University of South Carolina Libraries
•( /■ ;/ -A PMB FOUR /, / Jm t../ / I > n KaCkMbiMd IfOO 1 WII^ON W. HARRIS* Editor and PnblM^r Publiihed iJverjr Thursday By .THE* CHRONICLE PUBLISHING COMPANY Subscription Rat* (Payable In Advance): ^ Ono Year |1.50; Six Months 76 cents; Three Months 50 cents n»rs. head, puddin’s ma, thmics he; An earnest gentleman granted me H tsouid also make a fine' preecher if j to write on merchandising. I asked he would be brok< from cussin and j him ^hat he meant by merchgndlling.; Entered as Second Class Mail Matter at the Post Office at Clinton, S. C. The Chronicle seeks the cooperation of its subscribers and readers—the publisher will at all times appreciate wise suggeations and kindly ad vice. The Chronicle wiirpffclish Te^ttera of general interest when they are not of a defamatory nature. Anonymous communications will not be noticed. This paper is. not responsible for the views or opinions of its jdorrespondents. - ' . ' • f l:-r: /, ■I 'f m ptd>licans mOught get in offis 'a^^t 'plOilons knd that He was pleased with } of distribution so th||f .jeveryfa|>^ can ‘ i. . < . ' - -T'.- -v tWJRsbiY, MARCH 4. 1997 / 4 the iime lie^ got thru thC agger-cul ture colledge, and farm rplief, soil etOMon and plowing /up would be djfvpped, that would leave *him in pov- verty where ewerbodidy was on the farm befoar pres, rpaeyvelt discov- vered him to 'be the forgotten man. His creatioi% He made us all proud of our hu manity, and sent us out moi:« cheer ful and better able to f/ght the week. 1 wonder why there are hot more such sermpns? “ 'Excnae Ua Hif^h Preaaore An earnest gentleman Wanted haye more of the good things of life a>^ result of steady, smooth produc tion? - - ' ' I cannot answe^y these questions, but I do bleievie.it is important tiriret as many men as possible, thinking about them. l FEBRUARY HONOR ROLL FOR THORN WELL SCHOOL CAID or THANKS . I wish, from the bottom of my/ heart, to thank' my~ neigl^rB asH friends for their kindness and sym pathy shown during the illness and . death of my wife. Also foi^he beau tiful floral offerings. May the Lord bless each of yoh 4*' my earnest prayer. JIQHN L. DICKERT. BLANK BOOKS —Every ralii«, an chawin tobacker in public, he would;He henvmed and hawed, and finally}. Third grade: Robert Grube, JuanitaBmtes. CoOectien plese the average cohgrergation with [ remarked, “Why, you know, merchan-t Hillhouse, Fernand deMontmollin. iwalleta. •r J" what I his sermonts; he is too lazy “to get up | dicing; everybody knows tone that would last over 15 minnets. i lyienD hy merchandisinir.” th^ is one of the qualifictione for .1 , 4i,te„ed to inodem eitty .posture in a ci(ty,„„^h conversation on that subject in church. '1929, but had never heard, any one Margaret Peters,; CLINTON, S. Cm THURSDAY, MARCH 4, '7tt7 LICKING SHERMAN A storm of public opposition and resentment is being "expressed, and . ^ ^ av ayamst tire”^e by posT--^te^^^ ^ver the^ affairs and rightly so. offices of 3-cent .Stamps bearing the likepess of General William Te- cumseh Sherman. Thi.-^ i.s the gentle man who pillaged and burned At lanta, ransacked Georgia to the sea, ravaged South Carolina and burned , Columbia. an(f campaigned .through - the heart of the South with the strat egy of cutting off Confederate sup- plie.s. ^ - , Ii> .Georgia United Daughtoi-s of the Confederacy recently passed a re.-rolution which stateti that- Sher- -iman’.s military tactics were not bril liant and that his place in history aIoo'^ not justify such recognition.” ■ “ i ne only .stamp 4tt Iwai- a likeness « f ?'du*rmun. . the resolution .stated, ^'hould he a hlackehed'chimney with :i mother and-her children at the/base "hirmtdesH.” 1'he criticism is altogether justf though it wil!_<lo no good. Why is- century. Thoughtful men at all times have recognized the danger of giving men whose major equipment is good. you. Fourth grade: Jesse Pryor. Fifth grade t Carolyn Murphj’, Sixth grade: Chestnut Whitaker. CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. PlMtoe 74 Seventh grade: Martha Boozer, puddin leans toward.s being a me-1 germed define the term. “In those bwm days‘Jean Curry, Betty DuBose, Bobby Mc- to mean over-.selling,” I chanic and work in a garrage, out ne' . _ . u _ II Au- 1. # n- A A- I . .14 continued. “It meant pushinw up the allso thinks filling station work would twentv-five ner cent ev- suit him, as he likes the broad open i„i-„ ^ t, * au- i, .pwe, ind do not think he conJd v. .tend to be cooped up in a lawyer'. .’’"yjT" offi. an.oforth. he haa had .ome ex- ""S' «"* lives of others. That is particularly true in govern ment. Examples of the effects of good intentions are to be found in the trou bles which beset the wbole world to day. In the effort .to restore order and to improve the conditions of their people, well-intentioned men have taken control of the affairs oC na tions, with the result that instead of making things better they have be come woj'.se. .So much worse, indeed, that the whole world seems on the verge of another frightful war. Mus.«olini, Hitler and .Stalin beyond perience at musack, and would not ob ject to being ajband leader on a ra dio program, he blbvred the flute in grade . T^homaa W’^eller, Lellan. Eighth Jeanette Coxe. Ninth grade: Sara Dayis. Tenth grade: Mary Jones, Eutsler. Eleventh grae: Beth Ayers, Bessie Jean Ihe'fTat rock hi. jugger-Ieers. gantly to steal the other man’s cus tomers. All that sort of high pressure Fortner, Ejizabeth Tucker, activity was called ‘merchandising'^ in 1929,” I said, “and if, when we speak of ^'getting back to normal’ we mean getting back to that rush and strain mr. and mrs. head has alreddy rote the govvermept to put puddin’s name j then I am not much^interested, down as an applicant for f. y. a. help. Ue went away shaking his head, as they want uncle sam to pay ewer- 1 bad uttered treason against thing it will cost for a 4-ycar coarse .'American enterprise, in coiledgo except the railroad fare to! The kind of mei'chandising prob-i and fro; puddin thinks he ca-n hitch-that I believe our country mu.st [ hike enduring these trips and thus}fact: sooner or later are problems like have hi.s ma and pa everthing. if his .the following: - ^ _ pa and ma can make up his ipind, he! Why, with so much wealth, arc so will.have a big future behind him. i niany nmn out of work? Why, with .so I ♦-T— I many lahor-.saving device.'!, have we Week-End llappeningN At Flat j .so little lei.sure? Why were our par- Itock M|ont3, who were sTo much poorer than at- TYPEWRITER RIBBONS, all makes for standard and portable machines. CHRONICLM^TUBLISHING TO Dr.,Felder &mth of • DRS. SMitH & SMITH OPTOMETRISTS Specialist In Eye Examinations Office Houra 8 to 6 Daily Phone .29-W for Appointment —4 Clinton, S. G. Iff the when they .set up their respi*ctive and far-reaching experiments in govern ment. The result has been to deprive their people of their inborn human rights and liberties an<L reduce them to complete servility. What ha^ hap pened elsewhere should be a warn- ^ty ( :*}ihbera coun.sell of flat rock, doubt were full of good intention.s ter dt/Mhberating ftir 8 hours at 4 dif- peaceful and secure? we, still so much more contendte 1, sue iv stamp and glorify .Sherman who cau.'ed* so much suffering.” a IL should he remembered in buying ^tan>ps that ^Southerners for the jvi r^e^-uf-ikking .<iencra! .Sherman are indqbted to the Honorable James Farley, head pf the jmstoflFice do- 7>artment, and high political general ♦if our Democratic party. ing to this country again.st a bureau cratic and'dictatorial form of gov ernment in Washington. HE'S ALWAYS UNANIMOUS Governor Johnston i.s a unanimous gentleman when it cbmes to the en- ♦lor.sement of the Wjishington admin- ir^trafion. He says- he i.s 100 per cent lind I’resident Roosevelt's proposal reorganize the Supreme Court by adding six additional judges to make that body subservient to the wishes ef the president and to wholesale transfer to Congress all power it may ehoo.'e to exeici.se over any aspjcct of the economic life of the country. Viebini [jo rec THE YOp^CH PROBLEM We hear a greathdeal these days of America’.s “Youth I^blem.”, Most of tho«c. who write and trmke speeches a/bout it seem to have tne^impression that it is something new, V^at least that no social system up to ^w has tried to do anything for the you^. Of cour.se that a.ssumption is mislea The problem of how to make folk into good citizens and ho will not be allowtsl to tote,-a 1 billie or wear a badge or put on his i uny-form, but he can carry his pistol J as usual, except he won’t be pqrmit-.j ted to load it while on duty, this will j humble him to see the error of his ■Wy. verry much and gives right freely to charrity. he has dropped in the hat at i^ehober church as high as 10c at a timel hut he goes only about 3 times a year;- he newer mi.sses a funeral youni specting members of society is as old as the human race. One has only to turn to the Bible'and read what Solo mon and many of the prophets had to say atrmit the “perverse and crooked generation” of those ancient days.. The effort of society to bring up that is hell at rehober church, but the self-re-ji^at is^rarely ever passed at one of thein. I sonte^ new audiences were passed by the couiifell at a recent meeting, as followers:\no speeding in excess of 10 m. p, h. ^ywhert’a in town except on north malm atrebt after midnight 1 children in the way they should go. He has also publicly .state<l that he I ho that when they are old they shall has informed the president'lhat he I not depart from it, has'been constant is’ in favor of the child labor amend-jin this country from- the earliest nK'iil which would give ('ongress thejday.s. The Massachusetts coloily in power to icgLilale the lives of l.’i.OOO,-j KMX ordered every township to ap- 000 boys and girls under IH years of'point someone to teach all children age in tin/ iJiHted HtUTTvs. This is a radir.i! jiropo.'al that should be de- tiafcd, calculated as it i.s to under- •nim'- our sm-ial and political order. K'm’l be fooled, it is no proposal to abolish child labor. That hh.- already been The give the feileral govuniment power to '■tep into every home in America and ♦■xerx'ise * emwpiete control over the how to write and reasl, especially how to read the .Scripture.-^. Nearly every legislative'body in America since then has enacted laws for compulsory edu cation of children, for protection of the young against exploitation for done in this. and other s-tates. | money, even for intervention betw^n passiige of the measure would' children and their parents when the child’s interests, which are para- mouivt, seem to be threatened. Dr. Walter A. Jessup, presiilent of activities of American children. The governor as a New Dealer of the .'•ubber stamp variety, is a top- notcher, ranking along with Jimmy Byrnes amUsonie of the other Wash- nigton satellites. Why the powers that Vie haven’t^made a fat fetjeral job for him with a remuneration far exceed ing that of the governor’s office— many are asking. In all fairness, his loyalty and unanimity should be re warded. ! the {larnegfa Foundation for the .Ad- I THREE AGAINST ONE A report submitted at the annual "convention of Ahe Anti-Saloon League of America held the past week in St. Petei'sburg, Fla., revealed these fig ures: “Three girls are n6w employiHl as barmaids or liquor establish ment hostesses for every one en rolled in a college or university in . America —1,350,000 engaged in the liquor industi-yl 439,640 in higher educational institutions.!!- i Here is an astounding condition that should stir and aTouse-educatfon- al as well as other foix^es, for tem perance education in Collaboration with the public schools and colleges! Since reptfal of prohibition to the shame and di.sgrece of cAir people, the American girl has been “glori:fi^” as a barmaid, a feminine role never known before in the United State.s. As we have before a.sked, "where ■are we headed for, what is to become «f our boy.s and girls? Unless there is a nation-wide mobilization of anti liquor forces whait may we expect? only knowE. vancement of Teaching, suggests in his annual report that perhaps there has been too much intervention by the Stater-Jor the beat welfare of the child. He says “the child has been withdrawn from the home, the ap prenticeship system, the chUTth, in the belief that the school is the agen cy best adapted to assist youth and to serve youth’s interest.” Then Dr. Jessup raises the ques tion, which must havc' occurred to everyone who has griven thought' to the subject, whether the school sys tem may not be in itself7 a form of exploitation of children. Has the weL fare of children become subordinated Aa the interest of the smooth-running educational machine? Better no school “system” whatever than one which* tends to make children tnierely so much grist fbr the educational mil( It is not unfair to ask whether^tKe alarm expressed by many educators and writers over tlk “youth prob lem” may not be evidence that our -schoor system has not been too suc cessful. f(*ren{ meetings at $1 each per meet ing/hasdecided to reinstate and put nian bcing.s and less aViout money? How can we think more about hu- batk on duty the poleesman who run' How away a .few months ago onner count of'love. can we recognize the econonvic.s Pound Cake our poleesman is railly a good man at hart, he do not verry drink going out towat^ the county seat, no leese dogs or cowsxpr mules or^ bosses will be permitted oVk the streets en- iluring the" d3y“tim^, and only at night when tide with a Vope. D. E. Tribble Co. FUNERAL DIRECTORS EMBALMERS—^ Licensed Embalmers, Complete Modem Equipment Day Phone ^•4 Night Phonen 24, 253 or 255 Clinton, 8. a Mad* oe m iar-po«ad rsctpOi M laeradloBls. bahed shIDf«lly I* letola AU Ms Ibis sMcn srfD nin.ium ospfov^. tool B*caiiM dMc* ora ee murr wors Is mtrm irii does oake. Cuieann'e edb h *1h*lDak* oie i Order « todoyi noui (n 5 i oaiaoui VARIETIES m Z? 2S* 1 ClduSSenS GENUINE POUND CAKE BAKED I IKF YDU RAKE H V r -I ■ I the tux levy will remain tju* !<ame, vizzly: f) mills on the dollar,^^nd a pole tax of $l will be levelled mi all citizens over 21 and under (ir>. ever gets an old-age pension will eV cape all manner of taxes except on tobacker, licker, cigars, snuff, soft drinks and dogs, the mayer has took over the job of treassure during the absence of the seeker-terry, who is in a hosspittle for observation anso- forth. , — # some winder-lights was broke out of the drug stoar friday night by 0 0 ixjcks which seems to of benp throwed from the dollie-sue caffay. some drinking must have bej}Ln_ going on over Hhere when this was done. dr. green has offered a reward of $3 each for the mis^eants. dead or alive,' if returned t(/him for pro.secution, / i remain— / , mike Clark, rfd, . / 7 yore corry spondent. BRUCE BARTON SAYS... i! GOOD INTENTIONS The world is full of people whose intentions are good but whose acts do not have the benevolent results whieh those who perform them in tend. Indeed, it U probable that much harm is done by well-intentioned peo ple who think they are doing the right thing. It is ho excuse that a penen’s hiteiitions were good, when the eanaequences of his aetiona are -IK ' Dr. Samuel Jolwon aaid 150 years li pwrMt with food inten- ’ Ha ^ii|»:^p«raipltnMiiig the o£ Ototga Bathart, the great MSac^luih 'fnaa^r aiKl poet af the ITth tkma.^ Nobody’s Business By Gee McGee Puddin Head Will Go To College Next Year mrs. tom head is trying to figger Sermons Should Be Inspiring Last summer I went ter a church in a New England town. The preacher for the day was a famous man from a big city._ The church was only about one-tenth filled. Even* his famous name was not enough to pull people away frono the cooU^-sroods and beaches. - When the preacher arose to Th- nounce his text, I thought:' “Now we’ll catch it. We shall be told that these empty pews mean that the world is going to the dogs. We few, who have come to church, shall be crucified for the sins of those* who have strayed away/’ But I was due for a pleasant sur prise. He annouheed a text from I 3 i! 1 i! 0 1 0 fl i! 0 0 If—»ii-—-^rr^lr—' / MR. FARMER! Ask the Man Who Used BEST FOR ALL CROPS GUARANTEED AS TO QUALITY AND UNSURPASSED IN RESULTS CHATHAM BRAHDS Are made of the best materials, carefiilly selected to produce the best results, and are twice milled before going into sacks, thus insuring a thor ough mixing of the material and putting the manufactured goods in that dry and per^t .condition so necessary / for proper distribution. DOLOMITE LIMESTONE out what coarse to give her son, pud-j Paul’s letter to the Corinthians. He din, when he goes to college 'next explained that in this passage Paul y^ar. she has noticed him dressing rabbits. Cliffs, and othet wild fowls, and he has proved hjsseLf so skillful with a knife, a saw;, and a pair of siasors, she thinks he mought make a good doctor. but mr. head thinks puddin would become a big lawyer if he .would atud- 4y same, he ia verry slow abbut eir- verthing, and puts off jobs u far ahead as poaarble, and is a fine lis tener. he allao haa a stentorioua voIm and can be heard making just a* very ordinary speech, at least 2 mUee. he looks like s k'wyer alioddy, except he wears s cap. pudding do Dot liks the idea of farmhif. he is afeared that the re- was really making a plea' for a gen erous collection from the Corinthians for the struggling churches else where. Having told them how kind they are, courageous, how faithful, Paul concludes by saying, in effect: “Since you have all these many good qualities, I ^k you to have also this grace-^wHich was in Christ Jesus, Who being rich became poor for our sake*’.” The preacher then proceeded to ^tell ua what a gnand thing H ia to bekmg to the human race—^how good people are, how courteous to each others how brave under their sufferings, how hopeful in the facelxf an hii Fate. He said that God ersated^assn and wom«i because. H# wanted com- Is Used In Our Fwinulas To Make Non-Add Fmmiing Fertilizers. Big Stock Hand At All Tima For Delivary. ORDER NOW FROM muiNE Guy E. Tumbling Pn^. EXCLUSIVE AGENT FOR CLINTON TERBITOaY A. ' 1 ; -y.i.' ..j..;;*-Sliii '\..