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/ 7 I v Page Two THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Thursday, June 18, 1953 Rev. Blakely To Speak At A. R. P. Church Sunday Rev. William B. Blakely, former pastor of the First Associate Reform ed Presbyterian church of Green- OMN JfRRY 'MARTIN-LEWIS! Misairr SCARED STIFF ... GtORGt OOtiW OOROTW MAKM • WHLIAK CHINC 0.K1M Hr a0»0£ kiwvui I» xw*' •« •X Tt * m to simmois ««) »o«K** ewdorisWIKOwOrtnKKCKrKsK Oo***’ A PWtAKOUKt Wt* COMING JUNE 25-26 WOAmm OhectUe k ville, will be the guest speaker for the 11 o'clock service Sabbath morn, iitg at the Associate Reformed Pres byterian church here. Mr. Blakely, the son of Mrs. R. F. Blakely, of this city, has recently re- i turned from two years duty with the U. S. Army Supervisory Center in France as a lieutenant colonel and has been released from active serv ice. BRIEFS.. ABOUT PEOPLE YOU KNOW Battery B, Clinton National Guard, At Camp Stewart, Ga. About eighty men of Battery B, 107th Anti-Aircraft, of the Iqcal National Guard unit left Sunday for a two weeks encampment and training at Camp Stewart, Ga. Lt. Guy Tumblin, commander of the lo cal unit, Lt. Milford Smith, Sgt. Bobby Sanders, clerk, and Sgt Roy Smith accompanied other non-com- misioned oficers and enlisted men of the battery for the summer train ing encampment. Lt. Col. B. F. Wingard, who is attached to the 228th headquartfYs group of the S. C. National Guard, is also at Camp Stewart for the two weeks. j the close of the program, the par- | ents and friends visited the various ; rooms where handwork was on dis- ; Play. The school was in session for 11 ; days, 3 hours each day. There ■■■ . were 301 registered with 191 aver- Miss Hazel Terry of the nurses a ge attendance, 60 members on the staff at Joanna Memorial hospital, faculty and 80 pupils with perfect was the week,eml guest of Mrs. attendance The church expressed ! Lawrence W. Sanford. appreciation to James Addison for Mr. and Mrs. William Childs and P r °viding ice each day and to Mr. and Mrs. Earl Rice spent the l Gordon 0xn ,f (or Providing ice ; week-end at Tybee Beach, Savan- 1 cream one afternoon Mrs. Edward Braitsford and OgSoUSSUTG Hcods daughter, Katherine, wHi return to- College In Switzerland morrow to their home in Summer-; ' ® — ton after a visit with her sister, 1 Clinton friends of Prof. Yves De- | Mrs. Hubert Boyd, and family. Saussure, v who taught at Presbyte- Mrs. D. C. Heustess, house ma- ;rian college during the 1950-51 and Iron at Erskine college. Due west, 1951.52 sessions, will be interested | is spending the summer at her home here. Miss Katherine Turner, dietitian to learn that he recently completed work on his doctorate and has beenj choseh president of the Presbyte- at Kansas State college, Manhattan, rian Junior college of Western Kansas, and Miss Mary Turner of Switzerland. High Point, N. C., are visiting their sister, Mrs. D. A. Yarborough, and Mr. Yarborough. Mrs. Olga Coppess of Lafayette, Ind., is spending the summer with her daughter, Mrs. Lester L. Norton j and Mr. Norton. Don’t Forget Dad on His Day June 21st _ Remember Him on Father’s Day With a Gift Ronson Lighters — Pipe and Tobacco Stationery — Tussy and Old Spice Shaving Sets Flashlights — Thermos Jugs — Razors, Blades Cameras, Etc. SHOP AT FRIENDLY . - Mr . - A Young’s Pharmacy Phone 19 ‘The Old Reliable’ \Ye Deliver QheaDie-^--.,- t Thursday and Friday, June 18-19 Ho +THtYSPOO*r 'tOtyTHiYCaOOHf "By Hie Light oflhe Moon FROM Warner Bros. .'cou»*rTechnicolor Saturday, June 20 (One Day) “Annie Get Your Gun” (A Big Technicolor Musical) With Betty Hutton and Howard Keel Monday and Tuesday, June 22-23 RAY MIUAND ARLENE DAHL WENDELL COR WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24 (ONE DAY) I CONFESS (Thrilling Suspense in a Murder Story) -With Montgomery Clift and Anne Baxter THE CASINO FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, JUNE 19-20 THE GREAT MIKE A Story of a Boy, a Dog and a Horse With STUART ERWIN and “BUZZY” HENRY MARSHAL OF CEDAR ROCK (Western) With ALAN “ROCKY” LANE Serial—“SON OF GERONIMO”—Chap. 5 9c and 30c Mr. DeSaussure returned to his native Switzerland after spending! two years here on an exchange fel lowship. The junior college he now heads is College Protestant in Cop- pet, Switzerland. His wife, Alber- i . .. t"> i i tine, and two children have 'just 1 Mr. and Mrs. Paul League and ! ... J t "ij £ T-, | TT'ii a o j ^ moved toere witli riim. children of Rock Hill, spent Sunday i ^ with the former’s parents, Mr. and n i * r\ t j ■ Mrs. R. M. League. PollO On March Again In South, summer her with their parents, But Cases Fewer Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Helams and Mr. » and Mrs. A. C. Workman, Sr. Mr. Atlanta, June 16.—-Infantile paral- Hellams, Jr., will go June 21 to Air y 6 j s has started its ominous summer Corps at McDill Field, Fla., for a ma roh across the humid Southland M -day stay. of danger and the fourth improving, indicating _that,tlm-poljk^there is not of the crippling or killing type. But two polio deaths were recorded in Montgomeriy. A “great deal” of gamma globulin was administered to fight the Cald well County outbreak, health officer William Harper said. The supply of the temporary vaccine is made avail able by the Office of Defense* Mobili zation to places where the polio in. cidence is heaviest, to families where a member has been stricken, and to pregnant women. City health officials in Montgom ery said gamma globulin is being used in the polio outbreak. Dr. A. H. Graham, city health officer, said a present supply of 14,000 CCs is al- loted by ODM and is enough to treat 2,000 children. In Montgomery, mass spraying was begun this week with a new insecti cide, lethane, which destroys flies that have built up a tolerance of DDT. W^ile flies have not been prov en to be polio carriers, they do spread filth in which the disease may lurk. Most other states reported a slight increase of polio incidence this year over the same period of 1952 but saw no cause for concern. Health offi cers said that with better and faster diagnosis the number of cases, In cluding the very mild ones, can be expected to rise from year to year. The number of cases through early June this ^ear compared with the same period last year in South Caro lina is 2l‘ fn 1953, and 11 in 1952. .11 ■■■■ '■■■IK ——— I' LIONS CLUB DIRECTORS TO MEET TUESDAY NOON The board ol directors of the Lions club will meet Tuesday at noon at Hotel Mary Musgrove, retiring Pres ident Gary Lehn has announced. This will be the final meeting of the year for the old board. New of ficers take over the affairs of the club July 1. TO GIVE TEA MONDAY The Green Garden club will hold a tea and flower show Monday afternoon at 4:30 at the home of Mrs. J. J. Cornwall. All members of other clubs are invited to attend. WE DO ALL KINDS OF PRINTING —EXCEPT BAD CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. Say— T SAW IT IN THE CHRONICLE” Thank Yon , but the number of cases to date is Anaita Ellison, daughter of Mr.; a t> ou t 25 per cent less than for the and Mrs. James F. Ellison, is visit-1 S ame period of 1952, a survey showed ing her grandmother, Mrs. A. H. I today. Campbell, in Anderson. Jinny and Reggie Walker of Co lumbia, spent last week with their aunt, Mrs. L. E. Bishop. Mrs. W. M. Walker and Mrs. Jessie Burns spent Sunday here and accompan ied them home. Mrs. James Pitts has been visit ing her daughter, Mrs. Joe McGee and Lt. McGee at Camp Pickett, Va., this week. The figures may be misleading be cause last year Texas and Louisiana experienced record-breaking polio outbreaks and most of the decrease comes on the reports from those states. Still Texas, with 335 cases through June 6, stands second only to California 4n polio incidence this year. The Texas figure compares with 1668 cases for the same period in Mrs. Dill Ellis and children of 1952. Louisiana, which reported 163 Dillon, spent last week with Mr. cases through June 12, in 1952, had Ellis’ mother, Mrs. George H. El- only 63 for the same pericti this lis. year. Miss Mary Ella Bailey, member 1 Several “outbreak” centers were of the Greenwood school faculty, | noted at Mid-June — Montgomery, who is at home for the summer, is | Ala.; Caldwell County, N. C., and spending two weeks as a counsellor f Corpus Christ! and Brownsville, Tex. at the girl scout camp Cherokee, i Montgomery, with 46 cases, was near Kings Mountain, N. C. Miss the worst affected spot in the nation Agatha Bailey, who teaches in per capita, according to the latest Chester r is alsa -at- home for K the figures of. the. National. ..Foundation summer. “ — " | for Infantile Paralysis. But Caldwell Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell Ferguson County, N. C., had 20 'cases among and son, Jimmy, of Campobello, I a much smaller population. Corpus spent the week-end with the for- Christi had 32 cases and Brownsville mer’s mother, Mrs. Eva Ferguson. 142 - Mrs. George R. Blalock and chil- Four sisters, ranging from five to dren are on a vacation stay at Paw- 12 years of age were among those ley’s Island. Dr. Blalock will join struck down at Lenoir in Caldwell them there for the week-end. Mrs. Wallace Meggs and chil dren, Beth and Wallace, of Flor ence, are spending the week with her mother, Mrs. Inez Pruitt, and sister, Mrs. Frank Cauley. Tuesday Mrs. Pruitt, Mrs. Cauley and their visitors were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Ramsey in Whitmire.! Also visiting here during the week were Mr. and Mrs. Keith Pruitt of Whitmire. Bible School At Joanna Baptist Conies To Close ^ —. Vacation Bible school commence ment was held at the Joanna Bap-1 tist church on Friday evening, [ June 12 at 7:30. The joint worship | period was presided over by Mrs. j James Mitchell, principal. The ten departments presented some of the teachings of the two weeks. At County. But three were reported out HOW YOU MAY When your estate passes to your family, taxes will be incurred. It is possibly to reduce the tax bill by carefully setting your estate in order now. Let us show you how our trust services may help eliminate unnecessary tax losses. 2% INTEREST PAH) ON SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SEMI-ANNUALLY M. S. Bailey & Son BANKERS Established 1886 Capital and Surplus $600,000.00 Member F.D.I.C. — Our 67th Year in k it Over! T HE second South Carolina Road-e-o, to ba held in Bennettsville Saturday and Sunday, June 20-21, will see 26 of the state’s best teen-age driv ers compete for the honor of" representing the state in the na-' tional road-e-o to be held in Washington August 11-16. The winner will be given the trip all expenses paid, with the chance of winning a scholarship valued from $250 to $1,250. The three top winners in Bennettsville will also receive numerous prises. Hie contestants, each of whom won in his own county, will com pete in driving tests and writ ten quizze^, with members of the highway patrol serving as judg es. The road-e-o is sponsored by the Jaycees, with the co-opera tion of the Carolines Motof Club and the S. C. Automobile Dealers Association. This is a worthwhile project, { ilanned to proipqte better driv- ng practices among teen-agers, and it deserves the co-operation of every citizen of the state. Several thousand people are expected in Bennettsville for the event. PRESIDI CAPITAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY 'Foundti on Poitk—Deiicotod to Service" ussa—i “*!**■ WILSON’S GROCERY 305 N. Sloan St. Phone 884 Clinton, S. C. Large Cantaloupes ea. 15c Red Bliss POTATOES 10 lbs. 29c Fresh S. C. CORN ear 5C No. 1 CUCUMBERS 10c lb. No. i : SQUASH 10c lb. Baby OKRA 29c lb. Tomatoes ‘j'c! lb. 15c Unica SALMON No. 1 Tall Can 39c White Sail Toilet TISSUE 4 rolls - 36c With Colored Wash Cloth Armour’s SHORTENING 3 lb. ctn. 72c 1 Lb. FREE! Round STEAK lb. 49c T-Bone Fresh Steaks lb. 39c Smoked SAUSAGE, lb. 29c Ground Beef lb. 29c BOLOGNA, lb........ 25c Watermelons Cnl Cold ea. 50C THESE PRICES ALL WEEK LONG _n