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What Business Offers To Youth Special to The Chronicle Illy IJoycr I tab-mo) UohHOn I'ark Miihx , June 12 As in home icci'iit J><i?t \enrx, m liool and college prndiotles are hot faced thTa inTtfiTTi v, Hit pi'bsprrTT"" nr m? employment The majority of male Kraduatfh will ahoitly ? 11 f?*r h' in?: branch of the armed nervlcea. For thoae having a d< lei nil htatqs, Jobs will b? p 1 e 11111111 Willi yoveriiMl'IU UKdu lea and uciri.ii))t_*/rt indiixti'i ch taklllK the I h'illll YoiiliK Women, loo, who employment h.a\< little concern. The status of women In bun incss find Industry has grown rapidJy. l.'von without the war many girls would llnd Jobs open tu them today which a few years ugo would have thought Impossible for them to hold down. Recognize the Signs In spite of the war. conditions In our country iih well as throughout the world are better today. How. I envy the young people graduating J from school and college. They will play a most important part in out future progress. My only regret la Iliiit I am not young enough to gimp i the many wonderful opportunities ( which lit* within tlw reach of today a j youth I wish I wci'v starting my own lift- all over again. When I gradual|? d f i'on i collt'K*' in IhUh 111 > mo It a (I \ a n - j Mages ami opportunities awaited hi*; | i 'a- lii'i' l.uW ill hand l"i I In- current i i I op of g fadHi t?'H. Young p? oph- who ha\r n-ached M|i.. ay Id Miiijoi It v .1 lid ha .. colli- J | |. I i d ili> ir luminal m hoolllig ran ' ma k>' "i (h.'ir future exactly what; 11|. \ an- willing I o put III! o the of. ' full While ill iilliml a lice* have III tl* h j in do with *n>aess in itiiy tit Id, n?*vji ilhi hss hard work. comMitration, ' land good personal lilihlts it r?? Mill r? -sponsible for tin* dIIftnaiuc between f-uic.-.ss and failure. Aliavt* itvur-ytbiiiK j . I-.-, the ability to recognize tho I signs ot tli?; times Mini the openlngH tlo > provide is of prima importance, la : us briefly I - vii in I in' tlu* outlook today. The Part You Will Play If you aro old enough to graduate Iroin college you aro old enough to put UHido childish thoughts and habits. You ure old enough to art like men and women. It is to you youngsters facing bravely a new world that I want seriously to write this week. I have Bald before that 1 envy you. My rruHona are aw follow#: You will have been a factor In Having the good thlngH of this world agaiiiHt the gangsters of Kurope end Asia. Yon will In* acquainted with tho new I)?.feuno Industry which will continue iin Important factor after the w ar. \ You will belong to the world's leading and greatest nation, when, after I tho war, all the world looka to us lor Ku Ida lice. You will see I he airplane coming into Its own. carrying passengers and freight to all parth of the world, levoluiionizing commerce. You can have a part In reforming and rebuilding democracy; In lau h" veterans of World War II nay < ontrol pol11Ich. You will enjoy a more sensible vtatidiird of living with much of (lie present foolishness and waste eliminated. If you are an expert ou.somo phase of business, with a real helpmate tor a wife, you need have no llnancial worrleH. You will enjoy new inventions, new products, and new proces&Ofl not yet discovered. These will give further new openings. You are fortunate to enter business without the handicaps of having trained In the "good old days" which your parents miss. Most important of all, you will witness a great spiritual awakening in which 1 sincerely hope you will tako a most active part. A Way Of Life Of course, much depends on the I length of the war. It may last some years or it*. may ho over within twelve months. One thing I am certain. namely, the longer It lasts, the greater opportunities 1t will offer to those who are alert and anxious to he of real service. Right now young people can render great service by keeping calm and helping others from getting excited and going off halfcocked. Too many people?old and young?are not showing the courage necessary to face these wartime days. They are running around, waving their hands in the air and saying, "What will I do?" "What can I do?" Just tell them to hold on a minute, to quiet down, and to take it easy. Furthermore my young friends, don't you jump through the first hoop held before you. Consult with your parents ?they've been through the mill. If in disagreement with them try cbmpromising. After the war, much pressure will be brought upon you to join this group or that group. The age-old question of world expansion or national isolation will again come up. Blocs of one kind or* another w ill be formed Labor problems will again be in the forefront. Even if many of the Administration's wartime powers are revoked, new social order schemes will arise to take their place. My advice i8 to avoid all of these. Go quietly about your business, keep your own cofinsel, be not talked Into or against any faction. Such cycles come and go. During the coming one there will be marvelous chances for the young people who keep their eyes and ears open, their life clean, and their mouth shut ? | WARTIME NEEDS 1 CHANCE GREYHOUND SCHEDULES EFFECTIVE MONDAY JUNE 15TH ... Greyhound buses will operate on new wartime schedules. This change in 1 service is being made in order to cooperate to the fullest extent with the wartime plans of the Office of Defense Transportation. The purpose is to make every <5us work full time ? keeping vital traffic on the move. America's wmr program trot the right oi way! The great majority of the people Greyhound is carrying today and intends to carry efficiently are aelecteea traveling to examination center#, fighting men on leave or furlough, war worker# moving to their jobs, buaines?men traveling on easential work. The trip# they take are necessary to keep the war program rolling. i With increased service demanded for war I production area#?and little increase in buses available?it is necessary to divert ' equipment to routes where it is most | needed. MsMty peacetime features are discontinued. Operating speeds are somewhat reduced. Express and Limited Schedules are eliminated entirely. Second sections of regular schedules are being I eliminated unless the buses carry a | sufficient number of passengers. Greyj hound schedules will be combined with 1 those of other bus companies, when necessary. Co<ii?rvo(ran of rubber is all-important? j and Greyhound is taking every possible step to increase the big savings already effected. Today buses use only a fraction ss much rubber as private cars per passenger, per mile?and they average more than 40,000 miles per tire. We hope thai th?s wartime* cheap? will not cause you inconvenience, crowding or delay. But if you don't find travel as comfortable and easy as in normal times, please make allowances! The war j effort comes first with Greyhound as it does with you! You Can Help by getting information about the new schedules before you travel?taking as little baggage as possible ? traveling before or after tbe mid-summer rush ' period?taking your trip on mid-week j days, leaving seats on week-ends for soldiers and war workers. BUS TERMINAL DeKALB ST. TELEPHONE 249 GREYHOUND l/N?5 v - J Weekly News Letter' From Liberty Hill | Liberty Hill. June 9.?Sunday ut the Presbyterian church the inon.'ng services wert4 coiidlH'lcd by the pasKir, I >r R. W. Jopling. who used passages found in tlin -1 and -1 chup1 i?.p of I)?>uteronoiny for the bas 1h of a \ cry Intcrest iitg script mil discourse. Sunday school a I tho usual hour in charge of superintendent If- J Junes. The regular monthly collection for Thornwcll Orphanage was taken. The Sunday school has recently purchased a number of nice clothbound hymn books for use in the sung service. j The Ileath Springs high school, in which Mrs. T. P. McCrae of our village was popular music teacher, closed Monday last for the summer. | Misa C. Ann Thompson, music teacher In the West Columbia school, lis at home for the vacation period, 'her school having closed last week. | Miss C'allio Jones, member of the Columbia school faculty, Is expected | to arrive on Tuesday to spend the vacation ut home. Miss Margaret Itlchards, of the Columbia College music department, is at homo for the summer, and has as her guest .Miss Marjorie Blundell, of the. same popular institution. Steven McCrae, University of South Carolina student, has gone to New York where he Is studying art. E. L. Clements, rural mail carrier, of Lynchburg, Is visiting his brother and family, while Mrs. Clements and daughters, Misses Annie Bell and Louise went on to Rock Hill where Louise expects to attend summer school. John Richards McCrae, well known and popular South Carolina baritone singer, has volunteered for United States army service and is located at Fort I)ix, N. J. W. E. (Ned) Cunningham, Jr., who has been employed at Augusta for some time, was a week end visitor at the home of his father, \V. E. Cunningham, Kershaw county Fire Protection Association warden. Mrs. A. M. Francis and little son are spending a while with her mother, Mrs. John G. Richards. Miss Lucy Clements, who since the closing of her school at Easley, has been doing clerical work at Holly Hill, spent Sunday with her parents. She had as guest for the day, Milton lUst, ot^Holly llill. Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Hamiter. who have been sojourning in Camden for some time, are at their home here again. We deeply regret to hear of the death of Frank Campbell. former well known Camden citizen, and also of young John Jenkins, who was State paper carrier for our village before joining for war service. Verne Foster, a good colored woman, wife of Willie Foster, tenant on tlie place of R. C. Jones, died on Friday after a long illness. Funeral and burial was at New Hope Baptist church near here on Sunday. (Too late for last week) Liberty Hill, June 3.?At the Presbyterian church Sunday morning tho pastor, Dr. R. W. Jopling, delivered an interesting sermon based on the words, "What will Thou have me to do?" A very timely and instructive discourse?directed specifically to young men, many of whom at this time are finishing their high school .studies, and who have made no definite plans for future studies or for a lifetime course of action. To such he stressed the need for pleasure and power for good to be gained by adopting a course of gospel training and ministerial work for those who are fitted for such work. Dr. Jopling backed up his discourse by relating some interesting personal experiences in his ministerial work of forty years or more. The vacation season has arrived < and most of the schools have closed for the summer months and the i teachers have returned to their homes ' for a period of recreation, if not, of rest. Some will attend summer 1 school, some go to the beach resorts ' and some to the mountains to enjoy < the cooling breezes of the higher altitudes. It's a season of pleasant i anticipation, of meeting wijh friends ] and loved ones. It also has its se- ( rious side of breaking up of pleasant ; and congenial friendships formed ( during school time which will in , many cases never be renewed by ] teachers and pupils alike. The Cedar Creek school in Lancaster county near here, in charge of Miss Lizzie Richards, closed a very successful session 011 last Wednesday with a picnic and an enjoyable time for those in attendance. The Hickory Hill school in Lee county, in charge of Mrs. J. H. Clements. as principal, gave a very pleasant entertainment at its closing two weeks ago. We attended the interesting exercises of the Camden high school on Tuesday night when two of our boys won the "cloak and motor board cap" and received their diplomas?L. P. Thompson, Jr., and John Henry Clements, Jr. We congratulate these young men and the entire class upon this very important event in their young lives, and hope that their , motto through life shall be "Upward and onward" in the service of their country and their God. Miss Willie Lee Higgins, Winthrop student, was sick at the home of her parents last week. Miss Lucy Clements, who taught in the Easley schools, returned home , two weeks ago, her school |fl closed for the vacation periojM | Miss Marion Richards, who |9 school In Sumter, returned ho^| week and was taken suddenljflB' was carried to the Sims Miqfl hospital where an appendix opjfl 5 was performed. At last wordiifl doing well. Dr. and Mrs. T. G. Hall aod|fl ter, Miss Louise, and son Bobbpfl has just finished high school ii9 dictorlan of his class, of Westalfl arrived on Tuesday for a visit ifl and Mrs. R. C. Jones. Mtasjfl Jones, who was visiting in their fl returned home with them. Crashes Car Into 9 DeKalb Monuafl (Continued from first pap)I ties for in December, 1940, helrid^H end his life with a bullet whliafl ed in a car at a filling downtown Camden. By a strange coincidence, started his mission of death I] and a half ago from a station opt^H ed by Harvey Smith. Saturdiy? noon, before he ^j?ade his charge upon the resting placotfl Baron DeKalb, he stopped at il^H Btation across the street and cMH briefly with an attendant?none than Harvey Smith. Dunlap was at pne time on the Camden police force. Sfl as is known, he did not say or indicate in any way he wufl ning to end his life. Smith eaji^M he did not think he had beenlH The 8,000 toi^s of steel which J to go into the novelties and would make 160,000 .60 callbrtj chine guns. ^jyiilk^ls in the Army Now J At the Presidio in San Francisco, as in all other army camps and naval stations, the fighting forces of our nation have the opportunity to enjoy milk find other health-giving dairy products. In this historical army post which outdatcs the revolutionary war and which serves as headquarters for the Ninth Army Air Corps area, 6,000 milk shakes and 7,500 ice cream sodas and a la carte servings of ice cream are consumed daily in addition to milk and dairy products in other forms. "The food the soldiers^ecehj day is, to a large degree, rea^B sible for the greatly irnpr^B health conditions among our forces," states Milton Hult, dent of the National Dairy CouS For the first time, since ther?9 tionary war, fresh milk is a pyjfl ; the regular army diet cheese, neither of which wereii^B able in revolutionary war timqB also prescribed as a partofftai^B ular diet for our soldiers. Iceo^B is made available at least oo*fl i twice a week whenever posslbfc^H 1I42-"P0' FOLKS" VACATION HEABQUARTERS-Itfl Take a Two-Week Land Cruise, Including Tranapor* f tation and Hotel Room Accommodationa, via Stream* 1 lined Train to Riviera Hotel and Return for only $55.00 FLORIDA'S NEWEST. FINEST, and LARGEST ALL-YEAR HOTEL. THE RIVIERA HOTEL BAR AND GRILL Near Dayton* Beach, Florida. I "Where the Troplce Begi**. Convention and Conference Headquarter* the Year Re??'* I Capacity 350 Guest*. Private Bath, Radio and Electric Fan In EVery H Cocktail Lounge, Bar and Grill, ? 3 meals daily'.pe*' v ^ S from 31.30. Golf Links. Artesian Swimming Pool Beach. Tennis, Badminton, Ping Pong, Croquet, H?r _ ^ and Shuffleboard Courts. Ballroom and ConY^tlon Banquet Facilities. 1,000 Acres of Spacious 0f> COOLEST SPOT IN DIXIE, AT THE BiRTHPL*Wa THE TRADE WINDS. Where the Labrador (Arc"JJ .W rent meets the Gulf Stream, and Bathing and Superb. Write Today for Free Detoriptive ZAt^ret^re. HOTEL RIVIERA, Box 42S, Daytooo Bo*?*" -Meet for Yeur Hemp tm Fl__ Phona 1800 on Arrival and