The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, January 26, 1933, Image 2
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PAGE WO
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THE CLINTON CHRONICLE. CLINTON. S. C.
THURSDAY. JANUARY 26. 1933
NOTICE OF PRT^IARY ELECTION
t—j I
Pursuant to a request from . the -
Chairman of the I^urens County Del- j
citation requesting: the County Execu-;
live Committee to hold a primary
election on the firsi Tuesday in Feb
ruary, 1933. to vote on the rural po-
Hce question, notice is hereby',grivcn
that said election will he held on'
Tuesday, Feb. 7, 1933. and the follow-
iop manepers are hereby appointed to
hold said election at the respecti'c
precincts hereinafter named. ’ The
manapers
o’cloet a.
FPANK PARKER
STOCKBRIOOE
Relief Council [,
Function Soon!
s.
w'
The Primadonna Takes Her Bow
r
By filbert T. Reid-
%
♦
Or);:anization Is Perfected For|
County and Comtirunity Ad-
Niscrv Committees Named.
will open the polls *at d
m., and close at 4 o’clock
Tlu* l.aurens County Relief council,!-
recently named to man.ape the distri-'
hut’cn of a $20,030 loan from the Re-,
■ construction Finance corporation at
' \Va hinpton, has about completed its.^
I think most of our p; esent troubles I y work, it_was stated yes-
SUIUMX’SRS
.can he traced to the fact that the terday, and is exjxstted to bepin func-'
of the wirld is unelde o- unwillinp to, tioninp within the next few day.s.
p. m. The execati\e committee i." t^uy the surplus p oducts of our farms. . .,.,11 u u/ivia/nv
iliorired 1 v the ilelpirat'on to nav each i' *ur .i* ♦ announccdl la.st wtek, ad\isoiy
Uionw-U t y int ^^" J (jo not believe this export market fov ... . .
*et of mar.apcvs JRo.OO and the ^^anu . . . cotton'tobacco live .s^ock icon.si.stinp of thice mem-,
will be uaid wiun maiie available bv 11 r ’ 1 . ’ • 'hers have been appointed m each com-,
wni ue paia wiun maoi avauaiue o> other farm products is e.er pomp .. J '
the delepation. come bhek. 1 have myself .seen how, T,
Manapers are notified to call foi Italy is makinp itself indepenclcnt of .u,.
the boxes on Saturday, Feb. 4. and to our tobacco, cotton and wheat, and the
return them immediately after the|!oth.''r nations are doinp the .same
coentinp of the votes. liiinp. • ■
Manapers There ha.s been no increase in the
Barksdale-.Narnie —.Mace Lanp-ston. ■ c.vcrr pe yield of v/heat per uc 'e; it
VN'. R. Fev ( r. i . H. Burton. t .-.till stand.s for the wh(>le nation at
OinloTi - lulm I). Dav is, Rol l. I. i i.j hush'do But in the five years
irotn i;/25 to Ib.dO the acreape sown become elipible for work,
wheat in .\merica ir.creased by 21,-
b O.Ot acie.s.^
It i^ V',. 7 clear to uje thai the only
solution of the farm problem lies in
rediicinp the (luiintity and improvinp
the (juality of farm luoduction.
.'s. Denson. L. D. .Mc-
( laud .M>\)ott, F..
Kihp, F. r, Pinson,
( ooper.
Copeland. VV,
(!rary, clerk.
Clinton Mi!
Harris L. \V
clerk.
< 0('k's .^'ir (•- K. R.
Fid,v-.1V(V . I !’• C,,..k
<10; s Hii' NV. I’. ( iil'“.*i tson, C
!'■ Pi
Daniel .'■tore d. B. ()’I*eIl, .1. <
Martin. B ' .Martin.
Dials P H. Ha:,'IS. W. R. Ha i
k. I . < » vi;r.’ . - '
each community where the commit
tees in charpe will have cards on
which applications will be sipned. Af
ter the cards are passed in to .S. Boyd
Sexton, the director, and the peneVal.
committee foP final approval, those]
whose applications are approved will j
receive, notification cards and immeili-
.s.
I ■
Phiiiip . (I. F. Burton.
'e'liei
.1. (
’\V
Franklin, V, ill
I'incher, .1. h'. N:'
w. r .'! •
Col i', l’’
.Cr^v'^ !:.
ft. il. ( vd'.i-r.
\ tv V ' t .1
ftoiith, H A.
P.<^;,M-,V,-!'
c't. liynKin Hendersiui.
Hickory 1 a vnMir~~™AV
C, ( Koi»c; E. .M. Murphy.
Jorii.' .'slo'e: I.. W. (lillilan
' FRKDKRICK Ik MCRPIIV
.My friends, Fred<*rick E. .M n (ihy,
publisher of the .Minneapo]^ T ibune,
is a real farmer as' \ .*11 ;is a real
n* wspaper man. Il<* h.is done more
tr.an any other man to brinp the slate
An office ii. Clinton has.,been open
ed in the buildinp oppo>-ite Younp
company 'with \\C P. Baldwin- tnl
charpe. Those dosirinp to enlist for j
'vork, both white and colored, are
askefi to repister with Mr. Bahlwin,
ct once in onler that their applica
tions may he passed upon. 1
The fbllcv. inp a.lvi.sory y-immittee;^ ^
have been named in this section of
the county to a.ssist in the repistration;
of applicants. ' 1
Hurricane division: \Vk Stone, i_
o; Mi'v'.e.sola
'MS
J.
up to til,
forth a tanpilili
front rank in-. Wa.sh Horton, F.. .M. Younp.
!!.
it. .\’. .hudeson, T.
Repp. •
I. d. Youiip, d. L. Di( k-
A:~-" H*aldw n,
•. Huphes.
Roy De.Shiclds
\V. .lohnson.
(
1..
S. O. (’larkj \V. (i.
I )on-
d. H.
li' hani-". <
l.anl'o!'d
'A uldrep. .1.
lainpstoM
iiari, l iaiik .Xnderson.
I.aiirciis ,Nathan Rodiardson, .1
Brown. .!an<*lle Teapue, < Larence
Tollison, .). K. Philpot.
laiuifiis Mill—('. A. Baldwin, d. (»
Holt, .Inn <»n. .lack Bishop, ( lerk.
|mt forth a tanpi!>!e, wo’-'kable
plan ol farm relief. I
Firs;, he wouhl have tie* govern-:
inent mdiice th<* farmer to cut down
<• up acrc.tpe, liy "fn <>vi(linp money re- .
H i (Is for th.i.sc V.I10 will do that.
^ I
.Sec.ind, sti’ps should bo taken to jiro-
tect dairy and live sto'k. f'ifme’s|
jipuinst iinfiorted oils and fat.-, 'riiird,!
he wants (piick tariff aciion apaiii d
p;()duct;?-of nation- w'l ■ivency i'\
.Mr. .Murnhv Pe.ckbridpc
.lack
division:
ir.
VIS,
John
w:
X.
H.
TT
F. Mitchell,
,1
I’ pMy s
fa nn
hi
V.
Lydia
.Mill
VV. r. .lu** *1**1,
B.
Bitl'iwi’i.
tv N
1 idlll).
.Mf na
W
. .\l, Na ll. .1
, lU'ii
Tumlilin,
Thd.-.
.1. Mali<i)n.
Ml. Olive
Jones, li. S.
Mount ville
— W. (). .Martin, d. N.
Boland.
— William Her b e r t
"Burns, Preston Motes, O. Watts.
Mt. Pleasant (k W. Madden, F. F.
MtKire, A. B. Fullor, - . .
Ora ,1. .M. Wallace, D. .M. .Md lin-
toQk. R. lu .Smith.
Owinps— H. d. (i. furry, N. f. Bry
son, F. E. Owinps.
Pleasant Mount f oilier Burdette,
Geo. F. Pulley, Lee West.
Poplar .Sprinps N. B. Wood, T. T.
tA’otal, L. < . Taylor.
Prineelori B. h. .\rnold, NN. L
freeman. -M L. Cheek.
df piceiat»‘d. rouith on .Nfi
propram is readjustment of
mortpa!'»>s ‘it r'*diieed iritere.st. Fiftli, i
me nduetiori of farm taxes, l ixth, an
early revision atid .seUleuH'.nt of the
war debts, and s(*vi*nth, intensive re-
s«*ar(h lookinp to wider industrial
U'cs of farih products. .
I think "Mr. .Murphy’s propiam w411
woik. !Vf,v only doubt about it is
wludher the politicians who run our
public affairs will see (*noiipli in it for
themselves to adopt it.
N our-ip,
Younp.
.Mountville division; f
NV. d. Cluck, H. T. .Jones. ^
R nno district: dames 1’. Copeland,
T. .M. Ray, NV. S. IJatton. |
.Scufflelown district; F. L. Donnan,,
NV. 1). Glenn, O. J*. (Joodwin. ,
GohLille district: C. Ii. NVorkman, 1
L. T. Law'son, NVill Dobliins,
.lames H. .Sullivan is chairman of'
the Laurens unit; .Mrs. Sarah 1).
NVilkes, secretary; R. A. Babb, treas
urer; B. H. Boyd, paymaster; NV. I*.
Baldwin, clerk at Clinton; .S. Boyd
Sexton, county sujiervisor;, L. E. Hat
ton, assistant. Other members of the
countv council are .John D. W. Watt.*
1
McSWAlN PROTESTS PASSAGE
DOMESTIC ALLOTMENT BILL
Fourth District Representative
Says Would He Tax Upon
Tho.se Unable To Pay It.
V iporou.s objection to the propoised
farm allotiuent plan is heinp mad<* in
conpress by ('onpressman .1-. ,1. Mc-
, , Swain of this district, on a variety of
county supervisor; .Joe h. .Smith, may-
or of l.aurens; JJ. Y. Abrams, mayor,^
of Clinton,
this city.
and
Dudley .Jones of
.4
t.tmo.ohdj
old who
Nat ionnVr
Carolina Wins . _ .*
Ring Contest
One, is that the bill is inipracticHble
and the plan^couhl not be worked
another is Dial it^wi^uld boomeranpi
and w’ould only pliinlire the ... That
sided price-boostinp project. If it he
true that the ChamlH?r of Commerce
of the Lnied States and some hip
NVall street financiers favor the allot-
niert plan, it is merely because they
want to divert attention from the real
remedy, which will help b.'i ppv cent
of the people in the nation, and that
is an expan.'-ion of the vidume of
money. That will produce a rise in
prices of all comnuxlitie.s. NVilh the
prices \yill come increased
stimuIatTnn in tr.f mercantile Hues,
will in turn produce a demand
O'- manufactured provluct.s, and tlius
ILLHER.\(’Y
There.are still more than
.Nmericuns over ten yeais
cannot read and write, Hit*
Advisory Committc'* in victory over the
ports. That is <)()0,t)<M) fewer tljan L'u I’roshyterinn fist-slinpers—^Saturday,
yt'ars apo. Geoi-pia has more illiter-- dan. 1 7. .Many of the houts-were close,
ales than any other state, some 30U,- \,iih Seiple, Clark, and Sims winning
();)(), while Wyoming has the fewest, for Ik C.
only about 3,000. ! The feature bout of the night came
farmer
deep'f into the mire of economicj
Nstrer.s and would strike jrvitTfenl b!o\v ^^-<‘ all-kinds will resume
ito the manufacturer with the re-iilL!'prol-rCion. NVirh s-ich
that there would Ire even more cur- a condition will come inciea.-ie in wap-
— jtailm. nt and more unemployment ‘ in .as a result of the peneral rise
The L’niv ersity of .South Carolina ' iiiumifacturinp center.s. |’’’ prices, ami in wages, the buyinp
rr.. . , ,1 , / , oower of all the iieojlfie
I h*‘ followinp extracts are from' - ’
the Conpressional Recor.l: , ■*
The objection I make to the bill is;,),.,. directly ben
efited by money expan.sion will cer
tainly not be hurt. That is the small
proup of inveslnien; b'lnker.s and bond
buyers that have bought securities
within the la.M three yeai;s. This num
ber, compared with those whose in-
vestnienCs antedatf 192'.», is almost in-_
'ipnifiean't. With the jpossibility and
)i -ospect of relief al! alonp the line
to practically everybody, it is unfor-
limate to he sidetracked with a pro-
tp i ul of yiariial and of ilouhful re-
Hcf.
“By the allotmof't plan the cotton
farmer who eats flour will edntribute
to the wheat farnuT. Jdiit the wheat
farmer can jmstpune buyinp a new
: hirl for himself or a new, dress for
I is vvifo and h ave the cotton farmer
imaMe to buy wheai. Thus both will
finally™!iuffei- as a revtilt ofin-
u:y they ha.e caused to the indus
trial. worker.-.”
oower of all the
creased and their
ferred wants will
will he in-
mahy and lonp de-
be sunplied. Th:> .')
Itenno
J. D. Cop«
>iiiiioh
lu'li:-. C. 1
Ctew H' l
Albert ( (tol.
M.
Luy,
l>avid Pitts,
B. Hel-i
I Considering that at the beginning
of our national life hardly more than
I one per.son in ten knew how to read
! and write, that only within my own
.1. B
an
a Mil.
; Ci. Wilsell,
W allace.
■^tor** L. R. Henderson,
W. 1). .'siewait.
that it firoposes to levy a tax >upon
the very people who 'can least afford
when Bolick matched gloves with NN'il-l^** h*LV the tax with which to suhsi-
lard, of the University, and knocked jJ^Sl^ ivulure. It proposes to levy a
him down in the first round. The bell: pleasures, not upon con-
Rent that room by
using a Want Ad in
The Chronicle.
B. .Sims, S. ,N. Ta\lor,
Tip Toi W
J. C. .McDaniel. ^
Trinity Ridge .lohn Mitchell, Ma-
rn»n Caine, .Scott George.
Waterloo -*1. Ik Smith, I'.. B. Rob-
in-on. .S. 1 Moore.
NValls Mill- I . NV. Ihdder, NV. H.
Tayloi. .1, ( . .Mai liii, B. K. Sot p<*<*, .M.
.A. (iairet*. t). Ik Harlsell.
\N oo'l\lilt I. L. NNhum, \.' B. Ter-
' y 1 ..M Ke!U*tt.
NV. D. SiiDon, NVilkes NV.
luempry practically no Negro or In
dian could read or write, and that
; chool attendance was not compulsory ^
anywhere in America when 1 was a,
hoy, it .seems to'me we have pone a
lonp way in raising the standard of
educaliiin to the point where ninety-1
- e en people out of eveiy' hundred are j
aide to ^ead.
The important (tiiestion, however, ^
is; “NVhat do peoph* read?” Having
saved NVillard on the count of eight. Iupon luxuries, not upon
taught them to read, it seems to me
we might devote the next Inmd'-ed
years to improvinp th«‘ir tastes
reading.
in
N'oungs
W idl.ice. 1
I'pli IJolio.
it NI i’ll I' NVII.SON,
Comity ( hairman.
1 :..J-2-2te.
Jan.
The
FI.X '.i. Safi I LE.NIENT
' n " e.‘ that on tlie 2Kth
.SCRII*
late.st thing in the fo 111 of
money is called “stamped scrip.’’ Hie
idea originated in Germany and has
been adopted in a numln'r. of .\meri-
c:in cities, to make money' circulate
luster.
The seconds did a pood job on the
Carolina boxer, evidently, and he
came buck in the second round to box
with the’ heavy-hitting Bolick. Bolick
failed to connect again in the final
two rounds and the judges deci.sion
went to NVillard.
.Seiple boxed his man to a draw, but
won when the Carolina fighter was
too tired to come back for a fourth.
Clark outpointed his man to gain
the third victory for the Blue Hose.
Bissett, Barker, and
close di*cisions in their
the close.st match ever fought against
the State University by a Bresbyte-
riun team. it
theatre.s and tourist hotels and auto
moi>ile.s and jewelry.—it propujics to
levy the tax upon the things th'it peo
ple must eat in order to exist. In ov
er to raise money by this tax ittu
must rai.se the price of the thing.s
that the imiustrial workecs must buy '
in order to eat, and there are at
least 10,000,000 industrial wo;-Nersi
without jobs, which means that at '
least 30,000,000 human lieinps who
are upon the very verge of starvation
McDuffie whom a breakfast an'l a dinne*'
Ixmt.s, to lose * suiiper are the most vital prob-
Furman Wins On
Court, 33 To 22
Special Introductory Offer
WASH—50c GREASE 50c
('OMei.ETE WASH AND GREASE JOB—90c
I 10 DAYS ONLY
1,
GIVE ns A TRIAL
CALHOUN SERVICE STATION
TEXAC 0 PRODUCTS i
Joe Vanct* Pitts,
S. Broad Street
lem.-i coiitronting them e.ci'y 21 honr;-,
“This donve.'.tic aJlothient plan
seems” to be “'Tmixture of hope and ■
fear. There is hope that it will h.*Ip
the price.s of farin' com-nodities. and i
there is fear that it will close c.)nv.''
of the cotton mills, or at least <-urtail
{U'oduction, and tlius cause some ^m-i
ployees to lose their jobs. It is not;
;
Tuk(‘ 11 " »•.' that on tlie 2Kth day
r>i h e' l uai y. 11*. 3. I will render a fi
nal ;r''c()ufif‘“(Tr"'nTv”iicrs and dorngs as
AHnniiisl‘aL*i ol ihe ustalu of John
Gnfi’iii Bitts, deceased, in the office
rl the .Iiuipi* (d Broliate of Laurens
ciunD;. at lo o’clock a. m., and on the
same day will apply for a final dis-
Ylviipi fiuin iny trust as .Adminislra-
1; ix.
.\ny persoit ’iidehlei to said estate
IS notified and .equi'-t'd to make pay-
ni«.nt on o;- bet I'e that date; and all
persons having claims against said
♦state will present them on or lieforo
said dat<*, duly p-o.en, o;- he forever
laired.
possible for the mills further to cut
In Evanston, Illinois, they work the Fuiman defeated the Bresbyterian
.-cheme this way*: 'I'he local retail varsity Saturday night, 33-22, in a -y^y reasona -le su,^pestion to
meachafttic-4tasiu;mtu*n-put-^m)U inm -qrnme-mhatwraT; fa^t at~ Dmgs; ~Mestnte^^F
lank. Then it i.ssued .b.OOir scrip dol- the slow start. 'direct injury to woikeis in the cotton
tars, each one of them good for a (tot-^ TAu man started off the scoring, butj**'’^^^ would certainly have
lar at the hank if presente*! within a , Breshytorian rang up a goal .shortly i
week. But after one week it was pood afterward. Furman then
only rf 4t* bad A sqjecial two-cent ti a*l- • commandinp lvj»4. which
ing., stump pasted on it. Nobtrly Ijut throughout the g*nre in siMtewT^se^
farmer.s and
interests
of the mill
they held
;he merchants had these stamps. N *ui
.\1K4 IRENE ADAIR BIT P.S,
Jan. 21, L' 3. ■2-D)-ic.
Administratrix.
have to spend the dollar at a store to
make it pood. The next \ve**k anotlier
st;un|) has lo he put on it, and so on
for a year.
This makes each of these scrip di)l-
lais turn over fifty-two times a year,
b«‘cau.se anyone who hohls *>ne *>f th*‘m
has to “{fay two cents a week for the
privilege of holding it. or lose his ori-
ertd huv.sts liy the Blue Hose.
No one went out on fouls, although
the ;-i)ie l of the game brought on
•*>m** little bit of roughness. Adair,
of Furman, was in top form, shooting
■-o.u all points of the cohrt, and mak
ing fine slmts over the midget
.Niaje's ’ liead.
B<*b Lynn {ilayed a fine floor game,
and tlu* two forwards made valiant
FLNAL SE'ITLKMENT
of lioth the
workers are
too closely interlocked to think of
hEtpjnsp-’the- farrnerar^dd dhe e.x{ie»ise
of the mill workers. In the neighbor-
hoo<l of the cotton-mill towns are
m-\ny farmers that produce milk, but
ter, vegetables, and potatoes for sale
to the mill workers. If the mill work-'
er lo.scs his job, or if his salary i.s cut,;
the farmer thereby loses his market, j
If the mills can barely operate at the
present price of cotton, there is se
rious danger that they could not op
erate, at all if the price of cotton be
doubled. There is no way of forcing
the public to buy cotton goods, and the
How^s Your Battery?
Don't take a chance on it Roinj; bad on a
dark ni^ht or a deserted road. BfinR your
-A-^l'^4--+o^-«tt^ and lef us test the bat
tery, Tet'tins: free. New Ford IB-plate battery,
fully Ruaranleed—only $6.90 in exchantre.
• •
Clinton “ ' Company il
V
Authorized Ford Dealers
Clinton, S. C.
g'nal dollar. ' i efforts to get into their form. How-
Our principal money troiilile is not ever, the Furman team covered thfe
i‘ shortage of p>onev hut the fact that! floor so well it seemed at times there,
jit is not moving last enough. This were more than five of'the Hurricanes j people can do withovit clothing long-
S
. i
I
irMcn(
plan is said to be working well on the court.
e towns that have tried it.
Take no'ice that on the 1st day of
.Nla.ch, 131/3,! we will render a final
account of our acts and doings as F7x-
editors of the estate of Carrie Rook, I'ROSBERITY
deceased, in the office of the Judge of l I pass my compliments to the town
Probate of Laurens County, at 10, of Row'ley, Iowa. Rowley has 205 pop-
c'clock a. m., and on the same dayiulation, living in .sixty houses; there'
of people cannot do
any number
equally well.
The answer, of course, is politics.
Rowley has no large list of salarM
taxeaters. Its people run their own
will apply for a final discharge from! are fifteen business institutions in-
thi'ee chui-ches.
•ur trust as Executors. | eluding a bank, and tni'ee cnui-cnes. j Rexall’s factory tO you rHot
Ally person indebted to said estate And it is the most prosperous town in „. ^ j
is notified and required to make pay- America, if not in the world. Halcr ISottles, ComDlIiatiOIISy
aoent on or before that date; and alii There is not a single delinquent etc,, insure fresher rubber, low-
havinf claims against said es-jux payer in •le town. Not one resi-l^jr prices, and longer guarantees
—SO buy and save with safety
tntc will preaent them on or before
date, duly proven, or be forever
EUGENE GARY,
. THOMAS ROOK,
Executors.
Jnn. 24, 1938.—2-16>4c->P.
dent of the town is on the county poor
list. There has never been ^ bank fail
ure.
If 205 people in one community can
manage their affaire aa well as that,
there sema to be no reaaon why 205,-
000 people, or two millions people, or
at SMITH’S PHARMACY-
Rexall Drug Store. '
-your
SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRONICLE
•The Paper Everybody Rcada**
iS::
er-than they . can do without food
They can wear old cotton goods, old
shirts,*^ and old di-esses, but food can’
be eaten only once. Hence, the food
crops have an advantage over the cot
ton crops in such a depression.
“Under normak conditions the do
mestic allotment plan would tend
equalize agricultural products witl
industrial prices.. But in this crisis,
when nearly one-third of the popula
tion has lost its purchasing power and
is living on mere pittance, and part of
that put of the public treasury, and
when the industrial workers have had
"their wages cut to the none, and must
buy everything they eat, and are un
able to ‘pay rent, surely when such
conditions prevail is no time for ex
perimenting in an artificial and oiie-
CHEVROLET LEADS
\^X)RLD’S MOST POPULAR CAR TOPS ALL COM
PETITORS FOR POUR YEARS OUT
OF THE LAST SIX.
These figures reveal the ever increasing popularity of
'i the Chevrolet:
REGISTRATIONS FOR FIRST TO MONTHS OF 1932:
(Pignrea not yet released for last two montlui of year)
Passenger Tracks Total
Chevrolet 305,763 55,753 .361,516
Ford 232,125 57,992 290,117
Plymouth.... . 95,589..... 95,589
GILES CHEVROLET CO., INC
Clinton, S. C.‘
t
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