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\ ^1 J*A»■ ■ 7 -.r .^- ■'? ' ■^'- ■- ■’■'4»- 7: ♦ v' , s- .* ;-’j-.T-" ■ ■ 'JJ*. ., ^ THtJ^DAY. MAY THE CUNTON CHRONICLE. CLINTON. S. C. • PACE SEVEN » 0 THE CHRONICLE'S WANT AD RATES Ic per w«r4 for firat ti«a; fhre iaaeitiMM far tkr pfk* rf ttmr. Mtadaiaai dwrg* 'He ' « CaHa ef tkaaln mmI tribataa •r retpect, le i" wwA iwytUa hi adraace. Miaiaiaai Stc. SHAMROCK—Two>ro(MR apartment available May 1. A O’DanieL tf TYPEWRITERS FOR SALE—I have several reconditioned typewriters for sale. Prices range from.. $154¥lf and up. Kennetib N. Baker, ^one 806. tf FREE!—.If excess acid causes you pains of SUxnach Ulcers, Indiges tion, Heartburn, Belching, Bloating, Nausea, Gas Pains, get free sample, Udga, at Kellers Drug Store. 6-30 r SNAPDRAGON PLANTS. Ruatt Proof, Mixed. Colors, grown out doors. 25c per dozen or $1.75 per 100. Blakely Brothers Seed Store. Tele-; phone 188^ ' Ic WANTED—Red cedar logs and cedar - stumpage. Write for prices. Give full details as to amount you can furnish. James D. Boyd, P. O. Box 132, Chester. S. C. i 30-4p AOGSDENT INSURANCE TICKETS .. cost only 25c a day, pay up to $5,000. S. W. Sumerel, Tlwnes 80 and 82. Ic * HAS THE CENSUS MISSED YOU IN rrs COUNT OF CLINTON PEOPLEr,^. I ! Have you been enumerated in the 1040 population census now in progress? Have all members of your.famil} been counted? If you have been missed, the Chamber of Commerce will ap preciate your calling 8^ and making the fact known to Mrs. Clif ton Adair, Assistant Secretary. Everyone in Clinton is desirous that the city receive as accu- . rate as possible a population figure in the census, and by re porting to the Chamber of Commerce, your b^ing enumerated will be assured. If you do not have a telephone, the Chamber of Commerce re quests that 3rou mail|in the following coupon. ROTENONE DUST. The Non-Poison- ous Ina^icide for Vegetables and Flowers. Also Trk^en, Black Leaf 40, Red Arrow and Evergreeh Sprsqrs, Arsenate of Lead, Calcliun Arsenate, Spraynrs and Dusters. Blakely l&noe. Store. TeVepKoM 188, PLANTS —PLANTS. We have Nice Tomato, Cabbage, Hot and Sweet PeiHte>^> Egndants and Sweet Potato Plants. Also all kinds of Garden Seeds. Blakely Brothers Seed Store. Telephone 188. Ic BLOOD-TESTED CHICKS, $5J>5 per 100. These chicks are B.WJ>. T^- ed and of course are Pure Breeds. Barred Rocks, White Rocks, R. I. Reds, White Wyandottes and Buff Orpingtons. Also Feeds and SuppUea. Bl^ely Brothers Seed Store. Tele phone 188. Ic LOST—Disappeared Saturday after noon, my little black and white fox terrier. Ears straight up. Answers to name “Rex.y The person who was imthou^tful enough to take him, be kind enough to return him. No ques tions asked. Reward to anyone giving information as to his whereabouts and recovery, S. A. Pitts. Ic CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, CLINTON, S. C. A census taker has not yat^iaited my home. Address tOPAV jobs are created.’ guests demanded or expected a ’"p- arate room. Five strangers in one bed are recorded in a New York h<>- tel in 1840. The first real hotel in FRONTIEM — Here One of the comnum fallacies which has been widely preached by folk in |higli places who ought to know bet- last frontier has vanished, say these prophets of defeatism. ^ Nothing could be farther from the RUBBER — Frairtter Another of the speakers at the clinic of New Frontiers was David America was opened in New York in M. Goodridi, chairman of the B. F. 1794. The first luxury hotel was th* Goodrich Company. Mr. Goodrich i Tremont House in Boston, arith ITS ppinted out that in the field of rub-' rqoms, the lar^st hotel in the arorML ber one of the broadest new fron- Opened in 1829, every guest got a tiers of industry is being opened up piece of yellow soap for his iadhrid- to developmant. ual use, but there eras no such thing Although America ia the largest' a* » private bathroom. It was many consumer of rubber, this countrylater before the first elevater does not produce a pound of it.iwas installed in the Fifth Avenun That fact has started men of imogi'lhotel in New York. Most of tha nation to push back a frontier of in-' g^^sts were afraid to use it. dustry. Capital and man-ppwer com- ^ blned have developed synthetic ma-' ^ .i,- Iter la that there are no opportunitiesjterials replacing rubber, such as!.. ^ , isUnda in the Ha^ ' left in Amemca for young men. The koroseal, with qualities in many ‘“n Archipelago, eight are inhabited. ways sperior to natural rubber. Mr. Goodrich, like Owen D. Young and other industrial leaders who ad- t. ^ .1 dressed the three-day session at tnith. There arc greater opportuni-| Rochester, hammered home the prin- , ties for young Americans to'build ciple that universal prosperity and human happiness is only to be a- chieved by the greater production Those who teach fbat there is only and wider distribution of real wealth. | a limited amoimt of wealth avail-' fortunes out of t^e country’s natural I resources than ever existed in the I pioneer days, Langboume M. Wil- jliams, Jr., president of the Freeport I Sulphur Company, told a representa tive group of college students at the | jqj. needs of an increaiing, clinic on “New Frontiers in American} population are doing a dis-service to Life, just held at the Uhiversity of i gn the people. | FSIF5 Pains in m ims THE SPORTS CHAHERBOX By TENCH OWENS Rochester “Opening up the new frontiers to get at the wealth behind them mere ly calls for a diffeient technique than that of the gold hunters of ’49," Mr. Williams said. “The schooti ansFcoI- leges are training youth to find I am cmivinced that the future of* America depends upon the intelli- ( gent (exploration of the new fron-t tiers which scientific research and technical training are constantly { opening. ’The greatest raw material wealth where their grandfatherstoday is trained intelli-' KIOAm never dreamed it existed. WEALTH — Everywhere Billions of dollars of new wealth t ELECTRICAL REPAIRING- Bring me your Fans, Radios, Irons, Toast ers, Lamps, or Any Electrical Appli ance for Reliable Repairs at Reason able Price. R. Stanton Blakely at Blakely Brothers Seed Store. ■ Tele phone 188. ' Ic With the coming of graduation, (xmunencement exercises, exams, and ldt^3^'r~Wbl*tic8 arc forced to , take a back seat in school and college for the time being. But wait, look again, tnaybe we are wrong! The sports situation is not suffering from a relapse. To the contrary; Pick-up baseball games are seen on vacant lots, people young and old are seen headed for the lake or swimming pool, and sun-tanned tennis «ithusi- asts are seen swinging lustily at elusive tennis balls. Plans are being made by many to attend summer camp somewhere and take things easy for a while. Out at the coun try club golf course, and on the col lege campus as well, golfers can be seen- chedung their stance and prac ticing their swing. About this time of the year, ping pong rises in popu larity among the college students who Just can’t bring themselves around to studying for that first exam. Yessir! Things are buzzing as CUntonians prepare to keep cool, re lax, and have fim this summer. about organizaUbn of the softball | creat^ literally, by hu- league. But this column sincerely I hopes that eomeonc wiU be able ,^Se* water is J^ing comirf start the ball roittng. I foW-for the bromine m anti-l^nock gasoline is extracted from the sea. Also out of the sea It’s about time for the softball league to get under way again. ’This column would 4ke to see another summer of fast games with active and wideqiread interest in the sport. If the teams are organized on an even basis with plenty of rivalry thrown in, the softball season during Clinton high school can look back on the year just completed with pride in its athletic achievements. The best Red Devil football team in the history of the school ran rough shod over a series of tough oppon ents and climaxed a great season with a 7-to-6 victory over Lake- view and the state B class champion-: ship. Captain Bangs TranuneU, Chiles Burnette, Joba H. Cmaford, and Talmadge Sanders sh(»e in that last game, while the whole team played fine football the entire sea son. In basball, the Wilder-men won five and lost six. They defeated Jonesville (twice), Whitmire, Coi^e Maxwell (twice), and lost to Spar tanburg (twice), Whitimre, Newber ry (twice),^and Greenwood. Prater, Shaw, King and Fuller were out standing for the locals. Aided by the superb playing of a newcomer. Art Prochaska, the Clinton netmen won eight matches and lost two. The highlight of the when Mimnau^.^jnd gence. HOTELS — Indoatry I’ve spent a lot of time liviiig in hotels of all grades and sizes in every part of the world, in the course of a long lifetime, but I have learn ed a lot I never knew about hotels from a report just issued by Thomas D. Green, president of the American Hotel association, in connection with is obtained the lightest of all metals, I “National Hotel week,” which is to magnesium, used in airplane con-! $3(10,000,00 last year to serve one struction. The raw material of this'billion meals to guests and 220,000,- new wealth is the trained intelli-! 000 meals to employees. gence of the men who createJit, • That makes hotel keeping a bix Application of brain power takes i business. The Iwtels of the nation nitn^en for fertilizers, dyes and ex-{be observed all over the country plosivek out of the air. New fibers from June 2nd to 8th. MONEY BAEK iUARANTEEt PumH tlAt wttk mm tw hmm •< TOAKR fiir MiMua wkh nauLm nOHM trhm U Um mmm mm BaiWf taOM, CZDAKa li mU «Htil •dwr SMITH’S PHARMACY [ ■ p I _ r ( n F and fabrics are fopnd in air and water and coal. Ores whidi uaed to I didn’t know that there are 16,- 000 hotels in this country containing f' PROTECT ^ VDUF CHOPS PIITH BARI-CIDE EFFECTIUE - ECONOniCRL be ciHisidered, worthless now yield'1,200,000 guest romns valued at $3,- riches by the application of human j 000,000.000, employing 325,000 peo- ingenuity. One of the richest gold; pie. I^e hotels of America spent fields In the world lay untouched ■ are among the largest buyers of until someone thought of sending I food-stuffs, also of soap.\ I never Omlning machinery into the mountain | counted them, but the hotel as^ia- tops by airplane and bringing out tion says that the average hoterroom the gold by the same means. contains fifty different articles for “There are new frontiers practi-f the use of guests, cally in everybody’s backyard,” said' Mr. Green says that the average Mr. Williams. “They are in the' American hotel malces about one cent things that we have wasted for hun-1 profit on every dollar spent, which dreds of years because we thought doesn't make it sound like a get- they were worthless. Those who rich-quick business. benefit by their development are not ^ only the technical men but the thou-1 LUXURY — Recent sands of workers for whom new' A hundred years ago’ few hotel M fev •ARIUM RIDUCnON COKPH. Minw CHMLtsroN. w NOnCK, POULTRTMEN Piicea Rodoeod 9*^ the summer months should be the most successful yet. A satisfactory means of buying equipment and ^teds. Barred Rocks, White Rocks. Fine quality, $6.00 to 100 delivered. ^ ... playing Itatislics will go a long way to put the sport on a sound basis and increase its popularity. We are looking forward to some swell pitchers’ battles and batting sprees and heckling from the sidelines. So far no word has come our way iBarred Rocks, $7.00 -the 100 deliver ed. Also starts chicks. FARMERS HATCHERY iM)8 Main Newberry, S. C. Imm IiIm ItclH Chtcht » IhtiMlh Pais Qaicklf rilgtuPAtic. ter dtek siaud* iiMxpcMiv* ) tkat tkMMUMia mm uaiac. Gat s paekac* _ ^BxCanpanAteaay. MU it wiUi a euait te water, a44 tlw Jaka mt 4 laama. It'a aav. ^ troobla at aD aMl plaaaant. Yob Mad^r S tahlaapaoafah two Uawa a day. Oftea a^kin 48 boBra—aooMtiaMB oraraiyln—apteadid ra- aaka ara aktainad. If tka p^aa do not anlAU laaao and tt jroa do not uA kottor. kadCx will Botkiac to try aa It la fold by yowr aadar aa abatlola awBay-kaek tea. Ba-Ex Coaapouad ia (or aala and net ‘ Iby ■» SADLER-OWENS PHARMACY ka had been declared ineligible. Lawrence Ferguson upheld the school in track and that right weU, too; for Ferg is one of the best hign school sprinters in the state. The girls tennis team broke even in the season just completd with vic tories over Newbofty and Kershaw, and losses, to Abbeville, Anderson, and Kershaw. The girls playing on the team were Martha Foster, Bet ty Hqnter, “Kat” Dicus, Marguerite McMillan, and Marjorie Miller. 20 Patiteits Are , :: X-Rayed Saturday Twenty patients from various sec tions of the county were X-rayed at the monthly tuberculosis clinic held at the county hospital last Satur- WALKER’S FUNERAL HOME CUntML S. C. FOR COLORED PEOPLE ONLY Day $2$$—Phmies—Nlfht $19 Rev. H. W. Walker. Bfauger TmWRTTER RllfflONS For All Make MaddiiM, Standard and PortaMa. ADDING MACHINE RIB BONS ADDING MACHINE PAPER Cain ,Chronicle!^iib. Co -1^- . . well scare" you Into using safe brakes to save your Ute, I your prcHierty, the helpless old, and the thoughtless young! ii. Why not—for It is now the ;'.iaw, snd good business for ^3mu, ton. Offieiat Ssrvtee .'•••• \ SAwere CaragA day, according to Miss Jennie Faye Ervin, county tuberculosis nui^. The clinics are conducted each month on the fourth Saturday, she said. A. Homer Moore For Commissioner A. Homer Moore, well known farm- er~of ti»e Trinity-Ridge section, an nounces this week his candidacy for county^ commissioner. Mr. Moore served) as commissioner for 10 years and once ran for sheriff. He says that he has been urged by friends from all over the county to make the race. He has been teacher of the TO nRAniTATrAT ri mi SON Trinity Ridge Metho- TO GRADUATE AT CLEM80N church for. thirty years and is a W. B. Wade, son of Mrs. R. W. Wade of this city, and the late Mr. Wade, is a member of the graduat ing class at Clemson college. Mr.‘than I,” he states. Wade has an excellent scholastic record, has been active in campus af-! , ' NOTICE fairs during the past four years and! persons having claims against has ^ ® ."^***‘ the Mtate of the late R. W. Wade, de- ors, being IteM In Whos V^o In ceased,'will please file same duly A^ricM CoU^es. He will r^ ■ itemized Mid sworn to before either ceive his bachelor of science degreelo. l. Long. AttortHy Jor the esUte at ihf commencemnt exercises Mon^of R. W. Wade.'Sniuiens. S. C., or d#y looming. Frances S. Wade. Executrix, at 'Clinton, S. C., on or before July 1, 1940, and all parties indebted to said member of the board of stewards. “I’ll let no man do more for his community according to his ability PRICES Have Hit Bottom ■ at ifCt4/L I CHEVmUT DEALERI CHANGE IN SERVICES Rev. L. P. McGee, pastor, an nounced the following hours of wor ship for Broad Street Mettiodist church for Sunday: Sunday school will begin at 9:45, preaching at 10:00. This will allow the congregation an opportunity to attend the b^alaureate sermmi at 11 pajhnent or before college is-3cl. o’clock estate will likewise make to either of said parties on or said date. FRANCES S. WADE, Executrix of the last WiU and Testament of R. W. Wade, Dec’d. at the First Pre^yterian churdi. Evening services wiU be held as us ual at eight o’clock. YOUNG DENDY PASSES > . . ... Young Dendy, weU known colonAi resident, died last Tuesday after a CITATION FOR LETTERS OP ADMINISTRATION The State of South Carolina, lAurena County. By J. Hewlette Wasson, Probate Judge: Whereas, vK; M. Rice made.auit to me to grant him Letters of Admin- DncrllX iUM... -Th. h»«nil ““ held Sunday and burial was atrthmmfnrm tn rite, and A.-M. r ohurch '''• ’!f'' “S .pp~r Mor m., in the Court X®;” of Pr^, to b. bold >t Lounn. on Rorth rtioot He l^lcourt Hourt. Leuren,. S. C, on is. ^ ®^r- yeara. He was about 75 years old. j show cause, if any they have, why the said Administration TO SELL ’EM, TELL ’EM- Vilh Aa Ad should not be Gil4aB^r of May, ^ D., lS-3ew granted my hand this 27th day 1940. J. HEWLETTE WASSON, J. P. p. C. 8UB8CRIBB TO THE CHRONICLB INSPECT THESE AMAZING USED CAR VALUES TODAY Thanks Folks ... for.the grmiid rc«|KHise you gave, contribulinf ao much to the succetsa of our Yvry aucc^ful sale last week. In ap|ircdatk>n of tkia we have'de cided to five you these, still grchtM’ values. GUoES CHEVROLET CO, INC. 1938 Chevrelet DehiXe Tewe Sedan, leeatty eweed. Very eleia. new tirea. A real bey. $475 19S$ Peed Tudor, feed tires, eteea tewide aed eel. oseter everkaeled and carrtes high way stteker. Oeir— $235 Twe I9t$ Clwvte- ekee aed priead te salt Year $195 198$ Peatlae Sedan, tow miiesce. lecaUy eweed. Ra dio. unasaaliy eleae. a bm- dem car ia every respect. Te sell eaiekly— $465 / 198$ Chevrelet Master Ceech. cued pslet. eew rtegs aed three. Ceespere sad yeu’U bey tkle $295 Several Medal-A Ferds and Cheap Cars—At Year Owe Prices. 1939 Chevrelet Deluxe Tewe Sedan. t$.M9 actnnl Is sn clean we dent what It’s wertk. Makes ns an effer. 1934 Chevrelet Delnxe Se dan. numy miles ef depend- ahls transpsrtattett kN bere. And $175 1933 Chevrelet ehanleelly geed. A $169 & CHEVROUIDUUR