The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, November 28, 1929, Image 5

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■i:- THUBSPAY, nQiifBaaeatag. i»29 THB'CIiirroN CHR0NitXS;~a3BnK>N. & c 1^ -t+ I ♦ I I ♦ : i I t ♦ i i < > o o o <► i> <> o o o <» <• o o < * o o o O I ► o o o o FR F F t IL Am A-^.' JLU • $40 Hamilton-Beach Electric V^um Cleaner With every 2^ cash purchase, we will issue a coupon entitling you to a chance of winning this splendid vac uum cleaner. TO BE GIV^ AWAY ABSOLUTE LY FREE, ON THE EVENING OF DEC. 24th, TO THE ONE HOLDING THE LUCKY COUPON. p Personal /Aention ^ ▼ I ♦ ♦ t ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ X ♦ ♦ ♦ o (> o o ♦ ♦ <► o o O o ,o o o <► o o o o o o ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ o Our Thanksgiving People today have much more for which to return thanks than had our Pilgrim Fathers. This institution appreciates the patron age of its customers at all times. But it wishes especially at-this time to express gratitude and thanks to those who have helped build up this organization for the past 43 years through their business trans actions. May we continue to serve you in the fu ture? M. $. Bailey £ Son i BANitERS OLDEST STRONGEST ' J - Thanksgivin; .We have very good reasons to be thankful. The cordial welcome ex tended our bank by the people of Clinton and contiguous territory— stands out as one of our principal reasons for gratitude. We arje thankful for the confidence our patrons have reposed in us, and we shall continue to strive to merit that confidence as— THE BANK OF PERSONAL SERVICE^’ « 4 ♦ ♦ <1 i> o o < • Mrs. J. I. Copeland is visiting in’ Durham, N. €., the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Farr. Miss Agatha Bailey of Chester, is spending the Thanksgiving holidays with her parents, Dr. and Mrs. T. L. W. Bailey. Rev. John MeSween spent the week-1 end in Dillon where he occupied the • pulpit of the Presbyterian church on' Sunday. i Mrs. Vv’. S. Bean is visiting in rsew- berry as the guest of her daughter, Mrs. D. W. A. Neville. ! Misses Alene Newsom and Anna' Bell Hudson left yesterday ioi their hemes at Hartsville and McColl to spend the Thanksgiving holidays. Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Shannon and baby, sent the week-end in Newberry as the gdests of the latter’s mother, Mrs. R. H. Swittenburg. Mrs. C. L. Rounds has returned from an exetnded visit to her sister in Kansas City, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. Teague Harris are spending today at Clemson college at tending the Clemson-Furman football game. Mrs. E. Mood Smith has returned from Columbia where she visited her sister, Mrs. J. L. Harvey. Miss Lora Montjoy of Rembert, is spending Thanksgiving with her mother, Mrs. W. P. Montjoy. Miss Marie McLean left yesterday for her home in Aiken to spend the Thanksgiving holidays with her par ents. Miss Polly Elrod is spending the Thanksgiving holidays with her par ents in Greenville. Rev. A. J. Bowling is at home from Colupibia where he attended the an nual meeting of the Upper South Carolina conference. ; Dr. and Mrs. E. Mood Smith are spending today and Friday in Char- loltte with their daughter, Mrs. Eu^ gene Timmerman. Rev. 0. M. Abney has returned from Columbia where he attended the meeting of the Upper South Carolina conference. Mr. and Mrs. P. B. Bailey have moved to the city from their country residence near here and are making their home with their daughter, Mrs. Arthur P. Little, on North Broadway. Friends of Officer L. S. Bagv^ell will be glad to know that he has re turned from Savannah where he has been a patient in the Marine hospital for several weeks past. Mr. and Mrs. T. 0. McKeown of Cornwall, Miss Nannelle Blalcck of York, and William Blalock of Ker shaw, are spending Thanksgiving with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Bla lock. V. Parks Adair will return today from St. Louis, Mo., where he has been spending several months. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn r,uller are spending Thanksgiving at Clemson college as the guests of the latter’s mother. Mrs. A. M. Copeland is at heme from a visit to relatives ia Clio and ilartsville. Misses Azils Livingston, Gladys Stillwell and Lily Mae Werts are spending Thanksgiving with their parents at Silverstreet. Miss Eunice Robertson loft yester day for her home in Liberty to spend the Thanksgiving holidays. . Dr. L, R. Lynn spent the week-end in Atlanta and spoke over s.aiioh tVSB in the afternoon in the interest of the orphanage. Mr. and Mrs. Allan F. Lido and children of Elloree, are the Th'xnks- giving guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Stutts. Miss Marion Copeland spent • the week-end in Newberry as *he giitst of her sister, Mrs. M. C. Deady. Misses Ansie Kirven and Lucy Burns are spending the Thanksgivir.<r h;-];- days at their homes in Sumter. Mrs. E. G. Fuller is sper.c rj; Thanksgiving in Charlotte as the gUcSt tf her dauirhter, Mrs. F. R. Gaines. Miss Lillian Quinn of Concord, N. C.ris the guest of her sister,-Mrs. W. B. Tribble. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Flanagan of Hendersonville, N. C., arp the guests today of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Plaxico. Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Baldwin and children, are spending Thanksgiving in Due West as the guests of relatives. Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Neal are spend ing Thanksgiving with relatives in Shelby, N. C. The friends of Geo. T. Speake will regret to know that he continues ill at his home on South Broadway. Miss Benita Boozer is spending sev eral days in Newberry as the guest of her pother. ' Miss Elizabeth Dowling left yester day for her home in Norway to spend the Thanksgiving holidays. Mr. and Mrs, H. R. Phillips and children of Spartanburg, and Mr. and Mrs. W. G. King and ^mily of Ly man, are .spending Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs. B. L. King, i Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Pitts h%v§ as j their Tlianksgiving guests Mr. and I Mrs. S. E. Evans of Laurinburg, N. C., Misses Emmie Pitts, Frances Hollo man and Helen Satcher, all of Seneca. Rev. and Mrs* Edward Long, and Mrs. T. L. W. Bailey, spent Saturday at, Mt. Pleasant Baptist church near Laurens, attending the quarterly [ meeting of the Third division of the Laurens County W. M. U. Mr. and Mrs. A. O’Daniel left yes terday for Rockingham and Winston- Salem, N. C., to spend Thanksgiving and tomorrow with their daughters. Misses Frances and Clara Louise O’Daniel. Mr. and Mrs. Crawford Clapp have j as their Thanksgiving and week-end j guests, Milton Clapp of Salisbury, N. ! C., Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Bowen and ^little daughter of Gastonia, Mr. and Mrs. Win, Lomax and family of Greenwood, and Miss Nell Clapp of the University. Did You Ever Stop To Think? » < I Now MiOions More Stop ‘‘Dosing’' CoMs Better External Treatment Wina Mew Users All Orer tkc WorM By Edson R. Waite W. D. Little, publisher of the Ada (Oklahoma) News, says: That the creative instinct, or the in ward urge to build, is the strongest human impulse. The child builds his toy and wants all his friends to see it. The business man is glad to show the home, the business, the list of cus tomers he has rnade by his own ef forts. The mother’s greatest pride is in her offspring, ♦^^he thing to which she has given life itself. Every normal person wants to leave behind, when he passes on, some mon ument by which- future generations will judge him. A great building, a giant business, a new oil field, an im proved farm or ranch, love in the hearts of those with whom he comes into contact. Shakespeare was wrong when he said that only evil lives after us. The good that men do constitute the only worth while monument. To build—that is the great task of all of u». Build houses, build ^arms, build businesses, build character, build human lives. The urge to build is what makes ad vertising so Attractive. A generation ago it required a lifetime for a man to build a great business. With the as sistance of newspaper advertising, one can now build a business to the same dimensions within a year or even a shorter time. There is no longer any reason for a meritorious product not being a success from the start. Adver tising is the direct route to greater building power. The world has much in store for the man who has a vision of service and is willing to spend money to let the world know what kind of service he can render. He can build trul.. and quickly. 1 o ^♦♦4 I Every year since the introduction of Vicks VapoRub, more and more people have given up the old-fash ioned way of “dosing” colds and turned to this modem external method. ’Today, the whole trend of medical practice is away from need less “do^.” Uothers of young children espe cially appreciate Vicdgi because there’s nothing to swaUow, and, of course, nothing to upset delicate itomarhe, lust rubbed on, its medt- eated vapors are released by the beat of tn4 body and Inllaled direef to the inflamed alr-passagee. At thej same time Ylcke acta through the detn liken poultice or plaJter.^diaw- ing out” tiiditnees and soreness. Tear by year, the fame of Vlckf haa qpmad from neighbor to neigh* bor and from state to state, until now it is used for the colds of adults as well as Children in over 60 coun^ tries. The ever-growing demand for this modem method of treating colds is shown In the familiar Vick slog^. Mad^ famous when Vicks reached ♦’17 MiUion Jars Used Yearly,” later raised to “21 Million,” these figures are again being changed, as there are now “Over 26 Million Jars Used Yearly”—^in the United States alone. James F. Harney Dies In Laurens Laurens, Nov, 20.—James F. Har ney, ^0, local manager of the National Utilities company of South Carolina, died Tuesday at his home on W. Main street after an illness of several weeks duration. Funeral services were held from the residence Wednesday morning at 11 o’clock and interment followed at the Laurens cemetery. The services were in charge of the Rev. J. R. T, Major, pastor of the*First Methodist church. Mr. Harney had been a resident of Laurens for about eighteen years and for many years was superintendent of the Reedy River and Sullivan Power company operated under the presi dency of former Senator N. B. Dial. 'When these properties were sold about two years ago Mr. Harney was appointed as local manager. ^ Mr. Harney was a native of ^Spar tanburg, a son of the late James D. Harney and Emily K. Lee Harney, He married Miss Willie Mae Childress of this city, who survives, together .with two yu^ng daughters, MaVy and Jane' Harney. He is also survived by one sis ter, Mrs. J. B. Ramsay cf Durham, N. C., and two brothers, T. L. Harney of Spartanburg, and W. S. Harney of Savannah, Ga. An aunt, Miss Nellie Lee of Spartanburg, also survives. : X ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ X I I ♦ X We Are Ttiankful FOR THE MANY FAVORS AND THE VERY GENEROUS PATRONAGE BE STOWED UPON US SINCE LAST THANKSGIVING DAY— We hope that each of you have received your share of the good things of 1929 and that prosperity, health and happiness wiD remain with you always. Accept our thanks for the increased bus iness you have given us. N Blakely’s TELEPHONES 136 AND 175 UNCLE SAM’S BANK IN CLINTON EXTENDS TO ALL Thanksgiung Greetings We hope that you will have an enjoyable day. Also—we want to thank you for your business of the past years. We are truly grateful for all our friends. OUR SERVICE MAKES FRIENDS First National Bank “Clinton’s Strongest Bank” Telephone No. 7 To Our Customers » We are thankful for your pat ronage during the past years and we wish for you a happy Thanksgiving Season. We assure you that your busi ness has been highly appreci- ' ated, and we promise continu ed faithful service and the best values obtainable in— « ‘‘GOOD THINGS TO EAT” % BALDWIN’S GROCERY “The Home of Good Things To Eat” Phones 99 and 100 X I I I i I I i t EASY TO TELL OUR DRIVERS iTl have no trouble in recognizing the men of our They are all outfitted in Blue Smts and Caps and to serve you at your bidding. You’ll have no trouble in recognizing^ the men of our force, ready Our drivers are different, and so is our Service. Buchanan’s ‘KLEANERS WHO KLEAX ” PHONE 28 Dry Cleaners and Steam Laundry n- *'■ - ■ ■ ■ S” ,v .