The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, September 11, 1919, Image 13
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LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE TkbtoU na
cum. Thera k only cm "Bnxno QaioiiM.
GROVE'S aifMtare oo the box. Me.
Hm Quinine Thni Dus Not Affect The Hee4
ud hotMhra effect. LAXA
TIVE BROMO QUININE (Tebieu) can be taken
by anyone withov
in the heal E. W
by anyone withoat causinl nervonaness or rintfps
ox. 30c.
1 siSnature oo box.
ATTENTION PARENTS
9 {
—i—■— , , , - . . t
Is your boy or girl going to any South Carolina
College or Prep School this Tall, as a pay student?
If so write us, we can save you money. Gi\e
the name of the school.
f •>
Carolina Farmer & Stockman
$ Exchange Hank Building
CHARLESTON. S. C.
What Do
P. S. JEANS
✓
^1
Do?
Experts or Theorists-
WWdi?
The packing industry is intri
cate, complex—far more so than
the railroads or the telegraph.
Every day multiplying needs
of society increase its problems
and multiplying responsibilities
demand more of it
Highly trained experts, spec-'
ialists of years’ experience,
thinkers and creative men, de
vote their lives, their energies,
their activities, to solving the
problems of the packing industry
and meeting its widening duties.
Swift & Company is not a few
dozen packing plants, a few
imndred branch houses,' a few
thousand refrigerator cars, and
a few million dollars of capi
tal, but an organization of such
men. It is the experience, in
telligence, initiative and activity
which operates this physical
equipment
Can this intelligence, this ex
perience, this initiative and cre
ative effort which handles this
business at a profit of only a
fraction of a cent per pound from
all sources, be fostered through
the intervention of political
theorists, however pure their
purposes? Or be replaced by
legislation? Does Congress really
think that it can?
L«t us send you s Swift “Dollar'’.
It will interest you.
Address Swift ft Company,
Union Stock Yards, Chicago, I1L
Swift & Company, U.S. A
Me. AvsftACe Amsmcah/
meet mr. Saving mamt.
Yoo Two oucmt to ’
Knew EACH OTM6R
OmnsR.
o Yes. i
Ypoft c ffANOFATHSR
V«RM WELL.
ilr
SUP
Loyal Amaricanal Gat Togethar on National War Savings Day.
WAYS OF EARNING MONEY
DURING SUMMER VACATION
Many Opportunities Opah to Children
Who Wish to Encourage Habits
of Thrift and Saving.
BEN FRANKLIN EARLY
LEARNED FRUGALITY
Groat American Examplar of Thrift
Knew Value of Regular and Sys-
•tamatio Saving For Future.
A great many questions about how
children may earn money in order to
purchase Thrift and War Savings
Stamps during tho summer vacation
period have come into the War Loan
Organization at Richmond, and It Is
to answer these inquiries that the
present article has been prepared.
The suburban or country child prob
ably has the best opportunities for
making money, though selling papers
and magazines, running errands end
doing chores offer several ways for
the city child to earn the where-wlth-
all for Thrift Stamps.
la the country there la first of all
the garden, and at this time growing
food stuffs should receive special at
tention. It la not too Isle to plant fall
crops which may ha marketed with
profit. Lettuce and radishes are
easily growh and always find good
- markets, esneniailv In the late eum-
mer and fall. There will probably be
more oTsome kinds of vegetables In
the garden than can be eaten or can
ned. These should be sold.
On almost every farm there la a time
when much of the fruit ripens at
once, and the problem of disposing of
it arises. Some of it is eaten, some
preserved. A quantity of It not in
frequently rots. This should be sold
if there le a market near enough, hut
if such is pot the case the children
can put it up and sell the canned »tuff H)tapitall8t By the mlddl# ^ ^
in the fall
Pigs, chickens, turkeys or rabbits
are easily raised in the summer vaca
tion, and all of them will bring in
large returns for the time and labor.
Berry picking is another way of mak
ing money that children should enjoy,
and this year there is a plentiful
crop.
Many mothers and fathers will be
glad to pay the children for t ing
care of the yard, cutting wood, run
ning errands or doing dally chores.
In fact there are so many ways of
earning money during the summer
that the list might be Indefinitely
lengthened. But of course the object
» , . ami par—-start saving today. Thrift
of any and all of these ways is not r a ‘ , ^
. , 7 - , —c—Stamps are an easy beginning and
simply to make money, but To make Biara ?“
save money; in other words,
enough to l>uy War Savings - Stamps
which will bring in four per cent In
terest, compounded quarterly.
Tou can do this, every boy and girl
In this big country.
A. B. C. OF IT
AGITATORS and
BOLSHEVIKI howl
CONTINUALLY,
DENOUNCING
EVERYTHING they
FIND in the
GOQD old System,
HANDED down to or
INTACT
JUST as our
KIND forefather*
LEFT it, to
MAKE the young
NATION
OPULENT and Free.
PROTECTOR of all t»
QUEST of Liberty.
RIGHT and Equality!
SMITE d >wn
THESE vile efforts to
UNDO oar Blessings!
VINDICATE AMERICA!
WAR SAVINGS STAM Ty S
EXTERMINATE “Reds!'*
YOU can help. Put
ZEST into your
WAR SAVINGS SOCIETY.
HOW ABOUT ITf
Someone is saving the money yen
waste. Who Is depositing your dol
lar*? Save them and deposit them
yomroelL
Sing a song of Saving* Stamps,
oi living’s high,
you counted all the things
’hem Savings Stamps will bay?
week they were penniless, and came to
him for loans to carry them over antil
payday. He would accept no Interest,
but each Saturday, on getting their
money they gave back to him what
they borrowed—only to repeat the
borrowing a day or two later.”
The secret of Franklin’s success
was systematic and persistent saving,
from the time-he first began to earn
money. And always having a savings
fund he was ever ready to grasp his
opportunities^ those of lending a
helping hand as well as those of self-
betterment.
Let Benjamin Franklin he your ex
well
the
ywn kaovaM •Mbs***, At*-]* 1
SOLO BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
in Id to 21 Day*
-LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN” is a specially-
prepared Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual
Constipation. It relieve* promptly but
should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 day*
to induce regular action. It Stimulates and
Regulates. Very Pleasant to Take. 60c
per bottle.
INSURANCE
t 0
“It is better to have a policy
and not need it,
Than to.need a policy
and not have it.”
SEE ME TODAY
W. C. BAILEY, Clinton, S. C.
Thrift is not stinginess. In fact it la
more often than not that the thrifty
man is the one who is truly generous.
Benjamin Franklin, our national sx-
emplar of thrift, was, from boyhood
pp. always liberal and unselfish. Rene
Bache, his great-great-grest grand
son, gives an Instance of this charac
teristic of his ancestor in a story he
tells:
‘‘The price of bread two centuries
ago was a penny a loaf. Thus it hap
pened that Benjamin Franklin, a boy
of seventeen, on arriving In Philadel
phia, was able to buy three loavee for
three-pence; ard with them he walked
up Market Street from the wharf,
holding one under each arm and eat
ing the third. An hour later he gave
two of them to a woman and her
child who had been fellow voyager*
up the Deleware.”
Rene Bache goes dn to say ef
Franklin: “Where his own expendi
tures were concerned he was always
frugal, saving what he could out of
his wages as printer, while hts fel
low-workers spent theirs as fast as
they got them, or faster. In this way
it came about that, while a mere
youngster in a printing office, he lent
them money every week.
“Though the earnings of moot of
them were greater than his, he was
pave the way to a certain future.
THRIFT ~
Without me no man has ever achiev
ed success nor has any nation ever
become great. I have been the bed
rock of every successful career, and
cornerstone of every fortune.
All the world knows me and moot
of the world heeds my warning.
The poor may have me aa wall as
the rich.
My power Is limitless, my applica
tion boundless.
He who possesses me has content
ment in the present and surety forth#
future.
I am of greater value than pearls,
rabies and diamonds.
Once you have me no man can take
me away.
I lift my possessor to high planes of
living, increase his earning power, and
bring to realization the hopes of hie
life. ^
I make a man well dressed,
housed and well fed
I Insure absolutely against
rainy day.
I drive want and doubt and care
away—— —— —
-f guarantee those who possess me
prosperity and success.
I have exalted those of low degree,
•and those of high degree have found
me a helpful friend.
To attain me you need ytot out no
•capital but personal effort, and on all
you Invest In me I guarantee divi
dends that last through life and af
ter.
I am as free as air. u
I am yours if .you wffl cake mf. ”*
I am THRIFT.
—
War Savings Stamps are belter than
money becaoaa they earn more money
Highest Price Paid for
Cotton Seed
• BEFORE SELLING SEE
EDGAR TODD
If you don’t want to sell
don’t list your land witli us.
151 Acres in 2 miles of Clinton, situated on road from Laurens to
Clinton. One four-room house, 2 tenant houses, good barn
and stables; fine hog pasture; about 100 acres in cultivation;
pTerity of timber to tuitthe place indefinitely,
156 Acres in about 2 miles of Clinton, known as E. W. Ferguson
place, about 85 acres in cultivation, situated on main road.
One seven-room house, situated in a lovely grove; 2 tenant
houses; plenty of wopd to run the place indefinitely.
65 1-2 Acres, in 1 1-2 miles of Clinton, aoout 35 acres in cultivation.
Four-room house; barn; well.
70 Acres, known as E. C. Briggs place. One tenant house; barn
and well.
70 Acres, known as C. M. Pool place; five room dwelling; barns,
/ stables, well.
211 Acres, known as Fred Johnson lands; One three-room house;
barn, 2 stories high, 2 stalls, shed on side, 12 x 20; 100
acres in cultivation; 30 acres in pasture; 60 acres in pines.
190 Acres, known as W. T. Tinsley place in 2 1-2 miles of Clinton,
2 tenant houses, barns, wells, etc.
246 Acres, known as the old Dick Blailock place, about 3 miles
from Clinton. Houses in good shape.
200 Acres, known as Thomas Simpson place. Bounded by D. W.
Mason, John H. Pitts and others. Houses fairly good.
13 Acres, part of it in the incorparte limits; 1 nine-room house
as good as new; 2 tenant houses in good shape; fine barn
and stable; 1 gin house; 3 seventy saw new gin outfit; steam
engine and boiler; corn mill and feed mill; 2 wells; water
and lights from city.
110 Acres, known as J. M. Smith lands.
152 Acres, known as George Boyd place; houses worth all we
ask for the lamb
~295 1-2 Acresv known as C. S. Lankford place, adjoining the old
Ren Anderson place, J. H. Syllivan and others, one 6-room
house, 2 barns, 2 tenant houses, 1 well. Place well watered.
1 House and Lot on Florida street, 5 rooms finished,. 4 rooms Up
stairs not finished; house almost new. Look at this before
you buy. It’s cheap; known as G. C. Johnson place.
1 House on Main street, 7 rooms; 1-2 acre of land;-nice barns,
stables and well, and known as the Dr. Wofford place. Going
at a big bargain.
1 1-2 acres, known as George M. Wright home place, situated on
' Calvert avenue. Price right.
206 Acres, known as the old Isaac Adair place, 2 miles from
Clinton, on Musgrove road.
NEWBERRY, S. C.
Three store rooms, 2 stories high with basement; pressed brick
and plate glass front with metal ceiling; up-to-date in every
respect. Situated on corner between post office and modern
six-story hank building. Right in the heart of Newberry
City, now occupied by Copeland Bros.
One 8-room house, owned by Johnson and Johnson, going at a
bargain.
249 Acres, situated on main road from Clinton to Newberry,
known as the Hix Connor place. In Newberry County.
LAURENS COUNTY.
300 Acres, known as W. M. Myers lands, going at a bargain.
50 Acres, known as W. M. Myers lands. Don’t fail to look at this.
60 Acres of lanr}, known as the old Calaway Todd^lace. One 7-
room house, barn, stables, cotton house, well. 45 acres in
cultivation, 1-4 mile from Longbranch school house.
44 Acres, known as J. L. Todd and T. B. Sumerell; houses almost
new. The land good.
58 Acres, known as the old Hannah place, bounded by L. D.
Hitch, Charlie Holland, W. A. Pool and Emmet Little.
400 Acres of land, known as the old Jeans place, the prop
erty of J. C. McMillan; 5 tenant houses, 1 barn, 5 stalls;
2 small barns, 1 well, 3 springs; about 100 acres in pasture.
Lot of good saw pines. Going cheap.
250 Acres, known as th^ old Dick Ferg uson place; 1 six-room
house; 1 tenant house; 2 small barns, 2 good wells.
Sumerel & Stone
Real Estate Dealers