University of South Carolina Libraries
\ If?- ^ ■/ PogeSix THE CLINTON CHRONICLE, CLINTON. S. C. Want Ads LYDIA MILLS NEWS FOR THE WEEK FOR SALE—Beautiful comer lot on j ^ . Walmirstrwt. S« our sigh, pi«i.iMr»- M»»o» »!■»■ C«.rre.p«.d..t inont Auto Sales, Westminster, S. C.i , 4-3tc' Rev. and Mrs. R. W. Justice of .Atlanta, Ga., were visitors in the It)R SALE—Seed barley, nice, re-1 commdnity during the week. cleaned and ready for market. D.j Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Mills and E. Tribble Co. le, family, Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Green — .and family, and C. T. Estes visited FOR RENT—Furnished bedroom in Ware Shoals Sunday. with connecting bath, in nice i Mr. and Mrs. A. L. James and fam- dential section. Write “C, ’ care The yy ggjj Boland were week-end Chronicle. guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. James ACCIDE^ insurance TICKETS' cost only 25c a day, pay up toj D- «• Duckett has returned to hU *5 000 S W. Sumerel. Phones 80 and home in Chesnee after a visit with ■ * * Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Duckett. Thursdoy, August 28, 1941 „/ TODAY... TOMORROW By Don Robinson INOUESI Has M (Ooothraed from pnc* one) little over 55 when they saw the ap- KEROSENE —10c per gallon.j borough Oil Co., West Main Yar-i Gladys Osborne of Kinard, is visit- jing Mrs. Ethel Threatt. FOR SALE—One Estate Heati^ola inj Posey Davis, Henry Abercrombie, good condition. Also one hot water’Roy Owens, H. W. William^ and L. heater with coil and tank. Sowers j L. Simpson were visitors at Charles- Garage. Phone 196. and Myrtle Beach Sunday. ’ Miss FASHIONS—Hate Most every map thinks up-to-date! P*’®*chinf Buick. fashions are silly. | Fred Hill said he was on the rear At least he does untU his own wife'seat of the Copeland car. He testified ashamed to walk down the street)®'*’™* ^ before cr after thei with her. j wreck. | I wouldn’t want to come right out Watt Hmderson testified thatl in print to defend those mohSey-hats I with three others he had gone to the' which women are wearing these days, mountaiiis in the Copela^ car for I But I am willing to admit that, al- the day. They got back to Clinton though I don’t like those hats, Fd i ; — prefer to have my wife wear one i would have been thouid^t up to than to have her wear a hat which I ®*ke ^t year’s stockings old-fash- I did like a few years ago but which before ttiis, except for the fact about 10 o’clock at night and carried an order of meat to a local cgfe to be prepared for the party. While the meat was beings coOked they drove down the highway, but seated on the back seat, he did not notice at adiat rate of speed tiiey were traveling. Re said they kn^ a ear araa in front of their car. Ilicir brakes were ap plied suddenly when the Buick was met but, he testified, he didn't Idww anything that happened after the crash. He said that if any occupants of their car drank int^icants dur ing tibe ds^^it was without his knowl edge. Elwyn jsiurgeoa, wno was driv ing the car ahead at Copeland’s, was called as a witness. Sheriff C. W. Wiar replied that he was not present due* to his aheence from the state on a vacation trip. is now out of style. I Wompn are slaves of fashion to the extent of wanting the newest thing, lone Neal of Sumter, spent Men are more slaves of convention— FOR RENT — Four-room apartment, , j also five-room apartment. Steam | the week-end here with her parents, they dont like to see their wfves or heat furnished. South Broad Street. I Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Reeder and chil- daughters make themselves too con- Apply to W. B. Owens, Agent. tf Mrs. Ellie Reeder and Miss I Nellie Jackson were visitors at Chim- that silk stockings wear out so quick ly that there is a big repeat busi-i ness without the necessity of chang-, ing styles. ' | spicuous and rthey know a woman, is least conspicuous when she dresses! like other women. Men resent women’s ^OR SALE—Fryers, hens and fresh'ney Rock, N. C., Sunday eggs. We deliver. Smith-Plaxico| Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Jackson and changes in women’s clothes — but Farm. Phone 141-W. 18-4p^ family were guests of Mr. and Mrs. j when the changes come they resist WANTED—To trade Cotton GoodsGreenwood Sunday. jfor a While and then accept them as for Cotton Stamps. Copeland-Stone, Mr. and Mrs. Louie Galloway and inevitable. But by the time they do qq tf. and Mrs. Rufus Galloway of' begin to get used to a new style it. is Greenville, visited Mr. and Mrs. C.! already old-fashioned ^nd RADIO —For efficient, reliable ser vice on any make radio. Clinton Radio Service, Wall Street. H SALESMAN WANTED—Route man. Good opening. Sell, deliver Raw- lei^ Products year around, steady work, large profits. Write Rawlcigh’s, Dept. SCH-81-137, Richmond, Va, IF YOU WANT plenty of eggs when they reach 60c per dozen then START your hens now on “SPART AN LAY PELLETS,” the modem laying ration. C-W-S Guano Co., Inc. TURNIP and RUTABAGA SEED. We [ have a Big Shipment of New Crop now ready. All the Leading Varieties to choose from. Blakely Brothers Seed Store. Telephone 188. Ic U. S. APPROVED CHICKS From U. S. Pullorum Tested R. 1. ^ Beds, Barred Rocks, White Rocks Carol Ann,'of Whitrnire, "were wwk- M. Broom Sunday. Fred Lollis of near Ware Shoals, and Rome Lollis visited their sister, Mrs. R. E. Whitmire, Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Allen and fam ily spent the week-end in Virginia. Mrs. G. H. Jackson and Curtis Jackson visited Mrs. J. H. Roberts in Union Wednesday. Margie Mosely of Charleston, is visiting her mother, Mrs. Rachel Mosely. Doris Bagwell of near Laurens, visited Virginia Blackwell a few days this week. Mrs. Lucille McMims spent a few days last week with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Burnette in Clinton. Mrs. Dorothy Griffin and family of Watts Mills, are spending a few weeks with Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Mills. Mrs. Boyd Grant and daughter. 100 and New Hampshires, $8.50 per delivered. Cheaper if called for. FARMERS HATCHERY »08 Main St. Newberry, S. C. of Mr. and Mrs. F. SALESMAN WANTED—Available at once nearby Rawleigh Route. Good opportunity for ^an over 25 with car. Trade well established experienced helpful but not neces sary to start. Write at once. Raw- leigh’s, Dept. SCH-81-102, Richmond, Va. Ip WANTED — Small house, or 4-room unfurnished apartment. Close in or near Florida Street school. Write: “W,” care The Chronicle. H end guests Brown. Roy McKittrick of Glendale, visit ed Misses Sallie Ann and Stella Duckett Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Thomas and daughter, Mrs. Velma Wilkes, Ron- Route nie McLendon and Stella Duckett OFFICE SPECIAL -i- Commander Stapling Machine, tacks and sta ples. Only 50c. Chronicle Pub. Co. Phone 74. FOR RENT — To a couple without children, apartment consisting of three rooms, bath and kitchenette, on Musgrove street. Mrs. Lula Da vidson. Phone 150-W. tf were visitors in Columbia Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Taylor and son, Paul, visited Mr. and Mrs. Buddy Hamm and Mrs. M. L. Taylor in Goldville Sunday. Anita Kellett of Fork Shoals, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Kellett a new fashion is introduced. Thus n>en are kept in a continual state of dissatis faction over women’s clothes. At least those are some of the con clusions I reached as I sat at a win dow watching the hats stroll by. MEN—ColM« The garment industry, which has so successfully sold women on the| idea that they should change styles) every season, has never been able to j put such a plan over for men. | I remember when there was a lot! of ballyhoo about blue shoes for men, j but I never saw a man wearing bluei shoes. There have been attempts to| get men interested in brifgU cqtors In i suits, as a step toward jjaving the way for style changes for men, but it never worked. Men seem to be bom conservatives so far as style-changes are concerned.' Consequently, changes are made so, gradually that men don’t see them going on until they suddenly discover! that the cuffs on their old trousers are narrower than on their new ones —and from then on th^ feel a little uncomfortable in those old pants. Look in the family album at pic tures of men taken 30 years ago and it is apparent that men’s clothes have changed considerably. But nobody knows Yi^hen the changes were made, they were done so quietly and unob trusively. But it is possible that styles for G. C. Parrish visited friends near'm'en may make more rapid changes,; TABLES, FRAMES, Etc.—Expecting Thursday morning load of marble- top tables, walnut and gold leaf pic ture frames and other things. The Trading Post, S. N, Crisp, Laurens,]Sunday. S. C*“ r~ Ic i Miss Mildred Holland has returned home after spending Riverdale Sunday. Alma Hawkins of Spartanburg, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Henry Aber crombie. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Simpson and family of Newberry, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Simpson Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Shelton spent Sunday with Mrs. I. L. Lewis in West Clinton. Luther Carson has accepted a po sition in Pensacola, Fla. Mrs. Janie Miller and daughter, Blanche, and Josephine Jenkins at tended a birthday dinner in Woodruff j Greenville with Miss Charlotte Stew- Furnished completely.! FOR RENT- downstairs Use of telephone. Mrs. Mary Owens, Breezy Bluff, Phone 223-J. Ic WEDDING Invitations and A n - nouncements. Engraved or Process ed Printing. Prices most reasonaWe. Complete sample books may be taken to y6ur home for inspection if de sired. Chronicle Publishing Co. Wheeler Stewart of Ekom, is visit ing Mr. and Mrs. George Pressly this week. ATTENTION! Wake up! Gft your job now! Be patriotic. Stan “work todayi Over 150 positions open. Ev ery type service — teachers, steno graphers, furniture finishers, book keepers,. hostess, cook (white and colored), chefs (white and colored), sauce cook ($100 per mo.), hotel mgrs., hotel clerks, curb boys and girls, soda dispensers (expert), wait resses, salesmen, beauticians, nurses, drug and grocery clerks, filling sta tion mgrs. and helpers, mechanics, electrioians, brick layers, cement fin ishers, meat cutters, stone cutters, professional and domestic help, agaiiy dozens more. See or write us at oneq. {vited to join. Southern States Placement Bureau, 1316 Washington St, Columbia, S. C. Telephone 28111. 18-4c With The Sick Mrs. Rachel Mosely is out after a week’s illness. Herbert Wright is suffering a frac tured leg injury. Mrs. Saxton is ill at her home on Main street. Tom Kirby is .improving from in juries revived in a faU whUe at work the past week. Jolly GIrb Clab OrgaafaMd The Jolly Girls’ club was organized on Monday at the community house. Miss Katherine Eichelberger is di rector; Margaret Pressly, president; Bernice Dean, vice-president; Lutrell Oakley, secretary; Esther Johnson, treasurer. The club meets every Monday at 4 o’clock. All girls be- and! tween the ages of 11 and 16 are in- KEROSENE... I Ac Per Gallon YARBOROUGH OIL COMPANY WEST MAOI STBBET TYPEWRITER RIBBONS For An Make Maddnta, Standard and PorUbla. ADDING MACHINE BIB- BONS ADDING BUCHINE PAPER Can 74 Ommicie Pub. Co Mbs Eichelberger Heads Beerea- ttaoal Center Miss Katherine Eichelberger of Laurens, is now director of a recre ation center located at Lordia club house. Among the activities are public library, furnished by an ex tension of the Laurens public li brary, Junior Girls club, Jolly Girls club, and a service club conducted by Miss Margaret Webb, home eco nomics director of Clinton high prtMWtl, Bev. Algie Lawwn Aeeenie CaB Rev. Algie Lawem of Lyman, has accepted the call as minister of Lydia Baptist diurdi. Bev. Lawson and Mrs. Lawson will soon move to the community to make their home. The new pastor succeeds Bev. M. F. Moorhead wIm> recently reaiitoed to go into army service. yojR $$ mC READ THE ADS BAT, 1IAW R IN ns CHBON- ICU." TIAME TOO. in the near future. For the garment! people have discovered that men will! consider changes so far as sport f clothes are concerned. First they sold I them knickers a few years ago. Then j they somehow made^^Jcnickers passe and sold slacks for sport wear. Then various kinds of changes in shirts were made and bright colored sport coats were put over. They found men were wflling to be more radical about their clothes during their play hours. And if they ever are able to get their fingers on that radical streak and get men to carry it into their daily life, you can’t tell what will happen. STABIUTY—Unifonns The idea of a “freezing” of all styles, for both men and women, is an interesting one to consider. Suppose it was decreed that 1941 styles would remain indefinitely — that the dresses for sale next year would be exactly the same as those sold this year. Certainly it would provide a big cash saving for every weU-dressed woman; And men, for <mce, would have an opportunity to get u^ to a dress before it went out of style. But such a possibility is out of the ques tion. The only way American women could be unsold on style would be to put all women in uniform. And even if that happened, the uniform would be considered tUs year’s style and they would demand a different set of u^orms 4or next year. But it isn’t just the women who demand style changes. It’s the hun dreds of thousands of pc<^le who are in the clothes-making and aelling in dustries. Their jobs depoid on style changes. Although the shortage of silk, whidi pn^bly means no more silk^ stockings after this summer, seems to worry a lot of women, I doubt if the fashion-creating world is partic ularly disturbed. 1 dont doubt that they are already at work thinking up ways to make cotUm, woolen or ray on stockings so popular toat the wo men edM) stodc up on silk stofpidnis will 1)0 ashamed to wear them during 1943. It’s herd to imagine now- -but 'wait until a few Hollywood gals t^ how they love cotton stockings and theytl beemne a fashion in no time. In fact. Iff a strange ttdng that silk stocktogi have been kept iivstjde as long as ttiey have. Undoubtedly. Need t iaxitffd? fir ’dl0 Olif fW iMilift GO Straight To McGoy s FOR TOE BIGGEST VALUE aso ' . McCOVS REGULAR GASOLINE gal. When you go to McCXIY’S you get gfii^ine at a saving of about 20%. With coats of living rising on every side, it will pay you to save wherever you can. Start using Me- Coy*8 gasoline, and find out how much extra money yok will have in your pocket at the end of a month. Drive in today and let one of our oovteoos^ experkmced attend ants fill your tank. Come early on Saturdays before 7:00 P. M. and avoid the rush! \ TUNE IN on THE RANGERS over WBT—Tuesday and Thursday, 8:30 to 8:45 A. M., Saturday, 7:80 to 7:45 A. RL STATION Station Corner Florida and Musgrove Streets \ Storage FREE: Storage For ibe Font Bale Ginned Ip LaHurwis County Farmers reaHae K soon will be tbnt to BMdm arriiffpnmtg for cotton storago and that the LAURENS RONDED WASBIEroUBE, with Ha con- veniant weigbinc todlittos, Is thg plaft to noe tUt ywr. llis warehouse is atoo a mombor of the Sooth Crahia WjlMihoBii SyBten^ wfth receipts approved by the Coniaodfity Credit QgrpOfittoiu Lei ns handle your cettoH^^ vIet of conipitto satisfaction. tnm the gin. ttj ^ insured scr- Low Feed Prices TableRocfc ' 1A HOG FEED, 100 Iho. #4eiV GROWING l^H, M M too Ha. 04(Aw M Mb. te Il,4tU a*. M Mr LAYING MASH. 09 ^4 iM ai. wwOw Wa..f«r$lA» —Haikar Wr - Grocery Spedab -SliS : sr «• 35' 48 Ibn. of lyUe Refk FLOUR ........ 25 te. of Mle Rock FLpUg - Mplf hmbgf^ef Btaitod CORN MBAIi The New Frank WaUrep^ 1||^. 'Tfiihhene 424 Sonti a Bmnm Sto.