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/ =-/* / i Poge Four THE CLINTON CHRONICLE, CLINTON, S. C. Cdlmton (Uliranirlr Estobliahed IMt WIL£ON W. HARRIS, Editor and Publisher Published Every Thursday By THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING COMPANY Subscription Rate (Payable In Advance): One Year $1.50; Six Months 75 cents; Three Months 50 cents Entered as Second Class Mail Matter at the Post Office at Clinton, S. C. The Chronicle seeks the cooperation of its subscribers and readers— the publisher will at all times i«>preciate wise suggestions and kindly advice. The Chronicle wil^ publish letters of general interest when they are not of a defamatory nature. Anoh3rmous communkations will not be noticed. This paper is not responsible fOr the views or opinions of its correspondents. I Thursdqy, September 11/1941 starts wearing glasses, he will always ' have to wear them. That theory has been proven un true by many diildren who have scholl turns out pach ybar. my son, scudd lark, bought nearly everthing he has evver had on the installment plan, but he rarely evver j used glasses to' correct defects and keeps what he buys verry loi^. while | after a year or two have been able his mother-in-lawWissited him for 3,to discard the glasses entirely. Ey^ I weeks last winter, he bought a bed-1 exercises have alsor been found to stid and a dresser and a fonygraff remedy many vision ailments. But and a lamp and raddio and put it in tests of school children show that at jthe companny room, he made the least 15 per cent have eye defects ' down payment, viz: 1$, but he newer whiph are not being attended to. made the secont payment, after she: The army, as far as viskm is con- j left, he let th«n| re-possess all of the cemed, only requires a man to see' I stuff. [ without glasses at 20 feet what nor- I . 'mal eyes can see at 100 feet Yet I mr. art square is allso in fawor of 100,000 out of every TnllHQi^ young the installment buying plan, he says of coarse he could buy his need- cessities for lesi than half what he men can’t even do that Incidentally, recent tests show that daric eyes are stronger than blue or CLINTON. S. C., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11. IHl \t Can't Be Done , It might be unfair to attribute to any party or individual the theory that all people can be prosperous for any great length of time. There is no reasonable law that can cause money to stick to a fool, and you cannot any more legislate prosperity into a people’s experience than you can legislate brains into their heads. Wide In TFs Scope well-ordered living and that economy is a prime requisite of a sound finan cial structure, whether in govern ment, business or personal affairs. “I believe that truth and justice are fundamental to an enduring so cial order. “I believe in the sacredness of a promise, that a man’s word should be as good as his bond; that charac ter—not wealth or power or position —is o'f supreme worth. “I believe that the rendering of .. , _ I useful service is the common duty of When the present war btok' out, many Americans tned hard to re- gard It, and to re , selfishness consumed and the great- ropcjm war. human soul set free. The second anniversary ot that war Jurt passed and the Nationa k^^j^g whatever non il ,™,r rittho nf name, and that the individual’s high- 1,700,000,000_^^ple,^ “!;est fumument, greatest happiness tihd widest usefulness are to ^ found in harmony with His will. that has managed to remairi aloof. ! t believe that love is the greatest Against our will, and against ourji^''*''? in the world, that it alone can grain, we guess it’s proper to call this overcome hate, that right can over- World War No. 2. In the terrible con- ■ come hate; that can and will flict Hitler will lose. He’s slipping! triumph over might, now, but of course he’s too smart to j '• admit it. ———— ,,, , .. est fulfillment, greatest happiness ahd the worlds population — are now ai' . ,..,1.^ , ^ c_ war. The Western Hemisphere is the. only sizable part of the whl^le world * ♦ Vine mnnacygkH aloof. I 1 belif but he says further that he has ilev ver in all his life had anny more monney than enough to make the first payment on annything. and sometimes has to fail to pay the gro cer and the doctor and the preacher to do that well, hold it off, plese, mr. morgan-thaw, till we can buy at least i 5 or 6 more things on the 50c down' basis, we need them verry bad. wait at least 3 weeks longer. yores trulie, mike lark, rfd. ^ays on this plan if he had the cafdi, i gray eyes. The U^t eyes tire more quickly and are more susceptible to glare. But there must be somethiiv! in favor of blue eyes too — for it isj understood that nearly ttiree-foui^ of Hollywood actresses have theml TODAY... TOMOttOW By Don Robinson Kiwaoiaos Eject Saunders Head 4B5 Attend Meeting At Myrtle Beach; To Meet 'Next At Pinehurst. COLOR-BLINDNESS A friend of mine never drives an automobile alone because he can’t tell the difference between a red and a green light. He has what is known as red-green color-blindness, which means that he can identify other col ors but can’t tell red from green — they both look gray to him. It is estimated that about one per- PRICES OF FOOD AT lO-YEAR PEAK Washington, Sept 6.—RataU food prices reached **ttie higheat levti ia 10 years” om August 12, the bureau of labor .statistics reported today. R added that in the latter half of Aug ust **Rte rise has continued.” Prices of bgsic foods increased an average ol 14 per cent from July Ig to August 12, the bureau said, and were 12 per cent hitter than a year ago. The buriaau’s report attributed the increases to ”many factors," but said “chief anwng them are increased em ployment with consequent greater contumer demand, large government purchases and some speculative buy- ing.” BOL, MRS. AND MISS SCHOOL TBAOHERI Why not give me your subseriptkm for magazines needed in your work? School libraries a specialty. JAMl(g W. CAtDWSLL CITATION FOR ANCILLARY LETT1ER8 OF A0M1N18TRA110N The State of Soutti Carolina, Laurens Coimty. By J. Hewlette Wasson, Probata Judge: Whereas, uacar‘liodgea, Jr., mada suit to me to grant him Ancillary Letters of Administration of the Es tate and efiects of Or. R. N. S. Young. Thaaa are, therefore,, to cite apd admemish an and singolar the Rte- dred and Creditors of the said ^ Dr. R. N. S. Young, deceaaed,' that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Lau rens Court House, Lainens, S. C., on September 12, IMl, next, after pub lication hereof, at 11 o’clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said Administration should not be gnuited. Given under my hand this 22th day of Augxuit A. 1241. J. HBmJCTTB WASSON, ll-2c J. P. L. C. SAT, *T SAW n ot THE CHBON- ICLft” THANK YOU. FINANCIAL STATEMENT HUNTER SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 5 AS OF JUNE SO^ 1«41 (Condensed from audit made by John M. Palm, Greenville, S. C.) NOBODY'S BUSINESS By GEE McGEE Retailers To Help | SeH Savings Stomps | Retail stores all over the nation — | drug stores, grocery, hardware, fur-j niture and other types of reUil out- A Letter Addressed To Washington lets—are now adding a new line—I Defense Savings Stamps, j _ Many of them have already begun xnm* selling stamps to aid the government i seeker-terry of war, in its present financial emergency. I Washington, d. c. After a meeting at the treasury de-, seeker-terry: partment in Washington last week,! ibe loyal citizons of flat rock hell more than a million stores pledged i ^ patriotic meeting last night in the immediate participation of t h e i r | school audy-torium. they voted to go members in “Retailers for Defense; on record as realizing the dangerous Week” designated for September 15-11** country is in and fight fifth 20, during which period they will^^obums regardless of where they make efforts to enlist customers to work—in congress, in the sennate, or buy defense savings stamps. factories, they voted to con- With a total of 1,770,413 retail demn the practice of sennators and stores in America, plus every bank congressmens playing pollitics in- and 26,000 post offices, handling de-. stead of realizing the danger their fense stamps, these stamps will un-; country is in. ^ doubtedly be the best distributed, — best merchandised and probably the holsum|moore made a short best advertised product ever put on I talk as followers: “ladies and genter- the American market. ! the time has come for repub- Commenting on the offer of the; beans to become americans instid of retail stores of America to partici- ■ *^®w deal haters, and likewise ^e pate in the sale of stamps. Secretary j time has come for disgruntled dim- of the Treasury Morgenthau said: i *if'er-crats, with chips on their shoul- “The defense savings program is; decs and spite in their harts, to re{^ gaining momentum every day. TheiP®*" ®®^t the prople instid of toeir splendid spirit shown by the retail-1 narrow disgruntled feelings, ers of the nation in putting their as-I they are suppoMd to get paid for sociations behind the sale of defense | working for and with the govver- savings stamps is sure to have a ^ent, not to fight it. he was encored stimulating effect in advancing the' ~ times when he mentioned linden- whole program. It is another indica-1 berg and hitler, and he newer said tion of the American determination ^*'*^^**'2 ^ their fawor either, to proceed wholeheartedly toward i . ——— success in our national defense dffort. j chance, senior, s]^ke as fol- ■i-The-thanks of the treasury and ofaio^^^'-te^termem and Jeilqw^^^^ the government are due the leaders '"en or slackers? are we of retail industry and to their mem-.8°‘"8 to listen to few icy-lationists ber stores all over the nation for the'^^^^ our country be over-run? are enthusiasm with which they are en-[''^® Washington tenng into , the plans for ‘Retailers' influence our sons in the army for Defense'Week’ and/for the con-l^® against our democracy? are tmuous activity pledged in the f® ''ot resent of defense savings stamps.” 1'^bat the disloyal polliticians are do- Many people are expected to take ‘"8 raying? as for me and my advantage of the opportunity to buy'bouse we amt. (whi e he was set- <=t^rr,n« in X«tnrps hv nut-! ^ng down), he said—‘^you notis sen- wheeler don t come down south to do Myrtle Beach, Sept. 9.—The Caro- linas district Kiwanis International, i elected J. Maryon Saunders of Chap el Hill, N. C., district governor and chose Pinehtirst, N. C., for its 1942 meeting-at the closing session of ^ annual convention here Tuesday. Saunders, executive secretary of the University of * North Carolina Alumni association, succ^ds Ray Al bert Furr of Rock HilL Lieutenant governors were elected i as follows: Hugh Beam, Marion, N. ‘ son in every 20 has some fbnii of C.; F. V. Fields, Mooresville; Marion color-blindness. ’The most common j Allen, Elkin; D. B. Teague, Sanford; form is not being able to identify thejW. Ernest Thompson, Graham; Wil- color green. Of 2,500 male college i liam J. Norwood, Roanqke Rapids; students studied for color blindness. I Aaron Goldburg, Wilmington; Jeff ASSETS AND LIABILITIES / ASSETS Cash and claims receivable $ 4,183.15 Cash In bond retirement fund 1,170.86 Fuel and janitors’ supplies ^ 400.00 Land, buildings and equipment - 226,804.08 TotaL.... anny of his icy-lation work.” defense stamps in all stores by put ting a voluntary “savings tax” on their purchases—a tax of say 10% ^ of what they spend in the stores to I . ., ... awivfor^sL'mes*^f Ilfof^^^dM gathering? “we think j fact, eye specialists teU me. ^^1 there ain’t annything wrong overj Columbia university recently made 113 were green blind, 15 were red- green blind, one was red blind and seven were totally color blind. Perfect eyes, studies have shown, can see up to 2,000,000 shades of col or^. In a big dictionary, there are 3,400 words for various color shades. But to a person who is totally , color blind all of these shades look prac tically alike, only varying between white, gray and black. CHILDREN—School There are very few of us who do not have some form of eye trouble. Accc^ding to M. J. Julian, president of tne Better Vision institute, only about half of the school children who should be wearing glasses are wear ing them. Among young children it is very difficult to tell whether they have eye'trouble, for a child doesn’t us ually realize that he can’t see what his playmates can see. Often young children have great difficulty with their school work and when it is fl- nally discovered that the difficulty is eye trouble rather than brain trou ble, glasses bring about a complete change in ability and personality. Teddy Roosevelt, who all through his adult life wore thick glasses, is a good example, of that. The flrst few years of school were a great stroMie to him and not until his ’teens did he or his family discover the reason. Then one day he was given a gun as a present and was surprised to find that his friends were shooting at^ things he couldn’t see. A little later' one of his friends redd the words on a billboard aloud when Teddy could n’t see the words at all. It was then he told his mother he thought he had eye trouble. Soon af ter he was fltted with corrective glasses and his whole personality changed. Instead of being a shy, awkward boy, he became fllled-jwith self-confidence -and- a leader of his friends. Probably we would never have heard of him, when he became a man, if that eye trouble hadn’t been taken care of. * • ANGER^-^yes That expression, “I’m so mad I can’t see” is bas^ on good sound Bates, Columbia, and Harry M. Dan iels, Greer, ^S. C. At the final meeting the Kiwanians heard ^ an address by Edward Scheldt of the F. B. I. office at Charlotte, who discussed the work federal agents are ooing to prevent sabotage. Herbert W. Hennig, of Darlington, who was reappointed secretary- treasurer, announced that the regis tration $or. the three-day convention was 485. $232,358.09 LIABILITIES Accoimts payable—Co. TreasiT—Trustees’ claims $ 2,750.29 Bonds payable outstanding .’. 1. 39,000.0Q Total Liabilities _..4 41,750.20 Surplus—or excess of assets over liabilities 190,607.89 Total. $232,358.09 here just cause we ain’t done no shooting as yet. we laff at gassoleen aside 10% of our retail purchases for government savings'it would amount to almost five billion a year—a tidy nest-egg for Americans to have for the rainy day which will follow the war. jrhe government is urging ewry-,, breathless, tolks, we had bet- body to purchase stamps and bonds,,„ a study of the effect of emotions on eyes and found that both anger and to help buy essential equipment for our armed forc^, and to help pre-!,j V whether we vent inflation. Money is needed. Our ^ “spending” treasury is busted. rationing and food shortage, etc., but'fear, temijprarily derange the ydeli- friends — you all just wait a few I cate eye mechanism. It was found weeks, and something will overtake that emotions diminish the sight of you of its owHi accord and leave your! one out of five persons and' another one of five become actually wobbly- eyed under the stress of emotional excitement. Although excitement I verry long a change in our way Rockefeller's Creed The “ten fundamental and eternal i principles” by which he and his wife, have tried to bring up their family! were made pilblic for the flrst time- expect or want 4t or not. we are set ting on a vessuvius and are believing I it is a sofy pillow, but it ain’t.” yores for loyalty, mike lark, rfd, chairman. ^ » Wait A Mlnate, Uncle Sam: Don’t Rush the other day by the world’s greatest j seeker-terry of the treassure, philanthropist, John D. Rockefeller,' Washington, d. «*. • Jr. ’The statements of his creed, pub lished below, are deserving to be read and re-read by every American citizen. “I believe in the supreme worth ef the individual and in his right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. “I believe that every right implies a responsibilityr every opportunity, an obligation; every possession, a duty. “H believe that the law was made fur man and not, man for the law; that government is the servant of the people and not their master. “I believe in the dignity of labor, whether with head or hand; that the world owM no man a living but that it owes every man an ppportunity to make a living. “I believe thrift Is essential to deer sir; i am filing to ask that you plese desist from enfbrcing the installment buying law.-if we can’t bqy stuff from now on with mought nigh noth ing paid down on same, we will miss half of the joys of liwing and en joying new stuff. had it not benn for the installinait way of doing bizness, idM would have slept in his room and he would of slept in the kitchen, just thii^ hbw much the plan was to him. his moth er-in-law went home thinking fairly well of him. mr. holsum moore won ders if they will take his secont-hand ford away from him on which he has made only 3 payments if this bill be comes a law. he hopes not, as that is the oply way he can take his children to school, be gives his can up aftar changes the vision of most of us, it aeema to have different effects on different personalities. To a fairly large group, excitement sharpens and stimulates the eyesight so that they can see better imder emotion. The emotional effect on the eyes of telling lies has always been pro nounced, even to the casual observ- ler. We all have seen people become shifty-eyed and have immediately suq;>ected that-^hey weren’t telling us the truth. This demonstrates the close relationship between the eyec and the emotions. Dishonesty, if practiced on a large' scale, has a per manent effect on the action of the eyes, so that a person Isading a dis honest life gets so he can’t avoid be ing shifty-eyed even when he is tell ing the truth. The eyes are not only affected by our emotions b^ they also refl^ our emotions. It is easy to hy look ing into p^c^le’s eyes, if fftey.afe angry or afraid. And tha chai^ in their eyes that we see whan they are emotionally wrought up also affects their vision. GLASSBS-AIW Parents often mate th# mistake of not getting glsiiis tor a child be- cMise tlM7 fuea .allFii#,^ that ooca he Jeney Offerings Bring High Prices Forty-nine Head of Registered Stock Sold At Newberjy. The tenth annual sale of the South Carolina Jersey Cattle club was held Monday at the Newberry county fair grounds with 49 head of registered Jersey cows and heifers seUing for a total of $8,917.50, an average of near ly $182 per head. Laurence B. Gardi ner, field representative of the Amer ican Jersey Cattle club, stated that according to his memory this was the highest average of any- state Jer sey sale held in the United States during the past ten years. The highest priced animal in the sale. Day Dream Lorna 1258357, was bought by W. M. Swindler of Co lumbia, for $350. S^e was consigned by Wheeler Bros., of Saluda. Mr. Swindler also purchased the second highest animal for $340, consigned by C. B. Parr of Newberry. Carroll C. Brannon, of Clinton, salesmanager, stated ffiat the cows were purchased by breeders in South Carolina, Georgia, Florida and North CaroHiSiBff' Dr. A. H. Meredith of Augusta, Ga., was the heaviest buyer of the day, purchasing 13 head for a total of $2,600. The cows were consigned to the sale by the leading Jersey breeders of South Carolina, with one breeder of Augusta, Ga., also participating. Wheeler 6ros., of Saluda, sold the largest number, 12, for a total of $2,650. Mr. Parr was Second hi^ with 9 head bringing $2,030. Singing Conventign '' Here Sundoy A singing convention will be held here Sunday at the armory, with a large niunber of out-of-town visitors expected to take part on the program. The exercises wili be broadcast front 3 to 4 o’clock over radio station WSPA, Spartanburg, it has been stated. . STATEMENT OP INCDME AND EXPENSE ' For Year Endkiff Jaae 30» 1941 ' mcoMR County Treasurer, approved claims $ 67,96547 Miscellaneous- fees, tuition and rentals 29147 Loan from Bailey’s Bank _.....„,__1420.08 Total Receipts ; $ 69,547.42 Cash on hand Juqe 80, 1940 — 26448 Fuel and Janitors’ supplies on hand Jime 3,0, 1940 1,125.78 Total to be accounted for _...v. $ 70,927.43 EXPENSE General administrative expense' a..4 4482.84 Operating expense of High school — 20,184.08 Operaflriif"&*:f>efi®l*15f Academy Str^ef sch&l ll,8l0.83 Operating expense of Florida Street school 11447.95 Operating expense of Providence school 6,360.44 Operating expense of Bell Street school 9,682.28 Total operating expense $^ 83,977.40 Loan repaid to Bailey’s Bank 1,290.08 Other expenses, consisting of erection of new shqp, shop tools, i miscellaneous furniture and fixtures aqd library books 5,03144 Fuel and janitors’ supplies on hand June SO, 1941 400.00 Total.........4 70499.42 Cash in Bailey’s Bank 218.01 TotaL ....._ $ 70427.43 NOTE:—^Avcopy of the audit is in the office of the Superintendent and each Trustee has a copy. Any interested citizen v/ho wl^es to review the audit in detail may do so by calling on either the Superintendent or any of the undersigned Trustees. W. C, BALDWIN, Chairman. / R. L. PLAXICO, Secretary. C. N. MAUNEY, C. E. GALLOWAY. > Hunter School District No. 5. W. J. BENJAMIN SERVICE STATION Standard Products Carl Washed aad GratMi Tear Gray Funeral Htmie CMntoR. S. C. I FUNERAL DIRECTORS EMBALMERS Amhyaaca Serrica PhsMB 41 aad t99-J L RUS8S1X GRAY si^' T. PARKS AOAIR, Qm, Hgn. IT’S ABSURD TO KEEP ON • • < ... with the mine old-type mortffaffe that cones ap for renewal every few year»—that costa plenty 1% fees, ap- praisaHisearches, and what not! Wbrst of all, the nort- gafe never does get paid off. There's a mbdm pbdnt’s betier-^o^ hettiv: fin Citixens Federal way—gradually but surely pays off the debt and. meets progressively amafler interest charges with monthly deposits, like rent. Finally, no debt... no more interest. This pfatn of refinancing is worth investigating by any property owner. .iii ii i Each A^counf Insured Ug To $5j000 EDERAL Savings ^ND LOAN ASIOCUTION Tdaplmw Na, 6 A GUnten InsUiRtisR Sarvipc diujlgn Peopk Sines 190t 1 , .'2/