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I' 1 PAGE FOUR THE CLINTON CHRONICLE. CLINTON. S. C. THURSDAY, JUNE 27,1929 v (2Ii|ninirlf , state much of the wealth that is sent I into other states. South Carolina’s rel ative position amon^: the states can PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAf |ijg carried much higher and it should I be. Prosperity is restricted because THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. j miu-ons of Carolina dollars are drain- led off. The outgoing stream can be [lessened by wider productiveness. WILSON W. HARRIS Editor and Publisher Entered at the Clinton Post Office a^^ matter of Second Class. Terms of Subscription: On« year .... .... .... .... •••• ....$1.50 9iz months 75 Three months Sqjiall Mill Town Is Facing Extinction Payable in advance Newmarket, N. H.—This little tex- - tile town is today fighting a strange The Chronicle .'.eeks the cooperati o of its subscribe’ s and readers — tlio and apparently losing battle for its existence. It is a battle which involves the town’s single industry, the great mill for exodus. Many families, living in mill-owned houses, took their former employers at their word and left tow’n. Others remained and prepared to bat tle. The union heads, anxious to aid those who would stay and fight it out, erected the nucleus of a “tent city” on property on the Durham side of the tow’n. The tents are there now ready for occupancy, but apparently not needed. Farm Demonstration Notes C. B. Cannon. County Agent given to one local leader from each county. In checking over the records of this office, of the boys who turned in their records on club work, the fol lowing have been awarded this schol arship : Tommy Martin, Mountville club. Fred Carlisle, Poplar Springs club. Clyde Wilson, Hickory Tavern club. David Roberts, Barksdale-Namie club. G. C. Roper, Hickory Tavern, local leader. publisher will at. all times appreciate Wi.e suggestion. and kindly advto l“f 'he Newmarket Manufacturing, III company, which was founded here 100 CLINTON, S. C., JUNE 27, 1929 Iicars ago, and which entirely sup- 8 PAGES A THOUGHT The ideal life is in our blood' and never will be still. Sad wi.! be the day for any man when he becomes con tented with the thoughts ho is think ing and the deeds he is doing,—where there is not forever heating ar the doors of his soul some great desire to •do something larger, which he know’s that he w’as meant and .nade to do.—- Phillip Brooks. ports the town. It is a battle between the operators of the mill and the workers. Five months ago, workers at the mill went on strike as a result of a wage disagreement. They are still out more than 1,000 of them and the jn club projects. mill is entirely inactive, save for a handful of craftsmen who failed to join the strikers’ movement. There were approximately 5,000 .u w u • wu XT 1 j. u -L » -I pany that he is the winner from Lau- persons in Newmarket w'hen the t , - , .. Four H Club Boy Wins Scholarship Each year the Chilean Nitrate of Soda Educational Bureau, offers a scholarship to the club boy in each county who produces the highest yield of com on his club project. This schol arship is for the short course given at Clenison college each year for one week for the boys doing outstanding Sammie Drake, sixteen years old, son of John Drake, Waterloo, has been notified by the Chilean Nitrate com- Wg'auTThere' arTie'sV tha; ’2';000 he« ! • S»mmia has beau a club boy for several years, qoing outstand ing w’ork ever since his enrollment. today. Residents are moving daily to other cities. Two of the town’s score „ , . , . • f . . i. k • 1 He has won the scholarship the past of stores ha’.e gone out of business. L . ^ , rri. 4.1. _4. j • • two years on com production. Last Three other are reported in serious' . < f , J... u- u year he selected an acre of corn, THE CALL QF^THE -OUTsflOORR ^^es- Tlic BVy 'stouftrC^mR FSre‘girls'5''‘^^ ■ and other''exponents of tlie out^ol^ doors are now enjoying-benefits of-^‘thout a sight of let-up, the town of life in the open. They see the things of the world in a new’ light and under stand nature better. They meet friends in the same cause, swap stories and form congenial companionships. Ev ery student of the big out-doors gets new object lessons, makes new re solves and forms new links of char acter with the day of sunshine. Sunshine is the test of summer Gradually as the-atrike goes on Newmarket—one of the oldest towns in the United States—is disappearing before the very eyes of its populace. The trouble struck the. ordinarily peaceful town last January, when mill managers and a handful of girl em ployees clashed over wages. A ation families, who were living in houses an acre planting this acrc::in..the Dortthitr iga jriety, in five and one-hal^to six foot rows, fertilizing this cbm with 10-4-4 fertilizer, and top dressing with ^00 pounds of nitrate of soda. The total cost of the acre was $30.20, yielding 83 bushels of corn. Valuing his corn and roughage at market price, the to tal value of his crop was $124.50, or a net profit of $94.30. Sammie has noti- ’ Oats Demonstration On May 23rd a field meeting was held on the farm of E. E. Simpson, Ware Shoals, Poplar Springs section, for the purpose of showing the result of a top dressing demonstration con ducted by Mr. Simpson. At this meet ing a guessing contest was held, $5.00 being offered for guessing the near est yield of the checked plot and the five acres that was top dressed. This $5.00 prize was divided into a $3.00 and a $2.50 prize. The bats, sown by Mr. Simpson was the Fulghrum va riety. These oats were drilled with two rows to the cotton middle, the last part of October, 1928. The. stands were only fair. No fertilizer was used at the time the oats were planted. On March 7th and 15th these oats were top dressed with nitrate of soda at the rate of 75 pounds per acre at each! application. The oats were harvested' on June 6th and threshed June 18th and 19th. A checked plot was left, 1-10 * aerev wher»T<>c> ton dmssing was twed.j^ k BLACK FLAG I^OWDER KILLS BUGS ©MM.B.r.C*. Roaches, ants, bedbugs, fleas, flies, mosquitoes, moths, etc. Black Flag kills—quickly, surely! It’s the deadliest insect* killer made.(Packed in glass, it keeps its strength). 15 cents, and up. Black Flag also comas In liquid form ThisN checked plot produced at the fr' Irate of 5 bushels of oats per acre. On'' I the 5 acres where 175 pounds of ni- I trate of soda was used as top dress ing the yield of oats was 21 2-10!! bushels. I time. It ripens the grain and fruit 1 corporation that they V. -11 the county agent s office that he short time ago the mill corpor- . . . 4.. ,4. , .. .. expects to attend this short course at served notice on more than 100 _ ,1 o.u 4. no4.v Clemson on July 8th to 13th. Clemson college gives a scholarship and gives strengrth to the camper. All quit the property jto four club boys who do outstanding nature has a smiling face when the sun causes the plants to grow, the flowers to open and the fruits to ma ture. Sunshine induces youth to get out, amid the fields and forests, drink in the pure air and enjoy the health fulness of exercise in the open. There are profits in sunshine that one does not always reckon on when planning an outing in the open. It creates beauty and attractiveness and thereby adds to .efficiency and use fulness. It helps in fitting one for fu- That precipitated an added reason work each year; also a scholarship is We hear a great deal about the il- ture work and inculcates a desire, for i framers of our Constitution FAITH OF OUR FATHERS it is a mere fabrication, based on su perstition and ignorance! If that be true, then, why not ^0 away with the keeping young in order to continue en- their credit, by the way. joying the playfields of youth. Yes, They must have been good men. 1^ there are countless benefits to be de- cannot believe they were ignorant, j document, rived from mingling with the all-out-' tricky or designing; the destiny of a! To trust in a supreme being doqs not Prof. F. W. Taylor, Laurens, won first prize with four bushels on check ed plot, and 20 bushels average on the five acres. N. B. Woods, Ware Shoals, won second prize with 4 bushels per acre on the checked plot, and 17 1-2 bushels on the five acres. Cotton had been on this land for 1927 and 1928, the cotton being ferti lized with 300 pounds of 8-3-3 ferti lizer per acre. There has never been any cover crop turned under on this soil. DRS. SMITH & SMITH Optometrists SPECIALISTS Eyes Examined Glasses Prescribed 16 West Main Street Pbone 101 Laboratory for Prompt Repair Service j | ^ Clinton. S. C. SATURDAY ONLY With each can of Talcum Powder pur chased here Saturday, we will give one can absolutely FREE. Salad Bowls 25c Value, Saturday Only- lOc Come Saturday — while the supply lasts. WATCH OUR WINDOWS FOR REAL BARGAINS Rose's 5,10 & 25c Store doors. VALUE OF SOUTH CAROLINA CROPS Federal agricultural statisticians re port that the value of fourteen South i great nation depended on their integ-ifit into the ideas of some of out peo- jrity of purpose—their wisdom of ac- [ple. They can’t bear to admit their de- tion. They lived at a time when, “an; pendence on any higher power. Lis- fen, now: They will, in time, come,to a defiance of all law; if we can’t trust appeal to arms, and to the Lord of hosts,” was all that was left for them. in a just God, as our forefathers did, shall we put our trust in Man? Men who today “swear by” the sacred Con stitution — who preach adherence to One of their permanent creations ci‘rolinrcyo'p5Tn’i92Vwas'Vl52l854.-i*^^^ metallic money-i hijMy eesen- 000 against $126,316,300 in 1926 and!'I* "tfiium in My .ort of commer- ol livestock on farms $46,139,000 ini'"*' '*■»"“''■»"• These men caused to 1927 ac-ainst $41 251 000 in 1926 ' stamped deep into the precious ^ the sacred document, pedile the prop- Crops and livestock in this state in!™"*'’ God We Trust.” I do not aganda of the very people who seek ' aoubt the absolute sincerity of the declaration. I believe they were right, not wrong. We are supposed to be living today, in a stage of great enlightenment— 1927 were valued at a total of $19^8,- 957,000 against $167,567,300 in 1926. Spartanburg, the report indicated, led in value of fourteen crops, $8,842,- 213, with Anderson second, $8,230,503, and Orangeburg third, $7,665,636. The |supermen. We Me dating ' rapidly from the old ways. In this par- to overthrow it! To proclaim a trust in God when we don’t do anything of the kind—if not hypocrisy it’s just plain lying! Fortunately for our beloved coun try, the people who live in the “Faith I SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRONICLE [ The Clinton Chronicle—SI.50 a Year III Use The South Carolina iodine fourteen crops include cotton, com, oats, wheat, rye, hay, cowpeas, soy ■beans, white potatoes, sweet potatoes, peanuts, tobacco, sugar cane and sor ghum and fruits. By crop values in 1927 were: Cotton $71,530,282 Cotton seed 12,788,678 Corn 22,904,000 Oats 7,745,000 j Wheat 1337,600 of our Fathers,” are in the inajority. ticular and highly-important declara- j I can’t help shuddering at the growth tion of our forefathers, some of us and publi^Sv of the tribe who don’t rush into print with the assertion that'believe in an}rthing but themselves! Label On Your Stationery Rye 204,750 Hay and velvet beans 6,415,000 Cowpeas 1,701,000 Soy beans .... 152,000 White potatoes 5,764,000 Sweet potatoes ... .... 4,240,000 Peanuts 315,425 Tobacco 15,483,000 Sugar cane 882.000 Sorghum 1,384,500 Fruit .... 1,722,000 Truck 8,925,000 'The fruit included: Apples, $635,- 000; grapes, $77,000; peaches, $922,- 000; pears, $88,000, Truck (for ship ping) included: Asparagus, $1,283,000; snap beans, $343,000; cabbage (kraut included), $909,000; cantaloupes, $66,- •000; cucumbers, $871,000; lettuce, $251,000; green peas, $98,000; early white potatoes, $3,926,000; spinach, $139,000; strawberries, $97,000; to matoes, $248,000; watermelons, $712,- 000. These statistics reflect the tendency of farmers to diversify. It is in the farmers’ interest to produce several crops and not stake the year’s income on a single crop. The average Caro linian is likely surprised that the 1927 asp.'iragus value was $1,283,000; sugar cane and sorghum f^r -syrup, $2,266,- 500. South Carolina is adapted to the raising of many soi’ts of vegetables and fruits. If a fanner depends on a single crop, it is because he so elects', not becr.u.->e hi? acres will not yield other crop". Considering the huge quantitic.s of corn, oats and syrup brougln from di.s.ant states, Carolina ’ farmers are neglecting a great op- Guideposts to dy Bernarr Mdcfddden BATHS—INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL . portunity. It is well known t!»it Geor gia, Florida and 'Alabama produce much, of the .syrups sold in South Car olina stores. This slate can be self-sustaining if its farmers so will, and larger crops in wider variety will keep wdthin the Like many old sayings, “cleanliness is indeed next to Godliness,” is well founded in truth, although in the six teenth century when John Wesley, I founder of the Methodist Church, j spoke those words in one of his ser- , mons, a bath was considered extreme- ' ly foppish and a bath-tub a needless luxury. In many countries that idea still exists, especially in those locali ties where water, even for drinking, is at a premium. It is hard frr us, who simply have to turn on a faucet and clear, pure water gushes forth^ to imagine a sit uation of that kind. And yet we—with billions of gallons of bathing and drinking water constantly at our dis posal—do not take advantage of such good fortune. Many people, of course, bathe because they have a natural ab- j horrence of dirt and because a bath is ' refreshing. Too few, however, realize what a salient factor water is in main- ; taining and promoting general good i health. js y ! The truth^s thit bathing is an ab solute necessity. It is a powerful ene my of disease and a prolonger of life. And it modus operand! is simple and convincing. The daily bath keeps the pores free from clogging anl permits them to throw off impurities the system has a(cunuil;i*cd in going about the busi ness r>f life. The pores must also ; biojulic . and in order to do this they .n-j.st ii kepi clear, active and clastic. from the disease prevention insured by ba.hing, the use of both hot and cold water has many curative effects that intelligent people over look. A hot bath relaxes the tissues and blood vessels and relieves conges tion. A cold batn speeds up circula tion and tones up the tissues and mus cles in general, while the sitz bath, hot or told, provides an excellent rtieans of relieving many internal weaknesses and disorders to which both sexes are subject. Then there is the internal bath which is equally, if not still more im portant. There are people who make a prac tice of taking a physic every so often not the natural physic such as fruit juices, quantities of w'ater, etc., but powerful purgatives that irritate the membranes and do' not begin to cleanse. They call this “a good clean ing oat.” Such -a procedure is nearly always followed by a period of con stipation. As against this bad habit we have the more simple, cleanly and hygienic process of flushing out the bowels v.'ith warm 'w’ater. (Do not confuse this with the enema taken to relieve constipation. That kind of enema should be taken only in case of an emergency. If you are a sufferer of '•hronic constipation you need an im- iftediate and radical change of diet.) Hut the enema-bath is only part of t^be interna! bath. There is the entire iig'e,"tive tract that needs .washing ft this is best acc'implished through '>rinki;(g quantiiies of water after .a short period of fasting.. Much ill health coul 1 be avoided if the average ’‘nd'vidua! would remember to drink 'ix g’asses of Avater a day; more is still better. Water never hurt anyone —inside or out. Help advertise "the advantages South Carolina Pro- ^ duce has over that grown in other sections of the coun try. Much advantage is expected to come to our agricul tural industry by the proper exploiting of the iodine content in our food products. 1 There is no more helpful way business enterprise generally in this section can come to the aid of the agri cultural interests than to join in the movement to push South Carolina Food Crops by advertising this iodine content on their stationery. We have in ^tock a supply of Letter Stationery bear ing this Iodine Label neatly lithographed in four colors, and are prepared to render prompt service on all or ders. In using this label on your stationery, you are mak ing a contribution to our country’s basic industry at very little extra cost. SAMPLES GLADLY FURNISHED PUBLISHERS - PRINTERS — STATIONERS 4 CLINTON, S. C. PHONE 74 liliiliiiiillllliililiillllilliilliiiiilliil.