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Jt ~‘t N > * i •; \ « * > ' , Thursday, October 22, 1953 * IM — 111 MM—M—————— I MuifiMniiniuiimiiiinnmiHiimMiiiimiuwwMwwiluwwxmcxwtimKawMtiotttti NOTICE FOR PAYMENT OF ' 1953 CITY TAXES Notice is hereby given that Town Taxes for the Town of Clinton are due and collectible from October 15th to December 31st for the year 1953. The tax books are now open at the office of the Town Clerk and Treasurer and will remain open up to and through December 31. A penalty of ten (10%) shall be added if said taxes are not paid on or before January 1, 1954. The levy for current fiscal year is 53 mills; 15 mills for current operating expenses, and 38 mills for interest and sinking funds on various bond issues outstanding. * W. B. OWENS, City Clerk and Treasurer- A / * THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Page Seven HUNTERS! ...Get your Deg M Top Shape New hr HUNTING SEASON! FmH HRD SET'S MASCOT DOG FOOD ! 10 lb. b.f Only 25 lb. b«, only 100 lb. b«f only 86= 1204 $7.55 BIRDSEY FLOUR l FEED STORE Bdoa* afCealik ( €omei Phabmact is recognized as a public health profession in every civilized nation of the world. Its practice is regulated by l*w. It has as its primary objective the service which it can render the public in safeguarding the handling, com* pounding, and dispensing of medicinal substances. The conscientious pharmacist holds the health and safety of his patrons to be of first importance. See us before you buy medicine, no matter how simple your may » seem to be. Write Your Congressman “NO” on Socialized Medicine McGee’s Drug Store Phone No. 1 *• 8 8 Savings Accounts Z%—DIVIDEND—3% We invite savings accounts from the people of Clintoe and vicinity. Yon will like our friendly and efficient ser vice, and you wiU receive your dividend promptly each January 1st and July 1st. Any amount — from $1 up — opens an account. Each account is insured up to $10,000 by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. Two people may have up to $30,000 fully insured. w Accounts by mail promptly acknowledged. Chartered and Supervised by the United States Government * X. Laurens Federal Savings & Loan Association Wofford Head indicts Modern Education On Four Counts supporting ufider scheduled tax rates as far in the future as anyone could | reasonably look. t ^ < i The trust fund was expected to de- ; cline, but so very gradually that it ... i would be almost level for all prac- Charleston, Oet. 19-Modem edu-, tical s cation, with its social promotions, ^ j . , failure to recognize inherent dif- ] J* the , to increase ferences in ability and character as previously scheduled, its income and ignoring of moral and religious j’f rom interest payments of course also values, was indicted by Dr. Francis, would fall behind, thus starting a Pendelton Gaines, president of *°rt of downward spiral. Wofford college today. He ad-j (Last year, assuming high employ- dressed the Charleston Lions club, ment and intermediate or average Speaking on the general topic of | costs, it was estimated the trust fund “Certain Dangerous Tendencies in would hit a peak of 107 billion in Education,” he said that education 1990 and drop to only 106 billion by must succeed in America, where 1 2000. everyone has a share in govern-j ^ new „ udi ^ hwMVer , tigure ment ‘ _ 'the trust fund under these same as- He listed four counts on which sumptions will reach a peak of 65 Modem education is falling down. |billion i n 1990, drop to 56 billion by First of these, he said, is a fail-12000, and be exhausted in 2023 By ure to insist on certain basic forms 2025, benefit payments would ex- of discipline. He charged that edu-j cee( j income by six billion dollars a cators are trying to say that educa-1 year tion wiU come as a result of uncon-j The nt tax is 3 trolled seleotion. Because of this, he lpayrolIs under emp , oyment covered said that students are electing to dy the 3 y stem—up to a salary of S3,- 600 a year. Workers pay half, and employers half. The total tax is due bia college. Chairman of high school j section—Miss Elizabeth Otts of 'Spartanburg high. Dr. W. D. Nixon of University of South Carolina* will be luncheon speaker. Dr. Nixon will discuss with the deans and counsel- 1 ors methods of serving youth. 1 Miss Bernice Johnson, member of the Clinton high school faculty, is president of the association. The association is open to all counselors and deans of girls in all high schools and colleges of the state Reservations for the luncheon may be made with Miss Ethel Hembree. 504 East ..River street. Anderson, Membership dues $1.00; Registra tion fee $1.00; Luncheon $1.50. study all sorts of impractical sub jects. Thus, he said, a large num ber of GIs in the last two conflicts . . . , had as their sole literature comici 0 “ 4 next •' an - hooks and detective stories. 75 l ? r „? ent m 1980 ’ 6 P er 111 196a, and 6»* per cent in 1970 and there after. This is the schedule that might have to be riased if present bene fits—ranging up to $127.50 monthly for a retired worker and his wife— are to be maintained. The new figures undoubtedly will get attention from the Eisenhower administration and from a special House ways and means subcommit tee, both considering broad changes in the system. books and detective stories. His second count was the prac tice of giving something for noth ing. Replying to the argument of the good that is done for the poor student by so-called social promo tion in school, he asked what this does to the good student who sees that all his ability and effort brings him no greater reward than is giv en the poor student. He told of one school from which 32 students graduated and each received a prize, even if it was merely for giving promise of winning next time if he didn’t win then. Speaking of the less brilliant stu dent, Doctor Gaines said that “The sooner he knows he is not so smart as his brother, the better for him.” He said that this something for nothing education, translated be yond school, results in an attitude that the government owes every body a job. Failure to recognize inherent dif ferences were listed by Doctor Gaines as a third count. '‘That each person should be developed to his utmost ability” is an obligation of society, he said. Failure to recog nize these fundamental differences has resulted in a decadence in American leadership. “We’ve watered down our Ameri can education to take care of every mother’s child and thus have cheap ened our educational system,” he said. Ignoring of the religious ..and. spiritual values was his fourth count. “We are a nation of religious il literates as a result of a miscon ception of a clause of our constitu tion,” he said, adding that educa tors should agree on a common con cept of moral and spiritual values regardless of religious denomina tion. Association Girls Deans To Meet In Columbia The annual meeting of the South Carolina Association of Deans of Girls will be October 31, ait Colum bia college, l^olumibia, with registra tion beginning at 1130. The program will begin at 12 noon with sectional meetings for trans action of business and informal dis cussion. Chairman of college sec tion—Mrs. T. W. Munnerlyn, Colum- A Three Days' Cough 1$ Your Danger Signal Creomubioa relieves promptly because it goes into the bronchial system to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm and aid nature to soothe and caw, tender, inflamed bronchial membranes. Guaranteed to please you or money refunded. C reomuls ion stood the test of millions of users. CREOMUCSION ralMVW Coughs, Chut Colds, Acoto Bronchitis By Popular Demand We Repeat This Special . v m vM: I ■ ■ m wmm itii* •. .. ..-.w.-. .v. ,w. K'.<^gpr. . ,n . SEnsRTionni sole! • .y»v **' me mm a flU-mETM F0IDII1G IRBIES A CREDIT TO SOUTH CAROLINA Telephone 22271 ^ LAURENS’ LARGEST SAVINGS INSTITUTION f 104 West Main Street Laurens, S. C. Soy "I Sow It In The Chronicle" — Thonk You! Social Security Legislation Probably Have To Be Revised Here is the updated picture, as es timated by Robert J. Myers and Eu- gent A. Rasor, chief actuaries for the Social Security Administration: Under present law, costs will run almost a billion dollars or more per year higher than previously expect ed, starting in a few years and run ning on past the year 2000. This would put a drain on the vast social security reserve fund. Under present tax and benefit schedules, and under average or most plausible conditions, the fund would fall far short of the previously ex pected peak of more than 100 bil- j lion dollars. | Then it would drop off much more j rapidly than expected until it is wiped out somewhere between 1995 and 2023. At that point, costs of the program would be exceededing in income by from three to six billion dollars annually. Possible Changes Congress, however, might step in and change the picture before the program reached that point if it i wanted to retain the concept of a big trust oh reserve fund. Or could let the fund die out and shift to a pay-as-you-go basis, levying taxes each year to pay for each year’s benefits. Myers cautioned, in an interview that all the estimates are based on many unknown variables, such as economic conditions and the rate of births and deaths far into the future. The current figures, he noted, are no more final than the earlier ones.’ From the outset, he added, it was contemplated that Congress might J have to adj-ust tax-benefit schedules in the light of more experience. His new duties were completed I last summer, but were not generally! released. He said they suggested significant changes in the picturej and problems which—if the~S5tI-T mates are right—Congress eventual- ' ly would have to wrestle with, but j not necessarily any time soon. The original idea, when the pro- gram was begun in 1935, was that special social security taxes would far exceed bnefit payments for, man yyears to come, with the sur plus piling up into a huge trust fund or reserve. This fund already has climtoed to about 18billion dollars. Later, as more people reached re tirement age, costs were expected to exceed tax income. But interest from the trust fund was expected to bridge that gap, and keep the program self- TROYLINGS Styled by Seymour Troy MAY cobra medium Calabash Calf Bow with gold tips SONATA medium Grey Lizard MILTON’S East Side Public Square Laurens’ Most Modern Shoe Store” Telephone 803 Laurens, S. C.