The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, July 02, 1925, Image 7
THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1925
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NOTipE
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EE: Estate Mrs. Alice Milam, deceased.
Notice it hereby .given that the
undersigned will make his final return
of his acts and doings as administra
tor of the above named estate to the
Judge of Probate for Laurens County,
S. C., at Laurens, S. C., at 11 o’clock
A. M., on Tuesday, July 7, 1§25, and
will on said date make application to
said Court for final discharge as ad-
'ministrator.
All persons having claims against
the estate of the said Mrs. Alice
Milam, will file the same, duly veri
fied, with the Judge of Probate of
Laurens County, S. C., or with R. W.
Wade, attorney, at Clinton, S. <5-7 on
or before the 4th day of July, 1925,
or be forever barred.
D. W.jMULLINAX,
7-2 Adm. Estate Mrs. Alice Milam.
NOTICE OF FINAL DISCHARGE
In Re: Estate of Nannie Williams
(colored) deceased.
Notice is hereby given that I will
on the 15th day of July, 1925, make ChoUx* estate
final return of my acts and doings as caUe<l ln probate court tomorrow
SHEPHERD FREED
OF LAST CHARGE
Jury -Votes “No Bur la Mra. McClin-
lock’s Death. Must Fight «
For WU1.
Chicago, June 30.—William D.
Shepherd today was freed of the last
charges against him, when the grand
jury voted a “no bill” in connection
Lesson
<»r P*V. P. B. PITZWATER, D.D.. D«a»
of eh* EvobIbc School. Moody Blblo ia-
atltut, of Chicago.)
(©. 1116. Wootorn Nowapapor Union.)
with the death of Mrs. Emma Nelson
McClintock, of sixteen years ago.
Mrs. McClintock was the mother of
“Billy” McClintock, whose death from
typhoid was the basis of the trial
at which Shepherd was acquitted last
week. The coroner’s jury had re6om-
mended grand jury proceedings when
experts reported that Mrs. McClin-
tock’s bpdy contained poison.
There remains for disposition the
will contest in which Ikabelle Pope,
“Billy’s” fiance, and several cousins
of the youth are disputing the right
of Shepherd to the $1,000,000 Me
lt is scheduled to* be
Lesson for July 5
administrator of the estate of Nannie
Williams (colored) deceased, to the
Probate Court of Laurens County, S.
C., and will at the same time apply to
said Court for fihal discharge as ad
ministrator of said estate.
W. D. COPELAND,
7-9-5tc jL- —Administrator.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
State of South Carolina,
County of Laurens.
All persons having claims against
the estate of Nannie Williams (color
ed) deceased, must present the same
duly verified to the undersigned at
Clinton, S. C., on or before the 15th
day „of July, -1925, or file the same
with the Probate Court of Laurens
County. S. C.,- on or-before the 15th
day of July, 1925, or be forever barred. Newberry C6llCerris
7-9-5tc
W. D. COPELAND,
Administrator.
1785 • , 1925
College of Charleston
Examinations at the county seat for
the Laurens county scholarship, Fri
day, July 10, at 9 a. m. Subject's:
English grammar and composition,
American History, algebra, and plane
geometry. *
Four-year courses lead to the de
grees of A. B. and B. S. Special two-
year pre-medical course. Courses in
Commerce and Business Administra
tion. Expense moderate. For terms,
catalogue, and illustrated folder
dress
PHESIDENT’S OFFICE
COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON,
CHARLESTON, S. C.
Newberry, June 30.—As an index
of the growth of Newberry, $66,115
will be paid out in dividends to the
stockholders of the different business
houses about the first of July. Meet
ings of the stockholders and directors
of the various banking houses and
industrial enterprises of the city have
been held recently and handsome divi
dends were declared in each instance.
The three -banks of Newberry—the
Exchange, the National and the Com
mercial—each declared a semi-annual
dividend of 5 per cent on a capital
ad- stock nf $100,000 narh.—The Newberry-
Cotton Mill declared a 4 per cent divi
dend^ on a capital stock of $1,000,000,
RENT A CAR
Drive Yourself
OPEN AND CLOSED CARS
DAY PHONE 357
NIGHT PHONE 156
Ellis Auto Livery
If fire begs your prop*
erty, you’ll find a South
ern Home agent n
speedy retriever—both
be and we are near by.
CbuibemHome
Km ancegfm;
pan 1
5 CAROLINA INSURANCE
2 FOR CAR0UNA PEOPLE
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LLOYD D. McCRARY
AGENT
The Bee Hive To
Break All Records
The Bee Hive, one of Clinton’s well
known department stores, in a page
advertisement in today’s paper,^ an
nounce their July clearance sale be
ginning tomorrow and continuing for
a period of ten days. The store is
now being arranged for this big bar
gain feast, prices hpve been cut to the
bone, and all records are to be broken
during this period of sale offerings.
The story, quite an interesting one, is
told in the advertising columns of
today’s paper.
Will Fay Dividends
THE
BEGINNING OF
MISSIONS
FOREIGN
' LESION T$XT—Acta 11:1-11. ~
GOLDEN TEXT—And Hn said unto
them. Go ye Into all the world, and
preach the gospel to nvery creature.—
Mark 16:15.
PRIMARY TOPIC—Two Men Beconu
Foreign Missionaries.
JUNIOR TOPIC—How Foreign Mis
sions Began.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP
IC—The Beginning of Foreign Mis
sions.
„ YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP
IC—The Holy Spirit in Foreign Mis
sions.
MISS UNI VERSAL
THE SEASON’S MOST FASHIONABLE
will personally display in the window of S. M.
Wilkes & Company her gifts of silver.
BRIDE
& E. H.
D!
WILL WEAR BRIDAL COSTUME
the Mollohno Manufacturing Company
3 per cent on $750,000, the Oakland
Cotton Mill S 1-2 per cent on $510,000
preferred. Security Loan and Invest
ment Company 4 per cent on $25,000,
and the Farrqers Oil Mill declared an
8 per cent dividend on $56,000. All
were semi-annual dividends except the
Farmers Oil Mill.
Adair’s To Stage :
.. Big Night Sale
Adair’s Department Store announ
ces a unique sale for tonight only
beginning at 7:30 p. m. It is to be
a feminine affair pure and simple, at
which time their entire stock of silk
dresses will be thrown into three
groups and attractively priced to go.
'Their~rhinrhery department will also
offer special closing out prices. The
sale is for one night only—tonight
at 7:30.
' N A Job—A Job
Judkins: “What’s the matter with
old Perkins? He looks like a whip
ped dog.” ;
Sampson: “Didn’t you hear? His
wife disgraced him at the opera house
the other night. When the cook go,t
mad at the mistress and quit in the
second act, Mrs. Perkins jumped up
and said -she’d hire her.””
-V
BACKACHE
Mississippi Lady Benef’tcd ly
Taking Cardui.
“I took Cardui for backache and
a weakened, run-down condition,
and 1 ' it strengthened and helped
me,” says Mrs. Mattie Hurt, of
Qbldwater, Miss.
“Before the birth of my children,
when wc^k and nauseated, I took
Cardui. After .he birth of my
children, when just getting up to do
my work, 1 took a couple of bottles
of Cardui and it never failed to
strengthen and help me when tak
ing it.
Y ‘l seemed to enjoy my food and
my back would feel stronger. 1
don’t believe I could have kept
going had it not been for Cardui
and the strength it gave me.
“When change ot life came on I
... got down in bed. Life seemed
to be just a terrible drag. 1 did
RENT A CAR
Drive Yourself
OPEN AND CLOSED CARS
DAY PHONE 357
NIQHT PHONE 156
Ellis Auto Livery
I. The. Gifts of the Church at An
tioch (v. 1).
Young ns Antioch, the new religious
center was, she bad prophets and
tempers. In Kpta. 4:8-12 Paul declares
that when Christ ascended He gave
gifts to men for the purpose of per-'
fecting the saints unto the work of
ihe ministry. This shows that the
church does not exist for Itself, but
for service to others. Christ, the
head of the church, came not to be
ministered to, but to minister and
give His life a ransom for many
(Matt. 20:28). - ^
II. Barnabas and Saul Sent Forth
(vv. 2-3).
—TTrerr \\W TRe 'ffr^"TofeT?m “rnT8-'
sionaries sent out. While the five
ministers were praying and fasting,
the Spirit of God commamfed them to
send forth Barnabas ahd Saul. The
work of evangelizing the world was
laid so heavily upon these men that
they refrained from eating in order to
seek .-the will of the Lord in prayer.
Tills |s the kind df fasting that meets
God’s -approval. From the fact that
they were directed to.send forth those
whom the Spirit called, we learn that
the real call to Christ’s service Comes
from the Spirit./ The Spirit called
and the church seconded the motion
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by sending those who were called by
Him. ♦The church should be constant-
ly seeking the mind of the Spirit rela-
tive to the sending forth of laborers
into the vineyard. The Spirit called
-and -the i-lnirrh sent- the—venr—best
men from the church at Antioch.
While displaying her beautiful gifts of over-laid sil
ver, the bride will be dressed in her wedding gown. One
of the attendants gives the following description of
*
this gown:
H!
The bride made a picture destined to linger long in
the minds of those who were present at the season’s
smartest wedding.
The best talents of a Nationally famed Fifth Avenue
couturiere was fully expressed in the wedding gown of
rose-point lace, trimmed with bits of priceless heirloom
lace which come down in the bride’s family f^om gsnera-
- tion to generation, caught lightly around her head with
orange blossoms, the filmy crown of her costume looked
more like a halo than a veil, and the white roses with
a shower of lilies of the valley that malae up tho hongnpt
was arranged by the master hand of a most exclusive
florist.
- We extend to all our friends a cordial invitation to
call at our store during the next week and meet the
bride and see the lovely silver wedding gifts she will
display. - •
y
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M. £ E. H. Wilkes £ Co
Laurens, South Carolina
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New Series
BUILDING &
nothave strength for anything. My
My li ^
back hurt. My limbs hurt I was
so nervous I couldn’t rest.
“I knew what Cardui had done,
SO sent straight for it, and it did. just
as it had done before—strengthen
ed and'buflt me up.” 7
At all drug stores. > c-3o
IbrnarfsTonic
TO BEGIN
JULY 10TH
Liberty B. & L. flssoc’n.
Clinton, S.C.
'i lie.se men seem to have been ready
to go for they rendered instant obedi
ence. This should be our attitude to
ward the Lord’s work, holding our
selves in readiness for the immedi
ate execution of His commission.
Those who have received” the Spirit’s
e:; , r are not taken by surprise when
the church sets them forward to their
specific work.
III. Preaching the Word of God in
Cyprus (vv. 4-5).
We are not told as to why they first
went to Cyprus, but Sve are left to in
fer that it was owing to the fact that
it was the home of Barnabas. He was
acquainted with the country and peo
ple, ahd Ponld thus be assured of a
respectable bearing' among them. Be
sides it Is most natural that those who
have heard the good news to go with
It first to their kindred and friends.
Andrew first went to his brother, and
the man out of whom the demons
were cast was denied the pleasure of
his request to follow Jesus, . Christ
commanded him to go home and tell
what great things the Lord had done
for him (Luke 8:30)/' As they went
forth they carofuRy earrled out their
commission for they preached the
Word of God, not current’ history,
philosopliyr ethics, etc. Those who are
fuithfuF-to God will never preach any
thing hut His Word. The great need
today is Spirit-called. Spirit-filled- men
preaching God’s Word. In fact Spirit-
iilled men will preach nothing else.
The opposer of God and Christ can
only he successfully met by this
means. ‘
IV. Withstood by Elymas, the Sor
cerer (vv. 6-12).
Sergius IV.ulux. the deputy, invited
Hurnalms and Saul to tell him of the
Word of God. Elymas mnlicion.-ly |
Sought to turn his mind from the;
faith. This is tin* first obstacle they ;
i n -ounteted. I»t;t if was overcome ;
through the power of the Spirit. Tiiis
opp<4*er is the same one who came to
Adam in the .garden of Eden, and
de-ms in the wiblerm -s. IL* is the .
enemy of God olid men. He now |
j .‘•ought to l»ar the gospel as, it entered'! j»*
tin* heathen. Paul denounced him In ’ j|
the moat scathing terms. He called
him the jChlld of the devil, denounced
him as (till of guile and villainy, pro
nouncing him the ' enemy of all
righteousness, accusing' him of per
verting the right ways of the Lord.
Surely a man is never more of a vil
lain than when trying to turn a soul
from the gospel.
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11
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H. D. HENRY, President
F. M. BOLAND, Treasurer
WHAT DO
P. & JEANS
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“That’s a
That’s the impression you want your letters to make.
But what you writtf isn’t everything. Much depends
upon what your correspondent reads between the
lines. , •
TYPEWRITER
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* Our Life .
We are living now by justice, honor
ahd mercy., by the iporal mastery df
ourselves and* of our timed and this*
life while In time Is not of time; It is
life in God and for God; it Is.the life
of freedom; it is free from anxiety,
fear, doubt, despair, deatn; M Is con
tent with God and with its fate.in God:
—^George A. Gordon. *
lend character to business letters. They endorse the
message. They speak an emphatic word for your busi-
** * ~ ‘ . fc > J
ness methods. We seek an opportunity to equip your
office with these quality papers. • ,
a
a
a
Sunday
tHrauss.
Sunday'
must continue
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Stationery and Office Supplies
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