The clothmaker. [volume] (Clinton, South Carolina) 1952-1984, July 15, 1958, Page 8, Image 8
8
iFrmit the Oliiuih HUuih
iirelhren. I count not myself to
have apprehended: hut this one
Hung I do, forgetting those things
which are before, / press toward
the mark for the prize of the high
calling of dot I in Christ Jesus.
Phillippians 3:13-14.
NOT BEHIND BUT AHEAD
It had not been easy for St.
Paul to become a Christian.
Family and religious ties had
to be broken, a promising career
abandoned, and all the
suffering and sacrifice involved
in that accepted. Yet,
once he was convinced of the
Lordship of Christ and of his
call to His service, he never
hesitated, nor flinched from
any hardship his loyalty to
Christ brought upon him.
Having made his great decision,
he turned his back on
the past and faced the future
with only one aim ? the attainment
of "the mark of the
high calling of God in Christ
Jesus."
There is at once a grand
example and wise counsel
here not only for those for
whom the service of Christ
has meant the sacrifice of
material possessions and
worldly success, but also for
those whose past still clings
to them and disturbs their
present and darkens their
outlook upon the future.
The thing to do with the
past is to let it go ? forget it,
hand it over to Christ and go
straight on in the way in
which He leads towards the
goal of complete Christian
character and eternal life.
?FORWARD.
Nor deem the irrevocable Past
As wholly wasted, wholly vain.
If, rising on its wrecks, at last
To something nobler we attain.
?Longfellow.
Lydia Blue Birds
Attend Camp
Thirty-one Lydia Blue Bird
and Camp Fire girls under
supervision of their leaders
spent the week of July 14th
at Cnmn Rurk Horn nn Pnric
Mountain.
Miss Nellie Osborne. Camp
Director, was ably assisted at
camp by Miss Mary Johnson,
District Chairman, and Mrs.
Betty Brown, Mrs. Peggy
Templeton, Mrs. Eva Templeton.
and Mrs. Mvrtice McGee,
all Blue Bird Leaders, and
Mrs. R. E. Whitmire, Camp
Fire Leader.
Misses Shirley Dunaway
and Mary Cunningham
served as Ass't. Camp Directors.
Water front activities
were handled by Kenneth
? I
"BE PREPARED"?Pool Lifegi
son, Alan Trammell, and "Sonny"
conditioning and endurance swims,
each day and weekly execute all 1
far in excess of what would be rec
effort in a pool the size of Clinton
na?
TOWELS ? BASKET ? REF
Clinton, and Sue Hamilton. Lydic
swimmers. All swimmers are re<
pool area. Cold drinks, crackers, c
Windows by these young ladies he
Household Hints Fo
All housewives like to feel
as cool as possible as summer
passes. Household duties
should be done with a minimum
of exertion so that tempers
won't flare up and you
won't look and feel wilted.
The following suggestions are
aimed at giving her a cooler
summer.
1. Look for easy to fix appetizing
foods which need
short cooking periods. Now
is the time to take advantage
of your freezer compartment.
2. Place refrigerator away
from the heat. This will aid
in defrosting. Have space
around appliances so they
will have "breathing space".
3. Have small appliances
placed where little or no exertion
is used to get to them.
4. Have an extra stock of
ice cubes in your freezer for
the thirsty crowd.
5. Melt a chocolate bar over
hot water to ice cakes, cupcakes
or over frosted cakes.
6. Mix meat loaf, hamburgers,
desserts, etc. a day
ahead and store in the refri?
Trammell and Wayne Fuller.
Kach day brought a busy
schedule of arts and crafts,
hiking, swimming, folk dancing,
ping pong, etc. The day's
; activities were closed with a
devotion bv one of the leaders.
THE CLOTHMAKER
Hgh at Clinton an
i
iards A1 Williams, Herman JackKing
are beginning their weekly
Pool guards are required to swim
ife saving techniques and methods
[uired in the average water rescue
and Lydia (105' x 45').
RESHMENTS ? Beth Trammell.
i. issue towels and baskets to all
quired to shower before entering
andies. etc.. sold at the Concession
>lp make the day's swim complete.
ir a Cooler Summer
gerator.
7 Tnkp arlvnntado of tVin
man of the house and do more
outdoor cooking.
8. When mixing pie dough
mix enough for several pies.
The dough will keep in the
refrigerator.
9. When heating water on
the range heat enough for
two purposes. For example,
coffee and the baby's bottle.
10. For a clean-up tip place
a sprinkler on top of detergent
bottle or can. Sprinkle
hard-to-clean pots and pans.
Will make clean up time
shorter.
11. Keep a good supply of
household needs for cleaning
so you won't have to rush out
in the heat of the day.
12. Pick a convenient time
for laundering. Late evening
is picked by many as a cool
time. Wash oftener before
clothes are too soiled. Perspiration
and other stains set
quickly.
13. To aid in ironing, shoo
for washable cottons which
have had treatments as :n
Disciplined, W r i n k 1-s h e d.
Tebilized and Zeset. Information
will be on the label.
Don't buy untreated and listless
materials that take arduous
sprinkling and ironing.
14. Above all don't rush!
Keep cool by walking and
working slowly.
d Lydia Pools this
I m
s'l v j m
CONTESTANTS FOR P(
At "Fun Day" held at both Clint
young ladies participated in beauty
each of the mills. From left to right
Burdette, both of Clinton Mills; Su
both of Lydia Mills; Linda Braswc
Lydia Mills, Myra Snelgrove, Franc
of Clinton Mills; and Sandra Shelni
l. - "ir LIFEGUARD
"SONNY" KING is
proper stance for beginning clivers,
taught to swim and dive this spring
of Clinton-Lydia Mills.
zz-rrr: _ v. n.
JUNE.
CLINTON
Tiny Mae Humphries?Spinning
Betty Lewis?Spinning
Shirley A. Ott?Spinning
Earl M. Satterfield?Spinning
LYDIA
Lee David Chitwood?Carding
Wayne K. McHan?Carding
Howard E. Byers?Spinning
Ronald Corley?Weaving
Robert E. Patterson?Cloth
It Wncn 't the*
mm m m mmtmmm m mmmmm
Luxuries, power, indulgenc
Roman people soft. To stay |
them more and more of the ease
circuses, easier living.
So the Romans softened up
hardworking barbarians. And i
the world had ever seen was i
The greedy cry of "someth
whine of "somebody else shouh
exactly the same for this nation
(Warne:
When someone "gives a
piece of his mind", it's usually
a cross-section.
JULY, 19S8
Season
Z>OL QUEEN TITLES
on and Lydia Mills, these pretty
contests to select a queen from
are: Beth Trammell and Mellisa
e Hamilton and Becky Gregory,
>11. Clinton Mills; Kay Roberts,
ine Smith and Pat Burdette, all
it of Lydia Mills.
St.
RshTT^II IBL
[IliHBHFi
-
, instructing Jimmy Nelson in the
More than 100 youngsters were
, without cost, as a public service
n/&fame
1958
MILLS
Nancy L. Smith?Spinning
William A. Adams?Weaving
Joseph V. Anderson?Weaving
Clyde Bigbee. Jr.?Cloth
MILLS
Preston Culbertson, Jr.?
Weaving
Joseph Cunningham, Jr.?
Weaving
George D. Brazille?Shop
boths
e had made the once-tough
popular, their emperors gave
> they craved?free bread, free
themselves for the ambitious,
n 410 A.D. the greatest nation
nvaded and destroyed,
ling for nothing", the stupid
:1 sacrifice, not me"?could do
i, NOW
r & Swasey Machine Tools Ad).
How easy it is the night before
to get up early the next
morning.