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\ j , * • d 'f « . s 1 1 . Thursday, March 23, 1950 THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Pa?** Fiv# LEGAL NOTICE The State Of South Carolina, County of Laurens COMMENTS ON MEN AND THINGS By Sr*< tator In Court Of Common Pleas Mrs. Annie B. Buchanan, Plaintiff are man y g 0(X j people in the Sc.^d^Co^mpa^Mi ^ ° f them ^ tion Picture Advertising ^ryice, y s W4 Some ha , ve ^ ura * e an d a brave Virginia-Carolina * Laundry Supply • s P iri ^i others have fortitude, Company, and Boggs & Havr&er, they be;lr P ain and 8 ri ? f and afflic - Inc. Defendants pursuant to a De- t on v ' llh resignation, yet with cree of the Court in the above slat- a faith that sees the sun behind the ed case, I will sell at public outcry cloud.-:; some of us are ju^ weak ^to the-highest bidder,-either in or in creatu e-v o. no special virtues nor front of the Court House, at Laur- any spe ial vices, just ordinary folk, plungefsTTor'a few years they are on! the top of the world; and then next they call on the Government to do | something for them on so vast a ens ‘C. H., S. C., on Saiesday in Ap ril next, being Monday the 3rd day of the month, during the legal hours for such sales, the following des- uey cribed property, to wit: “All that piece, parcel or lot of sine. ve:y ordinary. If ycu o. t expect much of people me: u e up fairly well; but if you pul pressure on them they fre quently disa point us. After all, land with the buildings thereon sit- '^ e ' 1 i.. fl, ; d .J , '1? lt i n< L a " „ unc0mm0 " uate, lying and 1 being at No. 201 s( l uad » 1 think Robert Burns said. North Sloan Street in the Town of Just why 1 said a11 that 1 reall y Clinton, in Laurens county, State of don ’t know: it. doesn’t grow out of South Carolina, bounded on the anythin , nor does it lead to any- North by lot of the heirs of E. F. thing. Ray, deceased; on the east by North Reading the first pages of most ►Joan street on the South by lot of papers one might think that the ^st^'^nd^rrs^rnir T TtV Buchanan; and having the follow-< wlck 4 edt \ ess ' Well, what about the ing metes, courses and bounds: Be- 1 great rellgl(> us awakening in Colum- ginning at a point on the west side scoffer says that people of North Sloan Street at the south- 8° from distant communities because east corner of lot of the heirs of of the attraction of a great ctowd; E .F. Ray, deceased; thence in a others say that curiosity, mere, corn- southerly direction along the pro- mon, cheap, curiousity draws many perty line on the west side of North thousands. That may be true: Idle Sloan Street, one hundred and fif- curiosity drew thousands to see and ty-two feet (152), more or less, to hecr Je^us: many believed; some an iron pin stake twenty-one (21) followed Him; a few transformed nn U th. In* the *’ 0rld . With the power Of that proper on the lot herein mortgaged; . „ _ _ . thence in a westerly direction along ^ nl . n ^. ;5 . liy , Revival s ar e n ot success- a line parallel to and twenty-one ^ tbey a PP ea ^ on ^y t0 earnest, (21) inches south of the south side righteous people The sick are those of said laundry building proper, and wh o need the physician. an extension of said line, one hun-1 No one can estimate correctly the dred (100) feet to corner stake, the influence of the powerful and sus- southern boundary line extending tained emphasis which has been giv- for a total distance of one hundred en to individual salvation during (100) feet frdm the property line these meetings. Surely that con- on the west side of North Sloan c€rns each of us, for each one must Street, thence in a northeily direc ‘ face the judgment, standing alone, tion in a straight line, one t.undred and fifty-two feet (152), more or «capt as he pleads for the interces- less. to lot of the heirs of E. F. slon ot the Son of God We Ray, deceased, at a point one hun- ver y strong in dred feet (100) west*of the west cemeteries are iside of North Sloan Street; thence once were strong, confident, self in an easterly direction along the^reliant rejoicing in the strength of south boundary line of lot of the their own right arms.’ Some lived heirs of E. F. Ray, deceased, one, long enough to grow weak and ail- hundred ^(100) feet to the Southeast i n g an d dependent on friends and family; many died in the vigor and promise of youth. But, whether old or young, they passed from the ourselves, but the full of men w(ho scale that we Atlantic Coast Eastern- ers seem like small-time tenant-far mers in comparison. Reduce State appropriations-, by re ducing; we can’t reduce spending by] | preaching economy in one direction ; and spending in another. Good men cause most of . the-trou ble in-any effort toward economy. 1 If all the high spenders were evil' men it would be easy to point them ' j out; merely pointing at them would | be sufficient ; to, arouse all the good, sound men; but when some of the ] best , men advocate this high spend ing the cause is given a dignity and respectability that carries it a long way toward adoption. „ We are a people of short vision. Could we not see years ago that we were committing the State'TO'exces- sive permanent expenditures? Some 1 tried to impress that, but were Like the hounds baying at the moon. But' where does that leave us today?' Shall we persist in error because we started in error? Can a man spend on his family in time of adversity j as he does in time of prosperity? j Some men do, and we point them out [ as the visionaries, the unpractical, 1 ' unthrifty men who quickly run through fortunes. A more prudent man will trim his sails to catch the wind; or take in his sails if -a storm blows. I am not impressed by the state- iinent that the University cannot op erate with less than $1,690,000; the basic fact is that we shouldn’t en- j danger the credit of the State in or der to operate the University, or any ether institution. The State has only two services of such urgency that we cannot trim them: police protection and public health: all (others are secondary. Important they i are,* of course; but the State which cannot maintain public order and i protect its citizens in the use and! enjoyment of their earnings and cap- ; ital is a mere bump on a log and an-| Invitation to anarchy. Likewise the State must take measures to assure the public against plagues. All these others are good things, splendid helps to the citizenry, but not of such immediate urgency as permits us to regard them as so necessary as to unpenil the credit of the State. I rejoice that I do not belong to p ressiiregroitps, nor to those clam - oring for public appropriations. The greatest danger we have now is such a sense of loyalty to a group or to an institution- as leads us to look fitst to them and their prosperity rather than to measure the needs of all the State, remembering that the State is not a group of people draw ing salaries from thq State, but the State is the taxpayer, multiplied thousands of times by his fellow suf ferers who are the victims of an an nual crusade to squeeze him to a pulp. ’ I may bje' as,n£ar the University as others are but the University is not to be placed above the taxpay ers; and that applies to all the other institutions and services. Cabinet Shop We have opened a well equipped cabinet shop to build cabinets of all kinds and remodel furniture. Whatever your job, brihg it to us. . - i ► Reasonable Prices — Experienced Workmen W. P. GASTLEY Phone 2203 * H. P. ATKINSON Joanna Highway :: Gray Funeral Home Clinton. 8. C. FUNERAL DIRECTORS ...and... EMBALMERS AMBULANCE SERVICE Phones 41 and 399 .1 L RUSSELL GRAY ana i P'RKS ADAIR. Gen Mrr» • mmwu'UuiMMiuuiioog.waowr ryn* *.< t: I 0 Savings Accounts 3%—DIVIDEND—3% I 1 $ :r 1 S I * # :: We invite savings accounts from the people of Clinton and vicinity. You will like our friendly and efficient ser vice, and you will recede your dividend promptly each January 1st and July 1st. Any amount — from $1 up — opens an account. --.Each account is insured up to $5000 by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. Two people may have up to $15,000 fully insured. Accounts by piail promptly acknowledged. % B 1 T: K comer of lot of the heirs of E. F. Ray. deceased, the beginning point. Said lot of land above described and mortgaged , the idenli-, .^ed ^ Sund^T^ Cleaners^ Inc. bj the! State ot being in which their strength said Mrs. Annie Br Buchanan by j * s weakness. - her deed dated April 29, 1949 which' I find items of interest in the deed is to be filed forthwith in the papers. I’ve just read something office of the Clerk of Court for about business failures, or bankrup- Laurens County, S. C. fbr record- tues. Apparently there were seven- ing.’’ i ty thousand business failures in Also the following personal prop-^ 1949. That does not mean seventy erty: - thousand cases in bankruptcy, but Item One ~ seventy thousand .who closed their 1 42-in. Wood Washer; 1 36-in. doors because they were losing mon- Wood Washer; 1 Troy 28-in. Ex-'ey. That is something new, but it tractor; 1 Wash Tub-cement: 1 Troy used to be common; and is becoming 3 roll 100-in. Flat Iron A-224; 2 all too frequent now. . Hoffman Wearing Apparel Presses;, it would be tedious to read or lis- 1 1 Pantex Bosom Shirt Press-Mod- { en a u the details, but compared e: L410-P; 1 McCleary X 0 Jk e il P'22, ^ w ith v -1946 consider these percentages 1 New_ York Collar & Cuff Pi ess— of f a ji ur e today: Furniture and Fur- 1 1 p Sin . g ^ Pro • wishing Stores 2,000 per cent; Gaso- Hat Blocking Press No! ««c filling sUUon, 850 per cent; 1554 1 Flexform Garment Shaper'Wholesale Dry Goods 800 per cent. JC 0 722- 1 Fletcher Clothes Press Restaurants and Bars 1,031 per cent; C142 AP 1672- 1 Hoffman. Clothes transportation Companies 460 per —Press' 'VC56-6231. 1 Excelsion-Puff cent; machinery makers 108 per cenl Iron. 1 Glover Deodorizer; I C & H That is the percentage of failures, Air Condition Fap Drier; 1 Hue-, as compared with 1946. All this is bsch Double Sleev^r; 1 Collar Iron very sad, but the Congress of the Form-Rite No. 6232; 2 Ironing umted States and our Legislature Boards; 1 Shirt Folder; 1 ^ rraa j)!j ar * ,should give heed to the trend. The ker; l Computing Scales 498689. 1 ] pi us h era j s over; we must face the Rug Machine; 1 Cash Register; li^th. Ame 1 ? 1 Lrg. rd Machine No 22730-M- j (i Sures arc impressive, bni 21044 1 D.C. Washer-American No. madder to me are several vacant store 121014 M 1389: 1 Troy Extractor 20-< butldmgs which I pass several times in (DO- 1 Glover Washer (D.C) » week. They tell me of a soldier No 27243; 1 Allway Pants Stretch-< home from the war who dreamed of — ■ ' ~ ” a little business of his own. There it stands, in all its desolation—a blasted* hope, a dead dream. It is as dreary as the stark loneliness of a chimney amid a scene of destruction by fire — a home destroyed. Here where the husband came home to his family and the cheerful fire; in front where the little girl played with her dollies and the little boy dodged behind trees and corners, “shooting-em-up”, as all the little fellows are doing, everywhere. I think I told you last year about meeting a Tittle boy in the cafeteria of the Grand Canyon. He was a wee ladie, but he had his two guns and drew both on me, and banged away. When I called him Roy Rogers he let me pass. Recently ^en scouts went out with me to a wiener roast. The little fel lows shot up everything and every body ?nd acted in the tradition of the fighting West they see in the movies; .but as dark came on they wanted their mamas and daddies; and I’m told they slept like nice lit tle boys, without a bloodthirsty dream. The business papers tell us that wool is so expensive that ,rayon is being used more extensively for men’s clothing; and that even rugs COMMERCIAL HOUSEHOLD WIRING Electrical Appliance Repairing and Electrical Construction Work Floor Plugs A Specialty ARNOLD M. CANNON j I 406 W. Maple St. Tel. 312-XJ ij it it it B :: :: Chartered and Supervised by the United States Government Laurens Federal Savings & Loan Association Telephone 22271" LAI KENS’ LARGEST SAVINGS INSTITUTION 101 West Main Street Laurens, S. C. »%•V#*»«*«•« »4W*V»«V»W»V»V«V»V er; 1 Maytag Washer; 1 Steam Radi ator; 1 40 H.P. Boiler; 1 64-in. 2 packet Wood Washer. Also, all other machinery, equip ment and fixtures except motor ve hicles, heretofore located in and used in connection with Buchanan s Cleaners and Laundry at No. 201 North Sloan Street in Clinton, S. C. The said goods and chattels above described and hereby mortgaged are the identical goods and chattels sold to the said Service Laundry and Cleaners, Inc. by Mrs. Annie B. Buchanan by her bill of sale dat ed April 29, 1949. Item Two I Rebuilt & Guaranteed 26-in. Troy Extractor; I Worthington Air Compressor; 1 Hoffman 30 by 30-in. Monel Metal Motor Driven Washer; 1 Forse 38-FCG Press. Serial No, 6F3154636; Collar and Sleeve Press; 1 Forse 36-FY6 Press, Serial No. 6F3154636; Cuff and Yoke Press; 1 Force 43-FM Press. Serial No. 6F- 3484642; Bosom and Back Shirt Press; 1 Rebuilt & Guaranteed 5- RoU Hagen Type Flat Work Ironer; Office equipment. County, Racks; 1 Prosperity Musroom Press, No. 115360; 1 Set Key Check fins; 1 Washer Automatic Valve; 1 5-H.P. Electric Motor. Terms of Sale: Cash. The suc cessful bidder, other than the Plain-, tiff herein, immediately upon the are being made of rayon, conclusion of the bidding, shall de- j It will be interesting to know that posit with the Clerk of Court the one man, an immigrant farmer, sum of 5% as a guarantee of his changed his $10,000 capital to $542,- good faith in the bidding. The same qoo i n eight years. That isn’t a fairy to be applied to the purchase p^c® ] t a i e ; i jead it in one of the most se- upon his complying with the r:™ 1 ?* I date financial journals of the world. ™ • Sa ^> imtehted ! This farmer pwns 4,160 acres of Plaintiff for enritt on the indebted- wheat land ^ one ^ this man bidder Should Tail to make such , was so far down that he had to .look dSSSt or should fail to comply 1 up to see the bottom. But in the dust with the terms of sale, the said lands , bowl, in spite of drought, in spite shall be re-sold on the same or some of all bad iortune, he emerges splen- Yo, -OU ’ve seen it happen with the family down the street, the friends across town, the folks you went to school with. They started out, as most folks do, with a car of modest size —and still more modest price. Maybe they moved themselves up a bit, step by step, to the top- bracket models' in that particular price range. Then they discovered something. It doesn’t cost much more—some times no more —to really blossom out in a Buick. It’s not such a long stretch to take command of a great-hearted valve- in-head straight^eight —to move into the room and restfulness and 1 subsequent Salesday on the same terms, at risk of the defaulting pur chaser. The purchaser to pay for papers, stamps and recording. Dated this 14th day of March, 1950 —30-3c. „ t V. R^LEMING, C.C.C.P&G.S. SUBSCRIBE TO TH*. CHRONICLI didly victorious. li read the account very carefully in order to learn the secret; but there isn’t any secret. It reminds me of meeting cotton farmers from Texas, Arizona, New Mexico and California. They talk of a thousand bales as nothing; and many of them produce two or three bales on an acre. Sounds fabulous, doesn't it? Tho'e men arc steady going of a Buick —to cloak yourself in styling that’s today’s height of highway fashions. You can know the good, satisfying feel of a Buick wheel in your hand — you can have the gentleness of soft coil springs on all four wheels —you can revel in the handiness of cars that are big in room and big ..in repute, yet traffic-sized and easy to park and put away. Maybe-who knows till you in quire?—you can manage the magic silkiness of Dynaflow Drive* in all its 1950 perfection —of a certainty you’ll find the model that’s twin to your heart’s desire among the many choices Buick gives you for 1950. So why not make this your year to blossom out in a Buick, as so many have before you? Why not *Stm94»r4 KXADMASTKI. i+t—msl 41 »»/r# cm/ mi sunn *nd snciAL mu*t. Tufli in HENRY J. TAYLQR A3C Nttwcrk e**- Vi^day tvtning. find out the dollars-and-cents story of Buick —it even includes some very happy figures on gas economy — from your ow n Buick dealer? See him now, will you—and help yourself to some real fun this season! BUICK ALONE BAS AND WITH IT GOES: HtOHtt • COMPMtSStON Firtboll rol*» in hiod powkr in thrn* tngmni, tm hp ratmgi (N*w F 2&3 •ngin* in Sunt moJtlt ) NiW PATTtKM STYUNO, with bvmpir guard grilltt, rap»r through Undort, "dovbb bubhh" toiHightt • WUU- ANOU VtSIUUTV, cW«/p road r.«. both tor- word and bo<k • TMAFFK-MANDT SIZt, tort oror-otl longth for taster parking and garaging, than turning rodwrt IXIAA-WtOI StATt crodlod hoHrooa tho oxht • son BVKK UOi. ham att cori tpringing, Sofoty-iido rimi. taw pttuuro tirat. rid+noortjmg torguo-tuhn • WlM AMAAT Of Moons with body by h- bar. NtoU&r* M/* HOC*/WV& Phono you* BUICK donJor /ox m domonstiation -Might Nos*! — LAURENS MOTOR CO. Zarick Street Laurens, S. C. When better automobiles are built BUICK will build them