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PAGB SET8R / TODAY ' aNd TOMORROW vf“The first and best point of the government’s program is that we won’t lie and we vijon’t swindle.” (Feb. 10). By Frank Parker; STOCKBRIDCar^ N(mCE OF SALE State of South Carolina, County of Laurens. ' Pursuant to an order of the'Court in the case of Dr. Prank Kellers,* Sr., Cmnmittee for Laura M. Hayes, a person non compos mentis. Plaintiff, against Dr. Edward Long and R. A. Bobbitt, Defendants, land situate, lying and being on the north side of West Main street in the City of Clinton, County and State aforesaid, fronting tl^reoh a dis tance of one hundred and five (105) feet, commencing at a comer marked by an iron pin near the comer of T. J. Leake’s Filling Station, and running along said street a distance ;of one hundred and five (105) feet terms, at risk of the defaulting p^ir- chaser. The purchaser to pay for papers, stamps and recording. V. R. FLEMING, Dated this June 11, 1940.—20-3cf. CITATION FOR LETTERS OF , AIMRINISTRATION I will sell at public outcry to the|[°^ *kCarolina, highest bidder for cash in or in front of the Court* House in Laurens, South Carolina, on Salesday in July, FCHl SALE — A choice lot in Rose- mont cemetery. |12S.OO. Telephone tOSW. 18-2c St;" P FREE! — If excess acid causes you pains of Stomach llkers. Indiges tion, Heartburn, Belching, Bloating, Nausea, Gas Pains, free sample, Udga, at Kellers Dnig Store. 6-20 ROTENONE DUST. The Non-Poison- ous Insecticide for Vegetables and Flowers. Also Triogen, Black Leaf 40. Red Arrow and Evergreen Sprays, Arsenate of Lead, Calcium Arsmate, Sprayers and Dusters. Blakely Bros. Seed Store. Telephone 188. Ic *-.'r PLANTS — PLANTS. We have Nice Tomato, Cabbage, Hot and Sweet Pepper, Eggplants and Sweet Potato Plwts. Also all kinds of Gardmi Seeds. Blakely Brothei;s Seed Store. Telephcme 188. ■S' ■' , BLOOD-TESTED CHICKS, $5i>5 per 100. These.chicks are B.WJ5. Test ed and of course are Pure Breeds. Barred Rocks, White Rocks, R. I. Reds, White Wyandottes and Buff Orpingtons. Also Feeds and Supplies. Blakely Brothers Seed Store. Tele phone 188. Ic t. WANTED TO RENT—By gentleman, beginning about July 1st, one oi' two furnished rooms with private bath and private entrance. Best resi dential • location. Refeimices fur nished. Wm. Fenley, 430 East Main 6t., Spartanburg, S. C. Ip I . V hums JiiM ffilprChfcIt Ihneatis Pais rnaai tie, artMl •lapi* taMKpMMlva BMMtaf. Oatapa MatpTllh a wHli a If pea aeflar inm rWamatlr, artkrMa or MarMB pata. try tUa figpip^ ( of Bn-gx Coeapooad today. Mix B aritli a opart of watar, add tha Joiea of 4 laaaoaa. It'a aan. Mo trooUo ot all aad plaaaaat. Toa Mod only i tablaeanoaMa two tmaa a dv. Often wBlda 4S hauo-ooaMtl oolta am afctalaad If tbo paina do not laavo and if yoo do Mt ft BOtUas to try aa R ia oolg by poor “Weiring the sacrifices of the last war, we want tn be true, friends of a peace whidi will at last heal wounds from wKich all have suffered" (March 21). “Germany, France and Po-^ Umd will continue to exist. Ger many wants nothing that she is not ready to give to others . . . No fresh European war is cap able of putting s(»nething better in the place of unsatisfactoi^ conditions . . . Germany will tread no other path than that laid down by the 'treaties . . The German people have no thought of invading any country,” (May 17). “There aie Germans and Poles in Europe and they ou^t U> Uve togeth er in agreement. "The Poles cannot think of Europe without the Ger mans and the Gefmans cannot think of Europe without the Poles.” 1984 “The assertion that the German Reich plans to coerce the Austrian state is absurd and cannot be sub stantiated.” (Jan. 13). * “We do not wish to, interfere with the ri^ts of others, to re strict the lives of other peoples, V to oppress or subjugate other peoples.” (Jan. 14). “The German government, like the German people, are filled with the unconditional wish to make the 11940, the same being the first day i^urens County. By J. Hewlette Wasson. Probote lot and the lot hereinabove ordered! to be conveyed to Mrs. Selma B. I Adair, and nmning thence "in aj, . northerly direction a distance of two.**‘**^**' and ten (210) feet, and be- Whereas, G. F. Templeton made jOf the month, during the legal hours eastern half of a lot of land suh to me to grant him Letters of conveyed by Mrs. Mary E. Nash to! Administration of the estate and ef- J. M. Adair and G. F. Adair by deed, ^ects of Mamie C. White. These are, therefore, to cite and MEMORIEO BeasMF) 4 '* j of sale, the following described prop I don’t know how dld’klMilh has to 1 erty: be before his memories become bore-J “Ail that certain piece, parcel or, . . . . u on mot j some to younger people. But I’m tak- lot of land, together with the dwell-: *^.1* u ing a chance that some of my memO' iries of the past .seventy years may I interest some \lrho haven’t lived that (long. ; I think of Lillian Russell first, be- I cause a new motion picture purport ing to tell her life story has just been released and probably everybody who reads this will have seen it. My memory of Lillian goes back more than fifty years. She was far more beautiful than Alice Fay is. in the film. Beauty was her profession. On or off the stage, Lillian was a beauty. I saw her in sports clothes on Jesse Lewiaohn’s yacht one day on the Hudscm, and thou^t I had never seen a more lovely picture. The last time I saw her she was past sixty. I sat next to her at a preview^ of one of Theda Bara’s silent films. More people looked at Lillian than at the picture. She was a ravishing beauty to the very end of her life. ins hniKA anA officc of tho Clerk of Court 1 admonish all and singular the km- ini in the Town ot Clinton. County I J?*' •*^1, “ “'ll"'' **’'“■ “J'i ot Lauren,, SUte of South Carolina, I "“''V’'>>' o'“I*- ^ ”,!! on th(e east by Bell street, and loti Court of Probate, to be held at Lau-i now nr fromerly belonging tp T. J.jrens C!ourt House, Laurens, S. C.; on Leake, C. G. Copeland and J. M. June 25th, 1940, next, after publica- Adair, on the south by West Main'tion hereof, at 10 o’clock in the fore street, and on the west by the lot | noon, to show cause, if any they bounded on the North by lands of the estate of Jo^n H. Young, one hun dred and ninety-five feet (195’), more or less, thereon; on the east by lot of the estate of Mary G. Owetis, sixty-one feet (61’), more or leis, thereon; on the south by lot of R. E. Sadler, one hundred ninety-five feet hereinabove ordered to be conveyetL.have, why the said Adminisfratton to Mrs. Selma B. Adair.” , should not be granted. ing. Bidding to close day of sale. VKrrOR R, FLEMING, Clerk of Court for GRANT—Clgan> As a boy in Washington in my early ’teens I was carrying a news paper route when General Grant died. I remember that I'got a hun- }ld June 11, 1940i I Laurens County, S. C. 1—27-3C. We Finance Terms of sale; Cash; the success-1 Given under my hand this 11th (195’), more or less, thereon; and on’*“1 bidder, other than the Plaintiff: day df June, A. D., 1940. the west by South Broad < Street, | herein, immediately upon the con- J. HEWLETTE WASSON, sixty-one feet (ei’)', more or less, cius'Pn the bidding, shall deposit' 20-2c Probate Judge. thereon.” {with the Clerk of Court the sum oft —; Terms of sale: Cash. Purchaser to j ten Per centum of the amount of bid pay for papers, stamps and record- ® guarantee of his good faith in ww,_ . . . - bidding. The same to be appliedi to the purchase price upon his com-, plying with the terms of sale, other-i wise to be paid to Plaintiff for credit j on the indebtedness. In the event the successful bidder should fail to make such deposit, or should fail to comply, i with the terms of sale, the said lands I shall be re-sold on the same or some I sub.sequent Salesday on the same NOTICE OF The State of South Carolina, County of Laurens. In Court of Common Pleas. W. E. Adair Plaintiff, vs. Mrs. Lo-| rena O’Dell Adair, individually and as administratrix, et al. Defendants. Pursuant to a Decree of the AUTOMOBILES o — S. W. SUMEREL Jacobs Baildisf ASK ROT dred extra papers and sold them all ^ I Court in the above stated case, I will eral, dnWng in and out of broth- public outcry to the highest bidder, either in or in front of the ^ ^“rens C. H , & C.V the throat, and his doctor had limited]Salesday in July next, being Mon- SADLER-OWENS PHARBIACT , / * I r.' W. J. BENJAMIN SERVICE STATION StandlEird Ih*oducts Cara Washed , and Greased- Tear Bneineea Appredatad r “WALEEim FUNERAL HOME ClintoB, S. C. FOR COLORED PEOPLE ONLY Day 9289—Phaaaa-Night 119 B«v. H. W. Walker, BHaaager ill . —> 3 ^ I MO FAMES W. CALDWELL CAU 276 a E. Tribble Co. FUNERAL DIRECTORS • ..juid. embAlmers IJtensed Embalmers, Coaiplet* Modern Eqaipment Day Phone 94 Night Phonea 24, 253 or K5 Clinton, preservation of peace in this world (August 17). ' 1935 “Germany neither intends nor wishes .to interfere in the inter nal affairs of Austria, to annex Austria, or to conclude an ansch- lus.” (May 21). “Germany is the bulwark of the West against Bolshevism and in com bating it will meet terror with terror and violence with violence.” (No vember 30). 1936 “We want t<y be a peace-loving element among the nations. We can not repeat that often enough.” (Jan uary 30). “After three years I believe I can regard the struggle for Ger man equality as concluded today —. . . We have no territorial de mands to make in Europe.” (March 7—Rhineland occupied and LocanMM. dpnouDced same^ day). “Germany has no claim to make against the European nations except to live exactly like the others . . . What we have in mind is a legal or der of European national states with equal ri^ts.” (March 28). “We see in Bolshevism a bes tial, mad doctrine which is 'a threat to us ... I cannot make a pact with a regime whose first act is not the liberations of workmen but of the inmates of gaols ; . . These are two worlds, in Bolshevist Russia there is dev astation, grim murder and ruin. Here is laughter, happines^, and beauty.” (Septemtfer IS). 1987 ^ The period of so-called surprises is now over.” (January 30). “Germany Is a guarantor of peace because she warns all those who from Moscow endeavor to world in flames.” (September 19). , 1938 “The Poli^ state respects the na tional conditions in this country and Danzig, and Germany respects Pol ish rights. Thus it has been possible to find die way to an understanding I which, emanating fro mOanzig, in! spite of the assertions of many mis-| chief-makers, has succeeded in re-| moving all friction between Germany and Poland and made it possible to work together in true amity.” (Feb ruary 20); (Germany invaded Austria March 11). him to one cigar a day, so he had some specially made, nearly a foot long. The cancer final^ killed him. General Grant in His army days had the reputation of being a heavy day, the first day of the month, dur ing the legal hours for sjuch sales, the following described property, to wit: All that piece, parcel or lot of ^er. In later .vearel^Kot to 1^ F^enck ptentj.|iQ^ Clinton, County and State* conUining one (1) acre, notK^ that he nffused all drinks. R^^^ore or less, and bounded on the cai^ht my eye md smded. north by Phillips street, on the'east, “I saw, as a boy. what liquor cM.^y shands street, on the south by to my he said, “and dectt(^ | property of W. E. Owens, and on the' that I would never never take a west by lands now or formerly be- drink; and I never have.” Fred Grant went on to tell me of his experiences longing to the Presbyterian College.- The said lot of land is composed oft as a l»y of fourteen when his father lots known as Number M2 and' took him to war with him and * he 233 as shown on plat made by Paul' serv^ as a sp^ial aide in the siege November 23. 1926. of Vicksburg. “I could get through, conveyed is the the lines and bring back information, where a'grown-up man would have been caught,” ji® ®®i<L TBDDT-.Foreef«l identical land conveyed to J. Rhett Copeland by Howar^ Caldwell by deed dated December 2nd, 1903, recorded in Deed Book 21 at page 369, office of the Clerk of Court lor many »peoi»e TewieHibcr that,Laurens C!ounty, and by J. Rhett* the first President Roosevelt had a I Copeland to G. Floyd Adair by deed| career much like that of the presentjdlited January 5. 1931, recorded in, president, in his early days? A Har- Deed Book 66, at page 249, office of vard graduate, he wwit into politics the Clerk of Court for Laurens Coun- as a member of the New Yoik legis- ty, S. C.; ALSO: lature, fathered important legislation which made him famous, ran for mayor of New York, was a member of the first U. S. civil service com mission, police commissioner of New York, then assistant secretary of the navy, frcmi which he resigned to take par^ in the war with Spain, where he won fame as colonel of the “Rough Riders.” I knew him first in Washington in the late ’80s. Then I was’ with him in his campaign for governor of New York in 1898 and spent the entire term of liis service in Albany as a newspaper correspondent. “Teddy” Roosevelt was the most forceful ant^ active man I ever knew in public life. Professional poliUcians hated hud. ‘All that piece, parcel and lot of poll would not stand for poli tical chicanery. His own party lead ers tried to get rid of him by “kick ing him upstairs” into the vice-presi dency. Six months after he took that office President McKinley’s death made him president. CHEMICAL POSmONS OPEN According to Rhett P. Adair, secre-• cretary of the local civil service»com- i missipn, explosive chemists are urged, to apply to the commission for ex- ■ aminations now open for the various j grades of chemist and chemical tech-1 nologist positions in the federal ser-( vice. Salaries for the positions range I from $2,600 to $4,600 a year. Appli- j cations may be made to Mr. Adair at; the local post office, and n\ust be on ; file by June 24. , | DOILARS SHERIFF .MARTIN -PASSES 1 Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Dunlap w^e' called to Greenville yesterday on 1 account of the sudden death of Sher- ' ■W^John Martin, tHt>ther=Tn-1aw nf ' to tha Warld't fair ar Aaywharal Raand-Trip Fares New York .. $16.29 Asheville $2,90 San Pclseo 968J9 Headseaville $2AS Atlante $4.99 Myrtle Beach $SJ5 Jaeksmiiille $8.95 Charlestaa $4.15 CNipN BUS STATION Mr. DunlafT and a brother of Dr. W. T. Martin of Goldville. 6 R i YHIIU NII UMBa Birthdays And Anniversaries Stand Must Mr. and Mrs. CarrcU M, Spencer celebrated their wedding anniversary Saturday, June 8. Monday, June* 17, is the anniver- The motto must be ‘jiever war sary of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Copeland. (May 1). agiun , “We hav^ assured all our im mediate neighbors of the integ rity of their territory so far as Germany is concerned. . . . The Sudeteniand is the last territorial claim which I have to Europe." (Sapt. 26). make in Miss Mary Jones ol Thom well or phanage will ^lebrate a birthday tomorrow, June 14. Mr. and <Mrs. A. B. Davidson ob served their wedding anniversary June 9th. Mrs. J. B. Dailey will celebrate a birthday tomorrow, Jun6 14. Mr, and Mrs. W. M. McMillan have Be Carehd •f tlMwe Woiti-Oiit Tiref They iWt Ukt HOT weather: Replace them at “Jn general, we have but one wish.a wedding anniversary Monday, June —that in the coming we nriay be n. able to make our contribution to the!" Mr. and Mrs. Heath Copeland ob served their anniversary June 11. igOReiyil pacification of the whole | |w<yld..7 (,Jan.;l).. ■i*Only the war-mongers think there be a war. I think there will be . ^ “J have never- cea99d to uphold the view that the necessity of a ' free access to IMe »ea for the Pol ish state cannot be ignored.” (April 28). •Mrs. L. A, Reeves has a birthday today. Wednesday, June 19, is the wed ding anniver;Mury of Dr. andi Mrs. Marshall W. Brown. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gasque will celebrate an anniversary June 16. (Pact wRh Russia sfgned August 21. Poland invaded Sept. 1; war de clared by Great BVitaia and France September 3), Si;MaAL OFfKR PATHRR*S DAT->IVNE If Give Mm Eaqatare, 1 Tllll eiler gnai wkM iwm if. JAmW. CALDWBIX riMte S26 MISS WHITEN GIVEN TROPHF Miss Millie Whitten, daughter of Dr. and &4rs. B. O. Whitten of this city, who has been a student at Foster School of Dance in Columbia the past season, was featured as the leading ballerinia in “Foster Follies” Tuesday evening in theit final re view. Miss Whitten was presented the trophy for imiMx>vemcnt given each year by the school, this being the only time in six years a first year student hat received the-hemor. . \ ■J