The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, August 08, 1929, Image 2
PAGE TWO
THE CLINTON CHRONICLE, CLINTON, S. C
THURSDAY, AUGUST 8,1829
'^rOT that we*re trying
to cook up trouble
—but Summer always
brings a lot of accidents,
and Accident Insurance is
a mighty good **meal
ticket” when trouble
comes!
HALF OF COnON INFESTED
IN FIELDS NOT POISONED
Clemson College, Aug. 5.—Gradual
increase in square infestation in all
sections of South Carolina is shown
by the weekly boll weevil survey made
by the Pee Dee experiment station at
Florence. Examinations made in 103
fields in ten counties show infestation
as high as 50 per cent. In some of the
unpoisoned fields, in all counties east
and south of Union and Greenwood.
Maximum infestation of 74, 64 and 67
per cent were found in Florence, Dar
lington and Bamberg counties, respec
tively. The infestation in fields kept
poisoned throughout the season is
still low, averaging 10 per cent. In
Florence 9 per cent. In Bamberg 7
per cent. In Greenwood 9 per cent. In
Aiken and a general average of 11
per cent in the poisoned fields in the
ten counties. Some • interfield move
ment of weevils has been observed in
A
the eastern part of the state, where
the infestation is high but no general
emigration is yet apparent. This in
dicates, says Director H. W. Barre of
the South Carolina experiment sta
tion, that there is still opportunity to
have much of the mid-season froit by
judicious poisoning.
Capt. Wysor
Is Assigned Here
Capt. Robert E. Wysor, Jr., U. S. A.,
is spending several days in the city
as the guest of Rev. John McSween.
Capt. Wysor has been assigned to
Presbyterian college for the coming
year as successor to Col. Glasgow as
professor of military science and tac
tics. He and his family expect to move
here within the next two weeks.
Are you insured against accident ?
>£TN A-IZE
S. W.
SUMEREL
.?:tna-izer
THIS WEEK
By Arthur Brisbane
The Chronicle does not necessarily
endorse 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.
iiiiiiliiiiiiiil
BACK TO STOCKINGS
AMERICAN PROSPERITY
HOW MUCH FOR FAR.MERS?
WITHOUT HOPE
B SRLLS OF I
BACKACHE
Manufacturers of silk and other
stockings hope that advertising will
enable them to drive out the “bare
leg craze, now afflicting lovely wo
men.
Moralizing appeals to modest re
finement won’t do. Bare legs must be
banished, as the almost universal hab
it of chewing tobacco was banished by
public opinion.
Make women realize that an imita
tion of a butcher shop is not artistic
and they will go back to stockings.
beaming with health, is enthusiastic
about American prosperity. Ha. well
may be.
Money is made rapidly here. Three
years ago an* investing company was
formed with $6,500,000. Now it issues
$24,000,000 in six per cent preferred
stock, and shows profits of over $40,-
000. Nevertheless, don’t gamble.
That advice is probably useless. The
public agrees with the distinguished
Mr. B. Baer, who says: “If we cannot
get our faces on government money,
the next best thing is to get your
hands on it.” Too many believe that
gambling is the best way to get your
hands on it.
Farmers are told that the value of
this year’s wheat crop has increased
$364,000,000 since June 1. How much
of that the farmers will get, how
much middle men, and especially
wheat gamblers, will get nobody
knows.-
"I HAVM naed Caz^
dni at intervala for
aixtawi yaaza, when
I anffned from
weakneaa, and it
always helped me,**
aaya Mrs. J. W.
Jinright, R. F. D. S;
Troy, Ala.
"Mostly I was
afflicted with bad
apella of backache.
At times I felt aa
if my bade would break. I
would drag one foot after the
othar, in a helpleaa aort of a
way, and once I got down in
bed. My hoaband urged me to
taka Cardoi, and I aoon found
what a llna medicine it
Calvin Coolidge, tanned, smiling.
Farmers might hire an intelligent
wheat speculator to sell their crops
for future delivery when prices are
high. As it is they wait until the wheat
is threshed. Then the price is lower.
WANT ADS
WANTED—To buy oats. Apply to
Farmers Exchange. tf
Present estimates show that the
four big crops, wheat, corn, oats and
rye, are wortl^£3,545,000,000, an in
crease of more'than a thousand mil
lion dollars in two months.
College Employs
Local Carpenter
Geo. A. Black, well known local car
penter, has accepted a position with
Presbyterian college for the ensuing
year as superintendent of buildings
and grounds. Mr. Black will ^nter up
on his new duties the first of Septem
ber and will have under his supervis
ion the general upkeep of the institu
tion’s buildings and campus.
Pharmacist Added
At Goldville
Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Purkerson of Ab
beville, have moved to Goldville with
in the past week and are now making
their home at the Joanna Inn. Dr. Pur
kerson is the pharmacist in charge of
the new drug store recently added by
the Joanna Mercantile company.
FOR SALE—Collard and cabbage
plants, 20c per hundred. J. Hamp
! Stone. 8-8-2tc
T—By wa
"When
my Mcond dxOdwu
UtUa^ I wae in very bed health.
I did not pick up as I ahould
have. 1 was we^ and sickly.
1 do oot believe I would
have come throimh, but for
CarduL"
PLANTS, PLANTS!—Winter cabbage
and winter collards, large, fine,
healthy plants. 20c per 100, $1.50 per
1,000. I have over 100,000 home grown
plants. John T. Blakely. tf
WE have large stock of Pumps, Well
Points and Cylinders, Automatic |
Water Systems for suburbs and farm
homes. Get our prices first. Columbia
Supply Co., 823 W. Gervais St., Co
lumbia, S. C. 8-15-4tc
LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN—One
light colored Jersey heifer with
horns, weight 300 lbs., belonging to
Jim Lawson at time of disappearance.
$10.00 reward to finder, or with proof
of conviction if stolen. Apply to J.
Hamp Stone. 8-8-2tc
GRAPES FOR SALE—Concord varie
ty, 2-quart basket 30c, $3.00 per
bushel. Mrs. H. G. Rheney, Clinton,
S. C. Itp
Tak* TMtaari’*
IUCK4)RAUGHT
• Ik rwMtipahnii. 1
awl
THE WOMAN’S EXCHANGE —We
keep fresh cake and bread on hand
all the time. Also fresh fruits in sea
son; jellies and preserves. Come in
and see our stock. Itc
♦
♦
A New Day Dawns
For The Home Maker
In the simpler days of an older generation that we
of the present look bgck on with affectionate and
prideful regard, every housewife counted her skill
in bread making as one of the most cherished of all
possessions. And well she might, for much of the
splendid stability and contentment that marked the
homes of those days was due to her fine artistry
in providing such culinary triumphs as the far famed
Southern home baked bread.
Today, because of a number of unfortunate circum
stances, home baking is at a low ebb, but it will not
always be so. For housewives are learning that’
modern science has produced an aid to home baking
which enables them to make a bread so infinitely
more delicious than any which can be bougdit ‘^that
they are beginning in ever increasing' numbers to do
their part toward reviving an honored and well
nigh indispensable art.
This invaluable article is
Budweiser Hop Flavored
Barley Malt Syrup
Used in bread making it means healthier fermen
tation, grreater volume, finer texture, better flavor,
longer keeping qualities, richer appearance and gold
en bloom. In short, a bread so far and away more
delectable than the ordinary kind that housewives
who take a true pride in their tables come to regard^
the work of making it as of negligrible importance
in comparison with the deep satisfaction arising
from the ability to bake and serve it.
Budweiser Barley Malt Syrup is also valuable in
making Malted Milk and Candy and it can be used
in the preparation of a tonic for persons in a run
down condition. It is available .in two and a half
pound cans at 75 cents each.
/or tho
(MOe
> by Nincu Hart *
o
SADLER-OWENS PHARMACY
< > CORNER AT UNION STATION
PHONES 377 and 400
It is just common sense to use pack
age f'-ods wherever possible. Dust and
personal handling, germs and whatnot
r.re kept from these foods where it is
impossible to give bulk foods the same
protection. This is one of the so-called
■‘food fads” that one may indulge in
without fear of contradiction from
any source, for in helping to keep
foods fresh it contributes as much to
economy as it does to health.
Another so-called fad that is ac
knowledged to be good practice is the
habit of choosing foods that are not
over-refined. "Hjis applies chiefly to
cereals, com meal, flours and rice,
where the most beneficial substance
is found close to the outer hull of the
product, and is lost through over
bleaching, bolting and polishing.
Economical Menii
Cream of salsify soup
Broiled little pig sausages in potato
Puff nest
Grilled tomatoes
Cream slaw
Blueberry cobbler.
Beverage
Chicken Cutlets
■(nsing leftovers)
2 cups chopped cooked chicken, 2
tablespoons each chopped carrots and
green pepper, 1 teaspoon salt, 1-2 tea
spoon pepper, 1 teaspoon minced pars
ley, 1-2 teaspoon onion juice, 1 table
spoon lemon juice. To 1 cup white
sauce add these Ingredients and cook
3 minutes. Add 2 eggs well beaten. Re
move from fire, cool and shape into
cutlets; dip in egg and crumbs and
fry in deep fat.
r=ir=ir=dr=Jr=Jr=Jr=ir=Jr^
For homes
that want
the best
in cooking
Black Fug PowD^ it thg
deadliest powderintect-kiUer
known. Blow J| into the air
to kill flies,' niosquitoes, etc*
Or into the cracks to destroy
roaches, ants, bedbugs, etc.
None escape. (Packed in glass.
Black Flag Powder keeps its
deadliness.) And remember.
Black Flag Powder is partio>
ularly effective in killing fleas
on pets, or plant lice in your
garden.
n I Jk ("I Jk kills bugs Quicfoy
DLJkk^lV rLAU -tsdfaadta
POWDER J.9
V
©1929.B.r.C*.
Black Flag alto comes in Liquid form.
Equally deadly. Only 35e a half-pint. Why pay moref
A savage outbreak of convicts in
New York’s Clinton prison is easily
explained.
Too many “life” and “long term”
prisoners were herded together. Such
men are willing to risk death because
they are hopeless.
Lacking hope and its courage, you'
have a bad situation. Goethe said:
“Money lost, something lost.
“Honor lost, much lost.
“Courage lost, everything lost, bet
ter were never bom.”
Odorless
Food fried in Crisco has no disagree
able odor and retains its natural fla
vor. Yes, we mean this. 3-lb. size 75c.
Good Enough
Yellow soap is good enough for those
who have never used P & G, the White
Naphtha—6 for 25c.
BLAKELY’S
FANCY GROCERS
Phones 136 and 175
Annual Mountain and Seashore
Excursion
Saturday, August 10
CLINTON, S. C: to
NEW YORK $25.26
ATLANTIC CITY $25.66
NORFOLK $15.21
PORTSMOUTH $15.21
RALEIGH $ 8.91
RICHMOND $13.71
VA^BEACH : $16.01
WILMINGTON $ 9.46
WASHINGTON $17.16
REDUCED RATES TO MANY OTHER POINTS.
FINAL RETURN LIMIT AUG. 28 — Baggajfe Checked
For Full Information Apply To Ticket Ag’t
OR FRED GEISSLER, A. P. T. M., Atlanta, Ga.
SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY CO.
“Flies have caused more deaths than
all wars,” says Major Ransom of the
Medical Department of the United
State Army. “Since the fly came into
the world it has been synonymous
with epidemics of pestilence and dis
ease.” But with FLY-TOX it is a very
simple easy matter to rid the house
of flies—to keep it fresh and clean,
free of insect taint. FLY-TOX is the
scientific insecticide developed at Mel
lon Institute of Industrial Research
by Rex Research Fellowship. FLY-1
TOX has a perfume-like fragrance, is
harmless to people.^ Simple instme-
tions for killing ALL household in
sects on blue labeled bottles. INSIST
on FLY-TOX.—Adv.
FISHER,
in the most colorful and captivating
motor car bodies of the year . . ,
Reflecting the matchless genius of Fisher’s
artist-craftsmen, as well as the unparal
leled resources cf the Buick and Fisher
organizations, the magnificent new Buick
Bodies by Fisher incorporate b:auty and
charm obviously superior to any other car
in ike Buick field.
Longer—lower and more luxurious, these
new bodies reveal entirely new harmony of
In addition, this new Buick embodies
other wonderful new elements of value—
a new and mightier valve-in-head engine
—new Controlled Servo Fmclosed Brakes
—four new double-acting Lovejoy Duo-
draulic Shock Absorbers, and new longer
rear spring new frictionless steering
' gear and new Steering Shock Eliminator.
color and grace of ItnaJHiey are Buick, with all
with extra features of utility, luxdfy and these vital superiorities, is offered at
including new Non-Glare prices—prices that make Buick
convenience, including new Non-Glare
Windshield for safe night driving—new for 1930 the greatest value Buick has ever
r—new nttinss offered in 26 years of building extra value
into each series of Buick cars!
and richer upholstery—new tattings
and appointments of princely luxury.
BUICK MOTOR COMPANY, FLINT, MICHIGAN
Camdian Factories
IfcLaoshUa-Buick. Oshawa. Ootarie
Dimtim a/ Gtmrml MaSan
Csrpsrstitm
Buildrrt of
Buick and Marqueue Mococ Cat*
Thomason Motor Co.
Laurens, S.C.
f ' ' ■ , . '
WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ABE BUILT BUICK VnU, BUIU) thkm