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' , 'V !■' ’i^'; '‘^ \ ^. THE CXOrtW CHRONICLE. CLINTON. S. t PAGE rtiVB — --T , ~ - 7— - -u €Untatt <filir0titrlT ■utahMui ItM - : WILSON W. HAIRIS, Editor and Publisher | PaMished Egery Thursday By THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING <30MPANT 1 . Ore Subscription Rate (Payable In Advance): ' ^ year $1.50; Six Months 76 cents; Three Bioaths 60 cents Entered as Second Class Mail Matter at the Post Office at Clinton, S. C. The Chronicle seeks the cooperation of its suJiscribers and readers—ths publisher wiH at all times appreciate wise suggestions and kindly ad vice. The Chronicle will publish letters of general interest when they ere not of a defamatory nature. Anonymous communications will not be noticed. This paper \» not responsible'for the viegw ot opinions of its correspondents. ’ / ■* - _ y L THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 23. 1983 ^goiwio ? New York for the summer. Mifuies Frances Barnett and Jane Sharp of Atlanta, are the gruests of^ Mrs. A. V. Martin. Mrs. T. D. Copeland is visitinjf in Savannah, Ga., as the g:uest of rela> tives. (From files of July lO; 1919). The Chronicle fori Roman Catholicjc and I xkviiiaii v.si.iivtiv.s Biiu none has ever been President One President, Cool- lidffe, was a Congregrationalist; one, I Garfield, a member of the Di.sciples of ‘Christ; one, Hoowr, a /[Quaker; two, I V'an Buren and Theodore Roosevelt, be a jfood b^;nesg. thing fo^^ the revival COUNTY TRRAS The books of t *8 NOTICE ty Treasurer . , j X xi TV 1 TV .r I ' ^ collection of taxes ^longed to the Dutch Reform church, j for the fiscal vear, 1932, at the Treas- Both the Adam.se.s. Fillmore and Taft 1 mer’s^office from October 15th to De- iii^ were Unitanans. Johnson. Grant and jcenfUplr 31, 1932. After December 31 Methqdist.s.’’Jackson, I one per cent will be added. After January 31, two-per cent will be add ed, and after February 28th, .seven ner cent will be added until the 15th i I McKinley were j Polk. Buchanan, Benjamin Harrison * I and Woodrow Wilson were Pre.sbyte- ^ I rians. The Episcopalians include PRESIDENTS, ( [Washington, .Madison. Monroe. Wil- day of March, 1933, when the books Franklin Roose.elt is the third sue-1 Henry Harrison. Tyler, Pierce j will he clo.sed. cessive President to have a double “o” i . kis nnnie. He is also th? third Pre.-;-, 1 don’t imagine it inuktM any ^ ^ :[idc:-,t whose .su.-name is the same a:-;ticular diffe.»*ence to what, ohu I got home at 5:30 .Saturday night, jpredecessors. We [President helong.s. Two of ihem. f.in- 1 took the sneezes at 7:10, I sneezed Pi*c.'ideTits .A.dam.s, two coin and CooHdge, had never Lesn i every minute for 2 hours. Tears as i Harn.v*o.n. and now two | rv.emhers of any church before th large as golf balls trickled down my emaciatt (1 fae<* and landed in my laj). Nobody’s Business By Gee McGee All r.ar '•fh have had two President^! Harriso.n, Presidents Roosevelt. Mr. Rjosevelt i.> , .... person.s own’og proj>erty in ! more than one school district are re- the quested to call for receipts in each of the several school districts in which the CLLNTON. S. f’., FEBRUARY 28. 1933 of Dutch de.scent. MaiUin Van Bui in property is located. This i.s_ im- any church before th^y! poilant, as additional cost and pen- ^ became President. But every P/e.si-[ alty may be attachwt. the third President!United States his Ih-ou a[ All able-bodied male citizens be- •en At 7.40 my eyeballs began to prove Theo'lore Rooaevelt being the olh- they Were incased in sandpaper. Ev-'^'^ two. He is likewise the third Pvesi-! •idence of the people , male citizen^ deeply religious man, as every man-tween the ages of twenty-one (21) must Ik* if he is to command the eon- , and sixty (60) years of age are liable George Washington could not tell [ for .American wheat, cotton, meat and i time 1* looked askance, I thought, fifty-first year. a lie. This is the only particular which the average hoy excels him. There are lots of thing^J flies that need swatting. i pr(»ducts, is now raising nearly [ they in dai'-y f all (if its own necessities A sciiool teachc asked a little hoy in hei' class if the world i.s round, lie i-epltt‘<l, “it’s crooked.” would bust out. My no.se was do- jing a marathan and handkerchiefs j We think that 1933 ia u good year j were being used at the rate of 5 pei’ besides for eve”y farmer to begin to try to j minute. help himself and his country by cut-: ting down his planting by anywhere j Coughing .set in at 2 minutes after up io ~)0 per cent. If all fanners IH. My throat was as .sore as a gum- If there is luck m President Roo.soVelt plenty of it. odd numbers to have to ]>ay a poll tax of $1.00. Commuta tion Road Tax $1.50 in lieu of road duty. All ahle-badied men between liable to military agreed to this they would find, by , hurve.'J time, that they were getting higher prices than they have dieame<l Y'oii can’t teach an old dog new [of for yt^ars. They could pay off their tricks, bur i.iUn are suppo.sed lo have I mort gages, buy the new equipment more .sense. 11 b<*y need, and so start the wlutds of — 1 prosperity spinning again. They can The "back to liie farhr movemciit h« ip tlu ni.seTve.s if they only will, apfieals to n l(>t of folks about twice: — - ) !m)II. .My back began to twitch at 8:15 and tny vertoiirae (or whatever that thing is that your neck sits on one (nd a.’id you .sit on the other) began to |>ain me like toothache. FEW GKANnF.ATHEK.S .Although one of the younge.st, Pres-|^^^ ages of 21 and 5.)‘ are idents, Mr. Roosevelt is one of except those in few who were s^andfathers trustee.s, .school teach- .\1 ASONS AS PRESIDENT S were elected. Mr. Hoover ministers and student.s. ^ President Franklin Roosevelt is the'« grandfather, but from then; Proper attention will be given those thirteenth memlK*r of the Ma.sonic or-a, hundred years j wlm wish to pay their taxes through der to be Pre.sident of the United any Prosi-j money onler, etc.. dent WHS a grandfather at the time!^''^"^ ’^**"1** township and numbe# of his election. Washington had school district. yeyi . V h; n s;)’ing chickens an-j rcuviy and v hen watermelons are ripe.: .MiddI ■ ai!<i old a‘'e have thoir com- peii-ation. a <»tic would .sa.V who sU'^ at night with a good hook hy u \va ni fire while the youth go forth, some with bate beads and some with tliin stocking.^ to endure the ligors of win ter in ebnmetion witli their social activilie;. TEXT OK RESOLUTION Here is the full text of the joint resolution pu.s.sed by the United States j portant senate and house for the direct i tir servance. Especially, .should Presbyte- peal of the 18th amendment to the i rians in Clinton and this community eonstitutitm (»f the United State.s, as be interested since theirs is u double SUNDAY IS (OLLEGK DAY Next Sunday has been de.signated by the General Assembly of the .Soiithe'n Iheshyterian Church as Hi . Day of Pruver for Schools and Col-i*^ leg{ s. The day has been se* aside es pecially l»y jthe South (’arolina Synml as “I’resliyterian <h)llege Day,” a for the presentation of the needs^^of the eollege, for accepting offerings from churches, ladies auxiliaries and individuals. Pre.sibyterians .should be^ thinking .seriously and prayerfully of this im- duy and enter into .My head began to hurt in the cen ter thereof at 9:10 andiUexiemied in every direction within 5 minutes. It felt like .somebody had been using it to tc.st the strength of 1000 maple rolling pins. .My toes twitched :>nd [ pained me. My knees got weak and d. My stomach got busy growing j I ami my heart action speerled up about 5 per cent. yo<i»i| .-I——ii- ^ My ai'ii'.s felt like thev weie going State.s. I have often heard some of my Masonic brethren say that every Pres ident has been a Mason, but that is not true. Washington was ir.astci- of his lodge* Monroe an,- Johnson odore Roosevelt, Taft and Harding were Masons. There no .Vla-^onic prove that Jefferson was a ! irn-mber of the order, but there i.s col- I lateral evitltnee which is taken and accepted Musonically as indicating no j children at all. Johnson. Adams andj [Jefferson were grandfathe’s. and soAf was master of his i * believe wa.s .Monroe. William Henryj - oe. j4u:k..on, Pulk. BucUaii* who lived but a. montli at^ . Garfield, McKinley. T’ne-' inauguration, had aj^-iin Uon j ' who later In'came President, but D. ROY SIMPSON, ('ounty Treasurer. I to fall off by 10 p, m. My ears roaied and throbbed and rumbled. My larynx and tbarynx and ton.sil.s got so dry I spat nothing but dust. My tongue took on the shape and size of a banana its oli ' cheek.s flushed and wrinkled. printed in the Congressional Record: Section 1. The eighteenth article of amendment to the constitution of the United State.s is hereby repealed. Section 2. 'fhe transportation or im- jHirtation into any state, territory, or possession of the United States for delivery or use therein of intoxicating iiqums, in violation of llu* law.s IIkua- of. is hereby prohibited. Section 3. This article shall be in- opt rative unless ili shall have been ratified as un amendment to the con stitution by conventions in the several •state.s, as provided in the con.-titu- liou, within seven years from the date tif the submission hereof to the states trv tlie Don The doctor got there at 11:20. The nurse arrived at 11:40 witH beau that he was. .Mr. Taft wa.v not a .Mason before he was elected, bid the grand lodge of Ohio made him a “.Mason at sight,” lK*tween his election and his inaugu ration. President Roosevelt wu.s recently initiated into one of/ the Masonic so- cietie.s, the Tail Cedars of L(>bahon. •ame President, but I be lieve there w^as no othee rre<^i:lent ' than tlio.se 1 have named lAh- gramIcHildren at the time of hi.- tion. . .M'S. Warren Harding wa- a g-ami-i mother, through her .son hv her fii-str uu^riiage. •Not that any of her son by that i.s impo!t:int but I .set it down as of possible inter-1 est while we are talking about the new President. I.KIUID - TABI.L'I'S - S MA E VmJl ('hecks ('olds first day. Headaches or Neuralgia in 30 minutes. .Malaria in 3 dav-i. r imU.eHG SALVE for HEAD COI^DS he.’- fust*Most Speedy Remedies Known 1 — .SI BS( KIBE TO THE CHRONICLE The Paper Everybody Keada* RELIGIONS OF PRESIDF^NTS President Roosevelt. will be the ii^ress responsibiUty. First, there i» the re sponsibility of .supporting the insti tution which carries the ideals of the church into education; second, there is the respun.sibility o^supporting, as I a citizen of (’linton, an institution 1 w hich is/ an indispensable a.s.set to the community. Either is a .serious obli gation—together, they are binding in a deeply significant aenae. It is the hope of the college that through the liberality of the churchea scattered throughout the Synod, a ! sub.xtantial contribution will be se- cureri. i Th<‘ future of Presbyterian Collegi' ' under President MeSween's guidance, I in spite of the.se trying times. tilul brown eyes, auburn hair, tender j hands, and a soft - . United heart, a bottle of rubbing alcohol, 3 towels, a lovely neck, a box of salve, wash rag, sweet ruby li|)s, and a thermometer. It was worth being sick just to look at that cute girl. BLUE INAUGURAL GOWN j Thirty yeans ago a Pre.sideiit’s j daughter gave her name to a new shade of blue. “Alice Blue’' was soj named because it was the favorite j color of .Alice Roosevelt, now Mr.s. j church to be PresTdentnof the^ Nichpia:r laingwopth. 1 States.'It i.s a curious thing; Mr.s. Franklin Roosev The-doctoi- made regular (3-dollar) visits twice a day. The nurse rubbed me. Plenty food was served that tast ed like something else. Kveryhodyt was good to me, even my creditors CMtite to see me. 1 was in be4 a w«tek. Grailuully my ta.ste returned to normal and bcefsU'ak began to taste like ham. I got so’s I could sleep without a njjjy i Uierinoineter in my mouth and I fin- Vin FDR I ARVIFKS tin* fifth cvn.secul i\c year now, F.. D. .‘•'m lb bus been suc- aid Fi.t iSenati'i ce.'v fill in M-curlng govv’inment for ciisti-c.dr-e 1 rarmrT-v"nmct.v milli<m dolla'.s lu'ir/ ui'.ul’- avu;lKblc under ♦'n- b’il r.)'- civp p .KUu'lion piirposes. Kilcs ami I cgolr^iion.-; have b'M>n luMiuilau il by ilte Dvua-t uumi*. at ra-iiltuifor tiu‘ 'll tribulioii ol : truthfully be said to l>e bright. Haiti j timesb reijuire sacrifice and patience^ and f^th, but hard times air not in-i terminable. I*et us hope that the a}»-1 peal next Sunday for this institution' will ThhI au attitmie uf ally began to breathe thru my nose. Our 3 undertakers were awfully dis appointed when I appeared on the street yesienlay. I’m feeling all right thank you, e.xcept physically ami .fiDiHB.vja.IIy. If you ain’t <lonc had the that this small denomination should have had more representatives in the White House than any of the other branche.s of the Christian,_ church. There are less than two million Epis copalians in America compared with nearly eight million Baptists, but bn-land a ly one Pre.sident, Harding, was a^ what 1 Bajdist.. 'There are nearly twenty million elt has given her name to another new shade of blue. It i.s called “Eleanor Blue” and she >A'ill wear a costume of this color at her first White Hou.se reception on March 4. It is described as a shade of hyacinth blue, between a gray-blue blue-gray — if anybody knows That means. If Uiis starts the women of .America to buying new dre.ss materials it V--J» ^ will NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY Si’vt’ral residemes in town, *St*vferaI farmR. *pi 11^ tractive. Hou.scs for rent. Broad St., Owen.s Hill and College View. Clintoii Realty & Insurance Co. B. H. BOYD |;t=ii=ai i ttitmie of reH|M»fMMve^i'-«*v*jA-iH.-‘,'. iberality. I.et Clinton' symjiathy and 1 . stand at the head of the list us among I those VI ho are willing to sacrifice fori \jjf. H gnat cau.-:e. In the meantime, it de-| (he/>''d\e< upon u.s all to pray and work, Under the Sun seed loan' ti nt lue to liens on the <mo|1'> 1>j be maxi 111 urn tbi.'- > 'ai' is be .si-cured by i)t-oduc**d. The red need from $40t* to ^-.kOO and an acreage reduetion of thirty !»er cent will be required as a loan condition. Intele.-*t will Ik* at th<' rate of r)*-« per c* nt. tlu* same as ■kn- tln.s .speial own child. ’ day .set a.sido for our la-st year, with next (Vlolier 3D This finHiuial loi farim rs.. y hp are unable to obtain obligation <luc the t. jid is {»ri*vide<l only ijUvl bu-U> and J(.vliq crop 13 Years Ago Items of Interest From The Chrbniele of 1919 ♦ amis for The ( linton tro/)i) of Boy ScouD ft Tuesday for their''annual outing production from o'.be' source.^. The at A’ai borough’s mill, witli their distribution will be m.uie through the Scoutma.ster, Rev. Henry Stokes, in county agi'nt’s office this jear, it is-charge. ^ under-stoikl. and loans arc e.Kjiectoti l«'; Something New deer mr. editor: nils, k 'sier Jones, pre.s.sideiit of the aiidob’.n .society, has asktd me to rite up the SI rang*' fowl ketched last week in a trap by my little son, ernie Clark of the otb grade, he i.-i a verry bright boy. this biid looks like a crane, but nirs. ] ,ioiie.s say.s it is not dietionaried in' nnny kook .she has, and she is anxious { to ‘oca.e where it belongs in the birili fam:le;.'. .--o kindly publish "this--dtL j .s«‘!iiilioii of him. get under days. way within the next lew TIME ID IM.A.M LESS I I .At the monthly meeting of the Commercial club Tuesday night, the resignation of President George M. Wriifht wa.s we g» ’ hull whim ho measures 3 feet wide and i feet long ami 2 feet high and has no spurs of iiPTe iTbrli^ he got winged or web fret bD bill is a cross betwixt a pink and a fiurple finger, he do noising, i or at least he ha.s not sung anny since j || n 1 fl fl E B B B B B Bl Winuir is nearly o^ er, and it ’will j elected as his successor, and J. F. Ja-l but a short lime before spring (-obs, Sr., wa.s elected vbre-president, | planting is under , way in every part: Boyd. As an evidence! of the United State.s. .And in every of the high e.st.eem in whieh Mr.j j4irt of the country farmei-s are more Wright is.^heW, the club presented or less|in a (luandty as to how much ^ b^«Vtiful silver pitdiei ji? hriny into Dro-.luction this ' IT'S ALWAYS GOOD BUSINESS TO USE GOOD PRINTING tlii> cram* might l)e a furrin bird of .some kind that flew acrost the ocean or he could of come over on a boat, i O’Neal .Adair has returned France arid i.s at home again. from to how acreage to bring into pro-.luction ytlf. If half of the threats of “farmers’ strikes” which we hear alnml are ear- • led out. there will naturally be a rnaterijiJ reduction in the volume of agricultural prmluction for 1933 and that, of course, will have a tendency to bring higher prices for such as is ”p;ro<luce<l. We think the realization that it is nece.ssary for tlie farmer.s of the nation, as a whole, to rediiee the acreage under cultivatimi has now! Mrh. John W,. Young and daughter, V-ecome quite wideepremd. .Miss Essie, s’-e on s-t'‘v of .several Farmers understand, .or certainly woeks in the mountains of North should, that a large part of their Carolina. troubles have come from retaihingj ^ under cultivation marginal lamlsj Mr. and .Mrs. J. F. Jacobs, Mrs. W. which were put to the plow during^J. Bailey, XTias Cassie Oliver and W. the war, when the utmost ^))ossible p. Jacobs attemled the nifM*ting of the production was .stimulated by the|Prwga asaociation tha past week in high prices fixed by the government | Creenville. for agricultural commodities. Withi ^ half thi* world at war the United | John Copeland of Nashville, Ark., SCaUs had to fe^ more than half of ;i» visiting Harrison Copeland'. the rest of the w'orld. But that condi-j —_ tion could not be maintained, and the] A Drummond family reunion wa» American farmers’ dxport market has . held on July 4th at the home of Dr. beta steadily faUing ofl tof the paatj and lira. T. L. W. Bailey. tea^sarg, since the rest of the world* — f«* liefc ta ita agricultural operatioBH. Mra. J. I. Coleman has accepted a with the [hub thinks it is of the peafowl | and po.ssibly relatedi byj btrih or pio genny to the riigh^g- . P. M. Pitts, Jr., David Copeland andj^^i^, ^,j• au.'.stialia and the new heb)i Wm. Me.Millan have gone to Arkansas I where they are packing peache.s. 1 re tney are pacKing peacne.s. i * , ., - - ^ J catalog or ifj Work was .started yesterday on thej no-.ie, run up to the liberryj new top-soil ro.id from Uutviis to jf you can hK-ate thi.s funny Princeton. I U*okin' his feathers are blue* U*xceT)») on hks wings and chi.st, andj! Iht* few that he has the'-e seem to bej lu n>o<> brown, or a worsted brown. ; We Do All Kinds “EXCEPT BAD” he wa.-; eatiijg a ta*!pole when ketch-! :'l by r^- little ernie and that proves: him to be a wutter bird, a.s he was! wadiug in same up to hi.s knees look-j ing for tadpoles ansoforth. he is most- ly skin and feuthers -and bones, jumL - could not be a bird of pray, all of him. woulddent make a pie a.s big as yorej left hand. j .7 1 position at stenographer CTiaton Cotton mills. Omr belief U thnt this export mar- kei in foiag to continue to dimipiah. Country n^y country whieh former ly was • st^y and reliable euatoraer' Misses Mary and Irene Dillard have if he is a new^ird, mrs. Jones wants' to have him stuffed and sent off to some mu.sini and mounted on a limb in Washington, d. C. whei-e our con-j giejismen meet to make laws, but shej do not want him to go to cong^ss, as' ‘ he is a w’ise-looking bird, rite or foam i as soon as you can place him for us and we w’ill hold his remains till fur ther notis. yores trulie, mike Clark, rfd., corry spondent V Company Publishers-Printers *1 Telephone 74 Stationers CMaton, S. C. s a .®ess* id Ji-ikW.*.. lit. ili