University of South Carolina Libraries
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1925 THE CLUrf'ON CHRONICLE, CLINTON, 8. C. PAGE FIVE x< ffl c C6rmacfi~MoreClearfy on the —T- i ♦♦i l | j H„|.i | l | | | j-H .I-t» Hi tt/herever you are in this country you can estsiiLy tune in John McCormack, Bori, Alda and the host/of other Metropolitan Opera artists, now broadcasting every other Thursday ’evening from W E A F and other stations. The Freshman Masterpiece assures true to life reproduction with real loud speaker volume. Brings out every single note dis tinctly, with matchless tonal qualities. \ 1 radio frequency receiver cade of the finest low lots materials and in a beautiful genuinesol:d mahogany cabinet, tbit is at* tractire enough for the most pretentious room, and at sixty Joiiars, economical enough for the most modest, it is the great est value ever oUered in A radio receivin' set. e hoa Freshman fbTNllL tiodiv l-X ,-ng,,^r» cm.' V. Ir’uri* FRtSKMAN Bt'llDfNC juo-m ».ut aorw ti - st* voa.hv Then ertiiti broadcasting tbjjmgb countsj of Victor Talking Macbim Co. SOLD BY KELLERS DRUG STORE This Bank :: has been safeguarding the funds .of Clinton since its doors opened for business in 1886. It is a depository for many of Clinton’s business houses and hundreds of men and women. When you put your savings or your cash for current use in this bank, you enjoy the peace of mind that comes with the knowledge that your de posits are altogether safe. M. S. Bailey £ Son .BANKERS “Clinton’s Oldest Bank” Success Is Up to You When heart and soul and mind are concentrated upon an under taking; when you can hear to morrow calling louder; no goal is fixed too far. To reach the goal of success one thing is certain—you must Jive within your salary. Save a part of every dollar you earn. The part you save is termed . POWER which contributes to your advancement.. I ? y X v y ? | y Y ? y y y ? r y y ♦ y « Miss Maude Pearson has returned from Newberry after visiting Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Hipp. Mr. J. K. Hatton spent several days last week in Charlotte attending the automobile show. ■Mrs. W. B. Tribble, Misses Eliza beth and Nannie Young Tribble spent the week-end with relatives in Due West. Mrs. J. R. Little of Laurens, and Mrs. Bob Thompson of Anderson, spent Friday afternoon in the 'city with friends and relatives. Mrs. Warren Bolt, of Laurens, and Mrs. Ward Thompson, of Anderson, were guests Friday of the^ former’s daughter, Mrs. Walter Richbourg. Rev. and Mrs. A. R. Batchelor, of Whitmire, were visitors in the city Friday. , Mr. W. E. Bell, of Greenville, spent Friday here on business. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Beaudrot and children, of Greenwood, spent the week-end here as the guests of Mrs. Mary Prather. Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Boyd and Miss Sallie Wright spent Thursday in Greenville. Mrs. Tom Carson, of Sumter, is visiting her mother, Mrs. Hale Shands. Messrs. Ebb Copeland and Lamar Smith, of LaurenS, were visitors here Sunday. Mr*, and Mrs. J. F. Jacobs, Sr., Miss Clara Duckett and Mrs. J. R.' Cope land were guests of Dr. and Mrs. J. B. Townsend in Anderson, Sun day. Miss Annie E. Hatton has returned from Buladean, N. C., where she has been teaching the past year. Dennis Sowers and Harold Flana gan spent the week-end in Hender sonville. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Galloway and children, of Abbeville, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. W. M. McMillan. Ed Aycock, of Jonesville, was the guest of friends in the city last week. Miss Katherine Day arrived in the city Monday from Frostburg, Md., and will again be milliner for the firm of B. L. King & Son. Mr. H. R. Phillips, of Spartanburg, spent the week-end with Mrs. Phil lips, who is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. L. King. Miss Janie Holland, of Wellford, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hearn. Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Boy visited relatives in Wellford on Sunday. Mr. Arthur Flanagan, of Columbia Seminary, spent a few hours in the city Saturday ^n route to Owings, where he preached Sunday. Mr. Robert Davis, of Charlotte, is spending some time with his mother, Mrs. George Davis. Friends of' Mr. D. W. Mason and Mrs. Gus Davidson sympathize with them deeply in the loss of their sis ter, Mrs. Lizzie Adair, who died Sun day at her home in Houston, Texas. After visiting her son, Mr. Charles Rounds, in Charlotte, Mrs. C. H. Rounds has returned to Clinton. Miss Florie McGill spent the past week-end with relatives at Hickory Grove. Mr. Turner Martin, of Laurens, w&s the guest of his sister, Mrs. A. W. Brice, Sunday. Mrs. Tom Pollard is spending this week in Charleston on business. Friends of Mr. S. W. Sumerel will be glad to know that he is improving after being sick at his home on West Carolina avenue. Mr. and Mrs. James Frazier, and children, of Blairs, are visiting Mrs. Frazier’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Rhett Copeland. Messrs. H. W. Richey and R. L. Longshore were visitors in TJre?nville Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Fox and Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Sanders, spent some time with Mrs. Len H. Rounds last week en route from Florida to their home in Warringsburg, N. Y. Mr. T. D. Copeland left Tuesday for New York where ha. will spend this week purchasing goods for Cope land-Stone Company. £ Mrs. Minnie Middleton spent Satur day in the city with relatives en route to Greenville. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Longshore spent Sunday in Newberry with relatives. Mrs. A. L. Watts and Master Billy Lynn are spending a few days in Mour.tville. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Copeland and children, of Laurens, spent Saturday and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. W. T. ! Putnam. Prof. Roger L. Cge left Tuesday for Nashville, Tenn., where he will repre sent the Presbyterian College at the Semi-Centennial celebration of Pea body College for Teachers. After nursing Mrs. Marshall Milam for several weeks, Mrs. Simpson has returned to her home in Laurens. Eugene Burns, of Fountain Inn, visited Mrs. Effie Burns last week. Mrs. James Leaman and children spent Sunday in Ci'oss Hill with rela tives. Mr. B. B. Mills, of Greer, spent Sunday in the city with friends. Miss Sara Harvin, of Spartanburg, was the guest of Mrs. Jennie Briggs Sunday. / Mr. and Mrs. Claude J. Hipp and | Utile son, of Cross Hill, spent Sun day with Mrs. A. W. Brice. Mr. Caudon was a week-end visitor in .Spartanburg. Miss Bertha Mae Gallman was call ed to her home in Newberry last Wed- I nesday on account of the death -of her uncle. . / Mrs. T. D. Copeland is spending thife week in Savannah, where she is the guest of her sister, Mrs. George R. White. Mrs. Ross D. Young, of Laurens, was in the city last Friday shopping. Mayor J. F. Jacobs will spend Fri day in Chester where he will attend a banquet given by the Boosters Club and will be the principal speaker of the evening. Miss Ruth Ferguson spent the past week-end in Spartanburg with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Fergu son. Mrs. Eugene Winn and mother, Mrs. Green, are visiting relatives in Green wood this week. Mr. and Mrs. J. Clarence Copeland were in Spartanburg Sunday. Mrs. C. M. Bailed and daughter, Miss Lucy Bailey, were visitors in Columbia last Thursday. Mrs. George Woodfin, of Horse Shoe, N. C„ is spending some time with Mrs. M. J. McF&dden. Miss Maude Ellis, of Columbia, spent Friday and Saturday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George H. El lis. Miss Ellis was en route to Green ville where she will be a representa tive of the-University of South Caro lina at a meeting of the American Association of Colleges. Mrs. Nancy Howse Jackson, of Fort Lawn, is visiting her nieces, Mrs. L. B. Dillard and Mrs. M. J. McFadden Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Pinson spent Sunday in Ninety-Six with relatives. Rupert Fuller, of Wofford College, spent the week-end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Fuller. George Rucker has accepted a posi tion as principal of .the Hurricane school near Clinton. Hansel Boyd and Rogers Harrell, j of Wofford College, were the week- 1 end guests of Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Boyd. Mr. D. W. Mason spent Monday in Laurens on business. ! Mrs. George W. Young left Mon day for Raleigh, N. C., to visit her ( sister, Mrs. M. E. Bethea, who is sick, j Mrs. A. L. Watts is visiting her son, Mr. Walter Wa^s, in Laurens. | Mrs. Nonnie Young has returned home after spending two weeks with ! her daughter, Mrs. Forest Summer, of 1 Newberry. Messrs. J. F. Jacobs, Sr., P. F. Pat ton, and W. R. McCuen, of Laurens, and Pinson, of Cross Hill, spent Tucs- 1 day in Columbia on business. Mr. Alex Bramlett, of Laurens, spent Sunday with his sister, Mrs. D. W. Copeland. Mrs. J. A. Page and children, Mr. and Mrs. Asie Sitgreaves and .Mr. Russell Gray, of Laurens, were gu'ests of Mrs. C. 0. Glenn on Sunday. Mr. R. M. Russell spent the week end in Greenville and was accompani ed home by his mother who had spent the past week in Greenville. Mr. and Mrs. George Moon visited friends in Spartanburg on Sunday. Mr. E. H. Hall, Jr., has returned to the city after spending the week-end in Great Falls with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Hall. Mr. and Mrs. 0. B. Burroughs and baby spent Saturday in the city with Mrs. A. T. Wilson. Mrs. Joe Martin Todd and son have returned to Spartanburg after a week’s visit with Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Todd. Miss Lurea Moore and Mrs. Luther Young spent the week-end in Simp- sonville and attended the funeral of j their grandmother. Mrs. E. W. Ferguson and Mrs. Em ma Little were visitors in Greenville Wednesday. Mrs. E. L. Chandler has returned home after a two weeks’ visit with Mr. and Mrs. John Graham, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Sullivan Holland spent the past week-end with Mr. and Mrs. George Holland. •> Announcements have just been re ceived of the marriage of Miss Mabel Jones to Mr. William Stack of Char lotte. Mrs. Stack was formerly con nected with the Thornwell Orphanage as music teacher and Mr. Stack was for some time foreman of the art de partment of Jacobs Company. Mrs. T. D. Ramage of Laurens, and Messrs. M. T. King and C. M. King, of Newberry, spent Wednesday with their sister, Mrs. E. L. Chandler. CITATION FOR LETTERS OF AD MINISTRATION The State of South Carolina, Laurens County. By O. (I. Thompson, Probate Judge: WHEREAS J. C. Copeland made suit to me, to grant him Letters of Administration of the Estate and'ef fect s of Mrs. Gertrude King, THESE ARE THEREFORE, to cite and admonish all and singular the Kindred and Creditors of the said Mrs. Gertrude King, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Lau rens Court House, Laurens, S. C., on the 28th day of February next, after publication hereof, at 11 o’clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said Administra tion should not be granted. GIVEN under my hand this 13th day of February, A. D. 1925. 0. G. THOMPSON (Seal) J. P. L. C. * * «• J. Roy Crawford SURVEYOR CLINTON, S. C. Telephone 2604 , II Heinz Ketchup Weefc x With your grocery order let us in clude at least 3 bottles Heinz Ketch up. Specially priced this week only. Three Large Bottles . . . $1.00 Three Small Bottles . .. . 70c . r Baldwin Bros. Grocery L99 “Good Things to Eat’ Phones 99 and 100 - - Clinton, S. C. Get Your Sprin Cleaning Done Now-- B AHEAD OF TH^ RUSH! Don’t put. off your Spring Cleaning until everyone else is sending theirs. Get in ahead of the rush today! Before you know it, you’ll be wanting to wear your Spring Suit or Coat. Get them ready. Send your things to us today, and we’ll do a thorough job of Dry Clean ing and Pressing, and send them back to you promptly. Hats and spats, dresses, coats, wraps, and sport clothes, will look like new, too, if they’re cleaned at our plant, and last longer! 1 For prompt and Expert Dry Cleaning just call 28 and we will send right to your door. 1 Buchanan’s Pressing Club [ I PHONE 28 S I I pgfcMaBBiaESiaiisaBiiawMwmnnmi Cramping Spells “r^OR MORE THAN a YEAR I had been in a JA very bad condition,” says Mrs. R. E. Kimbrell, of Route 1, Dorchester, Texas. “I suffered with cramping spells which gave me bad pains in my back and sides. Sometimes I would have to catch at something, I would get so suddenly dizzy. ... I had to quit doing my work. I tried many reme dies, but none of them seemed to* do me any good. *Tn April I went up to Arkansas to 1 Visit my sister. . . . She said to me, ‘Willie, if you are going to take anything, take Cardui. Jt will really help you.’ I came home and told my doctor what she had said and he said I could not take any better tonic, so my husband immediately got me a bottle and I began it. . . My case was a pretty tough one, I know, so I kept or. faithfully. After the fourth bottle, I began to feel very much better, so much so that I was surprised at myself. I have taken six bottles now ancf I can truly say I feel like a different woman. ... I feel fine and I owe it all to Cardui, which I took faithfully.” — ll1 '- 111 ——TAKE — CARDUI The Woman’s Tonic s Ul : m s s i ■ S r.