The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, August 06, 1925, Image 8
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"PAGE telGHT
THE CLINTON CHRONICLE. CLINTON, 8. C.
raPHSPAY. AUGUST 6,
Why Not Keep Yom;
Money at Home _
by giving me your Magazine ami
.Newspaper subscriptions, either in
club or single subscriptions? I . can
handle your subscriptions at publish*
ers price or less.
JAMES W. CALDWELL
THE MAGAZINE MAN
Phone 243 at 12:30
RENT A CAR
Drive Yourself
OPEN AND CLOSED CARS
DAY PliONE 357
NIGHT PHONE 156
Ellis Auto Livery
CLINTON
, S. &
Renew Your Health
by
9
Any physician will tell yon that
‘‘Perfect Purification of the Sys
tem is Nature’s foundation of
Perfect Health.” Why not rid
yourself of chronic ailments that
are undermining your vitality 1
Purify your entire system by tak
ing a thorough course of Calotabs,
-—once or twice a week for several
"weeks-—and see Low _ Nature - re
wards you with health.
Calotabs are the greatest of all
system purifiers. Get a family
package, • containing full direc
tions, price 35 cts.; trial packagey
10 cts. At any drug store. (AdvJ)
".vn-Tr-
BRYAN LAUDED -
BY CON. UPSHAW
L__ i '
. Georgia Congressman Calls Common
er’s Faith Sound. Memorial -
Service Held.
FARMER SHOULD LEARN.
ONE KILLED, IT PAYg.
THE BEATER IS BEATEN.
TO THE LAST MAN.
Rubber jumped to 80 cents. That
made everybody gasp. Then it went
to $1. Now it has reached $1.12.
That is because His Majesty’s Brit
ish subjects, who control the rubber
market, know how to manage prices.
American farmers see crops prices
dropping, and they are always un
certain. That is because farmers who
COULD control the price of food have
no efficient organization. They havi
something tp learn from the rubber
trust, and a few other trusts.
D. E. TRIBBLE CO.
CLINTON, S. C.
UNDERTAKERS & LICENSED
EMBALMERS
All . Calls Promptly Attended To
Day or Night
ALL MOTOR EQUIPMENT
Day Phone 94 Night Phone 205 or 24
RENT A CAR
Drive Yourself
OPEN AND CLOSED CARS
DAY PHONE 357>
NIGHT PHONE 156
Ellis Auto Livery
■i
•
K<
iq, as .
tens eqqs!
Yesair, it was «om« haill
Tobacco, cotton, gnfa—
all ruined. Busted? Nb!
Had « Southern Home
hail policy. It paid!
ome
mpan/*
CoutbernHc
Vl^l anceflf
URANCEL
PEOPLE)
5 CAROLINA INSURANCE
£F0R CAROUNA
LLOYD D. McCRARY
. AGENT
INTENSE PAIN
«■' — —* i
Lady, Alto Nervous and Weak,
ReKeved by CardnL
“I was ill and had to stay in bed
under treatment for about two
weeks without any improvement in
my condition, which was serious,”
says Mrs. J. T. Abercrombie,
R. F. D. 7, Brookville, Ind.
“1 had intense pain in my side.
I was so nervous and weak and
just out df heart....
El
mm SSVS v VaP OVVUIWVI 91W4MU1** QIIU J
J| didn’t feel so weak. I kept up
i feeling
taking Cardul and ’
like my old self...
wassoon 1
"1 am such a believer in Cardui
Until when I get nervous and weak
I take it. I took it before my
children were born. It strengthen
ed me and helped my nerves.
”1 took a cold and .. ..my back
felt so weak and I had such pulling
pains. I took Cardui and didnT
have any more trouble.
”1 fell and broke my arm. The •
fall shook me up and made me
very nervous. I told them Cardui
would help that, and it did.”
At all drug stores. c-35
Take
WHAT DO
. P. 8. JEANS
• * ’ V ’ flu ' , - . '
j
New York; Aug. 2.—William Jen
nings Bryan as a-mpn whose religious
faith was built upon tho “Rock of
Ages” and whose political faith was
such that he ^threw away a crown”
because he would rather be right than
«~|be president, was ■ eulogized by Con
gressman William D. Upshaw, of
Georgia, in memorial services for the
late fundamentalist leader at the Tent
Evangel today. «
The Bryan memorial service was to
have been the opening of a funda
mentalist campaign in New York by
Dr. J. Frank Norris .of Fort Worth,
Texas, known as the “Texas Cyclone”
in evangelical circles but he was pre
vented from coming by illness in his
family and the campaign was tem
porarily postponed.
Congressman Upshaw styled both
Bryan and Clarence Darrow, defense
counsel in the recent evolution case
at Dayton, as ‘‘titans of brain, logic
and eloquence,” but said that “Bryan’s
house was built upon the ‘Rock of
Ag4a/ Clarence Darrow’s on the
shifting sands.” '
While Bryan from his boyhood
trusted Christ “a» a personal Savi
our,” said Mr. Upshaw,. “Darrow con
fessedly left Christ out of his heart.”
He charged Darrow with “inviting
the' youth of the ^nation Into a great
spiritual Sahara.” The Rev. C. W.
McPherson of the Tent Evangel, had
previously called Bryan a friend of
science, who was “contending for
science as do all lovers of truth.”
Mr. Upshaw asaerted that the Com
moner “literally had the presidency
within his grasp,” when he returned
from his tour around the world, but
that he actually threw away a crown
because in his attitude toward a great
economic question he would rather be
right than be president.”
He quoted Bryan as having said in
Atlanta, the justification of. his stand
on government ownership of railroads,
M having reached this conclusion after
honest investigation, I would be un
worthy of the position of leadership
with which I have been entrusted if
I were to allow any personal or politi
cal consideration to influence in my
attitude or action.” • - .
The dead Nebraskan’s staunch ad
vocacy of prohibition was lauded by
Mr. Upshaw.
. —
“I wonder how many sighs of relief
have been breathed in the greet ‘wet’
centers since the eloquent prohibition
tribune breathed his last? They are
so^ry he is. dead and say beautiful
things about his brilliant ability and
his consistent sincerity, but they find
themselves visualizing the season of
man, with Mnl. George Copeland at 5
peace since the ‘dangerous disturber’4 o’clock. « ,
He delayed his aggressive
)hibition with the hope
is gone
espousal of pro!
of getting hie party leaders to follow
him to his battle royal against the
Uqdor interests but when the final
break came' he was utterly impervious
to the anathemas hurled at him by
the saloon politicians all over the na
tion.”
The various circles of the Woman’s
Auxiliary will meet Monday after
noon, August 10th, as follows:
Circle No. 1, Mrs. Bert Jones, chair
man, with Mrs. J. D. Jeans at 5
O’clock.
Circle Nb. 2, Mrs. B. L. King, chair-
%
V
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
NOTES
Sunday School at 10:00 a. m. . »
Morning worship at 11:15 a. nw
In
Circle No. 3, Mrs. H. D. 'Raotin,
chairman,'With Mrs. T. J. Blalock at
4 o’clock.
Circle No. 4, Mrs. George Bailey,
chairman, with Mrs. Larry Dillard at
4:30 o’clock.
Circle, No. 5, Mrs. D. W. A. Neville,
chairman, with Mrs.' John Holland
Hunter at 4:30 o’clock.
Circle No. 6, Mi's. A. M. Copeland,
chairman, will meet at the church at
6 o'clock and will study the fourth
and fifth chapters of Genesis.
Circle No. 7, Mrs. John W. Little,
chairman, will meet at the home of
the absence of the pastor the pulpit ^ 1 * 1 " 11 * 11 ’ wu \™ , , ,
»;ii k« T>-.. £ XM the chairman at 4:30 o’clock.
will be supplied by the Rev. D. M
Douglas, D. D.
Junior Christian Endeavor at 3:15
p. m.
Intermediate and Senior Christian
Endeavor at 7:00 p. m.
Union service at night at the Broad
Street Methodist churcht .... Rev. L.
Ross Lynn, D. D., will preach.j
Electric Range Demon
stration Thursday and
Friday, August 13th and
14th. Parrott-Electric.
At Johns Hopkins University, Balti
more’s magnificent seat of learning,
the able scientists report progress in
the preparation of insulin, the remedy
for diabetes discovered by young doc
tors in Canada.
The insulin diminishes the amount
of sugar in the blood, thus curing
diabetes. From insulin, as used hither- {
to, Johns Hopkins scientists have eli
minated various chemical elements.
One remaining is called “fraction LZ.”
This highly concentrated insulin, in
jected into the blood of a rabbit, re
duced the sugar in its blood from 113
millimeters per cubic centimeter to
39 within one hour. -v
The sentamentalist who thinks it a
shame to experiment with live rabbits
would change his mind if he had a
father or mother dying of diabetes.
Robert Shroyer, twenty-eight, beat
his wife in Frederick county, Mary
land. Shroyer was tied to the whip
ping post, ten lashes were applied to
his back, “with a regulation black-
snake whip.” The wife-beater de
served the ten lashes and ten thous
and.
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But it is the first time in a long
time that a white man has been offi
cially whipped in Maryland. Did it
reall ydo any good?
The man, for some reason, decides
to beat his wife and does so.
The people of a great state, for
some reason, decide to beat the man
and they do so.
What’s the difference?• . Why not
make the man work for his wife six
months, instead of letting a great
state imitate a wife-beater?
union
to be
do:
Bricklayers fight masons,
against union. There ought
arbitration, for the sake of working
people.
The bricklayers and plasterers
might ask themselves this question:
‘“Suppose presidents of railroads
quarrelling among themselves, should
shut down their railroads and refuse
to carry passengers, how long would
the public stand it?”
Railroad presidents are too intelli*
gent for that sort of nonsense. It
they were fighting among themselves,
they would keep- it te themselves.
That is why they are railroad presi
dents.
Thirty-four Minnesota volunteers in
the Civil War formed a “Last Man’s
Club.” The club has just held its
fortieth annual reunion. Four are
living, one too ill to attend. One of
the three present was unable to stand,
so they drank to the last man sit
ting.
One of these days there actually
will be on this earth some last man,
woman, or last child. - For in time
this world must die. Sqi^ce and the
Bible teach it.
What kind of creature will that last
human be? What shape, what lan
guage ? , How much will he or she
know ? ,
Will the human race, having moved
up to the highest possible point,
gradually go back to barbarians at
the and, as the individual in extreme
old age goes back to childhood?
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Will the last man know how to
talk to the other planets, and will he
know just what jju£oing to happen
to him afte^ he dies, or will he be
like ourselves, still wondering, with
only faith to comfort him, and save
him from painful thought and specu
lation ?
NAMELESS
THIS IS THE NEW
BOX OF CANDY
s 1 ’
Name Jt and win a prize. 78
prizes given away for names,
ranging from $100.00 to a one
pound box of the Nameless Huy-
ler’s. I suggest the following
name for^Huyler’s New Pack-
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age
Your Name
Your Address.
LeHls
Your New Home
the
Third
of the
- -’o . " X r • r
- v . r* 1 ■ •
Clinton I. & L
< »■ ►
15th
OR IF YOU DO NOT CONTEMPLATE BUILDING—USE OUR STOCK FOR ANY
ONE OF THE FOLLOWING PURPOSES: , — **
—To buy a hofne already built.
, —To build a fund for the education of your children. •
—To finance your business. ~
—To lay aside against a rainy day.
t————To secure a good, safe, profitable investment;
—To reinvest automatically the interest from other investments*.
* ^-To build a fund for a future home.
—~ ——To build a sinking fund against your debts and other obligations.
.—To insure your wife and children a happy future.
We have just finished a very active year and have enjoyed ^ phenomin&rgrowth.
Starting with nothing but the good-will of the people we cam in less than a year boast
of the following accomplishments:
• ’ * » \
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Subscriptions to Stock to Date Over 1-2 Million Dollars
Loaned in Clinton to Date *.... .... $96,796.33"
Total Assets to Date .. ...., ' $102,245.15
j . Loans Made to Date Twdnty-nine ^
u Built in Clinton in less than One Year 23 New Homes
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BOOKS FOR 3RD SERIES OPEN FOR SUBSCRIPTION NOW. NOTIFY
t) • V • ” € * • t * • •* •%
Wm. P. Jacobs, Secretary-Treasurer, or Jno. T. Young, H. G. Rheney,
t or (Sam Patterson for the Colored Folks.)
' * t
********* 1 A* Ai* At % %
Clinton B. & L.
l
J 1 *£
/ \
w. J. BAILEY
GEO. W. YOUNG
E; J. ADAIR
DIRECTORS:,
GUY L. COPELAND
E. B. SLOAN
JACK H. YOUNG
t
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J. F. JACOBS, SR.
J. W. COPELAND, SR.
C. W. STONE
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