The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, December 07, 1967, Image 19
THE CHRONICLE, Clinton, S. C., Dec. 7, 19G7—19
Legal Notices
State of South Carolina
County of Laurens
IN THE COURT OP
COMMON PLEA9
Newberry Federal Saving!
and Loan Association, Plain
tiff, -vs- General A. Fagan
and Clinton Hospital District,
Defendants.
NOTICE OF SALE
Pursuant to an Order Sign
ed by the Honorable Francis
B. Nicholson, Circuit Judge,
dated November 28, i08T, I
will sell at public auction be
fore the Laurens County
Courthouse at eleven o’clock
A.M., on Tuesday, January
2, 1968, the following describ
ed property:
“All that piece, parcel or
lot of land, with the im
provements thereon, situ
ate; lyim? and being in or
near Joanna, in the County
of Laurens, South Carolina,
and being more particular
ly described as Lot No. 225,
Section I, as shown on plat
entitled “Subdivision for
Joanna Realty Company,
located at Joanna, S. C.,
Laurens County,” made by
Davis and Floyd, Inc., En-'
gineers, Greenwood, S. C.,
December 12, 1959, and re
corded in the office of the
Clerk of Court for Laurens
County in Plat Book 13 at
pages 147 and 149. Accord
ing to said plat the within
described lot is also known
as No. 133 Tillman Circle
and fronts thereon seventy-
seven (77’) feet.”
TERMS OF SALE will be
cash and the successful bid
der, other than the plaintiff,
will be required to deposit
with me immediately after
the sale, five (5 r r) per cent,
of the amount of bid, the re
mainder of the sale price to
be deposited with me not
more than ten (10) days
thereafter.
In the event that the suc
cessful bidder fails to comply
with the terms of sale,
the initial deposit will
be retained by me as
liquidated damages for the
expense of the auction, and
the property will be immedi
ately resold. The purchaser
will be required to pay the
expenses of the preparation
of the deed and the revenue
stamps thereon.
The plaintiff having waived
deficiency judgment, the sale
will be final the day of gale.
Walter E. Dunlap
Clerk of Court of
Common Pleas,
Laurens County
‘ N30-3C-D1*
CITATION FOR LETTERS
OF ADMINISTRATION
The State of South Carolina,
County of Laurens
By J. H. Wasson,
Probate Judge:
WHEREAS Maggie Blake
ly Poole made suit to me to
grant her Letters of Adminis
tration of the Estate and
effects of Niles Allen Poole.
These are, therefore, to cite
and admonish all and singu
lar the Kindred and Credi
tors of the said Niles Allen
Poole, deceased, that they be
and appear before me, in the
Court of Probate, to be held
at Laurens Court House,
Laurens, S. C. on December
21, next, after publication
hereof, at 10 o’clock in the
forenoon to show cause, if
any they have, why the said
Administration should not be
granted.
Given under my hand this
30th day of Nov., Anno
Domini, 1967.
J. Hewlette Wasson (Seal)
J.P.L.C
D7-2C-D14
1h£ 0(d itwwi
FINAL SETTLEMENT
Take notice that on the 18th
day of January, 1968, I will
retuler a final account of my
acts and doings, as adminis
tratrix of the estate of Annie
Belle Poole Brown in the of
fice of the Judge of Probate
of Laurens County, at 10
O’clock a. m.. and on the
game dgy will apply for a
Inal discharge from my trust
is Administratrix.
Any person indebted to
aid estate is notified and re
tired to make payment on
>r before that date, and all
ersons having claims
gainst said estate will pre-
3nt them on or before said
ate, duly proven or be for
mer barred.
Alice P. Alexander
Laqrens, S. C-
N23-4c-D14
“There’s nothing like a lit-
e soft soap to remove a dirt)
FINAL SETTLEMENT
Take notioe that on the 11th
ay of January. 1968, I win
ender a final account of my
cts and doings as Executrix
f the estate of Reginald T.
lorse in the office of the
udge of Probate of Laurens
'ounty, at JO o’clock a. m.,
ad on the same day will
pply for a final discharge
*om my trust as Executrix.
Any person indebted to said
state is notified and re-
uired to make payment on or
efore that date, and all per
ms having claims against
aid estate will present them
n or before said date, duly
roven or be forever barred.
Martha T- Morse Executrix
R-2, Sunset Blvd.
Clinton, S. C.
Tov. 28, 1967.
N30-4C-D21
w ■ 1 ■ ■ ■
CITATION FOR LETTERS
OF ADMINISTRATION
fhe State of South Carolina,
County of Laurens
By J. H. Wasson,
Probate Judge:
WHEREAS Guy A. Tumb-
Un made suit to me to grant
him Letters of Administra
tion of the Estate and effects
>f Myrtle Adair Tumblin.
These are, therefore, to cite
and admonish all and singu-
ar the Kindred and Creditors
)f the said Myrtle Adair
Tumblin, deceased, that they
)e and appear before me, in
he Court of Probate, to be
icld at Laurens Court House,
murens, S. C. on December,
3, 1967 next, after publica- j
oh hereof, at 10 o’clock in >
he forenoon to show cause,
f any they have, why the
lid Administration should
t be granted.
Given under my hand this
7 day of Nov., Anno Domini,
967.
J. Hewlette Wasson (Seal)
J.P.L.C.
N30-2c-D7
CITATION FOR LETTERS
OF ADMINISTRATION
The State of South Carolina,
^ounty of Laurens
By J. JL Wasson
Probate Judge:
WHEREAS Elizabeth Hat-
on Burley made suit to me
o grant her Letters of Ad-
oinistration of the Estate
nd effects of Thomas J.
T atton.
These are, therefore, to cite
nd admonish all and singu-
ir the Kindred and Creditors
f the said Thomas J. Hatton,
eceased, that they be and ap-
ear before me, in the Court
f Probate, to be held at Lau-
ons Court House, Laurens,
. C. on December 15, 1967
ext, after publication here-
f, at 3:00 o’clock in the P. M.
to show cause, if any they
ove, why the said Adminis-
ation should not be granted.
Given under my hand this
day of Dec., Anno Domini,
967.
J. Hewlette Wasson (Seal)
J.P.L.C.
D7-2C-D14
AT CLEMSON — Four 'high school
students from the Clinton area par
ticipated in a “Science In Textiles”
program at Clemson University.
Julius C. Hubbard, Clemson associate
Students Attend
Program At Clemson
professor of textiles, discusses the
carding process with (left to right)
Torrence Sheajy and Johnny. Bolt of
Clinton, Steve Floyd of Joanna, and
Gus Ramage (back row) of Kinards.
CLEMSON — Eight Clinton
area high school students
were among 53 select stu
dents from throughout the
state who participated in a
recent “Science in Textiles”
program at Clemson Univer-
jity.
The event was sponsored
by the department of textiles
in the Clemson School of In
dustrial Management and
Textile Science in coopera
tion with the Clemson Lia-
son Committee of the South
Carolina Textile Manufactur
ers Association.
Attending from the Clinton
area were Johnny Bolt, Rob
ert Furr, Jim Johnson, Robert
Meadors, Jimmy Noffz, and
Torrence Shealy of Clinton;
Steve Floyd of Joanna; and
Gus Ramage of Kinards.
The visiting students learn
ed of the scientific challenges
and career opportunities of
fered in modern textile edu
cation, and were tol dof the
textile and textile chemistry
ourriculums offered at Clem
son.
A highlight of the program
was 10 laboratory exhibits
and demonstrations relating
to the scientific advance
ments in the textile industry.
LUNCH MENU
DISTRICT 56
Week of December 11-15
MONDAY
Milk, Fish sticks with cat
sup, Sliced tomatoes, Carrot
sticks. Fresh black-eye peas,
Tct cornbrand, Butter, Pea
nut butter cookies.
TUESDAY
Milk, Steak with gravy,
Orange juice, Whole kernel
'•om. Rice, Hot biscuit, But-
er, Slic' d poaches.
WEDNESDAY
Milk, Hot dogs with Chili,
Mustard, Onions, Cole slaw,
Pickle chips, Potato chips,
Hot dog bun. Butter, Chilled
applesauce.
THURSDAY
Milk, Vienna sausage, Bak
ed beans, Tossed salad, Cel
ery sticks, Hot cornbread
Butter, Banana pudding.
FRIDAY
, Milk, Sliced turkey, Broc-
| olli with golden sauce, Dres
sing, Giblet gravy, Cranberry
sauce, Hot rolls, Butter, Ice
cream cups.
Production Credit
Holds Annual Meet
The Palmetto Production
Credit Association held its
33rd annual stockholders
meeting Friday at the Salu
da Recreation Hall in Saluda.
Approximately 75 members
and guests were welcomed to
the meeting.
Hugh Workman, vice pres
ident, gave a report from the
board of directors. Work
man reported that the asso
ciation closed loans in the
amount of $3,781,949 and serv
ed 46 new members during
the fiscal year ended June
30, 1967 Palmetto PCA
serves Greenwood, Abbeville,
Saluda, Laurens, Newberry,
Aiken, Edgefield and McCor-
«F7Til HlHi W
mick counties.
V. L. Warner, a former di-
| rector who recently retired,
was recognized for his long
and faithful service to the
association. Warner is a char-
terter member of Palmetto
PCA having served on the
board of directors since
1934.
The business session con
sisted mainly of the election
of association directors. Those
directors elected to another
term were S. F. Sherard,
Hugh Workman, Ralph Boat
wright, Kenneth Mitchell,
Lawrence Davis, J. T.
McCracken, Jr., C. A. Pat
ton and David Waldrop.
EARL SINEATH
Sineath Named
Superintendent
of Joanna Plant
Ear] E. Sineath, C07 Byrnes
St. in Joanna, has been nam
ed superintendent of Plant 13
of Greenwood Mills, Group
Manager E. W. Roberts an
nounced.
Sineath has been associated
with the Joanna plants since
1948 and most recently had
been a supervisor of carding.
He attended the Bamberg
public schools and has com
pleted two International Cor-
respondence Schools courses
fa textile work.
Married to the former Zel-
ma Troupe, they have two
children, Ronald and Darren.
They are Methodists.
Sineath is a member of the
Loyal Order of Moose.
IN ChCi Of FlRt...
WHAT’S YOUR ESCAPf PiAN?|
GRAND OPENING DECEMBER 6th.!
BAREFOOT IN THE PARK
by Neil Simon
Gourmet buffet dinner followed by a Broad
way play with a professional New York cast.
FRUIT (AKIS
The Eastern Stars are selling Benson
Fruit Cakes. They can be picked up
. J •*
at the Beacon Drive-In or from any
member of Hie Eastern Star.
RESERVATIONS:
Call Greenville
Collect 242-4960
Take 276 to 1-85 to
Pelham Rd. Exit
r
r SPARTANBURG
GREENVILLE
country dinner theatr
An Affiliate of ihe Country Dinners pf America, Inc.
Permission and Consumption Permit No. 343
Vf
Pr POYM WTX YOUR fRAHHV H0W-6tfiC#t
you utte/r-AMP Mf'Di om mt smsst \
Fttr mat fAOM ROOM... AMO MAtCt SMf
EACH MEMBER MHOW{ WHAT TO POf
Timely
Tips
GET SHORTENING OUT
OF CAN—To get the last bit
of shortening out of the can,
fill it with boiling water, then
let it cool. The shortening
will rise to the top and hard*
en for easy removel.
MAKE YOUR OWN
SHADES — You can make
your own kitchen windov
shades put of table oilcloth
Buy the proper length am
color to match your kitche:
decor. Just remove the ok
•hade from the roller, am
ack the new oilcloth bacj,
on the same roller. Thes<
shades can be washed whe.
they get soiled, or can b<
wiped with a cloth. The
look nice in the bathroom
too.
i NEEDLE SHEDDING Oi
CHRISTMAS TREES — T<
lessen needle shedding c
your Christmas tree, star
with a fresh cut one. Sa'
1-2 inch off the butt of th
tree, and put it in a metr
stand that will hold watei
Refill the stand with wate
as the tree drinks it. Yo
can apply commercial mt
terials to the tree to prever
bedding.
TABLECLOTHS — Fo
hose who have a table i
the kitchgn, and do not lik
''hanging tablescloths ever]
iay or so which have to h
vashed and ironed —- mak
vour own from terry clot!
These can be thrown in th
vashing machine, require n
roning and spots come righ
out.
USE SAME CHRISTMAT
TREE FOR FIVE YEAS -
Ever hear of using the same
Christmas tree for 5 years'
It can be done. You cai
take a small cedar and po
t. This tree should be abou
15 inches high. This tree
in a pot can be taken insidt
ind decorated on a tabic
liter Christmas replant the
ree. The next Christmas di
he same thing and by Hu
lird year the tree can take
ts place on the floor. The
lext two years the tree cat.
,e decorated outside. Thie
.rakes five years of use oi
he. same tree.
To prevent spread of dis-
ast from one tree to anoth-
r, dip pruning tools betweer.
rees in a solution of 9 parts
/ater and 1 part ordinary
dorox. Be sure to clean and
hi pruning tools at the end of
.ach day’s use. /
Keep homemade cookies
lice and fresh by puttihg a
slice of fresh bread in the
cookie jar with them. Change
thg bread about every othei
lay.
Begin pruning peach trees
after January 1st, if at all
possible. Research has dem
onstrated that early fat
pruning can be damaging in
two ways, one the trees are
more susceptible to oold in
jury; and two, there’s more
danger of spreading the bac
terial canker or “blast” dis
ease.
' There is no such thing as
an “empty” pesticide con
tainer. There’s always some
chemical left in it. Don’t
leave “empties” around
where someone may pick
them up for water jugs.
v
FARMS and FOLKS
v By L. C. HAMILTON
ClMPflOQ University Extension Information Specialist
(^ardul planning' 4 has madeT
SEVENTEENTH ANNUAL
^Festival
OF
Christmas Music
presented by
CONVERSE COLLEGE CHORALE & CHORUS
WOFFORD GLEE CLUB
SPARTANBURG HIGH SCHOOL CHORUS
SPARTANBURG SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
GUEST SOLOISTS
ADMISSION FREE
SPARTANBURG MEMORIAL
AUDITORIUM
Sunday, Dec. 10 — 3 p.nu end f p.m.
Sponsored by
Citizen! and Soiithfrn National Rank
Community Cash Super Markets
Duke Power Company
Jonathan Logan, Inc. 1
Kohler Company
Spartanburg Coca-Cola Bottling Co.
Lockwood Greene Engineers, Inc.
The Spartanburg County Foundation
soybeans the nation’s No. 1
export crop, and the No. 2
crop in value in both the
U. S. and South Carolina.
The South Carolina Soy
bean Association with D.
Leslie Tindal, Pine wood, as
^resident, is putting great
emphasis on planning as a
factor in soybean develop
ment.
With “promoting research
and education” one of its
^hief aims, association mem
bers have been going about
‘he state for a look—see at
esearch projects.
The association recently
Sponsored, with the Clemson
University Soybean Commit
tee assisting, a field day, at
tended by 250 persons, at the
Edisto Experiment Station,
Blackville. The tour was ar
ranged by Fred Cahoon,
Superintendent of the station.
Few of the soybean grow-
»rs attending realized before
?oming to the station
‘he full scope of the research
that is now under way at
Blackville by scientists Har
old Musen, Cyril W. Black-
non, and Samuel G. Turnip-
^eed.
After, taking a look, an out
sider, John Stephens, field
representative of the Ameri
can Soybean Association, ex-
oressed our surprise when he
said:
“You’re doing research
here that is not being done
any where else in the U. S.”
HERE ARE a few high-
ights of the station^ soybean
research projects:
—Long-term fertility plots
on which soybeans have been
irown for seven years prove
beyond doubt that soybeans
need annual applications of
fertilizer, especially potash.
Previously, some farmers
questioned the need. The
Blackville tests prove that
severe potash depletion oc
curs in soils on which soy
beans are grown but where
no fertilizer is applied. Then,
/ields suffer. The tests also
;how that once depletion of
ootash occurs, it may take
more than one year to build
up the reserves again.
Placing the fertilizer deep,
12 to 18 inches down, allows
the soybean roots to pene
trate deeply into the soil. Ad
vantages are increased mois
ture, and root growth below
the zone in which nematodes
and diseases sometimes
cause severe damage. But
deep placement may not be
economical under all condi
tions. Preliminary results in-
dicate that the value oTTRe
yield increase should more
than offset the cost.
T-Farmers who aren’t too
careful about the source and
purity of soybean seed are
risking off strains and weedy
fields.
Seed survey plots at the
Edisto Station; planted from
samples taken at random
from the hoppers of soybean
planters this spring, show too
many weeds, too much poor
germination, and soybeans
that are not true to name.
Soybean growers should
know the origin and purity of
seed. It does make a differ
ence as members of the Soy
bean association saw.
This research by the Edisto
station, and support by the
S. C. Soybean Association,
are helping remove the
roadblocks to more success
ful soybean farming.
m
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Greenville, Laurens,
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SHOWROOM HOURS
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Monday thru Friday
Saturday
9 a.m. tb 6 p.m.
There are plenty of
good $ 25 watches.
Trouble is most of them
cost $ 50.
Not at
J. C. Thomas
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price, others usually make cheap, stamped-out
parts that don’t fit together. Caravelle watches are
different. Bulova didn’t even make low-priced watches
until they could put in jeweled-lever movements with
precision-fitted parts. There’s no greater watch
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See our complete selection of Caravelle watches—
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Jtwtltr
CLINTON — JOANNA
r