plenty of * Stumps fo* Them All. \ recent cartoon entitled, “The Forgotten Jlan ’ represents Rodin’s “Thinker” sitting upon something like; a stump and meditating upon sUCh things as the “treasury raid,’" “unsound eco nomics’’ etc- One consolation: While the "thinker” may be the “forgotten man,” fortu nately there is a P^ent^ of stumps to give each of l,;s small tribe a seat. I tried one day last week t0 show a man the difference between money and wealth- Though he had been a county commis sioner, I didn’t get in a mile of my objective. Turning to another man who'was listening in, I said: “You1 see it, don’t you?”~He-didn’t. And scarcely one in a hundred mature men can see the truth of the statement that this country has less wealth than two years'ago. “O, there’s more money by far,” they will say, and that is that- ____ ; ’ A Suggestion to the Highway Commission •Recently three of us went down to Clinton in the same car. On returning that evening all agreed that the road seemed rougher t than in the morning. I got to thinking. It occurred to me that the line of heavy gasoline and oil trucks from Wilmington to the interior of the state travel on the return side of the road—the eastern side. They return to Wilmington on the western side of the road, but without their loads. I di rected “George” to jump from side to side of the road, which happened to be rather free of traffic at the time. Whether it was due to imagination or to actual conditions, the eastern side of the road, the one upon which the loaded trucks travel, seemed roughest. This is a broken stone and tar road and passes through a section much of which has a rather unsatisfactory subsoil for building' a road upon. Reason, as well' as seeming, supports the theory that the eastern side of the highway would be rougher than the western side. ' I suggest to Chairman Waynick that he test the two sides of this highway. If the heavily loaded trucks are actually doing no damage, it will b,e worth while to discover the fact If they are doing considerable damage, the fact can be discovered and a measure of the damage esti mated. I would- not vouch for the truth of my impressions, but the impression gained; that day is very definite. , 1 - ■ ' Discouraging Outlook for People to Think Their Way Out. The content of another paragraph suggests the thought that there is little hope of the majority of the people ever thinking their way to a solution of governmental and economic problems. ,For sey eral years I have harped upon a few economic axioms, obvioud as a sore finger it would seem. Yet I doubt if forty people have grasped the ideas so long and so variously presented. I am hoping to bring the number up to fifty within a year or two. Reform can come only through -a man who knows what is needed and has the power to get. a personal following great enough to effect his desires. It will not be his presentation of the truth that will win, but his ability to get the ear of the people and to hypnotize them. tniortunately, the tellqw witn tnai gm m+y swing the people one way as well as the otlien Huey Long could be' a blessing to the United States if one could be assured that, he has thought through his economics and arrived at a solution of the problems of the ages. It will take a man of his audacity and ability to create a personal following, for the people will never be led, I fear, to any conclusive action by their own thinking or through the leadership of tame thinkers. Reform can cbme only by an as sumed dictatorship, as almost exemplified in the case of Roosevelt, or through a mob-like move ment generated by a real reformer gifted With the personal pull of Limey Long-or .a; leather Coughlin. Those two .geniuses can arouse the People, but who is to rfsSure the rest of us that they themselves know the truth? . . __ there is no-use in kicking Huey Long. -He or some one else with his power to sway multi tudes will ’lead this pfebple someWh^re pne, of these days. Such a man can do it—but ^s dur mg the past two' years, we shall be on ibe w®y but without knowledge of the end 'thereof.. , ? Congressman Lindsay . Warren ^ should ,haye, a bouquet for leading in the slaughter pf the Wf. to provide members of the ^lonal house an ad ditional clerk each. r v ' ,/ Kill the sales thx outright untess 90Uie for the poor" under the bropPsed bill can be_sg: RICHARD CLINTON ~ *5 % (By CLAUDE H. MOORE, Turkey, N.--C.) The Clintons alo'ng with others5 came over from Ireland with Colonel John Sampson-about 1736, and were among the first to settle in-the wilderness on the head-waters of the northeast branch of the Cape Fear Rivef. It has been said that the Clintons of Sampson were closely related to Governor Charles- Clinton^' and" Gen eral James Clinton, of New -York. - - “On November-29, 1768, Governor Try on commissioned Richard Clinton one of the justices for the County of Duplin; so at that early age he had attained a position of influence and was a man of consequence in his community; and by successive appointments he held this position un til the Revolution.” " Richard Clinton was elected to represent Duplin County in the Provisional Congress which “How to Pay the National Debt.” Every reader of The State’s Voice should read the aritcle of Robt. L. Owen, former senator from Oklahoma, in the Liberty Maga zine for March 16. When hq has read that if he will get hold of the issue of The State's Voice of 1933 which carries an article by Mr. E. W. Price on “The Reservoir of Credit,” he will see that Mr, Price had anticipated Senator Owen by* a year and a half. ~ Probably not a half-dozen subscribers' to The State’s Voice understood what Mr. Price was talking about. But the Owen article, treating of the same subject from another angle, would enlighten you as to the purport, of the Price article. There have been1 few articles of more impor tance published within a year than that of the former senator. It explains the'flood of cur rency in the twenties and explains how prices could be so much higher “when there was no more money than during the depression.” By inference, one can see more clearly that the notion that our currency was redeemable in gofd and a dollar of currency worth; a gold dollar was sheerest fiction. ’During some years of the inflation it is-doubtful if three dollars in cur rency would have paid for the mining' of ’ one dollar in gold. Yet before "the revaluation of the dollar in terms of gold thousands of men were reworking old gold mine properties. That means that we had dollars m the twenties that were cheaper than our present 59-cent dollars, but even the average financier has never real ized the> apparently obvious truth, >s- ; * - ^ Be sure to read the Qwen article in Liberty Magazine, March 16, 1935. ,, Let the Finance Committee Kill It. That Was an almost unaccountable mdve of' the senate—the‘reference of the Hill bill to the Finance committee after the body had agreed a week ago that the bill should be carried to a vote on last Thursday. Carl Goerch, in his interest ing radio report of the proceedings, had caught the idea that the proponents of the Hill bill had counted noses and foreseen defeat by two votes. But that would not account for anti-Hill-Bilhes allowing their opponents to make such reference. Can it not be that the reference was one way of giving the bill a chance to die without senators who hesitated to vote contrary to the “mandate of their constituents as given m me tion being forced to have an aye vote registered. If the bill is to die (and if it should pass the senate by the skin of the teeth, its death in the house is almost a certainty) why embarrass some promised supporters of the bill * by forcing the registration of their, narpes as. for it, ft) .their °w.n chagrin and the provocation of thousands of their constituents? ... . Even if the bill- was not sent to the committee purposely to be’chloroformed, we hope that on. second thought the members of the committee will ptit it gently to sleep anyway. ^ Will not be fair to push off the bill in its' amended form upon the people of thi sta^, who would see the^ State made a partner in 'the damnable wmsk«y business without a means of protesting. Qn the other hand, if the bifl as ffm; Writteirgoes-to ; the people, it is a dead gokling. In die first eg*. justkedemands that it ' omv 'df the State’s funds, of the people» tjtae, e and aft avoidanee of the bitflr cll^hds’ £nd i&t . ings -that must accompany a’ Campaign auch the bill dontemplates deniiiftd ^ ^ Let it' die, Gentlemen of the FmaflOe Gom mittee. EitherJdll it outright or_ fflmplyJet YOU mu. ‘T- ■ jc* V' have time td heecwie a V . « C. - > Vf- V S- f V.. sat at HflfeboVo h* August jintf Septetntej,‘1775, and' was" elected ‘'lieutenant-coloiiel of Duplin County1 by that body.' The ‘North' Carolina Co lonial Records* shoyr that Clftton reprinted Duplin County in the House of Cbrnmons contin uously from 1777 to 1^84.' He represented Sampson County in the Senate during the year* from 1785 to 1795. ■ *< The North Carolina Colonial Records give th* following facts about Richard ‘ Clinton :v ’... ^ umn.12 shows that Clinton was a member of the November session-oT the House of Commons Ant met in New $ern, N&vember 15,*1777. Volume 22—The North Carolina Convention began at Hillsboro on July 25, 1789. . The delegates from Sampson were David Dodd, Lewis Holmes, Cur tis Ivey, Richard Clinton, and Hardy Holmes. Volume 13 shows that the '.General Assembly met in Halifax on January 19, 1779 and that Richard Clinton was a delegate. _ Volumne 22» page—....... North Carolina Convention met ia. Fayetteville 1789. ' The delgates from Sampson, were Richard Clinton,' James Spiller, Jaittes Thomas, Hardy Holmes, and William King/ “When Sampson County, was established, Richard Clinton, owned the land that is now the site of the Town of Clinton, and when it was laid off, he donated five acres for a' public square and a court house; and also a lot for a public; school.” " .. ... Richard Clinton married Penelope, a sister of Colonel James Kenan, about 1763. They had two sons and four daughters—namely: 1. William Clinton, the eldest son, married Miss Sea well, a daughter of Judge Seawell, and had two sons, William and James. 2. Mary Clinton married a Mr. Rowland, of . Robeson County. '3. Richard Clinton, Jr., married Ferebee Hicks and moved to Georgia.' 4. Elizabeth Clintori married David Bunting, who came from Pennsylvania and settled ' in Sampson County! They left'eight children, one of whom, became the wife of Colonel Thomas K. Morrisey, who was the son-^f George Mdr risey, ©f Cork. Ireland-, and Jane Keriari. 5. Rachel Clintori married Owen Holtnes,' a brother of Governor Holmes, and had eight chil dren. One of her sons, Owen, married Betsy Ashe, oP Rocjty Point; and had the following children: Owen, who died urirriarried‘; Battien tvho married !Qr. John Mea.res arid moved to. California; and Sam Ashe Holmes^ who iriartied and moved to California.' Hone pf Colonel Richard Clinton’s.descendamts bearing his name noW live in North Carolina. Richard Clinton died in 1796 and wai buried near his plantation - home. _... , .. . (EpiTQRIAE ADDENDA;-X ■ r ■ The above ,is the second of the studies oi his toric men of the southeastern corner of the state to come from the pen of Mr. Moore, a studentj at.the University at Chapel JTill. We may ex=_ pect more. The data furnished above suggests the following brief statements: ..... I am sure that the; deed recorded in the regis- . ter’s Office at Clinton shows the acreage given by. Clinton for county, seat -purposes was ten rather than five. The area,covers just about the whole business area of the town named for Richard Clinton. — The Clinton granddaughter who married a, Robeson county Rowland was the mother or grandmother of Colonel Rowland who repre sented the old “shoestring" district, in Congress,; for several terms. Two of her granddaughter? by the name of Rowland still live in- Lumberton, and the Norraents and others of that town trace their descent to Mary Clinton. Elizabeth Clinton Bunting is the ancestress of the New Hanover Buntings. There are many of, the descent of other ..names in Pender and Samp son. , The Meares family of' Wilmington was origi nally located' at Clinton. : : ,,v Only the other, day I happened t© see a gen ealogy, tracing back, to Colonel James Kenan, and-; it is evident that- a host of Kenan descendants ©f ~ other names live in Sampson, DupKn, Pender, and New Hanover,' though, there scarcely survives one of the name, of Kenan in ,the state.. v ,. According to .the word of Ambassador Dodd given us, The State’s. Voice, through Mr. Unrnias Murphy of Greensboro,,the Ambassador lq,Oe.r- . many^s ‘descendant of the'DaVld Dodd mention ed above. The tradition; though, does not carry I ■ through, the:.father. pf the-ambassador, as I--dis covered by- a. chat with-him,- who • had. only one indefinite tradition of his revolutionary ancestor, . though ,etfie that, could point to David Dodd.'-^l :1 suggest. PavidiPodd as one of Mr. Moores studies.. .J. ;•?:'*;» ,i*u ..J'-.,:- . -By the the yoathftdliistopan is o£.the old*.> Sampson-Moore stoclcwhich furnished Louisiana with its war governor (1861-65).] - A Z:-Z ,