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i^' /' 1 ' Pace Four /■ i. THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Thursday, January 24, 1952 'Food Felt Like Fire In My Raw Stomach, Sea If's Gave Relief" MRS. WALKER 1952! It’s an old story new; we are i on the way and the newness has ; | worn off. How did you spend New Year’s 1 Day? I haven’t taken a holiday in Mrs. Emmett Walker, of Middles-1 many years, so I had my pencil in bero, Ky., writes: Ihad suffered hand, as usual. • spells of. gassy stomach distress for, !• began th^'dayr began the year, 12 vears but I seemed to grow much seeking the counsel of a man wiser worse after a throat operation. My! than myself. By the way, that wasn’t tongue seemed so raw and every bite a bad beginning, ^was it? My car I ate hurt me so that I was pn an [gave me furiously to think, ’as the ; oatmeal diet. - Sometimes I couldn’t' French say. On a trip tHe day before, bend over I was so sore about my [the dryramatic seemed to decide to i-tomach. I often had blind spots, take the day off . . . and that at a before my eyes and blinding head- lonely .spot. However, having read< aches. that book on the power of thought, “After taking the first bottle of Ihe conquering influence of brain Scalfs Indian "River Medicine 11 waves even over metals and ma- tould rest better and started eatingJ chines, I highly resolved that If a little, then as I got better I be-; should not sit in despair, but n>ust| gan to eat different foods. Soon Fuse the full power of the mind over was able to eat anything I wanted, [the stubborn, machine. It all worked even onions, without suffering pain, fout as predicted by the psychologists, The balanced diet soon helped me to.^od the halting mechanism yielded fc from 100 lbs. to 126 lbs. in weight' 1° a pressure on the accelerator, and and I felt better than in 12^ years. [ 50011 we were in full flight. But it I thank Scalf’s to the bottom of my seemed wise to confer with some one heart for all it has done for me." w h° knew something about such Scalfs Indian River Medicine is, things and did not rely entirely on sale at all good drug stores on a! the unpact of his mind on the wav- ..money-back guarantee of satisfac-1 ering outfit. tion from the very first bo’ttle. Try Frankly, I’m not a mechanic; and for tires-^-Coal, to make glass, for windshield and - windows—to make the dyes for upholstery, the color pigments for paint. But helping to make your car is .only one of the many ways in which bituminous coal, serves you. Hie food you eat, the clothes you wear, the house you live in, practically everything you use in your . daily life also depends on coal—as an ac tual ingredient, or as the source of the power needed in manufacture. Today, coal plays a vital role in produoing the great quantity and Variety of goods that make our standard of living the highest in the world—and here are two facts that promise an even better future: America’s coal reserves can power all fuels. America’s vast' reserves ol years to come. Of the nation’s entire fuel resources, 92 per cent is our industrial progress for hundreds coal! America’s coal mines are the tive and efficient in the world—an other good reason why coal will con tinue to be the prime source of pow- ei, heat and light in^ America. Coal is the easiest and safest to store of all fuels. America's vast reservess make coal’s supply always depend able! Lt. Maxwell Completes Officers Scliool David B. Maxwell, son of Mrs. A. S. Maxwell of this city, completed a special 15-weeks training on Janu ary 11 at Fort Benning^Ga., designed to produce company grade officers well-grounded in the basic funda mentals and techniques of all infan try units with emphasis on the de-i velopment of , capable company com manders. Lt. Maxwell was born in Brazil and lived there teiF ye.ars with his parents before returning to the States. He was an honor graduate Inst year from Presbyterian college and at tliat time received his com-, mission as a reserve officer in the ROTC program of training. SUMMONS FOR RELIEF The State of South Carolina, County of Laurens. Court of Common Pleas. A. H. Parkm&n and Martha Leej Parkman, Petitioners, against Catherine Parkmari Burdette, Man ning L. Burdette, Melissa Ann Bur* dfette and Patricia Dianne Burdette,! Respondents. 1 To the Respondents above named; You are hereby summoned and re-i quired to answer the Petition in this action, of which a copy is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to said Petition on the subscribed at his office, 106 N. Broad St., Clinton, S. C., within twenty days after the service hereof: exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the Petition within the time aforesaid the peti- tioners in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the Petition. * CECIL E. WHITE, Petitioners’ Attorney Dated January 3, A. D., 1952. NOTICE To the Respondents above named: Take notice that the Summons in the above entitled action, of which the foregoing Is a copy, together with — 1 1 » ; j; the Petition attached^ was duly filed in the office of the Clerk ^of Court for Laurens County on the 8th day oF January, 1952,' the object and prayer of which is the adoption of infant respondents. CECIL E. WHITE, 24-3c Petitioners’ Attorney. Savings Accounts 3%—DIVIDEND—3% We invite savings accounts from the people of Gin ton and vicinity. Yon will like oar friendly and efficient ser vice, and you will receive your dividend promptly each January 1st and July 1st. Any amount — from $1 up opens an account. * Each account is insured up to $10,000 by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. Two people may have up to $30,000 fully insured. Accounts by mail promptly acknowledged. — - Chartered and Supervised by Hie United States Government Laurens Federal Savings & Loan Association Telephone 22271 LAURENS’ LARGEST SAVINGS INSTITUTION 104 West Main Street Laurens, S. Cl ■irnwitaKmnexKKKKsy.aKKaiMtKKKicaaMaaawaKaaaiMimooiiiiaawdw j! today. Dr. W. W. Adams ' VETERINARIAN 614 Musgrove Street Phones: Office 958 Residence 991-W Clinton, S. C. Goodyear Tires and Tubes BATTERIES AND ACCESSORIES McMillan Service Station Sinclair Products Phone Ns. 2 accurately • Each prescription brought to us is accu rately compounded by a skilled Registered Pharmacist—and every compounding step carefully checked. Yet you’ll find our prices no higher. Bring us your Doctor’s prescriptions! McGEE’S DRUG STORE Phone No. 1 , Gray Funeral Home Clinton, S. C. FUNERAL DIRECTORS ...and... EMBALMERS Phones 41 and 399-J AMBULANCE SERVICE L. RUSSELL GRAY and V. PARKS ADAIR, Gen. Mgrs. IS COUGHING For coughs and bronchitis due to colds you can now get Creomulsion specially prepared for Children in a new pink and blue package and be sure: (1) Your child will like it. It contains only sate, proven ingredients. (3) It contains no narcotics to dis turb nature’s processes. (4) R will aid nature.JLo soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed throat and bronchial membranes,' thus relieving the cough and promoting rest and *leep. Ask for Creomulsion for Chil dren in the pink and blue package. CREOMUESION FOR CHILDREN rdines Cw^hs, Ciest Colds. Ante Bronchitis 1 my knowledge of oars, first ac-, ' quired in the days of the Model T. I and sand beds abounding in deep | ruts, has progressed little by little, from planetary transmissions^to the' grand speedsters of today. Even so, my knowledge is very elementary, though deeply grounded" a'nd - thor- ! ough. I know that the car requires i gasoline. Do you regard that as a; I foolish remark? Well, look at the thousands who are stranded because the tank is empty. The car needs! oil; and some is necessary. Perhaps I my education as a driver was ac quired at a fortunate time. I do; not remember taking the Model T tor a change of oil; I put in about; two quarts every time' I'“started 1 out,” regardless of the distance; and,! of course, we looked under the seat and took note of the condition of, the gas tank. So now, I do the elementary things thoroughly; have the oil and gas provided, water put in and the tires tested. That’s as far as I tinker j with the car. I'm a good driver, I think, saying' it' with fingers crossed, for the good drivers are killed by the reckless fellows. I can drive, if the car is willing to "go; and I can stop, if the; [brakes have a mind to work. Nor, do I try to jam on the brakes while running sixty miles an hour, or' start the car at fifty. My friend and counsellor of the j morning poured some oil in ther transmission, advising me to take | note of possible trash in the carbu retor. I consult several friends about the| car. The first fills it with non- i stallable gas; and' the second with non-stoppable oil and grease. Then II apply to the first for sound ad vice and he refers me to the sec ond; then there are three others I apply^to in time of anxious concern. And I’m stilT operating. This running from A to B and perchance to C, reminds me of an experience in France. Three of us were together in Paris for about , six weeks. Paris, you know, is quite a town—or was. I’m not sure I that it has fully recovered from the i Americans. We three^-one from j Alabama, one from Kansas, and I ' from South Carolina, were not at home with the French language. Oh, we could bon soir, a bit, but we were lame, very lame, hopeless cripples, before the gush of a i Frenchman’s rhetoric. We were not! three musketeers, but all three felt that no one should be specially dis- bound to expose our helplessness so comforted and chagrined. So, each in turn, would try out his French. .'•> One night the three of us were in; the Rue Royals, near the Eglise de Madeleine—(the Royal Street near the famous Church Madeline) and we needed guidance. We' approach- j a very handsome French gentleman; and my friend from Kansas spoke; up, feebly, haltingly, uncertainly. Then the brave man frown Alabama acquitted himself in like manner. Now I wish I could tell you that I stepped out and overwhelmed 'that chevalier of France in a torrent of beautiful and classical French. But not so; I was the saddest of the three: After several minutes exposure to cur limping French, that French man of the boulevardier type, looked us over calmly and said in perfect English, “Where do you gentlemen wish to go?’’ And that was the blow that almost killed father, if you re call the old song. * * * Coay Though many of us use" oil, there is a fascination about coal. When t was in the Shenandoah Val ley of Virginia I could lie in bed and hear the long coal trains pulling the •grades, with three great locomotives straining and puffing and chugging aiong. • . I read something about coal—an advertisement, which I find interest^ ing: '* , *‘The proud r w 1952 cars are a product of inventive genius—-and of coal, too! Coal, converted into steel, for frame and body—Coal, THE TABLE of 1001 USES FOLDING HAMILTON “A CREDIT TO SOUTH CAROLINA*