The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, August 20, 1925, Image 2
PAGE TWO
THE CLINTON CHRONICLE,
THUKSUAI, JMJWUOl *U, 1VZ3
Stop That Backache!
|i*ny
Clinton Folks Hire
the Wny.
Found
T
Is a dull, nerve-racking backache
gearing you out? Do you feel older
and slower than you should ? Are you
tired, weak and nerypua; find it im->
possible to be happy, or enjoy the good
times around you? Then there’s
something wrong and likely it’s your
kidneys. Why not get at the cause?
Use Doan’s Pills—a stimulant diuretic
to the kidneys. Your neighbors recom-
jpend Doan’s; ' Read what this Clinton
resident says:
Mrs. R. J. McCrary, 93 W? Main St.,
gays: “My back ached and sharp, cut
ting pains caught me across my kid
neys whenever I bent. Disr.y spells
and severe headaches caused a good
deal of annoyance and I felt tired, run
down and depressed. I started to use
Doan’s Pills. This medicine soon re
lieved me.” , x
A FEW YEARS LATER. Mrs. Mc
Crary said: “Doan’s Pills cured me
and I haven't needed a kidney medi
cine in some time.”
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’^eim-
K ly ask for a kidney remedy—get
loan’s Pills;—the same that Mrs.
McCrary had. Foster-Milburn Co.,
Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
PARENTS-
Before the child enters into
this year’s school work, be sure
they are not Working under eyfc
Strain.
To learn the condition of your
children’s eyes consult us.
DBS. SMITH & SMITH
Optometrists
Office: Smiths Pharmacy
Clinton, S. C.
NOTICE TO THE
SCHOOL *
PATRONS
In the future all School
Books will be sold for
STRICTLY CASH.
Get your books early
and avoid the rush.
JE ANS BOOK
STORE
HOME CLUB GIRLS
AT. MANY CAMPS
SECOND institute
OP POLITICS OPENS
purpose for which K was devised,
said Dr. Victor J. West, professor of
political science in Leland-Stanford
University, California, in a lecture on
the bicameral legislature to the second
Furman institute of politics tonight.
“Yet the legislature is generally
criticised not from that point olyiew
at all. Indeed, few stop to think What
the functions of a legislature are. The
general idea is that legislature exists
simply to legislate.
“Yet, upon examination the activi
ties of the legislature appear to fall
into three distinct classes.
Over Six Hundred in Total Attend
ance This Summer.- *
Greenwood, Aug. 18.—Home demon
stration club girls of the Piedmont
district have been attending camps
during the months of June, July and
August. Camps have been held in
each of the counties of Abbeville, An
derson, Cherokee, Greenwood, Mc
Cormick, Newberry* Oconee, Pickens,
Union and York, showing a total at
tendance of 645 girls.
Before she is admitted to camp,
each chib girl is required to have her
club work requirements completed to
date. The joys of camp life are a
real compensation to her. *
The camp is held at a place in the
county most centrally located and
most suitable for the girls’ pleasure.
The places have varied from the real
camp in the forest to the nicely equip
ped colleges of the Piedmont. These
girls have had the pleasure of being \ sented and criticised,
entertained in the dormitories of Lan
der college, Limestone college, Tam-
assee D. A. R. school, De La Howe
school, Lebanon Community school,
Little Mountain high school, and
Rocky Bottom Camp grounds. In
each case the camp has lasted from
three to five days.
To keep the girls busy at work or
play is most essential, so the pro
grams are planned to occupy every
moment of the time from 6:30 in the
morning to 10 at night. A variety
of articles have been made to carry
home by the girls. They have been
a red basket, dresser scarf, collar and
cuff set, towels, handkerchiefs or il
lustrative booklets of club work.
At each camp an honor contest was
held in order to simplify the camp
discipline. It worked fine in every
case. Every day, each girl was on
Greenville, Aug. 18.—"The organ!
xatioit of U»e legislature ought to beT was Officers,: Set*
judged by the way it achieves the Places.
DUTCH ANDERSON
STILL SOUGHT FOR
Chapman’s Pal, Who Eluded Namor-
At Several
“One of these As discussion—dis
cussion and debate without refernce
to any action to be taken. The as
sembly is the only part of the govern
ment in which all ideas may be pre-
ARE YOU MAKING
ENOUGH MONEY?
We have constantly more va
cancies for qualified men and
women in all lines of work than
we can fill.
Inquire at once
INTERNATIONAL
CORRESPONDENCE
SCHOOLS
C. F. KOHLRUSS, Jr., Local
Representative
952 Ellis street. Phone 3118-W.
Augusta, Ga.
her honorjto answer “yes” or “no”
to the following questions and rib
bons were awarded to the club saying
“yes” to all questions. The interroga
tions aVe:
Were you qqiet after bed time?
Were you quiet before rising bell?
Did you brush your teeth today?
Did you drink your milk served ?
Did you leave off tea and coffee ?
Did you eat vegetables served?
Were you kind to others?
Have you joined in all songs and
games ? n
The greatest value of the club camp
to the girls is that it teaches co
operative play. The girls make great
efforts to attend. Some few are for
tunate to reach camp riding jn a
closed car, but many girls will walk
several miles to catch a ride with a
neighbor who is taking his daughter
over in the wagon. *The most unusual
method was seen though, when Stella
Bowen rode eight miles on a mule
i “Secondly, in law making—law
making in the true sense. All of the
formal acts of the legislature appear
as statutes and resolutions, but only
a few of.them are rules of conduct
of general application.
Thirdly, and from many points of
viewx.this is the most important func
tion of the assembly, js the control of
the executive branch of the*govern
ment. This is true even in countries
like our own, where the executive is
intended to be independent of the
legislature. When it is recalled, how
ever, that the great bulk of legisla
tion is to create offices and bureaus,
to put new duties on existing officers,
to shift functions from one govern
mental agency to another, and that
the greater part of the time of the
legislature is spent on the appropria
tion bills, it is not difficult to realize
the significance of the statement. The
appropriation act itself sets the limit«,
often in general detail, within which
the executive is ^to .act.
Burglars Visit
Tribble’s Place
Burglars entered the office of D. E.
Tribble Company Tuesday night but
failed to make a haul as they had
exp^cfetT. Tuesday morning it was
fouijjfl that entrance had been made
into the building through a side win
dow and /that the visitors went direct
to the large Fire-proof safe and be
gan their work. They had earlier in
the night broken into Mr. D. T. Tim-
mon’s tool house on the Seaboard
yards and having secured the nec£s=4night,
safy tools, they proceeded to do their
job in professional style.
The combination on the safe was
across the mountains to reach crac ij €< j > an j ron ro< j used to knock the
Her young brother rode the fame
mule with her, and carried the animal;
back home. He returned three days
later to carry Stella home from
camp. ^
Does a camp mean much to the chib
girl? The greatest proof is that they
all will attend again next year and
persuade .their friends to c^me, 'no,
for each year the enrollment gets
larger add larger.
Municc, Ind., Aug. 17.—George
“Dutch*’ Anderson} 'mail robber, jail-
breaker and pal of Gerald Chapman,
today still was being hunted for his
latest crimed—the slaying of Ben
Hance and his wife, who Informed on
Chapman. '
Anderson, who has eluded score^ of
federal Officers, private detectives and
police departments of the entire coun
try since he escaped from the federal
penitentiary at Atlanta nearly a year
ago, has been reported seen numerous
times on the streets here and in
apartment houses since the slaying of
the Hances last Friday night, but each
time the police raid the pjpee Ander
sen is missing,
Anderson is wanted by the govern
ment to complete a 20-year sentence
for ribbing a mail truck on the
streets of New York. Last night
pplice received o “ty>t tip” that Ander-
s6n was hiding in a farm house be
tween Muncie and Hartford City. Ind.
Armed with riot guns several souads
of police closed in on the place, hut
ifter a complete search of l6e place
Anderson, as usual, was missing,
Hance, police say, has paid with hn
life because he violated, the unwritten
code of the underworld in “squealing”
on Chapman. As a result of Hance’s
information last January, Thapman
was arrested here and with the aid of
the former’s testimony, he was ‘on •
victed of the murder of Patrolman
James Skelly of the New Britain,
Conn., police department during the
hold-up of a mercantile establishment.
Chapman is now being held in the
Connecticut state penitentiary under
death sentence for the murder of the
officer. ,
The coronqf’s inquest, scheduled for
today, officers say, will be indefinite
ly postponed to give police and federal
officers who are assist-ng in the
search time to hunt the slayer and to
gather evidence. s Anderson and Char
les “One Arm” Wolfe were named ns
the slayers by Hance’s dying state
ment, ^ho told Marshall Booher, of
Middletown, npar where they were
slain, “Dutch Anderson and Charles
Wolfe got me.”
Wolfe, former peace officer, who
several years ago was acquitted of
having slain his first wife, was held
in the county jail under bond of $100,-
000. Wolfe was taken in a raid on
the home of his mother-m inw a few
hours after the claying last Friday
tion the speeds, to survey a location
that nobody needs. That’s why I am
stirred to the depths of my soul, when
science goes Wild over findin’ the
Pole.
Nobody hfs lost it that ever I
knew—and, aposen they find it, what
good can it do? Can they fetch it
back home without peelin’ the bark—
an* set if out here, in our National
Park? Whatever’the pqle is—or
where it may be, may attract other
'folks but it don’t concern me. As to
fiyin’ uor flag on a hemisphere’s
cfome—It might do more service, to 'fly
it at homa! ’
Poultry Wanted
Company
OFFERS GOOD PRICES FOR HENS,
FRYERS AND ROOSTERS.
Pelievesd at their plant in Clinton.
Chicken- manure for sale by the wagon
loads.
RENT A CAR
i Drive Yourself
OPEN AND CLOSED CARS
DAY PHONE 357
• NIGHT PHONE 156
Ellis Auto Livery
COTTON PLANTER
NOT YET FINISHED
One Half Way Says Kilgort In Ad
dress to Farmers At
Greenwood.
Greenwood, Aug. 18.—“The cotton
farmer has made'satisfactory progress
in increasifig his production during
the past 50 or more years, but he has
not finished the job, he has gone just
half Way,” declared Dr. B. W. Kilgore
of Raleigh, N. C., president of the
American Cotton Growers’ exchange,
in an address to approximately 200
lock out on the inside after which it
was easy to open the door. They
made a thorough search through
numerous bundles of papers, books,
etc., but did not secure a dollar, since
no money was kept in the safe. Dis
appointed in their efforts here, they
scattered the papers and other con
tents of the safe over the floor and
then rambled through the cash regis
ter in another part of the office where
they met with the same success.
Behind the register was a rifle be
longing' to Bookkeeper W. E. Dillard j
and the visitors paid their respects by
taking it with them, the only haul
they were able to make in their high
handed and bold attempt. They open
ed the side door and passed from the
building, leaving no clue to their
identification.
/ — ^
s' — . :
July Employment Is •
Some Less Than June
UndeJohn
It must be severe on the average
mind—to search for the things we’re
unlikely to find; it’s tiresome to rum-,
mage the ends of the eyth, a-lookin’ -
fer things of no imminent worth—and
it takes a lot of nerves, not to men-;
G-10-1
1,018,322
Busy •
Americans
y v
crowded Buick
Showrooms
at the first
showing of
the Better -
^ '
have
Yo]i seen
The
/
/
Ernest W. Machen
Laurens, South Carolina
|
When better automobiles are built, Buick will build them
J. But FRONTIS
JEWELER
CLINTON, S. C.
SWIM IN .
LAKE THOMAS
Greenwood county fanners today. The
other half. Dr. Kilgore added, lies
along the road of proper marketing
and this is the objective that the co
operative associations are attempting
to reach. ~ -
The meeting, held at the fair
grounds under the auspices of the
county cooperative marketing associa
tion, was presided over by Dr. W. A.
Barnett and the speaker was intro
duced by District Fifld Agent F. L.
3ramblett.
Dr. Kilgore was given the closest
attention in his presentation of in
teresting and instructive facts on the
farming industry in generafr and the
progress made by the cooperative as
sociations through the American ex
change in particular.
Declaring that nothing was done for
half a centtry in improving market
ing conditions, Dr. Kilgore said the
farmer realized his opportunity for
the first time during the slump in
1921 through the cooperative associa
tion and the price now is the object
ive.
He pointed to the suecess that has
been met thus far and predicted the
association would make an improve
ment on the system of the cotton
merchant. “It is true we haven't got
it worked out to perfection yet,” he
said, “but we have done/remarkably
well during the three years since* our
organisation was started and we are
nearer a solution of the sales prob
lem.” V
Washington, Aug. 17.—Decreases of
1.1 per cent‘in employment, 2.4 1 per
cent in aggregate earnings of em
ployes, and 13 per cent in per capita
earnings were recorded in the manu
facturing industries in the United
States in July as Compared with June.
The labor statistics Bureau of the
labor department in making this re-
purl said the decreases were “much
less marked” than in the correspond
ing period in 1924 and CPuld he
largely” attributed to “July closing
for inventory taking and repairs and
the vacation season.”
ART MADE INTERESTING
WHAT DO
v P. 8. JEANS
DO?
In 1800 the executive branch of
American government had but 140 of
ficers and clerks.
WHAT DO
P. 8.
Art has battled its way down the
centuries against prejudice, narrow
ness, Whatnot, but most of all, against
lack of interest. Dup to cultivation
by the intelligent, in past centuries
a minority, the very word had become
in effect*a warning signal to the
majority citizen until the development
of the educational system and the
coming of the motion picture. Today
the man in the street and the stu
dent in his study look upon art alike
as a leavening factor in life and civili
zation.
To proper development of the edu
cational system the major credit for
this change is due, of course, but the
part , of the motion picture is an im
portant one. Generally speaking
modern educational methods have
made art faiqiliar, while the motior
picture has made it interesting.
Words always have seemed dums:
instruments for artistic interpretation
The motion- picture, speaking withou
words in the language of Ught am
vision, has brought art into the spher*
of the so-called Common people.”
Enjoy the
Now come the most glorious days
of all—late August, September and
B oldeo October! Day s iheant to be
ved out-of-doors—when the road
sides are ablaze with flowers, and
the woodlands a riot of color.
Take a Ford Car and strike out
from the crowded highways. Ex
plore the side-trails that lead to the
best fishing, the loveliest spots of
natural beauty.
There Is no going too hard for your
Time of the Tear
Ford; nothing at which its willing
power will balk. And its contrcd
is so simple, so easy that yoij can
ventdre where you will on un
known dirt roads, with the same
confidence with which you set out
on the paved highway.
The best vacation day sof all are still
ahead, the weather is less change
able now and roads are in better
condition. Get a Ford Car and revel
in the finest time of the year.
JEANS
DOT
dfc)ncC
Runabout - *$260 Tudor Sodan - $590
TaurimM Car • 290 Fordar Sodom • 660
AU$rimm f.o»k. DotriU
SEE ANY AUTHORIZED FORD DEALER OR MAIL THIS COUPON
-7
« Pouch hammocks are practically un
known in Switserland.
Coupe
*
520
HOlM.
toll me how I can
a Ford Caron easy payments:
Mall this
to
i...................
H-U “l