The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, April 30, 1959, Image 4
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THE CLINTON
Parties In Hospital Suit .
Render Public Service
In tent week’ll imu* of The Chronicle »p-
pearrd a news ator>- under the headin*. “New
Honpital ('leam l>e}ral Hurdle." which told of
the hemrinfr of a auit in Newberry before
Judge Steve C. Griffith in which director* of
the proponed hospital "presented arjnimentn
tn v oomt>at a restraining move by W. C. Bald
win, a Clinton taxpayer."
It was stated that Cecil E. White. Clinton
attorney, represented Baldwin in the suit.
In order to clear up any misunderstanding
on the part of any who read the article, it
should Ik.* stated here that the move was a
“friendly suit." a device used often in legal
procedure to arrive at a desired determina
tion of a question of law in a given case.
And the question at issue in this case was
very much to l^e desired—that of the amount
of bonds that the newlv created Clinton Hos-
pital District could issue. The law in the mat
ter was indefinite—or contradictory. Any
way. a determination of the point was de
sired. \.
Ab^ut the only way a conclusion could be
reached was to go before a judge for a hear
ing and issuance of a decree. It Was all ar
ranged by the loard of trustees of the hos
pital—a move to test the law in the case and
get a judge’s ruling.
Mr. Baldwin consented to act in the role of
plaintiff, and Mr. White consented to present
the complaint. The action was defended, of
course, by the board of trustees, represented
oy Tench P. Owens, Clinton attorney.
Carrying the case to its conclusion, an ap
peal will be made on the judge’s ruling to the
State Supreme Court.
All of which was instituted, of course, to
present a sound legal base when the bonds
are offered for sale.
For the information of the public, the con
nection of Mr. Baldwin and Mr. White with
t he case was not in any way an act of animos-
:> or opposition. <>n the contrary, it was
tone in complete cooperation with the hos-
p.ta! d.rector*, in a move that will allow the
"Uarke of a sufficient amount of t»onds and
-;>eeti the construction of the hospital.
The |«arties to the suit were and are rcn-
• it-rinc a public *er\ice. <Hir thanks to them.
Sunday School Week
What do public school officials think of In RogoHon
Church Groups Join
S«m
'ice
Sunday Schools? Dr. John J. Theobald is Su- AU s ** u **s«psi Omrrt imiF
perintendent of Schools in New York City. ^ (he ib
controlling the teaching and preparation for t)a Sunday monunc. May I. at 11:13
fife of one million boys and girhs. Here is for a Rogation Service at Cedar
what he saV* about Sundav Schools: \alley Farms nmr Laurens Tbi*
„, . . . . . . aervice. which is held each spring.
M»n • two irrratMt wdventuro, »re ex- „ k „ the
ploring the world around him and the worth
within him. Whether he pnol>es with a mis
sile or a prayer, he’s on the high road to ad
venture. and his preparation must begin ear
ly in life; Sunday Schools of all faiths stress, 4 .
the principles that start young people in the ,he place of the regular 9 30 ser-
right direction.” I Vice at All Saints. Those attending
To help focus attention on the importance‘ ,he *'™ ice "'H meet at the church
...o j ou-i wu i at 10:30 m comfortable clothes with
of our nations Sunday Schools, the Day- a pj cn ic lunch.
The public is cordially invited.
nires that God and man work to
gether in the creative processes of
agriculture.
The service will be followed by a
pcinic lunch.
men’s National Committee. Inc., a non-sec-!
tarian, non-profit organization, has been
sponsoring National Sunday School We^k in
April for the past fifteen years. The observ
ance this year was from April 13 to 19.
Let’s start our children in the right direc
tion by giving them a chance to learn the
Word of God in our Sunday Schools.
Judging Team Enters
Contest At Clemson
Laurens County’s 4-H livestock
judging team placed sixth in the
state livestock judging contest held
Saturday at Clemson.
Thirteen teams participated in the
event.
The Laurens County team was
composed of Jimmy Simmons of
Ware Shoals, Jim Addison of Jo
anna. Car^ and Sarah Bradshaw
of Cross Hill.
— Jimmy Simmons was fifth high
Babson Park, Mass., April 30—1 have recently been individual in the contest, and third
Babson Discusses Bank
Stocks As Investments
high in sheep judging.
The contest was won by the team
from Spartanburg.
talking with a prominent General Motors official about
small cars. He is rather skeptical as to whether small
cars built by General Motors would sell after the first
year or two Reason—“Most people buy cars—large
and small—for prestige, not for transportation. This
desire for prestige causes us to build larger and
heavier cars."
The average buyer wants to keep up with or go 1 awarded scholarship aid for college
, ,* , , .. courses at Winthrop and Erskin?.
ahead of his neighbor. In fact, this is the real erason „
i Both are seniors
he buys small imported cars—to have a car to talk 1
about, not to save gas. “In fact, I believe"—he con- Elinor's award is for $200 and
tinued—“that the present buying of Ramblers is large
ly a fad Style and fashion now apply as much to au
Clinton Students
Get Scholarships
Elinor Xiver of Joanna, and Jack
ie Cooper of Clinton, have been
larship
inthrop
at Clinton High
Jackie's for $100
Other Clinton High School seniors!
, . recently announced a* recipients of
to mobiles as to the length of starts, size of hats, or jre ^ f;lenn j
color of shoes worn bv women."
and Marian Surratt
Powerful Case
*»**\einiwen.ol c^tim#'
• r i>*n«*tru«t.**n ptvjtrf
iiiir Ur .#i then
Phr H.’KKv-mile t.igh»*>
i.r*l under the
•f the
non
*t of nut-
<f lie-
Art
«n oat andtrif
network t
!**>» Fe»lrrwJ Highway
>*** .a piNBt. In thn
iveet figured at f J7 6 tulltun \<
etiard t *t.mate* |da«e It at IdllM
Ts**er *han ha’f arain a*
The* m-ait*
r.rg n the highway
e»!) : • t*> jnifrA** 1 the
a» pte»*nt ill
i»fi * •ne-ha.2 »vr.t*
K'ii manner
fArrm-r*. man afar tgPVfA,
an I other» ha**e
The.r «a*e ia a pMnvMMHy TW ht^B
a « . «• at federal tat .aapnaod am t«g of the
average aUU tat of h «aM» wottM aMMUl a
*«>tal of
j*'in' • .A*t. a»bm pot to K ptt eat of tho
nt« t«ut. ovukf Bawwrat t«hSgee teat af thi
tank war r Kwe. and 4t per coat of the re
tail pr k* Kv»n
hea.) a tat
•ity.
If aL the froeral late* collected (nan
* iai tec nr. on htghwajr
to th* highway fund, where they
i<ekmi. the clef kit wruaM ba eliminated, la tat
a.: fiOcal year three tpecial tateo t
$3.6 billion. Bui $1.5 Ulbon—42 per ceat
went for non-highway federal function*.
Thu heavy diversion brings on the deficit*.
Congrewfi should vote down the proposed
tax increase Then it nhould either devote all
highway user taxes to highway purpose*—
»>r stretch out the construction program so
that available funds are adequate to do the
iob.
C \REH I. Sf PER VISION
I have taken a lung time to get, to my point, which
is this: You can make no expenditure of mont-y which
will give you such prestige as will
.owning a few chare* of stock in your
best local hank But be sure to get
the- stiK k <jf y<mr mo»t lon-enatn*
and most highly regarded
M •'* ing * -
I will aat give you pfeWige
But there are other ummv im
I pertain reaeom 1m ewtnag mm*
Idtarr* m such t beak (kudu are
I the ato.; carefully go* eeniaeai •»
prrttsrd ferm «g iai Mtaiaal m
wr t*4re each yam the Federal Generwaaeal E**i
ef yarn hwal NatiawAl Ba*B this is m
ladl mate r* viasta—» This nmoa- (hat the slech
•hwh fm hap shaaM fee ef a Naimaal
free* mmmi tt»
WANT
PROOF'
THAT
QUALITY
DRY
CLEANING
PAYS?
Conway, Horry Herald: "The lords of or
ganized labor . . . are out to wipe out that
portion of the Taft-Hartley law* which per
mits states to enact and enforce right-to-
work laws. They plan to control states
through the federal government and further
throttle the rights of political subdivisions to
guarantee American citizens the right to
work.”
i. they are as*
they officially traded ever the
wish |a buy ar sell tea ifeares. you should go Is thr
prrodent or la oar of the other higher
will invite you ta to sit by his desk and give
He will want la know whether you wtO be an asset to
the bank’s reputation or not Secondly, such a stock is;
much like joining an exclusive club
Bank stocks are issued at various par values from
$10 up to $100 Most sell st s premium over their book
values Before talking with your banker about buying,
you should call upon one of the directors whom you
may know Ask him to explain all this to you. Ask the
approximate price and the annuaul dividend. The lat
ter, divided by the prive, gives you the yield. That is,
if the stock sells at $2S and pays an annual dividend
of $1 00, then the stock yields you 4 per cent. 11118
may seem a small yield, but it is not too little for the
security, diversification, and supervision which you
receive.
P. S. Be sure to go to the stockholders' meeting
each year and meet your other “club" members.
CLINTON, S. C., THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1959
0% (Elintmt (Ebrmtirlp
EstabUmed 1M0
July 4, im — WILLIAM WILSON HARRIS — Ji
Drv Cleaned 25 tfcNt,
because Sanitone Dry
Cleaning keeps quality
“ahve." You can ocp. d
on Sanitone. just as von
relv on quality fabrics
and fin* tailoring whet
choosing clothes.
Sanitone with exclusive
Soft-Set* Finish removes
dirt and perspiration like'
magic. Clothes come
back looking as fresh as
the day you first wore
them. No wonder you
can’t tell that the man on
the left wears the Sani
tone Dry Cleaned suit!
SWATCH TEST
*
U. IMS
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING COMPANY
SubscnpUoa Rat* (Payable in Adv
Out <if-County
Think you could feel the
difference between a brand
new snatch of fabric and
one‘that hat been dry
cleaned 25 times? Come <w
and try. Well prove again
that QUALITY DRY
CLEANING PAYS.
We Are Proud To Announce
I »' I
HOWARD'S
PHARMACY
6
HAS BEEN DESIGNATED
AS A REXALL
• ; r
Honor Store’
The Honor Store Award, a bronze plaque, was presented in rec
ognition of our efforts in providing better public service by im-
- proving appearance, efficiency and professional character of
our pharmacy. /
$165.00 IN PRIZES
WE ARE GRATEFUL TO OUR
LOYAL CUSTOMERS WHO HELPED
TO MAKE THIS AWARD POSSIBLE.
IN APPRECIATION WE ARE GIVING
6 BIG PRIZES.
TO OUR CUSTOMERS
$43.95 HAMILTON BEACH
FOOD MIXER
$26.95 HAMILTON BEACH
ELECTRIC FRY PAN
S34.95 R. C A. CLOCK RADIO
POLORON ALUMINUM
$205 ICE CHEST
JIOS OUTDOOR
BARBECUE GRILL
4b GALLON BORDEN’S ICE
CREAM EACH WEEK FOR
13 WEEKS (S13.I6)
REGISTER EVERY DAY
YOU DO NOT HAVE TO BUY ANYTHING
YOU DO NOT HAVE TO BE PRESENT TO WIN
IRAWING SATURDAY. MAY 2. AT 6 PM
HOWARD’S
PHARMACY
“Vow REXALL
ON THE SQUARE
PHONE Ml