The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, March 20, 1924, Image 7
1024 —
‘WV,
m LegKormk—Eggs from pure
S. C. Brown Leghorn*, $1.50
per setting of 15. S. G. Dillard,
—**■
Log Cutterr Wanted—$1.26 per thou
sand. Good timber. The Muriel
• Lumber Co., Inc., Clinton, S. C.
For Sale—100 cords pine wood on the
ground. 5,000 feet oak lumber
2*10x10 feet. Jack H. Davis. 27-2tc
Booms for Rent—Furnished or un
furnished, price reasonable. R. J.
McCrary. * 27-2tc
Ptr
For Sale—Hatching eggs from pure
Barred Rocks, Parks Strain,, they
win, they lay, they pay. Book your
orders now. S. A. Pitts.' Itc
■ r"'" .I. i
For Sale—Setting eggs from pure
bred English strain S. C. white leg
horn hens. $1.00 per setting. Mrs.
John H. Pitts, Clinton, S. C. 20-2tc
Wanted—500 hundred cords of dry
pine wood in 4-foot lengths. We
will haul it not over 25 miles and
on good roads. Box 224, Clinton,
S. C. 20-3tc
Eggs for Sale—Buff Rock, 15 eggs
$1.50; Ferris Strain White Leg
horn, 15 for $1.50. Irby Hipp.
2-21-4tc
Wanted the public to know—Don’t
throw away your old mattress.
Phone me and let me call and get
them and make them new for you at
-a-emaH-coet;—20 years of mattress
■asps
State of Sooth Carolina,
County of Laurens.
cCOffBT OF COMMON PLEAS.
* F. Bedenbaugh, Plaintiff
'g*. -VS, ( •••>» • \ T
Lula Bell Boyd, et al, Defond-
iT . NOTICE OF SALE
Pursuant to order issued in the
above entitled matter,* I will sell at
public "outcry, on sales-day in April
next, at Laurens Court House, in the
county and state aforesaid, all that
certain piece or tratt of land situate
in the county and state aforesaid des
cribed as follows, to wit:
All those two tracts of land situ
ated in said county and state describ
ed as follows!
(1) . All that tract of land con
taining one hundred seven and six-
tenths <107.6) acres, more or less,
known as the Charley Neill pface,
bounded on the north by lands of
Marshall William; on the East by
lands of M. B. %nd C. R. Workman;
on the south by lands of M. B. and
C. R. Workman formerly knovj^i as
the J. L. Young land. And on the
west by lands of Dolly M. Crawford,
of W. D. Boyd, and of M. B. and C.
R, Workman, this being the land con
veyed to me by Geo. A. Copeland
and others; and
(2) . All that tract of land con
taining one hundred and seven (107)
acres, more or less, known as the
Caine Boyd home place and being
bounded on the north by lands of
Mrs. Mary G. Vance, on the east
by lands of Mrs. Evans; on the south
by lands of the estate of Mrs. M. I.
-Boyd and on the west by Simmons
-tMCUNTOIt
■ a-.m n -
experience. All work called for and j Creek separating the lands hereby
conveyed from the Witherspoon lands,
and being the lands conveyed to me
by O. G. Thompson, J. P., on Janu
ary 6th, 1916, part of which I own
in fee simple, free from liens or in
cumbrances except this mortgage. '
Said sale to be to the highest bid
der, for cash, purchaser to pay for
record and stamps. If purchase
Rear Admiral W
Accepts Chairmanship
* • f
•*3®*’*' •' i« i'" 1 ' mt+tm
Will Enroll Young Mon Fro* Lau-
for Citlspna’ Mill,
tary Trai ning Cam pa.
Columbia, March 17*—Rear Admir
al Samuel McGowan (paymaster gen
eral), U. S. N., retired, has accepted
the chairmanship for Laurens coun
ty of the Military Training Camps
Association of the United States and
will as his first duty thereunder han-<
die the enrollment of young men
from that county for the Citixens’
Military Training camps, to be held
July 3 to August 1, inclusive.
‘Tt is an extraordinary good for
tune,” said McDfvid Horton, civilian
aide in South Carolina to tha secre
tary of war, in announcing today Ad
miral McGowan’s acceptance, “that
so distinguished a man should be
available and should be cordially un
dertake to assist in securing for
South Carolina its full quota of high
grade young men for these camps.
It is cause of pride to the country
and specially to South Carolina that
Admiral McGowan made so conspicu
ous a success of the Bureau of Sup
plies and Accounts of the Navy that
in all the fault-finding that has been
directed since the war against the
various other American war activi
ties, no breath of criticism, much
less of scandal, has touched his tre
mendous job.”
Admiral McGowan will especially
appreciate the cooperation of young
men in Laurens county who have at
tended—one—or—more C. M. T. <3.
SOUTH CAitOUNA
===—«=
delivered the same day. All work
guaranteed. Coll Phone 2, McDan
iel Vulcanizing Work. Give me a
trial. W. W. Cooper, Prop. 2tp
—Vi' - 1 1 ' —
Wanted—7 2 00 Salespeople now
MAKE BIG MONEY selling Wat
kins nationally advertised house-hold
products. YOU CAN TO. Establish
ed. 1868. Resources $15,000,000^ comply with terms of sale
Branches all over U. S. and Canada.
Rare CHANCE JUST NOW for City
as provided in Order in said matter,
land {o be re-sold on the same or
Sales dealers, men or women, full or j some subsequent sales-day at the
part time, in city of Clinton and
elsewhere. Write today for our prac
tical, sure MONEY-MAKING PLAN.
J/R. Watkins Co. Dept. 98, 156-159 j
Perry St., New York. 2tc
S..C. White.Leghorn baby chicks and
Ibatching eggs. The kind that lay
the year round and look good all
:the time. Ask the poultry special
ist at Clemson or Winthrop; they
■rhre State* Officials and '•re working
Jor better poultry and will give
good advice as to the right kind of
foundation stock. Also carry a
Stock of Wishbone Brooders. Oak
Crest Farm, Barksdale, S. C. 3-20
— '■ 1
For Sale—I will sell to the highest
.bidder on the 1st day of April 1924,
at 11 a. m., one tract of land con
taining 90 acres more or less known
as the Barham Bobo estate, situ
ated 2% miles from Cross Anchor
on the Burnt Factory road. Any
purchaser shall pay for papers and
stamps. Terms of the *sale, Cash
only. T. L. Cooper, Acting Admin
istrator, XHinton, S. C. 20-3tp
risk of the former purchaser.
• C. A. POWER,
4-10-4tc • C. C. of C. P.
WHAT DO
✓ P. S.
JEANS
do:
Plano $275.00 .
Player $420.00
O’Daniel & Reid
L—COAL—COAL
. Just received
Car Best Coal
Telephone your order.
. J. M. PITTS
n
11 !
. /
of Satisfaction
Here is one automobile you can
keep three, four, five or more years.
The quiet Willys-Knight sleeve-
valve engine actually improves with
use I Owners report 50,000 miles
and more without a single engine
adjustment. No valve-grinding or
carbon-cleaning. More satisfaction
per dollar than you ever dreamed a
car could give you. Touring $1175;
Coupe-Sedan $1450; 5-pass. Sedan
$1795, l o. b. Toledo.
SS ',rtr j
ELLIS MOTOR CO.
V » * * .
\'v J
.r •
eng
sor proves that Enright la a strong
man’s job.
, protection against
obstacles, for re-
r-nine per cent of
New York Is for-
fueds and
fought out
man, handling
He readers
the greatest of
member, that
tip population
eign-born. Many of the
quarrels of Europe are
there.
He haa driven the professional
gambler from the scenes of his oper
ations. He nmintains an active cru
sade against vke conditions in a city
once called the modern Babylon, until
it la now the cleanest large city in
the world.
He has dealt with the criminalsSrith •
such efficiency and dispatch thaF the
lawless seek safer and more healthful
climates. There are now thirty-five
per cent less inmates in Sing Sing
from New York City than ever be
fore.
more
courses. If as many as 25 young
men are accepted, they may travel to
and from camp as a unit in a special
coach and will be quartered and train
ed together. A 1 first year men will go
to Fort Bragg, ney Fayetteville, N.
C., the world’s largest artillery post,
where facility of a modern permanent
post is provided, including Y. M. C.
A., and hostess house. Men who
have finished the basic course and
who have qualified for the red, white
or blue course have their, choice of
the arm of the service in which they
will specialize, as infantry, coast or
field artillery, engineers, etc. Ad
vanced course men who are in for
infantry will train at Camp McClel-
tpn, near Anniston, Ala.; field ar
tillery and engineer courses will be
offered at Fort Brtgg and coast ar
tillery students wiH go to Fort Bar
rancas, near Pensacola, Fla. All nec
essary expenses are paid «by the
government fur the ’full nrbnth’ in
cluding transportation to and from
camp, lodging, food, uniforms, medical
and dental service. Candidates are
advised to pay their way to camp,
receiving reimbursement on arrival,
since by so doing they make one
cent the mile; but if more conven
ient to them, government transporta
tion requests will be furnished.
No contract of enlistment is in
volved and young men who go to the
camps for the basic, red and white
courses incur no sort of obligation to
any further military service, active or
reserve. *
Young men of 17 to 24, physically
sound, who can read and write and
are of good moral character and repu
tation, are eligible. Application may
be made to Admiral McGowan at
Laurens or if more convenient may
be addressed directly by mail to Col.
L. O. Mathews, Red Rock Building,
Atlanta, Ga., who will furnish the
necessary blank form.- .
Mijor T. J. Peake of Clinton is
among the medical officers of the Re
serve Corps who have volunteered to
make physical examination free of
charge for C. M. T. C. applicants.
ALL IN THE
DAY’S WORK
What would you do if you had sev
en million people to. protect, keep in
order and please?
What would you do if you had a
battle frontvof four thousand miles
of streets,—further than the distance
between New York and San Francis
co,—and the biggest treasure houses
of the world to guard ?
What would you do with this army
of people—more than three times the
size of Pershing’s forces in France
and one-fifteenth the population of
the United States—and all camped
within a few square miles?
Thie is the job conferred Richard
E. Enright by the City of New York
some six years ago and his has prov
ed such a master-hand in organiza
tion, protection, law and order that
he has become recognized internation
ally as the greatest policeman of all
days. ' *
His title is Commissioner of Po
lice. His active force numbers
twelve thousand four hundred, pick
ed, trained and highly specialized
fighting men. Twenty-eight years
ago he started as a patrolman and
haa climbed from the bottom to the
top. He' knows his business. That
is why he has been Commissioner of
office has
nistered his
%
WANTED
Man with good reference, and
car to demonstrate headlight-
glare killers for all make of
cars. This attachment is plac
ed just inside regular lense of
auto lights, which enables driv
er to meet cars at night without
being blinded in the least-, re
gardless of brightness of lights.
It also kills the glare of your
own light thereby keeping op
posing cars from being blind
ed, Strickly guaranteed. Price
$2.00 per set. Profits 75 per
cent. -No—cash • required to
start. Write us and we will
give personal demonstration.
WALTON & WALDSMITH
Box 72
Cheeter, - - S. C.
=
ate
~*T“
FOR MAYOR
I hereby announce myself as a
Candidate for Mayor of Clinton, sub-
•ect to the rules of the Democratic
LEE ADD BLAKELY.
Get Edgar
prices on Fertilizer
fore you buy.
Todd, Phone 5.
: Life of
WOODROW WILSON
By Joeephns Daniels. .
FOR SALE BY
JEas. W. Caldwell
Agent
PHONE 199—12 P. M.
in?! 1 !!; ", ■■ ■ v
I
WE CLEAN YOUR
CLOTHES
We repair theni.
We press themj
BUCHANAN’S 3
PRESSING CLUB
Phone 28
■i ^ti ■
• -n.TaV.rec;.
\
NEURALGIA
The moment the poin comes on,
cpply Sloan’s. Ju:t stroke it on
gently. You can’t have to rub it
an. A dov/ing warmth spreads
ihrcfaghTtht k pnin-ridden tissues. *
The pain eases off—4s gone. Get
a bottle from your druggist to
day—35 cents. It will not stain.
Sloan’s Liniment—
The Beauty
of the New
«*« •
Dresses
Beautifully fash
ioned from the
season's most fav
ored fabrics i n
-styles that have
'
I
won the approval
o f style leaders
everywhere, these
Dresses are repre
sentatively smart
for wear on any
occasion.
Then, too, thfcre is the economy of buying
them ready to wear, for the cost is but lit
tle more than you would have to- pay for
the ma;terial and findings alone. We are
placing new ones on the rack every week.
B. L. KING & SON
The Ladies’ Shop
u$ej:
P* war
Haven’t You Heard of the
New Way to Grow
Better Crops?
Cured Fertilizer—The Result of Years of
Research ^
For a lifetime Mr. Royster andr His large organization of farm
experts have searched, tested and toiled to improve fertilizer
and thus increase the earnings of farmers.
A Startling Development
One of the most startling discoveries has been the curing of
fertilizer. Mr. Royster and his helpers found that after aging
in bins for four to six months, fertilizer grew better crops f The
various chemical elements combine with one another and the
close association of these elements brings about a chemical
action which makes every food element in the fertilizer avail
able to the plant, Just exactly as it is needed—from seed time to
harvest. ^
Double Milled
After this aging, Royster's Fertilizer is re-milled (to prevent
lumping) and then bagged. All this additional work and care
certifies the quality, of Royster’s Fertilizers—and assures you
of proper feeding for plants.
Be Sure to get Royster’s
The name “Royster’s” appears on every bag of Royster’s
Fertilizer. Look for it. Ask for Royster’s Fertilizer by n^une—
and stop guessing about brands.
"Your goods are fins
crop-maJeers.”
' . -W.V
"My crop this year is.
far belter than eoer be-
/ *•
ore.
i ’ ,
**/ can frankly say I
hose received the best
results, by test, with
Royster’s.”
4
*'/ am expecting a fine
crop this year, and J
give Royster’s Fertiliser
the credit”
” I will not buy anything
else as long as I can get
Royster’s.”
'Eosry lime l USSUl
F. S, ROYSTER GUANO COMPANY
NORFOLK. COLUMBIA. ATLANTA. MONTGOMERY
ROYSTER HSte-
FiMlSsfafiTeriilizers
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