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THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Thursday, October 30, 1958 WANT ADS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES— • Flnrt Insertton — Mlmimam Tie to U S« each ■<i*t 4 r-*il w«r4. • Mattlplr iBsrrtton — 4 ttmei • OMtamrtes, Cards of Thanks ' chars* at S cents per wi • ALL WANTS AD VS CA DLADLINE: 9 a m. Wednesday. BUY desk baskets stacked in sky scraper effect—so convenient for your desk. The Chronicle. nf t. Nstf*. ft.##. SHOES We carry one of the beat stocks of name brand shoes that can be found anywhere. If you should need new pair •hoes come and see us first. McINTOSH’S SHOE SHOP SHEAFFER Fountain Pens with ink cartridges. The Chronicle. FOR SALE THOROUGHLY rotted wood earth, fine for shrubbery and lawns at $4 per cu yd delivered L. A Blakely, Sr. Phone 1133 2^N6 GOLD STARS in various sizes The Chronicle. FOR SALE—1 sweater stretcher. 1 door blind. 1 20-inch blind. 1 port able hair dryer, several pot plants and 2 half-Persian smoke colored cats Mrs. Henry King, Poplar St. F.xt . Lvdia Mills Phone f»57. Ic-L PIANOS AND ORGANS- (1) Wur-! litzer Organ. Demonstrator, $200.00 off list price. (1) LowTey Repro cessed. save $400.00. (1) Hammond Chord Organ, $300.00 off list price. Trade-ins accepted, 3 years to pay Write Bill Austin, Alexander Music i House, Spartanburg, S. C. 3c-O-30' TYPEWRITERS—Royal and Smith- Corona. The Chronicle. JUST RECEIVED—Check file for your cancelled checks. Chronicle. SPECIAL—W'ebster’s New Colleg iate Dictionary indexed. $5 00 The Chronicle. FOR SALE—room house on large lot. Awnings, gas floor fur nace, water heater Connections for automatic washers, hardwood floors throughout Appraised by F H A. $250.00 down plus estimated dosing cost of $200.00. Monthly payments tincluding taxes and insurance) cheaper than rent. Phone 960-J af ter 5:00 p. m. L. B. Roth. 2cJf-6 HOUSE FOR SALE—Seven room home with two baths, basement with furnace, well located in the south side of town. For quick sale $11,500. C. B. Holland, phone 715, 23826, LAurens. LOST & FOUND LEDGERS in many stvies. The Chronide. FOR SALE—Registered buff Cock er Spaniel pups. 2 males, 4 females. | Contact Mrs Fuller Motes, Mount- \ ille Phone Hilltop 12377 . 30-2p 1 • ! CLEM SON H OUSE Cookbooks make good gifts. The Chronide. CHARLESTON t «K»k Books with many recipes. Chronicle. ROLL LABELS in green, buff and white for using ui file folders Chronide. PANSY PLANTS, mixed and sep- rate colors. Also English Daisy, Columbine, Painted Daisy, Camter- bury Bells, Stock, Yellow Alyssum, Foxglove, Candytuft, Thrift, Day sizes ^and| Ll *>' and Iris Others later. Tangle- wood Farms, 3 miles north of Clin- tpir on Highway 308 Phone 1060. tf PAPER WEIGHTS in varied colors. Lovely for gifts. The Chronide. USE GREEN roll labels for files as they do in the movies. Chronicle HELP WANTED IT IS NOT TOO LATE — To earn that needed money for Christmas. Write AVON NOW' Write Mrs. Margaret Lewis, 2731 Maybank St., Columbia. S. C., for interview. 1c STRAYED—Several white lace cows and calves from Renfro Valley Cat tle Ranch on the Whitmire High way near Tip Top. H. J. Pitts. PIANOS in excellent condition. Tuned and ready to go. Terms easy, prices low. The Trading Post, Laurens. S. C. tfc GREEN TOMATOES. Call u$ and we will have them ready for you. Tanglewood Farm. 3 miles north of Clinton on Highway 308. Telephone 1060 tf STENSO sets in many styles. The Chronicle WANTED—Extra help for part time work. The Chronicle Publishing Co. HELP WANTED—Lydia Mills Store is taking applications for male help in grocery department. Apply at store. 1c REAL ESTATE WANTED REAL ESTATE — List that house, lot. farm or land you have to sell with me. C. B Holland, Realtor. Laurens WANTED WANTED — Six dinner plates, six cups and saucers, Nuritake china. Lazarre pattern. Sold by Frontis Jewelry 30 years ago. Mrs. E. H. Hall, Jr. 141 Augusta Court, Green ville, S C. O-30-c FOR RENT FOR RENT—Furnished apartment. Private entrance and bath. 308 Dav idson St. Phone 406-J. 1c FOR RENT—Upstairs apartment, 31k rooms «and bath. Outside en trance, close in. I M. Adair, Phone 243-W. tf NO TRICKS ALL TREATS END CUT Pork Chops lb. 49 Sliced Bacon Pure Pork ENDS "■ 39 c Sausage »39 <: CENTER CUT 59‘ Pork Chops ib. WESSON OR DI KE'S COOKING » 39 PCREX Toilet Tissue ROMs 25 C FRESH GRKKN All Reg. I Lb. l/oa>e»» BREAD 15 c Cabbage 3"»10 c DEL MONTE SALE — DEL MONTE Catsup 2 14 oz. Btls. 29 Del Monte Fruit 303 Can COCKTAIL 29( Del Monte Crushed - - No. 2 Can PINEAPPLE 29* Del Monte Halves or Sliced No. 2Vi Cans Peaches 3 for $l.oo • Del Monte Whole Kernel Golden303 Cans CORN 2 <-39* DEL MONTE Early Pea S 1 303 Cans 3 9' PLYMOUTH REAL Ice Cream Half Galoa 59 r ‘T*/ Oyuintit * :W R qN* Open Friday and Saturday Nights Till 7:30 P. M HOUSES FOR SALE — 25 acres with 5 room house. 4 room and 3 room houses, two wells and stream. For quick sale $4,500. Four miles from town. C. B. Holland, phone 715, 23826. Laurens. FOR RENT—frailer space for rent on Airport Roiid. Wehunt Grocery, ‘Clinton. S. C. 4c-30 FOR RENT—4-room upstairs apt. soubi Broad Street, John W. Fin ney, Sr. tf j FOR RENT—Two 3room. houses; j two 4-room houses H. J. Pitts, tf FOR RENT—Two 4-room houses ifor Colored in town H. J. Pitts, tf NOTICE NOTICE — Mr Jess Livingston \ wishes his friends and customers to ! call on him at his new location (formerly Abercrombie Barber Shop) in back of Abercrombie’s Gro cery. Poplar St Ext. Lydia Mills Ic-L PUBLIC NOTICE - I will not be bound by any contracts, agreements ior commitments other than those en- itered into by me personally E Ers kmc Blakely. NO HUNTING, fishing, trespassing of any kind on my lands P S. Bai ley 4c-N16 ELECTROLUX (R >-World * only automatic cleaner Sales and Ser vice 11 L. Baldwin, Bonded Rep resentative. Telephone* 1797 or 9351 tf WORKING MOTHERS - WiU tend children during day or night Nice warm playroom inside, fenn-d in )>ack yard for sunny day* Call Mr* | M R Hamrick. 124-J. or visit 306 Ferguson St lc < KhIHTORV NOTH K All persons having claims against 1 the estate of Samuel C. Dunlap, de ceased. are hereby notified to file the same duly verified, with Um . micr signed and those indebted to | said estate will please make pay ment likewise MAUDE BALDWIN DUNLAP. Executrix, Musgrov* St., Clinton, S. C. October 21. 19S8 3c N 13 FINAL SETTLEMENT Take notice that on the 17th day of November. 1958, I will render a final account of my acta and doings i as Executor of the estate of Pearl Copeland in the office of the Judge of Probate of Laurens County at 10 o'clock a. iji and on the same day will apply for a final discharge from my trust as Executor. Any person indebted to said estate is notified and required to mako payment on or before that date; and all persons having claims against said estate will present them on or before said date, duly proven, or be forever barred LEEVESTER TIMS, Executor October 13, 1958 4c-N-6 EVERYDAY COUNSELOR By Dr. Herbert Ayaagh This column is directed toward thoughtful businessmen. It is basAi upon an address I recently heard by a British theologian, Dr. Eric C. Rust, now teaching in one of our large theological seminaries. It was thought-provoking and downright alarming. He traced the pattern fol lowed by the church, business, and politics in England over the last two generaitons which has brought Great Britain to the position she is in today. He said we were following the same pattern. During World War I Britain expe rienced an era of unprecedented prosperity. There was growth in the labor unions. These unions and the government did more for the work ing man than the church. He was able to possess more material things than he had ever had before—things which previously only the nobility possessed. He saw wealthy indus. trialists patronizing, contributing to the church, and even building new churches. All the while they did nothing for the working man whose labors produced the industrialists’ philanthropy. So the Labor and Socialist Parties grew to strong proportions. The government became more and more socialistic. To the working man so cialism offered the answer to his problems rather than Christianity and the church. His philosophy and attitude became more and more materialistic. To him security spell ed money and the things which money could buy. Business became more and more government owned. Transportation and communication, and finally medicine was socialized. Today British churches are very largely deserted. Only about ten per cent of the population supports the church in any way, and only about five per cent of them are active. Dr Rust said that unless we i change our pattern of emphasis up on material things and looking to the federal government to provide for our needs, we will go the same I way in another generation or two. He said the church still had an j epportunity to take the leadership in our nation, by preaching the whole gospel and bringing Christian, ity into everyday living. We can share what we have voluntarily, or j it will be taken by the government as we move more and more tow ards socialism The world desperately needs | Christianity in its life stream Christian principles need to be prac ticed in everyday living. Far too msny treat the church as an organ!, zation separate and apart from the world, as a religious club which we attend and support. Then when they leave the church they are through with its principles until we come back to it again. 'Hiat isn’t what Jesus taught His disciples He didn’t say the church was to be an organi zation separate from the world. In His prayer immediately before cru cifixion, He prayed, “I pray not that Thou shouldest take them out of the world, but that Thou shouldest keep them from the evil.” Better Farming Briefs Taken from Recent Reports of Ex tension County Farm Agents. Anderson, H. D. Marrett—Ralph Sutherland and Felton Hoyle, presi dent* and manager, respectively, of the Piedmont Egg Producers Asso ciation, and the county agent at tended an egg marketing meeting in Charlotte during the month. At the meeting a conunittee made up of one representative from the co-ops in and around Charlotte and two from South Carolina was appointed to study the possibilities of forming a federated co-op to handle any sur plus eggs these organizations might have. The Piedmont Egg producers Association plans to get in operation by mid-October. Barnwell, John B. Griffith—The 27 entries in the county pasture con test have been scored. We found many farmers were getting good re turns from Coastal Bermuda. Some had been grazing 3 animal units per acre since fairly early in the spring; others had grazed 2 animal units per ^<;re and had cut some hay. Our farmers have learned that in order to do this they must fer tilize coastal Bermuda heavily. Clarendon, A. D. Grainger—Beef cattle farmers are gradually build ing up larger herds By fairly care ful culling the quality of the herd animals is being improved. Interest is also keen in the field of hog pro- duction despite the fact that prices have been somewhat erratic and have declined during the past week or two. Thirteen purebred York shire and one Lanrdeth boar have been placed during the month. Horry, V. M. Johnston—All of the tobacco warehouses in the area are closed for the season. Tobacco farmers will have a little less mo ney from their tobacco crop than they had last season; however, the average price they received per pound was the highest in the history of tobacco in Horry county. Quite a few growers porduced over a ton of tobacco per acre. The highest yield we had reported was that of W. O. Hardee of the Good Hope community, who pnxhiced 2710 pounds per acre. IF YOU DO NT READ THE CHRONICLE YOU DON'T GET THE NEWS Phone 74 SPECIAL NOTICE! Applications for employment with COMMUNITY CASH STORES at Clinton ' will be accepted Monday, Nov. 3rd 11 a. m. to 1 p. m. 2 p. m. to 5 p. m. Hotel Mary Musgrove v NURSERY SCHOOL Ages 2 Through 1 Ail Saints Episcopal Church Parish House Corner Holland and (’aftert Sts Monday Through Friday 8:30-11:30 A. M. BARBECUE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1st HASH Qt. $1.50 MEAT Lb. $1.50 Nabors Store BONDS CROSS ROADS PHONE 5821 99“ ANNIVERSARY ( RESTMONT! A & P\s OWN CREAMY SMOOTH ICE CREAM JANE PARKER DELICIOUS Apple Pie K-INCH SI7E HALLOWEEN HANDOUTS BOX SALE! ASSORTED FLAVORS AND BRANDS CHEWING GUM MORTHMORK ASSORTED CANDY CORN HANDOUTS Dr. Felder Smith OPTOMETRIST Phone 794 Laurens, S. C. Wasson & Wasson, Inc. Hickory Tavern, S. C. Well Drilling aad Well Boring Water Guaranteed aad ab work guaranteed. Cal co* leet. telephone: Laurens Rural: 2721 — 2711 — *«• •01 R FINEST QUALITY” HEAT AND SERVE PRE-COOKED A & P A&P French pries FLORIDA NEW CROP, FRESH G'FRUIT