The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, August 07, 1930, Image 6

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■ ''-'i' N' " r/ ~ iw ■■ THURSDAY. AUGUST 7. 1930 »♦♦•••••#•••••••••••••••••••••••♦••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • I SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON t By Rer. Samael D. Pri«e. D. AMnciate General SecreUry of Uie World*! Sunday School Aaaociation. International Sunday School Lesson for Aufirust 10 HANNAH, A GODLY MOTHER I Samuel 1:9-18, 24-28; 2:19 Whilt thronys may go into the churches only some are real worship pers. One of very devout soul was call of God duoring the night season as he said “Speak Lord; for thy ser- low responded to the thrice repeated NOTICE OF REGISTRATION FOR MUNICIPAL ELECTION incorporate limits of the said Town of 4 o’clock P. M., on each day except Clinton for four months prior to .the Sunday, until 12 o clock noon, August State of South Carolina, * County of I^aurens, Town of Clinton. iHh, 1930. j and collectable for the preceeding fis • cal year and who holds a county regis- Notice is hereby given that W..D. tration certificate entitling him or her Copeland is the duly appointed Super- to vote at a polling precinct within visor of Registration for the Town of the Town of Clinton, shall be entitled i Clinton, County of Laurens, State of to register. The said W. D. Copeland, South Carolina. ' Supervisor of Registration, will have. Every male and female citizen twen- open at the store of J. I. election to be held in said Town of Clinton on Tuesday, .\ugpust 19th, JACK H. YOUNG, 1930, and who have paid all taxes due Attest: Mayor D. C. HEUSTESS, Clerk and Treasurer. Dated this the 27th day of Ju#e, 1930. ^ ' 8-7-6t 666 Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia in ty-one ) years o upwar , Bro., in the Town of;30 minutes, checks a Cold the find frauds found in the tabetmacle at Shiloh atjvant heareth," I Samuel 3:9. Then (^-j Federal government haH begun the close of the period of the. judges., serve how prayer is his great life la,, active campaign against false. While harsh events are Ukiiig place work, in chapter 12:23. He was'forced j fraudulent and misleading advertis- in war and state there is always a cot-1 to lay down his judgeship but he I The federal Trade commission year, and within the Uge by the side of the road from; would never cease his prayership for | ^as announced a policy of holding which a great leader will come forth, i Lrael. | newspapers and magazines responsi Thus a setting is made for the sight Great songs come out of mighty ble equally with the advertisers, that greetted the eyes of aged Eli, ti umphs. Hannah gave expression to One result has been the cleaning up having all or the qualiiications as ' * «■ mentioned in Sec. 222, and 225, Vol-' Clinton, for the purpose of register-11*7 «i>d checka Malaria in three days. ume 3, Code of Laws of South Caro-' ing voters from 9 o’clock A. M. to 1 666 also in Tablets. lina, 1922, and who has resided in the * _ State for two years, in the County of, the priest, who ministered in the port able tabernacle which had been carried ur joy and thanksgiving in the song .,iat IS recorded in chapter two. Note Backache during the journey from Mount Sinai she repeatedly gives all the glory to the promised land.,There had been replacement of parts but it wa:i st.ll the place where God met with children. Hannah was bowed in prayer to Jehovah. Turn also to the magnifi cat, the song of Mary, Luke 1:46-55, of the advertising columns of the less responsible publications in the past | few months. Another result has been! to send advertising frauds, especially I medical quacks, into radio broadcast- and observe how the mother of Jesus ing. If functional Bladder Irritation dleturbe your alaap, causes Burring or Itching Sensation. Backache or Leg Pains,V making you feel tired, depress^ and discouraged, why not try the Cjratea 48 Hour Te^t? Don’t u.s rejoices in often similar words. While Hanah cannot have her boy. .Sooner or lattr broadcasting will have to be regulated, too. could be notPd by her moving lips, | in keeping her vow, she can make love though no sound was heard by the ob- * garments for him. Each year she vis server. Eli came forward in rebuke and foolishly sid she was intoxicated, bold in her assertion of innocence this woman told in part what she had just lesson been telling the I>ortl. She was one of the two wives in the home of Elkan- ah. Peninnah had borne him sons and daughters while she was still child- feBe, and like every Hebrew wife eager to have a son. Because she had not been a mother she was taunted -by Peninnah. Elkanah loved Hannah and^ was'^gtad to'givt her a double portion of tasty food to indicate his favor, but this did not take away her heart hun ger to become a mother. With direct ness she makes the matter the subject of prayer and is discovered while in devotion by Eli. This priest can speak for God and at once de<dares that her ardent pe tition will be granted. Samuel is the answer to her prayer and the babe is cared for in»the utmost loving devo- .\(I<ied affection must be lavished its Samuel at Shiloh and brings a lit tle coat in her joy and for his com fort. One practical application of this study is to observe another obser^ve mother’s day, though we have passed (ICAKErrES The prejudice against cigarettes i seems to have practically disappeared.! The report of the bureau of internal I rA*venue for the year which ended on June 30th last, shows the largest con- .second Sunday in May. The scope of sumption of cigarettes in history, give up. Get Cyetex today at any drug etore. Put it to -the test. See how fast It works. Money back if It doesn't bring quick improvement, and satisfy you completely. 'Try «0c. Cyatex today. Only SADLER-OWKNS PHAR.MACY FOR SALE 1 buildinj;, 4 lots on Enterprise Street. 1 lot, corner Miisgrove and Florida Street. 5 acres inside city limits, on C. N. & L. Railway. 1 house and lot ond West Main Street. 378 acres well-improved farm land, near Laurens. Will sell for replacement value of improvements. JOHN D. DAVIS Phone 141 Clinton, S. C. our prayer life is also suggested. We are to take everjdhinj; to the Lord in prayer and ask for anything that is right for us to have. Often we are un- i certain what would be be.st for u.s, anchjni„art and. child in the United States! ion. at 8uch times we are taught to safe- 'guard our petitions with the prayer that Jesus used in the Garden of GethJ semane when he said so devotedly, “Not my will, but thine be done.’’ Samuel had every reason to always he proud of his mother. He evidenced his fidelity by the way in which he did his part to live out the prayers of Hannah. The golden text is an exhor tation to every chlid: “My son, hear the instruction of thy father, and for- .sake not the law . of thy mother,’’ Proverlis 1:8, nearly one hundred and twenty bil lion of them having been sold during the year. That is an average of J,(KK) ‘igarettes a year for ev^ry man, wo- in the earliest years for she had vowchI to give him as a son of the tabernacle as soon as he was weaned, which may have been between the ages of three and five. To keep her promise Hannah 'The idea that cigarette smoking is more injurious to health than the usejl of tobacco in other forms is still held ' in some ' quai ters, but medical men generally do not take it very seriously. (Cigarette smoking by women is now commonplace, though until the war there was only one restaurant in .New York that permitted women to smoke within its walls. Peach Snow K«»r peach snow, beat a cup of cream until it is stiff and add half a cup of sugar and two egg whites, beat- returns to the tabernacle at Shiloh ien stiff. Cut up a quart of peaches in most people were expecting, if and reminds P!li of her specific prayer; a glass dish and pour the cream 1 def«*at of the treaty, at least a and its glorious answer. Though thisUure over them. The peaches and the POLITK'S After all the sound and fury over the latification of the naval reduction j treaty, just nine senators voted‘ against it. By the noise they made, and the] amount of space which the newspa- jiers gave to the opponents of the is a les.son about Hannah it is natural to at least glance through the life of the son. .Note first how the little fel- ream should both be chilled through before mixing. Serve them as soon as they are mixed. .selling: direct to you through our stores, we greatly reduce the cost of distribution. You net the benefit in lower prices for (Juulily Products. Birdsey’s Best SuperRrade IMain or Seifrising 12-Ib. sack $ .58 24-Ib. sack 1.05 48-Ib. sack 2.05 Four Brothers High Grade Plain or SeifeininK 121b. sack $.47 24-Ib. sack .82 48-Ib. sack .... 1.60 Birdsey’s Whole Wheat Graham Flour 6-lb. sack $ 12-Ib. sack .SO .60 Fair Play Plain or Selfrising 12-Ib. sack $ .40 24-Ib. sack 75 48-Ib. sack 1.45 Light House Fancy Patent Plain or SelfrisinK 12-Ib. sack $ .48 24-Ib. .sack 85 48-Ib. sack 1.65 Mascot Wheat Feed 75-lb. sack $1.50 100-lb. sack 1.95 (Ton lots,JULQ0 ML ton less) Special Price On Barrel Lots All Grades BIRDSEY’S HEN SCRATCH OR GROWING SCRATCH 8 1-3 lb. sack $ .30. 25-lb. sack .75 50-lb. sack $1.40 100-lb. sack 2.60 BIRDSEY’S LAYING OR GROWING MASH 8 1-3 Ib. sack t .35 25-lb. sack 90 50-lb. sack $1.65 100-lb. sack 3.10 SPECIAL LOW PRICES ON SUGAR Birdsey Flour Mills very close vote. In Washington every-i b<Hly knew better. There never wa.s i any real doubt that the treat.v would; be ratified. All the uproar was merely j personal and partisan politics. The trouble with two-thirds of the | so-called “new's" that comes out of) Washington is that it is misleading. It gives the impression that little men i are big men, that their words are in-! tended to be taken seriously. HOME.S Home building is on the increase, according to the Home Owners Insti tute of .■\merica. Regions where there has been no shortage of housing fa cilities are now i>eginning to feel a demand for new homes. This is a particularly favoralde time in whieh4<> ImiUi a-hoasa, the institute. states. Building materials are lower than at any time since 1922, and fi nancing companies, savings banks and other money-lending institutionn are making more liberal loans for home building, and on easier terms. Practically every new home is built with borrowed money. Most people hold that it is better to have a “per-’ manent’’ mortgage*on one’s home than to own it free and clear. In most com munities it is easier to seel property with a mortgage on it than otherwise, and there is less of the home-owner’s individual capital tied up in a home which cannot be turned into cash in an emergency. CREDIT ,A few years ago the principal gro cer in the suburban town where I was living began to raise his prices. After a few months my family found It jo much cheaper to go across the railroad to the “cash and carry’’ store that they transferred all their trade there. Our old grocer stopped me on the street one day and asked whether he had failed to give satisfaction. I told him I was satisfied with everything but his prices. He explained that so many rich peo ple had moved into the suburb that he had to charge more, because, as he explained, the rich took so long to pay their bills! My next door neighbor, re puted a millionaire, had not settled his grocery bill for three years. Instead of refusing to sell him, the grocer was so afraid of losing the “millionaire trade’’ that he tried to make me, and others like me, who bought for cash, •pay interest on the debts of the wealthy, I wa.s reminded of this by seeing a report of the department of commerce i on retail store failures, in which it is stated that the principal cause is the extension of credit. It seems incredible i that there are people who do not pay for the fotxl they eat, but apparently there are a good many of them. West Main Street Next Door To Industrial Supply (Company SPECIAI.—SPECIAL Red Book—5 months, $1.00. McCalls Msgasiiie, 1 year, and Red Book, 5 months, both for $1.7S. See me for other special offers. JAS. W. CALDWELL Call 243 at 12:3t P. .M. THE QUALITY — SERVICE —'SAVINGS— Plan has solved the greatest problem of the age, that of getting food from the manufacturer to your kitchen table at the very least cost. You can benefit "from this service and the savings effected by going to :^our tele phone and calling your nearest Quality Service Store. o Clinton Maid BREAD, 9c Assorted CAKES Lb. International Salt, 3 boxes .. 11c Lucky Strike Cigarettes, pkg. 15c Banquet Tea, 1-4 lb 23c CAMPFIRE Marshmallows, 2 boxes 15c Clinch River Kraut, 2V2 can .. 12c White House Coffee, lb 39c Borden’s Evap. Milk, tall 10c Red Band Flour, 24 lb. plain S1.19 Red Band Flour, 24 lb. S. R. $1.24 Frenches MUSTARD, jar 12c WHITE’S Boneless Park Rolls, lb 35c Fancy Pat. Flour, 24 lb. plain . 89c Lance’s Peanut Butter, 16 oz. 27c VERIBEST Vienna Sausage, 3 cans ..... 25c Chipso, 3 pkgs. ;. 25c Chipso Suds last because they're rich. Kewpie Tissue, 3 roUs 25c Borden’s Evap. Milk, small... 5c Red Peacock Syrup, 1-2 gal. . 41c Hitt T ^V.ud( f *• ’ * j MACARONI GOLD DUST, Little Daisy BROOMS each 43c Octagon Soap, 5 cakes . .. 19t ^ ^ve the coupons for valuable premiums. Dukes Mayonnaise^ 8 oz. ..19c WIIITE'S ST. MOUNT Sliced Bacon, vi^apped, Ib. . Balentine’s Boiled Ham, lb.. BEST QUALITY Virginia Dare Cake, lb. .... Claussen’s Short Lostf Bread NEWBERRY Creammy Butter, Ib. 4lc Veribest Potted Meat, 6 cans 25c GRAPE JUICE, pint THESE MERCHANTS ARE MEMBERS OP QUALITY SERVICE: CLINTON. S. C. WHITMIRE. S. C. Baldwin’s Grocery, J. M. Pitta, Blakely’s Young Bros. Scott Grocery Co Grocery. I. C. Boland, L. V. Pinson, Clin- GOLDVILLE, S. r ton Mercantile Co. ri.i«Wv^Li f: w V • ^