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( t \ N - THURSPAY, AUGUST 22, 1929 ^ <1 THE CUNTON CHRONICLE. CLINtON. 8. C. PAGE nw ■v- OPPORTUNITY! J Ah Opportunity To Obtain i High Grade Extract Delicately Perfumed With a Lasting Odor. At a Price Unusually Low for This Grade of Perfume.' BEN HUR COMBINATION NO. 588 Consisting of Ben Hur Face Powder, Ben Hur Toilet Water, BeitHur Perfume— FOR $2.98 BEN HUE COMBINATION NO. 592 Consisting of 3% oz. Ben Hur Toilet Water, Ben Hur Face Powder, 2 oz. Ben Hur Per fume— FOR $4.49 A 25c Flaconette Free With Each $1.00 Pur chase of Ben Hur. Perfume. Courtesy Costs Nothing yet it would* be hard to over estimate its value. This bank regards the spirit which marks its operations as an asset comparable to the good will which this spirit builds. M. $. Bailey £ Sea BANKERS OLDEST . STRONGEST L Bank Service FOR BUSINESS AND BUSINESS MEN The advantages of banking here are three fold — first, sound, conservative policies that insure the safety of your funds; sec ondly, we have a thorough knowledge of modern business practices and can offer constructive advice; and last, but not least important, is the courtesy and unfailing willingness to serve, on the part of every employee. “IHE BANK OF PERSONAL SERVICE” IMI laiFJHivaiiianiawBBiiiKisiiHsiMiaiitBaiaiiiafittiiiBiiBiiBH ^ Personal /Mention ^ | I CUINTON,' Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Killen of Green ville, were visitors here Sunday. R. W. Wade spent the week-end with his family in Saluda, N. C. MCS.1.R. C. Tidwell and daughter, Bobbie, are visiting in Greenville. Mis$ Sarah Knox has returned from a visit to friends in Easley. Aidine Blakely and Frank Godfrey are spending this week in Atlanta. Mr. and Mrs. Gua Burten spent Sunday in Johesville. Mrs. E. B. Pinson is spending the j week in Ninety-Six. Miss Willis Mae Wilson is visiting friends rn Lancasttf. E. H. Holland of Beaufort, is visit ing Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Holland. Miss Lila Boozer of Columbia, is vis iting Mr. and Mrs. Frank Boozer. Dr. and Mrs. W. S. Bean of Mobile, Ala., were guests here Friday. Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Gray are visiting in Asheville. Mrs. W. B. Owens, Sr., and William Brooks spent Sunday in Brevard. Miss Ethel Hunter is spending this week in Greenville. Earl Workman left Monday for Hot Springs, N. C. B. E. Wilson is spending several days in Peake. Miss Emma Little is the guest of Miss Ethel Killen in Greenville. Dr. and Mrs. W. E. Jordan of Balti more, are the guests this week of Br and Mrs. M. J. McFadden. Mrs. Thad Johnson spent several days last week with relatives in New berry. Miss Dorothy MeSwain has returned to her home in Greenville after a week’s visit to her aunts, Mrs. W. D. Copeland and Mrs. A. W. Brice. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Franks and Darrel Franks will spend the week end in Charleston. Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Suumerel of Laurens, were guests the past week df their daughter, Mrs. Irene Todd. Dudley Jones is attending the Offi cers’ Reserve camp at Fort Screven, iGa. , Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Yarborough left Monday for a week’s vacation at Folly Beach. I Joe L. Carter returned the first part jof the week from a business trip to iNew York. Lee Hunter has returned from Au burn summer school. Mrs. Roy Madden has as her house guests. Miss Ida Mae Madden of Lau rens, and Miss Mettie Cook of this city. Master Robert Donnan of Green ville, has been visiting his couusin, Paul Todd. Miss Maud Poole spent last week end as the guest of relatives in Union. Mrs. H. W. Richie and children are spending sometime in Greenville. Mrs. L. V. Pinson has as her guests. Misses Kathleen and Lucile Derrick and Elizabeth Lassete of Chapin. Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Barnes, Jr., have returned from a visit to Lake City and Myrtle Beach. Frank Kellers is spending several days in the mountains of North Caro lina. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Shealy have re turned fron\ a visit to Newberry and Columbia. Miss Mary Pruitt of Due West, is the house-guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Winn. Mr. and Mrs. A. O’Daniel, Misses Clara Louise, Rachael and Frances O’Daniel were visitors in Greenville on Wednesday. —; Miss Irene Dillard of Columbia, spent the week-end here wath rela tives. Mrs. Claud Sparks of Gaffney, and Mrs. Elmer Watts and son of Camden, were recent guests of Mrs. J. W. Crawford. M iss Ethel Killen has returneJ to her home in Greenville after spend ing the week here as the guest of friends. Mr. and Mrs. J. C- Copeland and daughters of Columbia, are spending several days with relatives in the city. Venable Martin is visiting Bothwell Graham at Montreat. Mrs. Howard Caldwell and daugh ter of Greenville, were the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Cope land. Mrs. Walter Montgomery of Spar tanburg, is the guest of relatives in the city. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Wise and Miss Rosanna Vance have returned from a week’s stay in New York City. Miss Mary Norman is spending sometime in Lancaster with her sis ter. Fant. Thornley spent last week-end at Silver Pine camp in North Caro lina. Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Johnson of At lanta, were guests of Mrs. H. W. Brimm during the past week. Roy Madden left Sunday for Seneca where he has accepted a position with the Jaynes Furniture Co. Mrs. Madden !will join him later, j Miss Melenee Thornley left this [week for Knoxville, Tenn., where she iwill be the guest of friends. ! Joe Simpson, Jr., of Whitmire, spent [the week with Mrs. G. W. Cunning ham. I Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Wallace of j Clearwater, Fla., spent the past two weeks with the latter’s parents, Mr. land Mrs. W. P. Hipp. 1 Rutledge Fuller left this w’eek for ) Daytona Beach, Fla>., where he will h^e joined by Mrs. Fuller and Miss ■i.BlB Kaffa Fuller who have spent the sum mer at Tampa. They will accompany him home. Miss Alma Templeton of Lau rens, spent the week-end with Miss Mary Grace Madden. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Hitt attend ed the funeral of Mr. Hitt’s uncle, Robert Littlefield, in Inman on last Friday. Mr. and’ Mrs. Roy C. Simpson of Greenville, were guests the past week of Mrs. Irene Todd. Mrs. George l^omelson, Jr., is at home from a visit of several weel^s to her parents in Baltimore. The friends of John Allan Dugan will be glad to know that he is re cuperating at the Greenwood hospital from an appendicitis operation. Dr. and Mrs. Jack H. Young left Sunday for a two weeks’ visit to their daughter, Mrs. J. M. Dick, in Pulaski, Va. Rev. and Mrs. Samuel P. Bowles and children, are at home from their va cation spent in Jacksonville, Fla., with relatives. Mrs. Gilbert Blakely left Sunday for a ten days’ visit to her parents in Montrose, Ga. Mrs. R. H.‘ Hatton has returned to her home after spending two weeks at Chick Springs, Bill Woodward of Mattituck, N. Y., and 0. W. Chapin of St. Louis, Mo., arrived here Sunday for a stay of sev eral days MrTand Mrs. Pet Adair, Misses-Fay and Helen Adair, Elizabeth Shealy and Marion Templeton spent several days this week at Myrtle Beach. Crawford McDwaine of Due West, spent last week with W. C. Baldwin, Jr. Miss Lillian Smith and Master Car ol Smith of Mountville, are the guests this week of their aunt, Mrs. Corrie Montjoy. Mrs. P. S. Bailey and Bailey Wil liams are spending sometime in Lan caster. Miss Annie Laurie Wells of Green wood, visited friends here last week. Mrs. Tom Robertson and daughter of Chattanooga, Tenn., are visiting Mrs. George M. Davis. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Lewis and chil dren of Whitmire, spent Sunday with Mrs. Lewis’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Hatton. Mrs. L. D. Bray and Mrs. Charles Hart and children of Spartanburg, were the guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. R.‘E. Copeland. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Baldwin and children motored to Asheville Sun day. Mrs. H. K. Npely and daughter, Mary Elizabeth, are the guests of Mrs. Neely’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. B., Blakely. t ^ L. M. Vineyard is spending this week in Atlanta, where he joined Mrs. Vineyard and Neil who have been there for sometime. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Arrington and son, Billie, of Greenville, were the guests last Sunday of Mr. and^ Mrs. R. F. Blakely. Mrs. W. H. Martin has returned to her home in Cleveland, Ohio, after a visit to her sister, Mrs. J. W. Cope land, Sr. Mrs. Broadus Suddeth and Mrs. Jes sie Sparks spent several days last week at Blairs. Miss Lois Smith has returned to her home in Milledgeville, Ga., after a several weeks’ visit to her sister, Mrs. Lee Add Blakely. Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Neil have re- I turned from a week’s visit to Shelby, In. c. I Miss Margaret Blakely returned Tuesday from Roanoak, V'a., where she spent several weeks. Misses Georgia B. and Martha Blakely are spending this week in' At kins visiting their sister, Mrs. Andrew Harker. Mrs. V’aleria Jones has returned from a month’s visit to relatives in Blairs. Miss Alice Benjamin has returned from a tw'o months’ visit to relatives in Houston, Texas. Mrs. A. B. Blakely, Misses Katha rine Coleman and Martha Blakely, jand Mrs. H. K. Neely of Dunbarton, were visitors to Greenville on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Bailey and daughter of Kinston, N. C., and W. W. Tribble of Washington, D. C., w’ere guests this week of Mr. and Mrs. J. Clarence Copeland. Rev. and Mrs. L. T. Phillips of Ear- hardt, and Mr. and Mrs. Marian Ina- binet and children, were recent guests of Rev. and Mrs. 0. M. Abney at the .Methodist parsonage. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Hitt and Floyd Hitt left Tuesday morning for Savannah, Ga., where they will at tend the national R. F. D. convention. C. M. Bailey leaves this week for I New York where he will meet his j daughter. Miss Lucy Bailey, upon her I return from an extended European jtour. They will return to Clinton by jway of Myrtle Beach. I Rev. 0. M. Abney and Mrs. Abney ! are spending their vacation in Char- i lette, Asheville and other points. They will return to the city in time for Mr. Abney to occupy his pulpit the first Sabbath in September. I Mr. and Mrs. John Spratt spent Sunday in Montreat. They w’ere ac- j cempanied heme by Betty and John Spratt, Jr., who had been visiting their 'grandmother, .Mrs. W. G. Neville, for • the past three weeks. Don’t Miss This are giving one Heavy Enameled Sauce Pan FREE with each 3-lb. can of Crisco purchased. 30c Duke’s Mayonnaise 30c Sauer’s Extract SATURDAY ONLY 45c 1 Pint Dukes Mayonnaise CC 30c Bottle Sauer’s Extract UwC SOUVENIR FOR EVERY LADY Blakely’s TELEPHONES 136 AND 175 Here To Serve The First National is serving,hun dreds of people every day and is constantly alert to the improving of ^ts'facilities to better serve the needs of its continually growing list of customers. Careful and conservative man agement has brought about this growth and has maintained this in stitution. Your business invited. OUR SERVICE MAKES FRIENDS First National Bank f “Clinton’s Strongest Bank” Telephone No. 7 Delicious! That’s the word that describes our .Meats. Kept in our sanitary refrigerators with no loss of taste. Tender and juicy, just the way Meats are liked by every member cf the family. QUALITY AND VALUE Make our store your Meat shopping headquarters. We guarantee choice, fresh Meats at all times. BALDWIN’S GROCERY 4<l The Home of Good Things To Eat” Phones 99 and 100 ALL PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED BY UCENSED PHARMACISTS CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED PROMPTLY S.ADLER-OWENS PHARMACY “At Union Station” Phones 377 and 400 Phones 377 and 400