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/ mUBSDAY, FEBRUARY 13. 19^6 ■'t THE CUNTON CHRONia.E. CLWTON. S. C. • . M / I . . ^ -! ♦ PAGE FIV& 7t BAD WEATHiatr-TRADE QtnET.' I ' • , We AT METHODIST CHURCH / Sufidty" m '“the pAstor of North Broad Street Methodist church, D j 1 Dr. J. C. Roper, will use as his theme, money. Iwady-ton evening ^ f^ersonal /Mention f Help Sidneys A ^poorlr foBctioDii ' BW _ M Kidnm and wiKMr OMiM jrou aolfw from Oatdac Wear, Shoes, Hats-^in fact, ev- ODT item in oar store-greatly re duced in price. Come and save. DANZIGER’S he will speak on “Danger in Dallying and Delay.” On Monday evening at 7:30 in the church, the board of stewardbs will hold their regular February meeting. Mrs.' James Davis of ColumbiajLander college,'Greenwood, spent the. week-end with her parents, Mr. and' spent a few days, last week here with * ^ RWnmatla StUhMH, Baraias. Smartiac, * AoMltr tha ruaraataail Doeta^«PraaeriptioaCyatas(Saia-*az) Cymtmx 2?“— MAIH AHO 9CALP JAmMtiOIL Ml la W. a. A. ■Tha Aattwpdla taalp aicitt. mi nwoui aianommimi .#..7 /■ SUBSCRIBE TO THE'CHRONICLE \The Paper- Everybody ReiMU** Mrs. W. M. Chaney and friends. Miss Mjldred/Whitten, student at, Anderson Junior College, spent , the week-end with her parents, Dr. and Mrs. B. 0. Whitten, and attended tKe ter, Mrs. B.' W, Gibson in Inman. Mrs. T. J. Leake. | Friends of Mrs. J. H. Hipp, will bef sorry to know that ihe is ill with,^^ pneumonia at the homr'of her daugh- Beware The Ct^h Pan-Hellenic dances. • Fwends of Dr. T. J. Peake w’ill be glad to know that he is able to be out Gene Knox spent the w’eek-end in' Greenville with friends. i Miss Katherine Graham, student From a common cold A Vo mttter how many medicines you have tiliM for your cough, chest cold qr^hggBCBUI Irntatinn.yoaican ^ je«^ ttH now wim Creomujsloa. Creomul- flion not only Contains the soothing elements common to many remedies; such as. Syrup of White Pine Com pound with Tar, fluid extract of Licorice Root, fluid extract of Ipecac for its powerful phlegm loosening effect, fluid extract of Cascara for its mild laxative effect and, most impor tant of^all, Beechwood Creosote is perfectly blended with aU of these to reach the source of the trouble from the inside. Creomulsion 'can be. taken fre- That Himgs ^ <mently.,atid continuously by adults and children with remarkable results. Thousands of doctors use Creomul- slon in their own families as well as in their practice knowing how Creo mulsion aids nature to soothe the In flamed membranes and heal the irri tated tissues as the Herm-ladefl phlegm is loosened and expeUed. Dniggists also know-tho effectiveness of Beech- wood Creosote and ttiey ra^ Crro- mulsion top for coughs because you get a real dose of Creosote in Creo- inul^n, emulsified so that it is palat able, digestible and potent for going to the very seat of the trouble. Creomulsion ls^ guaranteed satis factory In the treatment of, coughs, chest colds and bronchial irritations and especially those stubborn ones that start T^dth a common cold .and hana on for dreadful dasrs and nights thereafter. Even if other remedies have failed, your druggist Is authorized to guarantee Creomulsion and to refund every cent again, after having been confined to I at Converse college, was at home for his home with “flu.” jthe week-6nd with her parents, Prof. I Miss Mary Alice Fowler of Rock and Mrs. Bothwell Graham, and at-’ Hill, spent the week-end w:ith Mr. tended the Pan-Hellenic festivities, j and Mrs. Frank Fowler and attended Mr. and Mrsi, Mike Caskey and lit-, the Pan-Hellenic dances. itle son of Seneca, spent the w-eek-endi Miss Ella .'Vdair, Dillard and Floyd'with Mrs. Caskey’s parents, Mr. and, Adair spent Thursday in CoJumbiaC Mrs. T. L. Cooper. Friends of Mrs. Arthur Howard will be sorry to know that she is a pa tient in the Greenwood City hospital. H. D. HENRY 1898-1935 F. M. BOLAND I H. D>HENRY & COMPANY INSURANCE STOCKS — BONDS — REAL ESTATE LOANS NEGOTIATED Telephone 121 I / f' Mr. and Mrs. John Bulwinkle of Charleston spent the week-end here with friends. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Nichols T of your money if you .are not satisfied ■ h resulu from the very first bottle. wit Don’t worry through another sleepless night—phone or go get a bottle of ‘ ■ (Adv.) —Ph _ _ Creon;uisi&n right now. James Sloan, student at Erskine college. Due West, spehCthe week-end 1 Sunday Tn Spartanburg with the Tat at home with his mother, Mrs.'E. B. j ter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Wil- I Sloah. ^ i I Friends*of Mrs, J. D. Jeans will bej Charles Denny of-HartsA’ille spentj^ I sorry to know that she is ill at the the we^ek-ejgd here with friends at , home of her sister, Mrs. G. S. Yeldell j Presbyterian college. ■in Greeftw’ood. • Friends of L. S. Henderson will beii j Mr., and Mrs. Bonner Harvley .and | glad to know that he has returned to|<> little daughter of Greenwood spent ] his position at Spratt Grocery, after Sunday with Mrs. Haiwley’s parents,' ha\*ing Wen confined to hi.s home for Mr. and Mrs, A. B. Blakely. some time on account of illness. - Mr. andi Mrs. A* M. Cannon spent. Little Winna Copeland Dick, grand- Sunitay in Newberry-with the latter’s Daughter of Dr. and Mrs. .lack H. grandmother. .Mrs. Hiller. Young, has returned’to-4itM' hottreHn Mrs. Janus Tinkler ('f l liff-'iiie, LaU'igh. after a three weeks’ visit to N. (i., spent a few days this week lu>r giandpareiits.' S*lie wa- accom- with her p.'irents. Mr. anil .Mis. L. R. pmiied home by her grandfather for Knox. ^ a vi<it I'f several days to his daiigh- -Mrs. Mae Daniels of Houslbn, Tex*. and sotir.n-law, Rev, and Mr..,!] as, IS spending some time with Miss ] T>ick. ! I U)u Hendeh'son. ' i ' I Mr. and Mr.s. P. B. Adair, and Mr.” ^ ^ _ I a-nd Mrs. .1. H. Hinton are spending r,i,is »...k in l:'l«r„la.- ^ 10 Y^arS AgO Established 1886 We Appreciate I Our Customers... Mis.s Margaret Moorhead of Coker L college was called home Sunday, on j Items of Inlere.st From The Chronicle j account of the iflness ami death of; of February II, 1926 her aunt, Mrs. A. R. Fripp. } .John W. Finney7"Jr.. student at' Clemson college, spent the week-end Leumas T. Bailey died Sunuay night ,va.emsun ewweKe. at-t'ocoa. Fla., frbm injifrie.s sustained i with hi9 parent.s, Mr. and M*rs. .John . . i i ™ i u i ! ' in an automobile wTeck. He was bur ied here Tuesday in the Presbyterian Keeping Home Ties Alive W. Finney. Friends of Mrs. Jessie Sparks will . . ■ , cemeterv. be sorry to know that she i.s ill at ,, ,./'d hi e , V i C. M.'Ray, well-known farmer ufj , J {p—'pr~, „ Kenno section, died Monday after- Priemls of J. \V, Coleman will be ' Your telephone is a means of quick per- •oual contact with those friends and relatives whom you do not visit as often as you woidd like. More and more people who are separated by distances are using the telephone to keep friendships alive and to maintain family ties. The relief from anxiety and the pleasure of hearing a friendly, cheerful voice, give satisfaction and value which is almost priceless. Yet the cost of a telephone con- and Warm versation b et w e e n friends or relatives who are miles apart is surprisingly low. By using station-to station service after 7 p. m. you can talk a distance of 150 miles for about 50c, and greater or less distances for correspondingly low cost. If the town you wish to call is not listed in the front of your tele phone directory, just ask your ' long distance** operator. She will gladly quote rates to any point. home on account of illness. Mrs. Hob Tucker is in Belton with her daughter, Mrs. Grover Crapps, .who is ill with [ineutnonia. ; Mr. and Mr.-', .'^am Stone of Charles ton met' sorry', to know he is confined to hidj noon at his homv. j .Mrs. J. M. Pitts is on a trip of sev-j eral days to Florida. — 1 .Mrs. A. (i. .Beard has returned toj her home in Texa'i after a visit of sev-■ t ral wi'cks here with relatives. 1 ('apt. .1. \V’. {.'opeland has returned ■ ends j ip anu m ' ('apt. .1. \V. Copelahd has return , spent the week-end with the for- - . , , , ' ,• , ■ ,,, from a two months visit to trien r s mother, Mrs. Metta Stone. . . , , , . . , ’ !• . DDH relatives in Ijouisiana, Mississi .Miss Ijeila Norman has accepted a Mrs.. L. R. Lynn i.s spending tw«,^^ Arkansas and Texas w^ks with her brother,-W. S. d^. ' P'. Arkansas and lexas. wese in Brighton, Twn. f r' tTerical po,sition with the Joanna Cot- Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bolt of Co- * lumlbia, Yancey Qwen.s, Charlotte, Clarence Owens of Anniston, Ala., J. A. 'Owens and Randolph' Owens of. If you are not a customer of this bank, we invite your business upon our ability to serve efficiently and provide every, need, consistent with good banking:. Our customers say: “This is a good bank with which to deal.” ' NEW BUSINESS CORDIALLY INVITED M. $. Bailey i San BANKERS OLDEST STRONGEST ! ton mills at Goldville. Mrs. Mayrne Little Copeland of thi.s city, and Morgan 1', Todd, of v^rns -jsinipsonville, were quietly united in Safety HarW, Fla., and Earle Owens! 7 , „i ’ .1-' 1 J marriage last Wednesday in Green- of r* wood. The-ceremony was iH*rformejl with their parent!., .Mr. and Mr,. ( 1,,-vine,, pastor of the First Hap- A. Owens. Friends of Ray Owens, Southern Bell .T^elephone and Telegraph Compang. Incorporated , . list church, wtih on y a few c ose re - who ha.s ^ , . •.. lativus riresent.- been critically ill with pneumonia,, The Mothers’ Hub met on Thursday will be glad to know that his condr-! Young. Dr. Ellis tion IS reported as improved ^ Fuller, of Atlanta, was the gue.st Mrs. Joe L. Carter left Saturday, ^ ■ for New York, to buy spring goods for r M.lam and W.l- the well-known Carter s store. j Miss Ll,zal>eth Nelson, student at ^ Wednesday at noon ,n I SEFI L LIFE COMES TO END Greenwood, Rev. R. S.. Hardaway [ler- : forming the ceremony. Did You Hear The News? * (Continued from page one) terms. This trip, he once told the writ er, “was the turning point in liis life.” After refbH'ting ujion conditions rhere llahd tho.se in the far-off land he had Joanna Mill News Called to Father’s Bedside Your Friends Did! Mr. J. L. Delaney was balled" to left, he decided it would be foolish ' Mass, last week-end because to return We.st to ranch life. In this^.j ty,,. ,^,,.,,,0^ illries.- of liis father. horne-siek frame of mind, he .sold ev-^ , — _ erything lie had left. In'hind and again became an honored citizen of the Hur ricane cornmun the place on , Savannah Visitor .Mi^s .Mary Granger of Savannah, TUNE IN ' EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT 10 P. M. Eastern Standard Time OVER • . ff . I .-L.4 «*icliv xfianMvl W1 OclVcliiliClil ity. He at once bought . . ^ -H Ga., is visiting her sister, Mrs. A the Clinton-troldville! ’ ,,, * . I), Barr-on. Miss (iranger recently highway where he lived until his death. .' j On pec. IH, 1898, he mapied Mi.ssi Lola M. Nabors and, as he expre.ssed' returmed from a trip abroad. Retuma from Jacksonville ..Ill f ^ j-r <'Iarence Morse has returned frotn .It, happily .settled down for life,,in!. .. . . . ’ . Columbia Broadcasting; System -And Enjoy a New and Interesting Program ~ and' Learn the> Story of ' ' God’s choicest land.” When a mere lad Mr. .Simpson jbin- ed the Methodist church at Hurricane and was reared by devout parent.s who belonge<l to' the Wesley faith. When he returned, however, in 1898, from th4* - West, he-united, with-the Hurricane Baptist church of which tvas a devoted and con.sistenUmember. Jacksonville, PJa., where he has been attending a barber .school. / Modern Ice Refrigeration “Parties At Pid^Mr” Sustains Fracture j Mis.s Doris Abrams, who i.s teaching! in Greenville, had'the misfortune to! fall and fracture her arm the week! 7 . OF ALL THE HEMS In conversation with the winter a With the Sick j f -I Friends of Mrs. Parker Rushton' .!7. be glad to know that she is much * XmonG rtlE.MILLi().SS of hens in Ainei ica today, the trhrc ribbon " for euK productiim gt>es to only one. She earns first prize with ^24 eggs a rare masterpieces. Because she that the most rertiaYkable thing about' > a * * u W * U rr *1... fkof a improved and expects to be able to his life was the fact that he was, ' , .. , .j. . ,, , , f 1 leave the hospital-wiwin a.few days, never under the care of a physician i ^ e r 1C fl k.. on I M rs. Marian Hamm is improving from the age of 16 until he had an an illness of several weeks attack of influenza at the age of 74. several weeks Friends will be interested to know For my unusual good health and vi.u -u .L VI k,c s^e is able to be up in her room many other blessings of life, he said, - - _ . - IlD *V • *I am profoundly grateful to a kind come direct from Mary Pickford’a world famous home im Holly wood. Their hostess is Mary Pickford — America’s Sweetheart” _beloTed by millkms. Motion picture stars will be Uier6—taking an active part in the enterUinment-^ueat tUrs who, for the evening, become feBow-gnmU of the radio audience. A1 LyoH*ii* noted Cowanut Grove Orchestra furnishes ^ music. There will be a grand vocal choras. The whole atmosphere is that of a real party informal, idly, entirely out the ordinary. r Colonial ice Co ind loving God who has been far bet- ,er to me than I ever deserved.” In Mr. Simpson’s death this com munity loses another member of the old school. He was a mtizen .who held the respect and confidence of those who knew him, a man who was hon est And upright in all his dealings and who always stood uncompromisingly for the noblest and highest thin^ in life. He loved his community, his Tome, his church, his Master. He was a faithful father and husband, a jood neighbor and a sincere friend. His passing brings Jeep sorrow to an unusually large chain of relatives and friends who held him in high es teem. . ' Besides his widow, he is survived by three sons, Gillette, Lewis and Mason Simpson, and by one sister, Mrs. Prslow Young. ...J. \ Missionary Society Meets The Woman’s Missionary society of the Methodist church met at the home of Mrs. J. M. Ross Tuesday evening. The president, Mrs. Hayne Willingha^ ^reisided. ^TTie topic for study was “Jane Addisms, NeigUaor And Citizen.” During the social hour the hostess, assisted by Mrs. Bryce Little and Mrs. Cecil O’Dell, served coffee, sandwiches, and a sweet course. CARD OP THANKS We wish, to thank our friends for their acts and kindness and expres sions of sympathy during the illness and death of our father and husband, J. M. Sknpaon. Mrs. J. M. ffimpson and Sans. X yeai fur two corfsecutive years — moro than four times the national avoT.ine of 70. Suppose every, hen did that Think what profits that would mean to poultry men. But most hens .are juat hens, common, ordinary hens. There is only one champion. To just one single hen. Nature gives the vital spark—rthat perfect-nat> _ ura! balance of all the elements that make a champion. The champion hen is Mother Nature at her best — one of Nature’s standr"oiiT frnni the flfvck, because"" she does things that other hefP^ can’t d«k~8he is worth her weight in gold, while the rest of the flock is worth just tfbout two bits a pound —dead or alive. -r And'here is another of Nature’* masterpieces—Natural Chilean Soda. Like the champUm hen, Chilean has Nature’s priceless gift —natural blend and balance of many fertilizer elements—vital im purities. The vital spark—the secret of every champion—is in Chilean Nitrate, bom there, and kept altvo - through centuries of aging and mellowing in the ground. EAN NITRATE Ncftural Chilettn contains almost t«w) score of major arul minor elements such, as boron, magnesium, manganese, iodine, calcium, potassium, etc.—eAch a vital element in growth and development of plants. ^ With Vital UnpuritiM In Nertwra'f Own iokmca ond UMid “Y" ..1 .\ -4—- A.,