The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, January 10, 1929, Image 7
Tv* ' t
'.'.■i r.
.. .^,
ijyia&XY^ jAWARY 10. IW
wu
-■f
'CLINTON t-1
iS
' :A.
ASSESSOR)® NOTICB
^Tha Coi^jftjrVAtiditbr** office at Lau
rens, S; C:, will be op«ii from ibe 1st
> day of Januarjr to the 20th day of
February, 1920, for the purpose of
taking tax returns for the ensuing
year; and for the transaction df all
business pertaining to the office. For
the convenience of taxpayers returns
can be made at the following appoint
ments throughout the county on dates
specified below*.
Yoang*s Township .
Robert Harris Store, Monday, Jan.
7th, 9 tQ 12 A. M.
Pleasant Mouhd, MbiidhyY'jin. Tth,
12:30 to ^ P. M.
Lanford, Monday, Jan. 7th, 2:80 to
4:80 P. M.
Gray’s School House, Tuesday, Jan.
8th, 9 to 11 A. M.
Stephen’s Store, Tuesday, Jan. 8th,
11:30 A. M. to 2 P. M.
' Tollie Garret’s Store, Tuesday, Jan.
8lh, 2:30’to 4 P. M.
Dials Township'
John Jones' Store, Wednesday, Jan.
• 9th, 9 to 11 A. M.
Owings, Wednesday, Jan. 9th, 11 A.
M. to 1 P. M.
Gray Court, Wednesday, Jan. 9th,
2 to 4 P. M.
- Reeves’ Store,,Thursday, Jan. 10th,
9 to 11 A. M. < -<* V* :
Bolt's Store, Thursday, Jan. 10th,
11:30 A. M. to 2 P. M.
Ben Tumblin's Store, Thursday,
MOl
.Y meeting:
r
/
y. Sullivan Township
Hickory Tavern, .Friday, Jan. lltb,
9 to 11 A. M. *
Princeton, Friday, Jan. 11th, 11:30
A. M. to 2 M. .
Taylor’s Store, Friday, Jan. 11th,
2:30 to 4 P. M.
Poplar Springs, Watkins’ Store,
Monday, Jan. 14th, 9 to 12 A. M.
Waterloo Township
Ekom, Monday, Jan. 14th, 2 to 4
P. M. _____
Dr. W. C. Thompson’s, Tuesday, i
Jan. 15th, 9 to 12 A. M.
Jerry Martin’s Store, Tuesday, Jan.
16th, 2 to 4 P. M.
Waterloo Town, Wednesday,-Jan.
16th, 9 to 12 A. M.
Mountville, Wednesday, Jan. 16th,
2 to 4 P. M.
Cross. Hill Township
Cross Hill, Thursday, Jan. 17th, 10
A. M. to4P.;M.
Htfiiter Township
Clinton Town, Friday, Jan. ^8th, 9
• A, M. to-4 P. M.
Clinton Mill, Monday, Jan. 21st,
Sevcrpl Nee«M Improveiuents ^
thoriaed In Sewerage and Street ^
Departments.
City Council held its regular month
ly meeting Thursday night with Act
ing Mayor Harris presiding and all
aldermen present. A number of mu-
tine matters were before the mehl-
ing for consideration and acted upgn.
The financial atatement presentsd
by, the clerk and treaaorer, showed lA
ci^'a outstanding notes Md
ohtM ons pai^' up January fHlM.
The finance committee was empower
ed to make the necessary loan to meet
bond indebtedness due in January a|pd
February in anticipation of the rega-
lar tax money available for this pur
pose in the fall.
John H. Young, ^W. P. Jacobs, John
T. 4krang,' 4Sfd Dr. L. R. Lynn of ^Mie-
orphanage, appeared before Couneil
with a fbquest for cretain needed
sewerage improvements and exten
sions. Council approved the extension
of the orphanage sewerage line to the
new septic tank as it was under previ
ous obligation to do, and likewise the
installation of a sewer line in College
View to acjcommodate a number of
new houMB that 'are immediately tP
be erected. A .petition" for a sewer liae
on Frances and Gordon streets adr
uliding was^aTso authorized to se^rve
a new development now being com
pleted-in this section by the Clinton
Cotton Mills. A petition before Coun
cil signed by all property owners on
the street, was also favor.^ibly acted
upon for guttering and surfacje treat
ment of the “missing link” of Hamp
ton avenue running from South Broad
way and tapping Woodrow street at
the corner of Dr. S. C. Hays’ and R.
Z. Wright’s property.
Council took cognizance of the death
of the late Mayor Sloan and ordered
a general election for Feb. 26ih to i
beaten and untied football team came jiandg ^ successor to the office. Acting
home. . !
olutions on tSf::'aa*r dimth to bf
ttffwgrded h» family a^ « paga in
Ol minute book to be inecirlbed to his
memorj|<, -
The r^ort of the police department
for ^e month show^ $447 25 assess
ed and collected in fines and 210 days
on the coimty chain gang passed upon
violators. Several other mattras of
routine business were actel^ upon,
after whkdi Council adjoumecT. %
Public Schools
Resume Work
‘’MISS'CLA1MI>^ErDBAN
- Miss Dean will have charge of ^e
free cooking school at the city clerk's
office on next Tuesday, Wednesday
and Thursday. * She will be glad to
have every woman in this section
present at the school. Come and hear
her and see how to' electrically pre
pare many tasty dishes at low cost.
Atlanta Acclaims
Heroes Of Gridiron
Atlanta, Jan. 7.—The Golden Tor
nado of Georgia Tech, greatest foot
ball storm of years, was finally sub
dued tonight—some 60,006 cheering
home folk accomplishing the feat Ifk
the team returned from a Rose Bowl
victory o^er the University of Cali
fornia.
Reaching the Atlanta terminal sta
tion on a special train at 8:37 p. m.,
from Pasadena, Calif., amid.st the
shriek of locomotive and factory
whistles, the clang of bells and every
noise-making device available, the un-
The Clinton public schools .were re
opened for classes after Uie holiday
season'on Moaday with a fiill attend
ance of teachers and a ve:;/ large per
centage rf pupils present. It is felt
that the influenza epidemic has passed
its crisis in the city scnocls now and
,that the woiic can be resumed and car
ried on without handicap.
Tond flo^
SHOP
FLOWERS FCu ALL OCCASIONS
157 W. Main SL Phone 396
y-
What tiie New Yorltlife
Did In 1928
New York Life’s New Paid Insurance
dividend and all other additions)
is over ’ -
(exclusive of
AAA MILLION
^aDCMLLARS
At the close of 1928 the total out-
standinsr insurance in force is over
C 7QA million
D| IOU DOLLARS
F'rom the moment they unloaded in
the station yards, surrounded by hun
dreds of hilarious admirers who had
forced the gates, the celebration start
ed. Scores rushed Coach William A.
Alexander as he stepped from his car j
with his mother,t and he laughingly
grabbed as many hands as was hu
manly possible before the rush was.
carrying him up the steps into the
station corridors. Stumpy Thomason, i
W'^arner Mizell, Capt. Peter Pund, Ma- |
ree, Wadey, Jones, Disrant, Lumpkin j
and every man of the .squad had his j
own little army of well-wi.shers mill
ing around him. . .
Mayor Harris and City Attorney
W'ade were authorized to prepare res-
In the Twelve Months of 1928 the
New York Life Paid
IN DEATH LOSSES on the lives of 14,000 policy-hoUerg
(includes double indemnity for accidental death of 594
policy-holders amountins: to MILLION
$2,444,633.00) 9D DALLAR8
IN MATURING POLICIES and other cash benefits to
living policy-holders A^ MILLION
DQLLARS
tastes GOOI)
SMELLS GOOD
Is Good
GLAUSSEN’S
NEW
Tiitti Fmtti Cake
thi
DOLLARS
\
t
IN LOANS at interest dir^t to its policy-holders, on the
sole security of their policies without MlLLJiON
fee or ether charge
OVER
DOLLARS
Hugh L. Eichelbergef
New York life Man
Jtt gMMMnlMf fhsiMpafMfltia
2 1^0 8 P. M.
Lydia Mill, Tuesday, Jan. 22nd, 2 to
8 P.M.
Goldville, Wednesday, Jan. 23rd, 2
to 8 P. M.
4AeiEs Townritlp
S, W. Dean’s, Thursday, Jan. 24th,
10 to 12 A. M.
Renro, Thursday, Jan. 24th, 2 to
4 P. M. .
Linirens T5wnship
• Watts Mills, Bi^op’s. Store, Jan.
28th, 4 to 8 P. M.
Laurens Mill, Putnam’s Store, Jan.
29th, 4 to 8 P. M.
The law requires you to make re
turns on all your personal property
this year and also requires the Audi
tor to bring up your last return with
a penalty of 60 per cent in case you
da not make a return. Real Estate
will hot have to be returned this year
except in case of a transfer since
your last return.
If it does not suit you to come to i SUBSCRIBE TO THE CH){ONl(’LE
t-'-
Announcements |
I hereby announce myself as a can- '
Hdate for the office of Mayor of Clin-'
ton, subject to the rules and regula
tions of the Democratic primary.
. JACK H. YOUNG.
Laurens to make your return for 1929
please meet me at one of the above
appointments.
Re.?pectfully.
S. R. DORROH, Auditor;-
tf Laurens County.
-say those who have seen the
I
Outstanding Chevrolet
of (Chevrolet History
Six in the price range of thefour}
diN NOTICE!
WE WILL GIN THE LAST TIME FOR
THIS SEASON ON
FRIDAY, JANUARY IP*’
PLEIASE bring all COTTON THEN.
CLINTON COnON OIL CO-
The Outstanding. Chevrolet of
Chevrolet History has iv>w been
seen and inspected by millions of
people in every section of Amer
ica—and everywhere it has been
enthusiastically hailed as exceed
ing all expectations.
comfort... such luxurious Fisher
bodies ... and a fuel economy of
better than 20 miles to the gallon!
And no one believed that it would
be possible to produce such a car
in the price range of the four!
If you have not already made a
Everyone anticipated that Chev- ^ personal inspection of the new
rolct would produce a remarkable
automobile—but no one expected
such a sensational six-cylinder
motor . . . such delightful han
dling ease . . . such marvelous
DON’T TAKR^^HANCES!
LET US DO YOUR cleaning
AND DYEING
The intricate work of cleaning cloth
ing holds^ many dangers for the
housewife, in addition to being a
hard, tiresome task.
Why not let US do your cleaning and
dyeing? bur mtes are low. Our work
is un iformly excellent.
YouHakejiio chances wh^n you give
us your \^^rk.
Just givfe us a trial—let us prove
that what we say in this-advertise-^ -
ment is true!
“KLEANERS WHO KLEAN’
PHONE 28
Dry Cleaners and Steam Laundry
Th*-
KiKiJtirr
Thv
Fhiteton . . . . .
Thf
Coup^
The
......
Chevrolet, we urge you to do s«.> at
your earliest convenience. The
beautiful new models arc now on
display on our showToom floor—
andyouarecorJiallyinvitedtocall.
The Spnrt
Cahrittlet
.^525
^525
..^595
. .^675
..*695
The COACH
'^595
All prices jf. o. b.
Flint, Mich.
TKr Convertihle
Landau
Sedan Deliyerr .
l.iflht Delivery
Chawi,
1 .^3 Ton ChaMii
1 Ton ChaMia
with Cab . . . . ,
. .’725
$1
..’400
. .’545
. .’650
Read what these leading
automobile editors said
after seeing and riding in
the new Chevrolet Six—
“One of the greatest automobUes I
have ever seen. In performance,
construction and beauty it is phe
nomenal. Never saw so much cor
for the money.”
—NORTH BIGBEE
DalJae f/»w»
■J'ln appearance, performance and
'mechanical ni^y the new Chev
rolet Six presents actual values far
beyond its price range.” s
•—HAZEN CONKLIN
’ New York World
r
“The new Chevrolet is a triumph
for volume production. The car at
its price is one of the greatest
achievements ever recorded in the
automobile industry. Its beauty
is a treat; its'riding comfort a new
delight and its performance a real
sensation.”
—RAY PRIEST
Detroit Times
“Aside from beauty in body Imcs ,
and attractiveness in finish^ ^e
astounding feature of the mw
Chevrolet Six is its powerful and
flexible motor. One will have to go
far to equal the high performance
of this new Chevrolet in general
road and traffic use.”
—LEON J. PINKSON I
1 San Francisco Chronicle ,
1 I
j “In speed and acceleration, the
1 new Chevrolet will more than i
! ' satisfy the Average person. In
j design, Fisher offers costly car
1 appearance. In short, the new car 1
j is by far Chevrolet’s outstanding ;
( achievement.”
w
y
I —EDWARD M. MILLER
; Portland Oregonian '
1 i
-
tT-. ‘J
1
j “Introducing new st3iJe, beauty
and smoothness, the new Chev-
rolct Six certainly meets the
requirements of the most exacting
buyer.”
—H. M. VAN DEVENOER
Atlanta Constitution
*Come in and See these Sensational New Cars—Now oh DisplaY
Gii^s Chevrolet C
^ Cl'nton, S. C.
6 $ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦I
Q U
- ,v-
*
)■
L
1
X.
A T
Lr O . W
C ^O S ‘T
rO