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THUR80AY, JANUARY 23, 1930 rrS THE FLAVOR In Cakes That The Quality CLAUSSEN’S “Since ISIl—Scmtli’s Favorite** COUNTY TREASURER’S NOTICE ' im THE HAY .IS DONE By H^nry Wadsworth Longfellow The day is done, and the darkness Falls from the wrings of night As a feather is wafte^, downward From an eagle in its flight. I see the lights of the village * Gleam through the rain and the mist ! And. a feeling of sadness comes over 1 me That my heart cannot resist: a ♦ V The books of the County Treasurer will be open for the collection of ^xes for the fiscal year, 1929, at the Treasurer’s office from October Ibth to December 31, 1929. After Decem ber 31 one per cent will be added. Af ter January 31st, two per cent will be added, and after Feb. 28th, seven per ^""^nt will be added until the 15th day of March, 1930, when the books will be closed. All persons owning property in more than one township are requested Bhveriu townships in which the prop erty is located. This is important, as additional cost and penalty may be attached. All able-bodied male citizens be tween the ages of twenty-one (21) and sixty (60) years of age are Fiable to pay a poll tax of $1.00, except old soldiers, who are exempt at fifty (50) years of age. Commutation Road Tgg^ $1.60 in lieu' of road. duty. All able- bodied men between the ages of 21 and 55>.are liable to road duty except those in military service, school trus tees, school teachers, ,tnini8ters, and students. Proper attention will be given ttlOfF who wish to pay their taxes through the mail by check, money order, etc., giving name of township and number of school district.. The tax levy is as follows: ^ State Tax 5 mills; Ordinary County Tax ...5H mills* Road and Bridge 10 mills I Railroad Bond 1‘mill j Past Indebtedness .2 mills j Statewide School (6-0-1) 4 mills j Weak and High School 1 mill Constitutional School 3 mills A feeling cf sadness and longing That is not akin to pain, • And resembles sorrow only ' - As the mist resembles rain. Come, read to me some poem, Some simple and heartfelt lay. That shall soothe this restless feeling j And baiiish the thoughts of day. Not from the grand old masters. Not from the bards sublime. Whose distant ipotsteps echo Through the corridors of Time. For, like strains of marti^il music. Life’s endless toil apd endeavor; And tonight I long for rest. Read from sopie humbler poet. Whose songs guShed from his heart. As showers from the clouds of sum mer. Or tears from the eyelids start. Who, through long days of labor, And nights devoid of ease. Still heard in his soul the music Of wonderful melodies. . Such songs have the power to quiet The restless pulse of care. And some like the benediction That foliowf after a prayer.- Then read from the treasured volume The poem of thy choice. And lend to the rhyme of the poet The music of thy voice, y And the night :^all be filled with music- And the‘cares that infest the day Shall fold their tents like the Arab And as silently steal away. ODCTCk. JOIN JOT GAINBMD, BREAKFAST VALUES Other writers than >nyself are call ing atte^ntion to the absolute need of a good breakfast, whether the individ ual to be advised is a.school child or . - i a breybeard. However, the “ancient mariner” on the sea of life, is- very ' likely to tell you that a breakfast is the most highly enjoyed meal, of the day, and has been his rue through life; that’s why hOas lived so many years. I read in my paper this very morning that a ponderous city man and club man dropped over dead at a bridge- table —'kged fifty-five — from “heart disease.” I have mentioned in many previous articles in this column, the dangers of the no-breakfast habit, and, the cor responding sin of the six o’clock din ner. I reiterate here: There is no deadly dangejous way of living quite so much s^, as the no-breakfast— evening-dinner habit into which our business men have drifted. It practi cally insures men to be short-lived. The schoolboy or girl who is hur ried away mornings with a hasty mouthful of food, imperfectly masti- i cated if at all, will be tired on enter-* ing the schoolroom; the work of tfie forenoon brings actual fatigue; the child’s appetite is weakened; an indif-j ferent lunch is taken; more work un til school is dismissed; the youngster drags home, and fills the stomach- with a dinner of heavy food—too much' for a tired body and mind,—it all can-! not be provided with digestive fluids. { i It enters the circulation by the ab sorbents and floats in the blood stream, foreign, unadapt&ble. The child becomes weak, listless, “pot- belFed,” and in no condition to resist disease-germs. ! That ought to be enough to condemn j such a routine. A parent who knows no better is criminally ignorant. I And, an adult who waits until the j day’s w’ork is done to tfram the body full of heavjf proteins, is paving the I way to a “ tumble-over death, any- • w’here from fifty to sixty. The new’s- papers wdll say, “heart disease.” Re member: The oldest, healthiest folks today are breakfast eaters. H. D. Henry & Company INSURANCE • STOCKS . BONDS ‘ REAL ESTATE ► ► 1 > LOANS NEGOTIATED « ✓ ► ► - .1 '■ / ' \ • • w Sl-nSCIilBE TO THE CHRONICLE FOR SALE One vacant lot on comer West Main and Sloan Streets. Ideal site for fill ing station. JOHN D. DAVIS Phone 141 Clinton, S. C. J A in the sensational new CHEYROLET Total ...L .": 38 mills Laurewi School Dlatricts No. 1, Trinity Ridge 16 Vi mills >Mo. 2, Prospect :.... 1C mills No. 3, Barksdale-Narnie 18H mills No. 4, Bailey 7 mills No. 6, Copeland-FIeming 8 mills No. 6, Oak Glrove 6 mills No. 7, Watts Mills ... 8 mills No. 11, Laurens 22 mills No. 12, Ora 11% mills Youngs School Districts No. 2, PHendship (D-5) 24 mills Nq.;4, Bethany 18 mills No. 5, GVhys 17 mills ’ No. 6, Central 10% mills No. 7, Youngs 17% mills No. 8, Warrior Creek 16 mills No. 10, Lanford 24.%-mills No. 3-B, Fountain Inn 24 mills Dials School Districts No. 1, Greenpond 10 mills No. 2, Eden 17% mills No. 3, Shiloh (Sul. 17) 22 mills ^ No. 5, Gray Court-Owings ... 24 mills \No. L«3, Barksdale-Narnie . 16% mills No. 8, Smyrna (Sul. 17) 22 mills No, 3-B, Fountain Inn....'. 24 mills Sullivan School Districts No. 1, Princeton 22 mills No. 2, Mt. Bethel* .15 mills No. 3, Poplar Springs 25 mills No. 7, Brewerton 16 mills No. 17, Hickory Tavern ......'.22 mills Railroad Tax ... 3 mills Waterloo School Districts No. L Mt. Gallagher 12 mills Ne. 2, Bethel Grove 9 mills ,No. 3, Ekom (Sul. 17) 22 mills No. 4, Center Point 14 mills No. 6, Oakville 8 mills “ No. 6, Mount Pleasant 13 mills No: 7, Mt. Olive . 21 mills No. 14, W’aterloo 8 nlills ^roee HiE SclwM DtrtrkU COST OF CENSUS TO i BE FORTY MILLIONS' Secretary of Commerce Lament Gives! Out Hue ^ Plyna for 4rfeat Count. 1 New Data To Ele Gathered. Boston. Mass. —• The total cost of taking the 1930 census, covering a three-year period for preparation, enumeration, tabulation and printing, will be about $40,000,000, Robert P. Lamont, secretary of commerce, said recently in an address be/ore the Bos ton chamber of commerce. Divided among the population of the country, the cost will be 10 cents per year, per individual, he said. The total cost of all questions listed for the census was set at 20,000. by j Secretary Lament ‘’Of course, no in-- I ' ^1- * dividual answers more than 20 or 30 inquiries concerning himself,” he said, “and a maximum of a couple of hun dred concerning his business, if it ^e a complex business.” IlYDRAlMC s:!(k:k Porr l'p'co-l,ovejoy hy- h'.i.x'A «h:,<'rbcrii o;i cIl «'::rr.lnalc r-.r.d r.hiK U:> und con.ftM-l. M-IIORSF.POWKR Korczi A nreat •Ix-cyllnclpr irot'W, Itii-rrc'cd lo .SJ (i «> r -lu p o\y c r , i', I v c • <;v!7tpr o->er- aiion, wltharwiar puwar. BRONZE-BUSIIRO PISTONS Th*«trone*r, ll‘‘htcr pl«> tena arc buahed with hl'h-crad* bronr.* to proTido amootlier oper ation and longer 111*. '' No. 13, Cross Hill 21% mills Hunter School Districts No. 3, Rock Bridge 6 mills No. 4, Wadsworth H^mills No. 5, Clinton 23 mills No. 6, Goldville 18 mills . No. 7, Belfast .8 rriills » No. K;19i Kinards r. 8 mills Nio^^JD42, Reederville 13-mills 16, Mountville 21 mill: Jacke School Diatrictc f No. 1, No white school 4 mills - No. 2, Shady Grove 11 milla ' -No. 8, Renno 16 mille No. 4, No white school 8 milb No. 6* O'Dells s miUs /Ne. 7, Garlixiftoa , 8 mills No. 15, HunicBiM 6 mills h , Scufflciowa School Oietricto No. 1, Lopf Branch — 8 mills No. 2, Mvagrove 1--.—8 mills > , ' No. 8, LaafBton .8 mills Sandy Springs 4 mills , 10, Lanford 24% miUs ; No. 12, —11% milli ‘ Perstnts sending in lists of names to be taken off ai« roquested to send ~^^hdih^dhrig4UMLgiTe. tte nod adaxd of each, as ^ TranB> aver is eery boey during the month A. ef Deeemhar. toss a YOUNG, -- N County Treasurer, NOTICE! If you want your hens lo lay, feed Staf-O-Life Laying Mash. ! * We also have a fresh supply’ of Baby Chick Starter and Baby, Chick Grains. We carry a full line of good feeds. Low prices on Cotton Seed Meal, Hulls, Oats and. Hay. Special price on Scratch Feed. Seed Oats. Lime Sulphur for Spraying Peach Trees. FARMERS EXCHANGE. Phone 157 The Best Purgathre for NEW nOT-.SPOT MAN;r(>LD A tarUrr h»)t-«p<»r n ar.l- fold inaurrs com-;, te vapoririillon <f f.tcl — l.nprovlns perfornrutncd and efficiency. * STRONCrR REAR AXLE LarfM- and stronf.rr renr axle ZKiM—rr.si'-o . f (Le Sneat nickel ■tccl — aud .to durability and load Ufa The sensational value of the Greatest Chevrolet In Chevrolet History Is based on definite points of superiority—which you ran easily check for your self. From its improved 50-horsepower six-cylinder « vaive-in-head engine, to its beautiful new bodies by Fisher—it sets,a new standard of quality for the low-price field. ~ * A few of Chevrolet’s extra-value features are listed on this page. Check them over carefully. Then come in and drive this car. It will take you only a few minutes to find out why it is causing niore « comment and winning more praise than any Chevrolet we have ever shown. For it is a finer Six in every way—^yet it sells— —at greatly reduced prices! The Roadster $495 The Sport Roadster . $525 The Phaeton $495 The Coach $565 The Coupe .... $565 The Sport Coupe . $625 The Club Sedan $625 The Sedan :: , $675 The Sedan Delivery .... $595 The Ligrht Delivery Chassis .... $365 ThelVz Ton Chassis . ... $520 The 1 Vi Ton Chassis With Cab $625 ^ » An fffices /. n. fcctory, Flint, Michi’Zon A SIX IN THE PRICE RANGE OF THE FOUR WEATHER-PROOF BRAKES FulIy-rnchmod,lnterni»l- •xpandlril, wr-«th«T- pfnof broken aimurp p«Ml- tlva brake actlun at all llmek. V CA.SOLINE GAUGE ON DASH The Inatrumcnt' panel carrlee a new |*rouplnz of the drlrihS controla <■- eluding a gaaollne gauga. NON-GLARB WINDSHIELD Tbo now PUber body non- glare' windshield deSocts the glare of approoeblag headllghta. L-VRGtR « BALLOON TIRE.S r^ew, larger, full-balUion firm with Rmat’er wheel* Improve rnadability, comfort and appearance. NEW ACCELERATION PUMP A now autoinatic acccl- oratlon pump proridoa tbo fbahing aceoloratioa which modem trafllc naceaoltataa. TWO-BEAM IIF.ADLAMPS Twf>-beam headlampa runtroi:i*d by a foot hut- t'>a permit courteny, without dimming the lights. ADJUSTABLE DRIVER'S SEAT A!l dotted models have an aJJ.;3table driver's scat—a turn of the regu lator give* the '|»rop«r position. riM COACH •lev Giles Chevrolet CpmpBUiy Clinton, South Carolina , Jiiit idl yoiir dealer te aeml yoa a pMkacc ef JBANES SALTED fer your dine/^esh and fOdd. s. 41 O T H B B F A'S T B B , BB T T B B ) -