The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, December 11, 1969, Image 14

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J 1 6-B—THE CHRONICLE, Clinton, S. C. Dec. 11, 1969 Legal Notice FINAL SETTLEMENT Take notice that on the 26 day of December, 1969 I will render a final account of my acts and doing as Administrator of the estate of Matilda Daniels Tucker 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 Ad ministrator. 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. Alvin W. Hueble Administrator Nov. 26, 1969 D4-4C-D25 CREDITOR’S NOTICE All persons having claims a- gainst the estate of Ernest Da vid McCullough, deceased, are hereby notified to file the same duly verified, with the undersign ed, and those indebted to said estate will please make payment likewise. Lila Howard McCullough Executrix 404 West Pitts St. Clinton, S. C. CREDITOR’S NOTICE All persons having claims a- gainst the estate of Grover Cleve land Watts, deceased, are hereby notified to file the same duly veri fied, with the undersigned, and those indebted to said estate will please make payment likewise. James H. Watts and Thomas E. Watts 60 Pinewood Avenue Clinton, S. C. Executors Nov. 20, 1969 Dec. 4, 1969 N 27-3c-Dll D11-3C-D25 St*:- dW I ARP ASSOCTATE REFORMED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. Zeb Williams 701 South Broad Street Assembly of God ASSEMBLY OF GOD BETHEL TEMPLE Rev. T. L. Gray 114 North Owens S.t JOANNA ASSEMBLY OF GOD Rev. Ray Prosser 440 N. Main St., Joanna Baptist BELLVIEW BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. J. B. Abercrombie Rt. 1. Laurens Rev. Edward D. Pierce 301 Mafirnolia 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 Lutheran Pentecostal ST. JOHN’S EVANGEUCAL FIRST PENTECOSTAL CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH Re. J. W. Spillers North Sloan Street DAVIDSON STREET BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. M. Floyd Hellams Davidson Street Church of God ELIZABETH STREET CHURCH OF GOD Rev. James W. Wiley Elizabeth Street LYDIA MILL CHURCH OF GOD Rev. Fred E. Eason FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH MILAM ROAD Rev. J. H. Darr CHURCH OF GOD 301 South Broad Street Rev. Herman Anderson HEBRON BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. W. D. Coker 700 North Broad Street JOANNA CHURCH OF GOD Rev. Harry R. Kemp 122 South Main Street lydia baptist church Episcopal Poplafst., CHURCH^ EPISC0PAL FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. Peter Outz OF JOANNA - Calvert Avenue LUTHERAN CHURCH Rev. John Setzler Greenwood Highway Adventist SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH Hampton Avenue 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. Thomas Miller iBailey 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 R. L. Wood, Supply Pastor 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 DUNCAN’S CREEK PRES BYTERIAN CHURCH Student Ministers Billy Bryant, ('arson Rhyne THORNWELL MEMORIAL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Dr. M. A. Macdonald Thornwell Campus FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. A. L. Bixler •110 E. Carolina Avc JOANNA FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. Leon M. Jeffords Milton Road, Joanna LYDIA PRESBYTERIAN (HURCH Rev. Sidney Ayer Pine St.. Lydia Mill ROCK BRIDGE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Greenwood Highway SHADY GROVE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Bonds Cross Roads LEGAL NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the undersigned intends to apply to the SouthCarolinaAlcoholic Bev erage Control Commission for a license to operate a retail li quor store for the fiscal year end ing June 30, 1970 at 324 South Bell Street, Clinton, South Caro lina under the provisions of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Act, Code of Laws 1962 and acts amendatory thereto. James A. Suber N27-3c-Dll FINAL SETTLEMENT Take notice that on the 6th day }f January, 1970, I will render a final account of my acts and do ings as Executor of the estate of Martha Phillips Greenwood 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 Execu tor. 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. Arthur M.jreombe Greenwo'xi Executor 317 S. Broad St. Clinton, S. C, Dec. 2, 1969 D!!-4e-Jl cred: dr - s notice Ab per ions having claims a- gainst the estate of BlufordSimp- "on, deceased, ire hereby noti fied to file the same duly veri fied, with the undersigned, and those indebted to said estate will please make pi/m^nt likewise. Edd Simpson r f W. Paul Culbertson Attorney at Law Laurens, S. C. Dec. 3. 1969 Dll-3c-D2!> A Salute To 'Mr. Baptist BY DR. HERBERT SPAUGH There is one man in Charlotte, The Rev. Dr. William Harrison Williams, whose life has been filled full of years and full of love. He recently celebrated his 90th birthday. I know of no man in Charlotte who is more deeply beloved than he. As the senior Baptist clergyman in this area, he has been called Mr. Baptist, but I think he could be more ap propriately designated as Mr. Love. His whole ministry has been so saturated with it that he has been a living demonstra tion of it. He has had a 30 year minis try as Pastor at the great Prit chard Memorial Baptist Church, and 11 years as pastor emeri tus there. Some of his observations made on the occasion of his recent birthday worthy of note: In re sponse to whether the church is losing its influence as some cri tics contend, he said “Frankly, I can’t see it. The young peo ple in our churches are the fi nest, the most serious youngpeo- ple we have ever had." Queried about the generation gap, he said “I think there is too much gen eralization going on. I think the tendency to generalize is one of our most serious faults. There are only some of the young peo ple having difficulty finding them selves, but we generalize as if all of them are. “I think our new appreciation of the church’s obligation to min ister to the whole man, not only to his soul but to his mind and body, is good. “The church is involving it self in civic affairs and I think that’s good, the critics not with standing." The beloved pastor is also a living demonstration of how the Lord can do so much with so little. “I was a sickly child, ne ver could take part in athletics’, he said. “I suffered from asth ma. Its a funny thing to think about how a puny could live as long as I’ve lived." Dr. Williams has been my friend for many years and a deep source of inspiration to me. Our ministries have paralleled in many ways. I commenced my ministry in Charlotte in 1924 and he in 1928. I spent my entire parish ministry in this church, the Little Church on the Lane, retiring after 42 years in 1966 as pastor of this church. Since that time I have devoted my time to my neswpaper column, and to the duties of the office of a bishop in the Moravian Church to which I was elected in 1959. Dr. Williams reminds me very much of the late beloved Mora vian Bishop, Edward Rondthaler, who ordained me in to the min istry. Of him it was said that he “loved the sinner out of his sins". The same can be said )f my beloved friend, Dr. Williams. To Charlotte and the Southern Baptist Church he is certainly “Mr. Love." I salute him! Dr. Spaugh’s books “Everyday Counsel for Everyday Living” and “Pathway to a Happy Mar riage”, gift-boxed, are available at $2 each plus 20<? postage and tax. Order from the Every day Counselor, care of this pa per. PUBLIC AUCTION Please take notice that all the household furnishings and per sonal property of the late Ulysses S. Gray will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder at 3:30 p.m., on the 13th day of December, 1969. Said sale to be held at the home of the late U. S. Gray on S. C. 303 North of Clinton. Ail sales final. Buyers to remove and transport articles from premises. Wyatt Saunders, Jr., Attorney for William K. Gray Administrator of Estate of U. S. Gray 1c USE CHRISTMAS SEALS ? 'fi >ooooc aooooaoooc t t; THIS FEATURE SPONSORED BY THE FOLLOWING FIRMS McGEES Drug Store Prescription Specialists • Cosmetics • Sick Room Supplies We Deliver — 833-0020 JOES ESSO SERVICE 833-0227 ROAD SERVICE Compliments of GRAY FUNERAL HOME Dignified and Sympathetic 833-1720 RALPH PATTERSON Owner and Manager WHITEF0RDS JOANNA OIL NEUBURGER DRIVE-IN COMPANY & CO. 801 South Broad Street 100 North Main Street 108 West Pitts Street 833-0193 Joanna, S. C. 833-2081 697-9616 CUNT0N CAFE Johnson Bros. Chronicle Pub. Co. \Brinf Your Family To Dinner Supermarket 833-0541 i After Church “Sunday Is For Worship” 9 Office Supplies • Printers 102 Muegrove St — 883-2378 800 S Broad 883-2422 0 Books • Gifts FIGHT EMPHYSEMA TUBERCULOSIS AND AIR POLLUTION i BATON WINNER—Uura Waits, 15, displays tro phies and medals she won recently in baton con tests. In the first contest, at Newberry, she won first place trophies for special beginner, best ape pearance and first in special beginner twirling. She. also won a second place medal in beginner twirling. In a contest in Charlotte, N. C., she won a third place medal in beginner twirling and a medal for sixth place high school majorette. She is the daughter of Bill Waits and Mrs. Helen Chalk of Jo anna. She is a member of Drum Majorettes of America and is a Clinton High School majorette. Some Ammunition Sales No Longer On Record It no longer is necessary for dealers to keep records of cer tain ammunition sales according to Louis F. Fisher, chief spe cial investigator, Alcohol, To bacco & Firearms, Div. of the Internal Revenue Service. “Newly enacted legislation e- liminates the need for dealers to keep records on sales of shot gun ammunition, ammunition suitable only for use in rifles, and component parts of these types of ammunition. Pruchases of ammunition interchangeable between rifles and handguns, such as 22-caliber rimfire ammuni tion, continue to be subject to the record keeping requirements. Previously, the Gun Control Act of 1968, required records for all ammunition sales." Young marrieds: Insure your car, home,and life for under $35 a month. Impossible? Ask your man from Nationwide about his One Check Plan and see! Amazing! “Alcohol, Tobacco & Firearms officials stressed, however, that no other aspect of the act, was changed by the legislation.” “Persons engaged in selling ammunition still are required to be licensed under the act.” “Anyone under 21 years of age cannot purchase handgun ammunition. However, indivi duals at least 18 can buy rifle and shotgun ammunition. Dealers must still require purchasers to identify themselves if there is doubt about their age.” “Felons, persons under indict ment for a felony, fugitives from justice, unlawful users of drugs, mental imeompentents, and per sons under 18 continue to be pro hibited from purchasing ammuni tion of any type. Green tea is used to flavor ice cream and candy in Ja pan. and coffee in the United States, if you happen to press the wrong button on the vending machine BY SALLY SHAW DEAR SALLY: I’m losing a lot of sleep because of my hus band’s restless, bouncing, thrashing, kicking habits while he’s asleep. His gyrations too often compel me to climb out of our bed and retreat to the liv ing room sofa which is not near ly so comfortable as our bed. Do you think that if maybe I could persuade him to take some tranquilizing pills before he re tires at night, that this would solve the problem and permit me the luxury of sweet, unbroken sleep? E.T.O. DEAR E.T.O.: Pills aren’t the answer. How about suggesting to your husband the idea of twin beds? I’m sure that by this time he realizes how much sleep he is causing you to lose, and that he’ll go along with the twin-bed idea. DEAR SALLY: I’m a girl of 17 with very inconsistent parents. They were exceedingly happy when I stopped going steady with a certain boy about four months ago, but now they’re making a big fuss over the fact that I date too many different fellows. They claim there are too many boys hanging around our home and that this is damaging to any “nice girl’s” reputation. I’d be very interested in what you have to say about this. . .and so would my parents. DILEMMA. DEAR DILEMMA: So long as a girl retains her high principles, and so long as her parents meet and know all the boys she dates, and so long as she respects her parents’ rules and curfews re garding her social activities, I can see nothing in the least wrong or reputation-damaging with a girl’s dating a flock of young men. Certainly, at the tender age of 17, this is much, MUCH better than tying herself down to any one fel low. DEAR SALLY: What can a man do about a wife who thinks no meal is complete without a big, rich, gooey, weight-producing dessert? We have been married only about a year, and already I’ve put on 15 extra pounds, while she weighs in still at exactly the same poundage as when we were married. Food like this just haprepp t^ ^Mck .to my. nibs, but not to hers, and when she plunks it proudly on our table I have to eat it. What can I do? OVER STUFFED. DEAR OVER-STUFFED: Re member the old bromide, “You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make him drink?" This applies to people at the dinner table, too. There’s nothing in the world to MAKE you eat these fancy desserts, except your own sad lack of willpower. DEAR SALLY: I’m to be mar ried to a wonderful guy next month. Before he and I began dat ing he went steady with another girl who later tried every trick in the book to get him away from me. It was a terrific battle for awhile, but I won, and eventually she gave up and moved away to another town. I would like her to know about our marriage. Do you think it would be all right to mail her a marriage announce ment after the wedding? THE WINNER. DEAR WINNER: No. That would be childish gloating and in very poor taste. . .also very unsports manlike. She’s certain to learn the news in time from someone else . . .let it be that way. * * * Originated Phrase The phrase, “Everybody talks about the weather, but nobody does anything about it,” is generally credited to Mark 'twain, but it is be lieved to have originated with Charles Dudley Warner, a coauthor with Twain of “The Gilded Age.” JOHN C. HARMON 302 N. Broad — 833-3472 nationwide dfcl n 1W—iftwMiNiwHtohi; SANTA CLAUS WILL BE IN HIS HUT AT THE LAURENS PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER LAURENS, S. (’. On The Following Dotes And Times: Mon., Dec. 8, 1969, From 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Thurs., Dec. 11, 1969, From 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Fri., Dec. 12, 1969, From 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Sat., Dec. 13, 1969, From 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m FREE! Largest Christmas Stocking In The World Will Be Given FREE By A Drawing To Be Held Saturday At 7:30 P. M., Dec. 20, 1969. All Kiddies Are Urg ed To Register In Santa’s Hut. You Do Not Have To Be Present To Win! Most Stores Open Till 9:00 P. M. Each Week Day.