The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, June 22, 1933, Image 8
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page eight
THE CLINT0N CHRONIC^l::. CIJNTON^ S. C.
THlfflSDAY, JUNE 22, 1933
Laurens Gets
S88,017 In Notes
Paper Issued To Teachers «for <
Back Salaries Totals About)
$3,700,000. List By C4>uiiliies.
Columbia. June 19.—^Notes for the
payment of back ..salaries of school
teachers-of SoTJth^arolina were seiit
out last week from the office of the
.state treasurer*and now, for thP most
part, are in the hands of teachers.
The total numlH*r of notes sent out
was about and their total face,
value was abou^$i^00,(HK).
check up in the treasurto’s office
sh<»*us that Greenville county teachers
led'in the amount of notes received.
Trustees Elect
• mlisic
\
{tepai'j>ment,
Laurens Teachers
elected betau.«e the department will be
' discontinued^ Two other teachers,
•Mi.ss Floricfe’^Mbore, in the English de-
he said: was pot'NEW CblTON PLAN SET-UP
Everything In
FLOWERS
1#
.—<4
apn
{Continued from page qne) ^
partment, and Miss Eloi.se Clardy, in i ^Tovernment’s voluntary control 5^”’i CluitOli fToWCP ShOD
K ♦’v'rirht jirimary deprfrtrhent, did not seekj^™^^* with, its bbunty feature, direct i • an
nounced' the,reelection. ^ - " (to the farmer. Mississippi’s extension
been The following is a list of the teach-
jM.urens, June 15
supe.intendent, has
names of 30 teachers who have
reelected to teach in the I.aurens city ers already elected:,
schools next year. A teacher for the^
to the
workers will meet in Jackson tomor
row. Louisiana’s wMll gather in Baton
Rouge Wednesday.
. . Smaller community meetings will
^ara Babb, .Miss Buth^ Riddle, Miss later in the week and within a
.\zile Wofford, Miss Emma Cooper, days' workers will be in the field,
Miss i^ara Eliza Swygert, Miss traveling from farm to farm, bidding
High school — J. K. Herrick, Miss)
Member F. T. D.
Phone 33
, nessing the moon and lighting great
cities bv the movement of the tidejSr
\ ■" ,* .vies McMurray, Miss Annaljel Poag,
f;EARS M iss Beatrice Hellams, k'. C. (^d.shall.
Ever since the gasoline engine was fJames Tipkler,' F. W. Taylor, Miss
ijnvented, about fifty years ago, the | Jacquelyn Douglas, Mrs. l.aura B. i
that, county getting H)>i)niximaiery
$32S.0(H). Spartanburg recei\ed $211.-
40() in notes and Richland 477,TOO.
Jasper and Beaufort, receiving $11,-
079 and $14,930, resptH-tively. in notes
\ve.’'e among the “low" counties inso
far a.' notes were received.
Following is a li.st nf the cnimliH
and the amounts they received in
nf*tes for teachers, according to rec
ords in the office of the state treas-
o
urer: ^
Abbeville. $:)S.001 ; Aiken, $90,170;
Allendale. $21.] 11; Anderson. $1K9.-
1<;7; Bamberg, $30,211; Barnwell, $37,-
K
l!<s;
PRICES GOIN(; I P
It isn’t going to be long before the,
prices of everything will l»e higher.'
Good for producers, not .so good for
consumers, except that more people
will have jobs and so i>e able to be
consumers, when the producers can
get enough for their products to make j 'ngenuity of engineers,
it worth while to jiroduce. ; The ohly practical way seems to be
—t ut ting-down the amouTrl of some imrt of
I problem of how to change the speed
of the drive shaft without changing
the engine speed has been one to
for acreage control with cash and the
promise of highej prices. Similarly
exi>editiou.s plans were afoot in other
states. There were indications that
— Try —
COPELAND CAFE
PLATE LUNCH — 25c
F leming. , . . machinery .for the administration’s
Primary and elementary—Mr.s. B.j designated “cottop week” drive begin-
L. Jones, Miss Alliene F>anks, Mrs. ning June 26 would be well-oiled long ‘
F'lorence B. F'leming, Miss .AllitvGos- before, that date. ] '
riell, Miss F'lora Gwinn, .Miss .Alice The trend of prices in today’.s trad"-i
Harris, Mi.ss Fllizabeth Young, Miss ing indicated mixed sentiment. F'u-
any- i
thing pr.oduced is the popular way j >f‘^^>‘'^hifting mechanism. Nobody is | .Anne Williams, Miss .Mary Belle Babb, tures opened higher on renewed infla-^
nowadays*" to raise prices. The coun-; P^^*^*'^*^* however, with any of Mi.ss Dorothy Moffatt, Miss Jule Chil- tion talk, dipped immediately after j
•,e.s where the cacao tree Vrow.s, systems yet Invented. I have had I dress, Mjss .Macie McCarley, .Miss La--the W'allaee announcement and then |
om which we get cocoa and chocq- three different types of gear-shifts on vinia McCuen, Mi.ss Zoa Pruitt, Miss i advanced smartly as details of the
ate, are trying to get together on a'^ have owned. * . F'rance.s'Knight, Mrs. Jennie h?. Black- program were posted. The October |
>lan to reduce the output so as to get! Now one of the big motor manufac- | Barksdale. contract a<lvanced from 9.20 to 9.47
i better price. ^ 1 tureres announces that he is going to ^ — ;; — aifd the general market showed gains ,
' 4of $1.60 a bale, closing only slightly!
(.under the best on late profit taking. |
I wonder what will happen, how.'bring out a car with an automatic j
ever, when there is a world-wide croi) {gear-shift, which will not require any i
failure and peofile in the cities can’t f skill, effort or attention on the part!
get food enough. It seems to me that! of the driver. I’ll believe it when I see'
the g<ivernrnent.s which are trying to [it. And I hope it’.s true. >
curtail pi bduction 'ought to see to it;
that a year’s, supply of the non-jier-;
WHAT DO
P. S. Jeanes
DO?
, i^pot cotton advanced $1.30 a l>ale to a
basis of 9.18 cents a iiound for mid
dling. ,
INSUI^CE
\V’e offer/expert service
and prote^ion. Agent for
some of tf^ strongest Fire
Insurance } Companies . in
America.
REAL ESTATE
Town jjnd country prop
erty’. Prices attractive.
Clinton Realty &
Insurance Co.
B. H. BOYD. Asent
*
.V
SIBSCRIBE
THE ( HROMCLK
9; Beaufort. $N.93t»; Berkelev. $00..:'^^able food products is stored away i
,( ulhoun.- $15,159; Charle.rton,/»''' ^^e line of trade, for just such l
$J 9.000;, Gheiokcc
$3().9s5; ('he.rterfield, $110,975
endon, $.'«5.(M>3; (Vdlettm, $71,2(1; Dar
lington. $77,071; Dillon, $56,726; t>ar«
Chester. $29.25.5; Edgefield,' $35,683;
Fairfield. $10.1SS; Florence, $183,421;
Georceti'vvn. $4t‘i,51 1 ; Greenville,!
$'!2>,s‘;5; (ireeiiwood, $59,011; Hami)-
t('n. >12.3!(4; Horry. $197,191; Jasper,
$11,013; Ketshau. $S3,5()5; Lancaster,
$73.130; ' r,aur(>ns.
12S; l.vxmgton, $llf»,21
$1^,9 5>, .Marion, $71,7.).); .via'OO.'ro,
$52.5t 7 ; \’ev\berry, $8
$1 19.*<7i’.; (irangebiii g.
an
Clar-1 'oto the
emergency. They might look back ;
and see what .Tos*^pTid1(r|
in
KTHT*
B^ypt.
TERMHES
Little msi'cts that can eheu your
.house up are spreading all o\er the
United States. Many peoide call them
'“white ants” but they are not ants
at all, l)Ut near relations of the eock-
.1 • oach. .Many wooden buildings have
.M(*Gormick.' ’cooipletely destroyed
: .Marib..r()’.!‘’''‘*“'^'‘‘^ burrowing
.»K6; Oeonee, . .. . . 9$
$127,120; Pick-
$KS.0l7* I.t'e,
)y these
the wooden
< ns, $12s.372; Richland, $77,720; .Sa-
I'lda,. $5.'.71 5; Spai’tanburg. $231,UK;
.Sunrler. $7l,5K‘.); (Jnion, $<)7,2I I; W’il-
liam.^buig. $6s.Ut); Vork, $l 1.567. To-
tal. $3.6'..3.331.
Approximately $3>121.000’was for
]!t32-33 state aid and $517,000 the 15
pel cent withheld from 1931-32. Notes
for some $2,000,000 of the 1932-33
funds- and the $517.<MlO deficit from
1‘.i3]-32 will l)e payable by the state
.I line 30. 1931, and the remainder .May
1. I!t35.
' I een
Icreat ures
' !)eams.
i Scientists ha'c discovered that the
tt'iinites make tunnels in damp wood
I in oi lier to grow mushrooms for food!
Termites live under ground, and if
cut off from the ground they soon die
out." The best protection against them
i,s to .see that no timbers come in con
tact with the earth and that all the
beams of—t+ie- house are thtrroiighly
dry.
buildings xviTl
Some day^iir
structed of stee
won't have to
eating bugs.
le con-
and Toncrete and we
worry about house-
j
HAKHE( I E SATI RDAY |
THilMAS
MESSEN(iEK GETS THERE ;
,A Detroit messenger boy has jqstj
■iwn "grt'prf'M a yum iti!
general manager of all the transpor-
old-fashioned barbecue dinner j London. 1
V ill be served at^ l^ake Thomas Sat-, I/u'd Ashfield, who started!
uiday, with .1. F Milam kc-> a iJetroit troJ-1
ley line. Sonjehow American-trained 1
j railroad men do pretty well in Flng-
land. The first subway in London Was
! built by an American named Verkes,
•An
Dinner will be served on the grounds
at twelve o’clock with the'public cor-:
(bally invited. Lake Thomas is located I
mid-way on the tTinton-Laurens high
way.
and the men who operate the greatest;
lOnglisli railway systems are largely}-
,'<)f .American birth. '
^ Flurope is ahead of .America ih;
I many of the older things of civilizu-:
tion, but .Ameiieu is so far ahead of
Luropi* in everything whidi is new in i
the past 15(1 years that it is no won-j
der our technicians am! managers
know'better how to run them.
4-
Lonq drives „
never tire uou ■
out in the biq
new Dodqe Six
with floatinq Power
• With luxurious riding comfort
and the super-smoothness of
Floating Power’ engine mount
ings—you can ride all day long
without tinng . . . The driving is
80 utterly effortless.
Just compare the Big New
Dodge “Six” with any low-pnced
car — and you’ll see how very
much more in performance you
can get for so very little more
in price!
^ 'HIE (in.F STREAM
T'he Gulf Stream is over KIU miles!
closer in shore off the New Lnglamtl
coast than it normally is. That may j
make a lot of differenee in 'the cli-j
male of the .North Atlantic coast, as i
'Veil as (if soine other parts of the!
world.
1 always think of the Gulf. St ream T
us the steam-heating system of west-j
ern Europe. It starts in the boiler j
the shallow Gulf wf- .Mexico, w here ^
the Water is heated clear to the bot-|
tom by the sun. Then it flows through,
the F’lorida straits and up the .Ameri-'
can coast until it . meets the cold
Greenland current and shoots off east-
wardly, to Flurope. j
Ireland and Flnglaiid, 500 miles fai-rf
ther north than .New YOrk, would be
.uninhabitable if it were not for the
waiming effi'et of the Gulf Stream.
past there have been great'
migrations of people because ofi
changes in the ocean currents affect
ing the temperature. It wpubl l»e cui*^
ious if a shift in the Guir'* StivafNf
j should make p»tm and orarq^s
•grow on the .Maine coast and icebergs;
to form in the Thames, ('uruuis, but'
not iinpossilile. I
TIDES V. ,
There is something fa.scinatiiT^ in
the idea of making the moon turn a|
mill wheel. It is so fascinating that
men, since the beginning of time, have
DODGE “6
ff
(V
Ith Flemting Power
engine mountinge
595
AND
DP
DiMige Eight $1115 to FI 595. All
f. o. b. factory, Detroit.
EASTERBY
MOTOR CO., ING.
LAURENS, S. C.
Phone 603
'TrTed to harness the tides.
I On a small scale, in the old days
when money, men and materials were
cheap, there were many little grist-
' mills and sawmills along the New
Flngland ctmst at the mouths of tidal
'creeks. Twice a day the water rose
'and was imi'ounded l)ehind a gated|
'dam. .As the tide went out the water ^
(•‘ffowing over the darn would turn the
■ mill-wheel for five or six hour.s.' (
j When it comes to inipounding the^
'forty-foot tides of the Bay of F’undy,;
■jor/as is proposed in England, to bar-j
fni^s the .mouth of the Severn, it be-j
comes. a problem involving hundreds.
of millions af dollars, orf^’hich tjnej
interest chaiges are so higb J^s to
bring the cost’ of current ieneTated
almost up to the cost of malqng elec
tricity with coal or oil.
Still, when goo<J times are again
fjrmly with us, we shall see m^n h^r-
St’nSl'RlBE TO THE^CHR^FNICLF
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