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--A . \ v > v- ■ Thursday, February 2, 1950 THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Page Seven Soy Scouts Mark 40th Anniversary y* •• m.;.:-.:: "... BIRTHDAYS AND ANNIVERSARIES NOTED Tbe Chronicle fextends Greeting* To ThW Whose Birthdays and • Anniversaries Occur This Week. Mrs. H. C. Suber observed a birth day Tuesday, January 31. 'Patricia Ann Thomason, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herschel Thomason, 1 celebrated her second birthday Janu- Movor's Proclamation For noun^ment is one TTfregret to their continue to >er .e American. Heart Week <wiuu»ui«. | t uu, C 4«»- for the Mr. Brown has served the Joanna until Ifoup of ^nsrjpprjr by present _ arrangements are made Whereas disease of the heart and ^ >res byterian church as pastor, to-. South Carolina Presbytery for se- . , , , ... . .. . gether with the Lydia Mills church, 1 curing a pastor to have charge of blood vessels constitutes our nation 1 , shad)r Grove old Fleld He wjl J the ^ * “ most important medical and public —r —— health problem in that it effects —— more persons than any other disease, leads all others as a cause of death, ^ occasions a great number of days lost from work and is a severe strain on the economy, and Whereas the. week including Feb- The Revelers Male Quartet in Laurens Tonight j. ruary 14 each year is being -spen- February 7 birthdays include Mrs. B. Wilder, Mrs. Russell Cooper iation as American Heart Week for a ' ry ® ' - !sired by the American Heart Assoc- j and Roscoe Buzhardt. Hub Adair, son of Mr. and Mrs I. the purpose of focusing public atten tion on the medical, social and eco- ^ £; 1950 ' BOV SCOUTS OF AMERICA Official poster marking the 40th birthday. The 40th anniversary of the Boy Scouts of America will be observed Feb. 6 to 12 in every part of the nation by more than 2,300,000 boys and adult leaders. “Strengthen Liberty” is the birthday theme. The Boy. Scouts’ “Crusade to Strengtb- - en the Arjn of Liberty” con.- tinues through 1950. During Boy Scout Week, Units will hold “Crusade Night” meetings when 1949 Crusade Awards will be pre sented. Represertting the 12 Scout Regions, 12 outstanding Boy Scouts will make a "Re port to the Nation** at Wash ington, D.C., where the Move ment was incorporated Feb. 8, 1910. They will also take part in an impressive ceremony at Independence Hall in Phila-i delphia. The highlight of 1950 will be the Second National Jamboree which will see 40,000 Scouts and Leaders camping together at Valley Forge, Pa., from June 30 to July 6, including Scouts of other lands. Since 1910 more than 16,- 500,030 boys and men have been identified with the Boy Scours of Arneiica. M Adair was IT years old yesterday. nor ™ c aspects of this primary health j Billy Henry, son of Mr. and Mrs. | P roblem ' and of reminding the Na-| Edward Henry, will celebrate his, 1 ' 0 " tha * solution depends upon Jhe birthday February 6, and Miss Jo,/ ullest cooperation of the people, Copeland, daughter of Mr. and Mrs., scien fe. governmeht. and health and, L B. Copeland, also has a birthday 60 ^ a ag ~" CIes f : . . _ . j * thp • Now, Therefore, I, L. E. Bishop, 1 ‘ Mrs. Roscoe Buzhardt and Miss of Cli " to u n do hereb y order Barbara Workman, who is a student bat Q the we< * beginning February at Furman university, Greenville, 9 o0 be observed in the City of will celebrate birthdays on the 8th. as American Heart Week Mary Elizabeth Horton, daughter 1 further call upon schools, church- of'Mr and Mrs. Horace Horton will ff’ sci . entl . flc bodies civic assoeia- celebrate her birthday Tuesday. tl ° ns ’ business- establishments, and CC February 6 is the birthday of Ellen, ^ the people Frase, dUtir or«he Rev. M Mr. T aid y Mrs. F E.V Holland willj w,th appropriate activities. celebrate their wedding anniversary February 4- . . Lewis Simpson will observe his birthday February 9. John Little Carson, son of Mr. and i Mrs. Everett Carson, of Gastonia, N. ; C., celebrated a birthday January 31. i Mrs. Carson is the former Miss Em- ; rua Little of this city. Mrs. B. H. Suddeth observed a birthday January 20. _ Miss Joan Copeland, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Copeland, was: 15 years old January 28. Tommy Clement, son of Mr. and | Mrs. P. M. Clement, of Charleston, I celebrated his first birthday January 31. Mrs. Clement is the former Miss •* Elizabeth Nelson of this city. Ansel Tucker Smith, son of Mr. § and Mrs. William Ansel Smith, of Greenville, was one year old Janu- tt ary 26. Mrs. Smith is the former J.t Miss Elizabeth Tucker, sister of Miss « Inez Tucker. ♦*# Browns To Make Home In Abbeville — * Rev. L. W. Brown and Mrs. Brown, residents of Joanna for the past, and a half years, moved the past week to Abbeville where they will make their future home. The an- The last number of the 1949-50 season of the Laurens C ounty ( om- munity Concert association will be presented in the l^turens high school auditorium tonight (Thursday) at 8:15. The attraction will be the incomparable "Revelers." world's most famous quartet, who have appeared In every state in the I nited States and in practically all provinces pf Canada and in Newfoundland. This quartet extraordinaire presents a program that is enthusiastically re ceived wherever it appears. —- rt-: .% »Ji *0 t: "HOW TO WIN FRIENDS and Author of NRUB4CE PEOPir WIGGINS TERMS S.C. AS STATE OF OPRORTUNITY 'll ♦ ♦ :: • ♦ ■ ft :: N D. Carnegie when he re- Disagree Agreeably W. LIEBERMAN of Brooklyn, N. Y., thinks I am wront» a when I assert that one should never say, “No, you’re wrong.” He thinks there are times when a man should be told definitely that he is wrong. Well, note that I didn’t say you must always agree with a man, though I did say for you not to say, "No, ’ you’re wrong.” It is the phrasing that / is important. Dr. Lieberman says—and I am sure that you will agree with him, as I do—that there is an art in saying no, and this ayt is based on the oldest law of human relationships—respect for the other fellow. •‘When someone comes to me with an idea,** says Dr. Lieberman, “I ask him to spill it; and as soon as possible I' agree with some minor point of his proposition. Then I ask him to come back after a few days or a week, when we both will have had time to think over the matter. If, turns, my answer is still no, I say no, but I give reasons for my conclusion, and I attempt to raise his own self-esteem by sug gesting a substitute idea not too far removed from his own. "Before I end the interview, I praise him for the value of his idea and ask his opinion about some other matter about which 1 knoW him to be wel\ informed.^ You wOl note that Dr. Lieberman tactfirily, refrains from arguing; that he is honest in his treatment, and that he shows the man the respect that everyone craves. And you can bo sure that Dr. Lieberman has many more pa tients than he would have if ho put up an argument with - them on matters in which they are not wholly in accord. If he shouted, "No, you’re wrong!” when tl?ey did not agree, he would be sure to offend the sensibilities of some of those patients, with the result that they would not care to have further association with him. TEXTHE^HEADSAYS INDUSTRY BEGINS 1950 WITH CONFIDENCE More closely united than ever be—| creased stability for the future, fore in modern history, the cotton textile industry will begin 1950 with a confidence inspired by new-found strength, Ellison S. McKissick, of Easley, president of the recently- formed American Cotton Manufac turers Institute, asserted at the year end. Stronger because of its ability to present a united front in dealing with national and international pro blems, the industry faces the com ing year much better equipped for efforts to protect and preserve the industry and the jt bs of the hun dreds of thousands ot American men and women it employs. Providing direct evidence in 1949 of the resilience it has acquired dur ing the period of painful post-war adjustment, the industry by the manner in which its members have learned to coordinate production and merchandising with/T'apid changes in demand, offers (promise of in- OFFICE BOOKS—Ledgers, all kinds, • Ledger Sheets, Loose Leaf Bind- . ers, Cash Books, Journals, Day Books, Sales Books, Columnar Pads Call 74. Chronicle Publishing Co. / Through modernization and im provement programs, the mills have continued to make concentrated ef forts to hold down unit costs so as to provide the best quality products at lowest possible prices for the con sumer. They realize it is to their advantage to enjoy maximum pro duction entailing full employment, and to this end they will continue to accept what they have always considered their mercantile respon sibilities as imposed when forward lines of distribution pursue realistic buying policies. With all sales indications pointing to a continuatibn of the favorable ratio of.unfilled orders to stocks on hand for the next few months, cot- t&n textile mills approach the new calendar year in a firm technical position. Business outlook for the first six months of 1950 is bright although international development and their possible effect on our for eign textile. markets will have to be watched carefully and necessary ac tion taken by the industry to retain for this country a fair share,of the world te v t ! !e tr^de. • (Continued from page one) nation as a whole and, in that re ^ ; spect, this state ranked third among ft all states in percentage increase dur- ing that period. | ‘^Tbe- most astomshing imiex of j i financial improvement in this state I is the relative increase in federal taxes paid by the people of South Carolina between 1939 and 1947. For the nation as a whole, federal tax collections increased 6^ . times (657 per cent) while in South Carolina these collections increased during the same period 15 times (1518 per cent). South Carolina was ninth from the top among all the states in in creased payments of federal taxes during the 1939-47 period.” "Agriculture,” said Mr. Wiggins, “has made a notable advance in this state in recent years. In 1948, cash farm income in South Carolina reached a new high level of $335,- 000,000 as compared with $99,000,000 in 1940, •the rate of increase being eleventh from the top among all states.” He commented on the im provement in the staple of cotton and of the increased yield per acrO of to bacco and corn. "Probably the most notable ad vance in agriculture in this state in recent years,” he said, “has been the development and adoption of pro-! grams for the conservation of the soil.” f He urged the development {of the livestock industry in the state. Mr. Wiggins was enthusiastic in his praise of South Carolina'sjstate government and of its sound $nan- cial position. He said that whole the quality, the effectiveness, the efficiency, the fairness of a^jmin- l istration and the tax structure of this! state rank South Carolina among the top third of the best goverifments. in this country.” The fairness of the state to indus trial enterprises was illustrated, he said, by the fact that the state tax board of review had not had an ap peal from the findings of the South Carolina Tax commission in four years. In discussing some needs of the ^ state, Mr. Wiggins stressed the ne-r •. cessity of a reorganization and im provement of assessment on real es- \ tate and other property which he said is long overdue. 15-POINT FARM PROGRAM GIVEN FOR THE STATE (Continued f’-om ooge one) boys ,and girls in better farming and homemaking, health, citizenship, and leadership. Goal its 50,000 4-H clut> members in 1950. '15. Health and Recreation: Plan for better family and community health through improved housing, nutrition, and rural health and rec reational facilities. —: ^ If You Don’t Read THE CHRONICLE Y«w Pnn’t Get the Newt Something New Has Been Added! BELK’S Wed. Morning Specials WATCH,FOR THEM — EACH WEDNESDAY MORNING - From 8i30 til noon — Belk # s offers you extro special bargains that you can't afford to miss. Listen to Radio Station WLBG for these THRIFTY '50 budget-stretchers each week. 3$ n 1 :: S • • • P :: • * • • « • :: * • :: ata fkkaflJ brings you -tbe in automatic, no-shift control NEW LOWER PRICE I <4^ PACKARD \ pfCHECKlThens nothing eke like it! ^ /n V smoothness — no jerking, no clunking...because there’s no gear-shifting, either t by you or the transmission. r ’ l^New economy —be cause there’s no gas-wasting slippage at cruising speed*. l/New safety-no risky down- shifts on slippery roads. ew flexibility—instant change from forward to re verse, without clashing. 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