University of South Carolina Libraries
^j; : . /. ' THUBSDAY. jutv 2j ua ■ H4-. • 6m* *. m ■ *- ■ \ r GENUINE -i&J* 4»»l1111>>♦♦♦♦♦#♦♦ If##HIM ItII ■■ ^ '/'It ’V '; - * ? ., Jumbo KEEPS KEEPS COLD ONE GALLON SIZE if "" !k ;5. SPECIAL PRICE FOR TWO WEEKS • * \ $3.75 and $4.25 MB ! : V; W' - - 5? -rf Safety Comes First Mrs. T. C. Sumtffcf and son, S. W. Sumerel, visited relstlvis this week in JNewberry. .' • Attorney Robert S. Owens, of. Mc Cormick, spent Tuesday in the city. Master Isaac Copeland spent last week in Charleston. Mrs. P. O. Ellesor of Newberry, is the guest this week of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Copeland. Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Stutts and little Dorothy, and Mrs. Ella Riddle, leave to«My for a two weeks' stay at Folly Belch near Charleston. Little Miss Nina Martin McSwain, of Greenville, is visiting her aunt, Mrs. W. D, Copeland. Born to ProL and Mrs. H. E. Stur geon, on July I8$h, ft son, Harry, Jr. Mr. Geo. W. Young and Edward Henry left Tuesday for Florence to spend a few days.i < Mr. and Mrs. P. B. Adair and Mrs. Mae Leaman and children speht the week-end in Asheville with the lat ter’s sister, Mrs. Fred Mitchel}. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Galloway of Abbeville, were the guests of friends and relatives here this week. „ ' Mr. and Mrs. Claude J. Hipp and little son, of Cross Hill, and Mr. John Wise, of, Chester, were the guests Wednesday of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Brice. Landon Holland left Monday for St. Petersburg, Fla., where he has ac cepted a position. . ' Dr. and. Mrs. t. Ross Lynn are spending several days at Montreat where Dr. Ljfon is attending the Edu cational conference. ~ ^ Mr. B. H. Boyd spent the week-end at Saluda with Mrs. Boyd, who is spending several weeks there. ! Mr. John Spratt spent the week end at Montreat with his family. Dr. D. M. Douglas is at Lake Juna- luska this week where he is one of the speakers at the Young People’s Conference. » Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Simpson and their niece, Miss Frances . Bowen, spent Sunday in Union, Miss Bowen remaining for a visit of several weeks with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Richey spent the past week at Hendersonville and Chimney Rock. Dr.’ Dudley Jones is spending the DISAPPROVES COOLIDGE. LEVIATHAN FOR SALE. VERY NICE GIRL WANTED. MR. ROCKEFELLER, AGE 86. V « ;; .. «, More important than interest return is the SAFETY of your PAY DAY and other deposits.. That is the very point upon tyhich the popularity and standing of this Bank rest—demonstrated ability to give secur- — v * , ity, as evidenced by 38 years of uniform- i ly satisfactory service. Your Account Invited M. S. Bailey £ Son BANKERS ^ “Clinton^ Oldest Bank” f England dislikes President Cool idge’s Fourth &i July address and says there is nothing in it to “show that the President has tried to master the facts concerning Europe." ' That, however, isn’t what interests the United States. The President HAS mastered facts concerning THIS country. He has mastered the fact that when you lend money you expect to get it back. And he seems to have mastered the fact that the business of the United States and of the President is to at tend to the United States and keep out of foreign complications. That suits the United States! Quality is a paramount issue at this store when it comes to ; ^ a question of price or quality. . ( We believe the best is the r ’ ^ i • . i cheapest, event at a few cents *T* a added cost. . m ■4 rm , v i sai M . -Y r six houses and was sent to an indus trial school for correction. Not long ago this child would have been punished with death, perhaps by burning, ffrst being encouraged to denounce the “witch” whose evil spirits had compelled her to set the fires. The world is not so bad as it was once, even if it seems less reli gious. Bald win Bros. Grocery / : ' 4 -4H i-M :: ■ Hy ' ' < * • :: \ i » :: : - i YOUR BANK SHOULD BE YOUR FRIEND AS WELL AS THE CUSTO DIAN OF YOUR MONEY. i x THE BANK OF PERSONAL SERVICE” week at Montreal attending the Edu cational Conference. ■ • Dr. and Mrs. W. E. Hoy, Sr., mis sionaries to China, are the guests of their son, Dr. W. E. Hoy, Jr. Master Elmore Martin and Kather ine Martin of Augusta, Ga., are visit ing their cousins, Isaac Copeland and Margaret Brice; The friends of Miss Jaunita Law- son, who is a patient at tfie Appla- chian hospital in Asheville, will regret to know that she has been quite ill during the past week. Mr. Gilbert Blakely and Misses Roslyn and Lois Blakely left Tues day for a week’s visit to Johnson City, Tenn. ^ Messrs. Jack Shealy and Ratchford Boland are spending a few days ip. Hendersonville. Mr. Wingfield Young spent the week-end in Chester with his family. • Rev. W. H. Stevenson spent Thurs day in the city en route from Due West to his home at White Oak. Miss Ada Holmes Davis left Mon day for a three weeks’ stay in Wash ington. - Mr. Herman Forth, of Chicago, was a visitor in the city this week as the guest of friends. Mr. and Mrs. K. B. Brownlee, of Gray Court, were the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Hollis. Miss Annie Belle Blakely of Spar tanburg, and little Marjorie Dean of Asheville, are visiting their aunt, _ idie Blakely. rs. George Odiorne and sons left Monday for a stay of two weeks at Myrtle Beach. Mrs. Harris Landrum and Miss Annie E. Hatton spent yesterday in Greenville. Miss Lora Montjoy has returned from a visit to friends in Newberry and Prosperity. . Mr. and Mrs^L. B. Dillard and chil dren, were the guests this week of Dr. and Mrs. M. J. McFadden at? Horse Shoe, N. C. Mr. and MVs. E. J. Adair, Misses Ethel and Ellen Copeland, and Fur man Stokes spent Sunday at Hender sonville. * ' • i A Reunion of the family of Mrs. W. H. Drummond waS held yesterday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. T. L. W. Bailey. Picnic dinner was served in the grove and it was a happy occasion for mother, children and grand-children. Mrs. Jack H. Young and daughter, Miss Elizabeth, are at home from a two weeks' trip to New York, Canada and other points. The friends of Mr. E. G. Fuller, who is spending several weeks at Stomps Spring^ will be glad to know that he is recuperating from his ill ness. Mr. and Mrfc. A. H. Charleville have returned to their home at Tallahassee, Fla., after a visit to the I latter's brother, Mr. F. M. Stutts. Misses Margaret and Beth Blakely left last Thursday to spend a week at Bonclarken. • ’ \ : Miss Katherine Blakely, Nannie Young Tribble, Mrs. P. S. Jeans and William Adair, left yesterday for Bon clarken where they will spend several days. The Gpyernment wltt'^SeTI ocean liners that don’t pay; iihcluding the Leviathan. Suppose thej richest country in the world would run its ships without extravagant frills* brass bands, etc., and allow school teachers, high school and "college students to go to Europe and back at cost, or, bet ter still,. FREE of cost. How much would it be worth to this nation to have 25,000 teachers and young stu dents se#’' and study Europe every year? But nothing of that kind could be done. It would be “paternalism.” A rich man named Browning seeks “a pretty refined girl fourteen years old, for adoption.” He has one adopted daughter and wants another to keep her company. He will give the adopted girl every opportunity, education, travel, kindness, care, love. ; Of course Jie will, all perhaps EX CEPT opportunity. Opportunity to eat, dress, travel and live free of work is not OPPORTUNITY. “Good Things to Eat’ Phones 99 and 100 ■- ~ Clinton, S. C. IT What would Rosa Bonheur have amounted to had a rich man adopted her. Her girl friend painted fruit boxes to buy food for two, while Rosa Bonheur painted pictures that made her famous, and undoubtedly gave her self-sacrificing friend a place in Hea ven. Who would have known Rosa Bonheur had a rich man adopted her.? With lights shining along the road, Uncle Sam’s flying mail ships go by night between New York and Chicago. That is ^progress. And, because it means development of the flying ship, it means safety for the nation. Cre dit Postmaster New and President Coolidge. r John D. Rockefeller is eighty-six years old. He plays his usual round of golf, weather permitting, quite con tent with 43 for 9 holes, and with his milk and setzler, toast and perhaps two ounces of meat. It is hard for some to realize that golf, exercise that anybody can take with a stick and a round pebble, not more than 20 cents worth of food a day and a bed to sleep in are all that Mr. Rockefeller gets from his great fortune. SERVICE STATION Could DREADNAUpHT D attervj Waiting for you—Square Deal Battery Service! We have been appointed as a Gould Service Station by the Gould Storage Battery Company. No excuse now for you to let your battery “lay down” on you. Come to us for periodical inspection and test service. We will discover your little troubles before they become big ones. s i We are here to keep yoiir battery in your car and out of our shop. When we can do that it’s expert repair work done by expert battery men. ‘ Come in and get acquainted. Let us show you the ilew Gould with its famous Dreadnaught Plates and its new Dreadnaught Armored Separators. Square Deal Battery Service Repairs—Replacements—Recharging Refilling for Any Battery We Supply a Gould Battery for Any Car EDWARDS AUTO SERVICE DAY PHONE 365 NIQHT PHONE 307 juoiiom^mt<riropt Who’s Your Electrician? What will history say of John D. Rockefeller, whose work and success better than that of any other man,' with the possible exception of Henry Ford, typifies this industrial age? He will be praised because he has never set a bad example of ostenta tion and extravagance to embitter the poor. “~ FOR SALE AT ONCE •/[ (■jl TEA ROOM Y All Equipment Included. A good proposition at an attractive price. For particulars apply to the Tea Room. All except his contribution to knowledge will be forgotten in 500 years. But 1,000 years hence, his tories will carry the picture of J»hn D. Rockefeller and will say of him: “This is the man who proved compe tition to be wasteful and unnecessary. “This man, proving that one man could successfully manage and own an industry, laid the foundation of ownership by the people. They at last discovered, that what one man could do the people could do for them selves.” r SERVICES SUNDAY AT DUNCAN’S CREEK CHURCH Services are announced at Duncan’s Creek Presbyterian church next Sun day morning at eleven o’clock to which the puMie is cordially invited. Dr. Dudley Jones, the pastor, will preach at .this hour. i Hasn't affected the price of our Cotton Seed Hulls. They are still selling at the cheap price of 70c per hun dred. Meal is advancing though—Better buy before it goes higher. \ \ , . , . Meal $2.15 Hulls 70c per cwt WE DELIVER PROMPTLY — — — CLINTON OIL ^ TELEPHONE V?0. 61 ►♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ft CLE—$1. MILL THE CLINTON CHRONIC! 1.50 A YEAR uflrt. • *if’ffir - 11’’”ri v i ii A tffiirr'lii'ihdiilfili-ifi