The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, March 14, 1935, Image 8
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Iwdianto Heajf
talk By Mah<^
4»rMiiville Visitor Makes PnKti-
cal Address Here ^ pa “ Bfer-
chants and Their Problems.
j
Cotton .
ix 'Launcl^ Its 1935 Re
daction Program. LoCi|l Cdnt*
'mitteemen ^Aiding In Woric.
Committeemen, appointed to secttre
aifikataKs to the 1935 cotton acreage
redaction program in lAurens county
began their work Monday morning to
be completed this week. '
Fanners wKo were not included in a
▼olunteer contract last year-may line
np in this year’s program, and thoselduced Mr. Mahon and expressed
who signed contracts in 1934 must j pleasure of the organization in having
exwute papers again this year. An j him as its guest and speaker for the
opportunity also will be given signers)special occasion
business than jCOiirteoaa, service, bloth
on the part of employer and Ctraploy-
mnoK cBflrotrtdLi, cunros. a c
Lydia
ees. Too mahy
bhelr own business,. he said; they ^n’t
i|dopt "and follow business-^ke meth^
.InlLlthe opinion of Mu Mahon the
great tro^le with business^ today ja
f^ar; m^^anta and^ thd bimnc^
world are afraid, and this most ^
overcome. If we lose faith in the fu;
ture, he said, thert will be no futmre.
He predict^ that business will be
better during the next seyerail years
for th^ me^Wnt who goes after it,
but the man who sits down and waits
for it to come, the mere’ store-keeper,
so to speak, will never get it and ifl-
timately will face failure. Merchants
each conimunity, he said, must
ret t
ijita
merchants don’t know i
A group of local merchants gather*
e^ at the city hall Monday night to
hear a talk by Gi Heyward Mahon,
Jr., / prominent Greenville merchant
and civic leader.
The meeting -was presided over by
J. J. 'Cornwell, president, who intro-
the
Washington, March ^ 12.—The NR A
/^oday, anhouxK^ it Jias deprived the
L]rdia Cotton If ills of (Hinton, 3.'C.,
of the right to uae the Blue Eagle*
Failure of the company to reinstate
16 union woriters after the general
strike which end^ last September 22
was given as tl^ reason for the NRA
action. ' / *
HONOR ROLL fOR
WADSWORTH
SCHOOL
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to denote to whom the rental checks \ Mr. Mahon made a heart-to-heart i maxe up tneir minus inai. they are
shall be paid.: talk on present problems confronting after business with improved
Each township unit in the county'merchants and stated that, co-oper- |7<^thod.s enthus^sm^,and ^etermina-
is.acn townsnip una in me needed todav aSh^mn, and it is oijly in pursui -
has head4tuarters at which point con-lation among, them is n^ded today “ I success mav be
tracts are supplied by the committee-among’-any other group of'
men assisting in .the filling out of the 'u.siness men. There is still a lot o
forms. Mr. Cannon, the county agent,->Jnethical businesa. going on, he said,
has called attention to the fact that ! and merchants nmi to leani that they
the production this year is base<l on -must be fair with those from whom
25 to 35 per cent of base acres. jthey buy; with^'^ose whom they sell.
The following headquarters' w^m^ to their competitors and to their em
ployees. All merchants are entitled to
a fair profit, the speaker asserted, but
aet up for this week with the number
of days committeemen will be on hand
to assist farmers when signing con
tracts:
Jacks town.ship: Renno, March 11
and 12, Tan M. Ray, chairman.
Hunter township: Clinton, Mnsrgrove
atreert, March 11, 12 and 13, Hugh B.
Workman, chairman.
Cross Hill township: Sam Leaman’s
store. Cross Hill, March 11 and 12,
Sam Leaman, chairman.
Scuffletown: Sandy Springs school-,
liouse, March 11 and 12, Bryan Goodr
♦Win, chairman.
Laurens township: Lower floor
1 courthouse, March 11, 12, 13 and 14,
J. H. Power, chairman.
Waterloo:‘Center Point .schoolhouse,
March IL 12 and 13, J. 0. Stribling,
chairman. .1 '
Youngs: Robert > Harris’ store,
March .11, 12 and 13, C. R. Bobo,
^chairman. ? "
Dials town.ship: Abercrombie-OW-
ings store. Gray Court, March 11, 12,
13 and*14, Fre<l S. Stoddard, chair
man. I
Sullivan townshij): Hickory Tavern
pchogl, March 11,.12 and 1.3, H. O. Ab
ercrombie, oliairman.
and it is oijly in pursuing such a
policy that success may be expected.
How you play the game as me^ants
is the thing that counts, he said in
conclusion. . ,r •
' Mr. Mahon, when asked what hijii
position was on the merchants’^ sales
iax, replied that he is opposed to such)
a measure, that it’s psyshologjcal ef?
feet with the buying public would bel
First grade: Johpita Horton, Bruna
Jean Williams.
Third grade: !jim Crawford.
Fourth grade: Omega Monroe. ^
Seventh grade: IdapCrawfofd, Mar
tha .'Young.
OH! PROFESSOR
March 22/
it never pays to try to take advantage | bad, and urged that merchants of the
of your competitor. We need to take
stock, he said, both as merchants,' and
as individuals.
Continuing, Mr. Mahon said that
the impression the merchant makes
with his customers is extremely im
portant, and that there is nothing
more valuable in the conduct of a
state rally together in opposition to
Auch a tax if it is proposed again at
the present session of the legislature.
Mr. Mahon’s practical and helpful
talk was enjoye^d by those presentland
he was heartily thankod‘ for coming
down from Greenville as the organi
zation’s guest speaker at this meeting.
Repair^ iind Parts
Radios y Ranges - Irons
l^idio Exchange
Phone 36
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I. . . Successful aid In
PREVENlINC Cf Ids
At tW first'natal Initatioii M aniHle,
apply Vida Va^wHiol -^jqti a fiiwdro^
Used in time, H helps to aspid many
colda entirely. (Two aiaes: 30^, SOfi.)
I LET OUR TELEPHONE BE YOUR
^ J CLOTHESLINE
Choose from our many services, the way you wish your
clothes returned to you,. . . and don’t spend any weary
’ f hoyrs over your wash tub or machine!
You’)T enjoy sending your clothes here—^because they
always come back to you just the way you want them
. and much cleaner than you could ever get them by
washing at home! . ' - '
, 10 Years-Ago
Items of Interest From The Chronicle
.L\ of March 12, I9'2.">
The F. Louise Mayes. Memorial
Baby cottage' *t the Thornwell or
phanage will l)e formally opened next
Monday afternoon.
A series of evangelistic se^ices
will begin at Broad Methodist
church on .April 20th, witl>/the*Rev.
T. G. Heihert of Siin^m-, as the
leader.
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The__foTlowing ^-fiupils. are on the
first grade honor roll for February:
Lucile Wilsop; Walter Todtl, John \V.
^\T'inney, Wiiiihm Byars, Harold Car-
' t^r, Kijzii^l)eth Bragg, l^loise (’row,
Aha<^t4je Kiee, Bertha Smith; Olive
DeYotmg, V
Miss Lilia Todd and Walter A. John
son of this city, were unite</ in mar
riage Wednesday at nomi at the Todd
home in Laureft^. _
Erskine Chib At
- Cross Hill Friday
’The Erskine college orchestra and
glee club, under the direction
Vance Butts^ will give a concert in
the Cross Hill school amliforium Fri
day evening, March 15, at. 8 o’clock.
Admission 'will lie ten and fifteen
cents. "T -
The personnel of the orchestra in
cludes thirty members and is recog
nized a.s one of the best college or
chestras in the .state.
A varied and pleasing program will
be rendered. The public is cordially
invitee!^
SCRIBE TO THE CHRONICLE
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TIRED, ACHY-
***11111)091 OIT?”
__GetJfUd Poisons Thai
Make Yon ni
1 9 t eonitaat llsekaeha-keeping
yon gdeenbleT Do yon luffer
bornlng, eeenty or tyi freqaent
mrlnatSon; etUcke of dlxzinan^
rheomnUo pebtt, iwoUen feet and
aakleeT Do yon feel tired, ndrrone
—all nnstnuitr .
TlkSn live come thonght to your
kldneya. Be enre they function
pr^erly, tor functional kidney die-
lOrder permits poisons to stay in
<the blood and upset the whol^ sye-
Uee Doaa’t Pills. Doan's are for
the kldn^s only. They help the
kidneys cleanse the Uood of health-
destroying poisonous waste. Doan’#
PQU are need and recommended
the worid over. Get them from any
drngiist
SOU’S PILit
COLDS
urn
FEVER
lElSsIiES
OTTONRUSTi. easy to
^ , .^^V>'event if you use suffi-
cient NV POTASH. Here is a strik
ing exampler-The~rustyc^^
right above received 400 pounds of
3% potash fertilizer per acre at
planting and 100 pounds of nitrogen
top-dressing. The healthy cotton at
left was given the same treatment
plus a heavy application of NV Mu
riate of Potash. The cotton without
the extra NV POTASH yielded
only 7^70 pounds of seed cotton per acre.
The colton with the extra NV POTASH
yielded 1,640 pounds of seed cotton per
acre. _
This photograph was taken on Septem--
ber 23rd. There 4^|i8 no RUST where the
extra NV POTASH was used. The cot
ton set i^fine crop and stayed green and ^
healthy and hard at work until, its bolls
were full and mature. Lintswaa^wiform
and high quality. /, '
.The potash-starved cotton was robbed
of most of its'crhp~by RUST. It shed its
leaves early and its bolls were small,
poorly filled out and hard to pick. It had
to quit on the job because it did not have
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sufficient .available potash to make a full
crop.
Thousands of tests conducted by lead
ing agricultural authorities have proven
that RUST is the result of ektreme potash
starvation. The above picture shows ex--
treme RUST damage. If you saw liaht
RUST in your cotton last season, such as
a slight bronzii^ of the leaves and abnor
mal shedding, this means that a valuable
share of your cr<^ was lost due to potash
starvation. <■ r- _ ^ -— -
Ask your fertilizer man about ffie very
low extra cost of a fertilizer well-baU
anoed with plenty of NV POTASH.
Cotton never Rusts
WHEN WELL-FED WITH
M POTASH
'< I « »»
Typkmi Mts from tks ttsa
pietsakws. Tksmmffsrmkttk
quality Out ftum Iks pstusk
plot msusursd m fmtt ImI
sskHsliutfirumlStsstksrpht
msmursJ'ssvem sijkAs mud
um Ml sudfunm usUk muss
hug mud sums skurl fikrss.
How to^iweht H U ST
PREVENT RUST by using'extra NV POTASH
either in your fertilia^r at planting or WiX toi^-dress-
ing whdn you chc^ out. If Rust has b^ten very severe'
it will pay you to use both methods. %
If you have been using a fertilizer containing only
3 oi:4% p(Rash, select and use a fertilizer containing
8 to 10% |H)tash. You wiH be surprised at the small
extra cpstj^ Mie higher-potash fertili^r. ~
When yoiLchop out, top-drets with 200 pminds of
NV High-grade 20% KatmCo^r 100 pounds of N V
50% Muriate 6f Potash per acre. .' -
T^s extm N V POTASH not only prevents Rust,
Yt also helps Goiftrol Wilt and produces vigorous,
h^thy plants, with less shedding, larger bolls, that
are casierto mck, and Better yields of uniform, high-
quality lint. NV POTASH PAYS!
When you buy straight potash or potash in mixed
fertilixer, it pays to make sure you get genuine HV
POTASH--rt# same potash that has helped South
ern farn^ers to produce bigger yields of better Quality
crops fPr more than fifty years. ■ .
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A
UNIT li. Ik; M um/uu.mmKqK
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