The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, August 26, 1965, Image 5
1
a
i
Clinton, S. C n Thursday, August 26, 1965
THE CLINTON CHRONICLE
Club
News
Weddings
Meetings
^ TskphoM 8SMM1
Mrs. Waldron
Honors Miss Ulrich
Mrs. Charles F. Waldron com
plimented Miss Eva Ulrich with
a kitchen gadget and recipe
party Thursday afternoon, Au
gust 12, at three o’clock at her
* home on Pine Street.
The hostess greeted the guests
at the entrance and pinned min
iature utensil corsages as fa
vors before presenting them to
the honoree and her mother,
Mrs. Richard W. Ulrich.
Mrs. Don Rice invited the
guests into the dining room
where dainty p a rt y hors
d’oeuvres and punch were serv
ed.
The party table, overlaid with
a white linen cover, was beau
tifully arranged with roses in a
crystal bowl. Mrs. Ralph Cope
land assisted in pouring punch.
Elsewhere in the receiving
rooms, arrangements of mixed
summer flowers were used.
*- "Miss Ulrich received many use
ful and helpful recipes.
Sellers-Heaton
Engagement
’ Joanna — Mr. and Mrs. Gay
Vergle Sellers of 185 Tillman
Circle announce the engagement
. of their daughter, Sara Eliza
beth, to Jimmie Edgar Heaton,
son of Mrs. Katherine Butler
Heaton of 614 Elizabeth St., Clin
ton. The engaged couple was
graduated this year from Clinton
High School. Miss Sellers works
in the business office of Joanna
Stores and Mr. Heaton works for
Clinton Mills. The wedding date
is Oct. 16.
Strictly
Personal
No two
fingerprints
are precisely identical.
Neither are any two
Jewelers. We like to think
that our dedication to the
complete satisfaction of
our customers makes us
unique. At least our
customers think so and
that Is really what
counts. Come and see why
for yourself.
Priced'al
$39.50
On Msy
termi.
J. C THOMAS, Jeweler
“It’s Time That Counts”
CLINTON JOANNA
Betty Joyce Sheriff
Marries Mr. Bobb
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Sheriff
of Lakewood Dr. announce the
marriage of their daughter, Bet
ty Joyce, to Jerald Stephen
Bobb, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ira
Bobb of Marion St., Joanna.
The Rev. Roscoe Bryan of
ficiated at the twelve o’clock
ceremony at his home in Clin
ton, with a small assembly of
relatives and friends present.
Following a brief wedding trip,
the bride and groom are making
their home on Hampton Avenue
in Joanna.
Davidson Street
Class In Meet
The Young Marrieds Class of
Davidson Street Baptist Church
met last Monday evening, Au
gust 17, at the home of Mrs.
Robert Satterfield on North
Holland Street, with Mrs. Da
vid Young giving the devotion
al and prayer. The business
session was conducted by Mrs.
Joe Foster, at which time
yearbooks for the comnig year
were discussed.
During the social hour re
freshments were served and
the “gifts of the month” were
presented Mrs. Dan Wood,
Mrs. Cheryl Watts and Mrs.
Bill Jones.
Christenbury-
Griffin Rites
Miss Rebecca Ann Christen-
bury became the bride of Philip
Griffin Connell in a 7:30 p. m.
ceremony, August 11, in the
chapel of the First Baptist
Church in Charlotte, N. C. The
Rev. Colie Snipes officiated.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harold
Christenbury of Orr Rd., Char
lotte. She wore a gown of lace
over satin and her veil was at
tached to a jeweled crown. She
carried a Bible topped with
white roses.
Mrs. Connell was graduated
from East Mecklenburg High
School and attended Carolina
Business College and Kings Col
lege. She has been employed by
Duke Power Company.
The bridegroom’s parents are
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin J. Connell
of Back Creek Road, Charlotte.
He is also a graduate of Meck
lenburg High School. At North
Carolina State University, he re
ceived his degree in forestry.
He was a member of the Si
Sigma Pi honorary freternity in
the school of forestry. He is em
ployed with Catawba Timber
Company in Clinton.
The bride and groom are mak
ing their home at 500 Caldwell
St., CUnton.
TIE lEU THING!
PET. BUTTER MILK
Who's got that old-time
taste? Pet you bet!
GZ? i
HtJlUK \UIK
JHn Tf K
muk
New Forester's
Wife Entertained
Mrs. Don Creighton compli
mented Mrs. Philip Connell
with a morning party Tuesday,
August 24, at her home in Mer-
rie Oaks.Mrs. Connell, a recent
bride, of Charlotte, N. C., mov
ed with hre husband to Clinton
several weeks ago. They are
making their home at 500 Cald
well Street. Mr. Connell is a
new forester with Catawba
Timber Co.
Some fifteen guests were
present and enjoyed dainty
party refreshments sreved buf
fet style from the dining room
table.
Summer flowers were used
at points of interest in the re
ceiving rooms.
Among other guests present,
who were newcomers to the
city, were Mrs. Harold Blan
chard and Mrs. J. M. Crider.
Ulrich-Von Brero
Wedding Parties
Mrs. Richard W. Ulrich en
tertained at a bridesmaids’
luncheon in the Lafayette
Room of the Main Post Offi
cers’ Club at Fort Bragg, N.
C., on Friday, August 20, in
honor of her daughter, Miss
Eva Ulrich, bride-elect.
Miss Ulrich presented gifts
to her bridesmaids.
Special guests were Mrs. Joe
Maupin, formerly of Clinton,
and Mrs. Joseph E. Pieklik, of
Fort Bragg.
WEDDING REHEARSAL
On Friday evening, August
20, after the Ulrich-Van Brero
wedding rehearsal, Mr. and
Mrs. Jan van Staveren of Or
lando, Fla., entertained at a
rehearsal party in the Lafay
ette Room oi the Main Post
Officers’ Club at Fort Bragg.
Refreshments*' * a n d danring
were enjoyed by members of
the wedding party and out of
town guests.
WEDDING RECEPTION
Col. and Mrs. Ulrich were
host and hostess for the wed
ding reception of their daugh
ter and son-in-law, immediate
ly following their wedding. The
occasion was held in the Hodge
Room of the Main Post Offi
cers’ Club, Fort Bragg.
The bride’s table was dec
orated with ivy, yellow pom
poms, and yellow chrysanthe
mums. The three-tiered wed
ding cake with columns -was
topped with the bride and
military groom figures which
were used on the bride’s pa
rents’ wedding cake, and the
bridal couple used a sword be
longing to her father to cut the
.cake.
Miss Marna Mielson, New
Haven, Cohn., kept the bride’s
book. Assisting in entertaining
were the honorary bridesmaids
which included Miss Mielson;
Mrs. Louis Swiegart, Miss
Carolyn Bryant, and Miss Lyn-
dell Stewart, Winston-Salem,
N. C.; and Miss Barbara Grif
fin, Spindale, N. C.
Mrs. H. L Sumerel
Laurens — Mrs. Syble John
son Sumerel, 42, of 1123ft Rich
land Drive, Columbia, formerly
of Laurens, died Friday night in
Columbia after a month of ill
ness.
A native of Laurens County,
daughter of Mrs. Grace John
son of Clinton and the late An
drew Johnson, she lived here
before she moved to Columbia
two years ago. She was a mem
ber of Grace Covenant Presby
terian Church.
Surviving in addition to her
mother are her husband, Hugh
L. Sumerel; a son, James M.
Sumerel of Laurens; and a
brother, J. Kenneth Johnson of
Joanna.
Funeral services were con
ducted Sunday at 4. p. m. at
Kennedy Mortuary by Rev. Al
vin Boone and Rev. E. A. Wil
kes. Burial was in Rose HOI
Cemetery.
mm* n
»- •
PERSONAL Clinton B. & P. W. Tours Chemstrond
MENTION
Mrs. Thurston Giles, Mrs.
Jasper Rowland, Mrs. L. N.
Warren and Mrs. B. F. Wingard
spent a few days last week in
Hendersonville, N. C.
Misses Helen and Julia Porter
have returned home after spend
ing the summer at their home
in Montreal, N. C.
Adrian Giles left Sunday for
Spartanburg where he has en
rolled as a student at Spartan
burg Junior College.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Walk
er and. daughter, Sally, have re
turned from a visit with* Mrs.
Armistead Koplitz and daughter,
Bebe, in Sarasota, Fla. Miss Sal
ly Walker, who spent the sum
mer in Malvern, Pa., prior to
her Florida trip, left Monday for
Rock Hill where she has enroll
ed as a member of the fresh
man class at Winthrop College.
Mr. Walker accompanied his
daughter home from Malvern.
Mrs. G. W. Hollingsworth is ill
and a patient at Bailey Memo
rial Hospital.
Miss Mary Jane Jacobs left
today for Chapel Hill, N. C.,
Members and friends of the
Clinton Business and Profes
sional Women’s Club made a
tour of the Greenwood plant
of the Chemstrand Company on
Tuesday, August 10, the regu
lar meeting date.
The group of twenty-three
people were first taken into a
classroom and givne a very in
teresting and informative talk
on the Chemstrand Company,
a division of the Monsanto
Company. First, they were
given the history of the com-
»» .
where she will attend the parties
and wedding of her suite-mate,
Miss Peggy Sparrow, which
takes place on Saturday.
Patients at the J. F. Hawkins
Nursing Home in Newberry in
clude E. F. Anderson, R. A.
Steer and Miss Minnie Lee
Nash. .
Mrs. J. G. Freeman of Pick
ens, was a recent week-end
guest of her son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Tench
P. Owens. Visiting them this
week is a nephew, Charles Vick
ery of Forest City, N. C.
pany. It is relatively a new
comany—only sixteen yean
old — begun in 1969. Second,
the history of the Greenwood
nylon plant,\ which be gain In
1960 with less than 800 peple.
The present plant now employs
2200 people. The nylon process
was explained—that it has its
beginning through a chemical
operation.
Next, three members of the
personnel department escorted
the CUnton group into the plant
cafeteria for dinner with choic
es in every food.
Then the three (with seven
or eight in each group) took the
visitors on a walking tour of
the plant’s manufacturing fa
cilities. They watched nylon
being spun, drawn, inspected,
and prepared for shipment to
customers.
The group then returned to
the classroom for a question
and answer period.
Carroll Moore gave the lec
ture to the group. He and the
other two from Chemstrand’s
personnel department, Gayle
Poe and John Roberts, acted
as tour guides.
MRS. ERIK VAN BRERO
MISS ULRICH AND LT. VAN BRERO
MARRIED IN MILITARY CEREMONY
LEONARD-MARLER
Insurance Agency
200 North Broad Street
Phone 833-1121 Clinton, S. C.
Wo Strive Tircleoaly To Give
Prompt and Courteous Service
To AD Tour Insurance Needs
Automotive —
Fire —
C. H. LEONARD
Miss Eva Allene Ulrich of
this city and Lt. Erik Van
Brero of Fort Bragg, N. C„
were married in a military ser
vice August 21 at six o’clock
in the Main Post Chapel. A
background of palms and can
delabra holding white burning
tapers with altar vases of
white gladioli, carnations, pom
poms, and ivy made the beau
tiful setting for the double rin^
ceremony.
Chaplain (Lt. Col.) C. L.
Hopkins officiated. Organ mu
sic was presented by Harlan
Dueno of Fayetteville, N. C.
Mrs. Van Brero is the daugh
ter of Lt. Col. and Mrs. Rich
ard Ward Ulrich of 400 Pine
tf
Street. She is a graduate of
Cushing Academy in Ashburn-
ham, Mass., and Wake Forest
College in Winston-Salem, N.
C.
Lt.' Van Brero is the son of
Mrs. Jan van Stavern of Orlan
do, Fla., and Cornelius Van
Brero of Apeldporn, Nether-
In ads. He is a graduate of the
University of Florida, Gaines
ville, where he became a
member of Alpha Tau Omega
Rational social fraternity.
He is with headquarters of
the ,18th Airborne Corps. The
couple will live at Fort Bragg
upon their return August 20
from a trip to Florida.
The bride’s father gave her
in marriage. She wore an heir
loom candlelight gown of brid
al satin fashioned with long
sleeves edged with Brussells
lace. Below an illusion yoke,
the portrait neckline was trim
med with reembroidered bead
ed motifs. The elongated bod
ice gave the dress an old fash
ioned look. The full skirt form
ed a cathedral train below a
bustle. Her pure silk imported
veil of illusion fell from an
open crown ol A Alencon lace,
seed pearls, and silk illusion.
She carried a cascade of yel
low roses and ivy.
Bridal attendants included
Miss Sherrill Dunevant, Win
ston-Salem, N. C., maid of hon
or; bridesmaids were Mrs.
Lacy Ballard, High Point, N.
C.;. Miss Meredith Zehner, Ar
lington, Va.; Miss Vicki Young,
Winston-Salem, N. C.; Miss
Freddie Neel, Blacksburg, Va.;
and Miss Charlotte Kirshrot,
Alexandria, Va. They wore
sleeveless sheath dresses in
maize silk organza over taffeta
with removable' floor - length
overskirts. The taffeta bodices
were outlined with tiny em
broidery underneath the organ
za which were cut in high
neckline. The overskirts were
bell-shaped with fullness in the
back topped by an obi sash
which formed a bustle. Yel
low roses held their short veils
of illusion. Their crescent-shap
ed bouquets were' of yellow
mums and ivy streamers.
Ralph ’ (Terry) Handley of
Winter Park, Fa., was best
man. Ushers ware Richard W.
Ulrich, Jr., brother of the
bride, Clinton; Charlie Chilling-
worth, Gainesville, Fla.; Wil
liam Barfield, Orlando, Fla.;
Lt. Gary White, Fort Bragg, N.
C.; Lady Ballard, High Point,
N. C.; and Henry Koehn, Fay
etteville, N. C.
Forming the saber arch un
der which the bridal couple
passed as they left the chapel
were Lt. Gary White, Lt. Hen
ry Knapp, Lt. Tom Gauger,
Lt. Raymond Sapp, Lt. Mai
Sam a, and Lt. Paul Brooks, all
stationed at Fort Bragg.
For travel to Florida, the
bride changed to a light blue
silk and wool suit with brown
over . blouse * *and • trim, with
brown accessories- and corsage
of yellow roses.
EVERYDAY
COUNSELOR
By Bishop Herbert Spaugh
“So much for so little.” These
words were spoken by a friend in
my home as he picked up a
small toy and hand organ and
turned the crank vigorously, on
ly to produce a grinding of
gears with an occasional feeble
note. I laughted at his efforts
as he ground away, and then
put the toy organ aside with this
pointed remark.
After he had gone, I thought
about what he had said, “So
much for so little.” What a ser
mon in that remark.
How vigorously most of us
grind at life, with a great clatter
and clashing of gears, trying td
produce the music of happiness.
We exert our best efforts to
gather money and things. We
seem to think that they will pro
duce happiness, only to find that
some great emergency sweeps
their value away, and we stand
before God empty handed. When
a man stands at the graveside
of a dear one, things shrivel to
nothing.
The world is grinding away at
a tremendous rate trying to pro
duce the music of peace and
-good-will among the nations.
More gears are put into the so
cial machine; new governmen
tal agencies are piled up; armies
and navies are* increased. Sadly
we admit, “So much for so lit
tle.” _
The trouble with the little
hand organ was that it was
wrong inside. Turning over so
vigorously accomplished little.
That’s the trouble with us to
day. The trouble is inside of us.
When a man’s heart gets right
with God, it gets right with his
fellows. The writer of the Pro
verbs in the Bible set down this
eternal truth. “When a man’s
ways please the Lord, He mak-
eth even his enemies tp be at
peace with him.” Marie that in
your Bible — Proverbs 16:7.
Study it. Copy ft and put it
where you can see it every day.
World leaders might study^it
with profit: so can you.
“So much for so little.” Turn
this around and look at it from
the other side. When a man be
comes a Christian and accepts
Jesus Christ as his personal Sa
viour, he gets “so much for so
little;” salvation from sin and its
power, from eternal hell, per
fect counsel and guidance, res
toration of soul, daily needs, all
that a man can desire and need
—all for a simple surrender of
heart and life.
Read the promise of the Lord,
“Seek ye FIRST the kingdom of
God, and His righteousness, and
ALL these things shall be added
unto you.”
Why don’t you do it. “So Much
for so little.”
ANNOUNCES
THE OPENING
- of the -
KNITTING SHOP
THURSDAY, SEPT. 2
9:30 a. m. Till 11:30 a. m
Come In And Register For FREE Lessons
Conducted By Mrs. lone Wallace
FREE REFRESHMENTS!
This is your invitation to learn to knit—we’ll teach you the ABC’s of
knitting and purling in one lesr si at BELK*S.
You can make slippers, a cap, scarf or ascot. Classes will be small, so
you’ll have individual attention. Just drop by our Art Needlework
Department Thursday, Sept. 2, .to register for a FREE learn-to-knit
course suited to your time schedule.
Hope to see you soon and welcome you into our wonderful world of Fash
ion Knitting at BELK’S.
MRS. IONE WALLACE
- PARENTS -
Get Your SCHOOL SUPPLIES NOW
WE ALSO HAVE TEACHERS’ SUPPLIES
Back To School Special!
Blue Horse Fillers
76 Sheets 25c
160 Sheets .. . 49c
500 Sheets 89c
' &
Sheaffer’s f
Ball Point Pens
1.79 Value 1.00
' 2.99 Value ' 1.95
Composition Books
Full Count Value — Wire Bound
25c — 49c — 98c
Both Wide and Narrow 1 Ruled
Narrow Ruled Filler Paper
Construction Paper
Large and Small Sheets
*
Compasses
25c and 70c
Skrip Ink
Protractors
Metal and Plastic
Pencil Crayons
20c — 25c — 1.00
Crayola Crayons
15c — 20c — 25c — 40c — 75c
Binders
80c — 1.30 — to 3.20 |
Cloth and Vinyl
Dictionaries
Webster Seventh New CoDegiate
Webster Vest Pocket
PencO Sharpeners
1.C7 — 2.00 — 2.25 — 3.85
FOR THE TEACHERS
We Have Class Registers — Stencil and Mimeograph Paper
Speedball Pens and Ink
Typewriters J'or Rent — Poster Board — Rubber Stamps Made
CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO.
Dial 833-0541 or 833-0542
109-111 Gary Street