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JHURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1850,
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1 MILK BRIGADE—A Pittsburgh district storekeeper who defied striking milkmen to import milk
{"for children had his store window broken during the night. Neighbors pitched in with SIOO for a
| mew window and women volunteers, armed with clubs and baseball bats, stood guard outside while
the storekeener dispensed his milk. .
JOHNSTON VS. THURMOND:
WHO DISLIKES TRUMAN MOST?
That's The Burning Question In
South Carolina Race For Senate
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
NEA Staff Correspondent
SUMTER, 8. C.—(NEA)—In a
green square outside the court
house, a few Negroes are lazing
under ‘a warm sun. It's June,
promary time, and ‘through loud
speakers they can hear the sonor
ous tones of a candidate, seeking
office.
The voice belongs to Sen. Olin
D. Johnston, 53-year-old Spar-~
tanburg lawyer stumping for a
second term, He’s inside, speak
ing to a few hundred Sumter folk
in the courtroom upstairs.
On the wall back of the judge’s
bench is a lighted, full-length por=-
trait of Gen. Thomas Sumter,
southern hero of the American
Revolution. As county courtrooms
go this is a handsome one, with
soft green walls and acoustical
ceiling. /
Shirtsleeved oldsters predomi
nate in the audience. There’s a
scattering of women. in cotton
dresses, and over on one side a
group of Negroes bunched to
gether. Both jury boxes are filled
with spectators.
* * %
Seated behind Johnston is his
primary opponent, Gov. J. Strom
Thurmond, who gained fame in
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1948 as the Dixiecrats’ choice for
President. Following South Car
olina’'s 55-year-old custom, the
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GOV. J. STROM THURMOND:
In the picture, a toast.
two are speaking from the same
platforms all over the state.
To South Carolina, President
Truman’s civil rights program is
poison. State’s rights and con
tinued racial segregation are the
great cry. So this is a battle be
tween two Democrats who are
each bent on proving their dis
taste for Mr. Truman is greatest.
Johnston, a bulky man with a
heavy face and a shock of wavy,
unruly hair, punches away at the
President:
“T fought his nomination on the
Democratic ticket (1948) more
than any man in South Carolina.
Yes, I did meet his train in Wash
ington after the election, but it
was because I honor the Presi
dent’s office, whether I honor
Harry Truman or not.
“We must stay in the Demo
cratic party to protect the South
and get what we need. I'm thank
ful for the party and what it has
done for the South. It's bigger
than that little man in the White
House and it’ll be here long after
he has gene.”
% % »
Swinging his arms in big arcs,
Johnston proudly tells how he
snubbed the President early in
1948. “I reserved a front table at
the Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner
in Washington, and then left it
vacant to advertise my displeas
ure over his civil rights propos
als.”
Though it's open season on Mr.
Truman, Johnston sticks to his re
solve not to lambast Thurmond.
He gears his talk especially low
here, for he’s decided beforehand
that Sumter just isn’t a “hollerin’
\)& DOG TALES
‘ z Decisions._
wliwsy'rom VARLEY s ki
AN oft-told story is of the farm
er's new hired man who turned
out to be a phenomenal worker.
He was up before the farmer in
the morning, worked twice as hard
all day, and kept going late at
{ night. Although the man seemed
! perfectly happy, the farmer felt,
« after a few weeks of this, that he
! was entitled to a little let-down and
f gave him the easy job of sorting
| the apples—the large apples in one
{ barrel, the small ones in &another.
‘ Whereupon, after only a few
hours’ work, the hired man came
| to the tarmer and asked to be paid
I off. When the farmer pleaded with
' him to stay, he finally agreed with
{ the understanding that there was
{ to be no more apple sorting. “I
{ don’t mind bard work,” he saig,
} “it’s making those decisions that
i kills me.”
{ Clarence Harbison, nationally
{ known as & ‘“dog psychologist”,
i gays that dogs &g a group are much
! like the hired man, They are per
! fectly happy doing what they are
told to do, but making decisions
presents a strain on their ‘'imited
. mental facilities that is unfair to
- them, 2 |
The question of whether a visitor
fs friend or intruder, for instance,
fs one of the most common causes
of distress. Dogs, in general, have
a natural finstinct for protecting
their masters’ homes. Even the
friendliest of dogs may bite if he
gets the idea that protectiom is
needed. So the way to avoid un
county.”
Besides, it's said to be Thur
mond territory. The senator’s re
ception seems to bear that out:
it’s polite but cool. (Later on at
nearby Camden he draws a con
siderably warmer response.)
All this while Thurmond has sat
impassive. Once he fished out a
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SEN. OLIN D. JOHNSTON: In
the glasses, water.
small notebook and scribbled in it
for a moment or two; otherwise
he hardly seemed to hear his op
ponent, But now it's his turn.
» ¥ 0
. The 48-year-old governor is
compactly built, with a broad
face, large, bony nose, high fore
head and straight, thinning, sandy
haif., He begins: :
“I'm not slinging mud in this
campaign. If there’s any mud in
the senator’s record, he put it
there. If it’s a sorry record, he
made it.”
He talks in a twangy, matter-of
fact tone as he runs over his rec
ord as governor. Listening close
ly but showing no reaction, John=
ston sits against the side wall with
his hands folded across his stom
ach,
“In 1948 the senator said a lot
of awful things about Mr. Tru
man,” says Thurmond. “But then
he supported him and raised
money for him. When the Presi
dent returned to Washington after
the election, my opponent couldn’t
wait to greet him. He rushed down
te the station, elbowed his way
through the crowd and knocked
over two or three admirals to get
to the train and shake Harry Tru
man’s hand.”
® % =
Gradually Thurmond steps up
the high voltage. He presses
against the microphone, flexing
his knees and then rising to his
tiptoes. He's ready now for his
latest bombshell. He holds up a
glossy print and shouts:
“Here’s a picture of the sena
‘tor. He'’s drinking a toast to Sena
tor McGrath on the occasion of his
departure to become attorney gen
eral. McGrath introduced the civil
pleasant incidents, and avoid turn.
ing your dog into a neurotic, is to
have a system that makes it per
fectly clear to him when, if ever,
he is to act as protector.
Some dogs are taught, for ex
ample, that anyone who approaches
by the front walk is a friend. Others
are spared the necessity of making
@ decision by being kept on a run
or in pens.
A practice that most dog han.
dlers consider just plain silly is
giving a puppy an old shoe to chew,
Once this is dome, the dog i 3 in
the position of having to decide,
with every shoe, all the rest of his
life, whether this one is to be
chewed, or not to be chewed. He
will probably learn in time (though
some pups never do), but what a
needless strain to place on the poor
(dog’s mentality. How much easier
to teach him that no shoes should
)ever be chewed, just as no hats and
no chairs and no rugs should be
chewed.
~ Equally bad, and even more com
mon, {8 the practice of allowing a
dog to jump up on members of the
family and friends. Or even worse,
letting him jump up on family or
friends when they are wearing old
clothes,
Almost no dog is capable of de
clding which of the callers at a
home he can safely jump up on
and which he cannot. To train a
dog to distinguish between dunga
rees and evening tlothes would be
a job for a professional trainer
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
rights bills in the Senate. He's the
President’s civil rights hatchet
man, e AT
“My opponent knew all this, yet
here he is drinking a'toast. And
please nole he's standing closer to
MecGrath than the other three sen
ators, Is this what he means
when he advises fighting our bat
tles within the party?”
(Afterwards Johnston privately
insists he doesn't drink, that all
the senators in the picture were
holding water glasses, that the
“toast” was just a photographer’s
idea, But he holds his fire pub
licly.)
® * %
There's still more from Thur
mond:
“Mr, Truman isn’t worthy to be
President. It’s his object ta force
integration of the races. The sena~-
tor now calls him ‘that little man’
but he’s trying to be one kind of
Democrat in Washington and an-
. ° i : .
- Food Values For A Housewife ey
W 2 .. With A Family To Feed! gullligliiNy
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trouble at your A&P? 2\ 4 L NS 7/ %/ STYLR
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time to give you the Mind of \\:' y ) Star Ch. oo wc oQuart BtL 19.
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ONE POUND — 19¢ ?‘,;- 3 L 5 s 3 ks 17 ¢ A& P Store Located At 3
Sl S L : . 125 Oconee St., Athens, Ga.
other down here.
“1 stood with you in your hour
of need.. He deserted you; i'm:not
going to kowtow to Mr, Truman
and his federal bureaucrats. I'll
be the same there as I am here.”
Rebel yells and stomping punc
tuate his mounting attacks on Mr.
T'ruman, the senator, eivil rights.
(Johnston men charge he carriers
his own stompers from county to
county.) At last the governor hits
his climax and the two-man show
is over,
On July 11 one of the two com
battants will ~be crowned State's
Rights Champion and the Man
Who Most Dislikes Harry Tru
man, Whichever one it is to be,
one thing seems sure: On the
morning of July 12, the ears of
“that little man in the White
iI;Ilouxse" will probably stop burn
ing. :
Curley top is a disease affecting
sugarbeets in the northwest.
Between 1928 and 1930, Bob
Jones. wiou Hues U. S. Opan gt
champfm%filt&wd ‘others
in playoffs.
The last foreigner to win the U.
S. Open golt championship was
Ted Ray of England who tri
umphed in. 1920,
Don't Neglect Slipping
Do false teeth drop, slip or
wobble when you talk, eat, laugh
or sneeze? Don’t be annoyed and
embarrassed by suech handicaps.
FASTEETH, an alkaline (non
acid) powder to sprinkle on your
plates, keeps salsa teeth more
firmly set. Gives confident feel
ing of security and added.com
fort. No gummy, gooey, pasty
taste or feeling. Get FASTEETH
today at any drug store,
OFFICE HOURS: SATURDAYS am.x, g
2AM TO 4:30 g.p“;.;g W € Qlyfif,“r};!"’;.'&
DR. C. J. POMPEI
CHIROPODIST — FOOT SPECIALIST
PHONE 531 »
26914 N, LUMPKIN ATHENS, GEORGIA
R R T T P
i FOR THE BEST IN |
AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE
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B oesoto SILVYEY'S pLYmouTH
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PAGE NINE