The clothmaker. [volume] (Clinton, South Carolina) 1952-1984, September 15, 1955, Page 4, Image 4
4
THE CLOl
Published by and fo:
CLINTON and LYI
Clinton, Soutl
Calvin Cooper
FRED GALLOWAYE.
C. HUFFSTETL
The publishers of The
items of interest from its rea
reporters or to the personnel
THAT TIME
Yes, that time of year is here
but what does that mean to al
school age. It means a great dei
To all of us, whether we have
at all, it is time to redouble 01
proach school zones. When a b
street, too many times out of ter
will bound out after it. If we're
when we have to pick someone'!
and rush it to the hospital. We i
ing to children in a common-s
hazards of playing in or near tl
To those of us who have child
obligation upon us now. And tl
-1 1J -
snuuia in our schools, in our sc
students. Perhaps the Parent-T
named. Too often we have all tl
meeting, we have many studen
parents? In our modern world, r
benefits of a good education tha
are not mature enough yet to r
education, and how necesssary i
age we are living in. But we pa:
a lot of us never had the opporti
date schools.
It is a real obligation for ev
that school days are OUR days?
and as parents of students who \
we are making for them today.
Such Wt
Maybe it takes a discerning
to make us appreciate the won
ours.
An editor of a paper in Rang
united states, said:
"Everywhere I go I see suci
homes and industries. But wher
tell me it was not like that whe
me of walking miles to school ai
read.
"This is very encouraging, b
tedly a backward country. But
these advances in such a short t
"Everywhere I see big priva
deal of time and money on rese
products to make life better for
these new products solve the e<
ally making new jobs and expi
The only fly in the ointmen
editor, was what he termed th
women from their parents."
"In Burma we place a very si
ties. I think that Americans dt
are small. But once the childrei
their own lives and do not pay
to the wishes of their parents."
There's food for thought in
World's shortest sermon,
preached by a traffic sign:
KEEP RIGHT!
* #
Very often the chip on
somebody's shoulder is just
bark.
* * *
Don't drive as if you owned
the road?drive as if you
owned the car.
1
HMAKER
r the employees of
DIA Cotton Mills !
i
1 Carolina i
i
Editor
-Staff Photographer
ER?Staff Artist
i
Clothmaker will welcome
ders. Turn them in to your
office.
: UP YEAR
i again. School has re-opened,
1 of us who have passed the
al.
children in school or children
ir watchfulness when we ap>all
goes bounding out in the
1 the child or several children
not careful, it will be too late
; child?maybe your own?up
llso can do a job here by talk;ense
sort of way about the
le street.
Iren in school, there is another
lat is to show the interest we
rhool teachers and our school
eachers Association was mis
he teachers present at a P-TA
ts, but what happened to the
10 one should realize more the
n the parents. Many students
ealize the benefits of modern
t is to get a better job in this
rents should realize it because
inities now provided by up-toery
adult in our mills to feel
-both as drivers on the streets,
vill carry on in the world that
Such Promise
visitor from a far-off country
ders of this fortunate land of
;oon, Burma, after touring the
i wonderful schools, libraries,
1 I talk to the old people, they
n they were young. They tell
nd having only a few books to
ecause today Lurma is admitif
you in America could make
ime, then so can we . . .
te industries spending a great
;arch, continually finding new
people. And at the same time
conomic problems by continumding
the market."
t, in the view of the Burmese
le "independence of men and
trong emphasis on close family
3 this, too, when the children
n grow up, they go off to load
as much attention any more
that statement, too.
The man who continually
skates on thin ice finally ends
lin i n Kr\t it rr?
All IIV71 WdlCI.
* *
One of the hardest secrets
for a man to keep is his opinion
of himself.
* *
It is not by man's purse,
but by character that he is
rich or poor.
'HE CLOTHM AK ER
...Stork Club...
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Starnes,
of Lydia Mills, announce the
birth of a son, Allan Ray, August
2. I Irs. Starnes is the
former Miss Corrine Campbell,
daughter of Mrs. Hallie
Campbell.
Mr. and Mrs. Vandy Fallow,
Clinton Mills, announce the
birth of a daughter, Debby
Lane, August 30.
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Seay,
Clinton Mills, announce the
birth of a daughter August 13.
Mrs. Seay is the former Miss
Margaret Brazil.
Mr. and Mrs. Levi Tucker,
Clinton Mills, announce the
birth of a daughter, Deborah
Irene, August 5. Mrs. Tucker
is the former Miss Pernie
Leopard.
a iouf2- o
Mrs. Mymie Sullivan, Clinton
Mills, is sick.
Roy Lydia, Clinton Mills, is
SICK.
J. C. Childress, Clinton
Mills, is ill.
Mrs. Richard Turner, Clinton
Mills, is improving at
home after surgery at Hays
hospital.
Mrs. Louise Frazier, Clinton
Mills, is at home after being
in Joanna hospital.
James W. Gentry, Sr., is a
patient at Joanna hospital.
William Samples, Clinton
Mills, is in the hospital.
Ruth Samples, Clinton
Mills, is sick.
ffht Biblt
And all thy children shall be
taught of the Lord, and great
shall be the peace of thy children.?(Isaiah
54, 13.)
We seek the best there is for
our children in schooling and
material happiness. But the
greatest gift that parents can
? ??> 1 1*
men i;niiurt?u is religious
training and devoted example
In the home, for these will comfort
and sustain them the rest
of the:?* 1 ivp
DIXIE ANN is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Gholdie Simmons,
Clinton Mills. She was a year
old September 9.
a> rr^
V \ I 'BIM MP
M?/?;
Installation Of Offi
Woman's Club Set
Installation of officers elected
at the August meeting of
the Clinton Mills Womans
Club will be held Tuesday
evening, September 20, at the
Community Building.
An address to the club on
"Cooperation" will be given
by Mrs. J. B. Templeton.
A buffet supper will be
held at 7 o'clock just before
the installation ceremonies.
All mothers of school children
are especially urged to join
the club at this meeting.
The new club officers for
this year who will be installed
this month are as follows:
President, Mrs. Tom Norris;
first vice president, Mrs. Taylor;
second vice president,
Mrs. Eva West.
Secretary, Mrs. Frank Hancock;
assistant secretary, Mrs.
Grady Arnold; treasurer, Mrs.
William Terry; assistant treasurer,
Mrs. J. W. Smith and
reporter, Mrs. George Ellis.
^ I'm not a bae
I I'm just scaR
l WHy doesn't c
THe life he Sa
mVfPPmP
HXkjTufl J9I1 nlifliliiyB
W^MdsiidSJuSM
SEPTEMBER 15. 1955
t.c.
icers Of Clinton
For September 20
7 he Brighter S^c
Give the weeds an inch and
they'll take a yard.
* *
Statistics show that quite
A lot
Of hard-to-get girls don't
Get got.
* * ?
Why go around with a halfway
sour expression on your
face? With a little more effort
you can be a real stinker.
* * *
Worry is like a rocking
chair?gives you something to
do but doesn't get you anywhere.
Before a man can wake up
and find himself famous, he
must wake up and find himself.
Sign on a church: "Come in
and have your faith lifted."
~i?n
dRiVeR /
Ed Like /Homtny V
iac/dy Listen tb us. I
i\/es mty be us. |