The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, November 03, 1932, Image 4
THE CLINTON CHRONICLE, CLINTON
Cluiton <£4ronirlp
7
1
WILSON W. HARRIS. Editor and PublisUr
Pnbliabed Eirtry Thursday By ^
THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING COMPANY
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Ore year $1.50; Six Months 75 cents; Three Months 50 cents
Entered as Second Class Mall Matter at the Post Office at Clinton, S. C.
4
The Chronicle seek.** the cooperation of its subscribers and readers—the
publisher will at all times appreciate wise sutr?estions and kindly ad
vice. The Chronicle will publish letters of ireneral interest when they
are not of a defamatory nature. Anonymous communications will not
be noticed. This paper is not responsible for the views or opinions of
its correspondents. *
X
H. M. Blakely, died at her home here, how you are getting alorij^Vote bad] same or some sul^sequent sales day atj sion of the ptQmi.sX^ upon the produc
N, S.C.~f
on Feb. 18lh.
men out..
TV
/ THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 3. 1932
::r:
j MisSes Helen Bailey, May Owens' 12. Don’t gossip
I and Frances O’^niel of Winthrop,
were at home a few days this week.
the risk of the former purchaser. The jition of deed from Trustee and con-
! purchaser to pay for stamps, deed and j firmation by the Court,
i recording and will be let into posses-1 ll-3-3tc. B. H. Boy^d, Trustee.
NOTICE OF SALE
{- The memiiers of the Clinton .\uto-,
Pursuant to Decree of the Court in
the above case of William Plumer Ja-
mobiie a.s.sociation enjoyed an oyster
1 supper Friday night at the hotel with
President Geo. M. Wright pre.siding. j cobs and James Ferdinand Jacobs, Jr.,'
! The following six directors were elect-) Exccutor.s.-af the]
•ed: W'. C. Oxley, E. W. Ferguson, r. . , , , r- j- j r ^ l j
1 Gw. H. Ellis. R. G. Harper. L. A. Bar-, F"*"*"*) de-
I row and Jas. R. Copeland. ceased. Plaintiff, vs Mrs. Eljiott Duck-
, iett Jacobs, et al, defendants, I will
I (From filei. of The Chronicle for .'•ell at public outcry to the higbes* bid-
Feh. 27th, l'J19).
Nobody’s Business
By f;ec McOc
C’JaINTON, S. THl'RSDAY, NOVEMBER S, 19.32
Polks who Ulk a whole ^ot can’t bt j EVEIJY t OTEjR’S RESPONSI-
‘ex|>ected to always tell thaiMmth. j ,. BII.lTY
I The IScHk- and the .Mice Fight |k
I flat rock, s. C. nor. I, 1932.
deer mr. editor:
a few days ago i reported thru my
collum
jdcr for ca.'h. either in o;- in fron’ cf
I the Court House at I.aurens, S. C.. on
tales day in November next, the 'same
being Monday, Nov. 7th, 1932, during
I the legal hours for such sale, the fol-;
'lowing described property, to wit:
j 20 shjfires of capita! stock of the j
J Clinton Cotton Mills. Said stock
i will be offered in lots of 1 share,
( 4 shares, 6 shares, 5 shares and '
! 4 shares. !
j Terms of Sale: CAsh. Delivery of i
One tnore ywtr- 4tkt*-
we will all be applying for jiensioni.
. fight betvrixt a little mice,
Next Tuesday, for the fortieth time, and a big h^etlp in t-ho /-rrrnnr nf stock will be made upon compli
ance wiDi sale. Th'life
the United State.s will elect u Presi
dent. Thirty-ono men have hidd this
There’v no’hliiir funnv about the «ame. the mice and the l>eetle was
Th«e. elected. Only th.r'.y.l^,, of the Presi-lnot «pp,cHted like the snake and the
dential eb-ction.', however, have lM*en spider in n. C.
mayor’s offis in the citty hall, and i I «nce with the sale. Th'Tire~~evWr the
promi.sed to let you know the outcome I succes.sful bidder does not comply with !
the terms of the hid, the property
■depression. It’s
it Sours the milk «»f human kindness! T “‘t V.V" '" I ‘“'"y’*.'
t , e . dc'cided by popular vote, in our pres-
id curdles the ontiniism of men. , . . ■ ... .. *. •
lu vui«Ai . pyjj fa.shion. ror that matter, there is
UTld
There are n few lucky luuiple in
tbt' world who get all the breaks. The
re^t of u. are alyavs broke.
n<* provision in the Constitution of the
United Istates under which ttu* people
are e’ther required or permitted to
vote for Presidential electors.
will be resold on the same or some
.aub equent *sulcs day on the same
terms at the risk of the former pur
chaser. T/ie purchaser to pay co.st of
at the; end of the fifth day, it look
ed verry much like the lieetle was go- transfer including stamps
ing to win, as hf hell the mice tail as j JAMES F’F^RDINAND J.Yf'OHS, Jr
tight as ever betwixt his horns and}ll-3-2tc Special Master,
the mice show ed that hii aperrit was t '
Now that the city-w.de revival is
over—we -should 1 e able tt» fill up
munv of thi- vacant t hurch pew.-*.
In the early days of the republic, broke and his constitution weakening,
the idea that everybody should have | mi^ts Jennie veeve .smith, president of
a v<»te for President never occurred M-he human .«ociety. Ted the l>eetle a
NOTK'E OF SALE BY TRUSTEE |
IN BANKKIT*T( Y I
Western Ifistric-t of South ('arolina.:
this
What
Bo ney. moi t
loantvy need.s is more
h.'ue tv, and less ■credit.
of Coll'e Brown .Adair, •
to the~ gentlemen who conducted the7'hip to gnaw on, and it hope it some.' Mat' r
Revolution and franusl the I)eclara-j [Bankrupt
tion of Independence and the Consti- the next day miss jennie veeve gotj pyj. order yf Hon E M
Blythe, Referee in Bankruptcy, in the
Tne dollars'of our daddies are all
right in their nlace, bqt tjiose Ave earn
oursilyes are rnoie appreciated and
(ii u.s. more good.
The lot of the criminal should be
nuMle as hard as justice Will allow.
Punishment for the law-violator
rmnns protection for the public.
Just imagine all of Solomon’s wives
demanding new' fall clothes at once.
That w6uld have tested h s ph.lo. i*-
phy, don’t you thirk?
A (IKEAT MEETING
•The city-wide evangelistic ivim-
pa gn coming to a close last Sunday
evening in the orphanage chapel Wa.s tern
iittendvd by capacity congregations
tution of the United States. Those
things were left to the states, and the
Constitution roads that “ench state
«hall anpoint, in such manner as its
I^egislature may dire<‘t,” the required
numbt'r of Presidential electors. If any
stale Legislature wished to, it could
today r*ns- a law' n fH'aling the privi
lege of its citizens to vote for Presi-
ilential electors, jin'! have them ap-
IKiintcd by the CIovcr:i;ii or r’nosen by
the Ix‘gislature.
Presidents Washington, Adams and
ifffi-- wi-i’i* ail elected under the
old provisions of the Constitution,
changed in 1804, when'by the candi
date wh<* got the most votes was Pres
ident. and the one who gdt the next
highest numlHT wqs Vice-President.
The present party convention svs-
of niminating candidates and
pledging Presidential electors to their
upport is only a little over a hun-
each dav and ha.- been declart*d by
revivarTlred ybars ol^: IF rh'ivrTrudcnvirygiri'* that stiuwed new life Tn-driTn: the bee-
maiiv as the mo-st succe
sful
the next day miss Jennie veeve got
to w'orrytng about the pwjtr mice who
looked hungry and she fetched him a
peace of cheese to eat. her .sympathy
art fir.-t w’as with the bug, but she ha.s
a big hart and that’s^ why she return-
i-d |u.d f„l th, shi. was bettinjt, ,^32, duriiiK tha usual hours for such
on rt, iH^at the hots stood 2 to 8 in j ,3,^. hiithest bidder for cash, the
Its favor, till the sixth day. ^ followdnK deserihed pro|.ert.v to wit:
All that lot. piece or parcel of
matter of Collie Brown Adair, Bank-
I rupt, I will se*ll at public outcry in or
jin front of the Court House at Lau-
1 rens, S. C., on Monday, Nov. 7th,
big gangs of folks vissited the citty j
hall ever day to see thi.s great in.seckt
fight, it looked like fmth of them in
tended to hold out to the bitter end.
the mice could not turn around and
bite the fieetle as the beetle turned
around when he turnini, the be<*tle
looked more vennimous the seventh
day than ev., r and his eyes showed
soine blood -hot.
betting changed to seme extent to
the mice on the eighth day. he got
where he would wiggle his ears and
tie lookc'd verrv’ much w'ore out his-
inteiest was intense and telligent* thought and examination of
not a dull moment in any of'the ser- the programs and policies of the op-
▼K-es as he pleaded passionately for posing parties.
a high standard of Christian living \\> fear that few voters in theie
Ij the people of this community. ^ days take their responsibility as seri-
The Mi QuTlkin meeting will prove k. ously as they shouldv We urge every
with vigg<>r and vivacity while he
kpawed the chip w'hich w'as his vittles.
some waiter was put where both of
the fighters could get a drink and
they enjojed same by smacking their
mouths, ansofurth.
<*wr held in this city. Interest in the state sfter stale has cbnslantJy ex-
loeeting lemained unabated for the tended the privilege of voting forjselLbut he hell on to the mice’s tail
entire ten days as was shown by the President until it has become such a
large crowds. . - 'commonplace, everyday affair that
The effective preliminary ' work, few, e^penally of the younger voter*,
dene by the pastors and church peo-.realixe that it is not an inherent Cou
ple, both men and women, played a stitutional right, but distinctly a priv-
great part in making the revival a’ilege. ft is an honor conferred upan
It was a union undertaking,, the ordnary man and woman—an hon-
one in which all our people entered, or which carries with it a correspond-
m a beautiful spirit of unity that will ing responsibility. It is not a privi-
result in lasting good to the respec-. lege to be exercised lightly. The pre-
thre churches. ■ ;,sumption is that every voter will go
To lead the revival, the local pa*- to the polks with tl^c feelirtig that he
tors made an exceHent choice in Mr. is discharging a solemn duty, for
licOuilkin. From his opening sermon which he has prepared himself by in- while he was going thru a crack in the
~ ' -r I floor, ended the terrible fight
and noboddy winned annything in the
bel.^..'
a sad axcident ended this fight on
the ninth day. a big old rooster slip
ped into the mayor’s offis ahou 10 a
111. and et up the bug and when he
turned tlie tail of the mice aloose, the
citty hall <at<.ketched the said mice
land, situate, lying and being in
the State and County aforesaid,
in the Town of Clinton, fronting
50 feet on Enterprise .Street,
measuring from a jioirit three
inches west of the outside line of
the west wall of the building now
on said lot: bounded on the north
by Fmt rprise Street, 50 feet; on
the east by lot of R. E. Copeland,
117 feet; on the south by lot of
Jacobs and Co.. .50 feet, and on
the West by lot of Jacobs and Co.,
122 feet. ■ ____
This lotTieing the .«ame lot con
veyed to me this day by Mr.s,
great blessing and uplift to the *pir- one to go to the polls next Tuesday
itual life of ('linton and has, set many and vote. If every voter does just that
gwod influence-c in iiiolion that will g»
«r for veai.s to come.
yores trulie,
mike Clark, rfd,
corry spondent.
Ixmda C. Copeland, ^and this mort
gage being given to .-cecure the
balance of the purcha.se money
due her.
Thi* lot l>e'ng Suhject to the
right of the use of a driveway or
alley, 11 feet wide, on the rear
line of the lot, reserved for the
u.se and benefit of the owner of
the lot adjoining this lot on the
east side, now owned by R. E.
Copeland.
Terms of sale: Cash. The prop
erty to be sold free from liens and en
cumbrances. The purcha.ser will be re
quired to comply with the terms of
the bid forthwith, and if not complied |
with-the property' will be refold on the!
c
]/
Dozen" Don’ts
Dont go into business
with a
the result w'ill reflect the intelligent j‘
judgment of the American people by i Partner who has nothing to lose and
th«* election of a iJ^miocratic adminis- ^*11 to gain.
t ration.
■iB* a
13 Years Ago
WH AT IS 1*01*1 LAKIT^ ?
Many f«»lks, particularly young peo-
ph of reserved Matures, often do not
ui»derstand why they are not popular.
They envy folks-who always have ad-
mireis and friends. Many petiple of
*aperior intellect look down on.popu
larity. They, say it shows a too ea^y,
going nature. The latter hold that if a
person is to li.e sincerely and do his are'visiting in Kparta^nburg.
duty, he mu.-l often antagonize olh-^ .
ers, and make himself exceedingly, Guy I.. "Copeland went to Charles-
uniopular. • ton last -w.eek to see his son, Thomas,
popularity comes in-different ways, vcho is in the U. S. navy in the hos
pital. corps. * “■
E. M<Mid Smith, O. I).
Felder Smith. O. 1).
DRS. SMITH & SMITH
Optometrists
2. Don't try to exjilain to your bru-j
! nette w ife how that blond hair hap-,
' pimed. to Iqdg'. on \ our^>hyulder. Tell i
' her you don't know r.nd .don’t care. ^
Items of Interest Frofti The Chronicle
of 19J^
_ . _ » ' . .. _
'"Vig -V— >|M' m "
Mrs'. W. . P. Jacobs ami litite Wil-
IKm’t t'ool your. horn like a fool
w'hen the fellow in front of yoii chokes
down: Ih‘’s already mad.
SPECIALISTS
Ryes Examined -:- Glasses Prescriiiec
15 West Main Street Phone 191
Laboratory for I'rompt Repair Servic*
Clinton, 8. C.
4. Don’t, af,'*ue w ith d drunk'man, a
mad womao, a balking mule, a bum
ble l>ee, or. a Jig-saw.
DISTRESS AFTER MEALS
Reliercd By Blick-Draught
in the old days of free liquor a lot ol
fH'ople acquired popularity by the
freedom with which theji pas.ed
xjaund the bottle. Many traveling
«ale*men used the tactics of passing
^.•-ound booze to merchants to. land
or^ders. This was the basis orf which
niany politicians got their ^tart. They
were always ready to'line up their accepted a position with Ad^r-
inands in front of, the "brass rail _
have several rounds at their expense.! ;——
Many people win popularity .by free, pr. D. M. Douglas has been noti-
Mi.-s Katherine I.ease
‘n the city to'o^n a millinery parlor.
She* will have associated w ith. her,
Mrs. Annie Giles Bailey.
5.' I)oh’t let your creditors know
I that you have money .a-plenly for ev-
i ery purpose in the world except pay-
has arrivc'd' 1*^81 debts; they might think hard of
your .wife. ^ . -
6. Don’t cqss ev^ry time you are
stopped -by a useless traffic light.
MUS" Blanche Martin of Greenwood, Your cit>' had to spend your tax mon
ey some way, and traffic-lights were
gheaper b>ythe dozen.
spending, by living extravagantly, and^ esUblishmept by the gov-
MSttering cash in all directions. !«rmment of a R. O. T. C. unit at Pres-
On the other hand many people byterian college.
^uire popularity by devoting them- . —
MteeB to some public cause. College q q. G. club met with Miss B.
Wy* who carry on student •ctiviHe* j Cop^Und on Friday afternoon..
7. Don’t count your chickens during
the..depressipn until ’they are large
enough to fry. Ej^'ry cackle ain’t an
egg any more.
“I had sour stomach and gas/’
writes Mr. Jess .Higgins, of Daw-
sonvllle, Ga.. “and often I would
have bilious spi^ils. I read about
Thtdford’s Black-Diaugbt and Die
gan to take it. It relieved me of
this trouble. I Keep it all the tlm«
now I consi'ler It a fine inadloine.
I tal.e a pinch o*' Black-Draught uft<‘r
inealK when 1 lu-e*! it It helps to
pi event nick headadie ar.d to keep
the systeni^ln ifo<Hl order." -
Q«t a parage at the store. Try tt!'
A'-uc you CON get Black-Draught in
*f ' o fnr CHii.nR«N
anally acquire popularity. Iltey are!
CBtitlad to it bmiauae they have to ^-! u, j, jj. Copeland were
n^h Ume to mamtaiati^ '^'hosU oa Friday evenjng when they
ition of their instituUon, m ath-; em^rtained several friends at a lovely
iRtkJ UUrary and other aetHrttm. j^^^se dinner..
SUailarly in cbmnmitr life.
Kquir. popularity 1 Thu committo. uppoinUd to orgaa-
effort te [pahl&c ^oouaty for cotton holding and
twite, tt^ly »ore than many who^^„ ^
8. Don’t depend oh government re
lief or .Die other fellow. Every tub
must sit ‘on its own bottom now-a-
daya. and if it has no bottom, put it
.on and woar it.
PICTURE FRAMING
Neatly Done
KODAK FINISHING
1 Day Servlet
tWm ur« wilUiv *• dovoM toi,, ^ ^ chairman, in Uui«n>|
1. paopU acquita pap-1 „ „„3,,
the friendly interest th^. ■
by a winaone smile j^im Lyigg of the U. S. navy, has
iiwcaivcd his discharge and returned
If?• salteb self.ah-1
mm oevar ft^slar
9. Don’t imagine that the, United
States is all right just because we are,
hetter off than Europe. Pa’s rheuma
tism didn’t feel any better when Ma
waa so low with typhoid fever.
to be. Any parson can
of yapo-
Tteday avaning Mr. and Mrs. W.
H. Hhenda antertainad a number of
at a lovely obi^rsa dinner.
10. Don't get it into your head that
government aid stopped the banks
from busting. Nearly, all of them had
already busted when Uncle Sam found
ont how to save them.
Mrs. EUa CampJ^ll Blakely, wife of
11. Don’t trust the man you elected!
to ofHea to raducf your tax burdens.!
Ha win aaad your help if anything is i
dona. Falitidans are always running]
fer office, 'and not worrying about h
NOW IS THE
TIME TO BUY
Several residences in town.
Several farms, prices at-
tractive.
Houses for rent, Broad St.,
Owens Hill and College
View.
Clinton Realty &
Insurance Co.
a H. BOYD
Mr.
• •
DO YOU REALIZE THAT AD-
VERnSING^TN A NEWSPAPER
WILL PAY YOU HANDSOME
DIVIDENDS EVEN IN TIMES OF
DEPRESSION?
• •
If you have not awakened to this
time-tested fact, we urge you to test
it without further delay. ,
' The Chronicle is making the task
of selling easy for progressive mer
chants. An advertisement in "The
Chronicle, is j^ertaiiLt^^^^ reaiby
every class of people. No matter
what you have to sell, if advertised
in "The Chronicle, your message will
reach those for whom it is intended.
Now is the time to snap out of the
dog days of siimmier and go after
business which we all know is not
dead, but has merely been asleep
during the last few months.
• •
The Chronicle is prepared to help
merchants prepare their advertise-
ments by furnishing free of charge
cuts and copy covering every con
ceivable line.
>**.
• •
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