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Old Fashk>ned Lit Gets « * The Word! '*■ » » • Conservation Bj It m OUlEUi Work Unit Conservatlwlai .WL STEWARliatttP WKK ardship Week, April SO throu- Aprtt Sft-MAjr ? y gh May 7. The theme i> «ig* “Three - Fourth^ of. Our nifleant because three-fourths Land’’ is the tfcanWr seiootwl of the land in the United for promotion of Soil Stew- States Is owned and managed si 19 si • '7 ACROSS 1 - Administer 6 - The human soul 11 • An image (var.) 12 - Australian bird 14 - Dash 15-imped*. 16 - Make amends 18 - Musical high . 19 - Of cell deetzuctlM 20 -' 43 . Ekocutleael Lattaa TecmtelS*/ II rrorSelrtae a-MmVwme 49 -ReeMre 31-limit, la law 5S-; 53 --j 34 - Certify 21 - " ftTma'* 25 - The "meal" of a bonk 27 - To rest 23 -SmmUh 30 - Slid 31 - Rleer- croeelng 33 - ... the mark! 34 • Raise with a jerk 37 - Shetfllke sleep- leg place * 39 • Minister'e dwelling 41 - Clairch oCflclal POWN 1 - cooked mereel of tew i 2,- AU right.(colloq.) 3- WMd3frol< 4- Prjsar'suntt Lfotiaau UJUJ . IU ,L'JJJ nr!ii i»»rrr, mi r'iSfeliihi OJn'hi^ IU !i! !U:*UKjLl Vi r ii L K CJUtJM Flilffl »13np ii a ra i-j LtJunr J oiiMUkJ: . 1LWJLJ IL'VitJ 1 uiuaj'l ilk'hi lhL*JMU UlUWLf S- Profit ■ S * Flay on words 7-Archalp the'" •- Pond outcry 9 • Robust 10 - Catch unawares 16-Deed 17 - Greek letter 22 • Maks proud 23 - Sorority 24 - Lease again 26 - Cooes It 29 - Terex ^31 • instigate 32 - Raved 35 - To compost 36 - Knight •••••• 37 - Garden ... 36 - To enclose 40 - To the shel- - tered side 42 - Greek god of love 45 - ... of the law 46 - Tellurium (chem.) 47 - Western nation (abb.). 50 - Roman 501 62 • Latin "and" Gmngft. Endorsas - v - Continuation of Cloofi-iip Campaign, Jhtt Menafcville Orange hsld its regular meeting last Thurs day with the members * en joying, a covered dish supper. a .4^ ■ by private citiiens. “‘Mom than the land itself is involved, in this ownership Pattern,” says Ryan F. Uiw- aon, chairman d the Laurens County Soil and Water Con servation District, With the land are ail the interrelated resources of timber, game, fish, wildlife, and much of the water, he continued. The meaning of this is clear. Individual citizdhs control most of the American coun tryside, landscape, and natur al resources. Here, on this privately - owned land, is where the biggest and .most difficult job of stewardship and conservation is being per formed and where, by necess ity, it will be performed in the future. Ministers and churches throughout the Laurens Coun ty Soil and Water Conserva tion District .are cooperating with the District Supervisors in observance of Soil Stew ardship Week. The Laurens Conservation District Supervisors are: M. Y. Blakely, W. P. Dickson, Ryan F. Lawson, J. W. Tins ley, and James D. Wasson. J. B. O’Dell is the Work Unit Conservationist assisting the Laurens District. " The Grange celebrated Na tional Grange week, April 16- 22, and announced their sup-, port for the continuation of. the clean-up and garbage dis posal project throughout Lau rens County which began last year with Mrs. Niles Clark of Waterloo as chairman. . Mrs.. Alex Simpson, lectur er, led an Interesting program on “Youth”. She read the “Red Letter Days of April’*. Mrs. P. H. Miller read an article, “A Fatal Event in the History of our Country Which Occurred in April”. This in cluded the battle of Ft. Sum ter. : The month of April has been proclaimed as “Youth Month”. Mrs.. Simpson was, assisted by Mrs. A. R. Gilmore in a candle lighting ceremony for youth. Mrs. Simpson read a poem “The Builder”. Furman Ott gave a reading, “Young People”. A poem, “The Kid Behind the Wheel” was read by A. R. Gilmore. Concluding the program were Douglas Wolf and A. J. Finley in a father and son humorous skit. Mrs. G. T. O'Dell Mrs. Maude O’Dell, 89, wid ow of G. T. O’Dell, died Wed nesday morning in a Lancas ter nursing home after a long illness. * . Native of Laurens County, daughter of the late Andrew Casper and Mary Moraih Ca son Mabry, she was the oldest . . • • • •* ...« *-•-> member of Mt. Gallagher Baptist Church. Surviving are three daugh ters, Mrs. Prances Giles of Lancaster Mrs. Rosa Cole man of Travelers Rest and Mrs. Alice Godfrey qf [Ware Shoals; two sons, T. B. O f Dell of California and W. B. Q’Dell of Ware Shoals; two brothers, Ernest and H. W. Matey of Greenwood; seven, grandchil dren and 10 great-grandchil dren. . y’l Funeral services were <opn- ducted Thursday at 3:30 p. m. at the Mti Gallagher Baptist Church by Rev. Nevelle Lam bert, Rev. J. C- Rice, and Rev. E. S. Jones. Burial Was in the church cemetery. Lucas Avjmmm Church, Laurens, States Revival . Lucas Avenue Baptist, of Laurens, will be engaged in revival services during the week of April 30 to May 7. Rev. Wayne Wiggins, Pastor of Georges Creek Baptist Church, Easley, will be the Visiting speaker. Music will be under the direction of A. D. Smith, min ister of music. Special mu sical selections will be pre sented at each service. Services, will be held each evening at 7:30 p.m. and Tue’sday through Thursday at 9:30 a. m. Rev. Alvin F. Boone, pas tor, and.the church extend a cordial welcome to the public. THE CHICKENS IN CUBA Around our shop we called her Gld Fashioned Lil ’Cause she sent her printing to Columbia and Greenville. Old Fash thought it was a pretty good bet That out-of-town printers could beat our own press. So we said, “Lil, honey, please get the word \ That sending printing out-of-town is simply- absurd. - We’ve bought the newest presses, Old Fashioned Lil, And our prices now are just as low as Columbia and Greenville. We’re not asking, Lil, for a very special break. All we’re asking, is for just an even shake. Our shop’s so efficient (and don’t you miss the bus!) That pretty soon those cities will send THEIR work to US.” When Lil got our prices she yelped, “Fiddledeedee,” From now on my money stays in Clinton, S. C. I may be old fashioned, but I’ll never forget That it’s cheaper at The Chronicle, you bet! Seriously, folks, we now DO have the new machinery and the increased volume which enable us to quote competitive prices wiiii printers any where. So why not get your printing done here at homp where you get faster service and an opportunity to check proofs fot accuracy. When you do business with The Chronicle you support a growing local industry which employs local Clinton people. V Recent hearings before the Senate InternaJ SecuritySub committee indicate that tbe So viet Union i* continuing to maintain Cuba M an armed camp, bristling with missiles which threaten tbe security of the United State* and,the peace of the world. The situation re calls the warnings which I issued early in January, 1962 and which the same Subcom mittee aired, months before the Administration reluctantly agreed that intelligence experts possessed “hard” evidence of a Soviet build-up. The delay in acknowledging Soviet penetration of this hem isphere brought on the critical confrontation between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. which has come to be known as the “mis sile crisis.” By allowing the So viet build-up in Cuba to contin ue to significant levels, unim peded, the Administration lost control of the situation, and brought the world to the brink of war. U.S. BACKED DOWN The result was that the U.S.‘ had to back down from the ex plosive tension. The U.S., as subsequent events have shown, agreed in effect to guarantee the sanctity of Cuba as a com munist bastion in the Carib bean. We did nothing to coun teract U ThartfTAubtle instruc tions to Castro to refuse inter national inspection of the mis sile sites. There has never been any convincing evidence that the Soviet missiles wera re moved by the Soviet Union. The Cuban confrontation must bo regarded as having ended in a Soviet tactical vic tory. In the past five years, the So viets have solidified that vic tory, and made gains. Accord ing to the testimony of sworn witnesses, Cuba today no longer exists as an independ ent nation. Castro remains as a fiery, but powerless, leader symljblizing tbe “revolution.” SOVIET CUBA But the experts testifying be fore the Subcommittee say that Cuba today is run by the Soviet - military commanders on the is land. The Soviets control the economy. They control the armed forces, and the fleets of so-called “fishing boats.” They train and export up to 10.000 guerrillas a yeai for the en couragement of subversion throughout Latin America. Cuba itself is a rocky for tress. Its natural cave forma tions have been widely inter connected with man-made tun nels and reinforced with con crete. One tunnel is reported to be large enough to transport 100-foW. missiles for 46 miles underground. Miss0s sites and defense installations art said to be located near the entrances to various tunnels. A “CHICKEN FARM" i Witnesses described hidden aircraft hangers, burrowed into the hillside. Ballistic milsiles of at least intermediate range are reported a* having been moved about under cover of darkness, with whole sections of cities systematically blacked out to obscure the movement. So phisticated radar and guidance systems are said to have blos somed at strategic locations. A witness told of one underground installation at Camagi^ey con cealed by a chicken farm. Yet the Administration, de luded by a spirit of “detente” with communism, refuses to take these reports seriously. In 1962, it will be recalled, the traditional “soft” but reliable techniques of Intelligence gath ering were rejected in favor of more difHcnlt photographic and electronic techniquea. Today these “hard” techniques are even more refined. The U.S. possesses the capability to check the testimony given to the Subcommittee. Old U-2 photographs can be compared with new photos made by satellite. It would be easy to discover the cave en trances reported by so many eye-witnesses from Cuba, since detailed locations have been cited New antennas and towers would be immediately obvious. The locations of roads and approaches to underground installations could be checked. UJS. radar detection systems could verify the statements about a new Soviet-built radar system in Cuba. Last month Secretary of State Dean Rusk announced that the U.S. has devices which can detect nuclear warheads in a space vehicle. The Depart ment of Defense should be asked if these sensitive devices have the capability to check on whether there are Soviet nu clear warheads stored In Cuba. But the problem is that the Administration does not want to believe in a Soviet build-up in Cuba. In 1962, Intelligence exports had to operate under an official policy guideline which contended that it was against the Soviets’ own inter est to Introduce mleidlgi In Cu ba. The same wishful thinking prevails today. At the meeting of Western hemisphere heads of State at Puma del Esta, Uruguay, the No. 1 problem, Cuba, kras not even on the agenda. Neverthe less, the time has come to find out whether that chicken farm in Ca maguey is filled with “mis sile crisis” chickens that have come hom* to roost 4 V fa > § :■ A • < v \ '*,• + . / Jl <*W IP* , ■ " it A popular priced tire with FULL 4 PIT NYLON CORD BODY! jm. 7 Yi. j - a \ V, - > ^ \ \ \ ' > > ^ \ > HOW J TRICES NEW Improved Performance Engineered to give you 10% more mileage and greater eafety at higher tpeeds than the former Safety Champion. r NEW ImprovedRide New precision wrap-around fread j provides better traction, easier handling, and a. smoother, quieter ride. e.N-is Tubeless r . 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