University of South Carolina Libraries
r ■ ■ I 4-A—THE CHRONICLE, CUnton, S. C., July 30, 1970 N cP r«Arrte icali "N. Clinton Traffic Volumes 24-HOUR AVERAGE WEEKDAY TRAFFIC VOLUMES ON PRINCIPAL STREETS IN CLINTON, S.C. MAY-AUGUST 1966 S C. »TATl HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT Girl's No-Iron Dresses 3.99 to 5.99 Hurry in and select a newly styled Fall wardrobe for back-to-school Now! All exciting new plaids, crisp fall solids and gay conbinations! In 100 cotton and polyester & cotton blends! Sizes 7 to 14. Girl's 1-Piece Bonded Orion Jumper and Blouse Look 3.37 Great 2-piece look.. .Jumper of easy-care bonded orlon phis a sewed-in blouse. Choose from 2 styles: V-neck Jumper with long collar blouse or scooped Jumper and blouse with faggotting' In red, gold, green, brown, purple. Sixes 7 to 12. 4 Junior Miss Panty Hose 99* F1U all 7 to 14 sixes. . .80 to MO Ail In • at the most EdiMwTi Boys' No-Iron s 1.99 Shirts 1.59 2 for *3 Short sleeve, button-down collar styles in solids, plaids and stripes. Boys sizes 6 to 18. Save now! Half Slips [with Panties! Full Slips with ribbon & lace trim! Girl's Slips S Half Slips I. i 9 e. Nylon half slip with attached tailored panty in pastels. 8-14. Full slip of nylon Tricot in white, pink, blue 4-14. Coordinated Slax & Skirts , 3.99 Straight tog slacks and box pleated Attala....both in 1M acrylic bonded to aceUte. Green, red, brown plaid. 7-14. Sizes S-12 Prep 25-28 ys Flare-leg Pants 3.99 Comparable Value $5.98! 1st quality! Never-lron fabrics in plaids, stripes and solids. 1st Quality! Boys' Ban-Lons Value $3.99! 1.99 Mock turtle or regular mllar styles. 10 colors. S, M, L XL. Udlss Br mmMm. cMSM 1.33 5A7 Beys Wtngttp with trap amooth pattern. teaus 0.97 A SmaM Deposit W* Hold Your jolocHons Or "Charge h" 4 Ways DPI NfTf 71 91 Shown at left is a map which gives the 24-hour average weekday traffic volumes on principal streets in Clin ton. The map is a result of a sur vey conducted from May through August in 1968. It shows that the traffic volume in the heart of down town Clinton (8,300 vehicles) was al most as heavy as the traffic at the busiest point (8,600 vehicles) on In terstate 26 just outside of Clinton. The survey was conducted by the S.C. Highway Department CHILD INJURED—Dwayne Malone, 6, was injured Tuesday evening when the bicycle he was riding, shown above, was involved in an accident with an automobile. The Malone boy was reported Testing comfortably’ Wednesday morning at Bailey Me morial Hospital The accident oc curred on Jefferson Street about 7:16 p.m. Tuesday. The bike struck a car driven by June Ann Martin of 903 Sloan St. HOSPITAL H'ifl!!” 1 NEWS Patients currently in Bailey Memorial Hospital from Clin ton are: Virgil Patterson, Clarence Dunaway, Edward W. Henry, Emma Prince, Julia O. Sadler, Catherine Womble, Rosa Ferguson, Ricky Dean Patterson, Baby Girl Nelson, Baby Boy McLendon, Baby Girl Grant, Robert Hellams, Nettie Prince, L. L. Herring, Clyde H. Rogers, Theodore Blakely, Willie Dendy, Mason J. Simp son, Forrek Smith, Hattie Owtogs, Fannie Motte, R«a Spires, Canzater Hill, Lucille* Nelson, Shirley McLenon, Fre da L. Grant, Gertrude Richards, R. D. Jackson, James Cope land, Bennie Lee Roberson, Will Long, Grover Harris, Ethel InezGamble, George Gos sett, Mary Reeder, Carrie Johnson, Martha Childress, Jeff Boland, Dorsey Turner, Arthur Greenwood, Elizabeth Jacobs, Joe Moon, Bruce Bagwell, Mamie Burnette, Eula Quinton, Gus Keller, Myrtle Wilson, Martha Graham. Patients from Joanna are: Doris Putnam, Tom Furr, Baby Girl Putnam, Vera Long, Idelle Shipp, Nettie Wilson, Dorothy Loll is, William Beckom, Law rence Bedenbaugh. Patients from Mountville are: Archie Young, Linda Anderson, Grace Winebrenner. Patient from Bertha Penland. Patient from Miami Shores, Fla. Is: Brewer Dixon. Patient from Union Albert Spoooe. is: LAURENS DRIVE-IN THEATRE Box Office Opens 8 P.M. Movie Starts 8:00 P. M. 92-00 Per Csr Wed. - Thur- - Fri. Sat. — Aug. 5-6-7-8 WALT DISNEY’S 'Castaways" Maurice Hay ley Chevalier Mills COMING SOON! ' WALT DISNEY’S "Darby O’Gill And The Little People" V YWGU* 1 Grand Jury Action Sought InShooiting A coroner’s jury has ruled that Willie Suber of Clinton be held for grand jury action in the fatal shooting of Lee Vance on July 3. The coroner's jury ruled that Vance was killed with .22 cali bre pistol fired by Willie Suber. Suber was charged with murder and released on bond. Clinton police Sergeant Wright Simpson said Vance was found wounded on Oak Street at 11:15 p.m. on July 3. Vance died enroute to Bailey Memorial HospitaL Local Road Project Set For Bid Opening Sealed bids will be taken on August 18 for the construction of a steel beam guard rail a- long sections of 1-26 from U. S. 276 near Clinton to Route 11 m upper Spartanburg County. This project also includes U. S. Route 276 from 1-26 near Clin ton to Mauldin. The Hotel Wade Hampton in Columbia will be the scene of the bid opening that is scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. on August 18. An estimated $12.3 mil lion worth of construction work will be awarded to the firm bid ding the lowest on earh partic ular projecL Chief Highway Commissioner Silas N. Pear man said that contractor’s bids are requested on 14 road projects, totaling 90 miles, and four bridge con struction jobs. Quality day care for children is a scarce and expensive com modity. It is estimated that the cost of after-school and summer care for school-age children comes at about $400 a child per year. Full-time day care for preschoolers runs about $1,600 a year. Kinards is: Doctor in the Kitchen” by Laurence M. Hursh, M.D. Consultant, National Dairy Council YOUR CHILD’S DAY Patients from Cross Hill are: Baby Girl James, Leila Bry son, Mattie Pearl James, Wanda Brown. Patient from Washington, D. C. is: John Miller. Patient from Laurens are: Bessie Brown, Vance Tucker, Judith McNinch, John Reid. Healthy bodies and minds are the most precious assets-we can encourage in our children. And it’s probable that as parents we can best help our children in this direction during their preschool and early school years, let us say, from age 3 to 9. Daily hygiene, healthful meals and snacks, daily exercise and play activities, appropriate cloth ing for activities and weather, socials and family relationships, and regular medical and dental care — all these factors can be come so “patterned" in young children as to be influential in their life style as adults. Good Practices Essential Not that one wishes to raise a generation of conformists, per se, but good health practices are essential for the fullest develop ment of human potential. They can, in fact, release the individual from the kind of repair and cor rective health measures that are the special burden of people who, through ignorance of -lack of motivation, neglect their health. So, parents: What are some basic patterns to encourage? First, let’s get out of bed on time, eager to start the diy, Vith time for the bathroom! wash face and hands, comb hair, dress neatly, tidy up our sleeping {dace. Next, an unhurried breakfast, a good lunch at home or school, a nourishing dinner, served pleas antly while the family shares good food and being together. And snacks midmorning and after school that are nourishing but not too close to meal time. A glass of milk or small pieces of yellow cheese — with fresh or dried fruit or raw vegetables, or with a meat, cheese, egg or pea nut butter sandwich, or with cereal — these are good snacks Outdoor Play Then, there’s outdoor play everyday, plus quiet indoor play alone and with other children, or sometimes with grownups or parents. And clothing that suits different activities and weather, with buttons or fasteners that children can reach and handle easily to dress themselves. Finally, play activities are needed that call for taking turns or making things together that help children to learn the en joyment of sharing good times — to care for their own and other’s belongings. At Bedtime Anything else? Yes — bedtime stories, music or quiet play to help young children to “slow down” and get ready for sleep. Bedtime also means the bath room, with time to wash or bathe, to brush teeth, and be tucked in for about 10 to 12 hours sleep. There’s really little else — ex cept to brush teeth after each meal and after snacks, or at least to rinse the mouth with water. And regular visits to the dentist and physician — every six months — to prevent and re pair tooth decay, to get vaccina tions and prompt treatment for injuries and ailments — and, most of all, to get to know and trust the family’! “health help ers."