Newspaper Page Text
Thursday, March 12, 1953
LANHAM'S tA
WEEKLY fjh
LETTER WIM
YOUR CONGRESSMAN REPORTS V
★ A
Shall We Roll Back the Iron
Curtain? or Much Ado
About Little
In his State of the Union
Message, President Eisenhower
said, “We shall never acquiesce
BOWEN CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC
107 S. Commerce St.
SUMMERVILLE, GEORGIA
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NOTICE
To the Taxpayers of Chattooga County
Beginning this year the laws regulating the re
turns of property for taxation will be strictly and
rigidly enforced. Each and every taxpayer MUST
file a return on or before April 1, 1953, and each
tax return must accurately and in detail set forth
the property owned by the taxpayer. In the case
of land, each tract must be itemized separately
and a separate evaluation must be placed by the
taxpayer on each tract.
No homestead exemptions will be allowed where
no timely tax return is made.
Penalties will be imposed where property is omit
ted from tax return.
Where individual tracts or lots are omitted, or
are not separated and evaluated individually,
such individual tracts will be treated as unreturn
ed property and the taxpayer will be subjected to
a penalty.
COUNTY BOARD OF TAX ASSESSORS
A. W. JUSTICE, Chairman
J. G. ESPY HARRY POWELL
T. P. JOHNSTON H. E. WYATT
(March 26)
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“Planned Lighting
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Says Dr. S. L. Taylor, Manchetter Druggltt
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It's a pleasure to provide our customers with
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lighting engineers planned KOO lighting systems for
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GEORGIA POWER
in the enslavement of any people
in order to purchase fancied gain
for ourselves. I shall ask the
Congress at a later date to join
in an appropriate resolution
making clear that this govern-
'Ue s on his
way home!”
Somewhere high in the air, half a world away,
son of a critically ill father is speeding to his bedsuA
He* 11 bring hope where there was littlelles sor S
'drug, no miracle of surgery so lifts the human he^
having a loved one near in time of crisis.
Your Red Cross helps the military get the servicerri
I •
home when critical emergencies occur. No miss^”"*
wt
is more important, no effort more gratefully received
by the man defending you in far places. You can
h^P him by giving through your Red Cross.
| \ ■ELA., A
ANSWER THE CALL-BINE GENEROUSLY
ment recognizes no kind of com
mitment contained in secret un
derstandings of the past with
foreign governments which per
mit this kind of enslavement.”
(underscoring mine) Much hul
labaloo about this statement
was raised by the press friendly
to Eisenhower and by the Re
publican members of Congress.
From all this fanfare many
jumped to the conclusion that
the so-called secret agreements
at Yalta and Potsdam contained
provisions acquiescing in or per
mitting such enslavement. Noth
ing could be further from the
truth. Furthermore, these argu
ments were not secret in the
sense that their contents were
unknown. They were secret only
in th sense that approval by the
Senate was not deemed neces
sary.
Following the President’s
speech, many of his Party in
both the Senate and House ex
pected a much stronger resolu
tion condemning the so-called
secret agreements to be pro
posed by the President and
adopted by the Congress. Much
to the disappointment of thos*
who had expected such a sensa
tional resolution, the President
has suggested, and the Congress
will no doubt adopt, a very milt’
resolution "making it clear that
we will never acquiesce in the
enslavement of any people in
order to purchase fancied gain
for ourselves and that we would
not feel that any past agree
ments committed us to any such
enslavement”. The resolution
merely provides after several in
troductory clauses that:
”1. The United States reject
any interpretations or applica
tions cf any inte-. tional agree
ments or understandings, made
during the course of World War
11. which have been perverted to
bring about the subjugation of
free peoples. (Underscoring
mine).
2. In proclaiming the hope that
the peoples who have been sub
jected to the captivity of Soviet
despotism shall again enjoy the
right of self-determination with
in a framework which will
sustain the peace: that they
shall have the right to choose the
form of government under which
they will live, and that sov
ereign rights of self-government
shall bo restored to them ail In
accordance with the pledge of
the Atlantic Charter"
From rll this It Is apparent
that It is the violation by 'the
Soviet government of their
propii, es concerning free elec
tions among the countries of
eastern Europe that has caused
the enslavement of these peo
ples, Furthermore, it Is perfectly
apparent that, the United States
government has nt. one time
acquiesced in such violations.
William Henry Chamberlain
writing In the WALL STREET
JOURNAL says:
"As a matter of fact, neither
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS
Yalta nor Potsdam has been a
governing factor in American
international relations for some
years. We are no longer forcibly
repatriating Soviet political ref
ugees. At the time of the ratifi
cation of the peace treaty with
Japan it was made clear that
the Senate does not regard as
binding the secret Yalta protocol
assigning to the Soviet Union
■■uch former Japanese posses
sions as South Sakhalin and the
Kurile Islands. Almost all the
punitive restrictions on the Ger
man economy prescribed in great
detail at Potsdam have been
dropped.”
France especially was alarmed
at this portion of President
Eisenhower's speech which they
construed as promising to in
some manner free the enslaved
peoples of eastern Europe. As
the French see it, only by war
could these Deonle be freed at
present and the French want no
War.
The comparatively mild reso
lution proposed by the President
protesting against the violation
by Russia of the so-called secret
agreements may do much to
allay the fears of our friends in
Europe that we are about to un
dertake to roll back the iron
cm ain and attempt to liberate
:: . people* of Eastern Europe
who have been enslaved, not by
am- provisions contained in the
Wz
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1953
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so-called secret agreements but
by the violation of Russia’s
pledges made in these same
agreements.
So all the sound and fury of
the storm about secret agree
ments and the liberation of en
slaved peoples have subsided intd
a gentle zephyr.
Mr. Dulles on yesterday, testi
fying before the House Foreign
Affairs Committee of which 1
am a member, said about the
resolution, “It is no idle gesture,
nor, on the other hand, is it a
call to bloody revolt.
Most Democrats will support
the resolution without amend
ments, but some of the Presi
dent’s own party will try to
“strengthen” it by amendments.
The entire controversy will be
helpful at home by dispelling the
“myth” as the Christian Monitor
terms it, that our former leaders
at Potsdam, Yalta and Teheran
gave away half of the free
world.
While I do not mean to imply
that I approve of all the com
mitments made at these inter
national conferences, yet the
fact that President Eisenhower I
and Mr. Dulles refused to ask |
that they be repudiated makes it
clear that while mistakes were
no doubt made, the pacts would
not have had any disastrous con
sequences if Russia had observed
the promises she made when
they were entered into.
Additional Funds Authorized for
Home Improvements
Both House and Senate have i
approved identical bills giving
the Federal Housing Administra
tion an additional SSOO million in
mortgage insurance authority
under Title I of the National
Housing Act which provides for
making loans for improvement
of existing houses. This portion
of the National Housing Act has
proven most beneficial to home
owners and while the interest is
rather high, it is probably justi
fied because of the fact that the
loans are usually for small
amounts averaging in the past
$567.00 each.
Congressman Wright Patman,
of Texas, pointed out that while
State and Federal
INCOME TAX
RETURNS
MADE AT REASONABLE
PRICES
HENRY POWELL
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the Act might be criticized as
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fact that it is inflationary in
that it makes available addi
tional credit, nevertheless, he
believed it justified. I voted for
the additional mortgage author
ity because I think Title I of the
Act does serve a very good pur
pose.
DR. G K. MacVANE
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