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THE CHRONICLE Strives To Be A Clean Newspaper, Complete Newsy and Reliable Volume XLIX ®hf (Eltttton ffibrontrlp If You Don't Read THE CHRONICLE You Don't Get the News Clinton, S. C, Thursday, January 13, 1949 Number 2 PARTIAL VIEW OF RECENT KIWANIS 'LADIES NIGHT' PARTY AT JOANNA CLUBHOUSE Shewn above is a .partial view of those attending the recent Kiwanis “ladies nisht" party in the Joanna clubhouse at Joanna which was lovely for the occasion in Christmas decorations. More than 200 Kiwanians, their wives and guests attended the annual social event. At the extreme rear at the head table just in front of the center Christmas tree is seated President D. B. Smith and Mrs. Smith, and C. C. Giles, president-elect, and Mrs. Giles. The picture shows about ^alf of those seated in the banquet hall. A STREAK Of FAI AND A SIBEAK OF LEAN (From ROE FULKERSON’S Personal J key, however, ^ that it makes second , Page, January Issue Kiwanis and third appearances. Cold turkey International Magazine). | for supper, turkey hash the next day. Every time I get to bed too early, | then turkey soup. There are those | I wake up at two or three o'clock in j who contend with some truth thet i the morning, hungry as a hunting turkey hash is better than the turkey hound. This morning I lay thinking on its first appearance, about Dagwood three-decker sand- | Thus I lay and drooled and dream- wiches and Little Abner ghmoo stew. ^ j n m y hunger. Then I thought of' I didn t want to go downstairs and the people in this world of ours, raid the refrigerator and probably | whose problem is not what will they i waken my wif*r so I lay tham aad estrtwrr wm thej gal -Hh^nhed-Godj suffered, thinking of food as every that the two lands of Kiwanis are! man does when he is lying awake, i blessed lands where we have an hungry. . abundance of food. Prices may be First I thought of thick steaks as j high, but with free opportunity and we used to cook them on an outdoor free enterprise we are able to pay oven on the beach at our old home these high prices, oji Chesapeake bay. We trimmed Then I began to wonder if I were the suet off those two-inch c-nes we limited to just one kind of meat, .could afford in those days, and tried what would I choose Obviously none' it out in the huge frying pans. Then of the meats of which I had been we put in the steaks and deep fried thinking, because they are all dinner them until they were dark brown meats. There are three meals a day, on each side and red in the middle, and I would have to have an all-day A loaf of French bread toasted on the meat At last I decided that if I could . back of the oven, a bowl of green have only one, it would be bacon., salad, and we had a Lucullian feast.! For lundh there is no finer sand-; Then I thought of a horseshoe of wich than bacon and tomatoes on Virginia ham fried and served with toast At dinner, baked beans need a hot biscuits and the ham’s own strip- couple of slices of bacon; green beans 1 ed gravy, with a dish of sliced to- need cooked with them Bacon makes matoes as a salad. The thought made an acceptable substitute for hog jowl me drool, for this, too, is big league with mustard or turnip greens. Last east in any home. It might be well but not least, the finest salad dress- to note here that ham conniseurs al- ing in the world is made with bacon waps pick the left hand ham when frying instead of olive oil, with the they buy. A pig always scratches broken bits of crisp bacon scattered himself with his right hind leg, mak- on top of the salad, ing the ham more muscular and less For breakfast, bacon is supreme, tender. ,With eggs any style, bacon is a ne-' Next I thought of lamb chops, cessity With pancakes or waffles, ba- Broiled with a strip of bacon and ac- 1 con is a help, and with toast and companied by a tossed salad, a lamb marmalade, bacon adds zest, chop is hard to beat. In a crown j So my vote for a one-meat diet roast, its middle filled with green goes for bacon. My reason is that ba- peas, it is not only gustatory delight con is a strip of fat and a strip of! but a thing of beauty. | lean. Lite requires just that propor- Then my thoughts drifted to fowl, tion in almost everything. There is only one bird which makes The man who is so devoted to his | better food than a chicken fried and business that he excludes all else is served with hot biscuits and milk living on a fat meat diet. If he takes | gravy. That bird is a turkey. It a day off now and then to play eight-i isn’t that turkey is superior to chick- een holes of golf to go fishing or to! en. but turkey has. added advantag- put a shotgun over his shoulder and es. Any man who has deep in him follow his dog over a stubble field, * a love of playing host is never so he gets far enough away from his .happy as when he has a dozen friends business problems to get a long range ■ around his table and a big brown view of them. He is a better business turkey stuffed with oysters before man as a result of this strip of lean him ready to carve and serve. And, in his fat meat business diet, of course celery and cranberry sauce, The man who takes no interest in turnips and sweet potatoes. This is a politics in his city is living on a fat' feast. The great advantage of tur- , meat diet which will give him muni- . . -— — clpal indigestion. If he studies )nun-; ieipal affairs, keeps posted on city | taxation and city budgeting and tells ' /^Chevrolet £ r « # ON THE WORLD’S TOUGHEST PROVING GROUND! mm ■ 4 Mile after mile they put it through its paces . . . proved its speed r its acceleration, its economy! Mat < ^ wv - i ■iig » Proved on the toughest grades ... the new Chevrolet takes htOs V in its stride. Its power wil thrill you. MclNTOSH'S SHOE SHOP Send Your Shoe* To ll* "Best Materials and Workmanship. -i REMOVAL ANNOUNCEMENT DR. MARION E, LAWSON Dentist announces his new loca tion: 200 South Broad St (Across the street from Casino Theatre) - • ; his neighbors what he has learned, j he is putting that strip of lean in his 1 ! diet which will make’him a better citizen. The man who is satisfied to admit the value of the church and its spir itual aims, yet allows his wife and children to go to Sunday school and church alone, is not living up to his religious pretensions. He needs that church attendance as the streak of lean to balance up his fat -Sunday; diet of newspapers and movies. The man who limits his reading to! the daily papers and paper-backed , who-done-iti, is on a bad literary diet. He needs the lean meat of good fiction, gdod factual books, to balance his mental intake. All of which brings me back to my great decision: When it comes to a one-meat diet, make mine bacon, with a streak of lean and a streak of fat. w. : V't. > ’ •:* »• -S'* . TH* punishing gronit* blocks of this “torturs tralT PROVED QwvroUt't ability to absorb punhhmsnri This b wWs Chsvroist for 1949 was PROVED to bo woothor- proof and watorproofl At the General Motors Proving Ground there are men who are experts at ruining cars/ "Find the flaws ... get the facts” is their motto. And so, when Chev rolet for 1949 was delivered to their “tender" mercy, they put it through its paces so vig- orously and so thoroughly that there was mo chance for basic weaknesses to go undetected. Whof o break for the buyer . . . STRIKES A UPtim ii instead of an experimental or unfried car, he gets a car that has PROVED economy, PROVED stomma, PROVED comfort, PROVED handling-easel Only Chevrolet, in the iow-priced field, has passed through the rigors of the "World's Toughest Proving Ground" and comes to you thoroughly TESTED, thoroughly PROVED and thoroughly APPROVED* GILES CHEVROLET COMPANY, Inc. CLINTON, S. C.