University of South Carolina Libraries
rAGB locwr -r-"' V, i\}£i .CHic6Nlbj^E, CLi^ION/tt. C. V*' t ' .1,^ \. / ^ SALARIED— AUUtj • , ) , A great deal of publicity is.being Much To Do, Pioneers 'Mixed up with a great deal of jus* CiJPiaUe complaint about existing so cial conditions thoiw is a certain pro* potion of plain oHinary* self-pity. It expresses itself after this fashion: *‘You who are older have grabbed all the opportiuiities. You had it easy in your day. If you couldn’t find a job, or if you didn’t like your job, there was always the land. Yoti could pio- ^ notice OF SALE r ^ . The State Cf South Carolina, ’ <8boaty of Laurens. / In Court of Common Pleas ^ The Federal Land Bank of Cohm- fiia; Plaintiff, vs Alex O’Danifi and ^lard Jones, Defendants. ^ Pursnant to » Decree of the Court in the above atahed'eaee, I will sell at IMblic outeiy to the highest ladder ^tiber in or in front of the Court Bouse, at Laureoii C. H., S. C., on iSalMday in January, 1939 next, being Monday the 6th day of the month, ^luring the legal hours for such -salee, the following described property, to wit:’ , ' All that certain piece, parcel or tract of land containing eighty-five and four tenths. (86 4-10) acres, m^ or less, situate, lying and being on the Buncombe Road about one and one-half miles from the town of Ren- no, Jacks Township, in Laurens county, State of South Carolina, hav- ^ V u tbe ability to manage the affairs ing such shape, metes, courses an<l . u disUnces as will more fully appear jg able^to Thousa^s of work- braska :sod-hut pioneer. bj ■>"<' the same time' Merely to eeeape sUrvation, Old itb^-eop; .„d on the west by other SnimW 18 IsTnd 21 loT idlich earn profits for the^ cspital invested Jules was dnven from one homestead jD. ,and W. A. Henry,,65 September 18, and 21, business, it wouldn’t seem un- to another a half-dozen moves Sand, thereont Above described lot is t fair to me if he wore paid, say at the storm and drought destroyed his, i^^jown as the L. J. Moore Home Place rate of $1 a year for each employee, crops; his cattle died from lack ofi^.^jj addition of thirty (30) feel I know dozens of ca.ses, though, where food or water, or were frozen to d«afh by H D Henry and the exe’eutive head of a big organi-jin the terrific shelterless winters He | y^j^ zation gets nothing like that. One of! had to fight off thieves and wolves,amount taken off his griven'these days to the salaries re-jneer. oeived by the heads of big business j Seen through the rosy hake of lemo enterprises. To superficial thinkers itl^io"* the pioneers appear as a com- seems unfair that one man should re ceive for his services so much more than most men do. It depends, of course, on the value of the service rendered, tf one man pany of hardy young men and women, with their attics full of ham and po- tateesi and their cellars full of bard cid^f—dancing^ bam dances and hold ing husking bees. But what were the facts? You get a glimpse of them in a recent biography called ‘K)ld Jules’’ by Mari Sandox, daughter of a Nje- NOTICE OF SAUV The State of South C^arc^ina, C^ounty of Laurena. In Court of Ckimmon Pleai. L. M. Wilson, Plaintiff, vs Gleor^ P. Moore, :^ndiviklually, and A<bninis-„ trator, et al, DefendantaV Pursuant to' Sj Decree <rf t!be~ Court in the'above stated case, I will sell at public outery to the higheat bidder, either is or in front of the Court House, at Laums C. H., S. C., on Saleedhty in January, 1989, next, be ing Monday, the 6tb day of the month, daring the legal -bouie for auelTiaales, the following described property, to wit: i “All that piece, parcel or lot of land, lying, being and situate in the Town of CHinton, (bounty of Laurem, State of South Carolina, containing a fraction, of an acre» and bounded on the north by a new street, running in a westerly direction intersecting BiK>ad street, 220 feet thereon; on the east by Murgrrove street, 65 feet thei-eon; on the, south by lands of more 'than bno school district are re quested to call ^or receipts in each of the several achbol districte in which the property is located. Tips is impor tant, as additional cost and penalty may be attached. ^ All abie-o^eci ’male citizens /tie- tween the aigas of twenty-o^ (21) and sixty (60 years of agawhe liable to pay a poll tax of fl.OO. Commuta tion Road Tbx 11.60 in l^n of rua J duty. AH ^|>le4>odied men between the ages of 21 and 26 are liable to road duty except those in military service, >>acbooU trustees,* school teach ers, ministers and students. Dog Owners! your dog is on the tax books. You are entitled to abatement j of dog tax by reason of rabies treat-; ment But, it is necessary that you' present inoculation certificate to the county treasurer at the time of tax payment or before. Unless present ed then, tax cannot be abated.' THUBSPAY, JANUARY 2, 1936 si" wi Proper atlentjon will be griven thoso who wish to pay their taxes through' the mail by ,check, money order, etc:,., giving name of township and niii^:d>er of school district. Persons sending in lists of names to be taken off are requested to sei^ i them early and give the townsh^ j school district of each as the Trou- orer is very busy dtiring the month of December. / ' D. ROY »MW80N^ tf * " County Treas. f jH. D. and W. ,. A. Henry, 220 feet 666 Liquid - Tableta - Salve - Nos# Drop#: COLDS had " FEVER first day HEADACHI8 in 30 minutea 1 \' I C I i.-'rv said plat is recorded in thq Clerk of Court for Laurens County in plat book 1 at page 52, and 63; being bounded on the North by lands of Wess Holling and McCrary lands; on the East by lands of Mrs. Mattie S. Glmn, from which it is sep arated by the McCrary road; on the South by lands of Thomas P. Wier, from which it is separated by the Mc Crary road and on the Southwest by lands of Ralston S. Wier, from which it is separated by the Bun combe road. This being known as tract No. 2 of the lands of the estate of Thomas W. Wiei;, deceased, and be ing-the same ti'act of land hetetofore * convoyed to the' .said George R. Wier by, C. A. Power, Clerk of Court for Lauivns County, by his deed dated 10th November, IDKi, and duly re corded in the office of the Clerk of Court for Laurens (’ounty in Iwok of .deed.s 31, at page 101. Terms of Sale: Ca.sh. The success ful bidder, other than the Plaintiff herein, imme<liately upon the conclu sion ofThe bidding, shall deposit with the Clerk of Court the sum of five per centum (5''/c) of the amount of his bid as a guarantee of his good ' faith ip-the bidding. The same to be applied to the purchase price upon his complying with the tenns of sale, otherwLse to be paid to Plaintiff for credit on the indebtetlness. In the event the sticces-sful bidder should fail to make such deposit, or should fail to comply with the terms of sale, the •aid lands .shall be re-.sold on the same or some subsequent Salesday on the aame terms, at risk of the defaulting porchaser. The purcha.ser to pay for papers, stamps and' lecordiitg. THOS. W. BENNETT, ■ C. C. C. P, G. S. Dated Dec. 17, 1935—l-2-3teb. IF IT’& A MAGAZINE YOU WANT, — See — ’ ^=^~JAMES W. CALD^ELL Call 38 PAYS YOU BIG DIVIDEKDS my friends draws a salary of 8100,000 a year—but his company employs 300,000 persons all the year ’round. The scarcest - commodity in the and labor from star-light in the'^jU morijing to moonlight at night.' Four wives wore themselves out trying to carry on with him; he could hardly world is administrative ability. With- have been punishe<l more by sentence out it, no great enterprise could flour ish, and the man who h>s it is worth’ whatever he costs. WORKERS—Who Rise Few wage-earnei's work a^ hard as their bosses do. That is my -considered belief, ba.scd on many years of ex perience and observation. I have seen so many wage-earners rise through as a galley slave. His case is not exceptional. -Out of the multitudes who .started Wekt with the forty-niners, only a few arrived; thousands travelled only a little way before the privations drove th?m back. The western frontiers are gone, it ■ is true, but if any boy or girl has in him the courage of the pioneers he will not be downed in this age, any thy rarrks-to high executive posts tiiat . . I began, years ago, to ask how* they would have M*en a hun- gained advapeement. ^^urage is timele.ss; In every ca.se the answer was to unfortunatidy, is self-pity, the general effect* that they always j ^ ^ =— did a little more than they were juiid for, liktKl their jobs and regarded the coinjiany’-s inteiysts as their own. While most of them did not say .so, it was always clear that these men who started life as manual workers had highei^ intelUgence and better control of their appetites than their fellow-workers. And they had ambition. There isn’t any other .route by which men ris<Lto the high places ip our industrial %stem, but the route of hard'w’ork plus - intelligence, plus ambition. And they don’t stay long in the high places unless they also have the priceless element oX character. Too .Many Babies Means War On the .subj.t*ct of peace I am a middle-of-the-roader, and am accord ingly shot at from both sides. My pre paredness friends criticize me as a street pui-po.ses.’’ Terms of Sale: The successful bid der, other than the Plaintiff herein, immediately upon the conclusion of the bidding, shall deposit with the Gleik of Couit the sum of four (4%) pcrcentum of the amount of Jris bid as a guarantee of hi.s good "faith in the bidding. The same te be applied to the purchase price upon his com plying with the. tj^rins of sale, other wise to be paitl to Plaintiff for cred-1 Tt'on the ii^btedness. In the event! the successful bidder should fail toj make .such deposit, or should fail to j comply with the terms of sale, the' same or some subsequent. Salesday said lands shall be rc-.sold on the on the .same terms, at risk of the de faulting ])urchaser. The purchaser to. pay for papers, stamps and recording. • THOS. W. BENNETT, *C. C. C. P. & G. S. Dated Dec. 18, 1935.--l-2-3tcb. r £ Try Your Home Town I'irst Dresenteri !'\ The tdianiher of Commerce contributor to peace movements; myj peace-at-any-price friends rtjgard .me | COUNTY- TREASURER’S NOTICE Huspicio^usly because I advice a\strong national defense, \ | books of the County Treasurer The horror.s of war ought to open for the collection of taxns wIgES—The'Guage I talked not long ago with a friend, wlio heads a great nation-wide cor poration about wages. “What we try to do is to put ^vory dollar that is possible to put into ev ery, employee’s pay-envelope,’’ he said. - 1 know that is true of mo.st grea? bus iness concerns, in spite of the belief to pc constantly advertised like the hor- roi's of highway accidents. We-need to be innoculated continuously also with the serum of caution against foreign pixipaganda. Thus far 1 go along with the peace workers. But when they talk about the_cau8- es of war they frequently talk non sense. The World war, in its effects, is still going on; the depressions of 1919-23 and of 1929-36 are as much a part of it as was the battle of the Argonne. Is anybody so child-like as to think that big business is as well off today as it would’ have been if peace had leigncd ^ince 1914 ? The real causes ’of war are not! bankers or hattle-.ship, builders the fiscal year, 1935, at the iVeasarer’s office from Septeml)er l^to December 81, 1936. After , De- c^rnwr 31' one per cent will be added. After January 31, two per cent will be added, ai^ after February 29Th, seven per cent MU be added until the 15th day of Mar^ 1936, when the books will be closed. .\11 persons owning property in H. D. HENRY -o ' ^ 1898-1935 F. M. BOLAND , « w H.D. HENRY & COMPANY INSURANCE STOCKS — BONDS — REAL ESTATE - A LOANS NEGOTIATED j Telephone 121 _ . . .1 ■" '' ' .n„, RUBBER STAMPS Any kind, to fit any business. 24-hour’ser* vice. Reasonable prices. Telephone 74. The Chronicle Publishing Co. Printers • Stationers which many workers have that the ..fl'orl is always to pay thorn as little . .’.Ki,. . < are hahies. Havelock/Ellis pointed this The man who is content tn do asl^'.'t [fT '", v'" little U».he has to, to Ret by, is usual-1T'oi>5:The htench. With Iheir^ ‘jly the,one who grumbles about ;wages. Hut the National Industrial [Conference board reported the other (day on 2,400 b\isim>ss establishments, [employing 4‘/^j million workers, all of which offer their employees'opportu nities to earn higher wages. More than half of them pay on the basis uL-wofk done—so much for each item turnetl out. That makes it worth while for the worker to be industyiows. A third of thest* companies have premi ums and bonus payment systems; many aiv on a profit-sharing ba.sis. •'The bigger the concern, the more it is intereste^d in jiutting as much into every w;drker’s envelope as possible. INSURANCE We offer expert service and protection. Agent for some of the .strongest Fire Insurance Companies in America. REAL ESTATE Town and country .prop^ erty. Prices attractive. . Clinton Realty & fauitfanee Co. B. H. BOYD, AK«nt hisjinK hlfth-rate, did not want war; the English people did not want it. The German jx'ople did not want it. But in forty-four yeai's the Germans had increased from forty millions to eighty millions — there was the war pressurt*. Today. Soviet Russia has about sixty people for each acre of tillable land; the United States has a hundred. But Italy has more than four hundrcMl; Germany more than five hundred, ^nd Japan more than Jwenty-four hundred! The nations with'declining birth rates cry, “IJsace,’’ The crowded na- tion.s t^lk about their “destiny.’’ The rulers who make war ai'e.not rulers really; they are distracted nui-ses, at their wits end bqciu.se* of too many babies. Ellison’s Moves To Broad Street The well-known Ellison firm moved yesterday from its former location on Musgrove street into the store build- Isute ami lOtal-anJ out of tho >0- in* a'ljoininit Younit’!. Pharmacy. Mr. 'mnininlt 13 cents raw materials have i and > force are qmte busy |to be paid for, lute,ost on borrowed *■'»"*'? jn the.r new home Icapital-bomls- has to he paid, man-i additional floor aKOmant compensated,“Sid the stock-’ “"d be better prepared to scree t-wib. - —tbe-pubhe. He timtes bis friends and / PROFITS — Small I havjC been studying some statis tics—^ accurate aij^any statistics can t,be—^ the division of the incomes of indptrial concerns between labor, i management and capital. Roughly, it ! sterns that out of every'dollar taken j4n, for the finished product, 65 cents [goes'into the*^ pbekefs of labtir, about i 20 cents is paid out in taxes—federal. Gash Books - Ledgers - Journals J I Day Books We Have^ Complete Line All Sizes lor the Office -bqlde+s get the rest7lT any The average profit to .stockholders run.s around 2 per cent on the volume of busihe-ssnlohe—in some businesses, less. . - , THE HAPPY MEDIUM Many persons are either— Over-iimared or ^ ’ Under-insured Our experience can aid you in finding the happy medium where your insur ance is just right. . CwMult us today. No obli- gatien, of course. H. D. Hmry ^ customers to call for new location. a visit at his . CAPITAL—The System \V[hen I h'ear people talk about the '“capitalistic” system” as if it were [something to be abolished as speedily as possible, I wonder what they would! i do under any other system. For no- j where in the eivilized world, outside I of Rasslav i.C thei'e anything but the 'capitalistic .system. . i: For instance, every farmer is a capitalist. So is every storekeeper, 'every man. who owns his own barlier [shop, garage or any other kind of j“service” businesa._j.You are jtalist if you have a savings bank de- . posit or a life insurance policy. Those two latter classeB take in nearly half of all the p^ple in the country. Where does the capital come from! to finance big enterprises? .Mainly! frem you and wow^nr mmfieyi paitfrin Refreshing Rdief WImb You Mood u Uulhro of the nftwiling Mllaf R hai iwouflR than, IhoaMBda of mon and wacMQ, who oould afford nuieh BBoro axpanalvt laxattvw. vm Blaolt* Drauflik whMi naaded. tt la vary aeonomtcal, purdly vagatabla, highly affeoUve. . . Ur. J. Lattar Hohataon, wan known hardwara dealer at llar- v».. "1 MTUtolr rrtfaititr'* aiMk-Orsucht m s aMtalM. I h«T« U ter MutlMUoa •as th* StiU tMllnf■; thsk toUMr. m4 hmf feuaa U Ytrr •sUsmtery.'* BLACK-D RAUGHT A well-equipped office is essential in the con duct of every busidess— itsaves time'and worry V- . — and makes for efficiency. Here you will find everything you need in Office Supplies for the New Year. / /. / NOTICE . The city water supply will be cut off tonight (Thursday), from 11 p. m. to 4 a. m., while to the savings Ooiks and the life in- wranca cumpanlei, walces a big pool oi money which goes into the hoods and shares of all. sorts of money-mak ing eoterprises. Tepairu are t water-main o»^ 9n a / PUBLISHERS - PRINTERS - STATIONERS Tdlqphone No. 74 ■7" Clinton, S.C Watw & light Dept! B; ft Aofftlck Sd|>t. / i. \