The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, July 25, 1929, Image 6
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t
NOTICE
Peaches For Sale
At Blalock’s Orchard or
Farmers Exchange
First -class Culls .... .... $1.50 bii'.
Se^bnd-class Culls $1.00 bu,
Best grade peaches at rei^on-
able prices.
They won’t last long.
T. J. BLALOCK
THIS WEiEK
By Arthur Brisbane
Brrg Slatrald
By Cecile
The Chronicle does not necessarily
(indorse or commend all of Mr. Bris
bane’s views and conclusions. His ed
itorials are published as expressions
of opinions of the world’s highest sal
aried editor.
Your tongue
tells when you
need
THE BOON OF SLEEP
E(;g statistics
WONDERFUL LANDS
WINGLESS HENS
EAT MEAT
HARRASSING HOOVER
; If you have sound sleep, don’t envy
.any man his millions.
I .\.n American, very rich,'knighted
1V V King George, because of the Amer-
j ■ an money he spent in London, was
aken to a hospital, suffering from
insomnia.
In the morning he was found dea'd,
clutching a piece of*paper on which
he had written that, as sleep was im-
I possible, he could endure life no long
er. He had poisoned himself,
Among the sports silks this season
are innumerable smart tub-wise fab
rics—perhaps the latest, that service
able weave known as PK crepe, spon
sored by Stehli, of Paris.
A washable si^k of exceptional chic
—it is possessed of a dual personali
ty. That is to say, it has the appear
ance of a fine ribbed material, yet it
drapes as softly as crepe de chine.
Worn with a loose jacket of polka-
dotted silk in harmonious colors, this
fabric is especially effective.
The “Long Silhouette’ the Vogue
You are perhaps thinking only of
longer skirts as you read this mess
age. But the “long silhouette’’ means,
oh, very much more. Particularly does
it refer to the elongated effect pro
duced by princess lines and fullness
placed low on the skirts. And when
the lines are not princess—then it’s
the higher waist that creates the il
lusion. These^are important details.
H. D. HENRY
F. M. BOLAND
H. D. Henry & Company
INSURANCE
STOCKS. - BONDS - REAL ESTATE
LOANS NEGOTTATHD
f
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WE CLEAN YOUR CLOTHES
SCIENTIFICALLY — ECONOMICALLY
y
^Vhen we do your family wash your clothes will last
longer and look better. It costs no more to get germ
proof service—Phone 28.
Coated tongue, dry mouth,
bad breath, muddy skin,
S^oggy nerves and sour
stomach suggest its use.
iCtna Life
Insurance Co
iCtna Casualty
and Surety Co
A utomobile
isuranceCo
of HartfordConn
2C TNA Combina-
^t'lon Automobile
Policyholders can se
cure from one organi
zation and from the
one agent, a policy in
suring them against
loss from personal in
jury.
yETN A-I Z E
S. W. SUMEREL,
Aetna-izer
A majority of us go through life,
not appreciating our greatest bless
ings, especially the
“Sleep that knits up the ravelled
sleave of care.
The death of each day’s life, sore
labour’s bath.
Balm of hurt minds, great nature’s
second course,
Chief nourisher in life’s feast.’’
Until sleep goes, you do not know
life’s greatest physical misfortune.
Stiff Silks for Formal Wear
When summer says goodbye the
farewell will also apply to transpar
ent fabrics of the moment—the chif
fons, laces, georgettes. Stiff silks will
find themselves the newest weaves
for evening wear—even moires an-i
failles taking on a more substantial
texture than displayed in the past .sea
son.
A Hint for the Travel Coat
Too early to become serious about
coats for fall—and yet, those of us
who must buy travel coats, speculate
upon their effect in early fall ward
robes. Those showing the touch of fur
will carry through well into autumn
and prove excellent mid-summer in
vestments. The removable scarf of flat
fur works out particularly well for
the travel coat—taking itself off on
warm days and snapping back to duty
with the first cool breeze.
COLLEGE MEN
WAGES DECLINE
Every year two thousand million
.\mejican eggs are confided to hens
and'incubators. Every year 800,000,-
000 of them don’t hatch.
Much lost possible wealth, at least
$200,000,000, at 25 cents per chick.
The department of agriculture owns
one hen, laying eggs of which 90 per
cent hatch, and she transmits her
qualities to daughters and granvi-
daughters.
This interests millions of women in
the United States.
The government has throwm open
to settlement government lands for
merly covered by the Mississippi riv
er. Wonderful lands these are, low,
level, deep, heavy black loam.
*As the “wind bloweth where it list-
i eth,” so the Mississippi flows where it
listeth, covering and uncovering land,
washing millions upon millions of cu
bic yards of fertile soil into the Gulf
of Mexico.”
GET YOUR
IRON
New Raisin Bread
—FULL OF —
Healthful Goodness
BAKED DAILY
—BY—
CLAUSSEN’S
Since 1841—South’s Favorite
When will man’s intelligence con
trol “Old Man River” and make nim
an ob^ent part of national^a-
chine ?
President Hoover, whose business
is engineering, will attend to that,
was “cut out” for that job.
This is real news. Dr. Renwald,
: poultry expert in Nebraska, says he
. has produced a breed of wingless hens
that also lack toenails.
They lay but can’t fly can’t scratch,
can’t be ardently interested in moth
erhood, having no wings to shelter a
brood.
Such hens, being saved the trouble
of moulting the difficult wing feath
ers, should go on laying all year round
I producing 300 eggs a year.
I To separate female usefulness from
; psychological disturbances like moult
ing would be maiwelous, in poultry,
and among the primates.
666
is a ;*rescription for
Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue,
. Bilious Fever and Malaria
It is the most speedy remedy known
The Arctic explorer, Stefanson, and
a companion, Anderson, have lived for
a year on nothing but meat, eating
enormous quantities.
Physicians say their health is bet
ter, their resistance to disease
strengthened. .
Let vegetarians muse on that.
Columbia Professor Says College Ed
ucation Becoming a Drug On the
Employment Market.
New York, June 9.—College educa
tion is becomnig a drug on the em
ployment market. The nation’s annual
production of graduate doctors, engin
eers, law'yers and other professional
classes, as well as those who expect
college training to aid them in busi
ness, is rapidly mounting to a point
far in excess of the number that can
be absorbed by our national life with
financial profit to the graduates them
selves.
This is the assertion of Dr. Harold
F. Clark, professor of education of
Teachers college, Columbia university,
in an article in the current issue of
W’orld’s Work. Dr. Clark’s analysis of
the situation is presented as “explod
ing the myth that a colleg'e education
increases your income.”
“Nobody who is familiar with the
enrichment of life brought by college
education to those who are able to
take advantage of it will say that such
educati<m ia not vrorth while,” he ^-
plains. “Enrichment of life, howeyer.
Motorists Rules
Given By Ford
BUCHANAN’S LAUNDRY
PHONE 29
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FELT
BAD
AFTER EATING
when
Tour txam ago, I
■uffered with heart-
bum and bilious indi
gestion. Whatever 1
ata disagreed with
me. Gaa on my stom
ach made me very
uncomfortable. My
tongue waa coated
end my color was
bed. I needed e good
laxative, and ao my
inother4zt4ew gave me eome
Bla^Dcaught and told me to
take it I found it helped me
very much, ao I bou^ it for
'aeU SMme it wee the very
I needed. It ie a foie
remedy, and I nee K
I need ^**»***^h^g for
oonetipetion.
*1give Bladt-Dran^ to
my childrm whenever they nW
eomething for colds or upset
•tomacha. Our whole fondly
tekee Blaek-Drau^t"—Mrs.
Q.C. Leaiw, 103 North Alston
Avok, Dumai]g^.M..C
ThedFordj
! The rock in 1,000 million years pro-
; duces soil, with the aid of earth
j worms.
I The soil, after more centuries, pro
duces grass. The cow eats grass for
I three years, digesting it slowly. Man
eats the beefsteak in fifteen minutes.
Great labor-saving device. Give your
children meat.
President Hoover, great engineer,
has been kept busy, since his inaugu
ration by prohibition problems.
Now he is asked to develop and en
force new blue laws. The blue law
gentlemen want Washington made in
to a “Blue-Law-Paradise,” that the
city may be an example to the nation.
Poor President Hoover, listening to
six speeches in favor of Sunday blue
laws, all in one day, must wonder
when the country will allow him to do
some engineering.
After all, preventing Sunday golf
in the District of Columbia is NOT as
important as the Boulder dam or
‘flood control.
does not necessarily pay rent and set
tle grocery bills.”
Dr. Clark cites many examples of
well qualified cqllege-trained men
whose incomes are far less than those
of skilled mechanics or of their con
temporaries who have entered busi
ness without college education. The
medium high school teacher’s ^lary
today, he shows, is $1,800; a highly
competent civil engineer graduated in
1911 is earning $3,300 a year; a young
doctor after nine years of education
and interne work, can expect to start
at $2,500 a year if fortunate; an in
genious college trained advertising
writer, after 15 years, is earning
$6,000.
“In the past,” he shows, “educated
people have received higher wages,
not because they were educated, but
because they were scarce. When you
increase the number of educated peo
ple the wages of the individuals are
automatically lowered.
“The physicians of America have
recognized this situation, and that is
why they have taken definite steps
to limit the number of physicians by
setting high standards of training and
by adding to the cost of training,” his
World’s W’ork article asserts.
Dr. Clark emphasizes the intrinsic
value of education both to society and
to the individuals who can afford it,
but in its economic phases the value
of higher learning has been seriously
over-stressed, he believes, by teachers
and others who convince youth that
each year in school means much added
income in after life. Surveys which
attempt to prove the value of college
training are fallacies, he asserts, be
cause they always include in the high-
earning group those who inherit
wealth, position and influence and
who would receive high incomes in
adult life no matter what the extent
of their education might have been.
' As a contribution towards greater
safety and more pleasant driving con
ditions on the highways of the coun
try this summer, the Ford Motor com
pany has listed twelve rules as sug
gestions to motorists and has distrib-
uied them to dealers over the country.
Announcement of the suggestions
was made yesterday by the Clinton
Motor company, Ford dealer in this
city, who will display the list promi
nently in their place of business.
“These rules,” said Mr. Ford, “are
merely common sense as applied to
automobile driving. Every experienced
motorist knows all of them. It is our
hope, however, that by stating them
concisely and posting them where they
will come to the attention of a great
many motorists, we can so emphasize
them as to make a real contribution
towards greater highway safety.”
The twelve rules are:
1. Courtesy comes first. Consider
the rights and privileges of others.
2. Keep your mind on your driving,
^and anticipate sudden emergencies.
3. Learn the “feel” of having your
car under control.
4. Obey all trattic and parking reg
ulations.
5. Keep to the right, and comply
with road markings and signs.
6. Signal for stops and turns —
watch the car ahead.
7. Slow down at crossings, schools,
dangerous places.
8. Never pass cars on hills, curves,
crossings.
9. Adapt your driving to road con
ditions—rain, ice, soft spots and ruts.
10. It doesn’t pay to take the
“right of way” too seriously.
11. When you drive, remember the
times when you’re a pedestrian.
12. Know the law. It was passed
for your protection.
“It is estimated that 20,000,000 per
sons will tour on American highways
this summer,” Mr. Ford continued.
“Recognition of the rights of others
will be essential. Many unpleasantries,
and accidents will be avoided if motor
ists, at times of close situations, will
recall these rules and act accordingly.
They are the recommendation of the
Ford Motor company offered to give
greater peace of mind to those who
travel by automobile.”
WANT ADS
WANTED—To buy oats. Apply to
Farmers Exchange. tf
WANTED—TO buy your cows and
cow hides. See me. J. Hamp Stone.
7-25-3tc
FOR RENT — Housekeeping apart
ment. Five rooms, upstairs, outside
entiance, modern conveniences. $25.00
per month. Mrs. B. C. Blalock. ' tf
« Better Baked Beans'
It improves the flavor of baked
beans to use several kinds at the same
time. For example, mix yellow-eyed
beans, navy and kidney beans in equal
quantities. Prepare according to usual,
recipe for Boston baked beans or add
to the basic recipe a choppe,d onion
and half green pepper chopped.
A Fragrant Fruit Drink
To each glass of ginger ale add 2
tablespoons of juice from a can of
apricots. Pour over cracked ice and
garnish with fresh mint.
Coal!
•
If you want coal that
will give the most HEAT
as well as the most SAT
ISFACTION per BUCK
ET-FULL just-call 62
and let us quote you
LOST—One bill fold containing more
than $20.00 and several valuable
papers. If finder will return papers
to me, will be glad to give the money
as a reward. F. M. Pitts, Clinton,
S. C. Itp
W^E have large stock of Pumps, Well
Points and Cylinders, Automatic
W’ater Systems for suburbs and farm
homes. Get our prices first. Columbia
Supply Co., 823 W. Gervais St., Co-
lunabia, S. C. 8-15-4tc
let
prices.
AGENTS WANTED—Men and wo
men to sell Nature Remedy, no al
cohol, no drugs. Turkey Mountain Min
eral Rock, it builds up the body. On
i*eceipt of $1,00 I will mail to any ad
dress, prepaid parcel post, a 30-day
treatment, C. M. Tollison, Belton, S.
CLINTON
COnON OIL CO.
C., Gen. State Agent.
Can You Beat It? Not
New Upright Piano $275
Player $395. Grand $495^
O’DANIEL & REID
Vj
/. o. 1^. Jmctvrf
FUnt. Uiekt.
-a SIX in
the price range
of the four /
The Chevrolet Six is scoring a sensational
nationwide success because it provides
everything you want in a fine, sturdy auto
mobile—yet it actually sells in the price
range of the four,
$595
you can now buy in the
CHEVROLET SIX
Six-Cylinder Smoothness
The inherent balance of six-cylinder, valve-
in-head design assures the smooth, velvety
flow of power that distinguishes the fine
! automobile.
Six-Cylinder Acceleration
A non-detonating, high-compression cyl
inder head and automatic acceleration
. pump give the new Chevrolet Six remark
able qualities of acceleration.
Better than 20 Miles to the Gallon ,
Chevrolet engineers spent years of research
and development to perfect a six-cylinder
motor that delivers better than twenty
miles to the gallon.
Beautiful Fisher Bodies
Rare beauty, smartness and comfort are
provided in the Bodies by Fisher. Hardwood
and steel construction ^ves them unusual
strength and safety.
Amazing Lo\P Prlces-~Easy Terms
Th0 ConP9rt»
RcMilstcr fh/# Lrd(Iru • •w
PhMton 525 *5Q5
Th* feqe »««wy
Th0 scoe Dcitwflrx chMsto.... .400
vs *545
Th* Sp^t ThsiHTtm IAEA
Cabriulct ;. (UumU WUh Tjib....
AU pricMt /. o. t*. fmc*»ry, Flint, Michigan
t
(
Giles Chevrolet Co.
Clinton, S. C., ,
A SIX IN THE PRICE RANGE OF THE FOUR
The Ginton Chronicle—^$1.50 a Year