The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, January 19, 1956, Image 10
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Pajce Twelve
THE CLINTON CHRONICLE
f-
Thursday, January 19^1956
Items of Interest From ...
West Clinton
MRS. JOHN MAYE, Correspondent and Representative
PHONE HC J
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«ufus iiandback and Doi'sev
Turner visited the Quinns and
Stewarts in-l^sunens Friday.
.‘\.-2e Harold Meadors, of Orlan
do. Fla., spent several days last
week with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Thornton Meadors.
Ann Page, of near Clinton, spent
the week-end , with Mary Ann
Hoover j
> Mr and Mrs. Sam Madden and
children visited in Spartanburg
dren visited Mr. and Mrs. Will
Puckett and other relatives in
Union Sunday
Mr. afld'Mrs. R. C. Oxner visit
ed the former’s brother, Ernest
Oxner, who is a patient at Green
ville General hospital Sunday.
Mr and Mrs. J. W. Fowler, and
Dorsey Turner visited friends and
relatives in Laurens Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. W»< B. Phillips
were called to Beeloy, N. C., Sat
urday due to the death^ of the
former's mother, Mrs. Sara Phil-
well, of Woodruff, Mr. and Mrs.
David Riddle and sons, of Wil-
liamston, also visited the Wootens
SundajL
Mrs. J. j J. Smith, Miss Nell
^Smith, Mr and Mrs. Oliver Hue-
ble, of Joanna, visited Miss Nan
Smith who is a patient at Green
ville General hospital Monday.
Mr. aiid Mrs. Alvin Trammell
and children visited the latter’s
mother, Mrs. Sadie Mabry in Vernon Trammell lait week
Union Saturday.
Miss Paulette Davis, of Rovk-
, ford. 111., spent several days last
week with Afr and ^ Mrs. Vernon
Williams.
Mrs. Maeoy Me^'oy, Tally Mc
Coy. Mr. and Mrs. Larry McCoy,
of Greenville, visited Miss Grace ] Sunday.
Fieklin Sunday.. * , J Mr. and Mrs Vernon Wiihdms
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Campbell and and children visited the latter’s
daughter, Becky, of Charlotte. N. mother, Mrs. J i 5 Brown, who is
C.. sjx'nt the week-end with Mr. ill in Whitmire Sunday,
and.Mrs R. C Oxner.' I Mr. and Mrs William Cannon,
Mrs Annie Evans spent the' Mr and Mrs. Robert Cannon and
week-end in Aiken with Mr and j sons visited Mr. and Mrs. Perry
Mrs. Roy Hawkins. : Cannofi at Enoree Sunday.
Mrs Norris Sanders, of Arken, I Mr. and Mrs. Harold Cauble
\ isited Mr. and Mi-s J M. Bouk-! and daughter, Mrs Bill Hedspeth
• night Sunday. and son and Mrs Roy Cauble vis-
Mrs. Inez Sorrow, of Greenwood, ited Nh - and Mrs. James Chap-
visited her mother, Mrs. Rosa man and Mr. and Mrs. J D. Pitts
Owens during the week-end. * ! in Ware Shoals Sunday. I
Mrs Pearl Shealey, Dons Bram- ; Mr and Mrs. James Crain, Mrs. 1
Jett, Mrs Jessie Spoone and Wil- j Melvin Creswell and Mrs. Mar-
•liam Spoone attendixi the all night i guerite Curry attpndiki the -all
night singing in Spartanburg Sat-
Inman, were supper guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Claudp Cannon Satur
day. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Holmes Holland
and children spent Sunday in
Cross Anchor with Mr. and Mrs.
-vjfj-B. Stribling.
S-Sgt. and Mrs. Jack Griffin
and children, of Ware Shoals, were
week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs.
W. E, Braswell. >
Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Bouchillon,
of Fountain Inn, visited Mr. and
Mrs. C. E. Roberts Friday, '•
Miss Pat Braswell has retorted
'home after spending two weeks
in Oklahoma City with Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Sexton.
Mr. and Mrs. Kav Baker of
^ .
near Nevlberry, visited Mr. and
Mrs. H. A Adams Sunday.
| Myron Guile and Chet McCau-
ko - , of Bob Jones university, were
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Pressley Chaney and daughter,
Judy, recently?
A-2c Bobby Braswell left Sat
urday to return* to France after
spending a 30-dsfy leave with Mrs.
Braswell and other relatives.
Mi's. H A Adams and Cecil
lips. ' r
Mr. and Mrs. Claud Harris and
children,'of Aiken, were week-end
guests of relatives here.
Re\:. and Mrs. W. B. Thorn, of
Chesntee, visited Mr. and Mrs.
?rnon ’
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wooten and! Adams were business visitors in
children-, of Duncan, spent Jhp j Augusta, Ga., Saturday,
week-end with Mr and Mrs. Ce-1 Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith and
cil Wooten. Mr and Mrtf.'D. Bag- children, of Greenville, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Lawson, Jack Law
son and Ike Smith, of Buffalo,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Henry Law-
son dunhg^he week-end.
A-2c and Mrs. Bobby Braswell
and son visited relatives in Whit
mire and Ware Shoals several davs
last week.
singing in Spartanburg Saturday
night
BM 2-c Paul Arnold, of Nor
folk. Va., is visiting his parents,
Mr. and Mrs J L. Arnold. >
Mrs. W. J Shepard, Mr and
Mrs Charles Shepard and chil-
urday night.
O’Neil Roberts, a student at the
University of South Carolina, spent
the week-end with his parents, Mr
and Mrs. C. E. Roberts.
Mr and Mrs. W. H Poole, of
PROFITABLE HABIT!
Supposing that “rainy day” never
comes—you certainly won’t consider
your efforts wasted. For now instead
of “emergency Reserves,” you’ve
•‘built an "opportunity fund.” While
your savings are accumulating, they
earn and grow at a profitable rate, .
in a savings account with us. Stop
• in today and Start yours!
I
Keep fur^ds sofdy-protected against loss
Receive liberal earnings twice each year
/ . „
Laurens Federal Savings
AXD LOAN ASSOCIATION
▼ ME SECURITY OF A NATION
LIES IN THE HOMES OF ITS PEOPLE
LAURENS, SOUTH CAROLINA
New Pastor First Pentecostal
Church
Rev. George F. Hopkins, form
erly of Irmo, has assumed his du
ties as pastor of the First Pente
costal Holiness-church on Jack-
son street and was given a warm
welcome on Sunday morning.
The Rev. Mr. Hopkins succeeds
Ben A. Williams who has gone to
Cuba as a missionary. For the past
four years he has held a pastorate
at Irmo. He attended Emmanuel
college, Franklin Springs. Ga., and
is a graduate of the University of
South Carolina. His wife, the form
er Miss Doris Crain, is a graduate
of Emmanuel college. They have
a son and a daughter, Floyd and
Sharon.
The Rev. Mr. Hopkins will be
gin a revival at the church on
Sunday, January 22. The public
is invited, to attend the services.
Birthdays
• Bobby O'Sullivan celebrated his
birthday toda<y
Murry McCoy had a birthday
J:in. 18.
' Mr. William Cannon will cele
brate his birthday Jan. 30.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Williams
will observe their wedding anni
versary Jan. 29.
Mrs. C. E. Roberts had a birth
day Jan. 3. v
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Thibadeau
wall celebrate their wedding anni
versary Jan. 22.
Susie Galloway will have a
birthday Jan. 22.
Mrs. Charlie Foster will observe
her birthday Jan. 21. ^
Rufus King has a birthday to
day.
Sybil Windsor will have a birth
day Jan‘. 21.
Dianne Caughman has a birth
day Jan 21
Sick
Mrs.* Maggie Hampton has re
turned home after being a patient
at Hays hospital.
Mr. J. T. Lokey is a patient at
Hays hospital.
Floyd Pitrpan has returned home
from Hays hospital and is im
proving.
J. J. Owens is indisposed from
a hip injury. 4
Fnefids of L H Dunaw^, of
! Jacksonville, Fla., will be interest
ed to kno w he is improving there
after being injured in an automo-
bille accident.
Miss Nan Smith, a patient at
Greenville General hospital, is im
proving after undergoing surgery
Thursday.
drive on ( Friday night, Jan. 20,
and meet at the community house
at 6 p. m. to get street assign-
ments? The club Heels, officers
state, that it is a privilege to be
asked to sponsor such a drive—
and asks all members to give their
support. • •
Cooperation Asked Of All
Officers of the Woman’s club
have stated, it is sincerely hoped
and believed that all those people
who are connected with Clinton
Mills in any way will cooperate in
the drive for polio. This drive is
to be sponsored by the club and
will be staged on Friday, Jan. 20.1
They request that all porch
lights of contributors be turjied on
at 6:30 p. m. Some one will call at
the I doprs for donations, those
sponsoring the drive said. “If you
cannot be at home, -please leave
your contribution with someone.
We 'want the Clinton Mills drive
to go ‘near the top’ in this wor
thy cause.’:
Fellowship Club
| The Young Peoples Fellowship
club met Sunday afternoon with
19 present. Choruses were spng,
the sword drill was given, and a
talk on ,"Soul .Winning.’' Myron
Guiler gave’an interesting chalk
talk, and the sermonette was giv
en by Bill-Gist. i.
Conservation
Notes >
coastal area; E. C. Turner of
Clemson, secretary; and Geo. H.
King of Moncks Comer, treas
urer. '
Thiss asociation is an organi
zation of 220- soil conservation
district supervisors of South
Carolina. It is operated by these
supervisors to: 1. Provide lead
ership throughout the state ^4n
developing Ihe effectiveness of
the SCD movement by enlisting
help from business, industry,
city, county, and state officials,
agricultural agency represeqta-
1 tives, individuals, and gcoup or-
; ganizations.
2. Exchange information and
to speed the use of soil and wa-
ideas between SCD supervisors
farms.
ter conservation practices our
3. Provide a meduinT through
which requests for research,
technical assistance, water shed
protection, educational help, and
other problems of a statewide
nature can be presented with re
quests for action.
The association is owned, op
erated, and governed by the Soil
Conservation Dictrict Supervis
ors in South Carolina.
January Farming Hints
« 1 ft,
For greater success in farming
in 1&56, County Agent C. B. Can
non makes these important sug-
By J. B. O'DELL
'Conservationist
Ryan F. Lawson. J. W. Tinslby,
and Sam B. Fleming, Supervis
ors of the Laurens Soil Conser
vation District, attended the
15th annual meeting of the
South Carolina Association of
Soil Conservation 'District Su
pervisors held in Aiken on Jan.
10, 11, and 12. They report a
most enjoyable and benfeicial
meeting which had the largest
attendance of' any yet hel'd.
Water conservation was em
phasized throughout the meet
ing. A highlight of this em
phasis was a talk by T. H.
Quackenbush, Irrigatioh Engin
eer, Soil Conservation Service,
Washington, D. C.
State association officers
elected for 1956 are: Louis £.
Hendricks, of Pickens, president;
Clifford T. Smith, of Kinards,
vice-president of the Piedmont
area; Newman Buck of Mt.
Pleasant, vice-president of the
gestions for January.
Agronomy
• 1. Get registered or certified-
cotton seed for planting the 1956
crop and be sure the germination
is 80 percent or better. Plant all
allotted cotton acreage or release
to county committee for reissue.
2. Use certified seed for planting
-ether 1956 crops. 3. If sufficient
oats were not planted, in the fall
to meet farm needs, plant this
month, the weather permitting.
4. Clean up hedge rows and patch
es between fields. 5. Spread lime
stone. 6.Plan for additional for
age and pasture in 1956. 7. Order
fertilizers early. 8. Use nitrogen
fertilizer for topdressing winter
grazing and small grains. 9. Plan
for a nursery patch of Coastal Ber
muda this year. See your county
agent about a source of .certified
planting stock. 10. Keep your
fields covered with a “Blanket of
Green”.
Horticulture
1/ Prepare hotbeds and cold-
frames to, be able to haye an
aljundance of cabbage, tomrfto,
pepper, sweet potato and other
plants for your garden. 2. Plant |
English peas (in lower part of the!
state if soil is in condition. 3. Pre- >
pare land for Irish potatoes and |
order certified seed. 4. Prune fruit!
trees and vines preparatory tO|
spraying. 5. Plant fruit trees at
once, if soil - is in condition. 6 fter-!
race all new orchard land before
planting. Don’t forget the eco
nomic value you can get from
growing plants in electrically heat
ed hotbeds.
igricultural Engineering
I. Check over farm machinery
for needed repairs and order re
pair parts now. 2. Arrange sheds
and farm shop for better care of
machinery and equipment. 3. To
insure efficient operation of farm
machinery, follow the instruction
manual recommendation on meth
ods of lubrication .adjustment, etc.
4. Make needed repairs and im-
provements on buildings, fences,
and gates.
Insects and Diseases
J. Resolve now to control pests.
2. Kill rats. 3. Treat cotton seed
before planting. 4. Do not bum
forest to control Insects. 5. Apply
dormant spray to peach trees for
San Jose scale and leaf curl. 6. Ro-
tenone will control grubs in backs
of cattle. Lindane, DDT, or meth-
oxychlor effectively controls .lice.
7. Order certified Irish potato seed.
z.
Dr. Fred E. Holcombe
OPTOMETRIST
•
Offices At
2UU South Broad St.
Phone 65S
Office Hows to S:M
Are All Cold
Remedies Alike?
No! For example. 666 is the wide- >
activity medicine, which combines 4
of the most effective, widely-pre
scribed drugs known, to relieve off
cold miseries sooner. 666 is mors
potent end gives positive, drams tic,
rapid relief from miseries of all kimdf
of colds. That’s why 666 is t
I in effectiveness, Try it.
No other told remedy
can match 666 liquid
or 666 Cold Tablet*.
666
>5
Complete Auction Sale dispersion of the Registered
Shorthorn Herd Owned By
Dr. Theo. L. Burriss
. Friday,. January 27th
1 ANDERSON, SOUTH CAROLINA
(John Cr Taylor Stockyards
Pavilion One Mile Southeast
On Belton Highway)
! 71 Head
Sell As 58 Lots
24 Bred Heifers
22 Cows (3 to 5 years) 10 Open Heifers
15 Calves At Foot With Dams
Sale starts at 12 noon. Lunch on grounds. A select
rebred herd to be sold in pasture condition. An op-
iity to buy the right kind at your own price. Sale
induides 14 lots from J. B. Broyles, Townville, and
McGee Bros., Starr.
Shorthorns—The Beef Breed for the Practical Cat
tleman. More Weight For Age—More Milk In the Beef
Cow—Faster. More Economical Gains.-
4 Bulls
I
c
QUALITY
SERVICE )
VMf r.tAtMACT
‘1*4 / ''
t
o pay for
Knowledge
Is Often
Real
Economy....
Cm yow mmmn itw vohm of m oxomlnaEon and dloQnoib
by your Dodorf Urn f•• paid to Mm baot far wort <
M aoo for no mowioago, tot roowwig wnav vo
Ukawha Eiiiro-^ro yaan of (tody
a port of ovary prnicripfion
not* that the pharmacist'i too far
but a wail part of to moderate
experience that are'
Conrlder Mi, and
knowledge b
of your medicine.
McGee’s Drug Store
Phone No. 1
TICKETS GO ON SALE JAN. 3
CARPENTER BROS. DRUG STORf — 123 SOUTH MAIN ST.
COMING TEXTILE HALL
*4 Thni 28 • • . NitHy At 8:88
-J PERFORMANCES SATURDAY—
IsM P.M.-6:30 P. M.-9:38 P. 9L
— By Populmr Drmmnd —
MCI M ENTERTAINMENT!
Dp a. O
%/j
■ESOtVK) SEATS INCLUDING TAX: $3.00 - $2 *0 - $2.00
• • UNRESERVED $1.50 • /
Matinao Saturday, Jan. 26, At 1:50 P. M.
(Children Half-Price This Matinao Only)
GET TICKETS THE EASY WAY 111
A C MAja
let KS vooues, P. o. Ben
PAYAMJ 1t> KM VOOUKL
Attention, Woman’s Club!
The Woman’s club is asking all
members to assist in the Polio
!
by the Cintu Ctab at GrMaritte, S. C.
FINE
FURNITURE
Down Through
. Hie Years
tTe.
Jones
&
Sons
The Best for Over
Fifty Years
CLINTON,
S.C.
PHm Thirteen Other
Stores hi -
South
STAR CHIEF FOUR-DOOR CATALINA
The car says 90 and the price won't stop you!
'EPN /
Drive this big beauty •
with Strato-Streak power
and New Strato-Flight
Hydra-Matic!
Pontiac’s mighty 227-horsepower Strato-
Streat V-8 is the industry’s most modern
high-compression, high-torque engine-^
more than a match for cars costing hun
dreds of dollars more.
And all thi/blazing power is smooihed
to perfection by Pontiac’s exclusive new
Strato-Flight Hydra-Matic* Drive.
In fact, Pontiac takes them all on—no
holds barred—in performance!
And in every other respect this car over
takes the finest in features although it over
laps the lowest in priy
Certainly no car is more distinctively
beautiful—with styling so new and feesh^RPAf.
the experts are calling it a tip-off on a trend.
Few cars put more road-leveling length
between front and rear wheels—where it
counts—or give you the safety of so much
sure-footed solidness.
Why not come in and see for yourself
why Pontiac has them coming from both
ends of the price scale—how it’s rhangmg
the buying habits of many who previously
paid much more and still didn’t get all of
Pontiac’s performance, size and luxury.
SPECIAL BULLETIN - AU-Pontiac*
are now available with the optional XCL
Power pack*, delivering 285 honepower
'' V
a
i.
•An
tr at
J
You can actually buy^a big, glamorous Pontiac 860 for less
than you would pay for JU models of the low-priced three!
SMITH MOTOR CO.
\
229 E. Mom St.
,S.C
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