University of South Carolina Libraries
r'' f iH ?:* I't. i: K: PAGE FOUR jgggr-gypgwTMijitLij jijaPii,jRjiWJiHw ■ y?;^. ^ ? . . >■■ ■ i "A. . " / . . t THE CLINTX^N CHRONICLE. CLINTON. 8. C^ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1930 Sly? (Elinlnu (fil|runtrlp EstabJished 1900 WILSON W; HARRIS, Editor and Publisher Published Every Thursday By THE CHRONICLE -PUBLISHING COMPANY Subscription Rate (Payable In Advance): One year J1.50; Six Months 75 cents; Three Months 50 cents Entered as S©c:ond Class Mail Matter at the Post Office at Clinton, S. C. The rhp.^n;<5le seeks the cooperation of its subscribers and readers—the publisher will at all times appreciate wise suggestions and kindly ad vice. The Chronicle will publish letters of general intA;resl when they are not of a defamatory naturte. Anonymous coimnunications will not be noticed. This paper is not vespor.sible for the views or opinions of its correspondents. [were originally intended for the pat-, PLATO DURHAM I ent office were a eow milker by using wheat straws, a trough that the mule* > could feed themselves in by pushing DIRS SUDDENLY Rev. R. H, McKinnon accepted the pastorate cf the Allen dale church. Mr. McKinnon has been Leaves Cross Hill in charge of the work here nearly four ! years and has won ,the affectima and % against the wall, a fish-hook with a [Noted .Methodist Divine Stricken. One S* Cress Hill, Feb. 3.—One the fourth confidence of all the people regarf- trigrger on it, a bow-and-arrow that|- of Organizers of Candler School i Sunday morm'ng'after preaching ser- shot up a keg of nails in a week my! Theology At Emorv i Baptist church. Rev. R. H. ; father thought w'ould last him a year,' ruin r» oi *• t rv, McKinnon, pastor, read a statement i? a well windlass that would draw wa- Atlanta, l eb. 10. Dr. Plato T. Hur-l^hJch he tendered his resii^nation as 'ter by turning thej~S2flae way all the ham, .58, widely known orator and pro-' pastor cf the Cross Hill field to take time, and a potato roaster. I made the ' fes.sor c^hurch history at Emory uni-; efferjt in March. His cr'ngregation re- i first automobile that was ever guided I versity, euffere:! a heart a.tack and | reived this information in much sur—, j down the- r6Sdi**it8 icomponcnt parts d ed v/h’.!e playing with his four-year-1 priae and great regret. An effort was ! were 4 old buggy wheels and axles old daughter, Lucy, at his ho.Tie here made ta have him reconsider his in- ^lelieses : and a rppe /?ir the stieering wheel and t. day. ; tention, but his decision was final, he- ;5 little niggers which served as an' Dr. Durham was one of the found-, seated, as he fc-L led.cf the Lord in i engine geared to the rear. And then er? of the Candler school of theology making the change ard hrid .alreuijy inhere were other nice things got up of Em;ry university. He w'ai dean of ' by me. • _ j he school from the time of its estab- { jlishment in l'H4 until several years j Cotton Letter j ago when a nervous collap.'<e forced New York, Feb. 12.—Call money ; his retirement from the executive post, has not answered since spots broke on, He remained on the faculty as pro- less of denominatiojK He and Mrs. Mc- liinnon have been untiring in all phaa- ££ of religious and community service and their leaving Cr.'ss Hill bringa ,,'er.?iai regret. 6 6 6 Tablets a Headache or Neuralgia in 30 minutes, checks a Cold the Hrat day, and checks Malaria in three days. C66 also in Liquid CLINTON^S. C., FEBRUARY 6. 19.30 Every girl i.s looking for a husband —both before and after marriage. The Tedegraph has heard on this dairy question are endeavoring to operate the last private estimate, therefore j fessor of cbur.h history, Bombay straddling wa.*; not in evi-j He gained a repucalion as an orotcr dence until hedging and southern sell- hroughout the nation, |uid was par ing decreased the visible supply to ticularly in demand a- ^xpeaker upon cream or dairy uusine.ssses on bought, <5,877,999 from 5,877,999 bales, exclu-^ patriotic occasions. Some ft Hows work their way through schools others Work their par ents. ‘ feed. And they can’t get enough for sive of hay and alfalfa. Curtailing has their cream to pay for (fitdr fin'd, they i been ordered on wash rags, super-6s, .“ay. And when we think (.f the man ; preferred stocks, brown sheetings, bot- out WeJt who grows thi.s feed for us. Some little girl'’ are puni.shed for making laces. Hut not when they grow up! then the gathering, the sacking, the fre'ght, the broker’s commissions and the num!cr of middlemenn who get the r profit.H and I ving out of it Ire- The ..verage man thing tha. could I’.vc a germ. thinks tlve only fure i* reaches Georgia, we find tha^^jlioKT^We advise a little rubbed sage I’.ve !.n his salary iS IVrh.'i,!' no place 11 Tnen going. 's tile i’onvic‘ii)n there's h j'me that keeps svuue Oftentim. father’s f >0 in the eelLrr. the .son who follows his :( ps is likely to wind up it is too expensive to depend upon. No man is wise who thinks this plan will work. - The great feature about ani.nals is that they will gather their own feed if it i« grown on the farm where they can get if, they clean up the fence corners and waste places and get tons and tons of stuff that is ordinarily wa.sted; they do their own th're.shing^‘nf-dast .summer and the -cold of this and sacking, and convert this fetni 1/ ng leg.s are pronounced a sign of' milk without any freight charges iriteHigence. .\t any rate, a long .step deliver it'at the'barn without any in that direction. truck.ng or man-handling whatever. Consider the man-power they save and it may he rank here.sy ip say it, but ^' n-e.iuent cheapne.ss^of such feed, there is usually a cu.-.ti iiiyr ii^he bar-1 . oinpued with the bought stuff. If b<r shop who laii out-'ta'.li^nv 'wo barbers. ' . people c.)uld h-*‘t -.4<VV)I ail.i-bu T-r WHAT \VK NEED There ai< many things we need in Clinton, hut a few are vital and out standing above all others. We need stability the will power to determine what is right ami a de termination to see that only that which is right |)revHil.s. We need a spirit of unanimity the ability and willingness to agree up')n a few cows, go to d-tturb :b.' milk )(■ cieani at a j)!'. fi., u 1 he too simj)le and easy, Evcrybi ly woulil jump into the business overnight. liwl in bond, ajul outings. Heavy boll weevil infestation has been predicted for next .July 4th, and in con.sequence thereof, Brisbane has begged the spec-, ulators not to sell May contracts' Surviving are his wife, formerly Miss Lucy Cole, Raleigh, N. C.; his' daughter, Lucy Cole Durham; three brothers. Stonewall and Robert L. Durham and Wright P, Dixon; a sis ter, Mrs.'W. L Balthin, Gastonia, N. and his imdlier, Mrs. D. F. Dixo,*.. iG o 0 d coal igrnites easily' and burns cleaner, longer and more evenly. It pro duces little ash and h’tfle smoke. That^s why it's good coaL Born in Shelby. N. C., .Sept, 9j^jl87 in your sausage. Sun si>ot3 aVe causing much worry and trouble in this old world of ours, lU'cording to the scientist*. Theae mean spots caused our droughts in 19 and 25 and 20, and the same hor rible spol.s caused our wet spells in 19 and 29. They likewise caused the heat Dr. Durham was graduated -from Trinity collect, now Duke univejrsity, ■ in 1S95, and received the D. I), degree from Ti inity in 1913. He attended, Yale univer.oty in 1895 and 1890. He w-as fr m Union The.>!ogicai seminary in New York in 1899. He was a .student in Chrl.st Church col lege, Oxford univerii.y, in 1901 and 19p;L „ . - He sptn Several years in minis'te- winter. Wonder,if they" had anything j rial work, mostly in'North Carolina, to do with the recent big break in j l)efore coming to Piniory as dean of stocks, and do you reckon those spots ! the Candler .“c’vol of theology. stopped my old hens from laying j 1 : when eggs went to 7.5 cents a dozen-! last December? I am in favor of-con-1 gres.s taking some action against those J .sun .s|>ots, or we’ll all be ruint next. DRS. SMITH & SMITH Optometrists Mo’-ey n t made by such simple and easy prot-e.ss. Let us have the million cows wi' need to care for Georgia’s require ments and stop the necessity for pur chasing the iHousands of carlomj.s of condensHl milk and ihe tank cur.s of fresh milk that come into this .“tale every night from Wi.sionsin and other I went down fowm a-shivering the other morning. I though it wa.s cold, having taken Mr.. Fahrenheit’s word for it who said it was 2<). I had on my heavies and my thick serge suit and niy big old overcoat and wa.s shak ing fn>m center to eirpuiiiferenee. But Wither.s Mhat we want and then go after it affd _ w,.stern dairy states. But let us apply 'L ‘ little business sense to the under- We nee.i aggressiveness for with-' taking before wo embark upon it. The Creator made food the first thing af- and neet eiit aggr(‘.ssiv»‘ness, inifolenee stagnation will be our lot. We need lo.vaity tor without loyal ty we will lie enriebirtg commercial in ti e^ts at di'iant poirus and imjiov- i; 'hing our people at home. ter the world eb.led off sufficiently to permit life of any kind, lie made It'ioil in utiiindance, and then creatures i.ne c ir b. cau e (,f the'r luttural advantage'ki (ither.s aie made only through the <1 I'.'ged energy and perseverance of Iht 'r citlzon-thip. Ours will be what we make it, and we should nmke-il all that we can. Munities thrive and grow came alongDd’rat it. Hi.s jilan. . We can’t lieat I met Miss Saifii; Sue Wither.s who -eenied practieally undresseil, anil she looked very comfortable, and then I be gan to sweat some also. She had .'KK’k- lets on, and that was all for about 14 inchips, and the rest of her clothes could have l>een stuffed into a com pact. She had her hat in her hand and her coat was on her arms. It proved u me that I had a very, very Htning inagmartorT. Had I not met up with Sadie Sue, I believe I W’ould have fr. zen plumb to death tlrat morning. SPECi; LISTS ' Eyes examined (Lasses I'rescribed 1.5 West .Main Street Bhune 101 Laboratory for Prompt Repair Service Clmton, S. C. CitroliiiA Geoi gifi 1'-. -iC Service Co ♦- ♦ Nobody’s Business GETS LARGE LEGACY By Gee McGee* A MILLION MOKE COWS In view of the fact that in the last few years Laun>n.s county has made ennsiderahle [irogre.ss in dairying and .since llii ie IS rea.sun to believe that this is nvie and more becoming a liading indtistry, the following edi torial from The Mu.on Telegra|\h'ha8 a strong l.i.a! applicatii.n, and is just Rut Tom Edison Got Ahead of Me The man w’ho designed an automo bile with the gas throttle on the dash instead of on the steering wheel broke out of the asylum last w'eek and was found in a back alley trying to per fect a pair of britches with the pock ets below the knees. U' applicable to South Carolina, as to Georgia; We need a niilliirn Tnore cows in Georgia, aoror.ding t-o the statement of But'speaking of inventions,, wlion 1 was lingering along 'between the “learning to cuss’’ age and sprouting little white wlnskers, 1 was all the time trying to make something that nobod.v eLse had ever heard of. I was 'iVti r F. Habusen. in his visit to Vi-j pretty handy with tools and my father dalia la.s: wt-ek, and The Telegraph has no I 'ubl be i-- entirely correct. Dr. Lahn-in is a vctciinarian and farme:-. and ought t.) know whereof had a blacksmith shop with everything fr;;m an an\dt bh up. The first thing I ever built that was he the gia pea , p ii'liculaiTy on account of a marvel to the community a e c he b.i rendered Geor- veterinarian: He is a churning ma/hine. .some -old gin and 1 made it conden.ser was a out of wheels German, w.tb all the qualitie.s of that . and a grindstone all Mrs. Florence Stoke.s, wife of the ilev». Henry Stokes, is to receive a fifth part of the estate of her bro‘^- er, the late A. C. Heath, of Albe marle, N. C. The estate is said to be betwi*en one and two million dollars. Both 'Mr. and Mrs. Stokes are well known in Clinton, having made their home here four years while Mr. Stokes was pastor of North Broad Street .Methodist church. Following is a di.s- patch from Albemarle telling of the .urge legacy: j pecul'.arly i ^ficicnt and observing i right. for few minute.s, then the dasher j*t‘i.p!< ar.d wi‘ v an well afford to lis-lhu-sted loose anil my mother’s new ten .seiim;.-;y .o whal he says. |.sto:;e churn was floating an and in a Dr. Iiahti I .1 ;> of the opimon that ■ puddle of millT. I .slep-on n|v stummick we :’.eeti tfusrnany more cow.s to take for (> weeks after warming of my care of Geo;;gia*s needs alone, and that they should not be ju.st ‘Vows,’’ but' real productive aninials that will pay for their keep and give a profit to their keepers. The scientists and other pants, which 1 did hot then wear onner count of shirts. My next venture^ wuis into the fire- arm world. 1 ruint my father’s scroll people who keep up with our health saw when 1 .sawed"la piece of iron pipe assert that every man, woman and in two to be used in the manufacture child should lu»ve at lea.st a i|uart of, of a shotgun. I got it ready to shoot in good whole.some, clean, sweet milk ev- a few days, and loaded her pret4y ery day as a minimum to keep up the heavy and sighted it at the bam door, blood stream to its normal qualities i When 1 came to an hour or so later, and'enable the body to function a.s it i the pigs h-ud done rooted all of the should and keep the doctor away. Such goobers out of my pockets, muddied milk conla r.s 15 out of the Ifi ele- up my face, pnd my clothes had been ments reiju red by the human bpdy, blowed off and I never did find any where as most of our food has been part of my jgun. I always will remem- denatured through cooking and pro-'|ber the w'hipping I got for that and cessing untii it contains very few cf the time I had typhoid fever, the Id requisite elements. , Albemarle, Feb. 4. — Speculation, rife here since the death last Thurs day of A. C. Heath, disappeared today as announcement wa.s made as to the provisions of the Heath will. .Mr. Heath was a bachelor, an;l his estate, which his will indicated, he wanted settled and heirs paid within the next Iwo years, is said Jby friends to be w.irth from $1,000,000 to $2,000,000. Central Methi>dist church of this city, of which he was a member, will receive $10,(MH). Heath Memorial churc'h in 'Union county. Will receive $5,000. Allen Heath, son of the late .1. A. Heath, a brother, will receive $2,000 and. the remainder the es tate will be divided into five parts. Four sisters will each ri'ceive a fourth. They are Mrs. Eugenia Nes- bit, of Charlotte; Mrs. Florence Stokes of Great Falls, S. C.; Mrs. D. '1. 'Bivin.s, of Great Falls; and Mrs. .Maude Massey of Waxhaw. The other j fifth of the estate will be divided equally among Allen Heath, Laura Heath and Mary '-Heath McMillan, children of Will C. Heath, of Monroe, But we should make no mistake ' about stai .:ng in on the dairy pro gram, as advised by Dr. Bahnsen. He I drifted from steel to woed and built a swinging c^dle that rocked automatically by tiem|(<ia -ormer legislator and a brother of the le.’cased. TJie Stanly Bank and Trust com- of w'hich Mr. Heath was presi dent, w’as named as executor. NiM^Ttnth* Prtoeniable Nine-tenths of all the diseases of the Axnencan pmple ean be traced directly _ string to the doesn’t mean to go out and buy or ac-' dog and then to the cradle and putting quire a bunch of scrub cows, without! a cat in a basket just far enough off any feed fur them, and expect to make U'or him not to reach her, but that dog a profitable business on any such ' got awfully mad at that cat once, and schedule^ A cow is said to require the !he jumped so hard he jerked the cra- incotne from two gallons of milk to die over and almost killed .my little to constipation, doctors sav. Constipa^ ..1. system * for her keep Md attentioBr^ Any body with a two. gallon cow is about breaking even, giving all the work that is done in the effort for nothing. Whatever a cow gives above two gal- lona ia profH, cenarall|r fpaaking. A gritmt auny pea|>la from whom tkm thidwa into the system poisons whidi taint and wedeen every organ of the body and make them easv VMstims for any germs which atta^ thnn. Prevent constipation and you wffl avoid nino4enth8 of aU dtseases, with their oonsequmt pain and fi nancial loeaes. Heroine the good <Jd T^tabie cathartic, wifl prevent oon- t " sHparkm TH a I^oassnt way. Qet a bottle %ro^nnd sislCT I was trying'to rock! Oet^bStSi from to I hAV6 forg^ot At tHis lAtc dAy qatyi i?d /yiwi whether my n>other whipped me with a stick of stovewood or an axe handle —or both. Among my proposed utensils that SADLER-OWENS PHARMACY WHAT DO P. S. JEANES DO? Tried — Tested — Proven! Tha 5,000,000 housewivas who shop daily at A&P Food Stores, hawa found that the values offered there are genuine. For over seventy^.years these housewives have tried, tested and proved to their satisfaction that to shop at the AAP b indeed a saving. Campball'a Beans 5 cans 25c Rich Creamy Cheese lb. 29c Pure Rio Coffee 5 lbs. $100 Rajah Bnuid SALAD DRESSING 2Sc Swans Down Cake Fiour 29c Large Pkg. Fancy Creamery butter lias Fresb ttio Tub, Lb. 43e 8 O'CLOCK COFFEE lb. 27e , ii'" ■ ~ 1 Ready-to^rve Spaghetti 2 Santa Clara cans 15c PRUNES Med. Sizes 14c Heinz Tomato CATSUP Large Bottle 23e White House Evaporated MILK H lie Grandmother’s BREAD PAN LOAF Ifros. .wfi^aped PAN ROLLS Doeen 7e 8c LARD'^““‘ Compound 2 lbs. 25c CORN Tender No. 2 Tatty Can ■t PEAS 10c Tender 2 25e Sweet sm No. 2 MediumGreen lima Beans 1 Sc Grape Jelly 17c Baker'i—Yellow or Blue Label Cocoanut can 15e Sunnjrfield SRced Bacon Lb. Pk*. 29c A Oeanter That Saves Time—Dirt—Moi^ Old Dutch S cans 20c Lnn Toilet Soap 6 catas $WSQ "ga?; a i« 25c Atiantic & Pacific «