The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, January 30, 1941, Image 6
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Poge Six
THi CLINTON CHRONICLE. CUNTON, S. C.
Thursdoy, Jonuory 30, 1941
THE,CHRONICLE’S
WANT AD RATES
Ic p^r word for first Ins«i*-
tion; five insertions for the
price of four. Minimum charge
25c.
Cards of thanks and tributes
of respect, Ic a word, pajible
in advance. Minimum 50c.
Newfoundland Bound
Hunger In Spain
Causing Worries
Problem Must Be Con
sidered Ahead of Poli
tics, Falangists Learn.
FOR SALE — Five-gaited saddle
pony. Billy Buchanan. Ic
MRS. DAVIS—Nice rooms and good
meals. Try our Sunday dinner, j
Reasonable rates. Phone 38. 13-5p j
WANTED - Good farmers.-Either
two ‘ 1-horse croppers or one;
2-horse cropper. Apply to W. J. |
Adair, Renno, S. C. t£
SALE ROSE BUSHES. We are clos
ing out all Rose Bushes we have
in stock at 2 for 25c. Several good
varieties. Ask for free pamphlet on
Rose Culture. Blakely Brothers Seed [
Store. Telephone 188. Ic |
NEW YORK, N. Y. . . . United States AAny men, specially equipped
for cold weather conditions, have their equipment inspected on
board the S. S. Edmund B. Alexander upon sailing lor new army
bases in Newfoundland. The Alexander is the old S. S. America
which was used as a troop transport in the days of 1917.
FOR RENT — Shamrock five-room
apartment. Private bath, garage.
Available Feb. 1. A. O’Daniel. tf
BIBLES — We have just what you
will need for the New Year. Chron
icle Pub. Co.-
PERSONAL AND SOCIAL NEWS OF GOLDVILLE
MRS. E. G. KAY, Correspondent
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Blakely of Pel-1 number of grandchildren
zer, spent last week-end with Mr. j great-grandchild.
and one*
SPARTAN STARTING MASH is
cheaper because chicks grow off ’ and Mrs. George Blakely,
faster and feed bills stop sooner. | NIiss Ruth Hair spent the week— • IVith The Sick ^
Either mash or “pellets.” C-W-S in Newberrv as the euest. of her! ^ara Louise, daughter of Mr. and
Guano Co., Inc^ 13-3c Mrs, Hoyt Noble. jMrs. George King, is ill at her home
WANTED—To quilt your quilts and
... . „ - „ * u „ Of' Marion street.
Miss Anne Howe of Spartanburg,
tack your comforts. Mrs. W. P,'was the Sunday guest of her parents,! Mrs. Lucille Bedenbaugh is ill at
Hipp, Clinton, Route 1. Ip'Mr. and Mrs. Moody Johnson. home of her parents, Mr. and
FOR SAT F Frpsh milk ^'^s Doris Abrams, teacher in the|^^^- Wilbur Russell.
FOR SALE--Fresh milk OQ.'vs. Some District Greenville snent Moody Johnson is out again after
Jerseys and some HoLstems. Taylor uisirici, L^eenviiie, spent , . illness Mrs Johnsnn
Martin. See Mrs. A. V. Martin or I the week-end with her mother, Mrs. • several ^days ^lUness.^^Mj-s. Johnson
Phone 273-J.
Ic
iJoe Abrams.
I'
Mr. and Mrs. James Hollingsworth Friends of M. S. Bodie regret to
FOR RENT—Two downstairs rooms, arjj children, Jimmy and Sara, that he is seriously ill at the
unfurnished. Private. Convenient, j spent the week-end in Rockingham, i'^‘^terans’ hospital. Mr. Bodie is a
L. C. Duckett, 36 Thornwell St. Ip
FOR RENT FEB. 1—4-room apart-
iri
with Mrs.
Hollingsworth's brother of Mrs. Moody Johnson.
j Mr. and Mrs. George Craft have
ment m nrivate home Senarate, Mr^and Mrs. Cleveland Miller and been confined to their home with flu.
e„rrr„« a„/S M?rj -L.®^rihV Children. Alice and Cleveland. Jr., I Fnends of Mis. Blanche; Durgin
N. C.,
parents.
Madrid, Jan. 25.—This week, in an
article intended to console the Span>
ish people for the present dire scarc
ity of food, a Madrid newspaper re
called that in the seventeenth cen
tury there was a famine so wide
spread that ‘‘a lark could not fly
across Castile without carrying its
own provisions.”
How much comfort this provided
is not certain. But it is certain that
these are hungry days. Ration cards
provide minute quantities of olive
oil, chick-peas, sugar, meat — four
ounces of meat every three or four
weeks—and most of the basic ne
cessities. Certain articles, such as
fish, ham and potatoes are sold
without food cards, but potatoes at
the moment are not to be had, in
Madrid at least, and the other items
are expensive.
Most of Spain is suffering even
more than is the capital. Sometimes
it is only one article, such as bread
or oil, that is lacking, but under
nourishment is uniform. For this is
a country where the average work
man makes less than 75 cents a day
and must depend on government ra
tions.
emment. (These prices were raised
recently). Third, there have been
difficulties in transportation, owing
to a shortage of gasoline and to reg
ulations hampering shipment of food
from one province to another.
In the midst of these stem reali
ties younger members of the Falange
have been demanding that complete
control of the State be given to their
party. The appeal was launched by
Gamero del Castillo, No. 3 figure in
the party—next in line after General
Franco and Foreign Minister Serrano
Suner—and he boldly asked cooper
ation of the army.
The-answer came from the news
paper Arriba, spokesman of the
Falange supreme command, which
flatly declared that the food prob
lem took precedence over all else
and forbade even discussion of po
litical changes until hunger should
be banished.
'CHEAP RATES' MEAN
'A CHEAP PAPER',
DAVID OVEN SAYS
ested in the newspaper,” he went ooT
“because it is through that medium
that Ivey’s talks to its customers.”
Mr. Owen declared that he fa
vored a raise in newspaper advertis
ing rates, “because a cheap rate
means a cheap newspaper.”
“It is your job,” he went on, “to
make your part of the paper a good
part. A newspaper is a moulder of
opinion ... It goes behind the scenes
and into the privacy of the hoa^
Doesn’t it give you a sense of pride
to know that you are a part of the
powerful force, the American press?
Think of the,importance of the part
you play in it by furnishing the in
come which keeps the iJkper coming
out! Nothing can take your place,”
he said.
“If you are not getting the right
rate then raise the rate. You are en
titled to a profit. I will not buy from
a manufacturer who says he is not
making a profit on the article for
sale.”
«<»■• j't
■w'
Ctentennial St. Phone 146-M
■jpiMr. and Mrs. Verner Ross and son, 1^''® sorry to know she has b^n sick
jVemer, Jr., and Mrs. Douglas Ross several days.
Nice four-room apart-'and children, Pat and Betty, spent Jane Crawford has been missed at
FOR RENT ^
ment. with private bath. Conv'en-' sundav with Mr and Mrs JohrT M Joanna club house because of flu.
lent. Close in. Rent reasonable. Mrs.,Ross ^ Friends are glad to see her out again.
Annie Giles Bailey, 56 Woodrow St. i Miss Grace Martin student at O’Dell is out again after sev-
Phone 387-J. Ip Converse college, Spartanburg, spent i^ral days illness.
BABY CHICKS—Pure Breeds, Genu- \ a days last week with her par- Mrs. B. E. Case continues ill at her
ine B.W.D. Tested. Also feeds] Feed-je"^’ Dr. and Mrs. W. T. Martin, o*'t i
ers Fountains Ovster Shells and! Milton road. i Catherine ^akely qf Joanna
Remedies. Blakely Brothers Seedi Mr. and Mrs. Sterlin Young ^nd j sch^l facul^ is ill with f^
Store. Telephone 188. id son of Clinton, were guests of Mr.: Walter Wertz 's sick at the home
— .gfjj ^j.g John Dubois Saturday. I*'' "'s son, Ray Wertz.
STRAYED from pasture on Little| and Mrs. J. E."Braswell of' Friends are sorry to know L. J.
river, white-faced Hereford bulPriinton snent the week-end with Drock is a patient at the Newberry
calf, weight about 400 lbs. H. mother Mrs Maudeihospital.
Todd. Kinard. Ip I Franklin. 1 Mrs. Doris Farmer is resting com-
Claude Kay and jfortably after several days’ illness,
daughter, Nell, of Union, were Sun- ■ Mrs. John Ross has been ill several
JUST RECEIVED—Several more ex
cellent used pianos. Mr. Charlie
Smith of Clinton, cleans, adjusts and
tunes all my pianos. Ask him about
them. Easy terms. The Trading Post,
Laurens, S. C. 30-4p
days.
Friends are glad to see Sybil By
day guests of Mr. and Mrs. M. M
Blakely.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Odell and Mr.jars out again after being confined
and Mrs. Cecil Odell visited their jt® ber home with flu.
, mother, Mrs. J. H. Craft, at Silver-1 Mrs. Ed Warren, a patient at New-
CABBAGE PLANTS, Onion Plants, Sunday afternoon. j berry hospital, is resting comfortab-
Onion Sets, English Peas, Carrots, I Hhett Abrams spent Sunday after-ily-
Beets, Tomato, Tendergreen, Rape; tiQQfi Greenwood with his brother, i 1'"'® Simmons is ill with flu.
and a complete line of other Vege- j Raymond Abrams,
table and Flower Seeds. Blakely j ^j. ^j.g Arthur Starnes and
Brothers Seed Store. Telephone 188. j daughter, Cleo, and Mr. and Mrs.
FOR SALE —1939 Ford Deluxe 4-lW. C. Cochran visited Mr. and Mrs.
Door Trunk Sedan. New rings J Charlie Girk in Greenwood Sunday
Clean as-a pin. See it and drive it
Special—$545. Pitts Motors. Ic
and brought little Peggy Girk back
r. S. APPROVED CmCKS
From U. S. Pullorum Tested R. 1.
Reds, Barred and White Rocks, New ^ ber7y~Satu7day.
for a few days’ visit.
Friends of Miss Tootsie O’Dell
are glad to know she has returned
to her home from Hays’ hospital in
Clinton.
Mrs. Hayne Willingham has been
confined to her home several days
with flu.
Spain, it is true, has never been a
land of plenty but in the old days
she produced enough to feed herself.
The Spanish people therefore do not
understand the present dire short
age, all the more so in view of the
fact that during the civil war of
1936-39 food was plentiful in the
Franco zone.
There is undoubtedly some truth
in the Nationalist argument that
much land, particularly on the ad
versary’s side, was allowed to lie
neglected during the civil war and
that stocks of food in shops—mount
ing up to considerable quantities—
were completely exhausted. How
ever, accepting the statement by
German Ambassaddr Stohrer this
week that no wheat flour or other
vi' ..j'y needed food is now being ex
ported to Germany, there have been
other reasons.
First and perhaps most important
was the lack of fertilizers and the
prevalence of insects, which played
a greater part than bad weather in
the recent short harvest of every
thing but potatoes. Second, there was
reduced acreage in vital crops partly
because many agricultural laborers
were in jail and partly because
farmers found other products more
remunerative than wheat and sugar
beets at the prices fixed by the gov-
Columbia, Jan. 27.—At a banquet
at Hotel Wade Hampton climaxing
the one-day convention of the Car
olines Advertising Executives asso
ciation, David Oven, vice-president
and general manager of the J. B.
Ivey company of Charlotte, N. C.,
told 200 advertising; men that noth
ing could take the place of nevrspa-
per advertising. He urged his hear
ers to “sell your merchants on the
idea of investing 3 per cent of their
gross income in what you have to
seU.”
Marshall Holds Lease
Bill Assures Victory
(Continued from one)
Germany with all aid except man-
power?” ‘
In opening his address Mr. * Oven
stressed the importance of the adver
tising salesman.
“The paper,” he said, “is as good
as its advertisements and you will
not see a live newspaper in a dead
town nor a dead town with a live
newspaper.”
“The newspaper,” he continued,
“is the most important function of a
city and it is your job to earn the
money that keeps the paper going.”
After advising his hearers to urge
merchants to invest 3 per cent of
their gross incomes in newspaper ad
vertising the speaker said, “if you
are not getting that much then you
are underselling your newspaper.”
Mr. Oven said that ads competed
with news in reader interest.
“My firm is tremendously inter-
TYPEWRITER
ADDING MACHINE
RIBBONS
CHRONICLE PUB. CO.
•dPlMme 74
JL
power?
“I think so, That certainly Is our
hope.”
Then a reporter asked the specific
question whether the general be
lieved that Britain could beat Ger
many with the aid envisioned if the
lease-lend bill goes through.
‘*¥08,” was the staccato reply.
%
Be Quick To Treat
Bronchitis
Chronic bronchitis may develop If
your cough, chest cold, or acute Imn-
chl^ is not treated and you cannot af
ford to take a chance with aiw medicine
less potent than Creomulsion which
goes right to the seat of the trouble to
help loosen and expel germ laden
phlegm and aid nature to soothe and
heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial
mucous membranes.
Creomulsion blends beechwood creo
sote by special process with other time
tested medicines for coughs. It contains
no narcotics.
No matter how many medicines you
have tried, tell your druggist to sell you
a bottle of Creomulsion with the under
standing you must like the way it quick-
the cough, permitting rest and
S ’allays 1
e
leep, or you are to have your money
bzxS. (*.dv.)
FOR PERSPIRING FEET
USE ,
STADRI lo™n
At Xbur Drngglsf ■ S5e
■P! W
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Rowland andj Toy Murphy is improving after
daughter, Frances, and Mrs. Sloan j several days illness.
Rowland and Juanita were visitorsT— —
I Roosevelt Ball
Hampshires. 8c each deliver^.i j^j.g Ruth Feltman spent the' The annual Roosevelt dance will
Cheaper if called for. Now hooking with her sister Mrs. Roy j he held at Joanna school Feb. 1, from
fnr futiiri» rfalivprv. II S. GprtifipH Ir, . t ’ —^ffHcTcIock until 12 o’clodc. MusiC wiU
for future deliveryj U. S. Certified!
White Leghorns, only 10c each.
CUSTOM HATCHING—We begin
McDowell, in Laurens.
Rev. Ralph Hughes of Clinton, he furnished by the Emsley Arm-
occupied the pulpit at the Epworth, orchestra of Monroe, N. C
our custom hatching machine Feb. 3 Methodist church Sunday evening,
and will^ prepared to do your ci^-l r^^ ^gRe^ Sanders of Newberry,
tom hatching. Chicken eggs, 2c to 3c, <|*iivered the evening sermon at the
Turkey 4c to 5c each, depending on
quantity. All custom hatching done
Baptist church Sxmday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. M,
Holsonback
in a Robbins Electric with separate | gRenjed the funeral of Mrs. Ellen
"Armers ha-tchery I
Mrs. Helen Bozard and family
908 Main St.
Newberry, S. C.
FORMER PIANO DEALER, now re
siding in vicinity, has left from
former stock and can demonstrate
by manufacturer’s permission: one
1940 model new piano. Will sacrifice
most of dealer commission and can
arrange terms, for quick sale. Write
immediately for demonstration if
you wish the buy of, the year, to X,
care The Clinton Chronj^le.
were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
W. W. Bishop of the Wadsworth
conununity Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Odell had as
their dinner guests Sunday Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Odell and
Brenda, the occasion being Mrs. Roy
Odell’s birthday.
G. A. Meeting
Birthdays
J. O. Heuble will celebrate his
birthday Feb. 2nd.
January 26th was George King’s
birthday.
Derrell Owens’ birthday was Jan
uary 27.
Little Charl^ Crowder had a
birthday January 26.
Bobby Spires, son of Mr. and Mrs.
E. T. Spires, had a birthday Jan. 24.
Margaret Lyons, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Harley Lyons, will observe
daughter, i birthday Feb. 2nd.
Betty Matthews, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Harper Matthews, will have
a birthday Feb. 1st.
February 2 is Boyd Gaskin’s birth-
Mrs. Roy O’Dell met with the G. iday-
A. of the Baptist church in the As-i January 27 was the liirthday. of
sembly room Tuesday afternoon at [Mrs. John Dubois,
five o’clock. * Harris Kelly will have a birthday
Plans were made for the coming February 2nd.
year. ! February 2 is James Adams’ birth-
WALKER’S
FUNERAL HOME
Clinton, S. C.
FOB COLORED PEOPLE ONLY
Day 9280—Phones—Night 819
Key. H. W. Walker, Manager
[day.
League Program | Daisy King has a birthday Feb. 1
The Young People’s league of the; Vernon Lever will celebrate his
Pre8b3rterian church, with Miss j birthday February 4th.
Grace Bozard as president, will have
charge of the worship service Simday
evening, Feb. 2nd. An oqt-of-town
speaker has been secured 'and this
promises to be an interesting pro
gram.
RUBBER STAMPS
An Sixes — Quick Service
CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO.
CLEAN COAL
For coal tluit bunw and
leaves no slate or dinkera,
call 62.
We have all sizes: Lump,
Eggt ^‘Ostrich and
Stolmr.
C-W-S GUANO CO.
Inc.
PIUMM 62
Eastern Star Meeting
Mr. and Mrs. James Fulmer, Mr.
and Mrs. J. T. Fulmer, Mr. and Mrs.
C. D. Blakely Mre. M. M. Bl^elyjg^ Llq«M or M« Tableto with 6M
Of
Cold Symptoms
w^Mn. L. O. E1im« attended ,,
Eastern Star meeting at Buffalo
Saturday evening.
Comeltns 8. Rowe
Cornelius S. Rowe, 71, died at his
home on Magnolia street January 23
after a lingering Illness.
Funesl services were held Satur
day afteiTibon at 3 o’clock at Emory
Chapel in Saluda county, with Rev.
T. B. Wilkes in ^arge, amisted by
Rev. O. H. Hatchett, R^. Ray And-
emon, and Rev. B. R. Nich^. In
terment was in the diusch cemetery.
Mr. Rowe was a faithful member
cd Uie Methodist cfaurdi.
following chttldren survive:
ribubeD,
Genoii^ .and F. C. Rowe.
IMUe Tucker, Mm. TKaonie
end Mrs. Bertha Evans; a
relieves eeld symptoms the first day.
Aliv»
Yegcttble Loxitivc
Makes Happy Friends
Ihooaands tom to this way to get
relief whsii_eonstipatioa has them
headachy, hffioust A quarter to a
Mdf4eas^nfal of aromatic
BLAC!K'DRAUCST toRtf ht; a
drink of water) theieli araally
time for Mo^ followed by gsntie
but thoro^ evataation in tka
a^vegetable
>I>RAU6^{ tiwe liitad;
1t IS to 4S deasi, StT^
Fine
Our theme during 1940 has bemi
—^auid it will be the same during
all of 1941-
’<WE DO ALL KINDS OF
PRINTING EXCEPT BAD”
WE HOPE TO SERVE YOU
WELL AND OFTEN DUR
ING THE NEW YEAR.
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TetepboM No. 74
Clmtoa, S. G.
A
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