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A*' •;* ■■^■ THUBSDAY, JUNE 20, 1929 THE CLINTON CHRONICLE. CLINTON, S. C. ::t PAgE SEVEN f I SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON • By Rev. Samuel D. Price, D. Aasociate General Secretary of the « World's Sunday School Association. # « / . A psalm'OF PRAISE \ . .International Sunday School Lesson for June 23 Psalm 103:1-13. hmk Singing has a fundamental place in worship. The Psalms were the song book of the Hebrews, and at times the rendition was most .elaborate. As the pilgrims went up to Jerusalem for the arious feasts they would sing in |np en route. Selections especially used * at'auch times were tho Hallel, Psalms 113-118. In some churches in Scotland and congregations derived therefrom in America all songs are paraphrases of the Psalms. This I03rd Psalm is a speciial favorite for the communion table. Great choruses were used by the Hebrews in, their worship in praise, liluch was made of antiph- onal singing, where two chorusps would be used, answering the other or giving a chorus-like refrain at the end of each verse. ■ >4i- Only 13 verses are indicated for the lesson study but all 22 should be read repeatedly. In fact the omission of any verse from a song in our school singring gives an incomplete presen tation of the poet’s thought. This Psalm is one of the many that should be committed to memory. No^.that therfr are many^ verses as^iTthe BeV brew alphabet. If you waht the names of those letters turn to Psalm 119, where they are given in each of its 22 sections. Thanksgiving must be expressed by anyone who will take the time to think over the abounding mercies that are renewed each day. We should not take such recurring special benefits for grranted but think back to the Source. The Psalmist has evidently been medi tating over the many joys and privi leges that were his. Then he breaks; misery to.himself, -forth in this joyous song beginning “Bless the Lord, 0 my iOul.”. He | God toward those who hold Him in rightly calls upon his entire self to: honor and seek to live in accord with give praise to the Bestower of All,;His holy will. • W’hom he calls by name. Much is lost in trying to maintain a cheerful men tal attituie by forgetting the endless number of good things.that have come our way. Such bounties help greatly in passing lightly over the distressing things which also are a part of our daily life. Seven is called the perfcet num ber. Read through these selected vers es, again and you will find that many great__ reasons for rejoicing at the ■nirone of Grace. “Count your many blessings. Name them .one 'by one’’ and you will change from the minor rkey of complaining to the major, in which you will “Count it all joy.’’ In daily prayer life cultivate the of praise and thanksgiving, to- .gether with confession of,sin, before you begin to ask the Lord for still more gifts. Forgiveness is repeatedly indicated this Psalm. Our sins, when sincere ly confessed, are removed “as far a3 the east is from the. west.'’ Instead of destojction,. that is iiiatlv- oargifebfc-- cause of the wrong doings we hav^ willfully persisted ill ’'doing, we are crowned with “lovingkindness and tender mercies.” In place of the unrest of one who is unrelated to Jehovah we are satisfied in Him apd we continue to live the hopeful life of youth. Yes, the Lord is one Who must be held in fear by the wrong doer. His corrections are for the sake of chas tisement rather than for punishment. A young person who has never been restrained is a menace to society and 'Die gentleness of parents is a type of the attitude of UNION SERVICES ARE ARRANGED Br AiBnir The Chronicle does not necessarily indorse or commend all of Mr. Bris bane’s views and conclusions. ir,> ed itorials are published as expre:i'iiuns of opinions of the world’s highest sal aried editor. MONEY AND LOVE HOLMES, BRANDEIS DISSENT MODERN YOUTH NOBODY KNOWS THE FUTURE In New York a man killed himself. The reason: - ' -“I’ve.lost my money.” In Chicago a young Englishwoman, 28, jumped to death from a twelve- story window. Her message: “I love Ed Page, 12309 Astor street.” Schedule Given For July and August In City Churches With Local Pastors Speaking. Following a custom of long stand ing, the churches of the city will unite during July and August in evening union services. The services will ro tate with the pastors filling the re spective engagements as adopted by the local ministerial unoin. The sched ule follows: July 7—A. R. P. church. Rev. M. R.^ Wingard. July 14—North Broad Methodist church. Rev. Edward Long. July 21—First Presbyterian church. Rev. O. M. Abney. July 28—St-John’s Lutheran church, Dr. D. J. Woods. • Aug. 4—First Baptist church, Dr. L. R. Lynn. Aug. 11—Broad Street Methodist church. Dr. Dudley Jones. Aug. 18—First Presbyterian church. Rev. S. P. Bowles. Aug. 25—Thornwell Memorial, Rev. C. B. Betts. i: O’DANIEL & REID Shakespeare’s “Men have died, and worms have eatpn them, but not for love,” is not true of women. Men die for money, women "for loye. -Justices Holmes and Brandeis of the Supreme court, are often together in the headline “Holmes and Brandeis dissent.” Justice Holmes, 88, oldest man that ever sat on the bench, and Justice Brandeis, one of the ablest law yers and one of the best men in the United States, are old fashioned Americans, taking freedom of thought and speech quite seriously. WANT ADS REDUCED SillllllfER FARES Rosika Schwimmer applied for citi zenship, and 'the. Supreme Court re jected her appeal,, because she is a pacifist, does not believe in war and says she would not fight. She is past sixty, and could not fight much anyhow: Apart from that, Justice Holmes reminds his fellow judges that the Founder of Christiani ty was also a Pacifist. THE JOY OF SERVING . , e This beautiful morning I left ’ my' behind the lace curtain! With an ex bed early, put on part of my clothing, j pression of profound interest, he sin- and went to a front window where a'gled out one of the three papers and rocker stood waiting. I love to watch i placed it carefully at the bottom of There is no doubt that if Christ re turned as an immigrant at Ellis Is land, he would be rejected after brief inspection of his teachings. You can hear the words of reproof, “What makes a rich man give all his money to the poor? Go back fo Rus- FOR SALE—Pure Porto Rico potato plants, $2.50 per 1,000. J. Hamp Stone. 6-20-2tc FOR JRENT — Onr -fcrrnishfed apahl- ment, private bath. Also one un furnished. Mrs. A. B. Henry, phone 66. Itc FOR RENT — Housekeeping apart ment. Five rooms, upstairs, outside entrance, modem conveniences. $25.00 per month. Mrs. B. C. Bilalock. tf FOR SALE — One good milk cow, fresh. Apply to C. C. Hill, 19 Bai- ley St., Clinton, S. C. ^ BIG BARBECUE and speaking at Mountville, S. C., Thursday, July 4th. Address of the day by Hon. Ira C. Blackwood. W. F. Lynch, Mgr. .Ip FRYING CHICKENS—Now ready at farm, 60c, while they last. R. S. Gaskill. Itp; NOWlNEFf^ i 44^up ROUNDTRIP^ CHARLESTON Gping and returning bv direct steamer with meals and berth included in nre. Tickets on sale to Sept. 30 with final return limit Oct. 31. — '-‘ii I. sia..”. early uoraing passers, while my morning paper is coming. The newsboy presently appeared With him was a much smaller boy— evidently a brother—not over five at the Very most. This little fellow car ried three or four papers under his tiny arm. Proudly he strode beside his senior, his eyes dancing with delight, at the trust reposed in him. I could not hear hia words, but he evidently asked if he should deliver my paper; the big brother nodded, as any great person age might nod in approval of a sub ordinate. The tiny boy dashed u^my steps— seven of them, and it required effort for his short legs to accomplish the man-size elevations; how he swung and glowed and smiled in the sweet morning air, wholly oblivious to the spectacled eyes that watched him from my door, just as near to putting it into my hand as possible; then he turned and sped away, laughing, as fast as those short legs could carry him. His financial accomplishment could not have been over a half-cent gain —no, it was not that; the little fellow was in glee because* he could do some thing good — something useful for somebody, and do it well. For him, the delivery of that newspaper was a su per-accomplishment. Had I been fully dressed, I might have frightened him I by rushing out and seizing the darling in my arms. Do we grown-ups get a “kick” out of the worthy deeds we do for others, if any? Sometimes I have to study awhile, before I can recall any good deed I have done lately. I have not quite become “as one of these.” Those that deplore the tendencies of “modern youth,” late hours, short dresses, wild dances, cocktails, and the rest, will be interested in an investi gation aad report by Chicago’s Epis copal church. FOR SALE FORD TOURING CAR. O’DANIEL & REID WHAT DO P. S. JEANES DO? SAILINGS FROM CHARLESTON J To NEW YORK, S. S. CHEROKEE every Wed- nesday amd also S. S. H. R. MALLORY every Saturday. \ (Additional freight sailings eyery Monday) To JACKSONVILLE, S. S. CHEROKEE every Monday. Additional freight sailings, Saturdays. To BOSTON Every Thursday. Freight only. Take your car. No trouble or inconvenience. No boxing or crating. . I'or sck4dttl$$, paisfuftr and freiikl rales, etc. apply to Lll\l€ J. D. Rooney, Gieneral Agent, Charleston, S. C. TinnifeilattOB Young people are wild, says the re port, but the blame rests with the pai- ents. Dr. Young, head of the Howe school of Indiana, says he is more i worried about the parents than about children. It is a fact that bootleggers’ cus tomers are the parents. Children de spise the law, and parents set them the example. ^ <► ! WOMEN WHO LOVE DAINTINESS LOVE FINE FEATHERS HOSE 'J , They’re Full Fashioned » of Pure Silk, exquisitely textured and lovely. Chiffon - or- Service weights. Heels (so im portant) include the newest French type, Double Pointed, and Square. They fit per fectly! They’re to be had in all the new colors. ^ FINE FEATHERS HOSIEIW m PURE TWCAO SIX Picot or Plain tops. In short they’re all a womah wants in hosiery. Pair $1.50 and $2.00 Blakely Bros. Company “Clinton’s Exclusive Shoe Store” Nobody knows what may be ahead of him. Frank Presbrey, in his able book, just published, “History and Devel opment of Advertising,” quotes an old aivertisement offering $10 for the re turn of “one Andrew Johnson, who had run away from James Selby, a tailor, at Raleigh, N. C., to whom he.^ ; was apprenticed.” ' That boy, when he ran away, didn’t know he was going to be President Andrew Johnson of the United States of America. And Thomas A. Edison, when he , sat at his telegraph key, thinking ' about sending more than one message on the same wire at the same time, did not dream that his thinking wouli add tens of billions to the wealth of the ! w-orld. Chevrolet Six offers all the Distinct Advantages of BODY ig FISHER Richard E. Enright, for years head ! of New York police, says murderers : should be put to work to support their i , families, instead of being sent to the j electric chair. : I Working and producing, the mur-' ^ derer would be more useful than lying jin quicklime, outside the prison wall. ' ; Mr. Enright also advises that I thieves be imprisoned long enough to; j make them repay those whom they ^ have robbed. i The murderers would approve his | I suggestion, the thieves not. i Gan You Beat It? No! New Upright Piano $275 Player $395. Grand $495 O’DANIEL & REID Dr. W. T. Hughes DENTIST Offices Formerly Occupied By Telephone Exchange' •Office Phone 63- “ JUST ARRIVED XI Carload of Choice Timothy Hay.' ALSO Home Grown Oats and A\lteat. Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls. Milk-Flo Dairy Feed, Staf-o-Life Laying Mash, Growing Mash and Scratch Feeds. ALSO Spartan Grain Feed of all kinds. ALSO Sweet Feeds, Fresh Corn Meal, Cane Seed and Sudan Grass Seed. WE DELIVER—PHONE 157 Farmers’ Exchange T, J. BLALOCK, Prop. Never in ail the history of the automotive industry has a low- priced car provided coachwork of such outstanding style and quality as the new Chevrolet Six. The smart new bodies are built by Fisher, with all the -mastery in design and craftsmailship for which the Fisher n.-me is famous. Lines are long, low and graceful— seats are deeply cushioned and luxuriously upholstered—interior hardware is fashioned by Tem- stedt — and finishes are modishly smart and lustrous. In construction, too, the new Fisher bodies represent a marked advance. Built of selected hard wood and steel—they provide a measure of strength, endurance, comfort and safety unapproached in any other low-priccd automobile. Visit your Chevrolet.dealer today. See and inspect this sensational new Chevrolet Six. >525 The COACH Phaaton ^525 ^ fml mat Supe *595 ^595 £dan ..*675 TKe Sport fiiQC All ^ices f.n.h. factory Cabriolet r'LtU, Michigan Thr CofM>rTt' 5-9-) c ihlc Lanihio ... / S'-l:;... ’595 Liiib t rVlirerr «■; a eiiawi-* ^UU ’545 ciu:::withc.b650 Giles Chevrolet Co. Clinton, S. C. A’SIX IN THE PRICE RANGE OF THE FOUR \ mi Aiir ■iitai iiliiiiiMii