The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, January 18, 1968, Image 11
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V
THK C HRONICLE; Clinton, S. C., Jan. 1ft, l%ft—11
Legal Notices
Carbon Monoxide Danger
Up When Temperature Down
BANK NOTES
by Malcolm
DID YOU KNOW..
FINAL SF.TTLEMENT
I akc notice that on the
2(>th clay of January, 1908, I
will render a iinal account of I
my acts and doings as
Executor of the estate of T.!
Edd Moore in the office of
the Judtfe of Probate of Laur
ens County, at 2:45 P. M. and
on the same day will apply
lor a final discharge from
my trust as Executor.
Any person indebted to
said estate is notified and re
quired to make payment on
or before that date, and
all persons having claims
against said estate will pre- ‘
sent them on or before said
date, duly proven or be for
ever barred.
Hoy W. Moore
113 Millikin St.
Laurens, S. C.
Executor
Dec. 28, 1967.
J4-4c-J25
CREDITORS’ NOTICE
All persons having claims
against the estate of Inez
Taylor Suber, deceased, are
herby notified to file the
same duly verified, with the
undersigned, and those indeb
ted to said estate will plea»e
make payment likewise.
William D. Taylor
Administrator
R-3, Box 24
Clinton, S. C.
Date November 16, 1967.
J18-3-F1
Wolfe Third
In Contest
FINAL SETTLEMENT
Take notice that on the 4th
day of March, 1968 I will
render a final account of my
acts and doings as Executrix
of the estate of John C. Can
non in* the office of the Judge
of Probate of Laurens Coun
ty, at 2:45 p. m. and on the
same day will apply for a
final discharge from my
trust as Executrix.
Any person indebted to said
estate is notified and re
quired to make payment on
or before that date, and all
persons having claims
against said estate will pre
sent them on or before said
date, duly proven or be for
ever barred.
Sara Stribling Cannon
Executrix
R-3, Clinton, S. C.
Jim Wolfe, district mana
ger for Channing Company,
Inc. a leading distributor of
Mutual Investment Funds,
with offices in Clinton, was
third in the national produc
tion contest through Decem
ber 15th.
He will attend the regional
conference in Atlanta Janu
ary 19th-20th
Jan. 5, 1968.
Little Theatre
Tryouts Tonight
The Laurens Little Theatre
will hold tryouts for their
next play “Arsenic and Old
Lace” tonight, Thursday,
at The Palmetto Bank in
Laurerts.
There are 11 men and 3
women in the cast and any
one interested in trying out
for the play is welcome to at
tend. There are also positions
open in the production and
business staffs.
Tryouts will start at 8
p. m.
W. L. TRFESDALE
Truesdale Naimed
Southern Beil
Foreman In Clinton
William L. Truesdale has
been named Construction
Foreman for Southern Bell in
die (’linton area.
Truesdale succeeds J. L.
C.reen, foreman here since
1966, who has been appointed
construction foreman for the
Greenville area.
The new Clinton foreman is
a widely experienced tele
phone man. He began his
career in Columbia, S. C. in
1949 in the plant department
and moved to Spartanburg in
1950. He has worked in in
stallation, repair and maln-
tanoe of switchboard equip
ment
Truesdale is married and
has four children; Linda 14,
Melanie 11, Tim 8, Kenneth 4.
They are members of Cudd
Memorial Baptist Church in
Spartanburg.
Your car heater may he
blowing up troubil' it
warms vour drive through
heavy traffic these cold win
ter days.
It can increase the flow of
carbon monoxide-loaded air
into a car crawling in hump
er-to-bumper traffic warn
Aetna Life & Casualty safety
specialists.
The odorless, oolorles- gas
it believed to b a factor m
causing mans trail ie acci
dents. It can produce drows
iness, disorientation, nausea
and death.
The insurance company
notes that the danger of car
bon monoxide poisoning m-
creusws in winter. And your
own car's exhaust system is
not the only threat.
The culprit can be the ex
haust from the car in front of
you. If you're within a car-
'ength, that exhaust is drawn
into your cai through tho air
intake system. With fan vent -
open, the heating blower
pumps an increased volume
of this polluted air into the
interior, producing the possi
hditv el a enrhon monoxide
ouddup.
la protect agaiiut this po
oTitia! hir/ard, Aetna sug-
ts these tips for cold
.M atlior driving in dense.
o;i and-go traffic:
Keep two opposite windows
open an inch or more. This
cross-ventilates your car.
Set your heater blower at
no higher than low Better
yet turn the fan off and close
i :t Ian vonts
Try to sta> a ear length or
more behind the ear you're
following, thus keeping out
of it exhaust range.
I May it cool w hen you park
with the motor idling, too.
The same " ventilate-low
heat" principle applies. Here,
the carbon monoxide danger
comes from your own car’s
| xhaust system. A chunk of
ice or a rock can puncture
1 even the soundest equipment
W hen you escape to tho op
en road, turn the heater back
| up. hut continue to ventilate
by keeping two side windows
open slightly.
Incidentally. in station
wagons, never open only the
tailgate window Air currents
created by the vehicle's mo
tion aetuallv draw exhaust
fumes in through a rear
opening.
Fumes produced bv pro
longed idling ot the ear en
gine inside the garage can
leak into the house - even
! with the garage door open If
1 you warm up your ear. move
it from tho garage first
TEXTILE INVESTMENTS
Following two record yeais.
Vapdal investment projects
’ announced in 1967 by South
Carolina textile and related
tirms amounted to a reduc ed
total of about $35 million Pro
coming solution to the textile
import problem, one leading
industrialist says ho knows of
$239 million in new construe
tion oaf! expansion of South
Carolina textiles either pro
jeeted or on the planning
boards for 1968. with $219
million of this total in man
made f her producing plants
- CC A
Is ORDfR TO SPfED UP Wf CHECK Cl FAR
INA., mx'FSS.THF FFOFkAl RFSf RVF.
SYS It AN IS CRACKING DOWN ON CPfCKS
IMAT ARl NCf ENCODED WIIH MAGNETIC
INK- TO INSURE PROMPT 1WMFN1, AND
lOkYOOKOWN PKOtECIlON.fc.t SURE IO
UAF CHECKS AUTHORIZED SY YOUR KASK
IT AU THfc GOLD feVtR BROUGHT
ABOVE- GROUND WAG COMPOSED INTO
A CUBE., IT W OULD BE WORTH ABOUT
*112 BILLION, AND WOULD PIT WITHIN
THE. CONFINES Of A BASEBALL DIAMOND.
£V
Ws
vSi ’> i
-c? .
THE SALT WE LAVISHLY SPRINKLE ON OUR
FOOD TODAY USED TO BE A FORM Of MONEY'.
EARLY ROMAN SOLDIERS RECEIVED A SAl T
allowance, and African slaves were
ONCE SOLD FOR THEIR WEIGH I IN THIS
CONDIMENT. THUS THE EX PRESS ION "NOT
WORTH HIS SALT."-
Classified Ads
Get Results!
CROSSWORD ♦ ♦ ♦ By A. C. Gordon
J11-4C-F1
FINAL SETTLEMENT
Take notice that on the 0th
day of Feb/ 1968, 1 will ren
der a final account of my
acts and doings as Guardian
of the estate of G. W. Bell, Jr.
in the office of the Judge of
Probate ofccCatlsena County,
at 10 o’clock a. m. and on the
same day will apply for a
final discharge from my trust
as Guardian.
Any person indebted to said
estate is notified and requir
ed to make payment on or
before that date, and aD per
sons having claims against
said estate will present them
on or before said date, duly
proven or be forever barrad.
G. W. Bell, Sr.
Guardian.
Jan. 2, 1968.
Jll-4c-Feb 1
CREDITORS’ NOTICE
All persons having claims
against the estate of Edgar
Beltana Norton, deceased,
are hereby notified to file
the same duly verified, with
the undersigned, and those
indebted to said estate will
please make payment like
wise.
Claudia K. Norton
Admrx, C.T.A.
108 N. Livingston St.
Clinton, S. C.
Date Jan. 5, 1968.
JU-Sc-JSS
14
*1*1
far
a c n e • *
7 - Graak lattar
9 - SoaMtblna
boload
11 - To bova
clUBaily
13 - Ordat- of
Marit (abb.)
1H - Cartographic
collection
16 - Mala nick
name
17 - Entertain*4
19 - To aye
81 - Act legally
22 - Ardor
25 - Bland of MUD
ical notaa
27 - Panorama
28 - Elida
19 - ••••
3* - nridk
35 -
(the way)
33 - LmwaX
36 - Headpiece
38 - Soaks flax
E - Repeat
- Roman 301
44 - "Remember the
"
45 - Music note
44 - To revoke
47 - To onforoo
regulations
49 - Like
30 - Seashore
91 - Spanish
affIrmatire
D 0 V N
X - Proposition
t - It* oast off
un 'JUi'JDR LR’J
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CJfaJ nen HC1GU
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J J LAMULL - ; JQ
LGHoari
uj unrpiE bgj
- Persian
K **
stinies
- Make proud
- Artifice
- Average
- Abraham's
birthplace
- Exist
- Have being
- Extol
- Boundaries
- Announce
- Yellowish
- To release
- Depart
- Lacks
- Immerse
- Drink
- Avoids
- Turkish
coin
- Morale
- Salutation
- Taps down
- Powder
- Horn note
- Roman 99
- Music note
- Sun god
- Either
Timely Tips
\
1
If milk or any other food
sticks in your pots and pans
while edoklng. . . Just sprin
kle enough cleansing powder
(such as we use in our kitch
en sinks) and cover it with
water. £eave the pot over
night. By the next day, the
stuck food will be all
loosened without any effort.
Effective plant disease
control requires fl prior plan
ning. In most cases, when di
agnosis of a disease Can be
xilade, it Is already tod lath t#
do anything other than plan
to prevent similar leases in
succeeding years. In fact,
with many crop diseases, ef
fective control proceduree
mint be eeeopnpUshed before
the crop is planted.
, Farmers and home garden
ers often find a disease in
their crop, take or send some
diseased apecirntfif te the
eoimty agent or
plant pathologist and
to receive ip jettfa e
mendation
train’that
the disease in its
With a reiftitty flew dfleeuece
a a
this can be done, but theee
diseases are in a distinct
minority.
Some diseases must be
controlled by seed treatment,
or by use of clean seed, or
resistant varieties, or by
crop rotation or soil fumiga
tion. And these things must
be accomplished before the
crop is planted, not after the
disease begins to show up hi
the field.
The textile industry weaves
more than 900 million yards
J f ribbon for business ma-
hinery each year. Some of
the computer rthbcni gee
more than a Atet Wide.
8394121
AGENCY
to N.
Us For
r dk .
:»
W
You Open
The Door to
When you join the
team at---*
This is the group that has set
a standard of quality recognized in
fabric markets all over our country.
That's why Greenwood Mills is
so proud of theml
The Standard Of Excellence In Textiles
GRE
5
ODD
Joanna
W&
m
"An Equal Opportunity Employ* 0
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