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' ^ rCI \nUjm, ""V, S. C n Thursday, January 27, 1966 THE CLINTON CHRONICLE / WHO'S WHERE « * — Ah — Reported By 1 Naomi Seymour Phones 833-0541 or 833-1817 Items of Interest About Clinton Folk Salisbury, Sn Monday. On Tues day he attended a meeting of a visit \with her the Enoree Presbytery fn Green- “ will Mrs. Lewis H Lancaster is guests of their daughter, Mrs. her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Geo- visiting her daughter, Mrs. H. Milford Smith, Mr. Smith and rge Blalock during the semester A. Codington in Wilmington, N. children. - break. C. Mrs. Don Fourman of Atlanta, Mrs. Ayliffe Jacobs visited in Dr. and Mrs. Marshall Brown Ga. visited last Thursday and Greenville on Saturday, spent several days in Atlanta, Friday with her sister, Mrs. Don Mrs. W. W. Harris spent sev- Ga., this week. Miss Ella Little Creighton. Mr. Fourman joined era i days last week with her McCrary was the guest of* her them on Friday evening. Before daughter, Mrs. George Senn, sister, Mrs. R. P. Kapp and Mr. their return to Atlanta, Mr. and Mr. Senn and children, Eliza- Kapp in Columbia recently. Mrs. Fourman spent the week- b?th and Foster at their home Miss Beth Moore is a paUent end in Maggie'Valley where they n,ar Newberry in Self Memorial Hospital in en i°y ed skiing ' 1 Dr. Marc C. Weersing attend- Greenwood Mr and Mrs - F - p - Thompson ed the athletic conference of the Mr. and' Mrs. Miles Powell o f t Laur ! n8 , were vi8ltor8 111 ^ ^, r o^ ^!t a ^ ba and family will visit this week- ~ clty on Sun ay end in Monroe, N. C., with Mr. Mrs. A. C. Young Jr. has re Powell’s aunt and uncle, Mr. turned from and Mrs. William Howerton. parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Visiting In Florida McClure in Sylacauga, and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bonds left Montgomery, Alabama. Saturday for a weeks trip to Or- Mrs. John W. Little has re- lando, Fla., and other points of turned from a visit to Mrs. interest. Frank Jordan in Columbia. Mr. and Mrs.’. J. C. Thomas, Mr. and Mrs.H .M. Young Sr. Mr, and Mrs. Davis R, Holland and Mr. and Mrs. Young Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Johnson spent Sunday in Easley with Mr. of Joanna spent Sunday in Char- and Mrs. Roymayne Hamilton, lotte at the gift show. Returning Cadet Keith Trammell of Cam- on Tuesday for other Rowings den Military Academy, Camden, were Mr. and Mrs. Thomas, spent the weekend with his par- mother > Mr8 ' John H Tedards Mrs. Joe Johnson and Kenneth ents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Tram- Mann, representing the J. C. mell. While here he attended the Thomas Jewelry Store. Dr. and Mrs. Davis Pitts re- the Mary Musgrove Hotel, turned Monday from a week- Enjoy Skiing Trip end visit with Lt. and Mrs. Glenn Mrs. George Blalock and chil- B. Reeves and children in Or- dren, Miss Almena. Blalock of lando, Fla. Mrs. W. C. Shealy visited her Mrs. Milling Blalock of Colum sister, Mrs. Oswald Copeland in bia, spent Monday at Hounds Newberry last week. Ea'rs nea® Boone, N. C., where At Veterans Hospital they enjoyed a day of skiing. Wilmot Shealy Sr. is a patient Mrs. J. M. Crider Jr. and chil- at the Veterans Hospital in Col- dren, Joan and Mark spent Mon- umbia. day in Charleston on business. t ' iarence 5>unneu was Mr. and. Mrs. Walter Jones Miss Almena Blalock, student of Blacksburg were Sunday at Converse College, is visiting 1 BUILDING FOR THE FUTURE f Attend Seminar at Clemson • A recent workshop* session in textile management information systems at Clemison University included the following participants, seated (left to right): George Grimes, instjatetor for Management Science At lanta, Inc.; George B. Brockenbrough arid A. C. Young, Jn, Clinton Mills; and Takaharu Miyoshi, Nippon Ray on Co., New York. Standing are: Dean Wallace D. Trevillian of the Clemson School pf Industrial Manage ment and Textile Science, and Dr. Thomas L. Newber ry, president of Management Science Atlanta. Rites Saturday For Bobby Sherman Cooper vflle. He will return tomorrow from Louisville, Kentucky where, pecially to see her new grand- ho attended an advisory confer- ^ Remb ert Russell. The Tru- Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dendy and ^ ucks t0 Bobby Sherman Cooper, 19, family spent Sunday in Royston, 10 the fal1 where he is a member died Thursday at ^.45 p m in Church Ga., going especially for the ce- of the faculty at Southern Bap- a i oca i hospital. Surviving are his wife; Mrs. lebration of Mrs. Dendy’s grand- tist Seminary as an assistant in He was injured Nov. 3 when Laura Bell Downery Earle; father, J. J. Allen’s 87th birth- : — — ; : the car in which he wds riding daughter, Mrs. Jimmy Chand- Mrs. W. Wilson of Athens, On., was involved in a headon colli- i er 0 f Spartanburg; two sons, and Mrs. Edison Lewis of sion on S. €. Highway 72 near Samuel C. and Jimmy W. Hampton, Va.; and two grand- Whitmire. Earle of Laurens; three broth- children. Lifelong resident of Clinton, ers, - Wilton R. andEdward Funeral services were con- son of Gherman and Mary Earle of Clarksville, Ga., and ducted at 3 p. m. Tuesday at Frances Ballard Cooper, he at- J. W. Earle of Port Arthur, F.rst Presbyterian Church hy tended Friendship Baptist Tex.; three sisters, Mrs. Ed- Dr. Ben F. Ormaad. Burial was Church. gar Meadows of Port Arthur, in Forest Lawn Cemetery. Surviving also are two sisters, Mrs. Patricia Frances Smith of Lydia Mill and Miss Teresa Ann Cooper of the home; a brother, Donnie Wayne Cooper of the home; and paternal grandmother, Mrs. Lou Ellen Andrews of Clinton. Funeral services were conduct ed Saturday at 3 p.m. at Friend ship Baptist Church by Rev; J. D. Stephens, Rev. Roscoe Bryan and Rev. Marvin Deitz. Burial was in Rosemont Cemetery. * Sam Earle, 68, Highway Engineer, Dies In'Laruens Laurens — Sam Earle, 68, of 517 Sullivan St. died Sunday at 7:15 p. m. in a local hospital after a short illness. Native of Anderson County, son of the late Ed and Fleda Sullivan Earle, he was a resi dent construction engineer with the State Highway Department for over 30 years and was an elder of the First Presbyterian the department of Old Testa- d Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Tedards ment Archeology while working and children visited the former’s on * 1 * s doctorate degree. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Fudd at the Greenville General Hos- an d children, Bruce, Suzanne, P‘ tal °n Sunday. Mrs. TCdards- AmeUa and Lisa of Lancaster Snowball Dance on. Saturday at J 1 ^ 8 a aad ^ ^onva^es^ng visited her P arents - Mr - and rricely convalescing ^ G c McInvaille Sunday. Misses Martha and Ruth Todd, Misses Mary Jan? Jacobs, students at Erskine College Due Mary. Ellen Cornwall and Jane u, c .., ~—- w* w snpndinc a few davs Mll am have resumed their Converse CoUege, and Mr. and ™ h ’ mc d semcsier break . classes at Coker College, Harts- -* ni-i—«<• — 0 ville, after spending several days at home during semester Mrs. Gary Holcombe attended the funeral services of Miss THE MAOie MUSIC OF FRED and THE PEN NSYLVAN IAN S IN PERSON Spartanburg Memorial Auditorium ‘ • H • ■ ■ ' Monday, Fab. 7, at 8:15 T;' . ; TICKETS. Orchastra, $4, $3 Balcony $3, $3 Box Office Open 10 to 5 Phono 583-8107 for Raiorvationi Mail ofdars to P. O. Box 1410, Spartanburg, S. C.. Enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope r Mozele Jones in Campobello last break. Friday. Recent dinner guests of Mrs. Mrs. J. W. Moore of Laurens. James Holland has returned to his home in Laurens having been a patient at Bailey Memor ial Hospital last week. Making Home In Laurens Mrs. Gary Holcomb was the dinner guest of Mrs. J. W. Moore on Tuesday at her home in Lau rens. Visiting Mrs. M. T. Motes at the Blue Ridge Nursing Center in Easley on Tuesday were Mrs. G^orgg - Watts Oopelahd, Mrs. Harold Coleman, Mrs. Marion Nabors of this city and Mrs. Hugh Morgan and Mrs. Allen Coleman of Laurens. Mrs. Marion Nabors and daughter, Jeannie, visited their husband and father at the Ve terans Hospital in Columbia on Saturday. Mrs. Rembert Truluck is visit ing her son and daughterin-law, Rev. and Mrs. Rembert Truluck, Jr., in Louisville, Ky., going es- PRESCRIPTIONS PROMPT, ECONOMICAL PRESCRIPTION SERVICE “Serving This Area 82 Years” We Give S & H Green Stamps Young's Pharmacy North Broad Street Dial 833-1220 Each generation looks for guidance to those who have the experience of the years behind them. Teach your youngsters early the value of sav ing regularly, with an interesLhearing Sav ings Account at our bank. BANK SERVICES Checking Acc’ts. • Savings Acc’ts. • Money Orders Safe Deposit Boxes • Christmas Club • Loans BANK OF CLINTON Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 3% Interest Paid On Savings Accounts Semi-Annually NEW BANKING HOURS Effective January 31 1966 MORNING AFTERNOON Mon.-9:00 a. m. to 1:00 p. m. 1 3:30 to 5:00 p. m. Tues.-9:00 a. m. to 1:00 p. m. Wed-9:00 a. m. to 1:00 p. m. Thurs-9:00 a. m. to 1:00 p. m. 3:30 to 5:00 p. m. Fri.“9:00 a. m. to 1:00 p. m. 3:30 to 5:30 p. m. STATE BANK & TRUST COMPANY JOANNA, S. C. SWIFTS GOLD CREST Hen Turkeys39c STOKELY SOFTEX FACIAL "WHITE ARMOUR VIENNA SAUSAGES 3 TEXIZE BLEACH • BAMA GRAPE • • JELLY S Half Galtofi Plastic •, COME HAVE EUN SAVING MONEY ON YOUR fAVORIEE FOODS LimS* 1 of Your Oicic* with $5 Order or More COFFEE* 58 MAXWELL HOUSE • PLYMOUTH c: jiii c BAG GIANT DETiR8ENT48 Umlt 1 with $5 Order or Mort PINT JAR Umit 1 of Your Choice’ with $5 Order or More AZALEA NunroMUMss ijriE FIBER dSiSHi VINE RIPE TOMATOES GREEN CMBM mmu '.r\ ; J L3. 15c L3. EACH r -Y <_ J BEAUTIFUL BAKERY BUYS Mother's Hotdof or Homborfer Buns 2 Sn 29c Mother's Streutsef Coffee Cake 29c Mother's Spanish Bar Silt 29c ■saa^’tiaawwii" aomm: MORTON FROZEN DINNERS BEEF-CHICKEN-TURKEY SALISBURY STEAK 3-* *1.00 Clinton, S. C ■ i ■« . \