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■■ ■ ' ■^.' . ' ■' C F I ^ -i- 1. J #• J Thursdoy, December 11^ 1941 THE CLINTON CHRONICLE, CLINTON, S. C. Poge Seven Want Ads KEROSENE-olOc per geDinn. Yar borough Oil Co^ West Main St Sp I rOR SALE — Whitnew coUapsibler baby carriage. In gbod conditim. Half price. Mrs. Gene Knox, Phone S86-J. Ic I TURKEYS, FRYERS, FRESH EGGS — Prompt d^very at your home. Call Smidi-Plaxlco Farm, Phone J41-W. 18-»ir^ ANSY PLANTS. We hayis |iice Swiss Giant Mixed Color Pansy Plants for $1.00 per hundred in any quantity. Also Itee Painted Daisy Plants for 10c eadi or $1.00 per doot- en. Blakely 'Brothers Seed Stor«» Tdei^one 188. Ic FC^ SALE—One lot and two build ings on Musgrove street one build ing on Broad sheet several lots on Florida street 34 acres land on Adair street J. P. Pratiier. ll-9p ROSE BUSHES. We have Just re ceived a shipment of individually wrapped Rose Bushes. Several va- rietim to choose from, bush and climbing. Blakdy Brothers Seed iStore. Telq>hone 188. Ic It ^JUDIO—For effiden \» ItADIO—For efficient reliable ser vice <m any make radio. Clinton Radio Service, Wan Street tf SPARTAN* iqashes and feeds have broken several world records. You can use the best at probably no in crease in prices. C-W-S Gtiano Com pany. , Ic Would Include ) County Roads In Stale System in»AY...T0H0lll!0W By Don Robinson Delegotfon Mokes Ap- plicotionifor Inclusion Of Nine Sections. The Laurens county delegati<m to the gmeral assembly. Senator O. L Long and Representatives W. L. COLLEGE—Bamtngs How much is a college education worth in dollars and cents? Many parents, who are considering whether to scrimg and save in (Mrder to send JunkMjO a university for four years, would like to have the answer to that>'qucstion. Although there is no sure-fire answer, it now seems safe to say that a coU^ edu- Martin, "James P. Sloan and C. L. cation is apt to be worth well over Milam, have made applicaticm to the state hiidtway department for the taking-over of several roads into the state system during the years 1941- 42. The application is made pursuant to the pro^^ons of Act No. 145^ Acts of 1941, approved May 10, 1941. The 49.4 miles of roads listed in die application, follow: 1. Sections of road from U. S. route 231 at Waterloo southwest, thence northwest via Bethel Grove school and church to Route 89—9.2 miles. 2. Section of old Laturens-Green- wood road from the SalUda river north toward Waterloo for a distance of 1J2 miles. 3. Section of road from MountviUe southeast to county crossroads — 4.2 miles. 4. Section of road^from Watts Mill STATIONERY—Lovely boxed writ ing paper at popular prices. The gift that is always appreciated at Christmas time. See otu: assortments. Chronicle Publishing Co. WILL pay stai^t salary $35.00 per week, man or woman with auto, sell Egg Producer to Farmers. Eu reka Mfg. Co., East St. Louis, IlL Ip BIBLES—^The ideal and appreciated Christmas Gift. See them at The Chronicle Publishing Co. FOR SALE or RENT—Factory rebuilt 14-ft. stack Ford truck. See W. L. Lynn, 31 North Owens St tf J ONION and CABBAGE Plants. Tex as grown White Bermuda Onions and Charleston Wakefield Cabbage. Also Onion Sets, English Peas, Multi plier Onions and Feeds and Oyster Shells. Blakely Brothers Seed Store. Telephone 188. Ic FREE! If exd^ acid causes you pains ~ of ~St(xnach Ulcers, Indigestion, Heartburn, Belching, Bloating, Nau- aea. Gas Pidns, get free sample, Udga, at Kellefo Drug Store. 15Ja-12p TRESPASS NOTICE—Notice is here by givmi that hunting, fishing or trwpassing of any kind upon the land of the Jade H. Young Estate is hard>y ivohibit^ Violators of this notice vdll be prosecuted. Jedm W. Finney, Mgr. ll-3c FOR SALE — Three black and <me brown cecktf Q>aniel puppies, ten weeks old. Champion st<^. Ideal Christmas gifts. Mrs. Hovey Reid, RJJ>. No. 2, Wellford, S. C. 18-3c TURKEYS FOR SALE. Buttermilk and mash fed. One two-year-old gobbler, 30c per lb. Mrs. W. R. An derson, Rt. 1, Clinton. Ip WANTED—In Clinton or Goldville, woman of refinement, age 27 to 45, with car for business opportunity. Pem^ent. Write 2^ Box 180, Clin ton. Ip LOST—^Drivers’ liemses. Miss Rutii Starnes and Mrs. Tedie L. Starnes. Finder please return to A. W. Starnes at Goldville and receive reward. Ic LOST—In Clinton or at Lydia Mill, brown zipper bill fold omtaining $9. Carroll Young, at Todd Grocery Co. Ip north to Route 308^41 miles. 5. Section of road frean point on Route 101 approximately two miles southeast of Gray Comi south to U. S. Route 78—miles. ' 6. Section of road beginning at a point on Route 56 approximately three miles south of Clinton north east via the State Training school lands, thence north to a point on State I^oute No. 7, approximately 4 miles northeast of Clinton—6.4 miles. 7. Section of road from a point on Route 76 between the Lakeside Country club and Lake Thomas south, thence northeast to a point on Route 76 near Lydia Mills—4.2 miles. 8. Section of road from point on Route 221 at or near Madden’s south- eitfibto State Route 39—9.4 miles. 9.. Section of road from point on Route 221 near the southern city lim its bf Laurens southeast, thence northeast via Bailey school to a point on Route 76 at or near Lakeside Coimtry club. (In the event all of this 'road cannot be added, recom mend -omitting 2.$ miles on Country club house end).—5Ji miles. ^ $l,000-a-year-for-life to Junior af ter he comes home with his sheep skin. Say his college education coats $4,000 and he earns $1,000 a year more as a result of it for 45 working years. That would amount to $45,000 extra income during his lifetime whidi could be attributed to that $4,000 investment. Those figures are based on con servative averages. The chances seem to be that the investment in a col lege education is worth considerably more than that. For in 1939 about 19 per cent of college graduate families had an income of over $5,000 a year and of those over 40 years old, 34.4 per cent were earning over $5,000 a year. I got these figures, plus hundreds of other interesting statistics about the value of a college education, from a research in which over 1,000 colleges cooperated. The study was stated by Ttoe magazine and is be ing published in book form under the titlfe “The U. S. College Gradu al.” ~e$ms $1,690 a year. Be- tweeir^e ages of 30 and 39 he earns $2,590 and wh^ he is over 40 he averages $4,020 annually. That’s earned inemne. It doesn’t include dividends or anything like that If you are over 40 and earn over $10,000 a year, you belong to a su perior groiip vdiich includes only 9.6 per cent of all college graduates over 40. If you earn oyer $5,000 you are still in the upper classes, only 34.4 per cent of college men over 40 earn ing that much. But if you earn less Ten” of the Middle West average, $3,440 a year, while his college mato $3,970 when over 40, and graduates in a town of under 2,500 popula- I' of all the othih’ colleges of the Unit ed States average considerably less. CRT—Cemtry Wading a little deeper into the de tails of the earning power of coll^ graduates I was surprised to find how unnecessary it is for the college man to work in the big cities in or der to go places financially. The infilux of college graduates from small towns into cities has \is- than $3,000 and are over 40 you are.ually resulted from the beUef thaf % one of a large minority, there being,city Jobs pay the beat dividends for 33.8 per cent of you who earn under $3,000 a year. As for women college graduates. a college education. To some extent this is true. The college man in the city does make more than the col- less than 1 per cent earn over $5,000 * lege man in the small town. But as a year and almost 75 per emt earn under $2,000 a year. From a finan cial angle, a college education isn’t nearly as valuable to a woman as a man. The best paying Jobs inr the kmg run for colk^e men are in the pro fessions— in medicine, dentistry or law. Teaching the lowest paid occu pation for men. As for government work, which is becoming more and more popular these days — it’s the hipest paid work when Just out of college and one of the lo^|^ after far as I can figure, he doesn’t make enough to pay for the increased cost of living in cities. In the biggest cities, the average income of the college graduate is tion earns $3,200 a year. That’s cer tainly not worth going to the citF about. ^ ^ If anybody should go to the city, according to comparative earning figures, it should be the non-coUega country boy. In the small town his earnings average around $1,100 a year whereas he could, even before the advent of defense jobs, earn over $1,600, average in the city. ^...^t those difference* in earning S3.200 for the college man in a smaQ town and $1,100 for the non-coUege men—show foat whether a boy in tends to live in the city or the I coun try, a college education is apt' to be worth a fortime to him. WE DO ALL KINDS OF PRINTING —EXCEPT BAD CHRONICLE PUBLISHING Ca FLOOR SANDING SALARlEg Average If the reader of this column is a college graduate, here is a check-list for him to determine whether his present earnings are below or above average. Under 30 years of age the average TALE—$M$9 If you can—it looks as thotigh you ought to try to get Junior in Yale, Harvard or Princeton. For the earn ings of the graduates of those dni- versities are almost twice as much as the earnings of the graduates of other universities. It hardly seems possible that there can be such a difference in earning power, after a four-year education in one university as against another —but the figiues show: men over 40 who have graduated from Yale-Har- vard-Princeton average $8,580 per year; those who graduate frem Dart- mouth-Cornell-Pennsylvania-Colum- bia earn $4,840 a year ^en over 40; those vdio graduate from the “Big We have bought a new sender and edger. Let ns sand your floors, OLD or NEW. Call ns fM* an estimate. Clinton Builders Sui^ly Co. Phone IS-J AUTOMOBILES CLINTON RESIDENTS IN HONOLULU NEW-USED FOR RENT—7«room brick bungalow. Desirable location, Musgrove St T. R. Owens, Musgrove St Ic LOVELY marble top dresser mar-i ble top tables, walnut desk, marble top walnut washstand, pianos, chinas, odd tables, etc. The Trading Post S. N. Crisp, Prop., Laurens. l-l-4p FOR RENT—3-room furnished apart ment. Desirable location. Phone 228-J. p Ic SOUTH CAROLINA STATE EMPLOYMENT SERVICE 1$ SonUt Bread St. CUBten, S. C. Has calls for eoeks, saaMs, and yard wsrfcers. Rsgisfor wttk tids Verriee In ye«r ssnnty. It Teresa na FOR SALE—Girls’ bicycle, practical ly new. Mrs. F. M. King, South Br^ St Ic i •BKsraa saascaisfioN briMMoe Aadiiis a/i^pcimto eas»y castewner foe eaery are- nawOIfoMl lUnly Issr—to have yoar fee- tSosidrfricBwyeosia assared skilled fiofessioasl sarrioas, fiteah, potsot dtafs sad ^mplsts accaraev. May ws fiU year assf pcesciiptloo? SADLER-OWENS ' PHAM4ACY an an % J Direct word is anxiously awaited from a number of Clinton residents who are in Hololulu and other Ha waiian territory. The only conununicati<m whidi had been received yesterday was a cablegram from Mrs. -William Ralidi Holcombe the former Miss Joyce Pitts, daughter of Mrs. Irene Pitts. The brief message whidi said “Safe. Notify others,” was sent Monday from a Honolulu hotel and was re ceived here early yerterday morn ing. Mrs. Holcombe has been in Honolulu the past year with bar hus band, Lt Holcmnbe. Others in Honolulu include: Gar rard Johnson, son of Dr. R. W. John son, wltii the headquarters depart- m«it of the air corps at Hickam field; Charles Hollis, aon of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Hollis, with the air corps at Wheeler field; David G. Dixon, son of Mr. and Mra. A. I. Dixon, 14th Bombardment aquadron, Hickam field; Ben Hart, son of Mrs. Rosa B. Hart, army quartermaster corps, Sco field barracks; George S. Simpson, Scofield barracks. With the United States«navy some where in Hawaiian araters are Charles Hall, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Hall, aboard the destroyer, Benham; and Clanton Willard, aon of Mr. and Mrs. J. Lee Willard. The following former Thomwell orphanage boys are enlisted in the army or navy and are smnewhere in Hawaiian territory: Alto Spivey, Eu gene McDonald, Ray Lightfoot, Jim my McDonald, and Wilton Martin. WE CAN MAKE DEUVEkv ON NEW CARS...SEE US TODAY New, 1941 PIpouth Special Deluxe Coach and Heater-SPECIAL PRICE New 1942 Ford Super Deluxe. Coach and Heatw — SPECIAL PRICE Oldsmobiles, All Models “Better Buy While You Can Get One” IMl Chevrolet Coach CImii as yoa And. Low ■iUeag$-~ $845.00 SAT. «T SAW R IN THE CHRON ICLE.” THANK YOU. •- * 1940 Ford Coach DeLoxe— $675.00 amc^ laxatives all over the South / 19S9 Chevrolet Coach Motor overhauled— $625.00 D. E. Tribble Ca PUNKRAL DIRECTORS ..JWd... BMBALMERS Llcwiaad ftsbsIsMTe, CssiplsCs t * Modan EgBipawit Day PhoM. 94 Night M. m CliatML 1939 Dodge Coach Seat Covers. Heater— $525.00 1941 Oldsmobile Streamliner. 4-Dr. Sedan. Bargain—- $1075.00 New Car Guarantee. 1940 Oldsmobile 4-Da SEDAN Radio and Heater. $750.00 New Car Guarantee 1941 Chevixdet Coupe . Buainess. Clean. Seat Covers— $695.00 1937 Ford Coach Rons Like New— $375.00 1940 Ford Coach Little Rongk— $600.00 1936 Nash Sedan Perfect. Radio. Heater— $295.00 1 . 1941 Oldmobile CLUB SEDAN Low Mileage— $995.00 New Car Guarantee 1936 Ford Coach' Gean— $195.00 1941 Ford Coach SUPER DELUXE Radio and Heater— $850.00 1936 Fixd Coach Trunk. Heater— $295.00 1936 Dodge Ddivory S^AN Clean Tterongkoat— $295.00 1934 Ford Coach Runs Good. Bargain— $150.00 LIFE INSURANCE ON EACH ACCOUNT. BETTER VALUES.. 18 MONTHS TO PAY TIMMERMAN MOTOR - Sales - OLDSMOBDLE - Service 17 South &x>ad SL Clintoii, S. C " Mione 119