University of South Carolina Libraries
i>R. C S. MEDBURY IN GREAT LECTURR Will Be Heard at Redpath Chautauqua Here. •elects "The Duties of Freedom" •• Subject of Stirring, Con* structive Address. Among the lending orators of today 1* Dr. Charles S. Medhury, the elo quent and forceful pastor of the University Place Church of Christ, Des Moines, Iowa, who will be heard at the coming Redpath Chautauqua In ■ distinctly notable lecture, "The Du- ITes of Freedom.” Doctor Medbury Is pastor of what DR. C, S. MEDBURY is probably the largest congregation In the Middle West. He has traveled extensively and is thoroughly acquainted with business and industrial conditions, while twenty years’ pastoral experience In college and university communities has yield ed a grip of the problems of America’s young manhoo'd and womanhood. In the lecture he will deliver here. Doctor Medbury will.impress upon his audience the fact that the privilege of freedom, such as we enjoy today, en tails definite obligations which the present-day man must perform with ■•’Miraae and keen foresight. Chester Planter . Dies of Lockjaw Chester, April 5.—Galloway Wade, one of west Chester county’s moat popular and promising young plant ers, died late tonight at the Chester sanitarium of lockjaw. This was the first case of lockjaw experienced in this section of South Carolina in many years and it attracted widespread in terest and sympathy. Mr. Wade made a valiant fight and every medical aid ,, available was brought into play but all proved in effective. The lockjaw antitetanic se rum, which in some cases has proved effective and which was resorted to immediately when it was found that he was in the grip of the deadly dia- ease, failed to perform its work quick ly enough. The terrible, convulsions which accompanied his case from the start speedily exhausted his strength until his heart could no longer hold out. His suffering and agony are said to have been intense. It is prob able that he might have responded to the lockjaw treatment had his strenyth held but, as in some ways it had helped him. He became sick last Tuesday. While, of course, it is impossible to trace the origin of the lockjaw, many think it had its inception in a bad accident Mr. Wade sustained recently in a sawmill when his hand came in contact with a buzz saw, severing two fingers, and some think the tetanus germ got into his blood before he could reach the sanitaeium. He was apparently well and sound, except for his injured hand, until early this week when -he-began to complain of his neck, which later culminated in lock jaw. Mr. Wade was only about 26 years of age and was a young man of the highest ideals and a devoted member of the Baptist faith. He is survived by his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Wade of Wilkesburg, and three sister, Mrs. Richard Sadler of near Sharon and Misses Mary and Elizabeth Wade of Chester, and a brother, Luther Wade of Wilkesburg. STATEMENT OF THE RECEIPTS AND EXPENDITURES OF THE CITY OF CLINTON, S. C. FOR DECEMBER, 1923, JANUARY AND FEBRUARY, 1924 RECEIPTS $8,580.98 Cash on hand~and in banks Dec. 1st, 1923 Dec. Jan. Feb. Light Revenue ! $2,365.44 $2,509.92 $2070.15 Water Revenue 606.23 70504 803.66 Light Meters 13.50 17.50 Water Material 4.00 ' - % Light Mettem 12.50 Police Fines' 420.00 120.00 232.50 Business Licence—1924 215.00 1,642.50 984.00 Business Licence—1923 5.00 15.00 127.00 Real and Personal Property Taxes 48.88 40.50 600 Real and Personil Property Tax 1 . • \ Penalties 2.20 1.95 .76 Fuel Sold 109.98 20.28 22.94 Money Borrowed 5,000.00 Rent 50.00 50.00 50.00 Advance Salaries 73.00 18.25 81.50 Printing, Adv. and Stationery^ .30 Poles, etc.—Sold 12.00 .85 - 1.10 Gutter Account 159.66 Tapping Fees 6.00 a ~ 6.00 Telephone Calls .65 105 Pistol Sold „ 2.50 Street Paving Assessment 1041.75 Street Tax - 735.00 Bad Check Account \ . 3.72 Total Receipts $8044.03 $6,629.04 $6043.48 Total — Grand Total . DISBURSEMENTS # - Light and Water Sal. and Wages 735.73 790.41 , 771.06 Plant Maintenance and Supplies 100.53 47604 36008 Fuel 917.56 1,915.09 750.44 Street Maintepance 708.84 668.63 589.08 Live Stock Expense 494.46 73.98 80906 Police Salaries 465.00 809.03 465.00. Police Department Expense 142.20 66.19 59.03 Police Uniforms 22.50 40.00 Health Department Expense 1.04 10.00 Health Department Salaries 87.00 75.00 75.00 Administrative Salaries 215.00 ; 215.00 215.00 Office Expense 3.50 ’ 2.60 3.50 Printing, Adv. and Stationery 72.42 7.61 70.60 Fire Department Expense .79 1.65 2.79 Improvement—G. C. Odiorne 2,452.23 1050.00 760.00 Interest on Bonds 6,750.00 t Advance Salaries 123.25 43.50 22.75 Interest and Discount * 1407 Rent 63.00 75.00 47.60 Cemetery Property 875.76 Real and Personal Property Tax .'v Refunded 88.28 2.50 Donations—Charity , 10.50 00 Office Equipment 25.20 Telephone and Telegraph Account 23.01 27.71 2306 Light Revenue Returned 40.44 Water Main Extension 7.19 152.97 light Plant Extension 787i31 31.61 1,052.01 Plant Tools 15.00 Mew Well Account 45.84 Bad Check Account - e 5.40 1004 Water Meters 10.84 light Meters 217.92 Street Lights 05 Total Disbursements $14012.73 $6006.17 $6,797*46 Tentative Grades for Can Tomatoes $21,618.56 $80,197.53 Hoped That Specific Stand ards Will Result in Im provement of Stock. by tb« United states Department •f Atrtcultnre.) Tentative grades for cannery toma toes have been formulated by the United States Department of Agricul ture for the purpose of providing a basis for agreements and purchases of raw material used In the manufacture of canned tomatoes and tomato prod ucts. It Is hoped that the use of spe cific standards w*!', produce better business relations between manufac turers and growers, and ultimately re sult in a measurable Improvement In the quality of the stock delivered to the cannery. « The principal of standardization Is now firmly established and becomes more popular each year, the depart ment says. Grades are wjdely used W the buying and selling of farm crops and are now considered a necessary feature of any well-ordered system of marketing. It Is f*^t that grades prob ably call be made applicable to most, if not all, of the fruits and vegetables grown for cannery purposes. - No Standard Grades. Up to the present time there has been no standard grades for cannery tomatoes. Some manufacturers have endeavored to buy on more or less definite specifications, but there has been little uniformity In the terminol ogy and application of such locally drawn standards. Establishment of federal grades -will enable all canners to buy ou a quality basis and enable growers to sell tomatoes at prices commensurate with the quality deliv ered, the department says. Success of the department’s system of grading cannery crops seems to de pend largely upon the establishment of definite gradations in price to con form with the variations tn quality and condition, ft Is pointed out. Such price gradations '•IN furnish a stim ulus to the grower to strive to deliver only a high quality product. In order, to secure the attendant premium. A) fair basis for discounting deliveries of low-grade tomatoes will also discour age the grower from delivering low- grade stock, and bring about a marked Improvement In the qnaltty of the to matoes grown and harvested. The growter who finds that he Is unable to produce tomatoes that will. grade U. S. No. 1 will be Inclined to discrim inate more carefully In the purchase of his seed, er plants, and "will focus his Interest on the elimination of the unproductive and poorly adapted strains of tomatoes and the constant Improvement of a few wall-selected va rieties, the department feels. Growers of cannery tomatoes will not be expected to use the proposed grades as a basis for separating the crop Into two or three classes before hauling to the cannery, as this prob ably would unduly Increase handling coats. Canners ordinarily are not equipped to handle lots of different qualities separately, and since Individ ual lots lose their Identity Immediate ly after being unloaded there would be little advantage in dolqg extensive sorting of the crop In the field," the department says. It Is felt that the more logical plan would be for menu- facturers to employ the standards as a basis fqr^ampifng the loads as they come to the receiving platform, there by ascertaining the grade and fixing the value of each load. To Try Out Standard*, The principle of buying cannery to matoes on grade la meeting with con siderable Interest among canners of tomatoes and tomato products and several manufacturers have Indicated their Intention to try out the proposed federal standards as a basis for their buying next season. One manufactur er In southern New Jersey has Incor porated in TJ. S. No. 1 grade In his agreements with the growers. In western New York the grades will be used by one large operator on portion of the acreege which he has under contract for 1924. Indiana can- uen have assured the department that they are heartily iff accord with the efforts being made to formulate a fair and workable system of grading, and have offered their co-operation In get ting such a system established uni formly in that state. The tentative grades have been ap proved and adopted unanimously by the Trt-8tate Packers’ association, an organization representing the cannery Interests of Delaware, Maryland and New Jersey. It also Is reported that the proposed grades probably will b* established as legal grades in New Jersey by the bureau of markets of the state department of agriculture. —“7 ' r 1 TH Z * HMtlllintfe ;: Pathetic Road Picture*: ; ; The man who left the Jack - ; handle at heme. ! Women who aren’t food look- ; ) | lug enough to attract ,81r Ra- ,, • • letgha to change tires for,them. ; ; 11 The party who washei the . » • * new sedan with laundry soap ' \ \; and a "clean” rag. • > Any car owner with an insured • \ II 1915 machine who rfeea a car y ;; thief pass along to the machine I - • parked Ahead. ; ’ Folks who come to the sales- .» • ■ room ready to buy, but oblivions | jj 11 to the meaning of t o. b. • • •; A driver whose rear-view mlr- ] | 11 ror reveals the motorcycle officer • ■ • * off the trail. —11 “Sun Up," “Jan* Clegg,” and "Miss Lulu Bett" : Undertow" -A. ^ > 'mhiiij ,1 11 Uiuja".!!!^! Miss Dial Wins Again In Play Writing Friends here of Miss Rebecca Dial, daughter of Senator and Mrs. Nath aniel Dial, were delighted to read in The State of Sunday that she had been awarded first prize in a play writing contest conducted by that paper. Prizes were offered in four classes, Miss Dial competing and winning first place in the most ambi tious class, that of the long play. Seventeen other contestants offered plays in the same classification. Miss Dial’s play was entitled “The Undertow.” In the announcement of the prize winners, it was said “Miss Dial won this same prize two years ago at the initial play-writing contest conducted by The State. Her present play differs in the extreme from her first effort, in “No Dogs Allowed," Miss Dial wrote a fanciful vein, but in her present play she has followed a story from life with most accurate dramatic sense., the result of which is a folk drama that, in the opinion of Dr. Felder Smith OPTOMETRIST fBtm Specialist MODERN SERVICE Jacobs & Company Building Phone 23~ “Give and Take” € t Modem business and age-old romance are featured in this rollicking play. . *’• . U , „• ' A New York Cast * • -v , .• tx ► V-v* > SIXTH NIGHT Redpath Chautauqua Seven Big Days SEASON TICKETS ONLY $2.75 REDBftTH CHAmAOQUAKBiifi CHAUTAUQUA WEEK HERE MAY 5-12 m sSmweoSa i i§ y; >■ : yX y £1 mm mm mmmm ~ < V m ■ • mtmM mm m mmmm m:: \ mmm Wm. :■ -y /w •' MM Total, on hand and in banks March 1st, 1924 $26010.86 3081.17 Clerk and Treasurer. $8009708 (Signed) .i' W. H. SIMPSON, Mayor. 7 Sweet Clover or Alfalfa Soil Need Inoculation Where neither sweet clover nor al falfa have been grown It la necessary to inoculate the soil to obtain a stand of either. Sometimes In the case of overflow lar i. Where inoculation has been carried by a stream from other fields It Is not necessary to inoculate but it Is not wise to attempt seeding an s large scale without the certain knowledge that the sell Is properly Inoculated. ;■ In summer seeding the hot rays of the sun will destroy -the bacteria If not properly covered, but la the winter seeding Is net neees- sary to attempt to cover the Inocu lation. •v J«i*ew Iwert «■ he. grewn. farther north and at higher altitudes 4han*nn,w! i grow course and tall A f-m I 1> - Styicplufi—no better designing at any price—tailored for style, plus all-wool fabrics, guaranteed to wear—popular prices. Good tailoring and good materials throughout—their style lasts. Styleplus Clothes include the new English type—loose, straight hanging coats with wide-bottom trousers—other stylish models for those of more conservative taste* Newest shades and ^patterns in standard all-wool fabrics—wide selections for men and young men. Ask us to show you the new Spring stylas in Styleplus. “America’s foremost style lm*>- at popular prices.” Priced $25 to $40 Copeland-Stone: “One Prict To All >» Phone 47 .Vu ...» -: vii «i ij. ► iMi*.