The clothmaker. [volume] (Clinton, South Carolina) 1952-1984, September 15, 1955, Page 6, Image 6
6
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PLACES LYDIA BASEBALI
house Foreman at Lydia Mills an
ball ieam, here places She Leagu
the display case in the Executiv
many other trophies of other sea
NEWS ITEA*
(Continued from Page 2)
new home which they built
2l<2 miles from Clinton on the
Spartanburg highway.
Mr. Cupid shot Carol Mills
and Donald Lawton with the
same arrow and they got
themselves hitched for life on
September 4. Rev. Stanley
tied the knot at his home.
Carol is the daughter of Mrs.
Sam Hairston of Lydia, and
Don is the son of Mrs. Lillian
Forrester of near Clinton.
Mrs. Bobbie Pierce, youth
director of the Pentecostal
Church of Clinton, gave a
party for the young people of
her church. Refreshments
were served and a treasure
hunt was enjoyed.
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Whitmire
announce the marriage of
men uaugmci, rvauuyn, 10
Junior Thomas, son of Mrs.
Emmie Thomas, all of Lydia.
The wedding was held September
16.
Glad to have Mrs. Cleo Abercrombie
back with us after
a long absence due to illness
and a journey to the hospital.
John Henry Estes, Leroy
TH/s tS
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WEEK ^
(SlVE VOUIiSELF
MOWS? WEEK OF
ACCI DENT-FR.EE
WOR.K/
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1 a
. TROPHY?Ralph Roberts. Wared
Manager of the 1955 Lydia Basee
Trophy, which the team won. in
e Offices of the Mills, along with
tsons.
kS AT LYDIA
Alexander. Harold Sanders.
Sam Elders, Walt Campbell.
T. D. Douglas, Skinny Gregory
and Ed Elders, all of
Lydia, visited Roy Owens at
Veterans hospital in Columbia.
Birthdays: May Abercrombie,
September 11 . . . Janie
Prince, Sept. 18 . . . John
Motte, September 20 . . . Jack
White, August 12 . . . and his
daughter, Linda Fay, August
24 . . . Pauline Poole, September
19 . . . Martha Ann Stone,
10 on September 29 . . . Becky
Stone, September 26 . ... Alma
Todd. September 17 . . . Betty
Gallman, September 11 . . .
Mrs. Kathryn Hampton. October
5 . . . Nellie Dean, August
10 . . . Roy Owens, August 24
. . . A. E. Lawson, August 25
. . . Harold Hampton, October
14 . . J. L. Lanford, October
1 O 1 A 1 1 1
m nTTn yours iruiy nau one
August 1. How many? How
should I know? I stopped
counting at 30.
DEMINIA is the five-monthsold
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Ward and granddaughter of Mrs.
Willie Mae Riley. No. 2 Spinning.
Clinton Mills.
THE CLOTHMAKER
NOT EATING CROW. BUT FIS
v-aaicia uuimy lilt; fJcisi season, SO
for the Lydia group. Above you cai
the feed.
Wheel In Your Hand
You may have seen a large
newspaper ad run recently.
It pictures, in commanding
size, two little girls crossing
a street on their way to
school and carries the title,
"You have more than a wheel
in your hands." Below, the
copy reads substantially as
follows:
Sometimes a man at the
wheel forgets. His hands grip
the circle of nlastic. hut his
mind is miles away.
Then?a boy tries to beat
the last bell, and doesn't remember
how he was taught
to cross the street. A little
girl pushes her way out of the
yellow school bus and races
toward her afternoon milk
ard cookies. A gang of happy
small fry let off steam on the
way home?only a motorist
with his mind on the job can
save them.
There are Safety Patrols, of
course, and over 12 million
school children are protected
by them. Also, our engineers
are striving endlessly to
build more safety into cars.
So why must we still sav,
"Yon have more than a wheel
i?i your hands"?
Look at children for a
moment, and you'll know
why.
A cherished ball will roll
out onto the street, closely
pursued by its pint-sized
owner. Some of the most exciting
races in history are
run on the way to and from
school, often past the
s ;fety of the sidewalk.
When children are on the
streets, a driver must go slowly,
extra slowly. When a
school bus stops, a car should
stop? whether approaching
or overtaking. When a schoolboy
in white harness holds
up his hand, he is as big as
the law.
The American Road is your
road. Every highway, every
byway, every boulevr rd and
every back street. And all the
children on it are your
children. The fate of so many
is in your hands?when your
hands are on the wheel of a
car.
^HHS' ^&|H
jMtir '^jtiiy^^n
" VlflP^i I >
MM^ '
H?The Lydia Mills Fishing Clul
the men at Clinton had to put 01
i see them diving in, and below s
T m
I
CrJ
B?. 1
A BETTEF
A better America will bring
spiritual satisfaction and maximum
material achievement
to all of us. It will continue
to the building of a world of
peace and prosperity.
It can come only from unwavering
faith?dedication to
the belief that God, in creating
man, meant him to retain
his individual dignity all
through life, with freedom
from regimentation and exploitation.
Each of us must have faith,
too in ourselves as individuals,
for it is only as individuals
that we can remain free.
Faith . . . Individualism . . .
Freedom . . . Opportunity . . .
cwNiyih;
"IvindneHH is one thing you
can't give away ? it alwaya
comes hack."
SEPTEMBER 15, 1955
* il
y
mm
1 -31
? out-fished the Clinton Mills bait
1 a fish fry with all the trimmings
ome of the ladies who also enjoyed
t AMERICA
These are the ingredients of
our economic system, a way
of life which has produced
more good for more people
than any other known to man.
It is a system which holds
for us in America?and all the
free people of the world who
will imitate and nurture it?a
future filled with the bright
promise of peace and prosperity.
SANDWICH FILLING
SUGGESTIONS
Cheese spread and bacon.
Cottage cheese mixed with
chopped tomato, green pepper
and onion.
V.lllt C.'ll.lfl tnmnlo "
?r>f-> J uclcon
slices and lettuce.
Tuna mixed with minced
cucurnber, parsley and mayonnaise.
Whole shrimp mixed with
chopped celery and mayonnaise.
Liverwurst, cream cheese
mixed with pickle relish and
crisp lettuce.