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■j < A ' -I ■ /■ / (dlinton (E^rntitrU ittt HARRIS. Editor amd Pid>!iftb«r PnblialMd Every lliimday By THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING COMPANY Subscription Rate (Payable In Advance): Ore year $1.50; Six Months 75 cents; Three Months 50 cents Entered as Second Class Mail Matter at the Post Office at Clinton, S. C. The Chronicle .seeks the cooperation of its subscribers and readers—the publisher will at all times appreciate wise suugestions and kindly ad vice. The Chronicle-will publish letters^ of general interest .when they are not of a defamatory nature. Anonymous communications 'ivill not be notu ed. Thi.s paper i."< ooi responstible for the riewsr or opiaions ol its corre4pondents. THE CUNTON CHRONICLE. CLINTON. S. C. ■./ / that'it must not be sent till 3:45 p.‘m., the next day. as she was going to squashe.s^ i am alw’ays ahead with' garding truck.-cabbages, 5c per head;! THURSDAY. JUNE 1, 1933 •V- jhave company, and then she told me beans, 10c per head, and'squashes, I to send the bill to her hu.shand who ditto Injuries Are Fatal i works at a filling station 3 mile.s. out : of town and that'* he would pay the jbill Saturc^y week. Then I told her , that we didn’t seel guano in large quantities. ' signed, mike Clark, rfd, truck farmer. jVille, Tenn., and a brother-in-law*. Dr. i William H. Wiljiam.««on. of Charlotte. To Dr. I Mrs. McGlothlin was killed iii same ■ * j wreck in which her hu^and w’as in- . "7 -jured. .\t the time 'hey were on their r urman <4 resid6iit Passes After i way to Washington to attend the Lingering Since May 16. Fun-[•''Outhem Baptist convention of which eral Held Monday. ^ past president. ! -t Near here iheir ,automobile,-driven I wore neiu nere -.oaay lor iir. MrCann was rfitally injured, dying a W. .1. Mcijlothlin, president of Furman; few hours after the wreck. reward: the undersigned cheef ofi j poleese hereby offers a reward of 7.5c - , ? • U ri a I liked No. 5 fine. .She was a blond, I*®*" fbe a-rest and conviction of the Greenville, May 21)*—Simple funeral ? . ** * 'pretty ankle.s, eyes and everything. 7Tii.<.s-creant who stole his hillie and nghts were held here today for Dr. Chariot e. Wa.s from Tennessee. Business girl bridge and hand-cuffs while he was working her W’ay thru Vanderbilt, taking a little nap in front of the ! Sparkling eyes, white chest and puck- drqg sto^ la^t night betwixt 9:30 p i "’ho died in Gastonia, N.l At first Dr. McGlothlin’s injuries * ered lips. Selling space (advertipng) ^hd 4l3(ra^* ni. return these need- ^-» Sunday from iniuries received in were not believed serious, but compl;- in a booklet that was being gotten up ecssities to the citty hall at once and‘an automoh.’e vvreeV near King’s by the Humane Society for the Ad- gft reward undef penalty of a jale Mountain May liJ. vancement of the Rights of Bumble sentence, no questions will be asked Leader.s in education, law*, medicine. B<*es hut “ . I tried to beg her t.j excu.se me <>»' arceicd. she finally~"gol ii:y-.dullai. Hcf” CLINXDN. S. (’., THURSDAY. JUNE 1, I93.t religion and other w'alks of life served ^ i'jsrned, as honorary pallbearers and the large hands were , s#'soft and tender and I rob rol»eil.s, cheef. auditorium' of the Fir.st Bapti.-t alvvay.s did like her type. I never ex- , ^ ^ church wa.s packed to overflowing,as pect to .see .iuy' ad or her face or my lost of stolen., a bunch of keys cofi- jx'.sidents of several state.s sought to dollar. taining the follov.ej irg: 1 key to gar- p.jy their last respects to the Baotisl T { r * *.* cork-.sciews, beer bottle open- The man whe tries to get something _ Hitler spoke, for nothing usually gets nothing. With President Roose- ^ .selling ipatches, carloads cations developed from internal in- jul■:e.^ and peritonitis set in. I.>ast -Monday an o{>eration was performeij in an effort to head off the periton- •*ic Afterwards. Dr. McGlothlin rai- lied,.but his conditions gradually grew worse and for the past .several day.s little hope had tieen held by his phy- r.;cia'’s for his recovery. hi 'as attended by Dr.. T.. .i. Glenn Dean R. N. Daniel of the university Gastonia. Dr. C. B. F.aVIc of Grepn- and Dr. L. .\. (^r'owell of Lincoln- A whole tot erf penplp should think for theniseh instead of having some one think foi them. Every cbimnunity should in every way possibli- patronizeX protect and encourage the business arid industries'fepre.sentatives of Great Britain, they u!i(‘u(iv havt>. - ! Fi’ance, Germany and his own coun- . ' \ ' i try, and, to the surprise of the world, .A fool wift) mom'v Is ahTTut the' they i^frced, unequivocally,-to back upi worst thing u girl can ma-rv. ‘ disarmament program and, what: ' \ ' was more to the [K>int, to engage in no •It’s a \m<i idea to be loo prompt taking sides in somebody else’s con-’ That leaves Japan ns the'only na- troveisies. Both parties may he wrong,jtion threatening world peace. Japan and anyvwiy it’.s none of your business, i has withdrawn from the Fx*ague of — j Nabions. I're.sident R«>o«eveJt*8 rnes.s- I HK (.KADU.XTES’ MONI'H I “K:‘‘ ^ nations .suggested the eco- June, the month of ro.ses-also .the boycott of any nation which month of brides.'sweet gil l graduates, i r>ersi»l in an aggres.sivti war. and other things that.poets rave over, | may come of that we cannot here with Die usual signs of its j but we feel certain that the appearance. The surest evidence thalD'loud of impending war, which threat- June, apart from the calendar, is the, <*"<■'! wafety of the whole world, breaking out of the hkecalaureate ad- bus been lifted. <ln‘ss and the haiAe.-Jling of the annual' ’— —- -— crop of diplomas l»y the young men and young woiium who go forth to do their liit m ..solving the problems of the world. .May their ideals and enthu- ers, .3 -identerfercation tags,, 1 more velt’s message ibefore him he declared i ^ explained that we had nearly y to .something or t uiher that i have-^and now its a.cting pre.sident, .spoke ••’’’•e e -that Germany aaked no more than toi ^ matche.® in stock, but he tried finger nail cutter, last briefly of Dr. McGlothlin’s work, laud- l,c rCooK.™ d .T,n ™uaT .Ln^tht'>o <„n.i„ce m;: that .M,-: HhoveV'w.: ">y >7, . l-n,ta caf ., . chri^.iatt. friend and nations,, and that she did not dreamt*'’'"* "'“tell '<•1"'" »f stole oi fpu.id. • _ of war nor ask for anything more MTces. I begged him to change his pol-, > ;* ’ ^he Furman gjee-club led the con- than the right to defend herseif. fitic.s as it was .Mr. Roosevelt who was . Now it was Mussolini’s turn. The'''"'"* f"'* 'i*"- leader of Italy called a conference of "'"'■I'l t*' H htKher. btems| were gelling mighty soai'ce, but infl^-| beri till ion, barber in chair 2. mr. editor: piese print all of the tion was coming. .He left in 3 hours! with no order, me, all rijghl. He was a match for -Social Dot.s From Flat Rock' jude Jones, when you read this, piese | charge ahe diddent J peaceji_juc_.miPb.rt.art. yores trulie. come hffme to .vou m* mean anny harrh w'hen she done what i she done when she ketched you with! that stuff and she says come to her' arms and e\erthing will be forgot and you can drink whiskey if j’ou want to, but she says |»le,se iliin’t get drunk. signed,^ Jude’s ma. above free of charge^as they are yore , regular readers and are more or less cemetery. I l>eing worked by the r. f. and c. i had jjj.. v;c.cond I one peace of noetry about Jed winters i by his wife who dide 2 yr. ago, but i left that.ot|f as i knevw you would tor same,/ but these other Later .in the ^a.v_ Dr. McGlothlin’s y was removed to Greenville, whei * Mrs. McGlothlin was buried. gregation in singing Dr. McGlothlin’s! Since 1919 Dr. McGlothlin had keen favorite hymn, “Faith of Our Fath-1 picsident of Furman and for more , j than a quarter of a centue-y had been He was buried beside his first wife identified with the affairs of the Bap- in the Furman plot in Springvvood - ti-''t church as an educator, minister and author. wife, Mrs. Mary Brea- McGlothlin, was killed in the wreck which ultimately cost Dr. McGlothlin’s life. 3 I, Ga.stonia; N. C., May 2H.^Dr.. Wil-j t'liam Jo.seph McGlothlin, president of inikeJ lark, rfd, ■ Furman university, Greenville, died in cony sjiondent. City hospital here today of injur- _ ies‘suffered in an automobile wreck _ NOTH E OF .SAl.E May 10. Death came at 9:2.') a. m. .An hour Notice is hereby given that Blakely- previously the 6.5-year-old educator COPEL.AND CAFE PLATE.LUNCH — 25c 13 Years Ago ^insm serve the coimtry well. iUTKe'"^ j plmty of~ soap7 before damping--mto harder scliool of ex}>erience into w hichi* - 1919 i pond and sjiiyailing disease anso- th<’y are enjerinjr ii^destined to take aj ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ forth, as per last yr. with a skin loT of UuVTTc'afism'ivbT rrPThemX==^~G&^(pa. t'ojieland Dry Cleaning Co.. Inc., has _ negotiated a sale of all of it.s slock, notis: no‘rfus-pas.«ing will he aioutl machinery, equipment, afipa^atus and ; at the wigwam .swimming po«»I endur- fixtuies except delivery truck to \V. ! ing the day-time and w hoever lets off. H. McCrary and W. ..XL McCrary, and ithe waiter again will lie took to law, that said sale i-- to be consummated I to keep the waiter clean and saniterry on the .5lh day of -lune ,193.3. .All per- j from now on, evei'boddy will be re-|,son.s indebted to Hlukely-(’c|pe!anil quired to take a show'ivr bathe, using Dry Cleaning ( o., Inc., will pay the To 44>e Kaid (Atrpoiatiuiu AH cre/litors of said '-^B!akeIy-('oi>eland Dry Cjeanir g Co.. Inc., aie hereby rcifiifs^i.e^upLkm.. _ __ notified and Bapti.st leaiier had lapsed into un- con.sciou.-ne.ss. With him when the end came witc his Sons, W. J. .McGlothlin, Jr., and lames H. .McGlothlin: a brother, the R'’V. .James T. .Mctllothlin, of Nash- PHILCO Radios & Tubes Smith’s Pharmacy HD. HRNI^T A r. HT^BOLAND FXJM JM IING^ Perhaps the mos! appalling news of recent wet'ks came from PmKisvL ania, where dispatelies ■ :iy eve ‘al hundred boy and girl of shirt am effoi I to etii worki” - have wallied out pajama factro'res J w eat shu| in ■’’an as ca.shier of the First National Hank t-o accept a fiu.sition a.s Imokkeeper with K. W, Fergu.son, local Foi’d deni er. He i.s succeeded as cashier by D. ^ C. Meustess. ' signetT kim skinner, manager. for •conditions. A At a meeting of the stockholders of the Commercial Hank held 'Puf'sday. large pei t i ntagi’ of these workers, it j the capital .stock wras increased from IS stateil, are umh'r 16; some .of t hem I ^35,000 to $50,000. tiave been earning us little as 30 ce.its a week. One girl of 1.5, the (inly member xif a family of seven to have a job, has l»een working fur So cents a week, laast wiiiler, according to investigat ors from (he I’etipsylvama De[>art- ment of l^ilhor, child workers who vomplamv'i that the shops were cold, were told to, ■’wor'k faster and gel warm." In Ru.ssia, w lien the head of a .sail: all kinds of vegger-tahh’s an«l cabbages and Jieans for cash, come one, come all with yore monney and yoil' huekeUs. i have the followei- ing reddy to dispose of at pres.sent ahhage heads, ^ I ; *.5- 1-.21CW. lilaA K KLVXC( >pf: iVANI V DRV CLFANING CO.. Inc. By A. B. Blakely. Jr.. Ptesident and Secretary. W. H McCRARY, W .M. McCRARV. I'utcha.sers.'- & Company INSURANCE STOCKS - BONDS - RKAL EaSTATF LOANS NE(;OTlATEn ^ and mo •(> later: 2 < ‘miss of. nice beans, 1/ — - and possi SUP»S( RMIK lO I HK ( IIRONK'LE “Ihe t aper Kvervbodv Read.s ’ An election will be held J>ec.’9th to: elect two meii^tiers of city council as^ succes.sors to S. J. Kilgore and James: W. Ijeaman in wants four and one. TIu* People’s Bonded Warehouse has applied fur an amendment to its charter to increase its capital stock from $10,000 U)\$20,000- J. V’. Edwards of Manning, has lo lly IS fouiai guilty of anti-social praCc^^t^ad in the city and formed a part- tices, he is sometimes led out and shot. Once in a while one could almost wish that we had such a law in this coun- o-y- \ nershlp with W. T. Putnam to enter the’ automobile and garage business. Rev. and Mrs. Edwaiti Ijong have returned from GoluiiAna where they attended the I^ptist convention. UtCicA/. May 22. 1933 Misses liena and Alice Co|)eland of tjapder college, spent the wwk-end \ Chronicle Nobody’s Business By Gee McGee LOOKINtr AHEAD Busines.s us .starting uj) ^again. That us clear ami definite. .Men are looking ahead and not backwards .And it is our belief that we are going ^ead | at home, into Ix'tU’f times than we have—ever | known. That lias been the history ofi (From files of The evei’5’ past recovery. TTte deeper the , November 20, 1919). Yleiires.siori, the higher the height.s' . , reached aftj^i^lln^ depression has been passed. Don’t ask us how it is going to be Jicconiplisheil. We have lUtle patience with people who want jirecise plans and J pi'cif’ii ations before they w ill be lieve (ha* tilings can be done. There is an element of faith which is, after all, the chief moving force m^Tuiman affairs and at the pre.sent pvMiple aPe feeling lit’Uer ami regaining faith in the futurt of their country at a rapid tat»’. % VX’e aie going to have a new ecl)- nomic Older, heyoml douid ;''but if it . ci^ujt^in, givjng everybody a chance to buy Tile TliTng!j.,he ’want.s, isn’t it going to lie better than a system which doe.s not provide customers enough for what we pioduce? I not only They — All In m Day’a Work ^ Folks are funny things. ,A man came into our place the other day and, asked: “Ifave you any sugar.” 1 re-] plied: “Yes,” and he shot back at me: “That’s too darned high"; 1 shot back! at him: “Is that so- why, 1 ain’t even! ^rrreed it to you yot.” He bought 5 Taucks and 12 dozen fruit jars and lOi bushels of corn meal. He sells his stuff cheap by the quart, ‘ ■ —- 1 Another guy biowed in not long ago ' and wanted mo to cash his check for, _— $10.00 and hold it for 3 weeks — to I HE Ol’I I.OOK FOR PE.XCE await the arrival <if his bonus money. Tliat F.urope has liecn for the past I informed him ihat we did not casli, two years on the vei'ge of another war checks nor had we any connection has been one of the things which has with the Salvation Army and then he delayed recovery from the w'orld-wide asked me if 'I thought he was a fool, depression., F.veryone familiar with and as he weighed 260 pounds, I told the subject has pointed out that be- him, “No you ain’t no fool; you would fore there tan be any real economic not be asking us to ca.sh your check adjustment ivations must cease trying if you had good sense.” That’s the to rival each other in armaments. j way some of us are. Now“it begins to look as if real dis- armament were at hand. The three j Along came No. 3. He told me that men who hold the greatest power in 1 was too high.'l informed him that I the world have agreed upon it. They I wa.s only 5-foot K, and he said that are President Roosevelt of the United j he meant my prices and I stated po- States of America, Chancellor Hitler I litely that I had not sent for him and of the' German Republic, and Premier: then he wanted to know arhat cotton - Mussolini of the Kingdom of Italy.[was going to do this fall, and I ex-| Each of these men is today, in a veryl plained to him that cotton was |>os-| I suppose that I may claim to be the first Ford Dealer, made cars, but sold them and frequently delivered them myself. The "drive away" is not new; often I have driven cars from Deti to towns in Ohid^br Indiana or Michigan to make delivery. There were no good roads in those days, and the people where I drove had never seen a motor car before. — My first reall;^ enthusiastic customers were.Country Doctors were, the first to realize the value of dependable transportation to a widely scattered practice’. Even'today I occasionally hear from some of those first Ford users.^ We had to teach local mechanics how to care for the oars. That Is how Ford Service began, which is now found everywhere in the world. We believed f'roin the beginning that a sale does not complete our V- transaction with our customer — it creates upon us an obligation to see that our customer's car gives him service. Ford Dealers know their’duty to the public in this respect. I can say of ForTDearers~generany ihat they have been and are moo of character and standing^in their communitTesr^ostr-of them liave- been with us many years, which indicates that we agree on basic business principles. The Company provides that the methods used the Ford car are.consistent with the self-respect o,f-the Dealers who handle it. - - The present Ford V-8 is the peak of our 30 years experience. We have never made a better car. Its eight-cylinder engine is powerful and smooth running. The car is admittedfj^ very good looking - and has comfortable riding qualities. It is economical in operation because of advanced engine design and low car weight. It i,3 the fastest, roomiest and most powerful car we have ever bui t. to rewl seiME, the “boss” of his country. Roosevelt spoke first, when he ad dressed an identical message to every one of the 54 nations of the world urg ing them all to* agree to abolish “of fensive" weapons and limit themselves | to defensive armament; further,“to sibly going to be ginned this fall as usual and he flew up and asked me if I was bom tkat^-waj, and I aaked what way. He left in a buff. I f- Nb. 4 was more considerate. Shei wanted 5 pounds* of goano’(for herp agree never to send an armed force (peony bed) which .she. suggesUvl that across their borders for purposes of j >ve sweep up^ from lOur warehou.se «ggT«s4iion. I The, whdlt world' applauded. Then floor and send it over to her hou.se only 29 blocks away, but explained! V \ tVA-.i