The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, May 21, 1936, Image 2
•f
r ■ ' ''.r, ■
■ V \ '•
-
4 1 * . 7*' •
. * i ’ ' •
■ . .. ... 1
day, may 21, 1»86
CasMO
/
MONDAY AND TUESDAY, t
' ' . May 2$ and
^ose Marie*j
With JEANETTE MmBONALD
and NELSON. EDDY — thfe linfinr
sweetheart#^ back acaia. The screen’s
miKhtiest^'musical romance! Hannting
meMiM . .„‘ni|fht8 of love . . /virile
adventure and fay romance as Rose
Murie flees from the world of con
vention to the arms of a “mountie*’
wlio>e name she scarcely "knew . .
ike-thi^ Taif^
but shose caresses spo'
oaye of love!
"Vacation Sports.” MGM News
10 A. M. Show—MONDAY.
— 10c and 25c
/WasMnfton, May 18. — The
sefor
boa Before of New Deal cases
won apd lost in the supreme
court today ehoW4ed two vic
tories and nine defeats:
Vie^ries: Gold clause, and
Tennessee Valley authority.
"Defeats: Hot oil, railroad pen
sions, Frazier-Lemke mortfafe
bill, NRA, removal of Trade
Commissioner Humphrey, AAA,
processinf tax, Jones securi
ties act, Guffey coal bill.
Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Yot^ and lit-
tle~ dnuflrhter, Janice, of Honea Path,
visit^ Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Wmd-
jsdr Sunday afternoon. '
Mr. and Mrs.^ A. J. Harvey spent
Saturday at Buffalo with Mrs. Har
vey's parent^ Mr. and Mrs.- Will
lifhtfuTrefreshments we%' served by
the little hostess*~ mother and Mrs.
Clyde Trammell. IJttW favors were
i f iven.' There were ^jwenty-nine
guests present. ^
ed. Those present were Misses, Mar
Lida-. Weir, Frances Bouknight and
Florenw Howard and Messrs <%arias
Trammell, Hall King, George Hill
and William Terry.
'. -i.
I Qatuse.
Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Pruitt of Spa
Pruitt and
nburg spenf
rs. Ralph
:e8
WEDNESDAY, MAY 27 ‘
f^The Girl
From Mondalay”
INVENTION — American
' I went out to J)earborn last month j Sunday with Mr. and
and, among other things, took a quick j Spires.
glimpse at the great museum ofj Mr. and Mrs. Orroh McGeaand Mr.
tnventtbflS ■ Which X. McGee were vistiore In Cfiar-
hA#^ assembled in Greenfield Village.! lotte Sunday. ‘
Vaa*. Fftl. is n liberal ^ueation in Araerican-j ^r. and Mrs. Brooks Blakely of
I ear ror I^niay ism to study the development of in.l„e,, Uurens spent Sunday with Mr.
dustrial pn^ress from the primitive, j
tools of the ^rst settlers, step by I ™
step to the marvelous machines of
today which* can do, everything but
pinner Party Giveii
- Miss Nora Cannon delightfully, en
tertained a few friends last, Tuesday
evening with a foimal dinner party in
honor of Miss Frances Bouknight
and. Msw Charles Trammell who are
mem'bers of the '36 graduating class.
A three cmMe dinner was served
by Mrs. J, C. Cannon, assisted by
Mrs. J. D. Word and Mrs. L. H. Bag-
well After dinner dates were eiijoy-
MiaceUaneous Shower Givea
A miscellaneous shower was given
Mrs. Grady Smith by the ladies of the
community Tuesday evening at the
home of Mrs. J. J. Smith. Many
games and contests were enjoyed af
ter which the shower was presented
Many lovely and useful gifts were
received. After the gifts had^/been
shown, the hostess served sandwiches
and punch. / '
Will Go To lUniversity of North
Carolina. Bernard H. Boyd To
Succeed Him Se^ion 19^6-37.| think.
It is hard to name an^qveiition of
Presbyterian college Officials hafve
absence of one year’s duration to
With CONRAD NAGEI^, KAY
LINAKER, DONALD COOK and
ESTHER RALSTON. “I’m the’‘Girl
From Mohdalay'! Trust no man,,. . .
- take .j«JuiL-^jML_j:an...g*ij,jr^ tfel
".MeWy In M.y." “Honit- »'">• >>,
Mmportaneje which did not et^er ori-
announced the granting of a leave *** America or get itS\^pr8t
practical use in this country. No-
Hugh T. Swedenberg, assistant pro
fessor of English; who will continue
kong Highlights."
.Morning Show At 10 O’clock.
10c To All '
THURSDAY, MAY 28
“Tough Guy’*-
With JAt'KIE (OOPER, JOStlPH
Bernard H. Boyd, graduate of P. C.
in the class of 1932.
Mr. Swedenberg, who spent much
time studying in the British museum
in 1933, has paa.sed his preliminary
where has the truth been better dei^Hlotte visited relatives here this week-
onstrat^ of the old proverb: “Neces
sity is the mother of invention;” The
work at the Univ«r*ity oLNorth Car-^ pioneers pf^America had to be. inven
tive. Starting’out with not much more
oral examinations and has written
much of his thesi.<":on the English-!-^-- PIONEERS— Their Problem
Neo-Cla.ssic theory^ but because of the ^
I-AI.I.KI.A. l(l.N-TIN-TI.N. Jr.. ,„d i‘"“Wed our forvf.lherr
JKAN HKI(SHOI.T. A thrill . m^n.'
than their bare hands, they had to
improvise means of conquering th«
new world. ^
I think we have done a pretty good
job of it so far, but invention has hot
stopped yet. • • ''
Mr. W. K. .Stewart of Watts mill
spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh Cunningham.
Mr. and Mrs. Parker Ruskin of
Goldville spent Saturday With Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Oakley.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sanders of Ghar-
elid..
Mf- Mrs. T. B. Stevenson anv4
nounce thiXbirth of twins on May 5,
1936. Tiie iTttle girls have been giv-[
en the names of Pauline and Irene.
ute awaits you in the years greatest , t i
. • . , A k J - from Princeton Theological seminary
artinn picture! A-boy, a dog, and a/— » y ^ i
crook
, • ..J u fTu D I 'wilderness were the curved axe helve
Mr. Boyd rocewd h,., Th.B. long-barrolled Kvulucky rifle.
„ 7''‘Ww»l seminary I had to clear and &t-
»hat a Mm^inalion forl“"^^ **:''• tie a forest country filled with lurk-
amazin, adventure! It flares ,/'"X" t ,'T i“„ v ""I ^•"'* >l«niterou» wild
rsrilemenl. while it isn't ashamed t9l!ii" conti"ued/Ins studies n English.1straight-shooting Ken-
touch your heart! It’s breath-Uking ; T^'* year Ik/will complete his resi- tucky rifle protected them against the
entertainment tem the word go! J"?"* In I ^ frif: '■'bile the
"Kuokie Eiremen." "Yankee Doodle XA*"*""* free-swinging axe helve enabled therai
Khapsmly." M«M N„a. I “Ziu/i? m.*' n™.i ^"‘'»p a new and more eff^tive-
echnique for clearing the land for
their farms and building their log
Shower GNen
A miscellaneous shower,^wa8, given
Mrs. Myrtis Patterson Friday night
at the home of Mrs. Hawks. Mafiy
useful gifts were received after which
The two American inventions which delightful' refreshments were served.
to cpnquer "
NORGE ROUATOB REFRlGBBAim
\
Morning Show ,At 10 O’clock.
lOc To All
Birthday Party Giyeh
Little Edan Joan Davenport was
delightfully entertained on Saturday
evening with a birthday party cele
brating her sixth birthday. Many
games were enjoyed after which de-
WANTS
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY,
May 2^ and 30
“Whispering Smith
opeaks^
- With (;E0RGN O’BRIEN, IRENE
ware, and KENNETH THOMP-/
SON. Get set for something new
e/citement! He speaks—with fists
^on! He’s a railroad hero in his
serving/on The Blue Stocking staff
for foifr years. He acted a., a...ociate| ,i„t 250 »ears,' America
editor of both The Blue Stocking and 1 handicapped by a ahortage of la-
The/Collegian, and edited The PaC- machinea be-
FOR SALE—One-horse vyagon cheap.
W. L. Jones. Ip
in his senior year
served as president
of the
FOR SALE—One wood saw outfit—
saw, engine and table. J. A. Bailey.
6.4-3tc'
cause there wasn’t enough man-pow-! g^EET POTATO PLANTS,. Tomato I
Nass, vici^dent of the ^weet;. P^^l^
senior class, and also toqk a promi-
/nent part in military and athletics.
Mr. Boyd comes to P, C. highly rec-
. ommended by all his associates at
Princeton who have expres.sed their
confidence in him as a teacher and a
est—riding roughshod over the^^n- leader.
ace^that threatens the girl he mves!i —-1
“(iREAT AIR MYSTERY"/I<o. 7.L,, .
remedy .ltd "The Kun Houy." iWatts Announcos
lOc and 25c
unemployment.jnen en^ged in bigjpi^nts, Cabbage Plants. All Kinds
manufacturing industries tell Seeds, Flower
there is still a shortage of [genuinely
skilled labor. « ^
./
■4
NEXT WEEK — “THE
KID,” with AL JOLSC —Exclusive
Stoug “BOHEMIAN RL." with
LAUREL AND HARD
SINGING
For County Sheriff
Broadway
Th^tre
Formal announcement is made in
today’s paper by Sheriff Jo^h D. W.
Watts that he will be in the race this
summer for the full four-year term
which begins next January, Mr. Watts j run it.
MACHINES — Operators
TV greatest coQirjbution America
has made to the world, it seems.,to
me. is our ingenuity in building brains
I into machines. I never go through a
modern manufacturing plant without
seeing some new machine which mini-
niizes’the need of intelligence on the
part of the man who operates it. The
engineers who designed and -the tool,
makers who built it put their brains
and skill into the machine itself, so
that, the most unintelligent laborer
Pots and In.secticides. Blakely Rroth-
ers Seed Store. Telephone 188. Ic
MAN WANTED for Rawleigh Route
of '800 families. Go^ profits for
lUel
I ,
WflWHI
tn selecting your refrigerator,
look for the 4ss*ntiai Qualities
of over-all ecooomy-f-oepeod-
able hot weather performance
—long-life mechanism^ Ahd
remember that Norge and mJy
Norge offers you the advan
tages of the surplus-powered
Rollator cfild-making mech
anism.
THI IKH.UTOII
The famous RoUatof Com-
pressor-has but-three slowly
moving parts, is surplus
‘ fc
powered for dependable hot
weather performance, almost
everlasting. Its efficient opera-
1104.1
•OMPkciSOII..
cmrrmt, ytt isptvtrmi
tan, rolling
P*wtr imtud Jmrntd hack-
amd-ftrth action pftho ordinary re-
frioeratinm mechanum.more
cold for Ao cmrrent msod^posititn! *'
prtectionfor jomrfoodt ptintypfice
when yom mood k
hustler. We tfain and nelp you. Write
today. RawWgh-Co., Dept. •SCE-27-
SA2, Richmond, Va. 5-28-3pa —
tion, plus the generous stonge
capa<^ of the “
WANTED—Your Electric Fans. Vac
uum Cleaners, Electric Irons, Ra
dios, Hot PlatSf or (jther Appliances
that need Repairing. R. Stanton
Blakely at Blakely Brothers. Ic
Norge which
permits bar gain tjuantity
buying, make pdssible over
all savings up to $11 a month.
NORG
ofr
MONDAY AND TUESDAY,
ly 25 and 26
Or a Bet”
With/GENE RAYMOND, M'ENDY
BARFUE and HELEN BRODERICK.
Here/ comes youth in high! From
coavi to coast you’ll giggle at the
Htt^^of a gay young idiot-about-town
1^0 took a hair-brained gamble,
letarting from New York pennileee
and dreesed only in shorts he had to
be in California ten days later with
is now filling out by appointment oi i vOn^ of the_ most complicated de
Governor Johnston the^ unexpired Lices that we had to turn out during
term of the late Sheriff C. L. Owens, | war was the recoil mechanism for
who (lied recently.
“1 have bjeen honored twice by gov
NOTICE — During June and July I
will have a young jack at my barn
ottv highway No. 7, four miles west
Get the inside facts hboot
RbUator Refrigeradon before
y<^ shop for a refrigerator.
Certainly see the Norge before
you buy. Come in.
, u. s. MT. orr.
thtt
of Clinton. |5:00 cash, balance terms.
Jack H. Davis, Sr. / 6-4-3tc
ernors 'of South Carolina who ap-
{winted me to fill out unexpired
term.s,” said Mr. Watts yesterday,
“and 1 would feel doubly honored if
the' {Hjople of~Laurens county would
give me a full term by their votes.”
„ , , BABY CHICKS SATURDAY, price;
the French 156-miJlimeter howitzers. | reduced 50 cents per hundred. Du-i
The problem of making them was put|pigjj starting and Growing Mash. AH i
bp to a big Detrpit automobile fac I Kinds Mash, Grains and Oyster
Shells. Also Dairy and Horse and
Mule Feed. Blakely Brothers Seed
Chnnsr ffflWftrstor
/Vtss Action 'LavUtch *
hinoCfon Bottk and Dsir/dfock
★ hiding -U^kty Bsskp^ ★ Ad-
Justsbit ★ Improytd Auto
matic Flood Light ji Cknely
V Spaced Shtif Ban ★ Many o.'.ver
foaturos, improYtmants and re
finements.- /
and build the automatic machines to
do the job. I went through the fac
tory in 1918 and found every one qf
these automatic-machines being tend-
Stjre. Telephone 188.
Mr. Watts was appointed sheriff jpj by a chunky Polish girl in a smock,
by the late Governor Richard I. Man-1 ^
no muscle, it took no skill or
ning in 1916 on the death of the then
sheriff, John D. Owings, serving for
one year.
and industry. Chemurgy holds prom
ise of going.a long way toward solv
ing that problem.
PRATHER-SIMPSON
COMPANY
training, to produce, by aid of the
machine which could almost think, an
apparatus in which every part had to
My endeavor has alway.s been tolj^ accurate to a thousandth of an
uphold the moral tone of the county,”
a new suit, a hundred dollars, and j Mr. Watts, “and if given the of
engaged to a beautiful girl . . or else!j again by the people of'the county
f\n-Star Musical Revue in lechni-|j shall continue my efforts in that
color, “I..a Fiesta DeSanta Barbara.
“Table Tennis."
10 A. M. Show—TUESDAY.
lOc and 20c
WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY,
May 27 and 28
“Between Men” -
With JOHNNY MACK BROM^'
BETH MARTQN^ and Wn.LTAM
FARNUM. . Trouble-shoibting with
both barrels! He's dynamite in action'!
Risking death for thrills and millions!
Comedy, “Kenual A La Carte."
“Spring* in the Park."
“TO^^A. RSDAA".
10c To All
direction. My motto will be to per-
foim my dutie.s without fear or fa
vor to the end that the citizens of
the county shall always feel that
their lives and property will be.pro-
I tected to tihe fullest." (
Mr. Watts said that he is now 67
Near.s_„bf age and feels in the full
vigor of I'i^e. “Unless sickness over-
UN EMPLOYMENT—Answer
I think the jiltimate answer to the
problem of unemployment will be a
tremendous increase in the number
and variety of so-cailed “labor Sav
ing” machines. Only by providing that
sort of machinery can most of the
unemployed be employed, profitably
to industry and to themselves.
The machine makes it possible to
pay wages which ^ unaided, uu-
Cakes me, T expect filled worker could never earn.iOne
twenty years or more longer." jof our great American discoveries
; has been that the more machines are
jset to work making useful goods, the
; greater the demand for the goods,
The L^der Stages
TaHav can be sold cheaper, and
I so the demand for more machines and
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY,
May 29 and 30
“Outlaw Deputy’
A sensational Clo.se-out Sale by The; creases.
Leader, of this city, is heralded forth' With all the talk about the great
in a page advertisement in today’s j a/rmy of unemployed there are twice
paper. It starts this morning ,at 9 as many people at work today in the
United States as there were thirty
years ago. Yet our population is far
o’clock to inaugurate a fast selling
event that will mean big savings for
With TIM McCOY, NORA iTaNE, buying public taking advantage from being twice what it was in 1900
and BUD OSBORN. A Western you’ll p ^ Z n •• v,
never forget! Crammed with fiery ac- [. ‘^e Barey^V alls has
tion-vibrant with suspense!-Hm Me-!announced as the/ntention of
Coy gallops toward his destined goal
CHEMURGY — Tie-up
“Chemurgy” is the name for the
B— — - »*— well-known stor^ with mark-' new line along which industry is de-
nnder red skies of danger in ‘The|v°X" to Jiquid^e, the business' veloping»-it means the application 6ft
Ontlaw Deputy.’’ He never went back! ^'"8 offered. The .^e is expected to chemical processes to raw materials i
on a pal, failed a friend, dodg^ i . throngs fron)/far and near and to convert them into usable commodi-
ftiachines in-
IfMDo tatam KiglU e-uoot Oodmn, $tIS*
For thrills, thrift and^martness—
no,€l6HT on earth Ilka the new PontiiBc
fight or feared a foeman!
“REX AND RINTY" No. 2.
“SNAPSHOT” No. f.
10c and/20c -
NEXT WEEK, “BjilDES ARE LIKE
THAT.” “I MARRIED A DOCTOR.”
give to those wh(/attend and buy an
opportunity to ^ve money in their
B^kets on dC^ndable . merchandise
lor men, women and children.
A^I
yk (
’CHAN AT THE CIRCUS.
£
T
We Have a -
ARNER’S CORSET -
Tl|iU Will Fi^ and Please You
/ The Price WiU Suit. V
ELLISON’S
Riddle Offers
For Council
ties. Both industrial and' agricultural
researchers hold out great hopes that
through chemurgy farm products may
make a larger market by their con
version to industrial uses. In the Ford
factory at Dearborn 'I saw one impor
tant application of chemurgy. Many
parts of the Ford car, including some
of the interior fitting?,- are made of
a compound derived from soy beans
E XPBKT8 call Pontiac the
why: Thanks to a ihoit-i
harmonic balancer and accural
vibration point at any
That’s genuine fine-car
ei|^t in the world. And here’s
crankshaft, overlapping besjings, a
iy balanced parts, Pontiac haa no
Ralph N. Riddle places his name in'by chemical processes. Soy bean oil
the candidates’ column today as an
aspirant for a .seat in city council in
the approachit^ election as represen
tative from ward five. Mr. Riddle is
a resident of the Clinton Cotton Mills
and hie friends end acquaintances
will be interested in his announce-
inent\
is an essential part of the lacquer
with which the,.cars are painted. We
are going to hear much more of
chemurgy.
Every forward-looking person real
ises that thp'ultimate solution of the
problems oi our economic life lies' in
a closer tie-up between agriculture
and it’s matched by ev«r]rthnu(
else in the’ear. You can’t g^better brakes than Pontiac’s big hydraulics.
The solid steel “Tur^-Tpb” Bodies are the safest money can buy. And
this big eight has delivered, under official supervision. 22 miloa par
ga'lon. Look around before you buy your eight. Get all the facts. You’ll
come back to- PontiM convinced that it’s the best buy of them alH
^Lisi price* *t Pordime, Mich.. b*tin mt $615 tor the "6” and$730 tor tha "S'*
(tabjeot io chanOa without notksa). Safmty pJaia glass »tandard on Da Luxa
"6” and "S*'. Standard groupot acoa—oeia* axtra- Monthiy paymant* toauJt
your putra oil tna Oanaral Motor* irtataUmant Plan. A Oanaral Motor* Vaiua.
THOMASON MOTOR
EAST MAIN STREET
LAui^s, s. a
V
.-V
Kil
■ ill ^ I*-;*'