The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, August 22, 1963, Image 5

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r Clinton, S. C., Thursday, August 22, 196S THE CLINTON CHRONICLE THE WOMAN'S PAGE Social Events and Chib News of Interest Telephone 833-0541 Jones-Parashis Announcement Lt. Col. and Mrs. Willard L. Jones of Silver Springs, Md., announce the marriage of their daughter, Alice Elizabeth, to Mr. George Parahis of San Jose, Cal., on August 3, 1963. Christening At — Broad St. Church Lynn Hollingsworth Phillips, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Benny Phillips of Raleigh, N. C. was christened Sunday, August 18, at the Broad Street Methodist Church, by the Rev. A. S. Har vey. Among those attending the ceremony were her paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Phillips and son Tommy, also the great-grandmother, Mrs Charity Wadell of North Wilkes- boro, N. C.; her maternal grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chick Ray, also Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Ray and Miss Sara Ray. Lynn and her mother are re maining in Clinton for a visit with the latter’s parents for sev eral days. Cotillion Club Dance and Supper The Clinton Cotillion Club en tertained members and guests Saturday evening with a dance and supper at the Lakeside Coun try Club. As the guests assembled, a picnic supper was spread on ap pointed tables on the lawn. Hur- Styling by Mr. James The noted stylist of Char lotte will be at Ruby's on Tuesday, August 27. Call Now For An Appointment Ruby’s Beauty Shop 833-1721 ricane lamps centered each of the tables. On the serving table, a wrought iron candelabra with burning tapers and basket of summer flowers was very effec tive. Following supper, the some 50 couples enjoyed dancing to the music of Harry Bouknight’s band. Tennis Players Given Supper The participants of the City Tennis Tournament was honored with a picnic supper Monday eve ning, Aug. 19, at the Douglas House on the Presbyterian Coll ege Campus with some thirty- five members participating. Following the delicious buffet supper, Mike Turner, Master of Ceremonies made the presenta tion of trophies to each of the winners which marked the end ing of the tournament, one of the best Clinton has had. PERSONAL MENTION Mrs. James Wolfe and children Jimmie, Denise and Jean have returned from a ten flay stay at Surfside Beach. Jimmy stopped in Mullins for a week’s visit with Mr. and Mrs. Mart Wheeler. Two of Mrs. E. L. Hortons former classmates at Sullins College, Miss Caroline Monckton, of Charlotte, N. C., and Mrs. Jim Singletary of Pickens have re turned to their homes after sev- earl days visit here with Mr. and Mrs. Horton. IF YOU DON’T READ ' THE CHRONICLE YOU DON’T GET THE NEWS phone tn mi for school *>**■'7*.:. OR CAREER... young people prefer BULOVA for stamina, and value! HOSPITAL NEWS HOSPITAL PATIENTS Joanna—Miss Melisa Bagwell, Miss Unda Davenport, AUen Frazier, Miss Rhonda Honeycutt, Mrs. W. R. Waits. Laurens—Mrs. Clarence Barnes and baby girl, and Horace Wil liams. — . —Mountville—Mrs. Frances Hunt and Miss Jan Young. Clinton—Robert S. Blalock, Fred A. Bodie, Johnny Bragg, Mrs. Emma F. Craig, Mrs. James .C. Dean, Mrs. Zona Dut ton, Mrs. C. J. Farmer, L. C. Gooch, Arthur M. Greenwood, Mrs. Rachel Hollingsworth, Bruce Howell, Alexander B. Jacks, Mrs. Brenda Johnson and baby boy, Mrs. Pauline Lawson, Mrs. Joe Leake, Joseph P. Leon ard, Mrs. Dollie McCravy, Mrs. Edna W. McGee, Mrs. Marvin Nearl, Mrs. Clarice Nelson, Gra ham J. Osborne, Miss Angela Owens, David Owens, Grace Ow ens, Sadie Quinton, Mrs. Donald E. Ross, and baby boy, Mrs. Z. W. Rushton, Mrs. Annie Smith, John Spratt, Mrs. Ernie Stone, Mrs. Violet Strand, Mrs. Leonia Westbury, and Dr. D. J. Woods. DISCHARGED PATIENTS Laurens—Mrs. Wilton Garrett, and Walter Tucker. Mountville—Mrs. Floyd Coats. Whitmire—Miss Carol Cren shaw. Aiken—Wallace Carr. Kinards—Mrs. R. L. Franklin. Greenville—Mrs. Shirley Hug gins. Joanna—Mrs. G. H. Metis, Mrs. G. H. Metts, Mrs. Modeen Bra- zel, Mrs. Maggie Pitts, and baby girl, Mrs. Carl O. Norris, Mrs. Margie Metts, Fubord Lowery, Luther Poag, MM. 0« Reid, Mrs. Swannie Wilkie, Mrs. J. K. Waits, and Mrs. Evangeline God frey. Clinton—Mrs. Pauline Proffitt, Mrs. Sybil Osborne, and baby boy, Mrs. Rosa Lee Milam, John D. Lynch, Mrs. Glenda Domin ick, Mrs. Linda Black and baby girl, Mrs. Beatrice Hardman, Mrs. James E. Simmons, Miss Sarah McGee, Robert L. Wick- man, Mrs. Martha Childress, Clyde Wehunt, Miss Lana Steph ens, Mrs. Patricia Nabors, Mrs. Leanna Holland, W. L. Motte, Gary O’Shields, Mrs. Frances Poole, Miss Gerri Smith, Jeffrey Smith, Johnnie E. Johnson, Mrs. Gene Buffington, Miss Azilee Sex ton, Miss Agnes Davis, Mrs. Mary Copeland, Mrs. Vounda Culpepper, Charlie Motte, and Mrs. J. B. Patterson. EVERYDAY COUNSELOR By Blshep Herbert Spaagh How mature are you? Have you grown up yet? St. Paul said, “Wheh I became a man, I put away childish things.” Some people grow up in one way and not in another. Some people never seem to grow up. They want to keep the carefree, irresponsible life(ydf a child. They want to escape the hard knocks of life and the trying decisions. “In age and in some mental qualities, he is a man, but in his emotions he is a child,” was said of a man who was difficult and sullen. While childishness may be charming in childhood, when it s carried over into adult life, it unfits us to face life’s reality. The immature adult shuns un pleasantness and discomfort. He has not learned teamwork and how to cooperate with others, how to give and take. He lacks tolerance, adaptability, flexibili ty, and patience. A child is an individualist. He is either a showoff, wanting to occupy first place, or else is shy, shrinking within himself. He is either too bold or too timid. While a child is an individualist, an aduR is a social being'Who must face facts, exercise patience, us ing the experience and skill of others in getting things done One of the great questions be fore the world is whether the hu man race is mature enough to handle the problems now facing us. The child-mind can never make a just and lasting peace, or even keep the peace for long. The emotional life of the hu man race is unstable, haunted by are being manufactured. Walhalla, situated just a -*t “giant's stone throw” from the mountains, revels in its natural beauty and unique history. More picturesque loveliness is revealed to the sightseers as. Among them are the Clemson they enter the state-fnalhtained Oconee park 10 miles north of Walhalla. There’s a 23-acre Hake with good fishing, boating and swimming; 20 cabins for'Lake Fishing and Boating Club, Where the winding lane and the sparkling brook stroll hand in hand down the rocky hill side . . . where the hooting owl and the scatting jay are lonely sounds across the bay . . These are the embellishments of a luring scene found fondly in the mountains of South Caro lina. We invite you to come with us on a Palmetto Pathway to Oconee County in the ex treme northwestern part of our state. Historic grandeur bespeaks the setting of Fort Hill, home of the renowned native son, John C. Calhoun. It is atop a small knoll just off Highway 123 at Clemson College, at the edge of the Oconee territory. This may be our first stop on this trip, which we hope , will mix a nostalgia of the past with modem industry of today and scenic stratascopes that make for a well-rounded travel ogue. While in the Clemson area, let us stop in for lunch, or just a short tour; or if it is late in the evening and you need hous ing, spend the night at Clemson House, a modem hostelry con sidered one of the finest in the southeast. If your visit is in the fail, make sure to check ahead and get the dates for Salem’s an nual fall rodeo. Salem is north of Clemson near the Pickens County line and at the thres hold of a splendorous mountain setting. There are usually two days of thrilling events, includ ing a parade and other enter tainments. Follow Highway 288 to reach this community.- No visit to this section of the state is complete without a fear. More people than ever be fore are victims of selfish intro spection, and worry. They are terrified and tied in knots by day, and tormented in their dreams by night. • If we are to grow up emotional ly, we must grow up spiritually. We must grow up in our religion. The child thinks of God as a big man in the sky, with a long white beard, watching him, much like a police officer. He is afraid of Him. Afher a while that image fades. We must either think of God with a mature mind, or we lose faith, become self-possessed, and self-assured. Too many of us are trying to live an adult life without an adult faith. Read St. Paul’s chapter on growing up in 1 Corinthians 13. He had been a self-assured bigot who throught his people were the only people of God. But his con tact with Jesus blew that world of illusion into bits. He became a free soul, happy, heroic, confi dent. His whole anxiety gave way to inner peace which deepened with the years. What St. Paul did we can do likewise, when we yield our lives to Christ. St. Paul had to be stricken down before he did it. Many of us have to have the same experience. looksee at Whitewater Falls, lake and river. Upon leaving Salem, one travels northwest ward on Highway 271, thence right on Highway 57 a short distance out of Salem, and 10 miles to the highest cascade of falling water in Eastern Ameri ca, according to statistics. We must stop off at Jocassee Valley, known as the Switzer land of South Carolina; the Old Stone Church where Andrew Pickens is buried; Issaqueena Falls, named for the Indian maiden Cateechee (Cherokee) who warned the white settlers of the impending British as sault long before Paul Revere made his midnight ride. Stump House Mountain Tun nel, a railroad construction be gun in 1856 and abandoned three years later, is another at traction worthy of attention. It was here that Clemson College made blue mold cheese, sue cessfully for the first time in America, To get to the tunnel, take Highway 28 north from Walhalla, six miles to where there is a sign pointing a turn off to the right. Half a mile north is the tunnel. An epic portrayed during the Revolutionary War can be re lived with a visit to Horseshoe Robinson’s home place. He was a hero in the war that claimed for America its independence. The home is just off Highway 76 from Westminster toward Long Creek. A marking on the chimney of the old house with a cedar tree in the front yard will let you know you have ar rived:— With additional industrializa tion in the Westminser area, one will quickly recognize how important Oconee County is to South Carolina’s economy. Take a tour of several of the plants where famous products camping; picnic shelters, rec reational hall, and restaurant. There are many other places we would suggest you see in Oconee before you leave this wonderfully scenic county. government fish hatchery In the National Forest, the old Indian Trading Post and Fort near Walhalla, the Mountain Tam as see and its community culture, the monument to Col onel Benjamin Cleveland at Old Madison, Moutnain Rest and nearby lakes, and Crystal Lake. For a map of this area and all of South Carolina, contact your local service station. Al so, he will be glad to give you any of the latest travel infor mation. ; It- EVERY REQUIREMENT FOR Boys’ Boys’ Short Sleeve Sport Shirts All Sizes 98c Tom Thumb Wash-Wear All Sixes Shirts $1.59 Long Sleeves—Fall Colors Sixes 6 To 8 Polo Shirts .. 2 for $1.00 Girls’ Sizes 1-14 DRESSES $1.00 - $3.98 Complete Line Girls 3 For Panties .. $1.00 By Ronnie—Knit, Floral Ladies’ RoU-Up va» Sleeve X Blouses A ’S ^ 1 2 FOR k yjN $3.00 Dungarees Boys’. Sizes 6-16. Pow der Horn, 10-Os. Brown, Blue, Green and Grey Only $1.98 Boys Wash ’N’ Wear Slacks . $3.98 All Sizes 100% Cotton Book Bags From 98c To $4.98 Canvas Back Big IV’ Ring Notebook O C' . Only 98c ^OSES VALUE-VARIETY ££ TEEN CORNER OFFICE SUPPLIES CHRONICLE PUB. CO. PHONE ESS4M1 jHtune with Your heart Your aentimenta dictate the king of gema, the dia mond, aa a token of your enduring love. But only your mind will guide you to utmost value for your money. Wisdom diracta our customers here. Seoee diamond bridal anntmbU. BE YOUNG! LOOK YOUNG! SHOP BELK'S! $59.50 Easy Torm* J. C THOMAS, Jeweler “It’s Time That Counts” CLINTON JOANNA • v‘- •I ’ ■ . ■ i ' • » .> ‘j ■ • J. C Thomas, lewder “It’s Him UmI CmmUT CLINTON JOANNA Consult about this i “We were mighty glad to have Pulley camera. sport* trip. DM this policy, Meludeu theft at and away from BAILEY AGENCY M. 8. Balky A 8m Baaker* BMf. Dial Day 833-0681 — Night aad Saaday the many intarsia looks of “Prettyeoft" is tho fashion word for theeo separates this fall. The perfect look for daytime and playtime - and precious enough for datetime. The eye-catching intarsia sweaters in a pfecious blend of 65% lambswool — 25% fur fibre —. . 10% nylon. The color-matched bottoms in a luxury blend of 90% cashmere *— 10% wool. Sweaters, 32-40; bottoms, 5-15. "tulip" slipover, mock turtle neck. -.. 8,99 slim skirt... 7.99 i... 12.99 pvwvw PUfft t • leW % 4- ply cartSgfoi... 19.99 si. 7.99