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4-B—THE CHRONICLE. Clinton, S. C., Oct. 2, 1969 ARP ASSOCIATE REFORMED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. Zeb Williams :70T South Broad Street • Assembly of God : ASSEMBLY OF GOD )BETHEL TEMPLE 5 Rev. T. L. Gray • 114 North Owens S.t ' ; JOANNA ASSEMBLY :OF GOD •Rev. Ray Prosser :440 N. Main St.. Joanna Baptist "CALVARY BAPTIST -tlnjRCH •; Re. J. W. Spillers • North Sloan Street : DAVIDSON STREET : BAPTIST CHURCH : Rev. M. Floyd Hellams Davidson Street : FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH i Rev. J. H. Darr : 301 South Broad Street HEBRON BAPTIST ; CHURCH i Rev. W. D. Coker ..TOO North Broad Street : LYDIA BAPTIST CHURCH . Rev. M. J. Sanders Poplar St.. Lydia Mill FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF JOANNA Rev. L. Byron Harbin 301 Magnolia St., Joanna FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. Jesse D. Stephens North Broad Street HURRICANE BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. J. C. Conoly RFD No. 2, Clinton Catholic ST. BONIFACE Father Peter K. Berberich 401 N. Main St., Joanna Church of Christ CHURCH OF CHRIST Evangelist M. S. Parker 603 North Broad Street Church of God ELIZABETH STREET CHURCH OF GOD Rev. James W. Wiley Elizabeth Street LYDIA MILL CHURCH OF GOD Rev. Fred E. Cason MILAM ROAD CHURCH OF GOD Rev. Herman Anderson JOANNA CHURCH OF GOD Rev. Harry R. Kemp 122 South Main Street CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY Raymond E. Duvall, Pastor 1100 North Sloan Street Episcopal ALL SAINTS EPISCOPAL CHURCH Rev. Peter Outz Calvert Avenue Lutheran ST. JOHN’S LUTHERAN CHURCH Rev. John Setzler Greenwood Highway Methodist BROAD ST. UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Rev. E. W. Rogers North Broad Street SANDY SPRINGS METHODIST CHURCH RFD, Laurens LYDIA METHODIST CHURCH Pine Street BAILEY MEMORIAL METHODIST CHURCH Rev. Wayne L. Mitchell Bailey Street EPWORTH METHODIST CHURCH Rev. Leland Rhinehart Magnolia St., Joanna KINARDS UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Rev. James McAllister Kinards HOPEWELL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Rev. James McAllister Hopewell Road LEESVILLE SOUTHERN METHODIST CHURCH Rev. Charles E. Baker RFD No. 1, Clinton Pentecostal FIRST PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH Rev. Furman Entrekin Jackson Street LYDIA PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH Rev. J. R. Bryan Poplar St., Lydia Mill PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH Rev. Floyd Brewer Whitmire Road, Joanna Presbyterian THORNWELL MEMORIAL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Dr. M. A. Macdonald Thornwell Campus FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. A. L. Bixler 410 E. Carolina Ave. JOANNA FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. Leon M. Jeffords Milton Road, Joanna LYDIA PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Pine St., Lydia Mill ROCK BRIDGE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Greenwood Highway SHADY GROVE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Bonds Cross Roads Going To Church Isn't Enough BY DR. HERBERT SPAUGH More people are going to psy chiatrists for treatment and are populating our mental hospitals : with emotional illness than ever before in the history of our country. So few people seem to understand the cause of emotional illness or know what to do about : it. Sometime ago I published a column what was titled by the headline writer (not the author) "His Collapse Leads to New t Life.” In this column I referred - tu the fact that I had an emo- : r IRHii Snd physical collapse du ring the days of the Depression. The headline was true. That was my experience. I recalled the doctors who were treating me (we had few psychiatrists then) rendered their verdict by saying, “You’re going to have to learn to practice what you preach or you’re through.” Then they told me to go off for a period of rest and try to d > just what they had prescribed. A letter from a correspon dent says, “I have had emotional problems for 18 years and don't seem to be able to grasp a new life. Ive been going to a pri vate psychiatrist, but I'm going to have to stop very shortly on account of the expense. I may have to enter a clinic. Inside of me it still seems that religion might be the answer. Evidently I just don’t know how to use or apply religion." The late Bishop Edwin D. Mou- zon of the Methodist Church was one discussing this type of prob lem with me. He said: “I don’t think any man is worth his salt in the ministry, or anywfiere else, until he has had his heart broken at least once.” By that he meant in very simple terms that man mu it learn that self-sufficiency will not suffice to bring a ma.i safely through life and health. There must be God-suecifiency. The Bible says p untedly, "(>ur sufficiency is of God." What perversity in all of us is the idea that we should tie self-sufficient. We were not created that way. The created cannot live without the Creator. This is true with all created living things. From the time of Adam and Eve where it is re corded that Adam and Eve re belled against God and suffered, man has been going through this experience of rebelling against the Creator. This is particularly apparent in adolescence. Sooner or later man must learn that his sufficiency is of God. He gives the answer and the power when we yield to Him. Then the next step is sharing this with our fellowman. It is that simple, but it takes most of us a long time to learn it. Simply going to church isn’t enough. There we may learn, but lest we practice it and demonstrate it helpfully to our fellowman, we are still in trouble. * * * THIS FEATURE SPONSORED BY THE FOLLOWING FIRMS CLIP and SNIP CANINE SALON GROOMING STUD SERVICE JOES ESSO SERVICE 833-0227 ROAD SERVICE FRED HAYES 527 Whitmire Road Joanna, S. C. 697-6943 GARAGE Prescription Specialists • Cosmetics • Sick Room Supplies We Deliver — 833-0020 AAcGEES Drug Store GRAY FUNERAL Dignified and Sympathetic 833-1720 RALPH PATTERSON Owner and Manager Compliments of Distributor of TEXACO PRODUCTS “Remember The Sabbath” Airport Road — 833-0788 PAYNE MEMORY GARDENS PINELAWN Perpetual Care 833-3413 WEIR TEXACO STATION 308 North Main Street Joanna, S. C. 697-9615 24-Hour Wrecker Service Full Line of New and Used Parts In Stock 833-0330 GARAGE NEUBURGER 108 West Pitts Street 888-2081 Johnson Bros. Supermarket “Sunday Is For Worship 800 S Broad 833-2422 JOANNA OIL 100 North Main Street Joanna, S. C. 697-9616 COMPANY Bring Your Family To Dinner After Church 102 Musgrove St. — 833-2378 CLINTON CAFE 801 South Broad Street 888-0198 Legal Notices FINAL SETTLEMENT Take notice that on the 6th day of October, 1969, I will render a final account of my acts and do ings as Administrator of the es tate of Anthony L. Blackwell in the office of the Judge of Pro bate of Laurens County, at 10 o’clock A. M , and on the same day will apply for a final dis charge from my trust as Admin- isifcdor. Any person indebted to said es tate is notified and required to make payment on or before that date, and all persons having claims against said estate will present them on or before said date, duly proven or be forever barred. Luther L. Blackwell Administrator Sept. 5, 1969 S11-4C-02 * + * SUMMONS STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF LAURENS IN THE CIVIL AND FAMILY COURT Ida Caroline H. Farmer, Plain tiff, vs. Donald Lee Farmer, Defendant. TO THE DEFENDANT ABOVE NAMED: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action, a copy of which is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said Complaint upon the subscriber at his offices at 106 North Broad Street, Clinton, South Carolina, within twenty days after the service hereof, ex clusive of the day of such ser vice; and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the tim? afore said, the Plaintiff is this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the Complaint. Wyatt Saunders, Jr., Attorney for the Plaintiff Sept. 11, 1969 TO THE DEFENDANT ABOVE NAMED: Please be hereby advised that a copy of the Complaint in this action was filed in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Laurens County on the 17th dayofSeptem- ber, 1969. Wyatt Saunders Jr., Attorney for the Plaintiff S18-3C-02 * * * CREDITOR’S NOTICE All persons having claims a- gainst the estate of Eva Walls Hambrick, 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. Thelma, Sue and Maude Wells 208 N. Owings Street Clinton, S. C. Executrices Aug. 28, 1969 S18-3C-02 * + * THE CLINTON CHRONICLE September 23, 1939 Notice of Lost Certificate of Deposit Notice is hereby given that Time Certificate of Deposit Num ber 12508 dated August 24, 1966, issued by M.S. Bailey & Son, Bankers, Clinton, South Carolina, to J.A. or Nettie J. McKittrick, has been lost or destroyed and that an application will be made to said bank on October 16,1969, for the issuance of a new certificate in the place of the one described above. J.A. or NettieJ. McKittrick Mountville, South Carolina S25-2C-04 * * * CREDITOR’S NOTICE All persons having claims a- gainst the estate of PearlStewart Brown, deceased, are hereby no tified to file the same duly veri fied, with the undersigned, and those indebted to daid estate will please make payment likewise. Marion Newton Brown, Executor 301 Carolina Ave., Box 331 Lexington, N.C. 27292 Sept. 22, 1969 S25-3c-O0 * * * FINAL SETT LEM -AT Tike notice that on the 23rd day of October, 1969 I will ren der a final account of my acts and doings as Executor ofthees- tate of Neill G. Whitelaw in the office of the Judge of Probate of Laurens County, at 10 o’clock A.M., and on the same day will apply for a final discharge from my trust as Executor. Any person indebted to said es tate is notified and required to make payment on or before that date, and all persons having claims against said estate will present them on or before said date, duly proven or be forever barred. R. P. Hamer Bank of Clinton Clinton, S. C. Sept. 18, 1959 S25-4c-016 Doctor in the Kitchen® by Laurence M. Hurth, M.D. Consultant, National Dairy Council A SALUTE TO SCHOOL LUNCH National School Lunch Week begins this Sunday, October 12. What you say? Another one of times* Well, there’s no doubt Ameri cans are subjected to endless weeks and months that celebrate certain products and services. Such observances are staples of our commerce. Similarly, many a good cause has adopted the technique. For that matter, I believe such stalwart, worth while efforts as Easter Seals helped originate this kind of promotion, and one can hardly be critical. An Important Task For these reasons, I’m all for National School Lunch Week. Helping our children to be better fed and to know better what constitutes good nutrition is one of the more important tasks confronting us as a na tion. Surveys show us that good eating habits are not necessarily influenced by affluence. While the greatest of our malnutrition occurs among our underprivileg ed citizens, it is also true that many families at all economic levels do not make proper food choices. For example, many teen-age girls and adult women, at all income levels, get less than the recommended amounts of certain essential nutrients. Ac cording to nutritionists, greatei'" consumption of milk, and fruits and vegetables is needed. So National School Lunch Week, with its posters and book marks, label buttons and student brochures — along with menu cards for adults containing in formation for parents — is some thing I am for. School children and their parents will be re minded that school lunch pro grams are important. Children Better Fed Children are better fed as a result. And the effort at school is not just one of feeding. For the child, the school lunch ex perience is an actual demon stration of the nutrition lessons he is learning in the classroom. This link between learning and doing has to have a more favor able effect than learning alone. School lunch programs in many schools also are now be ing extended to include break fast. Great efforts are being made, too, to reach children in poverty areas with breakfast. Fruit or fruit juice, a half pint of milk, cereal and often a high protein food such as meat or eggs make up the breakfast pat tern being followed. My hat is off to the school lunch people. They deserve the full support of everyone. Well, WMI Do You Know 1 a fun, games and knowledge L A- 4 * : , MARTHA GtAUBfR -H'PP f ‘ \ew Book ot Knowledvr I)i) oHudix /<■(//, i ifi'H C: / Have you ever peeled or ehopped .an onion and found yourself crying? This i< lie- cause the knife release.- the oils in onion, and \\ hen the oils rise in tinv droplets through tlie air, they irnta'e your eyes. If you hold the onion under cold watei when you peel it, you will have no more tears. The cold water prevents the oils from reach ing your eyes. 119m / in n xa it pii'nic husk i A' Warm summer weather hnnys the idea of picnics on the jrrass or on the heaeh. There are some foods that spoil easily and should not yo into your picnic Basket. The picnic foods most likely to -pmi include deviled eytrs, eey salad or any salad made with, mayonnaise, cream pies and pastries. But any food can spoil if it eets warm enough on the way to the picnic. Hen are some yood ways to avoid food -poilaye on your picnics. Kcm p food cold in an insu lated hay that is kept cool hy a hiy jar of ice cubes Use f r a n k f u r t c r s o r smoked meats; they are safe i than others. If milk cannot be kept mf;, take fruit juice, iced tea, or ttflffujl 11 n ks instead. ^....2r;ike unopened can-, pack "^SlRlIk. or jars on your picnic , open them only at mealtime. Use fresh fruit, not pas tries. for dessert. I)n tpni k innr n h< it (hr wvfd "ilnllii i " ciimcs t rmii ! In the early Ibth centum, m the silver mines of tL Joachimsthal — the Valley of St. Joachim- in Bohemia, sil ver coins were struck. They we re widely used in the West Indies trade before the American Revolution. The German word tha I mean- "valley," and the coins were known as thalrr. From there it was a short step to our word "dollar.” 1970 Caprice. A lot of cars cost more. But few if any are really that much more car. Which explains w hy more and more of the smart money is coming to Caprice. Look what you get: A big substantial 18-foot-long prestige car with a new 350-cubic-inch V8 engine, power disc brakes. Astro Ven tilation, wheel covers, deep twist carpeting, posh appoint ments. A remarkably roomy car, with a ride so smooth and silent you'll feel like Mr. Big himself. Tell you what, though. If you absolutely insist on a more expensive car, we won't stand in your way. Go ahead and order air conditioning. Order stereo. Order tinted glass, power windows, 6-way power seat, our new Headlight Delay system. Your Chevrolet dealer will happily help. See him real soon. Putting you first, keeps us first. On th© HIOV©. * If you spend more for a car, you must want to spend more for a car.