The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, September 10, 1925, Image 8
Page Eight
WRKIEYS
afteb
EVERY
Probably one
reason for the
popularity of
WRIGLEY’S U that it lasts
so long and returns such
great dividends for so small
an outlay. * It keeps teeth
clean, breath sweet, appetite
keen, digestion good. V
Fresh and full'flavored
always in its wax-wrapped
package.
By Artbpr
AMERICA’S ENEMY—FAT.
A SHORT-HORN BULL.
A ROOF TO THE EARTH.
'lO-POUND BABY?—WRONG.
BACK BAD TODAY?
Then Find the Cause and Correct It
As Other Clinton Folks Have.
What k more dangerous than ocean
travel, riding on railroads, or flying
in an airplane?
The answer, given by Mr. Johnson,
of the National Life Insurance com
pany is FAT.
There’s little rest or peace for the
backache sufferer.
Days are tired and weary—
Nights bring no respite.
Urinary troubles, headaches, dizzi
ness and nervousness, all tend to pre
vent rest and sleep.
Why continue to be so miserable?
Why not use a stimulant diuretic to
the kidneys?,
Use Doan’s Pills.
Your neighbors recommend Doan’s.
Read this Clinton case:
Oscar Cash, 11 Davis St., says: “A
dull pain settled in the small of my
back and when I stooped it was hard
to straighten. My kidneys were weak
and acted too frequently. The secre
tions burned in passage, too. When
having this trouble, I used a box of
Doan’s Pills -and* in a short time, I
felt as well as ever. Doan’s do what
they are represented to do.”
^ Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask for a kidney remedy—get
Doan’s Pills—the same that Mr. Cash
had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buf
falo, N. Y.
D. E. TRIBBLE CO.
CLINTON, S. C. .
UNDERTAKERS & LICENSED
EMBALMERS
AH Calls Promptly Attended To
Day or Night
' ALL MOTOR EQUIPMENT
Day Phone 94 Night Phone 205 or 24
Fat kills Americans more rapidly
than anything else. Fatty degenera
tion of the heart kills many. Fat ac
cumulates on middle-aged business
men, and that kills them before their
time. %
In old age especially iat is danger
ous. And in old age it is most diffi
cult to get rjd of dangerous fat. The
heart won’t stand exercise that might
take the fat off. The feeble will can
not control diet.
The safest place in the world as'
regards accidents is the cabin of A
big steamship on the ocean.
Next in safety comes a railrcyac
train, and before long the flying
machine will be safer than either.
The man in greatest danger is the
fat man past middle age, eating
heartily and hurriedly when he
tired. Don’t insure him.
is
Poultry Wanted
The Clinton Produce
Company
OFFERS GOOD PRICES FOR HENS,
FRYERS AND ROOSTERS.
Delieverd at their plant in Clinton.
Chicken manure for sale by the wagon
loads.
J. B. FRONTIS
JEWELER
CLINTON, 8. C. -
RENT A CAR
Drive Yourself
OPEN AND CLOSED CARS
DAY PHONE 357
NIGHT PHONE 156
Ellis 'Auto Livery
CLINTON, 8. C
Gould
%TT££i
EDWARDS AUTO
SERVICE
D»y Phone ^365 Night Phone 307
Buy Your
D IXIMAin
ICE CREAM U
— and —^ /'■’
ESKIMO PIES
P. S. J E A N E S
Good news for little automobile
owners. Gasoline prices are slashed
all over the country. Yesterday, in
Eastern territory*, the cut was three
cents a gallon. In the Middle West
many buy gas under 14 cents. It
makes a big difference those xhat
count the cost of living and motor
ing.
It means nothing to the big men;
they don’t care what gasoline costs.
And many of them, owning oi{ stocks,
feel rather sad. A three-cent cut in
gas • may mean a (30 drop in oi’
stocks.
A short-horn bull was sold in the
Argentine Republic yesterday for
$60,000, record price for that breed.
The real record is the price paid in
this country by the Carnation Farms
Company for a Holstein bull
000.
-$102.
These prices show what can be done
by breeding among animals. You can
get a perfectly good bull for $40.
But a little change in the shape of
the animal, produced by a careful
selection of the mysterious chromoso
mes, makes a big difference.
Students of eugenics think careful
breeding will produce equal improve
ment in human beings. They are mis
taken. i
Learned men, including churchmen,
once taught that there was a roof
to this earth, solid, held up by its
own strength and called the sky.
When Galleo denied it and said the
earth was a round ball whirling
around the sun, he had to get down
on his knees saying tbai he "retract
ed, abjured and abhorred his false
teachings”—which happened to be
perfectly true. „
PERSONAL ITEMS
FROM CROSS HILL
Special to The Chronicle.
Cross Hill, Sept. 9.—Mr. and Mrs.
Louis Major and Ann, of Ware Shoaty
and Mr. Hugh Lean^m of Aiken, are
the guests of Mr. • and Mrs. W. # H..
Learoan.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Baggott, of Co
lumbia, are week-end guests of Mr.
and Mrs. S. A. Leaman.
Mrs. J. H. Rasor, Miss Margaret
Rasor, Miss Caroline Matthews and
Mr. Jake Rasor spent Thursday in
Greenvill^. ' i
Mr. Hugh Milter Leaman of North
Carolina, is visiting his mother, Mrs.
Bigie Leaman.
Miss^ Sara Goggans has gone to
Winston-Salem where she will teAch
• , -
this winter.
Mr. Erskine Carter of Clinton, was
in the city^ Thursday to visit rela
tives.
Miss Lizzie Carter, after being sick
for some time, is able tb v l>e out* again.
Miss Jonella Austin, of Spartan
burg, spent Monday with home-folks.
Mr. and Mrs. Lathan Crisp of
Greenwood, visited relatives hete the
past week-end.
Mrs. J. L. Carter, Mrs. Hugh Senn,
Mrs. S., A. Leaman, Miss Ida Tur
ner and Mrs. Henry Carter attended
the Missionary Institute in Laurens
on Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Ratchford, Mrs.
J. E. Leaman, Mrs. Frank Miller and
Mrs. Lydie Miller attended the Mis
sionary Institute in Laurens on Wed
nesday. 1
Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Leaman, of
Laurens, spent Sunday with their par
ents. > .
Mr. Pen Goodman is better after
several days illness. ..
Mrs Henry Johes and children are
visiting Mrs. P. S. Pinson.
Miss Gladys Thompson returned to
Winthrop College on Friday.
Miss Ozela Harmon returned to her
school at Blythewood on Friday.
Miss Gertrude Leaman left Sunday
to open her school Monday nea^
Shoals Junction.
Mr. and Mrs. Lat Rasor of Shoals
Junction are visiting Mr. Barmore
and Ada Rasor.
Mr. and Mrs. J.- H. Nance jsnd
Andy have returned from the mount
ains where they spent the summer.
Mr. Calhoun Pinson is visiting in
Ninety-Six.
Miss Grover Manheim has returned
to her home in Virginia after spend
ing several weeks with her sister, Mrs.
Lewis Hanna.
Mrs. Janie Davis and little Billy,
of Georgia, are visiting relatives in
the city.
Mrs. S. A. Leaman and Miss Alma
Coleman are visiting Mr. and Mrs
Bob Baggott in Columbia.
Miss Caroline Martin leaves Wed
nesday for Inman for several days’
visit.
Mr. Furman Griffin of Chicago, is
spending several weeks with his, par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E> Griffin.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Wasson of
Charleston, are the guests of Mrs.
Lou Bryson.
Misses Evelyn and Kathleen Ruck
er, Lois Hipp and Mr. and Mrs. R. H.
Gunn of Charlotte, are visiting Dr.
and Mrs. Hudson.
Little Julia ilttler, of Whkmire, is
visiting her aunt, Mrs. L. E. Martin.
Misses Dorothy and Virginia Senn,
who have been spending the summer
in Montreat, came home Saturday.
Miss Renie Coleman is attending
business college in Greenville.
Mrs. Barden Wallace of Columbia,
4s-visiting-Dr, and Mrs. J. H. Miller.
The many friends of Mr. C. Dial
are glad to know he is better and
returned home Saturday fyom the hos-
The idea of a solid sky above us,
with stars planted in it here and
there, faded out. But now the radio
experts of the navy say the earth
actually has a “roof’ of another kind.
It exists, presumably, where our thin
atmosphere melts away into the ether,
“an inoized region in the higher levels
of the atmosphere,” the scientists call
it.
The “imponderable ether,” so dense
that solid steel in comparison is like
h coarse fish ndt, certainly does en
close our earth and its thin atmos
phere.
Radio waves such as we use may
be able to travel outside that atmos
phere. If so, science will find some
othe wave that will take messages
to other planets.
If light-producing waves can travel
from the snn to the earth, men will
find some wave that will carry infor
mation from the earth to the sun and
beyond.
pital.
Mrs. W. C. Rasor is at home from
a visit to Mr. Rasor, who is much im
proved.
School will open on Monday, Sep
tember’ 14th, at nine o’clock in the
tabernacle. All the parents are in
vited to be present. All children are
urged to be present on the first day.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Coleman of
Florida, are visiting Mrs. Wade Tur-
ner. ^
Mrs. Bigie Leaman and Mrs. Lydie
Turner are visiting relatives in Ham
let, N. C.'
Learn, proud parents, that the much
praised “ten-pound boy baby” isn’t
the thing at all. The average normal
boy baby weighs 7 1-2 pounds at
birth.
One learned Italian has written a
book to prove that women, by special
diet, can and should keep the unborn
child from becoming too fat for its
own sake and for the mother’s sake.
We have k Ut to learn about taking
care of children before they are born
including the science, of saving them
from piling on fat that makes birth
more difficult and is lost right after
birth. M .
PIANOS for RENT
O’DANIEL & REID
FORD COMPANY’S
ASSETS $644,624,468
I -
Statement Lists Figures of Corpora
tion For Figures Ending Last
December.
Lansing, Mich., Sept. 4.—Assets of
$644,624,468 were shown by the Ford
Motor company in its annual report
to the’state corporation division. This
is an increase of $170,000,000 over
last year. The company paid the
maximum corporation fee of $50,000.
Assets of subsidiary companies, it
was estimated, would raise the total
to $1,000,000,000. '
The statement which is of Decem
ber 31, 1924, listed cash on hand, pat
ent rights, formulas, good will and
value of credits at $265,723,525;
stocks and bonds, $65,070,30% sup
plies, $95,254,936; prepaid expenses,
^l,455,082; fixed assets, less depre
ciation and amortization, $227,126,-
617.
Liabilities were given as accounts
payable, ,$33,116,229; employees in
vestments, $23,459,388; expenses and
taxes payable, $28,122,714; amortiza
tion of patents, $181,138; capital
stock/$17,264,500; surplus $542,496.
, The Ford interests also paid
123 in taxes for other concerns coiPi
trolled either by Edsel or Henry Ford,
the eompUte records for which have
. i - \
not been made available. The other
corporations were the Lincoln Motor
company, Grand Rapids Land A Lum
ber- company; G. F. S tear nos Land A
dumber company; Ford Hydro-Elec
tric company, C. E. Johansson, Inc.,
Stout Metal Airplane company, Ford-
son Power company, Ford son Coal
company, Dearborn- Publishing com
pany, ai^d Dearborn Realty $ Con
struction company.
Tater-Flakes
“They’re Smackin' Good”
Here is mouth-water
ing- joy, made frofli
choice white potatoes,
cooked, in pure vegeta
ble Tater-Flake Oil-
coming to you crisp, gol
den brown, in sealed
bags. At every meal
and as a lunch a delicacy
you will appreciate. .
To be had at your Gro
cers in large bags—10c,
20c. As a confection at
your soda counter 5c
bags. - ..
Give them a trial.
» —
During thievery hot spell of dry weather we have been
put to the limit to supply our friends with ICE, and we
thank you for your patience and patronage. We have
done almost our very best. Have worked long and hard
that you need not suffer. Keep your milk, butter, et£,
on ICE and enjoy Ice Cream often. If you want ICE
“right away” please drive to the factory for it. # ‘ 1
DIXIE ICE & FUEL COMPANY
CUNTON, S. C.
4
RENT A CAR
Drive Yourself
OPEN AND CLOSED CARS
DAY PHONE 357
NIGHT PHONE 156 ,
Ellis Auto/Livery,
YOUR DOG
$
PEP NOX FITS—Positively cures running fits. Satisfac
tion guaranteed or money refunded. One full treatment
$1.35. Use the kind the leading kennels use and cure
your dog.
PEP STOCK MEDICINE—A Worm Eradicator -
For All dumb brutes and fowls. Positively guaranteed to
satisfy consumer or money back without question. Price
60 cents. - i * r f
Use the kind of Stock Medicine V. M. Montgomery, owner
of Springdale Farm of Spartanburg, uses on his champion
herd of Holstein cattle and get results.
For Sale in Clinton by THE CARRYTERIA; J. C. SHELL
& CO.; Laurens; LAURENS DRUG CO., Laurens; JOAN
NA MERCANTILE CO., Goldville; J. J. JONES, New
berry; S. O. NESLEY, Newberry ; NEWBERRY DRUG
CO., Newberry.
If your merchant or druggist can’t supply it, order direct from
Pep Stock Medicine Company, Winder, Ga.
A
■ ©
Han Schaffncr
& Man
1.4-v
You , U meet some friends youVe
always known at this store this fall
HART SCHAFFNER
& MARX CLOTHES
. * \ ’
V ' V • '
Everybody knows Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes t that they’re stylish,
all-wool, beautifully tailored and that they’re guaranteed to give satis- j'
faction. In fact most men feel that they’re as'good as clothes can be
made. And they’re right about it. * '
FROM NOW ON YOU’LL FIND THEM AT THIS STORE.
They're the kind of clothes we like to sell; and we’re the kind of store
Hart Schaffner & Marx like to sell.
All the newest styles and fabrics /are here. You’ll find the famous
Heathlands fabrics in shades of Scotch bramble; wood brown, peat, pheas
ant and grouse. The new models have wider shoulders; they’re narrower
through the hips; trousers are full and taper to.the shoes. The values
are as good as the styles and fabrics.
Farmers Mercantile Company
. The House of Better Values”
HART SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHES
NUNN-BUSH SHOES ! f i
STETSON HATS