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.’Wd F' .•.. ^ ry- ' r - ■sc TT lt>AGB FOUR THB CLINTON CHRONICLE, CLINTON. 8. C. all|f Olltntnn QllfranirU EaUbltalMd IMO WILSON W. HABJUS, Bditor and Pobliihar PUblMwd Ertttj Tbunday By THE CHBONIOIiE PUBLISHING OOMPANT ido fbeitter than mei^, but danfcd if 1 beHev« it •was intended that they run ihailf the macl^nes in induatry, loeep jaB •the books^ dedpic in grocery stores, '^peddle nierohandise on Che road andj 'do^other men’s jobs, thereby putting the said men in the poorhouse or onj .the W. P. A. 1 TmmanAV maSwi «t 1940 tODAV I t Subscription Rate (Payable In Advance): One Year $1.60; Sis Months 76 cents; Three Montha 60 cents If the women wquM give the men| 75 per cent <of the jobs in industry,; now held by women, and go home and, tend to tb^ ohMdren (if any), keep* house, do sewing and patching, hang iTumm Xm honeaty and-pevaonal integrity above aH else. iMen beiietad them and were willing to trust them with the desti nies of the nat^n 'because their hon- |sty was so clearly apparent. ■No man lis hv enough, arise ehoitgh, skillful enough to run a nation of^ fai Voi- 8TOJIKBllt«l Entered f s Second Class Mail Matter ^ the Poet Office at Clinton, S. C. 130,000,000 persons shigle-hsnded. Tbw are many men wise enough to take conneel,' able to | (Mstingipidh be- (tween sound advice and isel, and honest enough to take j course which will best serve Che na tion, regaixhess of •whether it is the AagtMt 2, 193^ ume 72, page 408. The sale shall ntC ba doead upon the day of sale, but ehail ramain open UBtn noon of the tUttialjh dag -after the sale, exehisive of Iba tit sale, within •which thirty-dqr, padoo any The Chronicle seeks the cooperation of its subscribers and readere—Che publisher will at ail times appreciate wise suggestions and kindly ad vice. The Chromcle will publish leUers df g^Mnd tetereat wbw they are not of a defamatory nature. Aium^oas oomnranieatiicns will not be noticeil._.Jhis^ paper is not responsible for the views or opkdona of ' its correspohjenwir , QUESTk)^! — Dieastar * around the kitchen when needed, there , * on a plat . course' at the monisnt or not )» any unamDlnvinai*. W. P. ■”‘**'* ^ew Ei»- !><>»“•»■• “•»« «• «>» momairt or not A-. eiAer, in 30 (ta^ And, further- **?” ‘"1ol.T more, there .rould he iuet as mud. “ ■« " NOTICE OF SALE to eaoh^vidual ..-Whata this countri- -- as . ' ccmving to7"j‘ Notice is hereby given that'l wiH iThat •wa^ in the Fall of 1876, when sell at puMic outcry to tne highest money-income there is now. 'Phe men would probab-’ *Tr o«tc«*y to the highest Jy be paid $24, where the women are'^"*^® . Rutherford B. bidder for cash at 10:00 o’clock A.llL, rebeivmg~ onjy $13 per^w<rek; •wsre* eonterang-ifotwthe ’P*'es*».oyi-ttdny;'dfa>eh*''00; *11*10, oithor ki’leet bighesto bjd enough stuff would be saved “around front of the Commercial Depot' CLLNTON. S. G.. THURSDAY, MARCH 28. 1940 the house’ ’to make any other loss. dency. qj. I didn’t knonv the answer then, and'ltory on Noitbh Broad Street in Clin person o4^ than the Ihlgheat Udder at the Mle or any repyreewgatlva thereof, may enter a higlklr IM uptm iMiw^ coim- complying woth the terms of sale by making a deposit of five (6%) paf cent of his bid as a guaranty of bid good faith, and tfhemufter withtei such period any persons other than such highest bidder at the sale or imy, representative there^, may in like manner raise the last highest bid, and the successful bidder sbaM 'be deemed to be the person •who eubnritibed the iwatbiaiaaid.. ptriiiA. 01 SHORT ON THINKINC It' is {>ix‘{x>-'^terous that any human Ining.'^. outside of actual ibarbarism, should grow up unable to read in this day with millions lH*ing ?|H‘rit in the name of education. Hut teaching people to read and write is only the first step, and the^ . 1« ss important. The next is teaching c'J'lt? human beings to think, which is con- . sideral'ly moiv difficult and import- P>^cfically and made the neoessary defwsit. I , The successful bidder will be re- I don’t know it now, though I have |ton. South Carolina, the following to comply with the terms of Sion cf their points of vieAv. It is With the women staying in the I**®®" sixty-four items of personal property, to-wit: [the sale within ten (10) daya after as many seeip to think, the oppo-,home, tbetter dtidren could be raised.^*'",the dosing •of the bid; if not, tJie de- * ~ — * — -A -11 , V- .. j ipoMt made by the sucsceuaful bidder R- will be forfeited to ithe plaiTitiffis and site of “Conserva^ve.” (They coidd receivo the right kind of|^!l“|^ wrong m this beat off all poa-jsonic Temple, Incorporated. Lately lin America the term liberal' education, be taugbt, how to cook, sew, i world.s came to me, I I'emein^r,, Balance of Deposit, Leender — ^ is coming to be use<l as meaning the wash dishes, raise ohiMren and. keep|** * rather surprising dnick.. If Gov-'Stone Estate, in the Commercial Bank the property will be adVertiaad and minoritie.s themselves and tiheir com- bouse. About haf of our young boys 'S^undere thought we were in liquidation. ^ sold on «ome sidisequent salesday at m<tn antipathy to any philosophy' ami girls spend 25 per cent of Ihniigs must be very^ which respects the rights and prin-jtime in a car, 15% in the moving!®*® indeed. . s of any group that disagrees picture shows, oO per cent in bed, and, I have been listening ron the radio ' ' with them. The word is becoming;the rest of their time is spent look- and reading in theiiapers the •speech-[ with “radi-; ing for jobs (that “aiwt” to. make | es of a numlber of men who want to I cal.’’ Communist speaks this plan won’t work and you were in liquidation. H. D. HB2NRY, the risk of the defaulting Wdder. The Executor, Leander R. Stone Estate, pui-chaser to pay for deed, stamps —:—'and recording. Thie purobaaer to be CITATION FOR LETTERS OP (let in posaession upon production of ADMINISTRATION I money they could do without if “paw” be president, moat of them asking the! The State of South Caiolina, of I had the job that he is due to have, same old question, with the inv^ica- But Clerk’s deed. It isn't wha' vou read that counts,! Thus every Communist speaks of i had the job that he is due to have, same old question, with the implica- Laurens County, lt’-< what voli think after vou read! ^ “Liberal” and scorns any But this plan won’t work and you tion that if they or their party are By J. Hewlcitte i.tmt imnr->vc'< individuals ' liberalism asjneedn’t think, I fbeiiove anybody wants not put rin charge of affairs, thin Judge: ment atid civilization • would recognize that those who do not it to work. Men likeTo see tifelr wo- heading for a very bad e^.1 Whereas, Mary B. “Day If-; nonul'ir now-a-davs and be- him still have a right to'men fetch home a little bacon, that is -After a good many years of listening'made suit to me to grant her Letters ' ■ ■ ■ — ' cwme of them do: it’s easier on their' to similar alarms, I am becomingiof Admuiistratioin of the estate and V. R. FLEMING, Clerk of Court, ■Common Pleas, Wasson^ Probate j Laurens Cminty, S. C. Williams SUBSCRIBE TO THB CHRONICLE ^ _ 4sra«a ww vb a • «■« « «• popular c wl govei iinuoH :-u4>ing mo.e so under odr'regiment- bold and express their opinions. That —^me of th« .Hi. socialized form of Washingtoin'l"^^seles, etc. Thomweli Alumni Plan To “The Paper Everybody Reads” ipi; for .0 blindly is another that f<'W piopio Mk mselves. any follow way of more to challenge* the honesty of any, one who holds a different point of' j skeptical, in my old lage, of all (heralds of disaater, of any •party. the WAR NEWS SLOWS DOWN say- think I Our pi'esent ipiesidential can>paign lis likely to create a gteat deal of con-; fusion in the public n>ind by the loose use of the woixi “Liberal,” as applied Memorial Fund STRUGGLE — Patronage Boiled down to its lowest terms, every presidential campaign resolves itself into a struggle for powor be- effects of Isaac Williams. | These are, therefore, to cite and^ (admonish all and sin^ar the kindred and creditors of the said Isaac Wil liams, deceased, that they be atMl ap-, pear before me, in the Court of Pro bate, to be (held at lAurms Court GaugtHi by the volume of official to parties and tiheir candidates. To staU- tleiyactment di.spatohes. the Eu- ^>4. a member of miihority group is well attended and enthusiastic tween the ottts and tbc ins. The outs!House, Laurens, S. C., on April 6,1 u-ant in and the ins wai4 to han^on 11940, next, after publication hereof,| W. J- BENJAMIN SERVICE STATION Standard Products Can Waah^ and Greaaad Your BviikeM. Appradatad to the patronage and apoHs of office. n>i)tan war has slow-ed down almost not in itself Liberalism. To denounc^nieeTing of Thornw'eralumnl was held Iside tries to convince the: voters to cKe routine stage; The tumultous’eveiy other group and attempt tO|at the orphanage Sunday at which' that the nation is on the path to de- excitcmeivt of the first few weeks 'has deny ,them equal rights with all otih-jtime plan.s were foimulated for a pro-jstruction unless its candidates are .subsided, according to Washington in-|o,.s is the essence of what might be posed $50,000 endowment campaign • elected. formation, ami barring a spriing offen-'called “flliberalism.” I'to provide for vocational and ^lege' Once in a long time there is a real- !*ive, tihc‘ foreign affairs branch of thej ft is wise to beware of any man,j'training of TKomwoll young people go\ei nnu,*nt has adjusted itself to party or clique which undertakes tojfer years to ooihe. kerp (toivast with any emergency that deny to any minority, •whethor racial,! program began in the morning|Upon whkh the election, of 1860 was! migh resuH in a firsh spurt in for- religious, or economic, the t-qual^at 'the usual wor^p hour when thejd^ided and the states •went to war' rights guaranteed to every .American 1 Rev. Louis C. LaMotte of Maxton, against each other, i have seen no ci..zt.i( by ibe Constitution. jN. C., preached an impressive Easter guch vital crises in my lifetime. -I.-—-- ^ ■ — .’sermon which was enjoyed by a large In every national political campaign eonga-egation. The visitorrs were guests j the outs have an advantage over the of the orphanage family at dinner. at 3:30 p.m., to show cause, if any they 'have, why the aaki admimstra-* tkm should not be granted. ' I Given under my hand this 21st day of March, A. D., 1940. ! J. Hevriebte Wasson, ly vital issue on which the people [ 4-2cw Probate Judge, must decide; such as the slavery issue ;\. r.. <‘ign coi li..-JiMi.Klcncc. The Russo-Finnish jH.i.v a.:i j. has no doubt into the pit-.u-e. When the Finns succuml)cd to Bol.-he- vTst pressure ami atcei»ttHl the Red ternis which tlH-y bad fought long and gallantly to escaj>e, the Allies at that moment sufferi-d a ma im defeat in thti( war with Gernuiny. Theie iS no otiher way to describe their failure to intervene by fo)ce on |)eae«- .s<> Nobody’s Business By Gee McGee ins. They control the political machin- NOTICE OF SALE State of South Carolina, County of Laurens. *■ •Citizens 'Federal Savings and Loan Aseociatipn ■off Clinton, South •Caro lina, plaintiff, vs. Maria Young, Mary Y. Jpnes, L. G. Jones and B. H. Boyd, We Finance AUTCMOBILES s.w.|)merel Al|g aOY (ik, the side of Finland, thiuebv forming , Russia is .ho a~new war barrier from which to settlement wyth strike at 'both Ru.ssia and Germany, she took the apple . Thi.s i>eace agret'ment represents ai^^® the core. Germany wasn t 1940 tlhe one (hundredth anniversary triumph for the mad-man, .-^•oundrel ®y®" and Czech^ of the .birth of the institution’s found- Hdler. He outsmarted his enemy in g^bl^ up the appte er. Dr. William Plum^r ’ * * The meeting was held at 1:30, pre- ery and have hundreds of thousands TWenda^ .V. C.. and F. M. S.ut.s, W- .he outa tunned out the in. R tikea l^Te matS^, What Next? ,.f .ln„,ni „„ ,h, ‘ either m or at the Court House at ... , , , ' ^ number of alumni s|K)ke on the mind to turn out the ms at any time.u'• big-hearted. In the plan ami-its need, and offered sug-‘especially if they have been Xumly^ ^ ’ Monday, poor helpless gestions looking to rai.sing and estah- entrenched in power for a long tame. and gave Hshing the memorial by March 15> —— Jacobsx PURITY — Dream , One of my first newspaper assign- is enemy in aIT TT ‘“"uy* ’'sw-iFys* A ments as a very young cub .ropqjter! big way. He is the “hoy” who sent the tilw coic pu up steering c6ThfhIlt4e aothorHed to'Jn Washington was to interview a* liussians and Finn.s into a conference Russia an wma^ be appointed by tihe prewdent, to be-|}|mnber of .senators about the efforts 1 calculated to end tiheir war and thus **'® civilization at tins |gin preparation for the rally reunion'of ar. young man named Theodora save his hide, and his people from 4C,avi‘ danger and disa.ster. Through-] time. lin June tihis year, and for tihe grar^,Roosevelit to purify politic.s, through reunion of 1942, by wbroh -time it is | the Civil Service commission, to which If anybody ever has to an^-er for. hoped that the proposed memorial j he had just been ai^inted. ^ out tihe bloody months during which'., ■ e>- t j la. . wi • . . - the Finns defended their birthright in [ +i,- have been raised. j Senator John J. Ingalls of'Kansas finest, gamest military ® meeting was attended by the ^ phrase which •! quoted in my xter, the fiu,s»n bear, foltowiuj, Wide, a uumber of local' |he Phil«Wpfci; Pn.*,, and cHy appealed for sssirtance. They grot . alumni of the inatiiution. twhich has beeoine a widely-quoted po- - - *"•' '“*•*■1 Mr,.C. A. Workman, Ma.-ion.N.C.:||i,1,^1 .phorism. -Purity in poItti^V’ one of the campaigns of all history, they rapeat- some help ibut not nearly enough. Fi nally, driven to desperate straits when . the Red, cracked ^ weatem end of "'*"‘1 *'* their line, Hitler, in the disguise of a I peace dme, .'topped in and clamped on the (screws. Students of military s..rategy who should know what ’theyj are talking about, say Chat be didi„ , m this to .‘«foguanl himself, not to ideals and *uS8>a s poll ever the little counti'iee have that we These acts were the I'oweat down tihinga ever committod and only Japan ticed such ati*ocities. With ail of this information about Henry J. Winn, Greenville; Mr. andjbe said, “is an iridescent dream.” Mrs. John Hardy, ^rtanbuig; Mr.! Congress has recently tried to ke. ev-o.., 1^*?^ Allan P. Lide, Miss Roberta j ^lake that dream a reality by pass- s prac LkJe, Mr. and Mrs. Val Duches, El-'jug, .^.be Hatch bill, prohibiting any loiee; Miss (Martha W. Hellams, Co- holdeV of a federal job from taking! lumbia; Mrs. iM. G. Bouhyare, Mem-jai^y whatever in a political cam- pbis. Term.; Mrs, J. Imn Dunbar,j or contributing to party funds. Rock HHl; Mrs. J. V. Dodenhoff, j .Hy judgment, based upon more and in Finland. The peace uiade -by FinlandStates ^ ourSjGreenvftle; Charles E. Layton, Way- than fifty years of close Observation jsents a catastrophe to Britain infested and afflictod. with N^i.cross, Ga., Harvey W. Layton, Ohar-jof ^.bc ways and wiles of politics and Fiance. They may sumve it, but Gommiinist. sor^. Tojlotite, N. C.; Mr. and Mrs. George M. .pQ]i4j2>iuus, leads me to the belief that case they do, it will be a serious'*^™ aaty man or w<man who hasiCartledge, Mrs. J. J. Gaines, Augusta,a larw wHl be as impossi'Ue to l>low to them. It looks as though litole enou^ sonro to think or believe Ga.; Mrs. J. R. Murff, Laurans; Misswas the piohibition law. these a.s.sociate<l Allies “sold I'lttle need a Hitlei or a Stalin over Daisy Lee Butler, Mr. and Mrs. Rex q^be men who hold those jo'bs are too Finland down the river.” beyond me. I can imagine only Wilbanks, Greenville; DeWese Lloyd, But as we said at the outset, thera * things »o b^d as that, viz; a Due West; Mr. and Mi's. Bruce Gal is now a -slovvi es, making anxious to keep them, to pay any at tention to a l«w' which would prevent wing-up of news dispatch- tun^ * school- loway, Goldville; Rev, and Mirs. Ix>uis them from fighting for them it hard for the American crowded with little chrldran or a C. lA.Motte and chiKli-efl, .Maxton, N.| ^ April 1st, 1940, to the highest bidder, for cash, the following described prop erty, to-wiit: I , * All that tract, parcel or piece i off W »twto. iriji|b and I in luilttW IvwRilipr UWiitytof Laurens, 'State off •Sooth Caitdina, < one-half (^) mile tooth of j iMountviille on 'the east side off | Calhoun hdghiway. State Highway Nunfber 7, containhig one acre, ' more or less, and having the fbl- ; lowing metes and hounds: start- j ing at a point on 'east side of i Calhoun highway on line of M. L. i Crisp land, measuring thereon ! one hundred itihirty-one (131) feet j east to right-of-way ■off S. A. L. i Railway; itbence seventy-eight | (78) feto south along right-of- ] way of S. A. L. Railway to cor- | ner off M. L. Crisp land; tibence j three hundred twrive (312) ffeet ) to Calhoun highway; and bound- j ed on the south by lands off Mrs. , Sara E. Alexander; on the east • by S. A. L. right-of-way; on the north by lands of M. L. Crisp, ' and on the west by Calhoun high way. This is the identical land conveyed to Maria Young and | Mary Y. Jones by ,deed dated , REAL ESTATE FIRE and LIFE INSURANCE LOANS FINANCED ON REAL ESTATE B. H. BOYD ik D. E. Tribjble Co. FUNERAL DIRECTORS 4 EMBALMERS Liecneed Embalaters, CMiplete / Madcni Bqidpneat Day PlMMie 94 1)1 Night Phones 24, 253 or 255 Clinton, S. C. p <>pk‘ to know with accuracy what is raking place behind the lines. That neium-r the Briu^h 'nor 'tihe French a*e hurting themselves fighting, is .the general beiief T the pulilic. Hitler has out-niamkeuverad hi.-* opposition all along. When the seventh month of the war started Marah first, tihe volume of in enminj? and outgoing diplomatic dis- lk)n running at large over the coun- C.; Mr. and .Mrs, Carl 'Bramlett and try with all rigl^s and privileges that son, Laurens; Mr. and Mrs. Robfert a lion could desire. Newton ami son, GreertviHe; Mra. C.l W’renn, Miss Katihreen Tuckei', We have a country that belongs to R„ck Hill; Mns. W. C. Fiore, J<i-., all of u.'h'At least 98 per cent of ouj; Jacksonville, Fla.; Fie<l Garland, people are happy and satisfied. But‘Leegville; Mrs. James ■Wa.sbam and _ there is, that 2 per cent of varmints. Charlotte, N. C.; James deMont- bolshevics ^ml fanatics that are try-'^ollin, Atlanta; WMIiam Mc.Millan, ing by every- hellish scheme known i Spaitariburg; Miss Mary Ingle, Bath. ’iatt!xi*s of activities at the state de- j.artment was less than half that of last .Septenilier. You ask why? That i. signifkant, when it is considered t lat in Hejtomher l,U07i9.').'i code , , .... words on tih<' war situation came into polite society to crime and blood-shcd, to undermine our good government and tuim it over to a bunch of scoundrels that know no more about justice, honesty, vir tue, religion, truth and decency than the (lepaitment. By la.'Vt month it had • irojiiied dowai to 479,394 words. Washington <(fficials now indicate that they lofrk to the future ^ess necessity for reque.sting informa tion or giving instructions. What this sloAving down policy of disseminat ing information means causes con- jectura in the minds of the public. Can it be that Herr Hitler is too smart for the Allies T Students To Elnter District Contests W'ELFARB — Panaceas •All of the candidates 'whose .speech es 1 have heard or read, and all the I'est who may pop up, base their ap peal for votes upon high patriotic grounds. None of them seeks anything but the public welfare. Elach of them i." sure that he and his party can run the government best. I would not accuse any of these gentlemen for a moment of insincer ity or hypocrisy. I concede that each of them honestly bdlieve.s that he can,^, better job of government than' any of his opponents. They all do can Clinton high school will be repre sented in the annual district contests in various subjects, to be held in Lau- piofess the .same objective, which is the general welfare of the whole peo ple, and they disagree only as to how If the government tries to fight the oncoming mob of destroyei-s, up hops a few congressmen, bonehead poli- . . ticians, and a large number of citi-iPens on Maircb 30th, by .the following can be brought zens to take up for the isms and students recently Chosen by their In my years as a pohtical observer criminal^ and it’s really hard to getiteachers: and commentatoh I l«ve seen lUmost started to clean house We’ve either'. French: Florence Ella BlakeJy, Em- every proposed remedy for the ills of got to clean them out or they wiM.ily 'Martin, Giace Martin. |humanity tri^ and found wajitii^. 1 clean us out. Republicans and Demo-i Junior Algebra: Bobby Sanders, am foi'ced to the conclusion th^ crats don’t matter: <we are wonied iMargaret Adair, Ian Morrison. -there is no poli^l panacea for the about our countiy. . 1 EngUMi: Grace Martin, Clara Poole, woes and difficulties of life. No form ^ 'Helen Morrison. or system off administration I Want A Job ! Short Story: Both Bouknight. «ver make anybody bai?py and What’s become of all the jobs? Wei History: OecU White, Ruth Bouk- prosperous. That is up to each of us hear tihe question every day. Well, iif|in|^t, Florence Ella Blakely. _ as an individual. , / lately come to have a new meaning you ask me. I’ll say: First, tbe itomenj General Science: John Morris, Peg- i in the minds of many, especiatty of j^ot moat of ’em. Modern machinery gy Jofentoh, Amriia Playne. i HONESTY Pdpularity politicians. Indeed, the words “Lib- has grabbed a goodly share of themi Geometry: Virginia Sumerel, Jane^' Since eveiy party ain|d faction pro- eral” and “yberalism” have taken on ,during the past decade. The method i Little, Betty Hunter. ifesses thb'eame idealfc iff promoting so many different meanings, depend-jof doing buRineto in the commercial! Senior Algebra: Grace Martin,'the common, goqd, by rwjUfit t^ can ing upon who uses, them, that it is'world now-a-days has turned loose,Helen Morrison, Cecd White. ordinary voter decide ‘'between almost necessary to affk a man for his thousands upon thousmide of clerks, | Junior Laitin: Byrd McM'iHan, Mar- M’HAT IS LIBERALISM? . 'Hie.re is a good old word which has jiarticular deffhirti^ of “Liberalism”!truck drivers, delivery b<^8, traveling garet Aroe Jacobs. before entering into apolitical discus-1 sBfltsmen and bookkeepers to “root ’ hog or die” in places where there is Otherw'i.'ie, one is likely to find that nothing to root ■he and tihe other fellow are talking! ♦ about two diffeient things. j Women are expeeted (and should) We get the •term liberal in a po-!to teach school, irork in millinery Biology; Macgaret Adair, Trftble, Oopo Blackwell. Bookkeeimg: Ruth Hughes, Bouknight, Mayer Johnson. Typing: Twenty students. Shorthand: Fifteen students. parties and their candidates?' As I see it, the prUblem is one of leader- Betty ship. And the question there is, what Idoes the nttioif ' nted most in its Ruth leader ? I think there is one quality off char acter which is imne vital to the fu ture off the natkAi than any other. IHical sense from Emgland, where it hae kxng meant a pohti^ j^ldk«ppby wh^ not only reoognizM the r^stds of minorities but tolerates the expree- stores, run brtuity priors, aeR dress- and .ander«tbtiig(i, serve as trained nurses, biff (typewriter keys, and do many other tMngs 'that women can White. Seniors who will enter the general iThat is common honesty; rodc-ribbed, seboiatehip contest are: Dorothy Hor- unquestionaWe honesty. Gur greatest ton, FPorenee Ella Blakely, and Cecil leaders whose memorito live in public 'respect had that character off sincere SPRINGTIME IS BUILDING TIME WE ARE ANXIOUS TO ASSIOT RESPONSIBLE CUNTON FAMIUES TO BECOME HOME-OWNERS What Will The Loan Cost Me? THAT IS A SENSIBLE QUESTION AND WE CAN ANSWER IT DEFINITELY! You wUl know in advanct txautHy wkat your monthly payments for prlndpal and interMt will be for the du- ratidn of the loan ... There will be no future renewal or commission expenses. Before you ceaimit yourself to ANY home loan, come iu and get the full particnlers about our simple and eco nomical leans to buy. bnild sr refinance your owi^ home. *ik^ EDERAL5AVINCS lANO LbAN ASSOCIATION Telephone No. 6 i I A Clinton Institution Serving Qinton People Since 1909