The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, August 13, 1925, Image 6
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PAGE SIX
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THIS CUNflQN CHRONlCtK CUNTON, S. C
Electrib Range Demon
stration Thursday and
Friday, August 13tkand
14th. Parrott-Electric.
V
SWIM IN
LAKE THOMAS
MS.10VED UNIFORM OTERNATIONAl
SundaySchool
f Lesson’
♦
*L4
(By RBV. P. B. F1TZWATBR, D.D., Om>
•f tli* Evening School. Moody Blhlo !•*
•tttqte of Chicago.)
(<E1 1125. Weatern Newepaper Hnlon )
Why Not Keep.Your
Money at Home
by givinf me your Magazine ^ and
Newspaper subscriptions, either N in
club or single subscriptions? * I can
handle your subscriptions at publish
ers price or less.
Lesson for August 16
TEMPERANCE LESSON
JAMES W. CALDWELL
• THE MAGAZINE MAN
Phone 243 at 12:30
RENT A CAR
Drive Yourself
OPEN AND CLOSED CARS
DAY PHONE 357
NIGHT PHONE 156
Ellis Auto Livery
CLINTON, S. C.
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
Renew Your Health
by
Aay physician will tell you that
4 4 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!
JPurifv your entire system by tak-
Jng a thorough course of Calotabs,
—once or twice a week for several
weeks—and see how 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 package,
10 cts. At any drug store. (Adv.)
‘Wholl rav
my taxes?
You’ll uk that mboiit
rent, interest, saUrieg
and tike items, tdo, if
fire burns you out Our
•goat beg the
CoutbemHpme
nsyrancenfmp
^CAROLINA INSURANCE
wxf
FOR CAROLINA PEOPLE.]
LLOYD D. McCRARY
.-t AGENT ' .
LESSON TEXT—<3»L
'GOLDEN TEXT—"Be not deceived:
God Is not mocked: for whatsoever a
man soweth, that shall he also reap."
—Gal. «:7. '
PRIMARY TOPIC—A Picture of a‘
Good Life.
JUNIOR TOPIC—Good and Bad
Fruits •
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP
IC—Drunkenness and Kindred Evils.
YOUNO PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP
IC—The Plesh Against the Spirit.
Having shown In chapters 3 and 4
T
♦ FARM DEMONSTRATION J
v NE^S ♦
C. B. CANNON, County Agent
DWARF ESSEX RAPE
Sown August 15th (o September 1st
and pastured November 15th. to May
1st. .
Farmers have not been taught the
value of rape as a forage crop. It is
a very hardy plant and can be sown
almost any month in the year, while
most of the forage crops must be
sown .at pertain seasons and rape
makes its best growth in cool weather.
Rape is very good for pork product
ion, makes excellent grazing for sheep
and is fine for egg production and
makes a splendid table salad,.
Preparation of the Seed Bed
The seed-bed for rape is prepared
similar to that of turnips, which
means a well pulverized seed bed.
You cannot get the soil too rich for
rape. Stable manure that is well rot
ted is an excellent fertilizer to use on
the cri>ps. It should be broadcast on
of this epistle that, the believer it , v* j . . . ,.
fr«. from the lew .. a mean, ef 1 * nd . » nd work « 1 in d ’» rt "<r
preparation.
| Planting
Rape may be planted either in early
tttli’ation, Paul make* practical appli
cation of this doctrine.
I. Christian Freedom'(w. 13-15).
1. It Is Not an Occasion to the
"Flesh” (v. 13).
Liberty is not license. The notion
that when one Is free from the law
he Is free from constraint. Is wickedly
erroneous. License of the flesh means
not merely the Indulgence of the flesh
In actual material sins, but In the ex
pression of a self-centered life In bit- >
ing and devouring one another (v. 15).
Bickering among Christians Is an ex
ample thereof.
2. By Love, Serving One Another
(v. 13).
Freedom from the Mosaic law means
slavery to the law of love. “The
emerging from bondage through Christ
is the passing Into a sphere of life
in which ail the powers should act
under the dominion of the true motive,
love."—Morgan.
II. Walking in the Spirit (v. 16-18).
This discloses the secret of how a*
irfe of service y> another can be lived.
The governing principle In the life
of a believer Is the Holy Spirit. Walk
ing in the Spirit results In: -
1. Loving Service to Others (v. 13).
2. Victory Over the Flesh (vv. 16-
17).
By the llesh Is meant* the corrupt
nature of man expressing itself in the
realm of sense and self. The renewed
man becomes two men between whom
a mortal conflict la going on. The
Christian tnust choose between good
and evil. When he chooses the evil,
the Holy Spirit opposes, and when he
chooses the good the flesh opposes.
Notwithstanding this deadly conflict,
victory irf sure if one chooses the
good. .
III. The Works of the Flesh (w.
19*21).
By works of the flesh is meant the
operation of the carnal nature. The
one who chooses to live according to
the Impulses and desires of his natu
ral ht4irt will be practicipg the fol
lowing sins.
1. Sensuality (v. 19).
The sins enumerated here are prac
tised in the sphere of the body and
are:
(1) Fornication. (The word “adult--'
ery” Is omitted from the best manu
scripts.)
(2) Uncleafiness. This includes al)
sensual sins, open or secret, .'thought
or deed.
(3) Lasciviousness. This menhs the
wanton reckless indulgences In tho
shameful practices of the flesh. "
Irreligion (v. 20).
spring or late in summer, but is often
planted during the fall, say August
' 15th to September 1st./ It will require
about three pounds seeding in drill or
six to eight pounds broadcasL In the
drill the rows should be about thirty
inches wide. The seeds are covered
about one to one and a half inches
deep. -
Grazing the Plants
S*oek should hpt have access to the
field until the rape is about six or
eight inches high. If dairy cattle have
access to rap« fields they should be
taken off six or eight hours before
milking time as the rape flavors milk
like turnips, and has a tendency to
make it watery. There is danger of
bloating if stocks are allowed too
xpuch green matter when first turned
on. For best results, Ihe field should
be divided into two lots and one al
lowed to rest while the other is being
grazed. Rape tnay be grazed from
about November 15th ta May 1st. A
good acre of rape will furnish grazing
for fifteen head of hogs for a period
of three months without any other
feed except one ear of corn for every
one hundred pounds of pork.
HOME GARDEN
Fall gardens should be under way
at this ’ time. Remember that fall
vegetables must be planted in time.
Listed below are the vegetables to be
planted in your home garden from
August 1st to the 15th:
Tomatoes: Stone, Acme.
Beans (Snap Bush): Bountiful, Late
Refugee.
English Peas: jHorsford’s Market
Garden, Alaska. \ j
>Beets: Crosby’s Egyptian, Crimson
Globe.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1925
RAULSTON PAYS
TRIBUTE TO BRYAN
Scop,* Judfe Specks At Memorial
„ Service in Chicago, Lauding
Late Commoner.
Chicago, August ft.—Speaking at a
William Jennings Bryan memorial
service at the North Shore Congre-
7
gatlonal Chuyfch here this afternoon,
T. r
Lettuce: Big Boston, Improved Han-
: w«
son, New York Wonderful.
Turnips: White Egg, Yellow Aber
deen, Extra Early Purple Top.
Kale: Curled Siberian.
Carrots: Half Long Turnip Rooted,
Chautenay.
Onions: Yellow Globe Danvers,
Prize Taker.
\ ORCHARD SANITATION
The control of the various peach
diseases can be materially helped by
using proper sanitary measures lifter
the crops are harvested. This is par
ticularly true in the cases of brown
Tot and scab. These diseases are car
ried over from one season to another
on old fallen fruit, decayed limbs, and
leaves. One mummied peach is capa-
T’les^nets take place In the realm ble of furnishing enough spores to
of the spirit and are
(1) Idolatry, which means the wor
shiping rtf idf^s.
• (2) Witchcraft or Sorcery. This
CHANGE OF LIFE
Yirginia Lady Improved After
She Took Cardoi
"1 had been going through the
change of life and it seemed to me
that everything got wrong," says
Mrs. Deala Hawks, of Bristol, Va.
‘T suffered from shortness Of
breath and 1 could not go up the
steps without stopping to rest
several times.
"When 1 would try to hoe in my
garden 1 would soon give out. 1
could scarcely hoe two rows before
my breath was coming in gasps.
"My. sister-in-law haa taken
Cafdul and she thought It might do
I, so she told me to try it.
me
! good, so she told me to try it.
1 got a bottle (of Cardui) and he*
P m to take it by the directions and
began to improve after a few
doses.. My general condition was
so much better after the first bottle
-^that I got another, and another,
until 1 had taken six. NoW 1 am a
well woman.
"Cardui is a great medicine.
Since 1 took it I feel like a new
woman. 1 had had female trouble
N for years. 1 am glad to recommend
* to other women a medicine whiclr
means nil defiling with the occr’t sufl!
as magical arts. etc.
3. Sins of the Temper (vv. 20-21.
These take place in the sphere of
the mind and are:
(1) Hatred.
(2) Variance, which meBns strife.
(3) Emulations, jealousy.
(4) Wrath, bursts of passions.
(5) Seditions, factions In the slate.
(6) « Heresies, factions In the chur<»h.
(7) Envyings.
(8) Murder*. ’
4. Sins of Excess (v. 21).
(1) Drunkenness. This means in
dulgence in intoxicating liquors.
(2) Bevelings, acts of dissipation
under the influence of Intoxicants.
IV. Th# Fruit of tho Spirit (v. 22-
24).
This indicates action in the realm of
life.* the product of the Holy Spirit
Indwelling the believer.
1. Love, to God and man.
2. Joy. glad-henrtedness because* of
what God has done.. <-
3. Peace with God Jind fellowmnn.
4. Longmiffering, taking insult and
InJury'Wltbout'murmuring.
5. Gentleness, kindness to otfier*.
6. Goodness, doing good to others.
7. Faith, believing God and commit
ting all to Him.
8. Meekness, submission to God.
ft. Temperance, self-control in all
things. Against such there Is no law.
has helped me.
Ataudn
drug stores.
C-36
Man's Sorrows i - *
Man’s sorrows are a v mystery, but
that sinners should not have sorrows
were a sapder mystery still. And God
pleads with us all not to lose the good
of our experiences of the bitterness «f
sin by our levity or our blindness ttf
their meanlngg.>-Alexander Maclaren.
entirely destroy all the fruit on a
tree the following season. Infested
limbs and spotted leaves likewise act
as sources of infection.
As soon as packing is over, all* TalK
en fruit should be picked up from
beneath tjie tijees and fed to hogs or
else buried. See that no truits are
left hanging on the trees. As soon
as the leaves fall from the trees in
early wipter th^land should be turn
ed in order to bury all debris around,
the trees. The pruning operations
should be carefully done, seeing that
all infected twigs and* limbs are cut
out.
In the case of bacterial ItiSf spot, a
disease commonly knovp as “shot
hole”, cultivation an4 good fertilizing
is the only cure. Watch your trees
during the summer and if "shot hole"
ie present on the leaves make a note
of ft and increase your fertilizer next
spring. \
Keep in mind that a few minutes in
clean-up around each tree in your
orchard this summer will save hours
in time and dollars in cash next year.
It is much better to prevent diseases
than to try curing them.
Remove diseased and broken limbs
from fruit trees immediately after
harvesting the crop.
. Blake your plans now for planting
fruit trees and grape vines next fall.
Do not neglect to spray apple, trees
for control of bitter rot.
Remember that grape vines should
i oeen
be sprayed after the fruit has
harvested Jfr, insure better fruit next
seasons
CARDUI
Do It Today
There are a lot of people who Barer-
vsisasa
pnt off till tomorrow whgt they
get somebody to do today.—Western
Chflstlan Advocate.^ 'J*-* *
PIANOS for RENT
O’DANIEL & REID
WHAT DO
Judge John T. Raulston, who presided
at the Scopes triaj, paid tribute to one- <
of the leading figures in the “evolu
tion case." '
"Coming from the South as I do
and knowing of my impulsive nature,
I fear that some of you (fright mis
judge my enthusiasm for uolitical
prejudice.” said the Tenrmsseean.
"Therefore, I think it proper that you
know fn the beginning that I do not
belong to the same political party as
the man in whose memory I speak.
"I had never known Mr. Bryan un
til I met him at Dayton and^whatever
I’shall say of him will be based large
ly upon my observations of him dur
ing the Scopes trial. And *ince he
and the trial are inseparable in my
mind, I shall be compelled to *^>eak
of one in,order to speak of thepther.
“I believe that it is generally *
BANKERS SECURITY COMPANY \
Greenville, S. C. ■
DEALERS IN:,
Cotton Mill Sto6kv
Municipal Bonds -
First Mortgage Bonds
\
We are interested at ail times in buying •>
; and selling LYDIA COTTON MILL ::
7% g<5ld NOTES.
^ i |
(Get your name on our mailing list.)
thought by Christian people that at
the time of his death Mr, Bryan was .
engaged in the greatest work of his /
life. ✓ !
"I believe that those who will sub
mit themselves to the guidance of
the Divine hand are used from time
to time in the work where they can
render the greatest service. In oth-
erwords, I believe that there is a mis
sion for every person in th6 world.
And if we will allow ourselves to be
led by Jehovah we will find the work
to which we are best adapted."
Judge Ralston reviewed the circum
stances leading to the ‘ indictment'and
trial of John T. Scopes, naming the
attorneys in the case in which Wil
liam Jennings Bryan appeared for the
prosecution.
/
♦
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Miss Leonell Smith
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JAMES F. deJARNETTE, V.-P. & Mgr. THO& J. KELLEY, Amo. Mgr.
S
v
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Following Hotels^Are AlsoXannon Operated;
GEORGIAN HOTEL ' JOHN C. CALHOUN HOTEL
Athene, Ga. Anderson, S. C.
W. H. CANNON. Manager . D. T. CANNON, Manager
SMi
The men who drill the deep oil wells, 5,000
feet or more down into the earth, are old
hands. They have been drilling wells all
their lives, always deeper, always in more
inaccessible places. They a inexperienced in
Overcoming delays, in avoiding accidents,
in getting the job done on time or ahead v
of it. It is largely due to the efficiency of ^
these men that the motorists of this coun
fry can^depend on a plentiful supply of
power whenever and wherever they want it.
So it is in every department of this com
pany. In the executive offices, in the refin
eries, in the shipping and marketing de-
/ . partments many of our employees have
followed in the footsteps of their fathers,
carrying on their work with the accumu-
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result shows in the uniform high quality of
“Standard’* products. Hundreds of thou- *
sands ofmotorists will testify to it. (
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
(New Jersey)
JjL
A
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STANDARD
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V' \
GASOLINE
t
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A PRODUCi 6f 55 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE IN REFINING a
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