Riddle, and McGee's. tr-frA
candidate, and secondly, there is the was a lifelong member of Warrior |1N s. sf m>M> NT
prewar and reconstruction de Creek Baptist Church r.s. that aa the am day
at » • ciaeh a ■
nay wtfl apply
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
Clinton-Joanna Highway
l.aurcn> County's Finest
l^st Times Tonite
2—BIG HITS—2
-NECKING PARTY'
—Also—
-RECKLESS GIRLS''
1 ridny-Saturday
Double Feature
Fiot Run Showini’
spending programs hut an economy
that is sound
.'It woold he entirely false con
cern for youth to add $500 million
to the anual cost of running the
government of the United States
Those who feel the greatest concern
for the rising generation will insist
that inflationary programs which
undermine national solvency be re
jected The extension of the GI bill
of rights for peacetime servitemen
should be defeated in the House, of
Representatives this session
Invalid Gets Self
And Grondchidren
»
From Burning House
John (' Young a partial invalid
who walks with a cane, managed to
get him.-e.f and his :wo grandchil-
1
dren'out of their hunting home here
Saturday
The h©u*e, valued at $2 6M. and
all the Youngs’ posse^A^ou* were
destroyed. The Youngs are Negroes
who occupied a house in the Lydia
Mill area
the
The cause nl
learned
The young'll
of ’Young’s son
son’s wufe
The parent' ai^o lived in the house,
but were away at the time
fire was not
are. the children
tohn Jr ,«»nd the
»-
Dr. Felder Smith
OPTOMf TRIST
Phene 704
Lourens, S C.
Live Free A Month
ON P1GGLY WIGGLY
Register All During September. Drawing Will Be Held
* September 30 — 12 Noon
DAN YARBOROUGH
PHOTOGRAPHER
I ulrkit — Commercial — We^dl***
efl and tUtfe* Marta Ow
• aaalu «f
CWrk
Swrmmg are owe tow
at
Mrs J P Heiam* aad Mr*
if
•r». LitdM Owiag* at
at
slaters, Mrs Lawn
Mrs Daisy Simpaaa. bath af
Mrs Ray McDowell at Green
'■file; aad Mrs Zeb Mason at
GamesviQc. Ga.; three grandchil
dren. and one great-grandchild
Funeral services were conducted
at New Prospect Baptist Church
FINAL SETTLEMENT
Take notice that on the 3Pth day
of September, 1998. we will reader
a final account at our acts and do
ings as Administrators of the estate
of Reese Logan Holland in the office
There Are T»» Kind*
Of Sex ...
One Coenew Wilk Lave!
The Otker?
'A ednewday -Thunday
Only Once to a Generation
.. . Are There .Men
Like Thewe
fe.
NOTICE!
Household Furnishings, Appliances and 1956
Ford will be sold at auction to the highest bidder on
Friday morning, September 4, at 10 A. M. at my
home. 1003 Elizabeth Street.
Mrs. Lillian Wright
twh.v . 7 ™ ' ‘ v. of the Judge of Probate of Laurens
Tuesday at 5:00 p. m. bv the Rev j ..
. m .v v» - V County at 4:00 p. m , and on the
A H. Coppedge and the Rev. F. D _, ni ' . . ...
Moore. Burial was in Forest Lawn
cemetry.
IN MEMORIAM
same day will apply for a final dis
charge from our trust as Adminis
trators.
Any person indebted to said es-
In sad but loving memory of our fate is notified and required to make
dear son and brother. Pvt. Marion payment on or before that date; and
Bragg, 18 years of age, of the 4th all persons having claims against
Division, 22nd Infantry, who was said estate will present them on or
killed August 30, 1944. . | before said (ftte, duly proven, or
The month of August again is here ' be forever barred.
To us the saddest month of all the T. CLARK HOLLAND
the year, AGNES M. HOLLAND,
For it was on the thirtieth day our Administrators
Dear loved one passed away. August 13, 1959 4C-S-10
the
Young Lions
—^ Cl****'* 1
Always A Color Cartoon
NEED QUICK CASH FOR
BACK TO SCHOOL
CLOTHING • BOOKS • Sl’PPLIES • TITTlON
SEt V> TODAY LOANS »» l'»
MOORE'S
CITOEN8 LOAN A FINANCE CO.
H. Brmd IW# 147
He left us with a cheery smile
And promised to return;
He laughed the while we worried
And showed such great concern.
But death has stilled his laughter,
His smile no more we’ll see,
So through the year* we’ll cherish
His sacred memory.
To think we could not say goodbye
Will always bring regret
Only a few taw you suffer,
Only a few saw raw die.
FINAL SETTLEMENT
Take notice that on the 5th day of
October, 1969, I will render a final
account of my acts and doings as
Executor of the estate of Janie L.
Sloan in the office of the Judge of
Probate of Laure - Caunty, at 10
o’clock a. m , and on the same day
wil apply for a final discharge from
my trust as Executor.
Any pertoa indebted to said no
tate is notified and required to make
pe><
aQ
tart estate wti)
r aoA*
WE PAY
5%
Assets $6,000,000.00
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ICE MILI
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^ Vj Gal
39c
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0LE0 29c!
t.OKlxiN POTATO
STICKS
1 ainre t an
19c
WESSON Oft HR AFT
OIL
ttiee t* ■ K- tii>»
Quart
39c
SALAD DRESSING
LIMIT Otoe With •$*• «r Mae* Order
39c
< C. Ht»>H SMALL
EGGS 4»~$1
.00
FENDER GREEN
BEANS »
10c
SCNKIST Due*
LEMONS 29c
FRESH CHICKEN
BACKS
u>; 10c
FRESH WHOLE .
FRYERS “25c
LIT I P Lb.
Medium Aged
CHEESE
* 39c