The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, July 04, 1929, Image 2
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PAGE TW O
THE CLINTON CHRONICI.E, CLINTON. S. C.
THURSDAY, JULY 4, 1929
III!IHl!:iBlill
l!'IB 1■''!l■llll■ll!l■l!ll■i me. Wilt resistant variety: Louisiana
Farm Demonstration
Notes
C. B. Cannon, County Agent
Red, Marble and Norton.
Kll
For Plantings July 15th to Aug. Ist
Collards—(plants) Cleoi^a.
Cabbage—(plants) Succession, Late
B!'I!B!'I:BI:!I9ImII ^ Flat' Dutch. ,
Vegetable. To Plant In Home ^ “ <»'•"?»). ' .S®*''
r*rdpn^ Blanching early, Giant Pascal late.
Cucumbers—Improved White Spine,
Emerald (pickling), and White Bush.
Squash — Giant Summer Crooked
Neck, Extra Early Purple Top.
Turnips — Yellow Aberdeen and
During the hot summer and late fall i
most people neglect their gardens
from the stanJpoint of producing veg
etables for their home. The 1st to |
loth of July the following vegetables
■itaaiKa: s. isi'b-!B'
with leading varieties are listed be- '^''ite Egg, Improved Purple Top
low;, [(rutabaga).
Irish Potatoes—Lookout Mountain, j'
(r
Irish Cobblers (from cold storage).
Corn — Stonewall Evergreen,
Country Gentleman.
Beans: (Snap bush) Bountiful an’
late Refugee.
Tomatoes: (plants) Stone and Ac-
Home Demonstration
Notes
Miss Mary Shaw Gilliam, Agent
!lliBlt»iiS(«i:BillB;:tBnBI':!:Bi;Bli;Bi:!iBlilB
1 he Short Course As a 4-H Club
Girl Saw It
On Thursday, the 13th of June, six
happy Laurens county 4-H club girls
met in Laurens to go to Winthrop for
the short course. I was among the
fortunate six td receive this trip.
Mr. R'ddle and Mr. Bums, two very
reliable and efficient taxi drivers, car
ried us over to Winthrop. We arrived
at 4:30 P. M. This' was my first trip
to Winthrop and as those beautiful
will be proud qf. This can only ccme
through the co-operation of every
farm woman in this county. Then let
us all back Miss Gilliam in this work,
in order that our county may stand
out.
A Mrs. Pluss Brown.
Sprays To Use
If you have worm, boring^into your'
came into view I was filled
YOUR GAME
Can Be No Better
Than Your Ball
Try Pennsylvania Vacuum
Cup Balls and see how much it
will improve—75 cts.
Jeanette and
onds—50 cts.
Kro-Flite sec-
Tennis Balls
Pennsylvania hermetically sealed
sealed tennis balls—-guaranteed
perfect—3 for $1.75.
Sadler-Owens
Pharmacy
Corner at Union Station
Phones 377 and 400
tomatoes and the fruit rotting, vines
showing blight, or leaf spots, I would
advise spraying thoroughly with the
following spray:
3-4 ounce of calciumarsenate, 1 1-2
ounces builders’ lime, 6 to 8 teaspoons
Bordeaux' mixture per gallon, and 3
gallons water.
For watermelons that show burn
ing of leaves near the base,of the
plant a disease known as anthrag-
nose, spray thoroughly with Bordeaux
mixture, using 6 to 8 teaspoonfuls
per gallon. Begin spraying melon
vines when they begin to run and
spray every 10 days until the melons
are three-fourths gprown.
Plant Lice: Spray with nicotine sul
phate, using 1 tablesponful per gallon
of water and spray the plant thor-
iittU Pjftnt lice^cm
veyetSiurea^Bmtr“TIT"
not be poisoned with arsenate of lead,
but with nicotine sulphate which may
be bought at any drug store. This will
with awe. Our state college for girls
is a beautiful place.
The first thing we did was to regis
ter, then we were shown to our rooms,
where we rested until ^ supper. That
eveni/jg we saw Mary Pickfrod in “My
Best Girl.”
On the 14 th our real work started,
and you have heard being^as busy as
bees, well, that is just what we girls
were for one week. Miss Gilliam, our
agent, had'gone ahead to Rock Hill,
so she made us feel very much al
home and introiuced us to many new
girls. Soon we were one big family.
The women who went for this short
course were real mothers to us and I
want to thank them for their kind
thoughtfulness.
I hardly know how to tell of the
^ tkinaa^ wfc Mias RijgirS.
gave, an iMM«Sing^a11f^Tr**The
Girl’s Wardrobe.” We learned from
Marketing Specialist Visits the
Laurens Curb Market
Miss Jane Ketchen, marketing spec-
■alist from Winthrop college, met with
the club market in Laurens Saturday
morning. Her chief aim was to set
forth the standards of organization
of club markets unior the supervision
cf home demonstration work. She also
gave helpful suggestions as to how to
improve and enlavge the market.
I feel that the women of this coun
ty have done an excellent piece of
work in this club market for the past
three years carrying on the market
without a leader. We hope to re-or
ganize this club within the next few
weeks, and would like to hear from
.my one in the county who would be
interested in selling produce* through
the market. It is the aim of the mar
ket to give to the people of Laurens
fresh, and canned vegetables, dairy
products, and poultry products at
market prices. The market is open
from 7:30 until 10 o’clock every Sat
urday morning.
Mary Shaw Gilliam.
her just how to buy clothes so as to
have suitable dresses for every oc-
control the lice if eprmyuiK ii JoM | After Miss Biggs told us how
*1 • e.-n J J to buy, we went to another lecture on
The boll weevil is still do^ d«n- 'p , Groomed Girl," by Dr.
age m the county and I find that
squares are beginning to drop from
BLEASE IN FAVOR
OF ORGANIZATION
•sTsmo" wtL?
c?*S3tN^
^ women who want
and do - without fatlggc/
Nunn Bush
ANKLE FASHIONED OXFORDS
FOR WELL DRESSED MEN
the effects of the puncture. Sweetened
bought. I enjoyed very much “The
poison continues to be uaed frwly, and ^.^(ch Miss Eit Dye" demonstration.
I would advise you to use it withm
the next few days if you expect to get
the best advantage, or results from
this mixture. Cotton is growing so
fast that within the next few days
In thfs we were taught how to dye
clothes successfully. In other words
we learned how to make a brand new
•dress from an old one.”
„ , . . . a -1, u au Next we saw on our programs “A
Caleiuro arsenate dnrt will, be the. ^g,” so of course we
only satisfactory method of w^vl I
control. Quite a bit of du^ng ^ be ^8 we know how
carried on next week. Splendid re
sults have been obtained by the use of
poisoning this year.
6 6 6
is a Prescription for’
Colds, Grippe, Flu, Den^roe,
Bilious Fever and Malaria
It is the* most speedy remedy known
IIOU
We Wsmh Your Clothes Cleaner
It is nothing but natural that, with our modern machin
ery, scientifically constructed for the purpose of washing
delicate fabrics that we can and do wash your clothes
cleaner than they can be washed by hand.
LET US DO YOUR FAMILY WASH
BUCHANAN’S LAUNDRY
PHONE 29
to make beautiful paper belts. Then
in the study of industrial arts we
ma 'e attractive little foot-stools,
which we were allowed to bring home
with us.
I visited the museum, went on the
art tour, and heard nature talks, all
of which proved very interesting,
i Then, too, I found the hours of swim
ming and recreation very pleasant.
Miss Gilliam, ever thoughtful of our
interest and pleasure, carried us for
avisit to the city of Rock Hill, where
‘ we again enjoyed the movies.
But I believe I enjoyed most of all
the meeting and mingling with thp
two hundred and fifty girls from all
over the state of South Carolina. That
alone was indeed worth the trip.
On Friday morning we looked out
to see Mr. Bums and Mr. Riddle ready
to bring us home. We arrived in Lau
rens about 2:30 P. M. We thank Mr.
Cannon who helped'to make our trip
possible, also Miss Gilliam, who kindly
directed and cared for us while at
Winthrop.
I am sure we all want to remember
the farewell words of the editors of
the Palmetto Short Course* Daily
News: “There is nothing finer than
being able to work and live together
happily and profitably.”
Katherine Langrston.
DO ¥OU SEEK
LOW- P?13SES?
Rogers Storef offer you greatest of food values —not
spasmodically—not just week-ends”— but every day
in the week. Constant, Consistent Savings for you.
prlcat effeslivo Vrlfay and fatnrtlay, Jwij S
Tells Mill Workers To Run Own Af
fairs In Speech At Anderson.
To Run for Senate In 1930.
Anderson, June 29.—Cole L. Blease,
South Carolina’s junior U. S. senator,
told Anderson mill workers, at a
meeting last night, that he was in fa
vor of ' any organization of labor
among cotton mill operatives in the
state.
The senator said he was “heartily in
favor” of any “legal” organization of
the cotton mill people in the state, but
he did not favor those organizers
preaching lawlessness, communism or
1. W. W. ism. He was against “any
Yankee trash running around down
here stirring up devilment,” Senator
Blease declared.
“I would be a traitor to the mill op
eratives of my state,” he shouted,
“not to call their attention to the dan
gers of communism, that places all la
borers, white or black, on the same
equality. You should organize your
selves, among yourselves. You can get
consideration at the hands of manu
facturers without having to send up
North to get a committee to go in
and talk with the officials.”
He opposed the Whettler resolution
in the senate to investigate textile
mill condition. Senator Blease said,
“because it was an attempt to bring
a group of senators from states that
never owned cotton mills into the
South for the sole purpose of holding
up this section to the ridicule and con
tempt of the nation and to drive out
what industries we have and prevent
others from coming.’*
“I am in favor of an investigation
if it is conducted by the department
of labor or the department of justice,
but I will never vote for a senatorial
investigation of mill conditions,” he
added.
Senator Blease said he would be a
candidate for re-election to the Unit
ed States senate next year.
Blakely Bros. Company
J^linton’s %glusive Shoe Store”-
Hight Lights On the State
Short Course
I regret that every woman in Lau
rens county could not enjoy the privi
lege I have just experienced—a trip
>*'i
WH AT DO
P. S. JEANES
DO?
if, /d L .
- A-
e)*tron^ly made to support
i-.ivy people ... yet so flexihlt
trat ic responds to the uvight
of d child ... Av AuuMacc ef
sound sleep
.ifi
HE Ace Oen Coil Spring k t^‘* finest spring of
its type that it is possible to produce. It contains
mere ceils than most springs—and every coil is made
. el
of specially tempered steel to assure just the ri^t
rcsilietKy. Small “governor” springs prevent ail side®
sway. There can be no rocking or tilting. The frame
is of rigid steel. Top is finished perfectly smooth.
There is no other spring that offers so many advantages
at anywhere near its low price.
WILKES & CO
Clinton, S. C.—Laurens, S. C.
MILK
. .ST, CHARLES'EVV.PORATED
Tall
Cans
Table
5C
Pacliciges
19*
LAED
BEST COMPOUJ.'D
Bdk
Pound
Diamond Matches 3 pS.. 10^
POST TOASTIES OR KELLOQQS
Corn Flakes 7k^
Wesson (HI
PINT
CAN
25*
ALL POPULAR FLAVORS
JELL-O 3 25^
ISmowTi Rice Flakes
CIRCUS OR EVIDENCE
FLOUR
Bag
Tetley’s Tea
i'.< LB.
FKG.
, BEST AMERICAN
to the short course at Winthrop. Due
to not being organized in .cUib workj^S
the delegates from our county could
not participate in the votings in the
Council meetings. However, we did re
ceive an inspiration and hope that
next year we may climb up among the
other counties in the state.
The most unusual feature about the
program was it’s variety and broad
ness. The general theme was “The
Well-Dressed Family, about which was
centered health, food, clothing, general
appearance, and recreation. We found
that no family could be well-dressed if
the health of every individual was
not good. Since good health comes as
a result of proper diet plenty of rec
reation and well-balanced meals must
be hadr
Another asset in being well-dressed
is the proper care of the hair, nails,
and skin. With all these carefully
guarded then the individual must se
lect clothing suitable to the individ
ual in line, color and cost. This
brought us to the climax where each ■ ^
woman cot and fitted a cotton dress
for herself. Each of the two hundred j ^5
and fifty women used the same pat
tern ,bat when they were finished so
much originality had been used that
no two were alike. The dresses proved
very reasonable, the entire cost being
one dollar.
^ There were specialists in each of
these various lines, from big corpor
ations who had carefully studied the
subject and were able to give out val-
uable information. I do not feel that ^
the actual value of my trip could be
estinmted from a money standpoint, ^5
because I feel that the contact with
such fine woman from over the state,
the new ideas developed, and the large
amount of information given has an
inestimable value.
I hope that next year Laurens
county, through her organization, can
carry to Winthrop a report that we
A STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF THE
I FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF CLINTON, S. C. I
Condensed from Report to the Comptroller of the Currency
AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS JUNE 29, 1929
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts $392,753.46
Overdrafts NONE
U. S. Bonds 113,150.00
Other Stocks and Bonds 28,570.00
Banking House, Fur. and Fix 13,975.00
Other Real Estate 70,589.09
Cash and Due from Banks 75,951.41
Due from U. S. Treasurer 5,000.00
Other Assets 9,101.71
= TOTAL $709,090.67
LIABILITIES
Capital Stock $100,000.00
Surplus 50,000.00
Undivided Profits 18,017.48
Circulation 100,000.00
DEPOSITS .... 438,910.37
Due to Banks 2,162.82
Bills Payable NONE
Re-Discounts NONE
TOTAL „.$709,090.67
S'
The strength of this bank is shown by the above statement which
gives our resources and liabilities. Our strength and experience is here
for your protection, and with it goes a safe banking service now being en
joyed by our large family of customers.
We offer our services to the people of Clintdn and this community and
solicit your continued confidence, good will and patronage.
The First National Bank
CLINTON, S. C.
u.