The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, August 25, 1932, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

PAGE SIX-^ S A V- / X THE CLINTON CHRONICLE. CLINTON, S. C. THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1932 Curtis Declares Against Repeal OUR TRIP TO WASHINGTON Republican Candidate for Vice President Speaks At Notii tion Ceremony In Kansas. President Speaks At Notifica-! litten by Jack Chapman, Troop 75,} ' Boy Scouts, Goldville, S. C.) DID YOU KNOW? Topeka, Kansas, Aug. 18. — Vice- President Charles Curtis stood today on the shady north steps j^t the Kan sas state house, received official noti fication jof hifn^nomination as the R<*- publican party’s candidate for vice- president and told visiting party lead ers and hi.s Kansa.s neighbors: .^t 6:30 a. jn., Thursday, June 30th, the .«cho,ol bus, loaded with Boy S< out8 NOTICE , fytate of South Carolina, ! deed book 42, page 399. The other por-1J. Roy Workman 157*^ fett; on the# 'County of Lorens, [Court of Common Plea? I tion of the lands described in said deed south by lot or formerly belong/ [having been sold by .Jacobs .and Com- in gto Joe H. Phinney 60 fee^.; on w pany to Mrs, Kirkpatrick and Kenneth] west by lot now or formerly belong- William Plumer Jacobs and'.TenTes Burdette | -j . / jing to W. S.* Denson lol\z feet.” Ferdinand Jacob.?, Jr., individually “PAR(’EL NO. 2. All that and as executors of the estate of I or parcel of land situated in ; lot. piece he Town THAT —Leonard Parker Dailev, ,' r,,u. younc Clintonian, operator the sWth' i James Ferdinand Jacobs, deceased,, of Clinton, S. C., bounded on the north plaintiffs, vi .Mr.«. Elliott Duck®tt Ja-jby Enterprise street 55 feef; on the jca.«^t by lot sold by me to Richard E. The tw’o lots of lalid next above de scribed are portions of lot conveyed to J. F. Jac^s, et al .trading as Ja cobs and Company, by Mrs. M, A. King apd^iss Emma Adams by deed Pur uant to Decree of the Couit in • U8 feet; on the south by recorded in the office of Clerk of bound f«rWashin/on‘ u'o"’"' "^''”’ithM''he "ra^nTan’of un“?uaf°arti!."rci the 7oo7e antitVod ^nTaeliildt formerly ouned by .1. H. Phinney; Court, Uurens County, S. C„ in Vd. Our first stop was Columbia, S, C., tastes^ that he has “planted” some i^e legal hours for sale on j J]ftate and now owned by Jacobs and 145, page 72. sales day ■'.anie be* the month pictures taken in front of the .statue of Washington, We had “I sund upon the party platform. I! us the place where shells nn me nui.a- i * Rlakelv nlace^ on the Laur^’owing deseribed property to approve Mr. Hoover’s admirable state, iing when Shermans army shelled the I . , nient of Republican principles - 11 capital. i road just this .side of the Lakeside know of no reason for th<‘ people criti-1 The next .stop wa.s Duke university.; club. At that time the part cising the parly under whose poll'ics i lu’-ham, .N. C. Dr. Flow’ers, the treas-1 our nation has become tin greatest i iin r of the university, obtained two and nio.st powerful in the w irld. rer-jvfiJ'S to show us over the entire! sorally I am opposed to the’return of p'ant and explain the outstanding the .saloon and I am opt'osed to th< liLaji to us. W«^|^'ere shown the chap repeal of the l«th amendnient.” ’’ Septeml>er next, the j <^o>«paT»y 55 feet; on the west by .*ing 'Monday, the 5th day of I of Jack H. and J. Lee ^oungj^^j. narcel of land, situate, ^ying and ith. either in or in front of !*(known as Utopia Building) and byib^j^^ ^he State the capital of our (xwn .state. Here we' . \ v. . • 'x sao- our rapitol building and had ouf’=‘"‘* that n.s buamoaa ,a «p,dly m-r *„i au a creasing in volume? Mr. Dailey camei^ , ^ , ,, -v ~ „ 1 . A t r t" Clinton in .Soptembar. 1926. In Ft*-'the Court Hou«a at Uurens, S. C.. to | propert.v p»-nad to myself, no* usadl^jd, i„ the City of Clinton, on the I ruaiy of the following year he boughthighest bidder for cash, the U. S Po^ Off ice, and hy prop-; northea.st comer of Calvert avenue » hit tn^ .11 - I T i r\vrkr\£^irf\r fi\ Wii* PTFTy SOld bv Vtw tD Pi Lillie JUld u .Likjv-ia Krkiin/lA/I nr. ?V.^ “P.ARCEL .\0. 6. All tha:l Lot, piece land, situate, tying and State and Cou’^ty afore- the vault wht^e fhe bodies of Mr. A crowd of more than .5,090 had gathered h<>neath aged eli;i.' ttt hca. what“< harlie” ('uiti.s of hi.storicaliv dry and agricultural K;.n>as would .say about prohibition, farm v<di(^ tariff?, the depre.-ision and the llcpuo- b<*auty-spots of this section. Mr. Dailey is more than a business )uke and the pre. idefits of the uni- ’nian; he is a born artist. He takes an .ii-.sity will rest after death, the union almost fatherly intere.st in his plants n which are Imated the dining loom,'—not only in those he is caring forl;'P leheation r(K)ms, barber shop, hank,'on his own farm, but in the many offices of student publications, library | others which he has sold and planted and Dike hospital. The things thr.^ invhc.s ... . ^ by ^ “^^IraTwl-Jefle* street, bounded on the north All that certain lot, piece and par-'This lot consisting^ (jot No. 131 rH>longing cel of land, situate, lying and being in ![**.*'”** busine,«s lot and the remainder ^ Copeland 195 feet thereon; the corporate limits of the.Town ofi^’^f. ^ the east by lot of land now or for- hare, red clay. Today it is green and [Clinton, County and State aforesaid, > belonging to Jack H, Young fre.' lt; the chouse is surrounded by j containing three acres, more or less, | ’ and Homer D, Henry 167 fret there- beau'iful shrubbery; it i.s one of the i bounded on the north by Calvert .Ave. i * i , i ^he south by Calv*-r: avenue N. 89 E. 343 feet; on the west by. All that lot. J)ie^ or 195 feet thereon; and on tht west by Woodrow stieet ( formerly Young' th^^)wn of Clinton,I street 165 feet and - street) and lot of James Ferdinand ^ ' thereon.” Jacobs, .^r., S. ‘a deg. W. 394 ft., ami, street. Clay and h londa street; ^ parcel uf the south by lot of R. H^ry! ?," P'‘«P^rty ' ing lots numbers 14 and 1.5 . Young .S. RSi-ij W. ;iJ3 feet, mo’-e or ^ ' branklin. later by Mrs ColyAi Ad-j „,j,p plat of a survey , !les?; on the east by Cleveland street Chandler. 1 Ohsubdivided by B. R. Tood. Engon- [ N. 1 deg. E. 397 feel. This is all of by l^nds of r . ( .. Smith, tor-j^gj.^ dated December 7th, IrJ ?. Tho 'the lot conveyed to .lame** Ferdinand owned by James Dillard, lol.h referred to is the iaim a.- refer- [ Jacobs, .Sr., hv A. E. Spencer bv deed the .s«iuth by lands of K CJ ^ed to under Parcel No. ]. ' dated March 7th. 1907, with 4he ex- ^ “PARCEL NO. 7. All that t 4., piece jeeption of a rmall portion of said lot ^ Company, 448 .)-12 feet; and j ^r parcel of land, situate, lying ahJ j on the southwest eorneri hereof ;I-hich^^ of Richard E. j portion taie.s on Woi^drow .street.” ; Also: land he- s shown of land I elsew here. His forty-four acre lot. lican record in bidding for n*-<“l< ction. impressed me mo.?t her<' w'cre th--j "’ith it.? twelve acres of nursery stock, Tney heard .Senator I.. J. Dickinson ‘ tjjany-colored windows in the chapel, 1 is a model for the envy of the horti- of Iowa, keynoter at the Repuhlii un j portray :.g the life of Christ, and the cultural enthusiast, and with his national convention, and chairman of j lai ge library. We had our picture tak- photographic memory he can tell you. the notification committee, extoll the j en in front of the chapel and'Xn t'iie,ftom his own front yard, the name | ■ ".V"" Copeland 108 feet, lieing all land.? re man who had represented Kan.sas for i football Xadium, which was the la.«l ‘ and locaton of vw-ry one of his flow-i Woodrow .street. niaining in my po’s.?essiun ea^t of the year- in congres^. as “one fixed, place visits 1 here. ' | ers and shrubs. / j Also: - (above mentioned land of R. E. Cop<*- Afte- !< a-. ing bere ve trnvel'M’ t( | The greate.<»t pleasure derives | “All that bit or parcel of land 'itu-jiy,,,} ynd deeded to n.e by .Jack H. Henderson, N. C.. where we spent the . from his hu.sine.ss, .Mr. Dailey .says, is [ate in the city of Clinton containing i young on the iiith day of May. 1906. oight. ; from planning and planting the orna- oije-hulf of an acre, more or less, ! OTuI '•£».-iX I’/l'I * 1 G ‘ V We left Henderson early I I'iday i mental shrubbery fur a home. VVhen morning and drove to Petersburg, Va.,} he siHmks of a job of this sort his face wheiv we had breakfast, lii.-h.nonvi, i lights up w'th the interest of one who \’a., was (»ur next .stop, ed places of interest. Here we visit- including the in fundamentals of govei nnient, one who know< the en’,ry of our people in this valley, who has an abiding faith in our own spaces, a firm draft (ui our ti ibulations, who i> seasoned with s<*rvice. polished in the art of a^'ulership." j And they hi-ard the vice-president.' his face tuc'icd toward the site of the log cabin in w hich he was horn, across , th«' Kaw ever in North Topeka, de- < lao* Ir- opposition to repeal of the : Isth annndnunt, h,? taith in tariff piiitiHtcn. his a.-snranci* that .Arner-! ica will he the first nation to recover} from the financial storm, and his-1 Mount Vernon, one of the most inter faith in Heilx-rt Hoover. listing places visited on the whole trip. The man who, (*0 years ago, hiked j y^e house .stands upon a slopigg hill,i:j, 7.5 miles to luing help fin’ the Kaw | uverhkoking the .Potomac river, a' being in the Town of C|'nt< *. in tho County of Laurens, in th<- State of South Carolina, containing xn.>tenth (1-10) of an acre, more or k .- s, bound ed on the north by lot now ..r fon ier- ly of TJeoi A. Copeland; on the east and :e iir!'d the 12 h day o. August,' qj. formerly of VC W'oodrow s'treit; on the east by lot of Jarne^ Ferdinand Jacobs; on the south tribe of Indians against milling trilK’S, I Ju aijiify) mansion, with its shaded creates and enjoy.- mating mote than anything el.«e. Numerous ' homes in ciipiiol building, and s’aw me statue ('Ijnton, Laurens, and sun’oiind^ig ./f W ashington, which war the only ; town.?, testify to his talent and cdu-] ore ac. epti'd and approved by Wash-' cation a? a ianiDcajie artist, inglon h;ms«.lf and also ITuvts of the!' 'che Dailey Nur.serie.? sj.eciklize ini e.ght piesiik nls w h.» were from ^ if-' the hardier ornamental shrubs, and in^i ginia. ^oses. Hecrntly .Mr. Daik v has turned fipti‘>n ‘■•an he had by refer- On Friday afternoon we arrived at ^ ^^s attention to ro.<=e.s and plans tO|‘''''‘“ ('raw- have his stock this fall include^nearly ] be'.*, 19J2. which show- said all of the varieties which thrive bt* * ' follow.?: on the north try VN ood, this area. krown as No. 108 .Sou’h Broadway, at jajos. in' !,(,ok 23. nage 11. Register the correr of W'lxKlrow street, and, (\,.,v(.yancc for Lauren- Coun- con^aiiiii'g thereon a two-storV fame.3. ,hown by plat supplied here- .-hingle roof hou.-e and a small barn, . ^.'th drawn by T. H. Wiggins on the and havmg the following metes and j7th dav of Fi hruary, 1920. a.s that br.und.s: Ib.ni’.ded on ihe north by, surve .ed by him, containing joy; on the south by lot r.. merly of Dave E. Tribble; .. west hv street, having ?! P. Mont- A or for-.- . i ontV' .mete.s, cour.Nes and distanc. - :es will more fully appear by pla* « f same made by John M. Hudgen-', .'surveyor, on the 22nd day of June. '.(07. ami by lot of IC. H. Young, an:l on the vve-l bv .'v)Uth Broadway. A more aef- heing the same lot of lam! nejetofore conveyed to the .Mayor anc A’ l 'r;ncii of the Town of Clinton bv W. ''._Irhy . hv deed >n the 2 Ith day of June. l'.« • recorded in the office of l.m was carefully dressed ,in a dark coat and white trous«*rs. wearing a striped tie. ’ .Although operating from headquar- Many To Need Cotton Cloth KiKht inK Million Will Need Cloth- From Supply of Farm lawns, gardens and outbuilding.?. We saw the shop, the weaving room, the kitchen, the dining room with the old silver set and wine'se't, the Washing ton coat-of-arm.-, Washington’s study, an old grandfather’s cliK-k, the bed ppon whii l4|^Washington died, also the room in which his wife died, swords usid by Washington, the room in which I^afayette stayed while u guest of Wa.shingU)n, the key to one of the jters so near Clinton, Mr. Dailey does! a thriving busine.ss all over the conn-''*'’ j ty. and by truck, with customers .far ther afield. .About thirty imt cent of I his business is in ('linton, while Lau- j nm.s, only .slightly farther away, han- 1 dies hut slightly more. He is now widely known in this section, and row street S. 76-00 VV. 222 feet; on the ea.-t by lot of Jame.s Ferdinand [Jacobs e.?tate N. 14-00 W. 127 feet; the south by lands of Mrs. Henry Young .N. H9-30 E. 211 feet; on the Ao--f by Vri.-ad .-treet S. 25-45 E. '.*0 feet.” Thill is the same lot of land coh- .v?’vi'(i to .1. F. Jacobs l)v Mr.?. J. B. 2 48-1(10 acre., more or le.ss.” The foregoing description of ?aid land is that contained jn deed of .1. lA*e Voiing 10 .1. F .Jacobs, et al, dat ed Feb. 20t‘h, 1920, and reconled the 2Jlh day of Feb. 1920, \.-l: 42. page I 'Cojit fir Laurens Coun* This lot of land is subject to a right ‘ ; oi. page 392.” of way for a street conveyed to the yf,,. discription of this ' Town of Clinton by Jacobs and Com pany on February 27th, 1930, ami re y!corded’in Deed Book 6S, page 190. of fice of the Clerk of Court for I.au ren? County. ( lerk of II deni of land i.s that contained in deed :. >m To«0) of Clinton to J. F. Jacobs, et .al. dated 'the 1 It^ of .May, 1919, vi.-riled in , b''ok 42, page 249. ‘ ’-.‘ARCEI NO. «. All piece. P.ARCEL NO. .\n that lot or p3,.(.^.| or dot of land purcha-eil by me parcel of land, lying, being and •‘itu- .|j,„uarv Hth. 1913, from Ckx. .A. Cope- ate in the Town of Clinton and in the jas. R. Copeland, A- e C. Fer- ct’ll.s of the Bastille pTii.son in F'rance, i weR-oine. Mr. Dailey Hoard Cotton In Six Months, the old-time piaripw’hich W a? a gift of his plants, and is happy r- ' Wa.-hington to Nellie Citstis. We sa-w the'opportunity to speak of them Washington, Aug. 17. — Estimate? an old coach ami fire •waipiTr XTKrd i-ui4U'^'ittd.,lis.li.‘iii,;r.i. Hi.s.JtmFwI^fge of AVashington. also a barn jthat was * kept busy the year around. The Dailey Nurseries are always open to inspection, and vi.sitors are delights to have to mg thrm -tenth (3-l()) of an 3‘*re. - f l^aurens, co-htir- more or less, and hounded on the jjjp estate of Mrs. N. M the bu.-iness - is Imth thus far provided the Red ('ross head quarters here i»laee at 7,i(9K,000 per-! built in 1773. V\’.e then visitei/ the tomb j "‘‘^h, and his reniarks are -oBs the iiumlKT of those who will m-iii (otton clothing during the next s’x inoiitiis from the '^ujipl.v of farm biiaid cotton placed at the di'po?al of tile orgaiuliatuoi. Only a little mure tiiatva '.hii ! of t qe It' ii I r',‘>s chanter- ihu- lur ha\’e s<‘iit in eytiniates. The rc]»'M-tinv>- i hap- ,tei^, ! ,.3 19 out ot till* 3,635, estimati’d that 1,11. . 611 faniilie- would need beddirie Of ’he I’h ipiei .-^ lepoi tin.i,...maii.sion i.- I»uilt of Carolina pine. 1,071 already were di-t ribut ing new | We.droxe -trom .Mount Vernon to oj- u.?ed cloihiTig, \ W ashmgtoM and found the tourist 'ihe e-tim;it«‘.? were made in rc-Jeamj) in which we stayed. 'Fhis camp spoM<e to a que-tinnna re sent oiit 1)\ . is located on the hank of the Potomac of Washington and hi.? wife. On Wash ington’.- tomb is his coat-of-arnis tind an eagle.' .Next wc saw the new pier running out into the river, als t the old pier that Washington had made to load and unload ships. A story a'out . the old fv>rt out in front of the hou--e told i».v an old eoiored man was interesting. One thing of which we should lie proud is that Mount N'ernon Baititn Pa.vne afti’r' river. Chaiimati .bditi the |»i c-^;deiitapprov al of tire trans fer of .‘lOli.CIKI bales of cotton to the Kt d Cl t'l provide cloth and wear- in- apparel foi the needy. The leplies mdleati'd the eastern On .Saturday we visiti;! the .Smith sonian in.stitgti|>n, where ,we learned a great dial. AVe saw Lindbergh’s air plane, “The Spiril of St. Ixiuis,” alio imiu.-triui eeiiters need of clothing. ehapteis leporting 719 jM*rson.- 1^1 WflU 111 The 661 eastern esti’uated 1,581.- model? of guns, loeomotives, bicycles, [ Hogunsville Nurserit scholarly and inter esting as only those 7if one w-ho lives in his work can V'- Leonaid Parke:* D,aile\ was hum in Fianklin county, (la.. on the 22nd of Fibruuiy, 18;»5. Mis Litlici was a fanner, and h.s eaily years were .-pent close to the .oil whi h now yields him iioih his livelihood ami lii.- girates: pleasuie ii' life. In 1914 he entcied the Bcny .school, in Koine. Oa., wiieie he worked h s way through. While there 'his interest in hi'iticultuie and laml.seape gardening as a li*'e-w‘oik I'iist developed. In It 20 Mr. Dailey <*nteMMl the Cni- ver.-iLv of Ceorgiu, where h<* iuither- tiil his i.ntere ts as a naturalist by tak ing every course he eould get in his chosen field.. CiMni bis graduation, in vided 1924, he sicured a position with the .lacobs .Jlorton with the exception of a -mall County and State aforesaid,, contain- j Dufk Copeland of the with me . Phinney, north by lot belonging to the Towrn jp^yted in the Town of Cli’ to.a, Coun- of ( linton N. 82-10 ML 98.0 feet then - laiurens, State aforesaid, known on;-’on‘the east by lot belonging tuiyg Briggs lot, and lvi;,g ea.st of ' i “"‘j ibekens street extenSfonTHir^h I am r. D. Copeland, N. dJ-30 M.^ 121.6 jjyy deeding to the f .1,, 'ouncil of the City of Clinton, S.^C., dxvunded (Strip on the , back portion thereof which has l)ecn cut off bv J. F. Jacolis <■ • land added to a jvortion cut off from j his hom< place and fo-rming a separate i lot on Woodrow .street: ff - .Abo: __LAU ami' uate, lying and l)eing in the feet thereon; on the south by Phinney av mue .'s. 82-30 E. 121.1 feet there on; and on the \\’<-st ^ly, a 30 foot alley near lui- greatest ,auti)mohile.s airplanes and everything | (j.-ange, C.a. In 1926 he deeided to go into tin* business indepemlently, and yon could think of from the time (hey were frist invented up to the moiiern in their jurisdictions miMlels. Here ^^■e could note the iin- W()’j!(l lUHii cluthi's. The 515 mid- piovenu’iits and lx* glad that wi* are we.-iein chapters made a 2,608,797 living today in.stead of years ago. In e-limate; the Paeific chapters ri’purt* one room were miniature eoal, gold -limate: the Paeific ed 796.0.35 pel sons. cho.se Clinton us hi.s headquarters. Mr. Daib*y was married, in 1925. to Miss Sara Lee McKinneys of .Meri- weather countj, iJa. Miss .McKinney Town 0/ i'linton. County and .State afoic-'aid. fiaijitirig on Woodrow street ' ■aud’liouuded'On the north !)>■ Wimdrow , S, 7. 15 M'.' 116 fer't thereon, to the ..street 1;'2.9 feet; on the ea.st by the starting jxiiii.t. .As to rnoi'e ijetaileil ho-me place of .lame? F'erdinaiivl la- information in regards to mark?, robs, .Sr., dccea ed, 167.3 feet; -'ti the -hafn- and lioumiaiy of aiiovc descrih- Di’h by lot of Mrs. K. 11. Abniag es-'cd lot -a’l’c may he hid h.v reference .u»j> 19*7 '■(■(l.’a’ni on tlyi* -.ve.-t 'i\ to olat i*f survey made by Paul H the llovti 11 lot iicloi’.gi'.g t.> the es- Nasli. .Suveyer. on Feb uary 3rd, l.xti of .l.une? l■'•‘rdiI1and .lavo'b?, .^r . r.M»6.“ over whib .M ’I anna (. Young .Vl?o; holds ;i moit!>-age, 127 fe» t. and being ".All that lot er parcel of land, ly- I noition of tie’original home plaee 'mg. lM*ing and si'tuate in the Towifof )f .'. F. .I.aco’c?, .Sr.. a”.d a portion of Clinton and in the County and State the oiiginal lioi ,m lot of .1. F. .lacobs, afore.-aiil, c.ontaining .1)913 of an acre. .-'r., as will more fully appear by ref- niore or less, and hounded on the cieiue to a idat thereof niadi* by I. north by lands belonging to J. H. Kj" <'raw-ford U'lder ikite of .luly 9th, I hi:;ney, Jr., S. 50 M'. 65 fett.>there- 19.'12.” ' on; on the east by lot of .Mrs. Corrie 1 will al.-o St 11 the one-fifth undi- I.. Montjoy, N. 50-30 E. 213'feel interest of James Fir iinand thereon; and on the southwest by the deceased, of, in and to the foi- f'.r>t J.it ik“?c-iibed and title belonging lowing real o-tate: “P.AKCE,Ij. .no. 1.- .All that piece, j ihe Town of Clinton, Iwth measuring ^ .Montjoy and Jacob ..hence west.along the'lunu on the west by; Pickens itrtil as thus extendrii 61 feet; on the c.rth h.v property of .Mrs, U. K. Ciq t band and Dr.' I. Lee Young 151.6 'e**; on th<- southeast by lot of .Mrs.. . irie L. .Mont.ioy 33.2 ?eet; and ’'n rhe e;ist l)y -^ame j)rop'*rty 46.i* fie*; and ofi the south l»y property of .L idis and I'anipany 129.9 feet, whi.n escrip- ,tion includes also a trianj... . lot of ,la:»d conveyed to me March h, 1913, ix.ok 35. page 244, office Kegi-ter of .Me.-ne ('onveyance f Laurens C,,unty; which triangular * is dc- ?ci bed as follows: Begin,; s' on the nor.h at a imint marked r., .in iron wedg-e on a line between la-, - of Mrs. Corrie- L. .Montjoy an-i .-»ph H. Phinney. running south ’ n said poin4 along the line of lot » * dr?. Cor rie L. .Montjoy a distance iron parcel and lot of land, situate, l^'ing^ S. 9.45 E. 171 feet thereon; on the' and 50 feet r9’:< inches to an iron vvtilg- on the to oursehe? and the (ot belonging to ,ine between the lands o< M:-. Corrie - 'npany; and being on Fifth avenue in the City'south by Phinney avenue. For more ('omt)anv for a di«tar I of 44 of Clinton, fronting 70 feet thereon minute detailed information as to feet 3‘iiu he? to an iron wedc* orner- :ind running l»ack therefrom a dis- ^-hape. marks and boundary of thisjm,, t>tqween ‘the proner.ir- of the (tinghum and percale clothing for children needing 4.819,022; womi n at 1,572.4.56. led the demand. Children cl.<lhi*’.g were estimatevl at and evipper., mines, also a glass fac- toiy. In the aircraft division we saw- the motor of the “Que^tion Mark” and parts of the “N. C. 4,” the first air- tance of approximately 188.9 feet am! li t, same may be had by refeivm.^ twi jow;! of Clinton, .Io.feph H. Phinney , Jacobs and Compan , thence shown on plat of the property of^ C.. ’ni. Surveyor, on the 26th day of Oc- northeast along the line of ’^e prop- A. Copeland, adjoining the Preshyte- toher, 1919.” jerty of Joseph H. Phinnev a distance rian Colli ge, a? sub-d>vided by B. R 'Fhe desi-ription of the two forego-, of 65 feel thereon to t > starting at 1.5'.(8.()(3; and plane to fly across the .Atlantic, also The U349 chapters reporfeil 1X15^ i (KIO volunteers ready to go to work; on the necessary sewing to turn cot ton cloth into garment.?. Schaeffer Life Time Pens The makers of Schaeffer Pens are precise in every deiaiL Every pen must measure up to a standard that is unquestionable not for jusf a few months, but for a life time. Their per fects methods assures you of this service, yet the cost is low consideHnit this fea* ture. Guaranteed for life aRsinst the slightest defect. DMigns and p^nts to meet y o a r individual require ments. jf Other Pens arc carried, fficti fi a GerniaP Fokker plane. On the out-, silk*' of Ihis^buiTiJing wei-e' guns'“atTd | an army tanlc useil by the .Americans in the M’orld war. .Next w-e visited the .National .Mu seum, where we .?aw collections of uniform.-, gifts and other relics of was a .school teacher for several years bounded on the norih by lot No. ’20 a- a plat of survey made by A.' V. Mar-j : before their marriage. 'Fo this union j have IxH'n born three youngstei-s w ho are making Jhe most of their out-dooi ! paradise, fven at this e;irly age. I Frank is six, George four, and .Martha “going on tw'o.” . “The firm,” whieh embraees them , , , ,, , , , , ... .... all. looks as prosperous as it is. and ( ompany, and lot of Mrs. , 1913, and recorded in deed book Kirkpatiick. purchased by her from i page 156. i A ub-d,;vided by B. R 'Fhi Todd, Engineer, under date of Decenv- ing paicitfls of land as herein g\\en isjp^jjnt. The entire property Co .tiiining her 1st, 19i:i; on the eait hy another (the sayie as that contained in deed of' one-fifth of an acre mor** or R'ss ' ‘ of .lacobs and ('onipany and lot of G. A. Copeland, J. R. Coiveland and, ;^.oi m rs marked With iron lot 5fr. gm letle'iwrrhnsrtt~br hfm fi'iyin - T. Dticlc Copeland; deted March 26th, r 3.5.' p.r-e.. desorfptfon 'of “IhT? pleST or is growing al a rate which, in itself, . , . , , , , is the finest endor.?ement in the world. ^ ompany: on the south by property is the same as that contain- PAPiTf vrt . All Fkoi I » deed by .Joe H. Phin’*.ty to Ja- IvinJ and Company, et al. July ?ium. wm ie we .-aw coueciioiis oi Fifth avenue; on the cast by lot No. and parcel and land, situate, lying and, r luio ^ T’l ♦u ^ K urn orm.-, gi ts and other ^ ('aiiitol buildimr while both 1shown on the plat made by B. being within the corporate limits ofx,,!.’ loiu’day o. Mashuigton. Lincoln. Grant and other ^ ,,,, ^ ^ July 1919, in deed book 42. X;ge ’254. famous people. In ihe new I 25 as ?hown on the plat afore- and State aforesaid. conUining one-. l”; ‘ uo, " ■ -'<'••• 'haH of .n .or. or I„1 and -n» o„o ff,h- iotereat . -V. .aid niuii as wen as Oineis. 1 nc ine-lile , a .r... k„ rv.. i toi.uav was the Roo.?evelt-.African animal ex- libiatj. Catholic university hibit as well as others. The life-life |y station. 'gioups of clay figures, model^s of In-' Un Wednesday we went to the ;ied dian villages, Indian gallery and totem} C*’»>!^s building, D. A. R. building. Pan- poles were int**resting. M'e saw the i •'^uierican building and the M'hiLe flag that was the inspiration to Fran- House. Me had our pictures taken was .AnnM|>ons, .MiJ„ on the Chesa- ‘"g hi an oiu sione house. -Pcakc Jjay^Her^ is the U. S. Naval, This trip will always^be remember academy w ith.^large and magnificent [ eJ. TiIverytl«ng~w=af~dOTre^^ com-- ouildings. Here we were shown 6ver a submarine, the R-I3. On Sunday we attended worship at N. Y. Ave. Presbyterian church, the church that Lincoln attended while president. On Sunday afternoon we were guests of the Washington ball j team at a game between M'a.shii gt>)n land Philadelphia.' j On Monday we went to the ^ where we saw animals from all over I the world. On Mon^y night, July 4th, we witnessed a wonderful display of fort, pleasure and good things to eat, sleep and a comfortable way of trav fling. j We Idained more history from this! trip than we ixiuld pos.-'ibly have kfarned from books. Everywhere we] went there were people- to explain! j things to us. There were so many in- '.laoIteresting things and places to see* No. 25 as ?hown on the plat afore-1and State aforesaid, containing one- . said.” half of an acre, more or less, and, Tlie one.f'fthMnterest ^ :he ?.»»d Also: bounded on the north by lands of Dr.[James Ferdinand Jacobs, dt la-eii, of, “.All that lot, piece or parcel of J. Young; on the east by lands in and to: land adjoining the above de.scribed lot,: of J. M. Pitts, on* the south by East *“AH machinery, equipme *.. appa- facing 60 feet on Jones street, in the Carolina avenue, measuring thereon iratus, office furniture, fix ures and City of Clinton, bounded on the north 124.4 feet; and on the west by lands]all assets of the firm of Ja.’ohs and : -of„jivety:-kind ar d nature tsoever.” will also sell the follo’-/ng per- projicrty: I me aescripuon 01 inis piece 01 [ v* shares of Clinton Cotton MiU of Mr. Burdette, and on the west by* nro;>erty as herein given is the same'stock; 1 share of Lakeside Corpor- the lot of Jacobs.and Company.” [as -that'contained in deed of Corrie jation stock; 1 Packard automobile; 1 library.” ^ T^e Cotton Mil! stock will be of**' reemded in Vol. 43, page 746. “PARCEL NO. 5. All that lot, piece ; and parcel of land, situated, lying and 1 ■ o' 1 ! being within the incorporate tiroits of Vr-IlCVrOtetS jthe Town of Clinton, in the County • and State aforesaid, bounded on the OnOW lllCrCSt80 north by East Florida street 215 feet, i m^re or less; on the east by lands of 1 MVs. Theae-two^ pareek of laxid Aze A pjiil L. Montjoy to J. F. Jacobs, et al. dat ed the 19th day of February, 1920, profit. Me had of the lands conveyed to Jacobs and a good place to Company by G. X. Copeland by detd dated January 20th, 1920, rei-oixled in 14 ing of some of them that we do not mention now. that will for a looK timo bo thinlc-. ?■> incroase of sixtooo per oont in!,^„ ^ formerly the sale of new cars and trucks in the Russie Prather 157H feet; on til St days of August over the belonging to Mrs.' George M. Davis fered in lots of three shares; share.?; 16 shares; 31 shares. Tenns of sale: Cash. TTie various parcels and lots of real estate as above described, will be offered as separate pan^els. Upon failure to comply with the terms of the bid, the property to. resold on the same or some subsequent sales day at the risk, of the former purchaser. The purchas er or purchasers of the personal prop- and Mrs. J. D. Dillard 215 feet; on to be given possession upon com- CHRONICLE ^ PUB. CO. atia»BllTr Depk. * J ■ . II J u; ■ 1 *71 3 1 ’""’‘•‘J- 'ot of J. Roy Workman'pliwnce with th€ bid and payB-.ent of TuMdwy *.. » full d.y. W, chpital with its beautiful buiU- j Chevrolet dealers, W. h. Knu^n. p^ee. The purchaser of Lincoln Memorial. Arlmifton, la js| ma-s, historic spoL , memorials, and ■ •"‘I r-neral manager of the the real estate to he let into POS.W8- mansion, grave of the Unknown Sol-( monuments and K am sure that what • Chevrolet Motor company, announced; j . >1 >y1 dier, saw the mast of the battleship j I have learned on this trip makes me! Yesterday. Maine as well as the field where the want to be a good citizen of this great period. detClers’ country.. _ • * j used cars stocks piece or parcel of sion upon compliance with the bid and stocks of Wri|[fht brothers flew their first air plane,> Visited the Bureau Engrav- I am thankful to all who helped ' land, lying, situate and being within production of the Master’s deed. Tho ^ . . . i the corporate limits of the Town of'Purchaser to pay foa all stamps, .■were ^^i^stantially leduc^j County and State aforesaid," transfers, deeds and recording. ‘ed* a tHghfrecea-.S'n, ’'h^ JACOBS, Jr, on the east py lot' of SneciaJ O - Js'