The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, April 19, 1934, Image 2
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;TOjj:iijiton^h«Hiicje. CIjnton. S. nmredky, Ayril 1^, 1934
mtmireGirl '
Gets First Place
District High School Expression
Contest Held Here
Schools Represented.
Hu^h S. Johnson before a penny can
be collected.
Thi executive order does not/conr
mand that every firm under every
code pay dues, but substantially leaVea
this frovemment-controlled method of
Noted Cartoonist
Taken Bv Death
Contest HeM Here. Eleven
In the District No. 2, high school
league expression contest held in this plan, which shall be put into
ue which may be followed.
Industries, under the order, will not
be required to, but will have the right
to apply to NR.A for approval of a
Creator of “Hambone” Newspa
per Feature Dies In Memphis
After Brilliant Career.
city last Friday evening, Elaine if Johnson “shall find approval
ber, representing the \Miitinire school, j. ^ clau.se is necessary."
won first ’place;^na Lw*-of Lau-j on-payment will constitute viola-
rens, second; and Eunice Harmon of code, subject the firm in-
IDDAYwil
Stoney Hill, tthirdi'
The program and list of entries in
the contest follows:
.\merica—By audience.
Invocation—Rev. H. O. Chambers.
volved to withdrawal of the eagle, de
privation of all other code privileges
and expose it to suit for collection on
the part of the code authority.
The president’s order cleared the
Memphis, Tenn., April 16.—The ca-
[ reer of James P. (Jim) Alley, 49, one
; of the country’s outstanding newspa-
jper cartoonists, was ended by death
today.
! The 'Creator of “Hambone," aged j
Negro whose whimsical “meditations"'dote of the little girl who, \vhen asked
appear in 75 American newspapers.
ness being done giye grounds for re- too seriously. In casual conversations
newed faith, and ?K>t before.
overheard on the streets, and in trains^
I seldom hear the note of ^yety any
more. That may not be true every-
RECOVERY — And Burnt fingers
I may have too high an opinion of j where, but it^ certainly is the case in
the intelligencfiL of the human race, the regions where I go the oftenest.
but it is my belief that it will -be at' It is entirely possible to maintain a
long time before we get i-nto another'gay outlook on life even in the midst
of serious money troubles. It all
conies down to adjusting one's mind
o realities. The outstanding fact that
Special Music—Girls’ chorus, Clin- road for early di-stribution of the new
ton high school. i“code eagle," the same blue eagle
“Crimson Rambler," .Mary Hatton, j symbol .shown in the past, but with a
Pomaria high school. serial number and the name of the
“The Prince Chap,” Elaine Suber, code industry added to record affirma-
Whitmire high .school. {tive compliance with the proper code
by the firm displaying it.
Smith Predicts ~
Better Times
“Patsy,” Eunice Harmon, Stoney
Hill high school.
Special music—Mixed chorus,
ton high school.
“Beau Trevision," Elizabeth Buz-
hardt, Clinton high school.
“Daddy Doc," Le'nora Williams,
Thomwell high school.
“The Valiant,*’ .Edna Lee, t^urens
high school.
Piano solo—Louise Jacobs.
“Daddy Doc.” Mary Barksdale, Gray ^ ^
Court-0«-ings h.gh school. ' Greenville, April 16.—Two hundred
“Bobby .‘'haftoe,” Blanche Culbert- i and fifty members of the Atlantic
son. Woodruff high sch<K)l. | Cotton association brought the first
died after a valiant fight for health.
Hodgkins’ disea.se wa.s assigned as the
cause of death.
Mr. Alley, who became staff car
toonist
such era of free spending as^ we went
through from 1922 to 1929.
, Those of us who laid up nothing but
J debts are certainly going to be more l so inany people never learn is tha^
thrifty^ for a long time to come, even happiness is never, dependent upon
if our incomes are restored to what possessions. They grow solemn 'when
they w,ere. ithey fear deprivation of material
The wrsteful ones will be the young-^ '
sters who will be holding the goodj T^e most consistently gay folk I
in Sunday school what was meant faring know anything about, as a class, are
LI - V . (money to spend will be-a new expert- the Negroes. I have encountered more
rV-.t- 7'"* If ' > business;genuine gayety in the “black belt” of
J.- .*7 ftuan 1 would try to produce and sell I Mississippi or in Harlem than in Park
Years ago I heard the classic anec-
dley, who became staff car- Tf^ [Siiefly merchandise that appeals tolavenue or other abodes of
for The Commercial Appeal bottom of all human re-‘people under thirty. , '
about 16 years ago, was a native
Arkan.sas. • f ^ busintRTTs done on faith; that
A short while ago he planned a tour! that a dollar invested
of the Southwest with Mrs. .\IIey and
Addresses Atlantic Cotton Asso
ciation Convention Meetinj? In
Greenville.
a leave of absence wa.s obtained, but
he suffered a relapse and was taken
4o-a hospi^U^ —
A share of The. Commercial Ap
peal’s credit for receiving the Pulitzer
prize in 1922 was accorded Mr. Alley,
for it was VFor cartoons and news” in
the paper’s Tight against the Ku KIux
Klah that the award was made.
‘Shadowy I.ady of Noel,” Constance j day of their two-day convention to a
. Armfigld. Ni:M:!.M r’y h.gh jtcjhftaL-
“Piano soh>^KIizaHeth Barne.s.
Decision of judges.
In the dx^riamation contests, with
—They turned to ligh^ affa[rs aftei;
hearing addresses during the day by
Senator EHi.son D. Smith, chairman of
ten boy.«5 enterexl, Henry Simpson of 1 the senate'committee on agriculture
'tVoo.lruff, won first' place, Wallace and forestry; A. Frank Lever, director
Laurens To Conduct
here will somehow, sometime, come
back, bringing a few cents with it.
That sort of faith is based on so much
experience that the probabilities can
be reduced. to almost a mathematical
certainty.
Just now wejare. going through a pe-
•dUt.
SE.\SERPENTS — Or Liars
The way these seaserpents keep
popping up all over the w’orld means
either that there are monsters in the
sea of which science knows nothing,
or that the human race has developed
a' new crop of liars.
It is more tlfian fifty years now
riod when almosreverything mu-st sea.serpent was a current
based on faith. There is no experience | I" |
to fall.back on. to calculate the chanc-r^^"' England sea
es of the success of the enormous ef-1town that didn’t have an ‘ oldj
forts of the government to stimulate ^®*d se.aserpent stories to*
the return of prosperity. Humanly ^^‘•dren, and incoming ships often
.speaking, the majority of people havei’^P®^^d having sighted one of the
r^rnffcfl ©ut .scientific men ridiculed
. jail right, but owners of dollars are.*"d sailors got the habit of
still waiting to see the mouthy shutjihgHULto^
laughed .at.
come when the actual figures of busi-| "^he latest seaserpent story is that*
couple of them who have be«i^xeen|:
32-piece Complete Breakfast
^ts, in Johnson Bros. China—
$6.50; 80-piece sets in English
China, $25.00; Orangei Jj^ce
Glasses, set of si.\, $1.00; Baby
Plates in Japanese China, 65c
to $1.50. —
Reduced prices on odd pieces
of Dresden, Bavarian and Havi-
land China.
THE
BOOKSTORE
what do
^he^ town^^T43aurens4a^soon lo^see its j
DO?
Harmon of Prosperity, .second, and P^ddic relation-s for the farm credit
Charle.s -\ul! of P«<maria, third./*
New Blue
Rule Announced
Eagle
Only Firms (ontributinR To Exr
adm ini.St rat ion at Columbia; I..a\vrence
M. Pinckney, South Carolina compli
ance director for South Carolina, and
David F. Griffin of Savannah, Ga^,
president of the as.socaition.
.Senator, Smtih, declaring the nation
is on the threshold of the “greatest
prosperity it has ever known," and
first garden tour, w-hich promi.se.s to L^ (jy L,"S. MeMillian. .frequently in Vancouver Sound havel
be an attracti\e festival occasion. Tlw j among the main features of returned to their old haunts. ^
tour 1.S to be given Friday. April 2m
beginning at 9 a. m., and clo.sing at 5
p. m. with a law
GAYETY — Always Available
entertainment
^ Carden lovers of the city and from!
nf Mr Mrt" suiTounding towns arei One of the things the matter with
Hnm,ekkn aardlrUi are take advantage of the op- |niost of u.s these days U that we are I
liat I tn » nn*»n tn thp various mo Laurens gar-* entirely too solemn ip our outl(x>k*on|
listed to be open to the various mo-. occasion,
torcade parties making the tour I committees are in charge
Some one needs the
article you have to
sell. Advertise it in
The tour i, to be »ta*ea for the!„, j,,
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iiLst coo/iera 1 e, T^ifh God,"
" — 1 iti
Eligible To Display Emblem, u.
, penses of Code .Administration j'lu _ u i i a .u
traced the part he .said cott'nl and the
tariff playeil in bringing on the last
, ' I«p-p. ^ ,
\\ ashington, .\pril 1 J. — Pre.>ldt*nt, a,. ,t .u c- . n" i . te
n t. . J 1 1 1 * .Attacking the Smoot-Hawlev tariff
Roosevelt tolav issued an order under ..,, „ ■ ..x,. v
hill. Smith said We must clean up
wh.ch future ili-plav of the blue eagle - n ~i>~ '
,,, , M ffhis tariff busines.s Ixuore we can
wii! *>e ali«*wt»«i only ttO those firms , .. ..
... . i. . . e I ihave pnisjMnty.
wnich cont*-ir)ute to expenses of code* • •
admini^tratior.. wheiever such O'l^ Data tending to show farm cre<lits
lay- are rquirel. ' I af® ?'»'*• 1 risk.s were presented hy l/C-
To p-ot»V emplt.ve-s from racket- ®f.the NHA com-
e.-i ing hy riranizer- of ind ;-trial, hoanl in .'^outh Carolina was
g.oups. the pre-i<ler.t ri-quirefl that described hy Pinckney,
all oofle au*hor;*y rates of a-sess-, .At the afternoon sessi(>n, (Iriffin
ments an.) budgets of expenditures, was pr«-^»*nte<l with a silver service in
)K*nefit of a fund with which the .Muidc
club has purchased a grand piano for
the city’s community hall. Tickets will
he on sal^ at 50 cents for the tour, and
each holder of a ticket will he entitled
to admi.s.«ion to the festive party cli
maxing t.he event of the day.
.At the lawn party on the spaciou.s
and attractive yard at IhMCfiPclsmd
residence, a pr.ograin of .-’tring-time
ilances. inter,Yp<‘rsed by a string en-
semhle com|ia.«f»l of a group of girls
from Greenville Woman's college, and
the day.
life. We are taking economic pnfssurei The Chronicle Want
Ad column. ~—
of SrikiCKIBE TD THE CHRONICLE
“The Paper Everybody Reads"
he .*»|>pr..ve
.Administrator recognition of hi'* activities as presi-
dent of the a soc,!a; on.
The convention will adjourn tomor
row after a president and four direc
tors art' elected and members have
taken part in a har)>ecue luncheon at
( hick Springs.
ANNOrNCEMENT
.Mi.ss F^ranres Lindsave. with
J. ^ •
\elens Flducational Beauty Ser
vice. of Kansas Citj, .Mo., will /
be in our .^hoppe Monday. Tues
day and W'ednesdaj, giving
comolimentary ‘ skin analysis
and facials. Also explaining the
care of the skin.
Call F'or Appointment. .
.MARY .MrSGROVE
BEAITY SHOPPE
NEUTRALIZED FERTILIZERS
AM. OCR FERTII.IZERS ARE NEI TRAI.IZED WITH
DOI.O.MITIC M.MESTOXE TO PREVENT SOU. .ACID
ITY. INSIST ON THE BEST AND SAVE YOUR SOU..
CLINTON COTTON OIL CO.
Phone b2 — \Ve Deliver
NOTICE
The Trust Department of The Com
mercial Bank Will Discontinue
at
12 O’clock Noon, Saturday,
2L1934
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ALL DEPOSITORS IN THIS bEPARTMErh*
ARE HEREBY GIVEN NOTICE.
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The trust department will be kept open,
however, for sufficient time for checks out
standing for collection or payment to'be clear
ed, not later, however, than May 21, 1934.
For the convenience of depositors in the
trust department of the Commercial Bank, The
Commercial Cash Depository/Will open Mon
day morning; April 23rd, at 9 o’clock, aifd will
be ready to receive deposits and will accept
transfer of accounts from the trust department
of the Commercial Bank for all who so desire.
^ A
Tranter of aMounts-cannot be made with
out writtoi authority of the depositors.
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H. D. HENRYv Conservator
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Announcing The Opening
Monday Morning,
23. 1934
of the
(In the Former Commercial Bank Ia>cation)
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This Depository, authorized under the laws
of South Carolina, is prep2u*ed to serve the pub
lic in handling, deposits, checks, exchange, and
give general banking* sendee with the excep
tion of making loans.
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WE INVITE YOUR BUSINESS
Conmercial Depositoii
OFFICERS: \
Jack H. Y'oung, Prcsideiit H. D. Henry* Vice-President and Cashier
F. M. Boland, Secretar>’-Treasiirer
DIRECTORS:
Jack H. Young
W. W. Harris
O. I. Sheely
F. M. Boland
,C. W. Stone
S. G* Dillard
H. D, Henry
John T. Young
W. D. Copeland
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