University of South Carolina Libraries
Page Eight THE CLINTON CHRONICLE, CLINTON, S. C. -, July 15, 1943 PERSONAL AND SOCIAL NEWS OF GOLDVILLE MRS. E. G. KAY, Correspondent and Representative Mr. and Mrs. John Boswell of Co lumbia, spent Sunday with the lat ter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Chapman. Kay Frances and Charlie Boswell, who had been visiting their grand parents, have returned home. PROMOTED Ervin Stroude visited friends in Newberry Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Cleve Brannon and son, Duane, and Mrs. Beulah Stroude! visited Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brannon at Enoree Saturday. Miss Bonnie Brannon, who has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. James Evans and there, returned home with them, daughter Bonnie, spent the week- Misses Mary Kate Carr, Hilda Ox-? end with relatives in Newberry. ner, Millie Thomas and Gaynelle Dale Styles and daughter, Betty week-end guests of Brown, of Mooresville, N. C., spent Misses Bobby J e a n 'p arr * *' ra [)? es the week-end with Rev. and Mrs. c. r ^ ow anc * an< ^ D° ris Thomas at Win- F. Allen. Miss Styles remained forjV* 1,0 ? college. a few weeks’ visit. Elwood Cline i Mr. and Mrs. W. >C, .Gardner and of Thornwell orphanage, spent last son, Harold, spent the week-end with week with Rev. and Mrs. Allen. Miss Evelyn Gardner in Charlotte, Fearless Rowe visited his son,, Tommy, at Camp Old Indian Satur-| Mrs. Daniel Bedenbaugh spent the day. i week-end with relatives in Savannah, Mrs. James Mitchell is spending the.Ga. -week with her parents in Newberry, j * William R. Weathers, Jr., of the Mr. and Mrs. Roy Templeton and navy, staioned at Bainbridge, Md., ill SI Hi children of Fort Mill, visited Mr. and Mrs. J. D. O’Dell over the week-end. Mrs. Templeton and children remain ed for a week's visit. Miss Doris Bozard of Greenwood, is spending a few days with his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Riley Weathers. Mrs. Corrie Fleming and daughter, Mrs. Grace Whyt, of Spartanburg, visited Mr. and Mrs. S. D. Weathers spent Sunday'^vith her mother, Mrs. Sunday. Helen Bozard. • |' Joyce Frady is spending the week Patsy Whitmire is spending the with relatives in Laurens. Pvt. T. E. Blackwell of Camp| Wheeler, Ga., spent the week-end | STERLING A. PITTS, JR., aon of Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Pitta, of this city, was recently promoted to the rank of petty officer, third class, as a pharmacist mate in the navy. He is receiving training at the Univer sity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and since his promotion wears the eagle and stripe, the navy medical corps emblem. week with relatives in Whitmire. S. D. Weathers and Riley Weathers visited Pvt. Landrum W’eathers at | wdth relatives here. , < A/lmmicfrnf inn An/I Fort Jackson recently. | p v t. Charles Stewart of Camp 1 ^ , j. Mrs. Mozelle Dobbs of the Shady j Wheeler, Ga., spent the week-end; ConQreSS Are Heading Grove community, spent Sunday with with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. W. J A Mr. and Mrs. Wilburn Russell. ' .jo. Stewart. ■ OW{K(j A ^nOWOOWn Pvt. Emory Moore; stationed in, Mrs. Sudie Mae Hawkins of New- California, has returned to camp af- j berry, visited friends and relatives ter spending several days with mother, Mrs. Hattie Moore. his here over the week-end. Mrs. Claude Farmer and Miss Edna Cpl. Calvin Elliott has returned to | Putman spent Saturday with rela- Drew Field, Fla., after spending sev- , lives at Lanford Station. Velda •'eral days with Mrs. Elliott and his Farmer and Mrs. Clyde Putman and parents. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Elliott. Pvt. Doc Hawkins of Yuma, Ari zona, is spending a few days with bis mother, Mrs. Shady Hawkins. Those spending Sunday with their son returned home with them. ' Misses Guynelle Payne and Mar garet Hays visited friends in Laurens Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Salters and sons at Camp Old Indian were: Mr. i daughter, Sammy, spent the week end Mrs. Homer Jacks, and Mr. and end with relatives in Greenwood. Mrs. Clarence Wofford visiting Deri Misses Juanita Adams and Ruby Jacks; Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Willingham Kelly, Curtis Lake and Joe Boland end children visiting Richard Will- visited friends in Prosperity Sunday, ingham; Ralph Stroude visiting Carl: M r. and Mrs. L. A. McCurry and Stroude; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bragg family spent Sunday with relatives and daughter visiting Ralph Bragg; i n Ware Shoals. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Osborne, Mr. and |» Mr. and Mrs. Colie Oswalt and Mrs. Earl Arthur and Miss Vivian children and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Arthur visiting Wallace Osborne and Motes attended the funeral of a rela- Pete Arthur. tive in Laurens Sunday. Mrs. Mary Rowe and daughter,! Mrs. Elwin Stevens and daughter, Patsy, are visiting her brother, Grov-iToby, are visiting Mr. Stevens in In- er Jenkins, in Greenwood. dianhead, Md. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Rushton and! Mr. and Mrs. Rayon Mitchell and daughter, Ruby Ray, and Mrs. James S on, Buren, of Newberry, visited Thomas and son, John Earl, visited the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Mrs. Anna Thomas in Columbia Sun- q. Murrah, Sunday, day- 1 Mrs. George Lehman and daughter, Jack Vaughn of Columbia, visited Juanita, of Patterson, N. J., are vis- bis aunt, Mrs. Belle Crawford, Sun-^ting Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Tucker day. and Mr. and Mrs. Rolfe Hughes. Ray Bragg, an employee of the| Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Schumpert of Curtiss-Wright Airplane factory in;Saluda, spent the week-end with California, is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Schumpert. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Bragg. (Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Eidson of Sa- Mrs. Marshall Mullinax of Greer, i u da, visited Mr.-and Mrs. M. B spent the week-end with her parents, [ Bridges Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. George Blakely. j Pvt. Hick Marshall of Camp Bark- Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Blakely and ley, Texas, is spending a few days son. Bob, spent the week-end with,with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. relatives in Greenville. , | Marshall. Misses Marguerite Seay and Made- I ♦ line Beckham of Clinton, visited Mr. j With The Sick and Mrs. Gray Stroude Sunday. | Friends will regret to know Inez Miss Ernestine Bickley spent the Tinsley is a patient at Newberry hos- week-end in Newberry with her par- 1 pital where she underwent an ap- ents, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Bickley, and pendectomy> Mrs. Sowell. Mrs. L. H. Poag has returned from Cpl. Joe Robert Kooh. of Camp Hays hospital, Clinton, and‘is im- Forrest, Tenn., visited Mrs. Koon and proving satisfactorily. „£on last week. Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Verner of Pied mont, Lt. Charles Verner of the army, Mrs. Nellie Jeter is a patient at the Greenwood hospital. Mrs. C. E. Chapman has been ill Washington, July 12.—The admin istration and congress are heading for a showdown on the issue of com pulsory savings versus direct taxes when the lawmakers return from a summer recess. Leaders said today the controversy may be one of the* hottest that has marked enactment of any revenue bill. Chairman George, Democrat, of Georgia, of the senate finance com mittee told reporters before he left for a vacation that the question of inaugurating a system by which the government will make individuals save their money to prevent inflation ary spending necessarily will claim the attention of congress in the falL Without disclosing his viewpoint, Democratic Leader Barkley of Ken tucky said he thought a projected new revenue bill, on which the house ways and means committee will go to work September 8, will present the major issue before congress when it returns. George said that the staff of the joint committee on internal revenue, which he heads, had been instructed to cooperate with treasury experts in drafting plans for presentation to the legislators. There has been much opposition in congress to the assessment of any ad ditional direct taxes against individ uals, on the grounds that the present rates extract about all the revenue from that source that the traffic will bear. George said others have contended that any effort directed primarily to ward whittling consumer purchasing power necessarily must take into ac count some form of compulsory sav ings through which the individual will get a post-war rebate. Secretary Morgenthau and treasury ; officials thus far have opposed en- j forced bond purchases, preferring the voluntary method under which the government now raises the funds to finance its tremendous borrowing for war expenditures. George said if congress decides to place a much-discussed excess income tax on individuals—a special levy on the increased amount they are earn ing in the war period over some basic normal period - W? CLINTON BUILDING &*LOAN ASSOCIATION •f Clinton, in the State of Sonth Carolina At the cloee of bmlneM on Jane St, 1943 ASSETS > Roal Estate Mortgage Loan*. .$39,008.72 Share Loans _ . 400.00 4,630.00 17,15723 6,615.04 47.04 2,818.41 Loans Real Estate Sold on Contract... Real Estate Owned Cash on Hand and in Banks Accounts Receivable Other Assets J TOTAL ASSETS — - $70,696.44 LIABILITIES Fully-paid Shares Bills Payable ., .’ ’ None Other Liabilities 7 „ ; 143.64 Reserves (Including Undivided Profits) 26,1172S TOTAL LIABILITIES * —- $70,696.44 I, Wm. P. Jacobs, Sec.-Treas. of the above-named Building & Loan As sociation; do- solemnly swear that the above statement is true, and that it fully and correctly represents the true statement of the several matters herein contained and set forth, to the best bf my knowledge and belief t WM. P. JACOBS. Correct.—Attest: Wm. J. Bailey, Wm. P. Jacobs, John F. Norris, Robert S. Owens, J. F. Jacobs, Directors. State of South Carolina, County of Laurens, ss: Sworn to and subscribed before me this 6th day of July, 1943, and I hereby certify that I am not an officer or director of this Building and Loan Association. . R. C. ADAIR, Notary Public. My Commission'expires at the pleasure of the Governor. * who has been in foreign service, vis-; several days. j ited Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Ross Sunday.; Mrs. Harley Lyons was ill several | days last week. l Terry Ellison received a broken arm injury in a fall last week.- Mrs. M. J. McFadden is a patient at Hays hospital. MclNTOSH'S SHOE SHOP We are doing business at the same old place. 34 MUSGROVE ST. I BENJAMIN & | SONS PLUMBING ...and... HEATING SERVICE Telephone 117 WE ARE HUNTING TROUBLE BELK’S BUY NOW! Use Our Lay Away Plan ADVANCE SALE! WINTER BLANKETS — Featuring CHATHAM ... A Quality Name in Blankets CHATHAM SUTTON $5.95 A quality-made Blanket throughout. Extra large size 72x84. 25% pure wool. Beautiful colon in solid reversible*. Green, blue, cedar rose, rose, gold. Select now while stocks are complete. COMFORTS-$7.95 Taffeta covered Comforts, 72x84. Wool filled re versible. Several colon to choose from. KENT - $2.98 5% wool double plaid pain. It’s smart to buy r. your Blankets now—use our lay-sway plan. Kidneys Must Work Well- For Yoa To Feel Well 24 hour* trtry day. 7 days erery never stopping, the kidneys alter waste matter from the blood. If more people were aware of how the kidnevs must constantly remove sur plus fluid, excess adds and other waste matter that cannot stay in the blood without injury to health, there would be better understanding of why tbe whole system is upMt when kidneys fail to function properly. Burning, scanty or too frequent urina tion sometimes warns that something is wrong. You may suffer nagging back ache, headaches, diaxineaa, rheumatic pains, getting up at nights, swelling. Why not try Doan’s PtUsT You will be using n medicine recomasended the country over. Doan’s stimulate the func tion of the kidneys and help them to flush out poiaonous waste from the blood. They eodthin nothing harmful. Get Dooa’a today. Use with < At all drug atoms. Doans Pills Birth Announcements Shumpert Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Shumpert an nounce the birth of a daughter, Mary Louise, July 7th. Morse Mr. and Mrs. George Morse an nounce the birth of a daughter, Va- larie Anne, June 30th. [ Birthdays Miss Iris Simmons has a birthday July 18th. Mrs. W. K. Waits observed a birth day Tuesday. Glen Adams celebrated his birth day Tuesday. Mrs. I. G. Gunter had a birthday yesterday. Bobby Simmons celebrated a birth day Monday. B. F. Sample has a birthday July July 17th. Herbert White observes his birth day July 17th. _ , Mrs. Virgie Gamer will have a birthday July 16th. DREEMOR ' By NASHUA $3.98 Beautiful quality, double plaid pairs. Extra heavy, -extra large. 5% wool. 4-Inch sateen binding. It will pay you to buy now. CHATHAM STANLEY $4.98 The quality blanket modestly priced. 72x84. 25% wool Smart solids with colored borders. Weight 3 lbs. A variety of colors to choooe SNOWDEN-$1.98 f v 70x80 double plaid pairs. A handsome Blanket for thrffty showers. EXTRA VALUES IN SUMMER NEEDS! I NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS MEETING FOR DISSOLUTION OF CORPORATION To the Stockholders of Dixie Bever ages, Inc. You will please take notice that a meeting of the stockholders of Dixie Beverages, Inc., will be held at its of fice at Clinton, S. C., on the 31st. day of July, 1943, at the hour of ten o’clock, in the forenoon, for the pur pose of considering a resolution au thorizing the Corporation to go into liquidation and wind up its affairs and dissolve. This meeting is called pursuant to resolution of the Board of Directors. Signed, T. E. ADDISON, President St Treasurer. * MRS. T. E. ADDISON, Secretary. — 3®-4c Directors. OPA ODD LOT RELEASE SHOE SALE $1.99 Pr. STARTS MONDAY, JULY 19 The OPA has given merchants permission to sell odd lot shoes ration free. Here’s your chance to get-good leather shoes with out stamps. We have selected a group of odd lot shoes that con sist of whites, brown and whites, tu-tone tans, etc. These are all good leather shoes. Most all sizes. Values to $3.98 pair. No refunds or exchanges In this sale. SPORT SHIRTS 88c One group Men’s Sport Shirts, plain and fancy patterns. Made of fast color materials. Small, medium and large sizes. SALE MASON FRUIT JARS 69c Doz. Mason Jars, with Wo urge DRESS SHIRTS 97c Men’s full cut, fast color Dress Shirts, whites and fancies. We say a bargain. Sises 14 to 17. Rayon PANTS $3.98’to $5.95 Men’s rayon Pants. Cool for summer. Tans and bines. Sises 2$ to 44. Sport SHIRTS 79c Boys’ Sport Shirts, plain and slub weavO materials. Sizes 6 to 16. Hand TOWELS He Nice with Hand Towels, white BED SPREADS $1.00 Crinkle Cotton Spreads, all wanted colon. Full double-bed 'size. Buy now and save. Wash PANTS 21.29 One group Men’s better Wash Pants, sanforised. Size* 29 to 49. Regular $1.98 value. Men’s SUITS $16.50 Close-out Men’s Spring and Summer Suits, tweeds, worst eds, shetlands. Regular $2249 values. SLACK SUITS Boys’ Sport Slack Suita, fast color, sanforised. Sizes 6 to If. Blues, tan, green. SALE — CANNON TOWELS 37c Big, thick, heavy quality Turk ish Towels. Smart pastel'' ool- You’ll want several at this Junior Cottons $3.95 Piques, Muslins, are tubable. Smart styles. Sises 9 to 17. HATS - $1.00 better One group of ladies' Hate, 91J6 and $2J8 Straws — all new styles. mess umns $1.67 A. Printed spun rayen Dress Lengths, SH yards, fast color. A $2.97 value. Sew and mve.