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Pajrc Two THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Thursday, February 15, 1951 ■ * (Continued from page three) ington, Mrs. Heath Copeland, Mrs. llrchael Turner, Mrs. Hugh Jaeofos, Sfrs. Thomas D. Jacobs and Miss 6ara Culp. Smith-Hunter Redding Solemnized At Newberry Church Miss Dorothy Eddie Smith, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Marion E. Smith of Newberry, was married to John Holland Hunter, Jr., son of John Hol land Hunter and the late Mrs. Hun ter of this city, in a recent wedding at the First Baptist churdh of New- bcrry. Dr. Louis LaMotte of Max- ten. N. C.. uncle of the bridegroom, cfficiated. Miss Vivian Ellis of Saluda, organ- Sst, and Miss Margery Smith of Ki- cards, vocalist, gave a program of wedding music. Ushers were Herbert Hunter, bro ther of the bridgegroom, Harry Stur geon of Spartanburg, Vance Logan of Augusta, Ga. and Louis LaMotte, Jr. «! Raleigh, N C. Miss Dorothy Aull of New York was maid of honor and bridesmaids were Miss Beatrice Goodson of Hick ory. N. C., Florence Wicker of New berry and Greenville, Elizabeth Fish er of Greer and Greenville and Mrs. Stanley C. Baker, Jr., of Charles ton. They wore strapless gowns of Nile green net over taffeta with bouf* fant skirts and satin boleros. Their flowers were gladioli and all wore pearls, gifts of the bride. John Holland Hunter was his son’s best man. The bride, given in- marriage by her father, wore a wedding gown of white duchess satin with a yoke of French illusion and a full skirt with a court train. Her full length veil of illusion fell from a tiara of seed pearls. She carried a white Bi ble topped with a showered white orchid. Mrs. Smith wore a gown of triple sheer aqua crepe and a corsage of red carnations. Mrs. Hunter wore a gown of fuchsia crepe and a corsage of white carnations. Immediately after the ceremony, a reception was held at the Com munity hall. Bowls of white gladioli were used in the floral decorations and white tapers burned in the win dows, casting a soft glow over the lovely scene. The receiving line was composed of the bride’s mother, Mrs. Hunter, Mr. Hunter, Mrs. My rtle A. Hunter (grandmother of the brdegroom), Mr. Smith, the bride groom and the bride, the attendants and Dr. and Mrs. LaMotte. For traveling, Mrs. Hunter wore a periwinkle gabardine suit with a two-tone jacket checked in dusty pink. She wore matching pink ac cessories and an orchid corsage. Mrs. Hunter is a graduate of Nine- ty^Six high school and the business department of Newberry college. Mr. Hunter is a graduate of Clinton high school and Presbyterian college. He is now employed »by the Industrial Supply company of this cityJ A number of Clinton friends and relatives attended the wedding. Musgrove Club Holds Meeting I Professional Announcement I am now giving my entire time to my office at 200 South Broad Street. OFFICE HOURS — 9:00 to 5:39 Dr. Fred E. Holcombe OPTOMETRIST Phone 958 Clinton. S. C. i Qteu) WOADWRi Oheathe Box Office Opens 2:45 Saturday 12:45 Shows Run Continuous Thursday-Friday, February 15-16 Heavens Sake CUFION HtB6 lOAN’BENNEfl HM'dlMiS M -• JOAN BLONOELL^GWmRREAU 4 I I Saturday, February 17 As Big’.and Great as the Wide 'Wild West! RANDOIPH SCOTT Zmme Greys BUFFALO STAMPEDE 4m.-... M «t .'t* su SSm With Barton MacLean, Raymond Hatton and Judith Allen • Comedy and Tom and Jerry Cartoon Monday-Tuesday, February 19-20 “Rocky Mountain” e <l No-Maris, t. With Errol Flynn, Patrice Wymore and Scott Forbes WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21 UNDERCOVER GIRL With Alexis Smith and Scott Brady COMING SOON “I’D CLIMB THE HIGHEST MOUNTAIN” HOVIBARj BETTER MR! The Musgrove Home Demonstra tion club held its regular monthly meeting at the school house last week with the president presiding. The clUb sang “Dark Eyes,” after which Mrs. W. R. Anderson gave the devotional and led in prayer. The roll was called and minutes read by the secretary. Mrs. P. B. Mitchell read the beautification goals and gave the special feature. She demonstrated a flower arrangement of one flower, using a rose in one container and a gladioli in the other. She, also, showed magazine picture illustrating the single arrangement. During the business session the club members voted to buy a $5.00 health bond. The amount was contributed by those present and turned over to the health chairman, Mrs. A. A. May. Miss Dean distributed the new year books, which had been completed and the members filled them out. She announced the 1951 Laurens county fair will be held October 1-6. Goals for the departmental chairmen were distributed. Miss Dean, assist ant agent, gave the demonstration on "Stain Removal" and distributed lit erature on the subject. During the social hour a contest was given to Determine who could make the best Valentine. Mrs. J. C. Johnson won the prize. Refreshments were served by the hostesses, Mrs. Mitchell and Miss Blanche Cox. *ne full year ’’ he explained. The bill appropriates only $460, or the salary for January and Feb ruary, to the tax collector. The ap propriation for the office will be cut off until there is a change in the set up of the office, Mr. Wasson said. To limit spending, the bill prdhib- its any county commissioner or other office of the county government to “purchase, bargain for, or contract for any materials or services” in ex cess of the specific itemized appro priation in the bill. One office, it is understood, went ever its appropriation for supplies during the immediate past year. The bill, according to Mr. Wasson, will put officers on notice not to ov erspend in the future. The supervisor is allowed $56,000 for maintenance of the chain gang, roals, bridges, building bridges, grad ing and for topsoiling roads. The bill also provides $30,000 for perma nent road construction and a like amount to pay off past indebtedness for 1950 road construction. Anticipated revenues during the six months is $114,256.86. Tom Carroll Speaks To Lions The Lions club had as its guest speaker Friday evening Tom Carroll, ( assistant vice-president of the Cot-! COLUMBIA CONCERT TRIO AT LAURENS TUESDAY ton Council Institute of America. Mr. Carroll spoke on management- employee relations, emphasizing the point that an appreciated, respected, well-treated employee maintains ex cellent morale. County Has New 6-Months Supply Bill For $210,746 Columbia, Feb. 13. — A Laurens county supply bill for the first six months of this year calls for spend ing $210,746 30. The bili also imposes budgetary restrictions on spending by the indi- vicual departments and cuts off the appropriation for the office of tax eoKeetor. Y Rep. Robert C. Wasson said the delegation had prepared the six months bill by halving approximate expenditures for the last full calen dar year. The county is changing from the calendar year to July 1 to June 30 year. The bill leaves to the supply bill for the next fiscal year the levying of a tax That bill will be prepared later. Mr. Wasson said. No salary in creases are included' in the six months bill. "If a salary increase can be work ed out, it will be put in the bill for District Brotherhood Roily Here Feb. 19 At First Baptist Church Dr. Robert E. Naylor, pastor of the First Baptist church of Columbia, will be the featured speaker at a district Brotherhood Rally to be held next Monday night at the First Bap tist church of this city at 7:30. Dr. Naylor, a native of Oklahoma, was educated at Oklahoma Baptist university and Southwestern Baptist Theological seminary at Fort Worth. He is one of the outstanding minist ers of the Baptist denomination. The purpose of the meeting it is announced is to enlist Baptist men In the simultaneous evangelistic cam paign March 25 through April 8, with every Baptist church in the South ern convention territory east of the Mississippi river engaging in the ef fort. A large crowd is expected for the meeting. At the same place and hour, Dr. Robert J. West, secretary of Brother hood work for the Baptist general association of Missouri will be pre sent to lead a Brotherhood confer ence. Dr. West, a native of Missouri, is one of the finest speakers in the Southern Baptist convention. The Baptist men of this state have pledged themselves to spear-head this great effort with an adopted goal of "51,000 Baptisms in ’51", more than twice the number attained by the denomination in a year. SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRONICLB "The Paper Everybody Three young musical stars form , The Columbia Concert Trio which will be heard in the Laurens high school auditorium at 8:15 Tuesday evening, February 20: the violinist Ariana Bronn, the violoncellist A^d- yth Walker and the pianist Richard Gregor. These brilliant young Amer ican artists, hailine respectively from the east, middle west, and the north west, and now on their fourth suc cessful country-wide tour, are play ing almost ninety engagements from coast to coast this season. This in cludes concert and orchestral appear ances, their most recent being with the Harrisburg Symphony Orchestra 1 m the Beethoven Triple Concerto. An ensemble which presents the piano trio masterpieces of the great com posers, their repertoire ranges from the beautiful and noble works of i chamber music literature to special arrangement! for their three instru ments of American folk tunes. In addition to trios, each artist, in the | course of the program, is heard in an individual group of solos. Violinist Ariana Bronn, a New j Yorker, studied with her father, a pupil of the great Leopold Auer, and ; hiihself one of the leading teachers in this country. The following year she won the ward of “The Society ior the Advancement of Young Mus icians”—a Carnegie Hall debut. Since then she has played four recitals at New York’s Town Hall, toured the country in concert, and been soloist with several orchestras. ■Cellist Ardyth Walker comes from Iowa. At fifteen she won a scholar ship at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music and, on graduation came to New York on a fellowship to the Juilliard Graduate School where ahe studied under the distinguished ’cel list Felix Salmond. Since then she has appeared in recital and as so loist with orchestra the length and breadth of this country and in Can ada. Pu nist Richard Gregor, a native of the state of Washington, was raised in Spokane. After high school grad uation he won a scholarship for stu dy with the late Olga Samaroff Stok owski at the Philadelphia Conserva tory. Subsquently he spent four years on a fellowship at the Juilliard Grad uate school where he continued to study under Mme Stokowaki. Alter his debut at Town Hall in 1946 the New York Times first praised his brilliant technique but added: “More important, he is musical." He gave a second New York recital just before starting the current tour with the Trio. The attraction will be the third of the season of the Laurens County Concert association presented bare and in Laurens on alternating dates THE CASINO THURSDAY AND FRIDAY February 15 and 16 RED CANYON Zane Grey Western (In Technicolor) With HOWARD DUFF, ANN BLYTHE and GEORGE BRENT. Feature 3:25, 7:25, 9:12 SHORT 9c and 35c SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17 ONE DAY ONLY DYNAMITE PASS (Western)^ With TIM HOLT and LYNNNE ROBERTS. Feature 2:18, 4:07, 5:56, 7:45, 9:34 Chapter No. 7 Flying Disc Man to Mars 9c and 35c MONDAY AND TUESDAY February 19 and 29 KEEP ’EM SLUGGING With DEAD END KIDS and LITTLE TOUGH GUYS, Feature 3:41, 7:41, 9:23 NEWS-SHORTS 9c and 35c WEDNESDAY, 7 FEBRUARY 21 ONE DAY ONLY TARNISHED (“Problem" Boy returns home) With DOROTHY PATRIC and JAMES LYDON. Feature 3:08, 7:00, 9:03 . SILVER RAIDERS (Western) With WHIP WILSON and AN DY CLYDE. Feature 4:06, 8:06, 10:03 SHORT 9c and 35c WILSON’S GROCERY 305 N. Sloan St. Phone 7-R Free Delivery Service Morrell Pure LARD 4 lbs. 95c Sunriy Brand and Hall. 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