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PAGE FOUR THE CLINTON CHRONICLE. CLINTON, 8, tHURSDAY, MAY 16, 1929 v5ljp (lll|r0nirls PUBUSHED EVERY THURSDAf BY THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. WILSON W. HARRIS Editor and Publisher Entered at the Clinton Post Office as matter of Second Class. Terms of Subscription: One year $1.60 Six months ..f. 75 enterprise cannot be st^ed in fives and tens, the assists, them in their particular tasks citizenry of the town will band tos^eth- and problems ei fo/ a work that is really an expres- With A few alterations of names superintending of one of the South’s largest school systems. Mies Wofford further announces . ui *. if i and locations, the writer of this para-{that reserved seats will be held for Sion of the noblest factors in the j . graph might well have been presenting | the parents of the graduating class make-up o the loyalty and ^a^n^^nn after which hour all va- of the heart. f President McSween of Presbyterian I cant seats will be filled by friends. It won’t be difficult to raise fifty j College. Although P. C. is. not a state thousand. Not long ago, no difficulty ^ university, ^ts president might well was found in raising an equal amount as the president of a state . , . • j X • 1 university, if the above is a true con- m stock to organize a new industrial .... The Boy Scouts will act as ushers for the exercises. There may be no money ception of what happens to them. niree months 60 Payable in advance During the few months that have The Chronicle ‘.eeks the cooperat; of its subscribe's and readers — the publisher will a' all times appreciate wise suggestion; and kindly advice. We Believe In Our College State of South Carolina, County of Laurena. Notice of- Application for Payment of Lost CertiHcate of Deposit. Please take notice that at the ex piration of sixty (60) days from the two weeks publication of this notice, the undersigned will apply at the of fice of M. S. Bailey & Son, Bankers, for the payment by them of a Time Certificate in the sum of ($6.25) five dollars and twenty-five cents payable on July 9th, has been lost. The above certificate issued in name of Virginia Sadler and is payable to her father or mother. (Signed) Rufus E. Sadler, 0 Father of Virginia Sadler. May 6, 1929—5-16-2tc. 666 is a Prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria. 1926, No. 4464, which It is the most speedy remedy known. returns to this investment for those elapsed since his acceptance of the whose children will not matriculate in presidency of the college, Mr. Me the college, but there are other re- Sweden has been globe-trotting with aj Our people should rally to Presi- turns that are more precious. To see '’<^ugence. Leaving out the expedition'dent McSween and his committee in the young manhood of the community to Abyssinia, he has probably engag-lthis drive for $50,000.00 for Presby- CLLMON, S. C., MAY 16, 1929 16 PAGES , . ed in every one of the delightful pur- i terian college. All who have given in getting a square deal, and knowing described in the quota-' cause to that you helped give them the chance tion-and he has probably done two Life owes thcni-thafs worth many a or three of them at once, when times '^,\®fhe advrntages'ciinto'n I dividend. became paiticularly pressing. has derived from the college cannot! His tours have carried him west- be recalled in one thought or even ward ot Texas, eastward as far as the mentioned in one article, but every one Atlantic ocean would let him at low knows there are many. The college has PEDRShTH This is no attempt on our part to say to any one just how much he FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS .Presbyterian college goes before ‘'“’I-,tide, southward to some point prob- had a gradual growth and, with it, the citizens of Clinton next week with the appeal to contribute fifty thous and dollars in the general campaign to raise the debt of the college. The ' request is not an unreasonable one. 11'^^® confidence in the future of jyj^. bad been a bug, and if beautiful campus. Clinton will contin-1 There are annually between thirty crawling across a map ue to stand by her college, and forty .students in the college dedication of tone’s gcods instead of choo-chooing V and down- be determined only by yourself. But'ably in the low'er reaches of the Geor-: grown and still grows. it is to be a love offering—an expres- gin jungles, and northward to where Clinton people are proud of our ....11 XU.. - i-s-..;. » j , I college with her able faculty and the.*' sion of appreciation for what the in- P^opl® roH th_.r lusciias r s and '“f i families, her fine student beans. smart statistician, if in good ^er lorm, might possibly tell us that if substantial buildings and her most i W.. H. SWlPSON. Clinton high school and Thornwell or- f"'' Promotion of a work that will,in .he worid. and if he had been drag-' c:r,n> rt tv-raso Vartvo mitrht' the ccmmunlty a better'place.to after him a fountain pen of suit- phan^ge. Some cl these bojs might ‘able size—that the lines he would go elsewhere to school, but doubtless ^ ® ^ ^bus have drawn on the map of the the majority of them would not be | Presbyterian college a name dear country would have looked like a spid-■ able to enjoy the privileges of a col-j to thousands who have received the er’s w’eb, and that South Carolina lege education were it not for the impress of her name upon their lives, would have looked like one great and fact that tWre is within view of their : I- Clinton fails, help will assuredly own homes an institution that gives come from another quarter. Who glorious blot on the’scutcheon. Mr. McSween has probably spoken between 739 and 911 times in the Pal- to these students between $5,000 and j knows but that this may be the finest j^g^ September. He iCtna Life InsunnccCo yCtna Casualty and Surety Ca of Clinton. In this day and time, the benefits $10,000 per annum over and above the opportunity the town may have for has addressed every conceivable type ; fees that appear on the bills. This, in decades to add a stroke to the paint- of organization, including civic clubs, itself, would make the college worthy ^ mg of a fine picture of cultural pro- and has traveled a good many more r XL X 1 1 X r XU X « ' crrocs in thi* nf thp Atlantic miles than it is from here to Ooltewah, ^ of the most loyal support of the town gress in inis section oi me Aiianm. . , , • r,- . > ' , , X u Tennessee, and back again. Right now seaboard. We would not have others .. . , , . . ; he IS a great deal better known in step in to take our place m this work I of a college education are well nigh! which U peculiarly and jopusly ours. ^ president of Presbyterian Col-^ incalculable. More and more, higher' Fifty thousand dollars for Presby- lege is a go-getter. Between his en training is demanded in the business terian college. Give it your earnest ergy, his speaking ability, and his' world as well as in the professions, j support. Let Clinton make this effort dynamic personality, he comes pretty | . e. J If .g X ui near carrying everything before him. The marts of trade are calling for men a notable success. , .... , when on a campaign. It is impossible trained and' equipped in head as well, estimate the number of friends that as in heart, in manners as well as in , THE Hx\PPY WWRRIOR he has raised up for Presbyterian Col- the great virtues which have always xhe following excerpt from the lege through the clear and straight- been the pride of the Southland. The New York Herald-Tribune is quoted forward and convincing way he has of college is the training school for the jin the March number of Ginn & Com- saying clear and straight-forward and finest youth of the land. In those im- rwnj-s little publication called pressionable years between seventeen and twenty-one, to come under the of men of character and i ‘W’hat convincing thfngs. ithe Colleges Are Doing”: 'Ail that a modern state-university Automobile tnsuranccCoi of HartfordConn ^VER 2 0,0 0 0 jEtna agents, lo cated from Maine to California, assure /Etna service to iEtna Combination Auto mobile Insurance pol icyholders, wherever they may be. /STN A-IZE S. W\ SUxMEREL AETNA-IZER president has to do is to produce, ev- guidance of men of character andig^.^. jT^Qj-jths, a learned paper to scholarship, to brush up with cultured dazzle the countryside, manage the men of different communities and of ^ irttricate machinery of his several- different viewpoints—this is to give million-dollar corporation, keep his him a shove forward in his social andtempermental, absent-mind- led, underpaid professors cheerful and YOUNG SENIORS TO GRADUATE intellectual development that might HON. NELUE TAYLOE ROSS of Wyoming AMERICA’S HRST WOMAN- GOVERNOR In a Great Lecture ® H&rrlf A Ewing. 9$ TRe Grovernor Speaks Just One of Many Great 1929 Redpath Featiires A Season Ticket for All the Attractidns of REDPATH WEEK 7 Days $3.00 REDRom SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRONICLE Chautauqua Week Here — May 20-27 Grammar Pupils To Hold County Commencement Friday Night. Address By Dr. Sutton. According to information received alert, understand w'hat the universi- ^•om Miss Kate Wofford, County Su- normally require a decade in the com- i archaeological expedition is doing perintendent of. Education, the County mon school of experience, where rough jn southeastern Abyssinia and raise Commencement will be held in, edges and corners do not claim friend- money for it, deliver occasional up- auditorium of the Laurens City' Iv attention but are objects of guarded lifting chapel talks to the student School on Friday n;ght. May IJ. Thej ' bodv, attend the ball games, lunch,exercises will begin promptly a^eight| , with a rich alumni, who might give o’clock, and the following program Then, too, the college means much dormitories or laboratories in will be presented: to the general cultural tone of the favorite maiden aunts,; Devotional Exercises— town. Many of its citizens—a higher' entertain the visiting English lectur-j —Praise the Lord, oh My Soul and higher percentage each year—are ers (and arrange for -the deans to en- Glee Club Laurens High School college men, and these carry the col- tertain the Americans), keep in touch A word of wekome—C. K. W'right, , • f • k tv, iw. CoTYviUr sr, with the members of the state legis- Supt. City Schools. lege viewpoint in-o their family, so-, Laurens High School cial, and church circles. The wide:j,^_, new Address: Dr. W. A. Sutton, Supt. At- awake Clinton is the product of a j assemblymen who hope to make the' lanta City Schools, Atlanta, Ga. wivie awake college. Like ancient Ath- headlines by denouncing frills in edu-^^^o^'as—Ole Carolina ens, the city w’ill be known for its col- , cation, and lecture occasionally to the Glee Club Laurens City ^Schools legiate institution when other things County Cheese-makers u ■ U J -ru : x f XV. D-aaa Operative Association, the Suffolk Wofford states that Dr. Sut- have perished, T e sp.n o e -, Exchange, the Wessex ton is one of the outstanding edu- bj-terian college dominates and moulds Trades and Labor Council, and rational leaders of the South and is the thought life of the town far more ^ Essex W. C. T. U.. as well as the ^ wonderfully inspiring siieaker. A than the average* person would realize. State Cliamber of Commerce, the f'iB story of his life was carried last RiizJHiHfzig|g|g|gJ2raizJzi2fgfgjgfZfgia[ErafgjgiHfEiZfg|graiErarafaigfafzjgfEfajzfBfafafigjajaf2fgfgJBfZfgjararajEf iu ClintoxLJs what it is because it has Steybert Society, and the Veterans of'^®^^ American Magazine and i in ^/Minfi* Viotr/i . - 11 i w, . TV, , f, XX L many people in the County have read breathed the influence of men like Foreign W’ars, pointing out to each . , . , • xu « u # of his spectacular rise in the field of Jacobs, Bean, Spencer, and Douglas. and all how the University serves ev- Educaticn, beginning with the teach- And Presbyterian college is the gry citizen of the state and notably ing of a small country school to the child of the town. It has been nour- Presbyterian College Our College ished, reared, clothed, fed, and watch ed over by the people of the city. It has been their college. It is our col- lege. One of the proudest monuments to the unselfish industry and philan thropy of our citizenship. To allow it to perish when we can throw out the life-line and haul her into port would be calamitous. P. C.—our college—the Bchool for which we have loyally toil ed, the place where our young man hood has touched the idealistic and the noble elements in life. A man isn’t PULL UP CHAIR, $12.50 Spanish type chair with smartly upholstered sag seat. Walnut finished attractive frame. A real value. On May 2l8t, a drive for $50,000 will be launched in Clinton as our contribution toward liquidating the institution’^ indebtedness. It must “go over the top” and will if each one puts his interest and ef forts into the campaign. PRESBYTERIAN COLLEGE IS ONE OF CUNTON’S GREAT EST ASSETS. A LIFE A MYSTERY Take the delightful uncertainty, the well tonight, or for nights to come. I guess-work, the “gamble,” if you’d ^ prefer the amorous dream of golden call it that,-take these elements out I tempers me to com- of life, and life loses interest. CEDAR CHESTS, $15 up Chests beautifully finished in cedar red or walnut, genuine red cedar lined. The mystery of tomoijow who bat possible disaster, like the loss of a small bet in life’s great game of chance. • Li 1.1.1 J XT .,,i would have it otherwise? The uncer-1 Good men and women have commit going to turn his child adrift. Nor will ^ tajn^y of what may happen—how se-1 ted suicide to escape calamities which Clinton cease to hold a sheltering armjductive! I would not know the future | they felt sure would come. Ah, they over the future of Presbyterian col- ^ could; the hope that it be bright not sure. Nobody can be ajbsolute- arouses all the faith of which I am! ly^sure of the future, or what it may capable^and life without faith is but bring—knd that’s a mighty comforting fact, it seems to me, to tuck avlray in one’s bosom especially if he has ten dencies to see only the dark side of 1 j things. i think about death, sorrowing I have no use for the “fortune-tell-: nine months of the year. Naturally, uiourners, and the like—so we turn' er,” or for any one who claims ability | fege. Of course, also, the college means dull, drab, mean existence, a great deal to the merchants and! Why, the few things we are reason- business concerns of the town Two business concerns of tne town, hundred and fifty students here for to think about death, MIRRORS A large assortipent at prices. right PRESBYTERIAN COLLEGE NEEDS OUR AID AND INTER EST IN ITS PRESENT CRISIS. WE ARE P. C. BOOSTERS. the clank and jingle of their coin. I'"‘"j'/'J' Inal life; and right here, the mystery will be heard on the counter? of the holjs a world of comforting reassur- city. But Clinton is not supporting the : ances. college on a commercial basis. Out of I certainly don’t want to know ex- , , actly what will happen tomorrow, next A love for an institution whose value ^ year; I might not sleep to peer into hidden realms and make forecasts for^me. To accept life with its entrancing uncertaini ies, its in- ' spiriting gambles, its happy conflicts —to win some of its ten th iif and vie-! tories—to overcome evi a .h good—j what better doctrine than that? Pnither-Simpson Fyrniture Co “The Home-Makers” Clinton, S. C. 9