University of South Carolina Libraries
Give Os Your Holiday jj Gleaning Early No matter where yoi^live, we are , * + as near to you as your telephone or mail box and we guarantee your » satisfaction. Thinp You Should Know JoMph Galnn, M. D.' Buchanan’s “Kleaners Who Klean” Phone No. 28 Dress-Up For Xmas In one Af our Top Coats and John B. Stet son Hats—you will be dressed up and feel different. TOP COATS in the very best styles and newest colors $17.00 up to $33.75 New shipment JOHN B. STETSON HATS just in — we are showing the new styles • * and colors $8.00 Come in and let its help you select your gift for Mother, Father, Sister and Brother. — o Copeland-Stone Co. “One Price To All” ' Phone No. 47 Clinton, S. C. MENU FOR MEN EMPLOYED You are busy—you are in the cumu lative period of life. You do not want to be sick. You are regular.in your work; you should feed the machine remain in good, serviceable health, as with system and safety. It will pay to I assume yoy are at this time—there fore the following daily menu: Breakfast Well buttere<J toast; one cup coffee; two soft eggs; three or four slices crisp bacon, or, a small steak, well- done; a dish of cereal with cream; a baked apple, or, a half cantaloupe, or orange, with no objection to cakes and syrup if the morning is cool and crisp to give plenty of oxygen for the combustion. Take plenty of time for this, the most important meal of the day. Dinner (Noon) Well-cooked vegetables, brown bread, butter, frui^, raw or cooked; baked potato of either variety; a bit of well-done roast, if no meat is taken son, fresh as is possible; best drink, at breakfast; raw vegetables in sea- buttermilk; second best, water not as pie or custard; cottage pudding—-or. a cold as ice. Dessert, well-made apple dish of stewed, dried fruit. Take plen ty of time for the meal, arid rest one hour after. Supper A glass of milk with brown bread; corn-meal mush and milk, or, whole- grain cereal with cream. The more tired you ate, the less you should eat. Ripe fruits may accompany this light est meal of the day. If you are healthy, you have no bus,- iness eating rich cakes, and highly- seasoned demons like mince pie, and the chocolate abominations, and a thousand other health-destroyers. Now First grade: Andy Nance, Charies Pinson, Jr., David Ratchford, James Leaman, Claude Mills, Hazel Walker, Henry, Boyce, Jr., Elizabeth Workman, Sara Chapman, Margaret Gregory, Sara Coats. - - ' < Second grade: Elbert JoneV Griffin Pinson, Lyl Adams, Juanita Brooks, Vivian Marion, Margaret McLeod, Blanche Pinson. Third grade: Lyl Walker, Margaret Ratchford. Fourth grade: Mary Ellen Adams, Virginia Hill. Fifth grade: Lula Atchinson, Sara Denny, Sara Noff, Lucius Marion, Ruth Coleman, James Pinson, Mary Emma Reeder. Sixth grade: Mary Reeder. Seventh grade: Wilma Carter, Thel ma Gregory, Ella McSwain, Sara Sims, Sara Ruth Thompson, Lois Wade, Caroline Wallace, May White, Julia Workman. Eighth grade: Katharine Denny, Alyne McNeil, S. L. Moore, Sara Lan- ford. Ninth grade: " Katharine Wallace, Stuart Anderson. Tenth grade: Dorothy Hitt, Julia Coats, Mildred Lanford, Mary Lizzie Brown. Eleventh grade: T-ucy Wharton, Kathleen Gregory, Charles Ropp. Cosmopolitan—gift book—$3.00 Good Housekeeping — gift book — $3.00. Cosmopolitan and Good Housekeep ing $6.00 per ye*r, to one address or to separate. Special— JAS. W. CALDWELL The Magazine Specialist GOAL! We deliver all orders promptly. Best quality coal. J. M. PITTS Phone 57 ~ —* ft'- ' “THE LAST OF THE BIGHAMS” First Edition. The most sensational 'WHOLE SALE MURDER of modern times occurring in South Caroli na and drew NATIONAL AT : TEN'nON—brother wipes out ENTIRE FAMILY—written by a South Carolina' editor, J. A. Zeigler. Send $1.00 to— R. A. SINCLAIR, Florence, S. C. Book will be sent by return mail. Nicely bound. Children can read local-tinted story years hence. I 1 WANT ADS ' FOR SALE — Charleston Wakefield cabbage plants, any quantity. J. Hamp Stone, Clinton, S. C. 12-29-4tc ■ v || What it takes to make e^s !sneer: COLLEGE ITEMS . OF INTEREST Happenings of Past Week As Picked Up On Presbyterian College Campus. Doctor Parkinson, president of the college, was absent for the greater part of the week. He was in attend ance of the Southern Association of GIRLS—Letting your hair grow out? PH help you. See nte. Margaret. Itp RAGS WANTED—We will pay 7c a pound for clean, white rags. Can use all you bring. The Chronicle office. LOST—Tortoise shell glasses between high school and home. Please re turn to Bothwell Graham HI. ~ Up CABBAGE PLANTS the year round. The right kinds. The right price. Sown at the right time. Telephones 136, 175, 192 J. John T. Blakely, tf FOR SALE—20 nice S. C. Rhode Is- . land red cockerels, pure bred, good shape and color. Eggs for setting, $1.50 to $5.00 for 15. C. C. Bailey, phone 304. 12-29-5tp LOST last week,' black .setter dog, six months old, near Garlington, S.n C. Had on collar with name-plate J. I. Copeland, Clinton, S. C. Five dollar reward for return of same to J. I. Copeland. Itp Jack D. Clark CHIROPRACTOR ‘Where the sick get well’ 10-12 A, M. 2-5 and 7-8 P. M. WATER Clean, fresh water is essential for egg production. - PROTEIN Protein is used chiefly'in making the wliites of eggs. Purina Chicken Chowder furnishes an abundance of material for whites. - FAT Most of the fat is used in making the yolks of eggs. Purina Hen Chow (Scratch) provides the necessary fat for a maximum number of eggs. MINERAL Hens need mineral to manufacture the shells. E GGS will make money for you now! To get eggs, you must feed for them. Purina Poultry Chows will furnish your birds the egg-making materials in the your birds the egg-making materials in the proper proportions. . If it’s eggs at less cost and more profit you Want let’s get together on your problem of feeding for eggs. For Sale By Clinton Hatchery & Feed Company Clinton; S. C. rj X T Cedar Chests Coty, Yardley, Gardenglo and Armand Toilet Sets Fountain Pen Sets } Desk Sets Norris and Huyler’s Candies ; Cigars Tobaccos !: ■ . " .* * . " w ; Sadler-Owens Pharmacy “At Union Station” Telephone 400 Telephone 400 Colleges and Secondary Schools, which met in Jacksonville, Fla., from Tues day to Friday. The programs for the literary so cieties were announced last week for Tuesday. The program for B society was as follows: Declamation, Russell; “The North and South Today,” Wade; current events, A. K. Wyatt; “Black Ballots in the White South,” Kolb; hu morous talk, I. A. Copeland; “Charles Evans Hughes,” O. C. Martin; an ori ginal talk by McDavid. The program for A society was: A debate, “Re solved, That the United States should cease to protect by force of arms cap ital invested in foreign lands except after formal declaration of war.” Af firmative, W. H. Weldon and M. P. Snypes; negative, T. J. Cole and T. G. Ellis; review of Oliver Curwood’s ar ticle, “Thou Shalt Not Kill,” R. M. Fraser; Henry Ford’s method of deal ing with his employes, leaders and pat rons,” L. L. Dunlap; improving our so ciety, J. W. Stewart. The preliminary varsity debate try outs have been announced. A number of men were present at a meeting held after chapel Thursday for those who intend to try out. Twelve men will be chosen in the preliminaries to repre sent, the school in the two varsity de bates to -be held the first of next year. At a later tryout eight men will be chosen from the 12 to comprise the two teams. The debates scheduled are a triangle with the Citadel, Carolina and P. C^ and one with Newberry, Wofford and P. C. The query will be the one announced above for the A section literary society. The* glee club has been progressing.t satisfactorily in its work for the last few weeks. A list of the members to date was posted by the manager 4ast week. They are: First tenors, O’Neal, Rigby, Prince, Means, Roberts, Hug gins; second tenors, Stribling, Mcln- nis, Smith, A. D. Jackson, J. S. An derson, K. L. Floyd, Swedenberg; first bass, Wilson, Beall, Hollis, Llteureux, T. N. Johnson; second bass, C. W. Johnson, G. J. Wilson, Hughes, A. W. Grafton. This list is in part tentative and may be changed before the final selection. A meeting of the student body was called Friday after chapel to elect a member of the freshman class to the student council. The men nominated weft O. W. Chapin, H. E. Ketchin knd Jimmy Greeh. Green was elected on the first ballot. Jimmy Green, former ly of Columbia, but nq?r from Decatur, Ga., is one of the outstanding men in the class. He was a star member of Western Carolina’s Largest Varieties and Biggest Values in Highest Quality Gift Goods Ready for Xmas Shoppers AT GAMBRELL HARDWARE CO., In Greenwood Every child wants and must have some kind of wheel toy as his or her gift from Santa Claus. Wheel toys take children into the out-of-doors—gives them the exercise that builds muscle, self-confidence and health, and are therefore fine gifts. THIS STORE IS WHEEL TOY HEADQUARTERS FOR WES TERN CAROLINA — SAVE MONEY AND DISAPPOINT MENT BY BUYING HERE. Fine Quality BICYCLES for Boys and Girls of All Ages. • Buying direct from manufacturers enables to sellfthese fine wheels at— $25 to $35 Union-.Hardware Roller ^Bearing ROLLER SKATES ~ A fine health building gift for boys and girls $1.95 us Rubber Tire VELOCIPEDES 1 In twenty different styles and sizes—strong and sturdy— 1.95, „ V $3.45, $3.95, $5.50, $7, $8.50 and up In AUTOMOBILES large and pleasing variety— $6 to $25 Winchester Fully Guaranteed Ball Bear ing ROLLER SKATES With arch rest built like a ptee! bridge. Will hold up a 200 pound man. Extra parts always available here— $2.50 , BLUE GRASS FARM WAGONS With shaft and tongue— $12.50 >} All Steel Rubber Tired DOLL CARTS With Wood Handles Only 95c The Biggeel A^sof tments and Best Val- i Qualit ues in Fine Quauty WHEEL GOODS That we have ever shown. Bought direct from manufacturers and assembled by experienced men. Extra TfiWTs if you ever need them. Buddie Bikes, Tri Cars, Irish Mails, Fire Engines and Trucks—strong and sturdy. YANKIBOY PLAY CLOTHES—a real gift for manly boys—Traffic Cop, Po liceman, Cowboy, Marine and Black Pi rate Suits. the freshman football team. He is a pledge to the Chi Tau fraternity. What Do P. S. JEANES Do? EXPRESS WAGONS Red Tin Express Wagons—all sizes— 95c to $3.50 ■a Rubber Tire SCOOTERS Extra light grade, must be seen to be appre ciated— $1.95 and up THE LARGEST AND BEST ASSORTED STOCK OF TOYS AND DOLLS IN OUR HISTORY—VERY MODERATELY PRICED. Thousands of useful, beautiful gifts for old and young, now await your selection! Pottery, Glassware, Silverware, China, Brass Goods and many new novelties of all kinds and descrip tions. Jt Gambrel! Hardware Company GREENWOOD! S. C. _ GREENWOOD, S. C. *4 i+JO''