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< 4 J J PAGE SIX j ■J ■■■ THE CLINTON CHROJnCLE, CLINTON, S. C. '■ } THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 19.^2 W A N T S TURKEYS for sale. Mrs. W. R. ders6n, Clinton, S. C. Route 1. NOTlCE~No hunting allowed on my ^ lan^^. H. Pitts. Ic LOST—One ladies’ diamond rinjr, .in yellow (fold setting. Reward if re turned to The Chronicle office. Lost Thursday, Nov. 10. ’TRESPASS NOTICE—No hunting fishing allowed on my land. J. R.j Holland. LOST, Strayed or Stolen—One small red cow, with horns, small bag.! Pihder plea.se notify D. E. Tribble. Ic' ! must look into his own life and size'your life?, as a means'^o"!livelihood. There .are j up his mental equipment and also hi&i There are, five different ways in j few who lo6i| 4pon it as a calling. ‘ are creative minds which men look at work. There are | Still a smaller |umber look upon it as * i amii technical minds; there are per- many men who look upon work as a means otf heiping God create. The ] sonalities which are very pleasing to' mere drudgery. Most of us look at it'ideal mAn moks upon it as worship. Secretary of University Group Addresses Presbyterian ^ Col lege Students On “Vocational Guidance.” • the people of-Hhe world; and there are p’ersonalities whichj should be kept | more in the background. In the Secfi^d place, know the job. . m R. G. Bell, executive secretary of Y. M. C. A. work at the Univer.sity of South Carolina, spoke Wednesday night in the college chapel on “Vo<a-[ ■tional Guidance.” The talk was inter-consideration the mental and Find out what inust actually be done in an average, day’s work. Be sure you [know how much education is actually needed. Make certain that there is chance for advancement, and finally e.sting and helpful to the PHILCO RADIOS AND TUBES Sold AT SMITH’S PHARMACY art I went to a .so-c-alled ‘'art” exhibi-'heard him. %ion the other day Awd wa.s amazed at I the audacity of some of students (physical hazards. •[ In the third place, take into consid job. Is it what you want to do? Vjrillj it keep up your interest throughout; TO f»RODl CTION LOAN " IIORROM LicS:- — November .‘JO^ ycjur nou* heeom<'- due, leaving only ten d.iys to satisf;, this obligation. Allow me to stre.-<.' ihi importantie of your promplties.s in jKiying up your loan, as-delay ma> work qu le a handicap ujron you in many ways. 'The promptn<‘ss -Mr. Bell mention^d jfhe fact that hejeration your owm attitude toward the ' had 'visited"B. C. quite a few times termed arti.sts whosq pictures were pleased, to have another op- -hown. Not one in ten of them had' speak to the students of ,.vdr l.arr„-d or attjm|.te^o draw a _ human figure, a hou.se^ or^ a land-, . , ipe as such things actually are In-| looking back ^over his own life, the .speaker recalled the incidents con- grade inected with the choosing of his own r ad, most <»f the work looked like j fiMt ■work. After finishing - high was-givan the ^opportunity-h he crude attempt d, .hpol children. 1- was-*tnMr-tr ■nil it lazy art. It takes time and ap-j of entering business with his father, plication, hard work and drudgery tq going into some other work in the; learn how l(» draw. Every youngster' city, or attending college. He chose' who thinks himself a genius' .spurns j the latter. He went to college for; hard work and imagines that merely ,t,ree vears and at the end of that' .dapping paint on canvass without re-deciding' withiP^'*^ lOrm is art. what he wanted as a vocation than at whuh you have met your prior ohliga- . * <’annot imagine that this modern- graduation from high tu,ns ,s v..,y <„n,„u..,d.blc.; d,,.,'! jeo.,|^t,c .-ra... w.ll la.t vary l„n«. ^pril „f hi* aanior yaar haj For Nervous Headaches heard u man describe Y. M. C. A. work j in glowing terms. Then and there he ;.dc^‘ukc| th^L tills, was .Mr. Hell does not believe this an ideal way to (hoo.sc one’s life work. He says that among the many things which must lie taken into consider- pardize your record or reputation. Re-! nothing lasts except memheli-. \uu are trying to es-tablish produced by the hardest kind a credit with the biggest eredit .‘■ys-j “'f hard, intelligent work. <em in A«>eriFca — thee^g,»ve»i>^ ^ .. Your hanks and lien merchants arej RO.\l)S / no longer able to aid you in the mi.s-, I drove through a .New Kngland vil- takes of yesterday; it’s up toiyou to !age a few w«‘eks ago and was horri- win youj (-W.1 battle or fall W-fore a . fied to see men with axes at work cut- haughty eiiciiiy. Procrastination used j ting down the magnificent dm trcc.s' entering any vocation, to le the thief of time—’lis true to- whieh had made the towm’s principal,., f t ■ \ * * if \ ' day.'l)e!ay oi action is usually, the: ■street one of the most beautiful plac-i father of sorrow and regret. So throw ' e: in .America. “Why, w,e have to wid-i * ' ♦•nuuph .‘ottoii on your wagon to eol-’ en the road on account of aulomoliile, Hgciit than the Indians, but we still latralize your note and place it with traffic," expla'.hed the postrna.ster, d<>ok ujioii the president as the “Great) one of the accepted warehouse.> at when 1 stupjHd. White father at Washington.” Every riinton or luiureiis.' I ' They were destroying the chief at- man who has ever been president has A. H SMITH, fraction which, for a hundred years, learned that his actual re ponsibili-: Field InsjKHtoi for UuiViis ('<.utity.4ias drawn thou.saiid.s to their village j ties were far easier to,bear than the I “ ' {every summer, in order to make a j things for which he was held respon- ' highway to enable automobiles to dash' sible. but which were entirely outside j ~S fieaBache "is^NaFuriTs wafHlni? of high nerve strain. You can get quick and delightful relief from headaches and other nerve pains bjf using Capudine because it soothe* the tense nerves. Contains no opi ates and does not unset the stomach. Being liquid, Capudine acts al most instantly—much quicker than tablets and powders. Sold by drug gists in 10c, 30c, and 60c sizes, also by the dose at founts, (adv.) This Woman Lost ' thnmgh the town at high sjieed with-jnf his authority. 45 Pounds of Fat Geo. R. Blalock, M. D. Announces the Opening, Of an Office for the PRACTICE OF MEDICINE Office Rear Sadler-Owens I'haf macy. Hours: 9 to 11, 2 tc 4 and by .Appeinf ment: Office Phone 100, Residence 110 I want my Telephone piit4>a€le^please^— Almost daily people who discontinued their telephones during re cent months are ordering their service restored. "They found that the small cost of the service had been repaid many times each month ip. convenience, in time and actually in money saved. Others missed the close and personal contact with friends made possible by telephone service. Still others men tioned the loss of many pleasant, im promptu social gatherings when their friends were unable to reach them by telephone. It is all true—^what these subscriber friends of ours say. Telephone service costs so little and its value is so great that it really doesn’t pay to try to do without it. Southern Telephone and Teleoraph <»ut stopping. . . _ I I cros.‘.cd ov<*r into New York .state j and came south on one of the finest | roai^ I have twer sixty feet| tie and'wit h no "speed 4111111. BQt Th*‘j “Hear .Sirs; For 3 imtnths-I’ve T»een| stead of going through the middle ofj using your salts and am very much towns and villages this great road had I pleastd w ith results. I’ve lost 4r» lbs.., been cut aeiuss open country. 6 inches in hijis and hast measure. This idea t>f the “townleMS high-' I’ve iak< ri 3 bottles one. lasting r> way” for high-s|MKHi thropgh traffic! weeks. 1 had often tried to reduce by ; is growing, but 1 am afraid it is not j .uieting but never could keep it up. gmwnig fast enough to save a'goodt 1 ut by cutting down and taking many comni'uhitie^ their beauty, Krusi hen I’ve had splendid re«ult:<. 1 : \ ^ h -ihly recoin;ncnd it to iiiv friends.” - .Mi . < ar! W’ilson, .Mariton, .Mich. T.. b.-e fat .SAFELY and llARM- I.ESSIA , take Kras to'ii :n a llie 'n<'ndng before breakfast ' don’t a iiaoiiiig. To ha'tcn results go r.NEMPLOVEI) I talked the other day with one of :he active heads of the unemplaynieiit i a half tea.'poonful of f work in New York, of hoi wyter in in> !'rh’ a’,.: iVl Illy me-its, potalie^. Cream that last- 1 .1 !m \Vf< !v - ■ a t ■,-if)v - but Mon'l tiikf < h 1 M( r • 111' -1, K- I'.’- K lU'v'hoK y 1 •. .. r 1ir t got it a 4 tilr 4’ ■' 1 "'hai n at \ <> 1 a'>.v .1 li ug -ton* ill Ml : ..a. If Milt joyf uliy satisfied rf’t r th .■ f;rst bottle mom* y bat k. “Thi- is the last winter I will have any part in this work,” fie .saiil. “’1’oo many men who are able to work arc getting liie haliii of getting money without w . i king. In the fir.si yi ar of 1h- depM si,,|) a!t> o-'i every’ nriii who ai>j>Ii> «i for relief wanted to know if IT’S SMART . . to b'jv goovl shoes and then keep ’em repaired bv— MeINTOSH’S SHOE SHOP •The Old Reliable” ( linton, S. (\ DIZZINESS relieved by Blaek-Draught “I decided to take Thedford* Btack Dranghl, as I h«d hav- . ItiK Uilloiis »;>< ll.x.” wrUm klv K \ -tiH. of rolnmhn*, Iml "When I »:.*t liiltovK*. T r*" l sU-«*ny an«l tiro.l hi a <lo ii<>i fo«‘l Uk** <loinB niv w<ok. 1 K* 1 :. V. fnllv .I.ZXV I know then tl-it I In I litke something. Afle'" I how Itlack-1 •riiUKtht Is. tl It N \ch;it I l .n.* I1S.-.1 I It tills I", of lh»* /o*' 1 feel tK*t- i.., - ,h,. -t fo.-l Ilk. I :toT .Iropein* off JO >-h »-|i >■!A- tl’l'..* I stt *1. '•'h.'-t. to me. Is ;i vo»-v Im-t f.-ell’.K “c. V..W ’Ko/ ftot m • s o..-.., of a SfYRt'f, for OhiLOKKN'. we -o'jolii t give h ut some work Co do. I.a>t year iu»t moit* than half of ' the a| plicanls made any such sag- ge.-tion. This winter most of them are ^lemamling money as if they had a right to it. and .some of them, for ' whom we have been able to provide opptu lunitit'S to work, have indignant ly rejet teii the idea. “The gieatest danger that we face tttday is of devehiping an army of , hums and panhandler.-.” MONEY It won’t be long now Iwfore the delegates (»f the principal nationsj meet in Euiojk* to try to figure out! some way of putting all of the world’s' money on a stable and equal basis., Thi.s IS of constKjuence to every.one in j .America, because our country and Fraftre^ iife- the^ only uiusi whose. ntoQvy - i# worth what it pretends to b<» worth Ion the face of it. In the countries where currency has been deprt‘ciated coinnuxlities can be pnxluced so much more cheaply than is pos.sible in .America, where we have to pay wages in Hound money’, that even the highest tariff wall cannot keep these cheap products out of com-j petition with our own products in our tiw n market. The greatest drawback to the itHstablishment of prosperity today i.s, we believe, this disparity ^Imtween the mom y values of the dif ferent nuti^ms of the world. _ The pr^K-eedings of the Internation- * al Econtunic conference which 4s to meet in lH-cembt*r may’ he, and prob ably will.: l>e. far more important to every one in America than the presi dential election was. R emember this—if •> acddenc plants you in a hospital bed you'll get out a whole lot quicker if you don't have to lie there worrying about who's to pay^the bills. y®TNA-IZE A« ^cna Acetdem Policy not only im* doctors’, iMMpitBl and nurses’ hub tmt Moiects you against loss ct jnmnin Pkoon m$ to cover you, TODAY! SlI’ERSTniON ' Nothing is more natural than to blame eveiything bad upon the presi- jdent. The gr»al mass.of humanity is >till very simple and child-minded. The notion that one man can and does cyiitrol the destinies of an entire na tion, that he holds in his hands the 1 powers of good and evil, is a survival -|in the race mind of the beliefs of the j most primitive 'human tribes. . When ‘disaster occurred and its I cause was not clearly apparent, j somebody" must have caused it. If I there wasn’t a tribal chief or a medi- • cine man handy on which to blame it, *then primitive man blamed it upon aoase mythical "old nsaa of the moun tain," and these mythical rulers over human deotiny in time became invisi- hk dillk CtiBioo, 8. C. ind prop! I We regard ourMlvf?a as more Intel-' ^Li D94N\S dUARA M/Sl BACBACA DON'T MISS THIS! Friendi^hip . . . I.,oyalty . . . Love. i Around (hotse emotions Ruby M. Ayers weaves a tense drama of that first year of married life, in her new story, ‘The Other Man.* Pauline, awakeninii: to a bri$fht i^olden sunshine on her wedding: morn- inii:, encounters her first premonition of doubt. . . . “Does love change?” she wants to knew, but there is no answer to her question. The answer is forthcoming in the stirring action which follows and through which ‘The Other Man” silently but persistently plays a part that he hates .. but cannot resist. / * ' ' I You'll enjoy this grippingly human drama. Read, “THE OTHER MAN” Starting Next Week Tmit Ji jnjEL > -. - *'■