The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, January 29, 1953, Image 5
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Thursday, January 29, 1933
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THE CLINTON CHRONICLE
Pasfe. Five
Shands Families
Here For Reunion
W. H. Shands celebrated his 82nd
birthday on January 17. Because
of illness in the homes of members
of his family they were not able to
CLUB COLLECTING
CLOTHING FOR GERMANY
Officers have asked that all
members of the Business and Pro
fessional Woman’s club leave their
contributions of clothing for the
German Youth Center at the South
Carolina Employmen office by
Thursday, Feb. 5. Others who
would like to donate to the box
may do so.
be present for the happy event.
The children and grandchildren
were all here Sunday to wish him
many happy returns.
Mr. and Mrs. T. P. P. Carson
(Kate) of Greenville; Dr. and Mrs.
R. L. Coe (Evie) of Columbia; Mr.
and Mrs. T. Norris France of Stan
ley, N. C., (Jane Carson), daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Carson, and their
children, Thomas, Jr., and Carson;
Mr. and Mrs. Albert W. Ford, Jr.,
(Louise Coe), of Georgetown), and
daughters, Lucy and Anne.
Mr. and Mrs. Shands were mar
ried 59 years ago on December 27.
IF YOU DON’T READ
THE CHRONICLE
YOU DONT GET THE NEWS
U-~t
WEEK-END TRIPS . . VISITORS . . ILLNESS
BRIEFS...ABOUT THE PEOPLE YOU KNOW
Items of Interest Concerning Clinton Residents
8 8
“PIE FOR ALL YOU ARE WORTH’’
Hugh L. Eichelberger
NEW YORK LIFE MAN
32 Years Experience
PROFESSIONAL INSURANCE INFORMATION
FURNISHED FREE
Member The National Association of Life Underwriteni
NOTICE
TO CITY WATER USERS
WATER WILL BE CUT OFF ON THE FOLLOWING
STREETS THURSDAY NIGHT, JAN. 29
From 11:00 P.M. to 4:00 A.M.
S. Broad St. from J. Sloan Todd’s residence to city limits
E. Walnut St. Cedar St.
W. Walnut St. Chestnut St.
Hickory St. Pine St.
W. Maple St. Highway 56
Young Drive Highway 72
B. R. AUSTIN, Supt.
CITY WATER AND LIGHT DEPARTMENT
>3
Savings Accounts
3%—DIVIDEND—3%
We-invlte sauings^accoun4s from4he people of Clinton
and vicinity. You will like our 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 the
United States Government
Laurens Federal Savings
& Loan Association
Telephone 22271
LAURENS’ LARGEST SAVINGS INSTITUTION
104 West Main Street
Laurens, S. C.
Backache may be
warning»..
Backache can be very painful . . .
What'* more, it can lead to serious
disorders not immediately associat
ed with the pain itself.
Pain it naiure't tcay of warning that tontelhing
it wrong. Frequently pain in any part of the
back it canted by a mitaligned vertebra tome-
where in the tpinal column which interfere!
tcith nerve trammiition between brain and
tittue cell. Permanent relief it not pottihle in
thit type of cate until the rertebra it retiored
to itt normal potition.
A series of treatments at the C. J. Hart Clinic will soon cor
rect the cause of your backache and you will feel well again. Call
the Hart Clinic for appointment today. Telephone 22501 < for a
consultation and discuss your problems. There is never any
charge or any obligation whatsoever for a discussion of your
health problems at the C. J. Hart Chiropractic Clinic. —Adv.
THE C. J. HART CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC
205 Church St. Laurens, S. C.
f
Mrs. A. K. Dill is visiting her sis
ter, Mrs. Eloise Morris in Winnsboro.
Mrs. Weldon Jackson ajnd daugh
ter, Sara Weldon spent Iasi 'week in
Greensboro, N. C., with her mother,
Mrs. W. L. Inskeep, and Mr. Inskeep.
Miss Clelia Garrison has resumed
her studies at the Woman’s College
of the University of North Carolina,
Greensboro, after spending a few
days between semesters with her
parents, Rev. and Mrs. E. K. Garri
son.
Mrs. T. N. Latimer of Ware Shoals
is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Roy
Gasque and family.
Eugene Johnson, business manager
at the State Training School, Mrs.
Johnson and son, Johnny have moy-
ed into their new residence on the
campus.
. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Crocker and
daughter, Jinny, of Slater, spent the
week-end with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. R. C. Adair.
Mrs. John Langston, formerly of
Laurens, is now making her home
with her daughter, Mrs. Lewis Wal
lace and Mr. Wallace on Oakland
street.
Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Johnson, Jr.,
attended a florist school on wedding
arrangements in Shelby, N. C., Wed
nesday of the past week.
Mr. and Mrs-Julian S. Bolick were
business visitors in Augusta, Ga.,
Monday.
Friends of Sgt. Erskine A. Jacks
will be interested to know he ar
rived Saturday from Korea. He
is spending a 30-day leave with his
wife and parents, Mr. and Mrs. A.
B. Jacks, after which he will report
to Shaw Field for further assign
ment.
Mrs. L. S. McMillan and daugh
ter, Mrs. Ed Sadler of Laurens, will
leave Feb. 9 for San Francisco,
Calif., to meet Lt. Sadler of the U.
S. Marines who is returning to the
States after 9 months in Korean
service. Lt. Sadler is the son of
Mrs. R. E. Sadler of this city.
Friends of Lt. Ferd Jacobs will
be interested to know he called his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Jacobs,
Sunday night from Bad Nauheim,
Germany, where he resides at the
Kaiserhoff hotel. He reported he
was'getting along fine and had re
cently met another Clinton boy,
Lt. Charles Galloway, at a theatre.
His parents stated the connections
were very good for the call which
came through about 7 o’clock.
—PtTittrp-'Pratmsf“Social ■ CTrcIer
Ga., spent several days this week
with his mother, Mrs. Inez Pruitt.
Mrs. M. Cassanova is visiting her
daughter, Mrs. Frank Bailey, and
Mr. Bailey in Greenville.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul League and
children, Nancy Sumpter and Mar
tha, of Rock Hill, spent Sunday
with the former’s parents, Mr. and
Mrs. R. M. League.
Friends of Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Stanley Johnson and daughters
will be interested to know they
moved Saturday to Myrtle Beach.
Mr. and Mrs. V. S. Harwell and
son, Vernon, Jr., are occupying the
Samuel Gray residence on South
Broad street.
Mrs. Frank Cauley and daughter,
Frankie, and Miss Jo Pruitt visited
their sister, Mrs. Clyde Ramsey
and family in Whitmire during the
week.
Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Hitchcock of
Birmingham, Ala., are visiting
their son, Roy E. Hitchcock, and
granddaughter, Miss Barbara
Hitchcock.
Miss Norma Jean Miller has re
sumed her studies at Winthrop col
lege after spending a few days be
tween semesters with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Miller.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Montgomery
have returned from Durham, N. C.,
where the former was a patient
last week at Duke Cniversity hos
pital.
Mr. and Mrs. Nick Sorrow and
Mrs. D. B. Wehunt visited in
Greenwood and Abbeville Sunday.
J. B. Puryear returned yester-
from Atlanta, Ga., where he has
been attending the General Ad
justment Bureau Insurance school.
Mrs. Inez Pruitt spent last week
in Aiken with her daughter, Mrs.
Grady Adams, and family, who ac
companied her home for the week
end.
Friends of Mrs. Samuel Gray and
children will be interested to know
they have arrived in Salzbury,
Austria, where Major Gray is sta
tioned with the armed forces. They
made the trip by plane from West-
over Field, Mass., stopping in the
Azores and completing the journey
from Munich, Germany by train.
Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Thomason
spent several days this week in
High Point, N. C., attending the
furniture market show.
Mrs. Sam H. McCrary and infant
son expect to return today to their
home here from General hospital
in Greenvillp.
E. H. Wilkes attended the furni
ture market show in High Point.
N. C., several days last week.
Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Harrison have
returned from High Point, N. C.,
where they spent several days on
a buying trip at the furniture mar
ket show.
Lt. Helen Hill of the Army Nurse
Corps, and Lt. Charles E. Hill,
both of Charleston, and Fort Jack-
son, spent Sunday with their aunt,
Mrs. F. M. Stutts.
Mrs r Goyne Simpson is spending
the week in Charleston with her
sister, Mrs. George Hesse, and Mr.
Hesse.
Mrs. Roy Pitts and Mrs. Hugh
Simpson are spending the week in
Charleston with the f o r m e r’s
daughter, Mrs. Robert Grube, and
Mr. Grube.
Gilbert Blakely has returned to
the University of South Carolina
after spending several days with
his mother, Mrs. J. B. Speake.
Bob Black has returned from a
business trip to North Carolina
and Virginia.
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Barnes spent
Sunday with their daughter and
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Matheson, and small daughter in
Mooresville, N. C.- 1
Lt. and Mrs. John W. King and
daughters, Betsy and Mary Elliott,
of Columbia, were guests over the
week-end of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Ja
cobs.
Miss Agnes Davis and Mr. and
Mrs. Edgar Blakely visited rela
tives in Graniteville over the
w'eek-end. ,
Haynie Murdocx of Columbia,
is spending several days this week
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Durward Murdock.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Adair spent
the week-end in Hickory, N. C.,
with the former’s sister, Mrs. M. H.
Yount.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hays of Brook-
haven, Ga., and Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Floyd of Olanta, visited Mr. and
Mrs. Guy L. Copeland over the
week-end.
Mrs. G. S. Yeldell and George
Yeldell of Greenwood, were week
end guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. D.
Jeanes.
Mrs. Kitt McMaster and children
of Winnsboro, visited the former’s
mother, Mrs. Hugh Simpson, over
the week-end.
Dr. Marshall Browm is attending
a meeting of Presbyterian college
alumni in Eiberton, Ga., today.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Robinson
w'ere w’eek-end guests of relatives
in Gastonia, N. C.
Dr. and Mrs. Marshall Brown
will attend the ceremonies inaugu
rating Dr. Joseph Clarke Roberts
as president of Coker college to
morrow.
You Can ,Save With
A Bank Auto Loan!
When there's o new cor in the picture,
more and more families are using sound
logic in the choice of a financing plan.
They borrow here — because a Bank Auto
Loan from us is economical. Rates are low,
and terms are suited to the individual bor
rower's needs.
Finance Your Next Car Here and Save!
We Want Your Business and .
Friendship
Bank Of Clinton
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
5535,900 Collected
Up To January 1
In County Taxes
Penalties on unpaid county taxes
for 1952 are now in effect as an- i
nounced last week, by Treasurer (
Sam Leaman.
Treasurer Leaman has also an- 1
nounced that the collection of,
county and school district taxes to
January 1, when the first penalty
of 1 percent went on, were $535,-
000 in round figures. He said this
left approximately $119,000 to bej
collected between now and April
15 when the books close.
On a percentage basis the past
year’s collections at the named date
were around 82 per cent of the to
tal of $654,000 to be collected. The |
percentage of the previous year at;
the same time was about he same, j
the treasurer reported.
Collections due were about tne 1
same as 1951, the difference being!
that the total to be collected the
past year, due largely to the high-1
er school district taxes, is about t
$100,000 more than last year.
According to Treasurer Leaman
the largest taxpayer in the county
for the year, as in the past several
years, was Joanna Cotton Mills, at
Joanna—$66,144.
Other large taxpayers were Clin
ton Cotton Mills, $30,422; Lydia
Cotton Mills, $26,500; Watts Mills,
$31,747; Laurens Mills, $25,254.
The five major textile plants in
the county, Treasurer Leaman’s
figures showed, pay approximately
two-sevenths of the total personal
and property taxes in the county.
RED CROSS APPEAL
FOR COLORED FAMILY
An appeal has been made by the
local Red Cross chapter for a cook
stove for a needy colored family.
Cooking for the family, which
consists of grandmother, mother
and five small children, is now be
ing done over an open fire. Any
one having a stove which they are
wiling to donate is asked to con
tact the local office, Phone 339-W.
1*T.\ MEETS TUESDAY
Tht^February meeting of the
Florida Street School Parent-
Teachers association will be held
at the school on Tuesday evening,
the 3rd, at 7:30. Guest speaker foi 1
the occasion is a representative
from the Departmen of Public Wel
fare who will addres the group on
"Child Welfare and Health.”
’ Say—
‘I SAW IT IN THE CHRONICLE’
Thank You
>R&TING
WE DO ALL KINDS OF PI
♦ —EXCEPT BAD
CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO.
Phone 74
WHERE BORROWING
^ IS PLEASANT!
When you-are Tend} 1 T(Tl5ny“<Tr'BTi7TrrT _ Fome of
ydur own, you II hnd that arranging your home
financing here is a pleasant transaction. Our
experienced mortgage loan advisers can help
you work out the right financing plan for your
particular situation. Your inquiry is welcomed!
ederal Savings
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
A Clinton Institution Serving Clinton People Since 1909
Telephone No. 6
Coke is on the menu!
Its so good with meals
There it is—right next to soups,
meats and desserts.
Yes, Coke with meals is growing fast
—it really makes good food taste better.
•OTTUO UNDER AUTHORITY OR TH« COC^COU £OMfAHY IT
GREENWOOD COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY
"Coho"k a roghlmnd trade hhmk. IQ 1957. THE rr~~ r