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S T r. Thursday, February 12, 1948 THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Sev« Relief At Last For Your Cough Creomulslon relieves promptly <4>e- - > cause it 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. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulslon with the understanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back, CREOMULSION For Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis T-' "HOW TO WIN FRIENDS ond Author of INFLUENCE PEOPLE" CITY SHqE SHOP Pitts Street Expert Shoe Repairing Clinton and Goldville S. D. Dawkins & Sons 1 * Tire Recapping. Battery Charging. - Firestone Batteries. Radiator Boiling. Car and Truck Repairing TIMMERMAN MOTOR CO. Phone 119 Gary Si FARMERS, ATTENTION! • Perhaps they believed > but they didn’t “h< when we told the ptfblic last summer that coal would be Maybe jy6\i will get caught oh fertilizer the same^ay. Certainly fer tilizer will be scarce be- ire planting time. To play safe, BUY EARLY. r w GUANO CO. Phone 62 SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHROVHXJ “ThI'aiwr Evervbodv R*ad«” /- A RE you ever faced with meeting someone upon whom you v wish to make a good impression, and quickly? Someone who is important in your life? Well, I can tell you one way t6 do it, and a very simple way it is. It is born of my own experience. A few seasons ago, I was delivering a series of radio broad casts juiider the title of ‘.‘Little Known Facts About Well Known People.” Among others, I wanted to do a broadcast about Ed Wynn, the well-known comedian, who was then going great guns in the entertainment world. Naturally, every body who knew, or had even met, Ed Wynn, were trying to get at him, most of them want ing favors. I tried three times to get him on the telephone with a view to making an pointment for an interview. But he was ei^ busy, ‘‘in conference,” not in. Anyway, he D. Carnegie never came to the telephone, and his^cretary was well versed In the art of ‘‘shunting off.” Finally, I decided to go ahead writing my T>r6adcast with out a personal interview, although -a^persojral interview, of course, makes for a far better and more instured broadcast. So I went to the library and started in Uyao ‘‘research” on Ed Wynn. There was. quite a bit of material, much of it just what 1 wanted. I thought of sending hiny^my typed notes and asking him if all the statements were true. All of a sudden I got an other idea, one that my intplfigence told me could not help but work. . So I called up the/feroadcasting company, got hold of a friend who handled su^h information,‘and asked him where Ed Wynn was rehearsing his own program. My friend looked up the information/for me, told me where Ed Wyn could be found at a certain Ume. I weiit^u) the studio, but was stopped at the door, natural ly. I sajdthat I had a message for Ed Wynn and would like to spje'ak to him in person. ie message got to him and, finally, he came toward me tuspiciously. I used an opening sentence that stopped him in his tracks. I said: “Mr. Wynn, I probably know more about you than anybody outside your own family. I am an authority on you. Would you like to know what I know about you?” I then handed him the typewritten pages of what I had gleaned about him—13 in all. I said, “There it is. Do you want to read it?” Did he? Well! Thirteen typewritten pages on what people thought of him, what had been said and written about him. As he read, he broke in with, “Well, I didn’t know that had ever been published about me. How in the world did you get this information?” And so pn. You can believe that every word interested him. The result was that I got an hour’s interview with him. Until that time I hadn’t been able to get at him at all. And why was I able to do so now? For just one reason: because I had talked to him about the most interesting subject in the world to him—himself. * And that’s a. sure-fire way to approach any one. Know something about him, let him know you know, whether it is oral or written. There’s hardly a man so big who isn’t in-....* stantlv an-’ • ' undlv interested. origin, or . + IR$T VAlEMTINia. A youN<5 ROMAN PRIEST, ST. VALENTINB, who was BEHEAoefr Fee. A r FOR REFUSIN670 RENOUNCE CHRISTIAN IT/. HlS FAREWELL TO WlS FRIENP, MESSAGE THE 1AILERS PAU6HTFR, M WAS SKSNtP " FROA\ — YOUR VALENTINE* ^ NO ENT ROMANS SAVE CUPlP A HELPING HANP WITH LOVf LOTTERIES IN WHICH young MAIFS ANP BACHELORS BECAME 'VALENTINES' BY PBAWlNG ^ LOTS. THESE l \P WERE THE / ORI6INAL - "&LINP PATES* VALENTINE CUSTOM SPREAD TO AMERICA ru DURING THE U REVOLUTIONARY WAR ANP REACHED ’ ITS PEAK IN THE IBBO'S • MOST POPULAR VALENTINES WERE ELABORATE ONES WITH SHY, CAUTIOUS.VERSES 7ANY A HOPEFUL^N&LlSH MAID OF THE 1600’S WENT TO SLEEP- AFTER EATING A HARP BOILEP E£6~ WITH BAY LEAVES FAST EM EP TO HER PILLOW. THE "MAN OTHER ^REAMS' that night WAS SUPPOSED TO BE ^ HER FUTURE HUS BAND WyS Valentines ARE BOTH SENTIMENTAL ANP ■HUMOROUS... THEV EYTf?eS5 THE ■heartfelt EAvCllOKS* ' OF THE SENDERS By SAYING I LOVEVOU* IN A , THOUSAND DIFFERENT WAYS << Lincoln Speaks Again —I—g, f p “We Do ft!! Kinds Except Bad” * ’ In 1948 We solicit a continuation of your business and good will. We are better prepaid than ever before to serve our cus tomers' PRINTING NEEDS promptly in our complete combi nation Newspaper-Printing plant. In 1948 Be sure your PRINTING is representative of your busi ness. Be sure that it is right in quality, typography and cor rectness. It wil) be if you call 74 FOR YOUR NEEDS AS YOU HAVE BEEN DOING FOR MANY YEARS . ■ ■ . .v ; •' . /’ - • PRINTING— ADVERTISING — OFFICE SUPPLIES “One of C linton’s Oldest Business l irnis’’ -v r A