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Page Two THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Thursday, February 12, 1953 Find Service ~ At Friendship Presbyterian Church iiickory Tavern, Feb. 10. — The . viihce of Friendship Presbyterian i nurch that has been used as a place . f worship for nearly 100 years will fce used for th'e last time Sunday rooming. On Monday workmen will begin Uaring down the hallowed old frame - ucture to make room for a new trick buildiivg. The Rev. Roy Coker, pastor, will ; each at the final service in the old The new building, to cost about $35,000, will be of brick construc tion, with a sanctuary seating about 250 persons and with 10 Sunday school class rooms. A modern heat ing plant will be installed. P. C. Graduate Killed Near City In Car Crash Samuel Adolphus Bagley, 28, of JJ auc * Geer * ^ David Owens and Walter Lollis will be foreman on. c 0 i um ,bj a> a t a local hospital at; ^ rs - Minnie Hiers of Laurens, the building project. Plans t were i 7 o'clock Saturday night as the result j _ drawn by O. V. Caudill of Salisbury, 1 0 f an automobile accident. Mr. Bag- Farm DUfeOU 10 N. C. | ley was en route to Columbia when AaoinSt The church was organized in 1820; his car was reported to have skidded SJ a and the present building was erected on wet pavement into a utility pole KabieS Spread j n 1359 !near the Edgar Copeland home place' At a homecoming service in 1951' on the Laurens-Clinton highway. He The Farm Bureau committee Leroy Dean, T. J. Fisher, Mrs. Pearl [tags will cost 1V4 cents a bale. Bpwington, Taylor Edmonds and “They would be purely for identi- James Smith of Route 2. fleation purposes. They would be Patients at the Blalock clinic in- helpful in tracking down stolen cot- clude Mrs. Lula Craddock, Miss ton bales. They would furnish an identiftcation also from the ginner to the factory,” he said. He may amend his bill to require the ginner to properly record the number, as many would do anyway. '' 1 ’ 1 - - Noted Comedian To Feature John Deere Day Here and In Laurens the building fund for the new edi-! was rushed to the hospital and was held a dinner meeting at the county fice was started and now contains dcad u P° n arrival A relative was in agricultural building in Laurens oni ibout $20 000 the car als0 an “ after recemn 5 Monday evening, presided over by Keaton Comedy will feature a ’ , * , , . . treatment for minor injuries was re-|Frang Baumberger, president of John Deere Day program with two rr.u i M embers of the board 0. deaco > move( j t0 hj s home in Columbia. j the organization. j big free shows next Thursday i,Hiding .it 11 a. m. Sunday. The comprise the building committee. The ear was completely demolish- The business session ooened with mornin S and evening at the Broad- 1 o'Se o-”?: "Tman C ^ <“ ^ ">• Vr^e'r by T B . 0X0^ c“m 1 » a.v Theatre here in the morning the new structure is be- man Henderson, James Wasson, Eu-1 t-^hf ^lTumb^r otteendl HteTas ^ com P osed ? f members a ^ at the Laurens armory in the Warren Tinsley John ! lcre a numljcr of fronds. He was f r0 m various sections of the coun- evening. ’ 1 ’ born in Columbia and was a student t y with 21 present. James Addi- , at the University of South Carolina son 0 f Joanna, president of the > up while in gbuilt and a temporary building | gene Wasson Armstrong,- Frank Baumberger and J. P. Kellett. Sunday school will be Coker said. Buster Keaton, long famed as a comedian of stage and screen, stars in “Paradise for Buster,” the fea ture film that highlights the John Deere Day progam to be given free for fanners and their families. The program includes a complete list of entertaining and educational pictures in color. The novel entertainment, coupled with door prizes and refeshments, is sponsored by the Laurens Trac tor & Implement company, author ized John Deere dealer in this county. The shows are announced in today's paper. METHODIST WSCS TO MEET The Woman’s Society of Chris tian Service of Broad Street Metho dist church will meet Monday af ternoon, Feb. 16, at 4 o’clock at the church. flmQ lii It] SH SPECIAL SALE - Tussy Cleansing Creams and Lotions FOft DRY SKIN FOR NORMAL SKIN Emulsified Cleansing Cream It* rn ii rmoMients licl|i to’ clcan-f Hivl soften your r< m- plexioir! Reg. size now $ 1.25 -i?e now J /sr t k-:- :* '•‘vM . i— t Dry Skin Freshener ...the iresh-up that's Vpeeiar for vou! $ 1. Reg. $1.75 size now ■■ ; j ’ U'l Pink Cleansing Cream Huffy i>a*tel cream for thor ough, iteep-tlown rloansin^ c normal or oil v skin ! Reg. $2.00 size now $ 1.2li $3.50 size now $2.25 'l when he was called into thq navy County Livestock Producers asso- where he served for four years as a c i a tion. and a member of the bu- S gunner’s mate 1-C in World War II. le au’s livestock committee, gave a H He saw duty in both the Atlantic and re p 0r t 0 n the rabies outbreak in $ Pacific oceans. Spartanburg, Greenville and j’j , After his discharge from military Greenwood counties. An effort is £ service he ^ntered Presbyterian col- being made, it ,was stated, to have a ♦» lege w’here he was graduated in June, quarantine on dogs put into effect ;i 1950. For the past few years he had in the county to protect humans.:;: been an accountant with the Southland livestock before the outbreak;« Carolina Electric and Gas Company speads here. The bureau will join! in Columbia. He was a member of livestock producers in an effort to the F.i.hburg Presbyterian church. g e t the present law which prohib- The news of his tragic death came its trapping of foxes repealed as 8 as a great shock to his acquaintances a means of preventing a rabies out- here. break. | Funeral services 'were conducted) The committee meets on the sec- Monday morning from a Columbia, ond MOrfday of each month at 7:30 funeral home by the Rev. M E^Der- in the agricultural building with Irick and the Rev. Walter K. Beaty, interested fanners invited. i Interment followed in Elmwood j cemetery. i Survivors include his widow, Mrs. Lillie Mae Freeman Bagley; bis > Pki^Lpri Cfp w ; mother and step father, Mr. and Mrs.' J. O. Lipscomb, and several aunts ! and uncles. *.♦ ♦> ♦ % ♦> ♦>v-v' Wobd Get* Around JA3ANK LOM . IG MiTf* Seniors To Hove The seniors of Clinton high school will sell chicken stew at the school | ^ cafeteria , on Friday, February 13, at, # 5 p. m. The price is 90 cents a quart, I }| | with purchasers furnishing contain- .v.aP'' 1= 1 Inquest Held Here Coroner Joe F. Smith held an in quest here Monday in the auto- : mobile death of the young man. | ers. The jury returned a verdict that! Bagley came to his death by acci-j dent. Freeman, who was accom- k e add ed to the fund for the seniors’ j panying Bagley was held in the trip t0 Washington'. county jail pending an investiga-, tion, but was released aftef the in- -j- . tr , quest. It was decided at the in- ; logging or Lotton quest that Bagley was driving the Boles Is Fovored car. - ■ - • - • - Skin Lotion Ti brace—and make your complexion glow! Reg. $1.75 size now -AH price* WITH THE SICK The stew will be cooked by moth ers of the students. The proceeds will :: ♦> ff :: 8 :: 5 ♦ ♦ mm S. :: Tf’ I Columbia, Feb. 10.—The house ag- '(riculture committee gave unanimous approval to Rep. George Harrell’s j-j bill to require the ginner to identify' ft YOUNG’S PHARMACY Friends of W. B. Tribble will be ea c h bale of cotton with a 'ir.etal tag i interested to know he is a patient | with the ginner s name and a serial hospital.. Phone 19 Mrs. Pearl Hammett is improv-1 ing at Hays hospital following an operation on Tuesday. Friends of Mrs. Wyman Shealy will be glad to know she is im- :: ft *- ! i. but in case f you haven’t heard, our Personal Loan Plan makes cash available quickly, for any sound purpose^ without “red tape.” The moderate cost and convenient terms of repayment make a bank loan from us the ideal way to borrow. If yovt are planning to borrow, come in and let us prove it. M. S. Bailey & Son BANKERS Established 1886 Capital and Surplus $600,000.00 Member F.D.I.C. — Our 67th Year . Rep. ItarreV of Florence, said the At proving satisfactorily at Blalock j.j clinic where she underwent an ope- j-J |8 hospital in- ft elude Mrs. Raymond Fulmer, little !.♦ #„• ♦♦ t i __ t-> -mm Tir j ration Monday. Patients at 'Hays . • I 1 I %# mm *% %• •# ft * mm mm mm :: i % 9 :: ft ft mm mm mm mm ft ft mm mm f: y ft ft mm mm ++ m m ii mm ft ft mm m.m 1 aeflADWPN . Q hecCbie L Thursday auid Friday, Feb. 12-13 g Judy Knox, George Raines, Mrs. W., g. jj J. Shepard, Mrs. Joe Lynch of near Laurens and Mrs. Katie Shealy. ft) Friends of C. T. Thomason willjg be interested to know he is a pa- ft j] tient at Hays hospital where he un-J-j derwent an operation yesterday. s: Friends of Willie J. Sloan will m*m | 8 8 8 ROGERS Check These 10c Values! g! regret to know he continues ill at ft the Blalock clinic where he has past 8 been a patient for ft days the ten Mi-s. W. C. Oxley has returned;^ Saturday, Feb. 14 (One Day) California Conquest (Technicolor Outdoor Action Story) With Cornel Wilde and Teresa Wright Monday and Tuesday, Feb. 16-17 Turner KIRK Douglas 1 f Pi»gh)n-_Powj! ~ WEDNESDAY, FEB. 18 (ONE DAY) DONT BOTHER TO KNOCK With Marilyn Monroe and Riqhard Widmark THE CASINO Friday and Saturday, Feb. 13-14 ft home after‘a few days stay at Hays ft U \ hospital. $[ Friends of G. W. Hollingsworth ft will be interested to know he is a,.-, patient at Hays hospital. g The following, who have been ft patients at Hays hospital, have re ‘ij| turned to their homes: Mrs. L. C.! ft Heaton, Rufus Handback, Steven j.» Lawson, Mrs. Lois Wehunt, Mrs. 5- 1 ft ft ft 1 1 5K in li it Over! M BORDER SADDLE MATES (Western) . With REX ALLEN UNKNOWN WORLD ('Itirilling Adventure) With MARIA MONTEZ vet; RS. RUTH SMITH, of York, writes: “I would like to say that those who have poli cies with Capital Life are very fortunate, for there are some who have been disabled their entire lives and have been un able to get insurance. I know just what this means. I am a widow, my husband having been dead for a year. He had been disabled since he was a very young man, and he %lso had a heart condition. He worried so much because he had no insurance. He often said that those who had life in surance policies had a lot to be thankful for.” Mrs. C. A. Hiers, of Colum bia, writes: “My husband died suddenly August 9, 1952, leav ing me with a daughter to ed ucate. Without his life insur ance I just couldn’t do it. Thank God for insurance.” Your Capital agent is trained to help you select the policy that will best take care of your needs. He will be glad to call at your convenience. Turnip Greens Rutabagas Apple Jelly Cherries-T SUGAR VALLEY CHOPPED BLUE BOY BRAND OLD VIRGINIA / Sauerkraut Clo - White Tomatoes QUEEN ANNE MARASCHINO SNOW FLOSS CHOPPED LAUNDRY BLEACH LUCKY FARMS No. 2 Can No. 305 Can 8-Oz. Jar 3-Oz. Bot. No. 2 Can Qt. Bot. No. 1 Can IOC IOC IOC IOC IOC IOC IOC U. S. No. 1 - All-Purpose White T-BONE, CLUB, SIRLOIN, BONELESS RIB OR ROUND POTATOES steaks 10 LBS. 49c BUDGET BEEF U. S. COMMERCIAL lb. 69c Fancy Pascal CELERY, 2 stalks .... 19c Sweet Florida SerUl—-“NYOKA AND THE TIGERMfeN”—Chapter 2 K JJ! Mil II111111 Hlllll* PRESIDE CAPITAL LIFE AND HEALTH INSURANCE COMPANY 'Founded on Foitk—Deducted to Servire” Temple Oranges, 3 lbs. 21c Firm Median Sise Great Cabbage, 3 lbs.. 10c Properly Trimmed, Budget Beef CHUCK ROAST, lb. . 45c Meaty—No Waste, Boston Butt PORK ROAST, lb 39c SAUSAGE, lb. . • • • • 47c