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‘V 1 GJjr-h- Msdkcr* EnrollfiMnt Should B* Before 65th Birthday A person reaching age 65 •bould enroll in Medicare 4uring one of the three months immediately preced- ihg the month of his 65th birthday, according to Miss Martha Pressly, district manager. • Timely enrollment insures that Medicare coverage will begin with the 65th birthday, Miss Pressly stated, but a de lay beyond this time will postpone Medicare coverage. Enrollment made the month a person is 65 or in one of the three months afterwards will cause the person to wait a month or more for his health insurance coverage. An ex tended delay in filing may prevent medical insurance coverage indefinitely. Persons already receiving social security benefits will be mailed a card on which enrollment may be made for the medical insurance. This should arrive about three months before the 65th birth day, and should be returned without delay in the envelope enclosed with the card. If the enrollment card is lost or not received by the first of the month before age 65, the Greenwood Social Security Office should be contacted immediately. The Greenwood district of fice is open from 8:45 A. M. to 5:00 P. M. Monday through Friday and extra hours on Saturday from 9:00 a. m. to noon. TMC SHOWROOM QUALITY I ALEXANDER'S Inc. 5 Beautiful Show- Rooms to Serve YOU Greenville, Laurens, Greenwood, S. C. and Gastonia, N. C. WHY PAY MORE? REGISTER FOR NEXT CATALOGUE MAILING SAVE MONEY ON THE FOLLOWING!! Diamonds, Jewelry, Watches, Cameras, Toys, Radio, T. V., Small Ap pliances, Sporting Goods, School Supplies, AND THOUSANDS OF OTHER ITEMS ALL NATIONALLY ADVER TISED NAME BRANDS. WOULDN’T YOU REALLY RATHER SAVE JHQNiiY?? SHOWROOM HOURS 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday thru Friday Saturday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. 11—THE CHBONICLI, Cltnton, S. £, Nor. 23.1867 News of Joanna MRS. W. J. HOGAN Correspondent-Representative Dial 697-6949 Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Craig spent the weekend with C. J. Craig and Chris. Mrs. T. O. McGowan will return Thursday after spend- .ng the week in Newberry with her daughter and son-in law, Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Lewis and infant son. RETURNS TO KY. P.F.C. Joseph Chandler re turned last week to Ft. Campbell, Ky. after enjoying a ten day leave with his mother, Mrs. Zula Brewing- ton in Laurens, Mrs. Jenny Hazel other friends and rela tives in Joanna. Mr. and Mrs. Hack Prater and family will be in Augus ta, Ga. this weekend for the Fhanksgiving holidays as guests of Mrs. Margie Gallo way. Last weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. McCarthy and Vlrs. E. J. Willingham were Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wil ingham and family of Rock lill. Mrs. Jennie Petit of Can on, Conn., arrived last Wed nesday for an extended visit with her mother, Mrs. Gus Cannon and Mr. Cannon who s ill at the home and Mr. and .Irs. John H. Fuller and amily in Clinton. AcCom- •anying her on the trip and or a short visit were Mr. and Irs. H. J. Petit of Forest- tile, Conn. Mrs. Eckard Boyce of 'aimter was a guest over the weekend of Mr. and Mrs. Jim ’urr in Clinton and relatives i Joanna On Sunday evening, the luy Praters entertained with ;n early Thanksgiving dinner :t their home on Laurens treet. Guests included L. E. ’rater, Mrs. E. J. Willing- tarn and Ralph Prater. Sunday dinner guests of Irs. Seasie Vaughan in Kin- rds will be Mr. and Mrs. linard Littleton. Mr. and Jrs. Dick M. Vaughan, Jr. md family and Mrs. Joan vdair and children of Clin- on. Mr. and Mrs. Littleton eturned on Monday from 'arasota, Fla., where they lave been for several months. They will be here for he winter. Mrs. Vaughan mjoyed a two-week vacation .here and returned with them. Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Alls- brook and children of Sumter spent the weekend with the farmer’s mother, Mrs. Buford Lowery, Mr. Lowery and Karen. SLUMBER PARTY Karen Lowery, Julie Pra ter and Susan Vaughan en joyed a Slumber Party on Saturday night at the home of Mrs. Josie Boyce on Laurens Street. Attending the Clemson — N. C. State football game on Saturday were Guy Prater, and Timmy, Dick Vaughan, Jr. and Dick III, Ralph Pra ter, Hack Prater and Jack, and Charles Davenport. They enjoyed dinner on Cemetary Hill. ATTENDS CHRISTMAS PARADE Mr. and Mrs. Frank Phil lips will spend Thanksgiving day in Charlotte, N. C. with Mr. and Mrs. Carl Phillips going especiafly to attend the annual Christmas parade, last Thursday they enjoyed the day with Rev. and Mrs. Obie Dyches in Great Falls. IN HOSPITAL Mrs. Nicolas Kramm who who was a surgical patient in the Spartanburg hospital has been transferred to the Medical College in Charles ton. BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs. John Richard Lewis, Jr. of Newberry an nounce the birth of a son, Paul Richard, on Tuesday Nov. 14 at the Newberry County hospital. She is the former Willa Rae McGowan of Joanna. Mr. and Mrs. John Hogan Fuller o fClinton announce the birth of a daughter, Robin Lee, on Wed., Nov. 15 at the Bailey Memorial Hos pital. She is the former Phyllis Bilodeau of Collins ville. Conn. They have a son, William Lawrence, age 2. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bo ling of Clinton announce the birth of a daughter Dawna Maria on Thursday, Nov. 10 at the Bailey Memorial Hos pital. She is the former Gayle Bedenbaugh of Joanna. BIRTHDAYS AND Qibi&ii CftevtUta 4 % • Y7. •*. .- * ' • i r jfb. k i '‘,1 Chronicle Publishing Co. Want A GOOD Job? A job that offers good pay, security, excellent benefits and good Working conditions . , , Contact Monsanto's Greenwood Plant! STARTING PAY UP TO *1.97 PER HOUR / Join your friends ot Monsanto and becomd 6 part of one of the fastest growing and most progressive companies in the state. Monsanto COMPANY Textiles Division jHMtnmusiM On Thursday Roy. 23, Dan Gunter slid Louise Thomas will celebrate a birthday. Happy birthday on Nov. 34 Simpson and Martha Nov. 25th brings a birthday to Martin Bozard, Ettie Kil lian, T. R. Chalk and Mattie Hunnicutt and a wedding an niversary to Mr. and Mrs. Elton Bedenbaugh. Many happy returns of the day on Nov. 36 to Candy Lawson, Ovaleen Humphries, Mary Lowman, O. B. Smith and Mike Chuvala. Lavon Mason, J. L. Delan ey, Margaret Tucker, Janice McCarson and Donald Kin- ard will celebrate birthdays on Monday, Nov. 27. On Tuesday, Nov. 28, R. C. Franklin and Mattie Stroud will observe birth days. WEDDING GUESTS Out of town guests for the Craven-Dent Wedding: Mrs. J. W. Craven, Nancy Davenport, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Davenport and Lynn, Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Craven, Kin- ards; Misses Marie King, Susie Black, Mary Robinson Mrs. William Robinson, and Olin Furr, Clinton; Mrs. W. L. Thomas, Mrs. G. N. Fgy -and Miss . Ruth Riddle, Laurens;. Mrs. K. E. Shelton, Mrs. Louise Jones, Colum bia; Mrs. Ed Osborne, Henry Osborne, Trenton; Mrs. Paris Livinepton, Mrs. Harold Barnes, Mrs. A. O. Booaer, Newberry; Miss Vickie Moore, Greenwood; Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Dent, Mr. and Mrsi Milton Batridge, Mrs. Grady Crook, and Rathy Cawley, Abbeville; Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Norman, Lin- colnton, N. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Cagle and David, Aber- marle, N. C.; Major H. F. Finney, Newport Newa, Va.; pnd Mrs. Robert Dwyer, Charleston. LT. COL. HARLEY Clintonian’s Husband Retires Lieutenant Colonel Walter R. Harley, whose wife, Ernes tine, is the daughter of Mrs. Alice Shell of 106 Oak St., Clinton, has retired from the U. S. Air Force at Stewart AFB, N. Y., after more than years service. Colonel Harley served as chief of the personnel serv ices branch at Stewart prior to his retirement. He was. commissioned in 1943 upon completion of Of ficer Candidate School, and served during World War II. He is a veteran of the Ko rean War. *. A graduate of Schofield High School in Aiken, the colonel received his B. S. de gree in biology in 1939 from Morehouse College, Atlanta. He has studied at the Agri cultural and Technical Col lege of North Carolina and is a member of Omega Psi Phi. FAITH IN FOCUS The New Breed's Man ^ *'.... i 1 By REV. E. W. ROGERS Pastor Broad St. Methodist Church About a month ago I had the opportunity of spending three days at Interpreter's House at Lake Junaluska, N. C. The event was the an nual Preacher’s Retreat for the Methodist ministers of the Greenwood District. Our resource leader was the Di rector, Dr. Carlyle Marney. In one of his presentations he read to us and shared with us an address he had made to annual luncheon of the Ministers and Missionaries Board of the American Bap tist Convention. This article contains “gleanings” from that session and experience. Copies of the address can be obtained from the author at Interpreter’s House. It bears the titled, “The New Breed’s Man.” ■'In describing the “new breed’s man,” one soon hears ijiat he, the modern holy man,” is only “semi- holy.” He reads Playboy goes to theater, digs jazz. But the hew breed’s man is “active.” He is involved. He is at Po lice Court on Monday morn ing not at Pastor’s Confe- ence. Secular always, he may work for the Office of Eco nomic Opportunity, or VISTA, or a Council on Human Rela tions. If he is a denomina tional servant, he is oh the “fringes.” Again, Dr. Marney suggest ed this new man is always committed. He gets hurt of ten and a lot. But he al ways comes back after lick ing his wounds to the affray He is isolated. Not such that he feels alone . . . but that he is alone. He serves no “adjectival modifiers” such as Baptist, Methodist, or even Christian. His great noun is the word, Man. He hates the Established Church. Thirdly, this new expeession of manhood is as the lectur er stated, “unnecessarily and abysmally ignorant.” He does not know historical theology. He did not take Seminary se riously. He has no great ap preciation of the past, and tragically also he does not know the region in which he iworks. Although he is always (revolutionary, he often times does not know why. He has seldom examined his motives for the ministry. He is pessi mistic— “needlessly too pes simistic." What does this new breed of man say to the contem porary Christian Church? I am certain it should say many things. For me, one thing it declares is that many arc unhappy with the present day Church. Sometimes I get the notion they have given up on reforming the Church. Could this be why they join government agencies like the Peace. Corpsu. or, their efforts with the Civil Rights pnovement? By the same token the question must be faced, what can the contemporary Church say to the “new breed’s man”? Again, for me, I think the Church should remind him that a form or struc ture is always a necessary vehicle. As Dr. Waldo Beach, Duke University, said in his class one day, “You don’t just carry ‘content’ around loose. You always need a ‘form’ to put it in.” The Christian Church as the ‘form’ for the Gospel can be changed but dare not he abandoned-particularly in its great hour of ecumenical mood and movement. Legal Notices NOTICE OF SALE IN COURT OF COMMON PLEAS State Qf South Carolina, County of Laurens M. S. Bailey & Son, Bank ers, as attorney In fact for Robert M. Vance, et al., Plaintiff vs. Alda Rawls G. Fuller Dick erson (formerly Alda Rawls G. Fuller), Ethel Strickland Fuller, and Peoples National Fund, Inc.; also, all other persons unknown, claiming any right, title, estate, inter est in or lien upon the real estate described in the com plaint herein, Defendants PURSUANT to a Decree of the Court in the above stated case, I will sell at public out cry to the highest bidder, either in or in front of the Court House, at Laurens C.H..S.C., on Salesday in December next, being Mon day, the fourth day of the month, during the legal hours for such sales, the following described property, to wit: All that certain piece, parcel or lot of land, with all improvements there on, situate, lying and be ing in the State of South Carolina, County of Laur- described as follows: Lot Number 270 West Clinton Subdivision being a por tion of the property of Clinton Cotton Mills as shown by a plat of said subdivision prepared by Picknell & Picknell, Eng ineers, of Greenville, South Carolina, dated December 9, 1958, and re corded on January 24, 1959 in the office of the Clerk of Court for Laur ens County in Plat Book No. 12 at Page 213, said plat being adopted by reference. TERMS OF SALE: Cash. The successful bidder, other than the Plaintiff herein, immediately upon the con clusion of the bidding, shall deposit with the Clerk of Court the sum of five per centum (5 r /«) of the amount of the bid as a guarantee of his good faith in the bidding. The same to be applied to the purchase price upon his complying with the terms of sale, otherwise to be paid to Plaintiff for credit on the in debtedness. In the event the successful bidder should fall to make such deposit, or should fail to comply with ;‘he terms of sale, the “ said lands shall be re-sold on the same or some subsequent Salesday on the same terms, at risk of the defaulting purchaser. The purchaser to pay for capers, stamps and record ing. No personal or deficiency judgment is demanded and the bidding will not remain open after the sale but com pliance with the bid may be made immediately. Dated this 13th day of No vember, 1967 W. E. LUNLAP C.C.C.P. & G.S. I - - . - . NOTICE OF SALE The State of South Carolina ICounty of Laurens ;In Court of Common Pleas i Citizens Federal Savings & Loan Association, Plaintiff, vs. Shiloh Homes, Inc., Phil lips Industries, Inc., South iCarolina Employment Se- jcurity Commission, South Carolina Tax Commission, Silvercote Products, and H. Wilson Long, Defendants. PURSUANT to a Decree of the Court in the above stated case, I will sell at public outcry to the highest bidder, either In or in front of the Cburt House, at Laurens C. H., S. C., on Salesday in December next, being Mon day, the fourth day of the month, during the legal hours for such sales, the following described property, to wit: All that piece, parcel or tract of land, with all im provements thereon, situ ate, lying and being in the County of Laurens, State of South Carolina, containing five and ninety-eight one hundredths (5.98) acres, more or less, and being bounded on the northeast by lands now or formerly of Champion Paper Com pany f or a distance of three hundred eighty-two feet thereon; on the north west by lands now or for merly of L. W. C. Blalock Estate for a distance of five hundred twenty-four (524) feet thereon; on the southeast by lands now or formerly of Rowland for a distance of five hundred sixty-three (563) feet there on; and on the southwest by U. S. Highway No. 76 for a distance of six hun- dried twelve (612) feet there on. All of which will more particularly appear by ref erence to a plat made by S. T. Martin, R.L.S. No. 1002, dated August 17, 1965, and recorded in Plat Book 18, at'page 230, in the office of the Clerk of Court for Laurens County. TERMS OF SALE: Cash. .* The successful bidder, other than the Plaintiff herein, im mediately upon the conclu sion of the bidding, shall de posit with the Clerk of Court the sum of five per centum (5 r /r) of the amount of the bid as a guarantee of his good faith in the bidding. The same to be applied to the purchase price upon his com plying with the terms of sale, otherwise to be paid to Plain tiff for credit on the indebt edness. In the event the suc cessful bidder should fail to make such deposit, or should fail to comply with the terms of sale, the said lands shall be re-sold on the same or some subsequent Salesday on the same terms, at risk of the defaulting purchaser. The purchaser to pay for papers, stamps and record ing. No personal or deficiency judgment is demanded and the bidding will not remain open after the sale but com pliance with the bid may be made immediately. Dated this 13th day of Nov., 1967 W. E. Dunlap C.C.C.P.&G.S. Patrol School Set To Open On Jan. 28 January 28, 1968, is the date for another 50-man contin gent of highway patrol can didates to begi nan 11-week training course at the Area Trade School near Columbia, the State Highway Depart ment announced. All applicants must fill out a regular form which is available at any patrol of fice and submit it as soon as possible. It is customary for successful applicants to be notified at least two weeks prior to the start of school so they may give suitable notice to their present employers. Therefore, applications re ceived after Newt Year’s Day cannot be processed in time. Young men between 21 and 30, inclusive, weighing at least 160 pounds are eligible for Patrol service. High school graduation or posses sion of a state certificate is required. Candidates will be paid $75 a week during the 11-week school. Upon graduation and commissioning, weekly pay is increased to $90. Periodic increases, as merited, may be expected. Col. P. F. Thompson is commander of the South Carolina patrol. Lt. Leo F. McSwain is offcier-in-charge of patrol school Present num erical strength of the patrol is 503. The Highway Patrol is as signed the primary function of enforcing the traffic laws on South Carolina highways. TREE NURSERIES Tree nurseries owned by pulp and paper companies in the South produced 170.8 mil lion seedlings in 1966, and the industry supplied 30.9 million seedling to other in dividual landowners. FINAL SETTLEMENT Take notice that on the 12th day of December , 1967, I will render a final account of my acts and doings as Ex ecutrix of the estate of Hudie Lee Gardner in the office of the Judge of Probate of Lau rens County, at 3 o’clock p. m. and on the same day will apply fbr a final dis charge from my trust as Ex ecutrix. Any person indebted to said estate is notified and required to make payment on or be fore that date, and all persons having claims against said estate will present them on or before said date^duly proven, or be forever barred. NETTIE MOZELLE P. GARDNER, Executrix, 506 W. Calhoun St., Joanna, Si C. Nov. 7, 1967 N9-4C-N30 Are You Fully Prepared FRUIT CAKES j The Eastern Stars are selling Benson Fruit Cakes. They can be picked up at the Beacon Drive-In or from any member of the Eastern Star. 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