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THE CHRONICLE, Clinton, S. C., Feb. 19, 1970—S-A W. N. Prater JOANNA - Funeral services were held Monday for William N. (Bill) Prater, 57, who died Sat urday. Services were conducted at Gray Funeral Home with burial in Pine Lawn Memory Gardens. A native of Saluda County, he was a son of the late E. C. and Linner Goff Prater. He had lived in Joanna for 37 years. He at tended First Baptist Church in Joanna and was a retired em ploye of Greenwood Mills. He was a member of the Old Timers Club. Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Guynelle Payne Prater, a daughter, Miss Debbie Ruth Prater of the U. S. Navy, Pen sacola, Fla.; two sons, Joe and Bobby Prater of the home; three sisters, Mrs. Thelma Tucker and Mrs. Gillette Rowe of Joanna and Mrs. Teressa King of Honea Path; and five brothers, Vaughan Prater of Columbia, Van Prater of Camden, Virgil Prater of An derson and Edison and H. S. Prater of Joanna. Mrs. Yates SUMTER - Mrs. Lizzie Truitt Yates, 74, died Friday. She was a sister of Mrs. A. E. Boyce, Mrs. M. A. Cannon, and R. R. Boyce of Clinton and Mrs. R. L. Boyce and Mrs. Beaufort Lowery of Joanna. Other survivors include ano ther sister and another brother. Funeral services were held Saturday at Concord Presbyter ian Church with burial in the church cemetery. Seven Clinton Students Named To PC List Seven students from the Clin ton area are among the 106 total students included on Presby terian College's first semester Dean’s List announced today by Dean W. Fred Chapman. They are: Robert Christopher Adair, son of Mr. Mrs.'ft. C. Adair, Jr.; Paul Robert Fallaw and Grady Alonzo Fallaw, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Vandy Fallaw; Mrs. Gail G. Pressau; Yvonne Dotson Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Troy E. Dotson; Sophie Sullivan Young, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Leland Young; and Gladys Kay Lewis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Lewis Sr. Dr. Chapman said all of the in dividuals cited for academic ac complishments had posted av erages of 3.3 or better during the fall semester. Mrs. Bowen GREENVILLE - Mrs. Ruth M. Bowen of 105 Ledbetter St. died Tuesday, Feb. 10. She was a sister of H. R. McCall of Clin ton. Other survivors include her husband, a son, three sisters, four other brothers, andagrand- child. Funeral services were held Friday at Grace Baptist Church with burial in Graceland Ce metery. Mrs. Sudduth SPARTANBURG - Mrs. Lila Mae Jackson Sudduth, 62, of 313 S. Spring St., died Tuesday. She was a sister of Theodore Jack- son of Clinton. Other survivors include two daughters, two sons, another bro ther, two sisters, 11 grandchild ren and a great-grandchild. Funeral services will be held Thursday at 3 p.m. atSouthside Baptist Church with burial in Wood Memorial Park. HOSPITAL NEWS Patients currently in Bailey Memorial Hospital from Clin ton are Frank Dunlap, Cora Hill Robert Lee Campbell, Ethel Fin ley, Pauline Fryfogle, William Henry, Zona Dutton, Eva Man ley, Elizabeth Pitts, Janie Ste wart, Frank Lawson, Lola Yar bmugh, Canzater Hill, Katie Pos tell, Lucille Dunaway, Etta Duck ett, Julia Arrowof»d, Ruby Wright Theodore Blakely, Margaret Hedgepath, Linda Gillis, Pearl Teague, Elizabeth Holder, Inez Leake, Ace Workman Jr., Raymond Benson, Denna Deitz, A. G. Caudill, Florence Camp bell, Annie Lawson, Randy Tem pleton, Essie Holliday, Brodus Bledsoe, Elizabeth Link, AltaAl- berga, Lillian Vanhoy, Jessie Owens, Lillian Wallenzine, Ma- zella Gary, Dorothy Poag, Sir- limer Edwards, Gus Keller and Luther Gary. Patients from Joanna are Elsie Gruber, Baby Boy Thomp son, Betty Thompson, Gary Bo- die, Toy Murphy, Paul Lewis, Elizabeth Gilliam, John Finley, and John Burton. Patients from Kinards areR'>- bert Franklin, and Angela Black. Patients from Laurens are Lonnie Pulley, R. D. Burke, Judge Harp, Willie Richardson, Emily Caughman, Corine Cun ningham, Baby Boy Caughman, and Baby Girl Cunningham. Patients from Mountville are Mary Atkinson and Mary Hender son. Patients from Cross Hill are Connie Davis, Hugh McGowan and Coraw Moses. Patient from Whitmire is Pearl Widener. Patient from Newberry is James Anderson. Bollard Elected To Honor Society At Clemson U. William B. Ballard of Clinton has been elected to membership in the Clemson University Chap ter of Gamma Sigma Delta, the Honor Society of Agriculture. This society is an international honorary organization whose purpose is to promote and re cognize outstanding achieve ments in and service to agricul ture. Faculty and staff members, graduate students, and college seniors withoutstandingprofess- ional and academic achievements in activities and curricula re lated to agriculture are eligible for membership. Ballard, a Graduate Research and Teaching Assistant in the Dept, of Horticulture has been chosen for this honor because of his devotion to his major field of Horticulture and to his lead ership in various projects pro moting not only Horticulture but also the good name of Clemson University. During his two years as a graduate assistant Ballard has worked as project co-ordi nator with the Smithsonian Insti tute, landscape advisor to the Horry County Historical Society and Middleton Gardens of Char leston, and has acted as co-host to many Clemson Horticultural radio and TV shows. Presently he is completing landscape plans for a historical garden area under construction at the Charleston Tricentennial Exhibition sight. He is co-author of a book to be published by the Tricentennial Commission on the history of rice, indigo, cotton, and peach inSouthCarolina. Ball ard is also serving as a mem ber of the South Carolina Tri centennial Commission and the Pickens County Tricentennial Commission. Teen Club Dance Saturday The Bee T’s of Toccoa, Ga., will perform Saturday, Feb. 21, at the Upstairs Teen Club in Clinton. The Teen Club is open every Saturday from 8 p.m. until 11 p.m. Parents of teenagers also are invited. Over 155,000 textile looms were producing cloth in South Carolina during 1968, accord ing to reports of the S. C. Labor Department. All-American Favorite February is fantastic—both sentimentally and historically— with Valentine’s Day, Lincoln’s and Washington’s Birthdays. Bring out the tender mood in even the way-out young mod and the thrill of patriotic pride in the most jaded soul with this luscious All-American cherry pie! (irumli Topped Cherry Pie ■t d Vi i Vi 1-pound cans tart red cherries cup sugar tablespoons cornstarch teaspoon salt teaspoon grated lemon peel (optional) 2 tablespoons lemon juice Few drops red food coloring 1 IMnch unbaked pastry shell PC Players Present Comedy The Presbyterian College Players are presenting a two- act comedy entitled “Where Did We Go Wrong?” in a four-night run which started Wednesday and goes through next Saturday. Tickets already are being sold at the Black Magic Theater of fice for the limited capacity of the experimental theater. The prices are $1 for adults and 50 cents for students. Curtain time each night is 8:15, and the public is invited. The theme is a religious one, and author Thomas Ohlson has described the setting as the le gendary East and Israel about 4 B.C. although it might well be present-day South Carolina. This rather avant-garde play, the story of the fourth Wise Man who views money and power as the secrets to happiness, was a cri tical success in its first perfor mance off-Broadway. Drama instructor Dale Rains directs this first production of the second semester by the PC Players. The cast includes: Car- son Rhyne, a senior from Char lotte; Juan Amaya, senior from Bogota, Columbia, South A- merica; Rodney Clark, freshman from Anniston, Ala.; Dexter Ross, freshman from Roanoke, Va.; and Judy Howie, freshman from Hartsville. 1 2 V2 teaspoon mace cup butter cup all-purpose flour cup sugar teaspoon cinnamon Drain cherries, reserving !'i cups luiuhl. Combine a 4 cup sugar, cornstarch and salt. Add reserved liquid; cook until thick, stirring constantly. Add cherries, lemon peel, lemon juice and food coloring. Pour into pastry shell. Combine flour, ’2 cup sugar and spices; cut in butter until crumbly. Sprinkle over cherries. Bake in -loo oven about 00 minute s or until crust is light brown. Serve warm. Note: Cherry Filling may be used in place of cooked mixture. 'Mothers' March Nets $1,525 In Dimes Drive The "Mothers' March" for the 1970 March of Dimes has brought in $1,525, according to the latest figures reported by Mrs. Marc Weersing and Mrs. Lykes Hen derson, who worked together to organize the effort this year. With collections from Whitten Village not yet finalized, Thnrn- well, and TAP, the total is ex pected to exceed the $3,000 mark. Asa real boost to the drive the Newcomers’ Club sponsored a bake sale and the proceeds of over $50 were donated. Mrs. Carol Waller is president of this alert group of new citizens in Clinton. Special credit goes to the press and radio for their invaluable as sistance in the attempt to raise funds which will accomplish at least three aims: 1) Finance the continuing cost of patient aid to those who had polio before the vaccines were made available through March of Dimes re search; 2) Research into the my steries of birth defects which are experienced by one out of every ten American families each year; and 3) The purchase of vaccine for mass innoculations to im munize against Rubella (German CARD OF THANKS We wish to express our deep est thanks to friends, relatives and neighbors for the cards, flow ers, food and other expressions of kindness at the time of the lost of our loved one. Family of Mrs. Alice Kinards Measles), one of the leading caus es known to produce defective ba bies. Thanks are due, Mrs. Weer sing says, to all who “marched” in behalf of this urgent need. In addition to volunteers already named, the following were in volved in canvassing their neigh borhoods: Mrs. Joe Edwards, Mrs. Mike Turner, Mrs. Judson Davis, Mrs. Windsor Ward, Mrs. E. N. Sullivan, and Mrs. Arthur Katzburg.,,, ,, , mOAMKi THE CHRONICLE Established 1900 DON NY WILDER Editor and Publisher Published every Thursday by the Chronicle Publishing Com pany. Subscription rate (payable in advance)—-one year, $5.00; two years, $8.00; six months, $3.00; out of county---one year, $7.00; six months. $5.00; Student sub scription (school year), $4.50. Second class postage paid at Clinton, S. C. Postmaster: Send Form 3579 to Clinton Chronicle, Clinton, S. C. 29325. * * * PUBLIC NOTICE Republican Precinct Organization Be Ready To Organize Your Precinct. Representatives from the Republican Women’s Club will be at the Laurens County Court House, in the Court Room, Thursday, February 19th, 9 AM-5 PM, with organizational material and information. Re publicans from all precincts are urged to come by. W. R. Garrett, Chairman Laurens County Republican Party i COUPON. 1 P HARRIETTS HOUSE OF BEAUTY t 600-B Whitmire Highway — Joanna CUP THIS COUPON AND BRING FOR SPECIAL ON PERMANENTS mm REGULAR 110.00 NOW — With Coupon TUBS. - WED. - THURS. — FEB. &4-25-26 TUBS. - WED. - THURS. — MARCH 3-4-5 COUPON I $6.00 NOW THROUGH SATURDAY YOU GOT TO LOVE MAX! ITS THl LAfF TIMl Of A Ufl TIMf! MOW FUN THAN MR BffORf OR BIHIND! JONATHAN WINTERS KE£NVjA^rriH»^MaH3WA0aQHCET^Y„K£^EiMfcWC • i max' COLOR! FUN FOR EVERYONE! 3:15, 7:00 and 9:00 — IP. 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