The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, May 25, 1950, Image 7
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Thursday, May 25, 1950
THE CLINTON CHRONICLE
Pact StTOi
"HOW TO WIN RKNDS and
Author of
MumKtnonr
! ihg President Truman or not sup
porting President Truman,” he said,
i “Get that out of your headr he (Thur-
jmond) is running against me now.”
Thurmond declared his States’
: Rights fight two years ago has “rous
ed the nation,” charged that Presi
dent Truman is supporting Johnston.
“Anyone who, will talk mealy-
at Hays hospital.
MAJOR
Mr. and Mrs. James Major, of
of a daughter on Thursdav, May 11.
Mrs. Major is the former Miss Betty
Ann Boland, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Ratrhford Boland, of this dtj.
BOONE
Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Boone, of Lau-
Charlotte, N. C., announce the birth | rens, announce the birth of a daugh
ter, Jerry Walker, on Friday, May 19,
at Hays hospital. Mrs. Boone is the
former Miss Shirley Walker.
V
f
New Farm Bath Unit
Comes All 'Packaged'
Setup May Be Attached
To Existing Dwelling
An Indiana manufacturing firm
has announced the introduction of
a novel, factory-builf bathroom to i
be known as Ad-a-Bath. Repre-,
senting an entirely new approach i
to home modernization, the bath is
•constructed in one complete “pack
age” for attachment to existing
dwellings.
Built as a self-contained unit, the
bath utilizes conventional materials
and equipments, and includes all
necessary fixtures and fittings for
immediate installation and immedi
ate use. It is shipped fully equip
ped for addition to a farm, lake
cottage or suburban home. Since
it is added to the exterior, there is
no sacrifice of space or change of
interior arrangement of the house
to which it is attached.
Carnegie
How To Hold Your Job
' • . • t
K LOS ANGELES reader who says “Just call me a manager
** writes that he thinks we ought to say more in this column
about what a man should do to hold a job, rather than so much
about how to get one.
Well, any man who has ever taken over a new job,
and any man who hires one. should ap
preciate the value of this.
But a few more words from the “manager.’'
*T hire men who seem to have it all on the
ball, and generally my opinion of them is justi
fied. I am proud of most of them, and the com
pany is vastly pleased with their work. But
now and then someone higher upon the com
pany sends me a man for a certain position, and
these men usually have to be watched. They
don’t know the rules of the place and they seem
to feel so secure because of the way they got
their job, that they don’t even try to learn the
rules that all the others adhere to. Then some of them use their
influence to bring in a helper, nearly always some relative or
close friend."
Now let’s see what impression a man tries to make when ap
plying for a job and how he can live up to that impression:
1— He tries te make the prospective employer feel
that he knows his work. To live up to this, he has to not
only know his work bat he has te work at it conscien
tiously.
2— He tries to make that employer think of him as a
• 1 man. Then he has got to be a man, in the highest sense.
That is, he has to be honest and have a certain amount •
of dignity, as well as ability.
3— He tries to give the impression that he is am
bitious to get ahead. So he has to do the things that will
help him to get ahead. He not only has to do good work,
and live up to a good reputation, but he has to watch for
opportunities.
4— He tries to make this man, who he hopes will
employ him, think that he will give value received; in
other words, he will work for the interest of the em
ployer during all the hours he is being paid to work.
And he has te do just that
If a man lives up to these four things, he will hold his job as
long as he wants it, provided, of course, he can fulfill one other,
and a vastly important, requisite: he must be able to get along
with his associates.
j mouthed to Truman and cOme down
! here and talk to you in another way
Us. not fit to represent South Caro
lina in the U. S. senate,” Thurmond
| claimed.
Both candidates used federal dis-
I trict Judge J. Waties Waring, of
Charleston, for a whipping boy. War
ing opened the state Democratic pifi-
; mary to Negroes in two historic de
cisions three . and two years ago,
while his wife recently has bejen
quoted as saying Southern white peo
ple are “decadent.”
Birth Announcements
PUBLIC NOTICE!
WATER WILL BE CUT OFF
IN THE CITY 1
THURSDAY, MAY 25
11 P. M. TO 4 A. M.
For the Purpose of Connecting New Pipes
B. R. AUSTIN, Supt.
JOHNSON
I'
Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Johnson, ♦
of Elmyra, N. Y., announce the birth <>
of a daughter, Mary Jane, on May 4.
Ml
Mrs. Johnson is the former Miss < >
Patricia Ann Dove of Elmyra. and J *
Mr. Johnson is a son of Mrs. W. E. < >
Johnson and the late W. E. Johnson ' *
of this city.
n
WILLIAMS
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Williams, of <>
Laurens, announce the birth of a
daughter, Ruth Lianne, on Wednes- < ►
day. May 10, at Blalock cliqic. Mrs. y
'Williams is the former Mlsi Haze! .>
Spires.
, o
HOLLAND ; J
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Holland, of near •
Laurens, announce the birth of a son, o
David Murphy, on Saturday, May 13,
The setup is complete in every
respect with tub, lavatory stool j
and tank, electric heater and built- i
in medicine and linen cabinets. It
is of frame construction with ply
wood interior. Walls and floors
are heavily insulated and the floor
is linoleum covered.
- The interior, according to the
" manufacturer, has been designed
for maximum comfort, utility and
attractiveness. Such items as
_ towel bar, soap dish, tub grab bar,
tooth brush and tumbler holder §re
included.
Since the unit qualifier for FHA
financing, a "home owner is requir
ed only to make a 10 per cent down
payment, paying the balance in con
venient m o n t h ly installments
through his local bank.
I believe the manager who wrote to me will heartily aprr*
that any new employee who comes to work each day and ;.
to these things will have no trouble with any employer, pr wi;;i
any sub-chief he works under Rieht man}»e.»r 9
Automobile
News
You can learn all about the
new 1950 models In THE
CHRONICLE.
You will find each week in
this newspaper Interesting,
helpful “automobile news."
F*w«r Wirmy Applit
SENATE RACE OFF
TO FAST BEGINNING
McCormick.—US. S. Senator Olin
D. Johnston, seeking renomination to
a second term, and Gov. J. Strom
Thurmond, who also wants the seat,
brought their already’hot county-to-
county campaign speaking tour here
Wednesday.
The long-awaited contest for the
Democratic nomination, off to an of
ficial start Tuesday, gives every indi
cation of being one of the keenest in
South Carolina political history.
Thurmond, 1948 States’ Rights
presidential candidate and outspok
en foe of President Truman’s civil
rights program, wasted no time in
opening fire on Johnston.
He called Johnston a “Trumanite”
and accused him of not supporting
the States' Rights candidates two
years ago. He shouted at Johnston
MI D WAY
Drive-In Theatre
NEWEST AND FINEST
CLINTON — JOANNA
< >
that Truman is “your buddy."
Johnston largely ignored Thur
mond’s heated attack. After sitting
impassively through the governor’s
many accusations ,he said:
“I thank you, Strom, for all you
have said. That is my reply.”
He added that “I am going to run
this type of campaign from a Chris
tian standpoint: I am going to run
on my merits and not on the de
merits of some one else.”
i Johnston, like Thurmond, de
nounced the civil rights program,
particularly the proposed fair em-
iploymeqt practices law. He lecited
his part in the so-far successful fight
against the proposal in the senate.
Though d-ubbed a "Trumanite,”
‘Johnston called the President “a lit
tle man.” He opposed his nomination
in 1948, but contended that “no
Harry Truman” ever will "run me
out of the Democratic party.”
‘This is not a question of support-
MOTHER ADVISES
HAUNTER
Mrs.
S. C, writasi
"■vary bit* I at#
ta
••
ot gas. Oftaa I
couldn't a at#
couldn't • I o 01
folt vai
FRIDAY-SATURDAY
MAY 26-27
z.r, best's
want# riooa woM and dn oat Mol
Scoff's b aa
tonic ond Hio flrot
ontood to tatbfy or
back. Try It today.
STORY OF SEABISCUIT
With Shirley Temple and Barry Fitzgerald
MONDAY-TUESDAY j MAY 29-30
INSPECTOR GENERAL —
With Danny Kay
WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY MAY 31-JUNE 1
RED STALLION IN THE ROCKIES
With Arthur Franz and Jean Heather
ALSO SELECTED SHORT SUBJECTS
ADMISSION 40c
Children under 12 admitted FREE
First Show Starts at Dusk—Second Show at 10 F.M.
<4
^ Faithful adherents of the “apple
a day’’ maxim, if fhey can think
back to war experience, will realize
nowdays they are not nearly so
likely as they used to be to find
a worm, or half a worm, in their
apple. Also, says the U. S. depart
ment of agriculture, the “spray
residue” problem is not nearly so
9 'troublesome as it was.
* The' apple worm—or coddling
‘ moth—problem appears to be on
its way out as a major' concern in
apple growing. DDT has proved
an effective spray. In fact, in
some isolated orchards that do not
draw moths from unsprayed or
poorly sprayed trees nearby, a good
early spray program with DDT
may so reduce coddling moths that
there is no need to spray against
a second brood.
But DDT has not proved a full
solution to the apple insect prob
lems. , It does not make a clean
sweep of all the pests. Thus DDT
sprays permit a buildup of some
g pests that it does not control—
the apple mites, for instance. The
problem shifts, but a problem re-
k mains. The mites do not cause
, wormy apples, but the apples are
smaller and of a poorer color.
However, the new insecticide
parathion is making an impressive
showing against nearly all the
4 apple pests. Federal entomologists
say that it can not yet be recom
mended for general use, that
more control la needed^.
^ livestock Sanitation Gets
r Credit for Avian TB Curb
Professor F. E. Mussehl of the
University of Nebraska poultry
husbandry department credits the
work of the U. S. livestock sanita
tion association with doing much to
reduce losses from avian tu
berculosis.
The livestock sanitation group
comes into the picture, he explains,
because avian tuberculosis was
quite often found responsible for
condemnation of hogs.
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