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\ /T- ^ V:- >’V- /■ ■ PAGE FOUR THE CLINTON CHRONICLE, OiNTON. S. C. THURSDAY, JUNE 20, IfUO^ (3tfr (dltntan (dlfronirU EsUbliilied 19H WILSON W. HARRIS, Editor and Publisher Published Every Thursday By THE CHRONICLE PUBUSHING COMPANY Subscription Rate (Payable In Advance): One Year $1.50; Six Months 75 cents; Three Months 50 cents 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 suggestions and kindly advice. The Chronicle will publish letters 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 correspondents. collums, like we have right here at home. Up And Dewn The Town In Flat Book officers in the recent southern man euvers showed more interest in whitewashed tent-pegs than in bat-| tlefifld discipline, according to some! reports. I mr. edditor; plese correct a state- j ^ York ment made in this coUum last week' ^ grou^ in two armies, that hon. holsum moore had bought * o" «ast and a blue the house and lot at the comer of . *** main and westside streets, he thought National Guard divisiOM^ Maine, he had bought it hisself for a few N^m^hire, Rh^e Jsland, Con- days, but the govverment refused 5^t‘cut, ^w Ywk, New to lend him enough to pay for it ^laware Maprl^d. ^glnia and the in full, he said they insuted him District of Columbia, ^ides regulars when they offeml him only 80 per- important Eastern army cent, he will live on where he is **®—’ ' 'with his wife at her mother’s home.! miliUry maneu-, I vers, m which regulars and Na-! ' tional Guard participated. ^ miss jennie veeve s*n‘th. our affi- y^ar in one army areror anothe7 {citn schoJl principle, left flat rock,^his year, for the first time, these! in a bus for a summer scholl last; p^^rcises are being held all over' ifnday amidst a hevy flow of teare the nation, to prepare citizens for: i and the waving of a sad farewell. CiJNTON. S. c;.. THURSDAY. JUNE 20. 1940 : nearly all of the men-folks in town NO NEUTRALITY NOW | There is unlimited work ahead fori was on hand to see her depart, allso The fact that the United States is the Red Cross in saving the starv- .7 wimmen and some children, she ne IcMiger neutral (if it ever was) ing. destitute, homeless millions whoi wiU be badly missed enduring the and has abandoned the policy of iso- are helpless victims of the brutal | summer, she will studdy fissical cul- lation in connection with the present warfare now being carried on across ture while away and will possibly in war (largely Hitlers) is being wide- the seas. The challenge confronts sert it into her faculty next fall. Iv acknowledged and heralded. We this community to do its part—gladly | ♦—^ seem to be in the midst of a strug-'and liberally. I dr. hubbert green is figgering on gle for the survival of democracy ^ ; enlarging his drug stoar. since he among a number of the nations of SPIRITUAL AWAKENING put in bicycles and laundry soap the world, and there is strong rea-' NEEDED j and groceries and radios and a eat- son to believe that if democracy isj ^ hundred years ago the people of!*tig cafe, he has very little room for confjucrcd in the old world itjpay United States were in the depths; ansoforth. he will increase soon have to tight tor its existence qj greatest depression which the length about 20 feet and make the ceiling -2 feet higher so’s he can in stall a mezzy-nine flore for rugs and in the new world. At least, if it does, young republic had ever exp^ienced. not stand'up for its rights here H Thousands of men wete unemployed,, ... will be forced jnto a subordinate po- (hundreds . of industries hadf^jjittosett'bis specials this week in sition by those who subdue the Allies, banks had failed, money wasl^*"^®® canned milk, 3 lor clO. 6 Sentiment grows stronger daily for scarce and hard to borrow. j packages of salt, c20, 6 bars of ail possible aid to Fran« and Eng- beset land short ol active participation on eapnnnmir dffficulties Americans powders, 2 ford inner tubes, and tbe battle,ields. The administration ouis , ? o”^?^mea, a,’thu time at Washington is to be commended ** handle corn meal at this time. for the steps which ar^‘ being taken One who reads the history of the to that end and for the activities, 1840 s cannot fail to be impressed mr. slim crance, the third, retum- though long delayed, which will " db the earnestness with which the ed back from the c.c.c. camp, he was stri ngthen our own means of defense, -thinking people of America turned | turned down onner count of 2 flat What tlie outcome will be, how far lo the teachings of religion to find a feet, imperfect chist measurements, the war will alTect the United Slates remedy for their troubles. Then, as 2 fingers missing from right hand— —only time can tell. There is as yet religious people were divided, this includes his trigger finger, and much of conjecture as to what a few Man.v sects read the Scriptures with, a slight touch of exema. he wanted TcTtTcs or months may bring forth, a different interpretation from tb®jto jine up and go across but his and wc should not go i/ito the war pthers. There was a considerable ■ iniirmaties were against him. he unless we are forced to and must ^roup which withdrew from the es-igays he will stay at home and fight travel a hard and dangerous road tablished churches altogether. These! fifth sixth collums. he iS'verry for the sake of human rights. It is "Come-Outers.” as they called them-1 loyal to his country and his familey the part of wisdom to offer to the selves, had lost patience with the but they could of done without him Allies all the material supplies we churches and their ministers who re- verry well. WE LIVE ON CREDIT Credit keeps the Wheels of com mercc and industry turning. properly can, it is time to give speed ftised to make the lighting of social: and strong support to preparedness "’congs their main b'.siness. ■ , at home, but we should refuse to How. the "Come-Outers’' asked,! send our men overseas as targets cu,^iu a Lnristian be a true follower j for the dastardly Hitler forces. ol the Master unless he were a fight-1 ^ tr against all socials injustice, as Je-j sus was? Since then, countless thou-' sands of religious leaders have asked the same question. There has come , about a great awakening to the re-' Relatively few business transac- sponsibility of organized religion to' tions involve the immediate use of fj^d the way out of the economic dis-- cash. W'hen you make a telephone under which American is suf- call. when you purchase a new car.lfering today. Instead of quitting the when you buy furniture, a home, or j churches as the “Come-Outers” did, tonight's groceries, as a rule you de-j gj-e participating in interde- fer payment until some future day. nominational efforts to find the an-' And the telephone company and the gwer ' automobile dealer and the grocer also, ^he ,3,3^^ yores trulie, mike lark, rfd, corry spondent. TODAY AND TOMORROW By Frank Parker STOCKBRIDGE Uve by credit—when they buy from! uw wholesalers and mapufaeturers. it is i agreed that payment will be made,'. nn it ^ f not at the time of delivery, but 30.1^^®"^®°" m an nA Washington the first week in June. 60 or 90 days hence. ' More than a thousand delegates, sent PREPAREDNESS — Army In all of the plans for building more and bigger fighting ships and faster and better armed airplanes, war. 1 RAINING — Officers Just how much real military train-{ ing the members of the National'; Guard get out of these short adven-i tures afield I am somewhat doubtful; about. The greatest value of this military training is to the officers rather than the enlisted nwn, giving them experience in handling large bodies of troops. The education of regular army officers as well as of the guard in the handling of tanks and motorized field artillery and the transportation of infantry by trucks instead of on foot is one of the most valuable features of such maneuvers. Everybody concerned will get a clearer picture of the use of air planes in combat, and their terrific power a^ a weapon of offense. From all I hear from my military friends, a new understanding of what air planes can do has been wrought home to army men by recent events in Europe. One of the great values of such military exercises, spread over great areas, is that they arous^ new inter est in the army among people who have seldom or never seen a body of men in uniform. They help to demonstrate what national defense implies.^ CONSCRIPTION — Revived In my boyhood almost every youngster wanted to get into a mili tary uniform and caryy a gun or a sword. The tradition was strong of a volunteer army. Men whb had been drafted in the war between the states were held in low esteem. Those who took the bonus of $300 for volunteer ing ^were not regarded as patriots. So when the ^ited States went to war with Spam nobody, thought of adding to the regular forces by any method than by calling for volvm- teers. When we got into the World war Gen. William Crozier head\ of the Army War College had a plan for a “selective service” draft which was adopted. Our World war army, however, consisted-of ratv reeToHs,'wiost—of whom had never fired a gun. It took months to train them. Now the pro posal has been revived for the con scription of every; man of fighting Ins MCDtCTEO^TtWr iitl CS THE tgxniM WiU ae iviAOE PROM MATRRli^ . KJT NOiM AVAILABief ing the eastern half of a lot of land conveyed by Mrs. Idn^y E. Nash to J. M. Adair and G. F. Adair by deed dated April 20, 1931, and recorded Some 90 per cent of all b^ness Protestant, Catholic and Jewish 1 people in and out of congress are congregations, spent three days in prone to think fifst, if not solely, the use of credit. In only 10 per cent discussions as to what the religious IS - cash on the barrelhead" involved, organizations can do to help solve A very large part of all credit is the most pressing problem of the provided, of course, by banks. And time. when the bankers lends you t thou- our nation needs a spiritual re sand dollars he is doing precisely yival. It is our only hope wnat the merchant does when he — ■ m Iru.sts you for your ten or twenty' ~ ^ ^ dollars' worth of food or merchan-i disc until pay day. On top of that,; (he banker is bound by rigid rules designed to protect his depositors from loss. It A his job to analyze your past credit record, your abili ties. your -character and your pros pects, and then either grant or de cline the loan. Nobodjr’s Business By G«« McGee Flat Rock Citizens Are fiot Under The Collar of the defense of our coasts from invasion, by air or sea. But what if an invader actually lands an army With equipment? That puts the prob lem of defense up to the army. I think most folk are pretty well satisfied with the present naval pro gram. The fighting ships we have, more than any other nation, I be lieve, are the best in the world, and we’re "building more of them. We haven’.t as many fighting airplanes as we ought to have, but we’ve proved we can build them fast, and we’re speeding up production. But in the long run wars are NOTICE OF SALE The State of South Carolina, County of Laurens. In Coun of Common, Pleas. i, , W. E. Adair WalnfiS, vs. Mrs. Lo-,«mce of fte Clerk of rena O’Dell Adair, individually and 7 as administratrix et al Defendants P®«® bounded on the as admmistratrix, et al. Defendants.! ^ ^rsuant to a Decree of the,o„ j,y street, and lot C(>urt in the above stated case, I will < fromerly belonging to T. J. ^11 at public outcry to the hi^t igake, C. G. Copeland and J. M. bidder, either in or m frotrt of the A^air, on the south by West Mate Court House, at I^urens C. H., S C., street, and on the west by the lot on Sal^day m July n^t, bemg Mon- hereinabove ordered to be conveyed day, the first day of the month, dur- ^ 5^1^^ B. Adair.” v ing the legal hours for such sales,! * - 1 . w *1. the loUowin* de«:ribed property, to| , ,7 STT* ^ jf ifyj bidder^ other than the Plamtiff •‘All that pieoe, parcel or lot of!"?”'"’ ‘TS.''";!;?: land lying, biing and situate in theh‘'S'°S, '*•'** 1 Town ol Clinton, County and SUM^ aforesaid, containing one (1) acre. ten per centum of the amount of bid age, in time of peace, for a year’s t n csa^srlrva. frv Kaa OfllCe Of tfaS CHcrk Of COUTt fOT mr. holsum moore says the u.s. has fought and decided by armies, fight- Without bank credit our economy been too goody-goody-good for its i ing men on foot or on horseback, and industrial structure, nas we know own good towards bolshevicks and riding in trucks or tanks, shooting It. would callapse. Si^h credit ^.^,jj„j„_4-with ^oulder rifles, machine guns, been » far more impoTtaTit factor m :or field artillery. An army is as the commercial and, geographical de- .ners. it s time now to stop soft-ped- gg j^g equipment, its morale velopment of this nation than most dling. if a rattlesnake comes into officers An army, to be any of us realize. And it will continue to our yard, we usually shoot the var-jg^j^j^ must learn how to live in the be a vital progressive if the wheels mint, if a mink or a possum both- i field, how to handle its weapons, of business are to be kept turning. ' ors our chickens, we shoot them 1 g^j^j how) to giVe and to obey orders. ^ forthwith, but not so with men and; « wimmen who try to destroy our I TESTING Plattsburg we talk taffy to them, | ^his summer all the fighting THE RED CROSS APPEAL The services of the American Red ^ govverment. Cross in the last great war is one of i and say—“help yourselves, this is a!fQ]-(.es of the United States are be the brightest spots in the history country.” that terrible conflict. At the* out-f ^ break of the war nearly three ye^rsj mr. moore says if the fedderal law before the United States entered it,'supports such men as this feller c. our Red Cross offered its aid to all, ‘ O- bridges in cally-forney, we need the nations at war, all of which ac-;^° do something about such a law. cepted the offer. jfact, anny law now on our statue From America there were sent toi^^^oks that will shield a criminal Euroi>e in the early days of the war i anny kind, be he or she a bunder more than 200 nurses, 71 physicians i ® communist or what not, accord- and surgeons and a number of oth--moore, such laws should ers, together with more than $1,500,-!^ books and new 000 worth of hospital and relief sup- ones to protect our country should tional Guard' and the organized re- plie.c, of which a large part wen$ toj^ substituted. Germany and Austria. After the United States became a belligerent j ing put over the jumps to see just what sort of an army we have. The largest detachment of the.,* regular army ever assembled in peacetime has just finished fighting a mimic War in Louisiana and Texas, and a good many useful things about mod ern military equipment have been learned. The army is better ac quainted with gasoline engines ' now than it is with horses and mules. Now we’re starting on the Na- service to be ready for war if called on. Every Frenchman has to do that, AUCE — PolHIeUn Alice Roosevelt Longwoith and Eleanor Roosevelt, the present’s wife, are first cousins. Mrs. Roose velt’s father was “Teddy’s” brother. Though they are politically as far apart as tKe poles, the two ladies are warm personal friends. When I first knew Alice Rooseveit she was a long-legged girl of four teen, very much bent on having her own way. She has had it, most of the time. I knew her husband, “Nick” Longworth, very well. More than once I have heard him say: “Fll have to ask Alice,” before committing himself on some proposal. He had a high respect for his wife’s political judgment. $ Most folk have forgotten that Alice Roosevelt was “Teddy’s” daughter by his first wife. She was Alice Lee, of an old Boston family, whom he met while a student at Harvard. Both “Teddy’s” wife and his mother died within a week after Alice’s birth. He retired to his ranch in Montana, in tending to follow a literary career, but was called back to run for mayor of New York. , more or less, and bounded on *“7 north by Phillips street, on the-east, s«ne to be appbed by Shanda str^t, on the south by"? V* >>“7.7 “Pon his COT- property ot W. E. Owins, and on the,»'>>“« >17 “*7 west by lands now or tormerly be- “> P'?'"*'* '■>■• longing to the Presbyterian College."'" *5® The said lot of land is composed of bidder shoedd tai to mate two lots known as Number M2 and '“.“t 7“,“ 7 ‘",7”®'? 233 as shown on plat made by Paul, n!?’’1® landi a, Ni,(*,pb hfcixiiljer 23. ttlg. jsball be re-sffld on the «me or so™ "Theland ne^y conveyed is Sie>T®?7'7’- identical land conveyed to J. Rhett,*t™“’ * * defaulting pur- Copeland by Howard C!aldwell by deed dated December 2Dd, 1903, | recorded in Deed Book 21 at page Laurens County, and by J. Rhett chaser. The purchaser to pay for papers, stamps and recording. V. R. FLEMING, C. C. C. P. & G. a Copeland to G. Floyd Adair, by ^^® 1940.—20-3cf. S a’t' S SUBSCRIBB to THE CHBONICLB the Clerk of Court for Laurens Coun ty, S. C.; ALSO: “All that piece, parcel and lot of' land situate, lying and being on the north side of West Main street in the City of Clinton, County and State aforesaid, fronting thereon a dis tance of one hundred and five (105)1 feet, commencing at a comer marked! by an iron pin near tee comet of T. J. Leake’s Filling Station, and running along said street a distance of one hundred and, five (105) feet to an iron pin at the comer of this lot and tee lot hereinabove ordered to be conveyed to Mrs. Selma Bg Adair, -ai|i tuHning thence in a northerly direction a distance of two hundred and ten (210) feet, and be- ’’llie Paper Eireryb«iy Reads* REAL ESTATE FIRE and LIFE INSURANCE LOANS FINANCED ON REAL ESTATE B.H.B0YD TelepliOBe No. 6 Clinton, S. C. mr. art square allso says that our the work of this humanitarian agency j govverment had better stop this was vastly increased, of course. : pussy-footing with furriners andjditions. We’ve got jess than a quar- When that emergency call came to;home-made . disturbers, we have;ter of a million regulars, but double serves as well as the regular army. They’re being mixed together and put in 'the field for a month under something approrximating war con the nation the Clinton area respond-' some native born americans that aint ed with contributions amounting to fit to live in germanny or russia, $10,000, and the Laurms area raised!much less over here where we are the same amoimt. trying to have a decent govverment With the present conflict in Europe'for a deent people, if they don’t developing during the past few weeks, like our way of doing things, he says into such a serious and far-reaching i either put thmi off'our soil or under struggle, the call of the American jit. it’s worser to have a ulcer on Red Cross rings out in a loud voice j tee inside of you than on tee out- to tell us that tee need is far greater: side, than it was twenty-five years ago.i ♦ No" agency will be able to do nnire! we seem to be willing to put up to alleviate suff^ing in this hour of j with annything “over here.” -some emergency than the Red Cross of our so-called leading “publlck which is as international as pain,! swrvents in high places” enjoy op- which knows no nationality and dis criminates in favor of no race. The Clinton chapter is asked and urged to raise $1,800 as our part in this nation-wide drive to help ad minister to the urgent needs of war- stricken people terou^out Europe. So far w« have fallen far short M our quota. This means that the ap- paal ia renewed and stiQ before us. posing mr. dies and his comnaittee: { they are not much better than tee bunch that mr. dies is seeking to un cover 'and put in Jail, even slim chance, jr^ knows teat germanny diddent capture. denmark and kol- land and bellgum and norway wlte bullets; he got tt^ with Just such forces as mr. dies is after, meanteg traRors, robbm, teeachary and fifth that in the guard and the reserves Lieutenant-General Hugh A. Drum, conunandinf the First army, wlte headquarters at Governor’s Island, New York, will take command of 100,000 fighting men, from August 3 to 31, for maneuvers to be held in northern New Yoris state, centering in tee Plattsburg-Watertown area. The hope and expectation is teat officers and men of tee regulars, the guard and tee reserves will all learn somethihg. COMBAT — Sfannlated Except that all the shooting will be done with blank cartridges, these army maneuvers, in this and three other Ureas, will simulate actual combat conditions. They will ogr* talaly give all concerned iiiwiftil tx- perience in living and ftMwMng in the field, and will of ficers are most oompataftf tp com mand troops. BaoM asgtilar anny CHANGES-^Many What started me on these incon sequential reminiscences was tee re alization that on June 11th I will reach my 70th birthday. In these three-score years and ten I have seen many changes, but human nature is the same as it was in 1870 and for ten thousand years before. In my lifetime I have seen many new inventions come into use to make living easier and speed up its pace. The telephone, > the motion pic ture, the airplane, .radio, mechanjeal refrigeration, tee automobile, the typewriter, tee phonograite, tee elec tric light and the electric motor, the dry-plate camera and its progeny, the film canjera, the typesetting madbine, the half-tone process of printing pic tured, the bicycle—those are a few of tee things that are so new that 1 can remember when they were first introduced. If so many changes, affecting cv- erybodjr’s way of living, can come about in the kpan of one man’s life, who can predict what may occur it another 70 years In teousands of laboratories brilliant raseardiers are working on {urojects none of us havai heard of, which may, and probablyt will, make’tea world of 2010 mtirally different from any of our dreami la 194<f. Ckily the people win be the same WR DO ALL KQIiS ^ PRlimiM ' -WlCKWfe tmomcia'T^lPieni Ol. .' .A LOANS THE FEDERAL DIRECT . REDUCTION PLAN Each Account Ifthired Up To $5,000 Curront Rate of BivMleRd 4 Per Cent OWN YOUR OWN HOME We Hbto Aaiple Fnftds 1^ Aaeiot Yon. Call At Onr Oflfee aSI Inyeoiifate W^hoi^ Oblifatios. JO.