The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, January 11, 1940, Image 1
UNER
SUNKRYMlNg
Air Attadw Blade Uyon Sea
Oraft and 10,002-Tm Ship
Lost In North Sea. Naais Blak-
tng Intenrive Drive.
WAR BULLETIN
BOARD
London—vF^me Minister Ohasniber-
lain Udls Britain of “grimmer" war
dayt'ahead, eeea victory and peaces
time federation 'built on IMtiab-
Frsneh coHaAwratkm; Geitnan jplanet
attaek eleven diipa, sinking three;
fottiah liner Dunbar Ouitle stiBcee
mkie and %ipks.
iCoecow -- Russian eonaimnique ad
mits Red Army withdiwa^ “several
* London, Jaq. 10.—'A terrific mine
. m^kssion last night copped the 10,001-
ton ft^sh pasaeniier liner Dunbar .......
Caatle in two after Naziiwarplanea,| kilometers" in east coVtiial Finland
in an intenee invasion of British j tovere figi^ng. ^
eoaetid waters,'had bombed or ma-! Helsinki — Finland reports Ruaaian
chine-gunned ^ven British or neu
trai sMps, sinking at least three.
*f»RacrM?w4-.^c
%
*1
Two other ships, or six in aH, were
newly rQ)orted suiric in Hh lari few
days-in the sharp burst of sea-air
ymrtKte. Loss of Itfe totsdled at least
84.
SuperbNeoaeue woric off the south-
eaat opast saved aR the Dunbar Cas-
<ie% 48 passengers and aH but three
of'her 150 crewmen. The mastm: and
two seamen were Idlied.
— yaseangcra from the wrecked Uner,
owned by ^ ID'hlbn CkMilo-mail
riaamsh^ line and bound for the
■ Gape of €kfpd ,Rope with 198 men,
women and otiildren, reached London
eariy today, some ^ them, vrrapped
in Uankets.
They t<M bow the explosion plung
ed the ship into darkness and said the
Hfeboata had trouble getting away
■because of the suction of watm*, rush-
Ihg through the broken huB.
The ship cracked clean ih half after
the boats were away, they related.
■ Capt. H. A. Caurion was on the
bridge at the time of the explosion.
He was found dead at 'the door of his
cabin. His body and those of the two
crewmen were brought ashore.
The admiralty announced that one
iBritij^ vessel and two Danish ships
had been sunk by German aircraft,
juri off the east coast to the north
of where the Bunbar Oarile' was
blown up. Raked by machine gun fire
were five fishing smaioks, a lii^htahip
tender and two other Chips, unidenti
fied as yet. One man was killed and
32 wounded out of the tender’s crew
of 40.
Tbe^iNsuti aerial attacks, which in
volved nearly a docan riiips during
y, ^ __x —1 ^ « roads than fJere were roads of ^1
11^ on JU <r^: offloija »y». two. in th. 1980 .y.tein, 6,101 milei
strengtii for new aasaiat. • many as the 1,676 miles of hard
Paris—French chamber throew out • gmifmog jn 1930.
four Cpmnraniri deputies who r^in pive oounties-Oheafferfield, Edge-
aeated during tribute, to army; fiat /jeld, Hampton, Lancarier and Me-
STATE HIGHWAY SYSTEM
BUtLT IN PAST TEN YEARS
lo675 Miles qf Hard-Surfiieell Roads in 1930 Now Increasod To
6,190. Five Counties First Paved.
■' ■(-
derpaeses. .Protective aignai delvices
have been erected at other crosaings.
The highway department aiao haa
mphaaized iproper viariringB of high
ways, both as to traff|c jajpw and
hazards, aiKl direction leaden. Bx-
ptriments are being conducted in re
flector lighting. Roadside improve
ment projects, for beautiDcation and
prey^tion of erosion, have been car
M. BAWTKR
Ch^ Hfrisvay CeaiMlasiaaer
Colombia, Jan. 6. IVemendous
atridea were mada ik Sooth iGarh-
Una hightiray devriopUMot in^the lari
decade, but much renisuns to be done.
Consider the following facts:
1%e state hig^dy system today
has mote miln . of hsoxi-surfaced
J. Rbetl Copehbd llEGISLATURE
IW. At Home; OPENS SESSION
fights break out during hoar’s vp-
roar.
■Ge^va—(Finland’s delegate to Lea
gue 6f Nations reveals his. imtion get
ting “practical 'help." '
Washington —• President Roosevelt
says he is talking over with state de-
partmeht questiouy^pf. further aid to
Fhfand.
Rotarians Hear.
Talk,By Leader
Oonnick—had no hard-smlfaced mile-
in 1980, but today Chesterfield
has 168 miiea, Edgefield ninety-nine,
Hampton ninety-aeven, Lancaster 132
and McCormick seventy-one.
Four counties—Allendale, Fair-'Concrete and other
Esteemed Citizen SuceumbB To
IDnens ot Sevoml Moatlm.
- Oefvkes Here .Yesterday At
Graveside.
House Meets For Brief Period
To Hear Speaker. Money Is-
' sues Hanciag Over . Solons
Again This Year.
Funeral aer vices for John
Copeted. 79. .nU kixnni CUmM dti-
j .• IPOWP ood ceremony the SStd genend
sen whodmdatlushoine.THiaeday sf-j,„^y ^ Carolina today
lemouo after being indecliiringlMallii'opened what may well be another
for some time, were held rsaterday [l^, hard legislative session,
afternoon at*3:80 at the gmveaide in Lieutenant Gover-
ried OT in coooeiwtiOT^h the fed-*^ Preabytecian cemetery. "’Blatt fe*! in aenate and house at high
ned on w cooperation with the l««-i^ieea were conducted by his pastor,),
eral roads administration.
And on ithe whole South Carolina
with limited funds, has come
with other states.
A comparison of conditions of the
state system on January 1, 1940,
with those of January 1, 1980, fol
lows;
Mika Miiea
Types of Roads 1980 1940
five, Fairfield 1S6, Lee seventy-three
and Georgetown .110.
iSeventeen counties in 193% had' no
hard-surfaced roads reaching from
one boundary to another.
Eleven county seats were not touch-
Morton Hull, 4>f Hi^yoke, Ma^s.. ^ ^ hard-surfaced rosuls.
rigid pavhq: 1,846
Bituminous surfacing 330
2,577
3,614
firid Georgetown and Ike—each hful
than a mile of hard surface in
1930, btrt'today AHendrie has liriy-llaapposed earth typei 3,331
Unimproved ^ 974 2,061
8J»0
Is Guest of and
^poke of Objectives of Inter
national Organization.
f
The Clinton Rotary club on M^day
at noon, had as its guest speaker,
Morton Hull, prominent Rotarian of
Holyoke, Mass., who is being accom
panied on a visit to Rotary clubs in
this section of the.south by three
j fellow Rotarians' from the Holyoke
dtib. Mr. Hull hy clamification is a
wholesale grocer. As president of
the Holyoke Rotary club, as a district
governor, and as a meral^ of import
ant 'Committees of Rotary Internation
al, he has rendered outatanding ser
vice In Rotary wotk over-a long pe
riod of years.
Tb# Tuesting was presided over by
the wt coa^lF>vsi> W- Brown of the ct^lege,
- ^a menibmr oTthe dub. Several goe^
ofn^jembers wmre introduced and given
a cotoiSl wricome.
Hr. Hull’s address was confined
totirsly to Rotary, ha woik, objec-
werc aimed at unescorted vmaels, the
admirahy charged. One of the Danirii
ships sank three hours after; a bomb
smashed her stem.
Besides the Dunbar CaatiO, reports
restehed London of the mining and if ^ and p-urpoM. The organisation
sinking of the.M86ton Britikh tank-ibM been-pecu^iariy succesafuJ, be
•er British liberiy; in <010 North rxM xff
with 20 crewmen missing and believed idtosajcataon and elugbuity H has
And there wasn’t a single hard-
Totals 5,981'
Gratifying road expansion has m-
abled the state to take advantii^
of rapidly increasing motor traffic
until now. Traffic today is approxi
mately double that of ten years ago.
surfaced highway running the length j Future requirements, however, are
or breadth of t|w State. ! going to be even greater. There are
Hard-sutifacM "roads a decade ago i justified demands for more dual-lane
we^ a patch-work with few connect-1 and four-lane higbwa.ys in congest
ed ,^ute8, but from 1930 on, pur-led areas. These cannot be provided
•dant to the 1929 act of the legisla-ltoo quickly in the intereri of aafe
tore, rapid expanmon was begun, and 1 and orderly traffic.
Dr. D. J. Woods, of the Firri Psaaby-
. _ terian church, and attended by a large
'conoourae of frienda who gatkared to
pay thmr last raapecta. Tha artrly-
made mowd was covered with beau
tiful and numwms floral trftwtaa aa
added proof of his extended fricud-
sbta-
Active psilbearers were Thomas
noon and legislators broke up the
little groups into winch they had
knotted on ithe floors of both cham
bers the satoe old new revenue need ,
they faced huit year loomed over them
again.
They could take hope, however, ia
the fact that increased returns from
present taxes had brought the need
down to tdiahtly above the millibn
All
wider.
modem Highways must be
tvow South Carolina is in the midst
of a program which is giving us rank
With other progressive states. jlina roads were more than eighteen
Not only has hard-eurfaced mile- feet in width, but minimum speoifi-
age been exteitded to 6,191 miles, but I cations for main roads now are
healthy hhprovements have included jtwenty-tr a feet. The greater safety
widening, straightening and otherwise alone ia worth the extra cost.
Hedtii Copeland, Camrlei Oopeiaiid, A>llar mark jood they could be opti-
Henry Hunter, Joha T. Young, John
H. Hunter, Fnnk Young, J. J. Gsm-
weU and H C. Fargoaon. The bonor-
ary eaeert eouaiatad of ■a.-gnanpL of
life-long frieida of the decaaaad.
Mr. lOopdand had apent hla entira
life in thia aeetimi .and in Ctinton. Be
was a aoo of the lata Gemrge Pringle
and FVaneea Young Cbpoiand, one of
Qlinton’a eariy and widely oomwetod
families. He was a successful fknkier
untH forced to retire aeveral years
iago on aocount of his health.
Mr. .Copeland was an upright gen
tleman ato good citiaen. Quiet, mod
est, coortaouB, load to others, and
truriwoithy in the btgheri degr^ he
was admired by nuuiy friends
win regret to lesum of his passing
miriic about the obortnsss of the
sion after they heard Chairman Win
chester. Smith, of the house ways sad
msans .oowmiitaf, tail the press to
night that he expected to preaent^ a
general appropriations 'bill to the low
er chamber tomorrow.
“We had a fine session this after
noon and I briieve well be able to get
that bill out tomorrow, certainly be
fore the week is over,” the little Barn
well representaitive eakl. “And this
yev we’ll give the 'bouse an appro
priations hill that contains' enou^
revenue provisions to cover alT inieeffiT’*
;^’s refecpnoe was to the [hill
lari year came out of the com
mittee after weeks of haggling still
modemixing some of the roads built
prior to 1930,
South Carolina’s greoitest road
weakness in the laat decade was in
Sthotimtia^ improvements havejthe low mileage of farm-to-piarkie€
been made in approaches to and from roads. Funds were not sufficient to
highfways through cHies and towns. jbuSd them as lapkfiy as desried.
Many, hasardous railroad grade cross-• The first concern was m connecting
ings have been eUminated by con- laig^r communities and county seats,
etruotion of ovathead bridges and .taKtar -APtnitIpngd nn pagt. ltiQ.....
Handsome First Presbyterian Church
To Be Dedicated Sunday Morning
lost. The 175-ton Dutch motor vessel
Traida.btt a mine and sank off the
Netherlands coast,
four waa saved
always maintained. Rotary is the
finest pattern for persoi^l behav-
bttt her crew ofr^> **® Ro*ary overcomes tim
idity, motivataa hidden talents 'of
Today’s reports mised the known,^ members and coordinates friend-
aea war toll of all nations to 300 ;®*»*P •“<* Rotary’* Wggeri
ships* having a toimage of at least «u»trR)uti<m, <12)0 speaker asserted.
<1
1,066,178.
Berlin's account of today’s raids
said the German planes, scouting
along the English and Boritish east
ern coast, attacked and destroyed
“several armed" naval patrol ships
and merchant vessels they 'vmre con
voying. 'The German-
tonied safely, it waa 1^.
German military sources in Beilin
challenged a British atetomeat today
that only two British Mpot the
ataamer Box HRl and the trawler Eta,
has been lost during tb^ first weak
is tha developmant of the individual
Continuing Mr^ Hull said the world
at present is ia an awfid mess. It
is tiM duty and privilege of 'Rotary
to proclaim idealism, and this is what
'the 6,000 Rotary chdw should stand
and woik for. He appealed to mmn-
hers of the club to make Rotary a
tai%3ble thing, not a res^ution passt
ing body mrtriy, but a’viud force for
the development of the in<hvidaal.
In conclusion he said the road to
happiness sikl soooess is sincerity-
Hr. Hull made a sttumg, timely ad-
of the new year. The Germans stid
thsy had susde at least, six British
sU^ with a total tonnage of 86,183.
Crowds on the cliffs of the fleottish
coast peering through the misto ss'v
the bond) strike the Danish vessel and
dress and was hsard with interest,
both by the Jtotarians and visitors.
Mr. HuB brought his guitar with
him on the trip and' in conclusion
played a song of hk own composi-
tkm, “Vive Le Rota:nr,” of which he
3
r
.. th^ could hear the rattle of ma^nc- [1*taed copies among the members and
gun fire as the Gennaiu carried out timm to learn it as one of thehr
the attack. Nearby veasel|i rescued ■<>«€* I>toause of its fine Rotary
the erew. sentiment.
The fUhmg smadm also were re
ported to have been machine-gunned./
The east coast of Scotland was the
scene of these reported attacks and
Hkewise of tiie attack on the tight
ly tender.
The tender was tukldg s relief
crew out to u ligdxtahip whto the war
planes swooped dimm
UnidentifM planes flew over the
Firth of Forth without attaeidag.
COUNTY MARRUGE
INCENSES INCREASE
Aoeoiriing to records at tha oAet
of Probate Judge *J. H«w4stta Was
son at Xemrsns, 596 marriage Bgsnsss
wsrs issued hi LanreM aouafy lari
year, conopatod wHb 558 during 1988,
a gain of. 48. ’Ihe reeoids show that
lUr Deuiahflr, thp hamwr month us-
f. JBeenM sriee were famr by 88
jTpaeiBAsr .1918, tba totii laat
.. being 98 u <ebdipaind vrllh M
the corieeponding period of she
^ ILLITERACY CAMPAIGN ON
A three-mmutii campaign to reduce
*^shc«e iUiteracy" bi Laurens coanty
before the' 1940 ernmus begins in April
was.iMUgurated the pari wedc, ae-
oprdiag to J. Leroy Br^s, county su
perintendent of edueati<m, who k
heading the drive in the county.
IS MBRITNG TODAY
Khsaok meetlsy dt the
bo Mi thk aeeste at
Olaton at Sme
effieerS'WRi ba ia
tprdgrrin toumdttaa atat-
af yeriMi|it,that thk taamhufs am
tu be addmtaby Hiv, J. L. Mpgar,
-a member wWti laMh urkh a8 fMta*
bert invited
Tell It To The
WorU
The firri nde of saleamanship
k that if you have anything to
seB, don’t heap it a aeerat. XW
it to the wosUt^Xbaa, in CUa-
ton'a trade graa; aeani ta ad-
vwtiae it in IHX OBBONICLS.
Every
so oDs jKaaee ec fino aMaanuiiCy
where your ptowpedave 1840
WMDMe
Tha Mire: iPaenle Tpu TeU,
the Hose You T^Sil! .■
iRMi nom Ncowmi uunvoii
finna In 1940 'kfll he thoaa’who
through ] efWbtiVe
tali the tkyiiv poblk
week whnit thsy havs'ta ssM,
.the vuloee thiy have la -oltler,
The First„ Presbyterian church of
this city Win be deikeatto at 11 a.m.,
Sunday, January 14.
The beautiful church building was
erected in 1980. The building which
it replaced was built in 1901 daring
the pastorate of Rev. William Plumer
Jacobs, D.p., M*.D., who served the
church frwn 1864 until his resigna
tion in. 1911. The church was destroy
ed by fire in 1929. The new bariding
was designed by Arriiitact WUUs D-
vin of Augusta, and was butH by Con
tractor J. Gary Martin of tiiU city,
under the stq>M’vision of js building
committee consisting of C. M. Bailey,
itihairman, W. J. Bai^y, W. D. Cope
land, Jack H. Young, and Wm. P. Ja
cobs, II.
In connection ^with the dedicatory
eim^sss a targe bronae plaque will
bel presented to the church. The plaque
wiM carry the name of Rev. Zelotcs
Lee Hohnea, who founded the church
in 1856, Ihe names of the 'three pas
tors of the church, Rev. WHliam
PliMner Jacobs, OJ)., LL.D., Rev.
Frank Dudley Jones, D.D., and Rev.
Davis Junkin Woods, DJ).; a Ikt of
all elders and deacons who havo serv
ed the church since its ootganisation,
and the names of the buflding com
mittee, the architect mid contractor.
Dr. F. Dudley Jones will give a brief
historical .sketch and tiie taMet will
then- be anvejled by Mrs. Jack H.
Davis, Sr., a granddanghter of the
foundW of the riiurch.
As symbol of the fact that the
church is now free of financial en
cumbrances and can be dedicated to
ita apiritual purposes, a member of
the Imilding committee, W. O. Cope
land, wilP convey the keys of •the
ehunch to W. J. 'Bailey, wbo was re-
oently eleetad a tburck trustee. Oth
er trostaea are T. D. Copdand and
jGoy L. Gopdand.
The dedicatory sermon will be
•preached by Rev, D. J. Woods, D.D.,
jwho haa awrved the church as pastor
jainee February, 1920. AH alders and
deacons of^ thq tourch will sR aa a
body ia the front pawa during the
(dedieriion axerekai. It is hoped that
pB iwenbart AC- tha ebuMh wffi he
present Sotoey inomiiig and that
ithare will also be a large
jof former meaabera of the
tHany apadal iavitatloiiB 4Urse bean
’ sent to fixrmar meaafcaia of 4he jeoa-
igrsgation who have mond to other
elttaa.
Dqxwitory Holds
about-' 14,000,000 under the actual
^rvivj^ are his widow, Mrs. lUry'needs of the state. He declined to say
whether or not his coipmittee would
nleet the |830,000 difference in the
budget roimnittee’s recommendaitiona
” South Caro-I^^ OolwiMd; thn* children. Gu,
H. Copriand, Abbeville; Mrs. Janies
B. Pnutier, Jr., Mairs; Mrs. M. E. Be
thea, Winatofi-Saicm, N. €.; eight
and the expected revenue of the State
P.CTaPlny
, - --.*15 Ca^.TRta't;:;;
grandchildren; taro brothers, Mace L.'by slaahi^ igipropriations or by .in-
Oopcland of Lanrena, Guy L. Oope-
kiri of this cHy; oee akter, Mia.
Rjohard E Copetaad, also thk
place.
eluding nmr revenue provisions, but
intimated that it would probably da
a Iktle of both.
Introduetion of the revenue meas
ure in the house this xreek k axheer-
fol sign for those who always begss
hy prcdictiag it wBl he a
one. Passage of the bBI ahmys
kwmsBcsk, wnd asgwsussri
^ lover Ha proviekma Uist year kept the
OIBcial BmllCilMlH Schedule An- asaesaihly deadiooked through its six
MNUMed. Season Opegs Friday
ARaiast The QtaM
Presbyterian
team will |tay
Annual Meetingi"^
^ against The
coBege'a
15 games
ion opening
f^tadei m Chmtastmi.
/
Directors and 'OflBcers Re-elected ^ ^am » coached by Lmmie He-
MiBan, assisted by BiH Lofler. The
For Coining Year. Statement
Shows Increase In Business.
freshmwn team
Galloway.
IS
The Oommercial Depository of Clin
ton held its annual stockholders meet
ing Tuesday afternoon at which time
all members of its bosurd of diraetora
were re-elected to serve for another
year.
Members of the board are: Jaick
H. Young, C. W. Stone,. S. G. lAllard,
W. W. Harris, H. D. Henry, F. M. Bo
land, O. I.. ^eely, Jiobn T. Young,
and W. D. Copeland.
' At a subs^uent meeting of the
board of directors,, the 'following of
ficers were re-elected for 1949: Jack
H. (Young, president; H. D. Henry)
vice-president; F. M. Boland, secre
tary-treasurer; Miss Margaret Hol
land, bookkeeper. The meeting waa
presided oyar by W. D. Copeland in
the absence of President Jack H.
Yioung, who waa unable to be present.
General regret was expressed by the
board over his illness. ^
The annual financial report submit
ted showed that the depository had (,«rtity and freohmen).
enjoyed a satisfactory and successful) Pob. IB-Hexico City Y.M.C.A.
year. The board recently added $1.500
from undivided profits to the suipkk
month long, record aesaion.
But the need for new revenue also
furnishes' all the eaeuse needed by
^ the divemionut faction to launch ita
boAetball perennial battie to bring the htahway
thi* ymu**: <M’*^^'tinent-’B earmarked gasoline tax
income Into the general state fund
where shoes of it could be donated to
other ilipaitinmti
A pooling bill k‘ expected to hit
the house hopper before the week is
coached by Chick'over, and O«>vemor Maybank, noasi-
|nal bead of the divwmonkto, Tms ai-
jready publiriy promised to add fuel
The card foNoxrs:
Jan. 12—The Citedri at Oharieston.
Jan. IS—OoMege of Cfiarieriion at
Charketen.
Jaw. 15 — Furman at GresnriHe
(varsity and freutaaen).
Jan. 17—University of South Caro
lina at CahnalMa.
Jmu 20—Errione at Due Weri (var
sity and freshmen).
Jan. 27—University of Sooth Ciuo-
tina at Oiatoa.
Jan. 80—^Wotfoed tit Cfiaton (var
sity and freshman).
Feb. 1—The Ctasdd at Qinton.
Feb. 2^Newtieny at (^intali^(mr-
sita wad ftneidwiMn).
Fri). 6—Furman at Clinton (varsity
and freabmen).
Feb. 8—Steteon at Clinton.
. Feb. 9—OoBege of Charleston at oierk
• canapaiga
Feb. 10—(Newherry at Newhkrry. year is used by many to holster taeir
^ Feb, ^18 l&akine at Clinton (var-.^ij^ that solons will quiskly oon-
aity and fiaAmM). dude their deliberations here and
Fet). 19 Wofford ri ^wrtxaburg |HuiTy home to bnild up their politkai
fences. The concensus of adjournment
to the flame by reconunending ks
passage in hk message to the legis
lature Thursday.
Haybank’s statement, of which ad
vance copies have not been, and prob
ably win not be made avaiMkle, k ex
pected to inpotikrate Ihe riroagsat
public blast at the highway depart
ment he has yet made.
The highway fight is certain to
flare forth hhk y^, and
most ohservers behefve a pooliiig
wHl have no owra riumee of
than it did hurt, when the senate ewr
peatodly hlodped it, the skirasiriung
is bound to be bitter, wita diversiea-
iiris seeking to focus puhik attentioa'
I on the struggle in the hope of unseat-
I ing highway aapporters in next sum-
at
fund, and ordered an annual 6 per
cetit dividend payment io stockhoM-
brs. The statement as of December
OUT AFTER ILLNESS
The friends ot D. E. TribUe
are
guessing seems to be
early April.
late March or
SA 1QA0 * eooR i**** to see him out again after being
80, 1989, showed deposita of g95,- epnfined to hk hoane ibhe pari ten
521.14,
994.77.
vfith total' assets of $804^-
days on account of iHneas.
v/
County Dairy"
Grwy To Meet
Tb^'flrri session of the dairy aehori |
ha Laurens county will be held at)
the Agrieifitural MkHng. on Friday,
Jaimary IMi, beginniiig at 1:30 p.
m., aaeorfii^ to C. B. daootu coun^
BAILEY NAMED TBU8TBB
' A4 a otafragationai nwating of Hta
Fitat Ptaibytarian rimBah hold .Ban-
dny at the aonriusion of Hw ncndiug
gwsiup aour, w, wtai stari-
cd a trustee of the chundh to aooeead
,tlM Izta Jfita R. Toa«.
Btaven farmer-dsirytaen of the
county are already enxoHed for in-
rimetioQ and dkeusstan of subjects
periaining to the factors that “Mfert
haeone froaa milk cows" coupled wNh
baiaaeed feed^ of dairy animela "
TNm extsMibn dairy speciaUsto, C.i
G. CuAunan hnd Ymice Henry, will
lead each of the three hatf-day Laur-
etMi aaMimn, eeheduled for January,
fkbraary and iMaroh. 'Other farmers
iaritod to enroll, aald County
Agent Cannon, adding thattairoltaMat
cards can he ohtaiaed at hk cffleea «n
or hefsee the firri meeting. |
DRIVE CAREFULLY
SAVE A LIFB-
So Far HAb Year 1lMr«
Haa Baai
o
FATAUmES
^AUTOMOBH^
Acennsms *
!■ ' .
I4URBNS COUNTY
^ Let's Strive Tie Make
1940 a Saf^ T«r Ob
the HiginraTa*
Thta date
ytatf) t.
Dr. Dimcan Felder
To Locate Hoc
, Dr. Drmcan Felder, who recently'
gradnated from Noitbem llliaois Col
lege of Optometry, Chicago, with the
degree of Doctor of Optoatetry, haa
been graced Ikenne to practice op
tometry ia South Carolina by exami-
iiatioo before the hut state hoard
meeting held in Laurens Dec. 20
!21.
I Dr. Felder wiH locste in
land he asMiated with Dr.
jSmiHi ia the practice of optometry in
;<9tnton and Laopens. '.
SEAL SALE SHOWS ^GAHI
I GsDectioas in the carrent ttiberru-
,loek seal sale had reachsd $1,3»5JS
last wask, a figure that County Ohak-
maa.J. Leroy Burns described as be
ing ta excess <of the total coUeetions
'for lari year wthkh were $1,104. '
i Bums said that easapaiga effictals
experi ad kmat $1,600 in. the fwrrsat
jdriue which has aa its gaal $2,98%
ladAng thri coflsetioBs 'wiN caattxaa
undH shout the firri of Marrii^ sd
whhdi date tiny ended kst
1 iuilA