The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, September 29, 1949, Image 7
I
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1949
THE CLINTON CHRONICLE
11
Page Seven
Dr. W. B. Rose
Endorses Scolfs
THE GREAT *
ADVENTURE
By DAVID TAYLOR MARKE
(AP Newsfeatures)
*ST**-*A»
W. B. ROSE
Today was the day of ddys! Breath
lessly, happily, excitedly, Johnny
prepared. Teeth had to be scrubbed
extra hard, shoelaces tied “just so,”
, for, when it is the day of the great
[ adventure, the day upon which you
become a “schoolboy” and are all
! ready to set forth as a knight upon
a journey which will last sixteen
years or more, you have to look the
part.
Curly-headed small Johnny now
was shedding his baby ways pain-
! lessly and naturally, points out the
i National Kindergarten Association.
“John’s parents, through loving com*
panionship and example, had direct
ed the young mind of their child to- j
ward accepting life as a great ad-1
venture.”
So, when Johnny stood for final!
inspection, received a hug and a I
kiss of farewell from his mother,
and started down the road to school
himself, he was beginning the
TAKE fT EASY
VV#
W. B. Rose, highly respected phy
sician of LaFollette, Tenn., writes:
“Several years ago I endorsed Scalf’s
Indian River Medicine as of recog-
nized merit in that it is a splendid r ong road to adv enure.
stomachic medicine and appetizer Johnny went into the school, turn-
offering relief from such symptoms ed down the hall, and walked eager-
as smothering gas pressure pains af- ^ Kindergarten. Miss Jones,:
ter eating which often cause loss of ^, e t ea chfcr, who had been talking >
rest or sleep; and from a weak, tired,| w ^ a mother, turned, and Johnny;
rundown feeling—loss of weight and wadced up to her, put out his hand
strength — due to undernourishment 1 and sa i d - "Good morning, Miss Jones.!
when brought on by poor appetite. I 1 m so glad I can be in your class
am a great believer in herbal medi- i now.”
cines and I know that the herbs con-| Johnny had known just where to
tained in Scalf’s Indian River Medi- and what to do, because that hadj
cine have merit.” I been a P art * he preparation for
Jf you are suffering the agonizing th< \ Srea. adventure. His mother
pains of gaseous stomach distress, or he *P ed him l0 prepare himself.,
if you feel weak, tired and rundown’ Johnnyand ,?' Iorn ! Ti y ^ ad vlslted ’
because a poor appetite has robbed i ^ he school, at the right time after
you of proper nourishment, then try he ^ as .,j eady * or lt a ^ er , t ^ e prop " |
Scalf’s Indian River Medicine. Your! er ouild-up at home had been ac-
money back on the first bottle if no t corn P llshed - Johnny had been intro-
at all! QUced to M 1SS Jones as a small m-
j dividual meeting a grown-up indi-
Scalf’s Harmoneers Quartet may * v * dua l who wanted to be friends
heard over WSPA, dial 950„ at I with him just as he wanted to be
; friends with her.
1 As Johnny stood in the kinder-!
THE CHRONICLE 1 garten he couldn’t understand why ter world and hope for peace sir
Completely Covers Clinton’s Trade | so many of the other children were John Orr has said that “world hun-
FEED, FOOD AND FARMERS
By J. W. G. MacEWAN
Dean of Agriculture and Home Economics, I niversity of Manitoba,
Winnipeg. Canada, in The Kiwanis Magazine
entirely satisfactory. On sale
good drug stores.
be
4:45 P.M., Monday through Friday.
Nutrition.Is More Basic to Human Welfare and World Peace
Than Rockets and Bombs, for Belligerency Arises When Men
' Suffer the Aches of Hunger.
000 extra people for breakfast. Three
billion is the estimate for the,end of.
the present century, and w'ith people
living longer, they also eat longer.
Students have been checking back
to see what Malthus, the Englishman,
: really said about population overtak-
! ing and passing food resources. It
appears that he was guessing about
i right. The world’s cultivated acreage
today allows under two acres per
• person, one acre in Asia, two and
i three-tenths acres in Russia, three
acres in the United States, six acres
in Canada. The nearly two acres per
1 person will grow more starchy foods
like potatoes, wheat, corn, rice and
1 rye than we need but will not pro
vide the minimum balanced diet
w'hich was visualized by the Food
and Agriculture Organization. There
are few new acres of. agricultural
I land and the existing acres have de-
! teriorated.
1 *
| With no new agricultural frontiers,
we must look to owier types of relief.
Farmers must collaborate with sci
ence, and science must not relax.
I Agricultural research has achieved
a lot has done it without • fanfare
and ja**avbast. But nobody rr^erving
society better than the often quiet
j workers: plant breeders who have
I carried the fight against plant ene
mies, soil conservationists who strug
gle to hold the fertility, animal
breeders whose objective is more
meat and milk and eggs, the agricul
tural chemists w’ho have revolution
ized practice by giving us insecticides
and fungicides and thus made avail-
J able more goods which would other
wise be consumed by parasites.
Nutrition is more basic to human
welfare and world peace than rockets
and bombs. The germs of suspicion
and war breed where people are
hungry. It is in the spring when the
bear is hungry that he is dangerous;
it is when the husky hog is hungry
that he is treacherous: it is when
men feel the strains and aches which
go with hunger that belligerency
arises.
Dr. Felder Smith
Optometrist
Laurens, S. C.
126 EAST MAIN STREET
South Side Public Square
HOURS FOR EYE
EXAMINATIONS:
9 00 to 5:30
Wednesdays 9:00 to 12:30
Phone 794 for Appointment
BIRTHDAYS
A better diet is essential to a bet-
Dudley Ray are cele-
wedding anniversary
Area for Advertiser!
There Is No Substitute for News-
HAYNIE’S
CAB
If you want dependable ser
vice . . .
Call 180
Anywhere In Town
25c for One
Two or More 20c Each
Why be late? Our de
pendable drivers will get
you there safely and on
time.
crying, clinging to their mother s g er j s a f ar greater danger to civiliza-
skirts. But these small folk in tears ^ on and mankind than the atomic
had long ago, without their consent,. Q 0m jj C ould ever be.’’ And, speaking
become members of an organization, in Ottawa last May, Sir John added
world-wide, whose slogan is: “You • that without bo i d action on behal f o{
wait until you go to school young agricultural security and on behalf of
man; the Teacher w’on t spare the hungry people, communism will go
rod.” ^ unchecked.
But Johnny doesn’t belong. Since The hidden hungers are not dra-
both his parents have been encasing m atic. They don’t strike like an
j him in a suit of armor built of love, i a t onri ic bomb or a ferocious bull. Un- more of the energy foods at home,
of understanding, of confidence, the principal killers, heart d;s- The Americas, with ten per cent of
Johnny understands love, he always ease and cancer( they don’t get front the world’s people, can grow more
has experienced love, he expects it, pa g e publicity. But they help to kill, food than they can consume. Canada,
and, in return gives it to ail. So shorten life, shorten resistance to in
now, Johnny sets forth on this be- fection, shorten efficiency. We may,
ginning of his sixteen years of ed- i nde ed, wonder how far science will
ucation, cfad in the confidence which g 0 tn relating nutrition to human
his wise parents have helped him behavior. Columbia University’s
Neutrological Institute made students
everywhere sit up when it reported
j just last year that sixty-nine children
| of sixteen months to seventeen years, year 1800, world population was un
treated with glutamic acid for six der a b iiii on- Today it is two and
months, gained an average of thir- one-quarter billion, and it continues
teen months in mental age and seven increase at one per cent per year
B Cannon this P° ints * n IQ; i in spite of war. Every morning when
We on this continent eat about iy 0U awa k e the world has about 50,-
3,000 calories of food per day, or,
Mr. and Mr
is greatest and world diets may of brating their
necessity deteriorate when popula- today,
tion increases. Asia, with fifty-seven Mrs. Metta Stone observed a birth-
per cent of the world’s people, has day September 20.
roughly one acre per person. Europe, STAPLES - Arrow. Markwell and
to develop.
Insect and Plant
Disease Notes
Issued By Clemson
with twenty-five per cent of the
world’s people, has grown ninety per
cent of her food and can easily grow
as much of the starchy foods needed.
But Europe cannot grow both the
vegetable and the animal foods her
people want and need. The tendency
is to reduce insecurity by producing
with six per cent of the world’s land
surface and six-tenths per cent of the
world’s people, is capable of being
a big supplier of surplus.
To aggravate the already poor diet
in much of the world are two impor
tant factors: deterioration of soils
and increase of population. In the
other standard machines. Chronicle
Publishing Co. Phone 74.
STOP BY . . .
. . . and see (he new John
Deere Grain Drills and
I’owr-trol Tractors. Let us
show you why John Deere
is the Quality Farm Equip
ment.
J. R. CRAWFORD
CLINTON, S. C.
Gold Theatre
JOANNA, S. C.
Morning Shows—10 A. M.
Monday. Wednesday. Friday
Matinee—3 P. M.
Monday, Wednesday. Friday
Night Shows—6:30 and 8:30
Every Night
Admission 35c (29c plus 6c tax)
Children under 12—9c
Thur.-Fri. Sept. 29-30
HOUSE OF
STRANGERS
Edward G. Robinson and
Susan Hayward
Saturday October 1
Double Feature—
DYNAMITE
...and...
TUNA CLIPPER
Mon.-Tues. October 3-4
LITTLE WOMEN
June Alyson and Elizabeth
Taylor
Wednesday October 5
THE ROPE
James Stewart
Also CASH NIGHT
NEXT—
SLATTERY'S
HURRICANE
WE DO ALL KINDS OF PRINTING
—EXCEPT BAD .
CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO.
Birdsey’s
QUALITY & SAVINGS
AT
Your Local Birdsey Store
FLOUR
BIRDSEY’S $9 1 C
BEST, 25 lbs £.10
4-BROTHERS AO
25 lbs l.aJO
MONEYS AVER $1 7Q
25 lbs 1.1 IF
COFFEE
BIRDSEY’S BEST Lb.
roc
Vacuum Can
4-BROTHERS 41*
3? c
FAIRPLAY 04
BIRDSEY'S FEED
GROWING
MASH *4.65
100 lb. print bags.
LAYING MASH
100 lb. print bags
SCRATCH
GRAIN, 100 lbs..
MASCOT DOG
100 lbs
■/
•4.65
‘3.85
‘7.10
‘4.05
‘3.40
DAIRY FEED, $Q 7|-
100 lbs. 20% Print O.fO
PIG & HOG
FEED, 100 lbs.
HORSE FEED,
100 lbs.
MINERAL MIX- $1 1 C
TURE, 25 lbs 1.10
100 lbs. *3.85
BIRDSEY FLOUR &
FEED STORE
V. Parks Adair, Mgr.
Musgrove Street
County Agent C.
week calls attention to the Insect
! and Plant Disease Notes, issued by. . . .... . „„„„
Clemson extension entomology and about a million a year Less han 2500
plant disease specialists, which stress day f , or ac,,v ' adu “f will produce
screwworm control, attention to the d ««™ a «? n Physically and m mo-
small grain diseases, and tomato late! [ aIa - Slud,aa " ,th consciettous ob-
blight The suggestions from these l«* orsa ',ft' Umvers.ty 0 t Minne-
soecialists follow- I sota ‘ on 1570 calories per day for six
Continue To Watch For Screwworm [ n 1 0nth a S, H reSUl t te 2 v?
Keep close watch daily if possible tlte * an d irritability. Multiply that
over all hogs and cattle to detect, ' 0 " d ‘'‘ 0 " a 7 a w thousand times and
screwworm infestations early. Secureij s a ° s se or war in any c u un-
a supply of Smear 62 or other et- Th wh h b
feettve smears. S c ™w" arm8 ™J> r ^: about soil losses find themselves tom
duce rapidly. A generation may be bctwMn , w0 udons: that we are 1
produced in as little as 17 days. A h „ ded for mas r starvation on one
single egg cluster on a wound ™y ;hand or thal science will come t0
consist of 50 to 3*0 eggs. Eggs may, h d alleviate the
hatch in 11 to 21 hours and maggots 1 H
may feed in the wound from 4 to
10 days. More complete information
on the screwworm and its control will
be found in Extension Circular 341,
Prevention of Screwworm Losses.
This publicatin is available from
your county agent
i
sure between population and foods, j
Two facts stand out: (a) that one
form or another of starvation has
been so common as to be considered
normal over much of the world; and
(b) human population continues to'
increase. About two-thirds of the
- v . . world’s people have been obliged to
Small Grain Diseases Need Attention Uve ^ ^ c approaching
Small grains are subject to appre-, vegetarianism . If the wor $ s peopl ^
'•able losses especially by certain^ sati$fied tQ subsist on £ a £ le
diseases. Last season rust and mi - !foods main , cereals and tatoes ;
dew exac ed a heavy toll from gro*- and beans then there is no imme _
ers of wneat, oats, and barley. A diate threat Qf food short 0ur ,
much warmer winter than usual was Canadian wheat crop WO uid furnish
important in increasing t e seven y a mi uj on ca i or i es per person for five
of' the diseases. General recommen- tbnes our population, and if all our
dations for the control of small grain Canadian acreage were planted to,
insects and diseases include. (U potatoes, it would take nearly ten
Good system of crop rotation, soil times our .present population to eat
fertility, and applications of ter i - the crop Tbe corn g rown i n mi no is,
zers in recommended amounts, (2) j owa and Nebraska would provide ai
the use of adapted high-yielding^re- corn diet for all the p^pjg in the
sistant varieties, (3) the use of j United States. But at a dietary level 1
quality seed properly cleaned and ^ demanded by our people, it will take
treated with new improved cereaam a jj the cu iti va t ed acre s in the United
or its equal, and (4) the observance, gtates tQ do it
of suitable planting dates. j Higher standards of living, consis-
L»te Blight Threatens Tomato Cro P;tent with diets uk » much
Tomato late blight was present in more land A carcass of |
the fields examined in Spartanburg f urn i s h only twenty per,
County during the past week. Where cent 0 j encr gy or ca i or ies present
the condition of the crop was suffi- in the 1058 pounds of
ciently good, two applicatins poP”; wheat, or wheat equivalent, which
went to raise that pig to 200 pounds.
The milk cow can do a little better;
about thirty per cent of the digestible
nutrients in her feed will go into her
milk, while the steer does poorer and
works on an efficiency of less than
per or dithane dust were advised.
Late blight of tomatoes is a £om-
paratively new disease. Recommen
dations for the Piedmont are based 1
on work by the pathologist at the
Truck Experiment Station, Dr. Wil-
liam Epps. A sheet on the control^" 7
ot the tomato bUght and Irult worms' icans were , 0 dKide ea( bee( ex .
is available from the Extension Ser-j clusive ,^ there would n0 , ^ enough
vice at Clemson. acreage to feed our present poula-
“ m tion. But people do not want to eat
COMMERCIAL PRINTING * j b eef alone or wheat alone; they want
This completely equipped combi-, and need mixed diets which require
nation Newspaper-Commercial Print
ing plant can serve you better. Our
goal la to give our customers the kind
of service they want—to give Clinton
a BETTER NEWSPAPER.
CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO.
about two and one-half acres per
person. And the world hasn’t got
two and one-half races of arable land
per person. The world at this mo
ment is short of soil.
Diets are poorest where population
Used Cars
For Sale!
1948 Olds 76 Sedan, extra
clean, radio and heater—
$1995
1948 Olds 66 Club Sedan,
extra clean, 11,000 miles,
radio and heater—
$1795
1941 Plymouth Coupe,
clean—
$550
1941 Dodge Coach, clean,
rebuilt motor—
$595
1937 Ford Sedan, clean—
$325
1936 Ford Sedan, clean—
s 2 ! 0 ^:
1936 Chevrolet Coach, av
erage—
$245 '
1936 Chevrolet Sedan, av
erage—
$245
Tailor-Made
SEAT COVERS
PLASTIC OR FIBER
We have a number of different patterns to choose
from. Come by and let us give you a price on covering
your car. We also cover furniture. If you have any fur
niture that needs rebuilding we will be glad to give you
a price on same.
Timmerman Motor Co
Sales — OLDSMOBILE — GMC TRI CKS — Service
Phone 119
1933 Dodge Sedan, aver
age, rebuilt motor—
$95
We have a few cars that
we will sell for—
$50 or $75 Each
TIMMERMAfT
MOTOR CO.
OLDSMOBILE-GMC TRUCKS
Sales and Service
Phone 119
•«*•♦«*« ooWooeoeoeo o«V»WoVooWowWooWooWooWewWoVooWqBWeVoVeoooWoVooWoV#* «
it
♦!
I NOTICE AGAINST HUNTING
AND TRESPASSING
We, the undersigned members of the Hopewell Game
Conservation Club, do hereby serve notice on the public
that no hunting, Ashing or trespassing of any kind al
lowed on our property. A game warden, Mr. Don Boyd,
has been appointed by the State and paid by the above
named club to patrol this area and see that the law is
fully enforced upon all alike.
1
* •
t:
I
Hugh Workman
James R. Davis
I
T. R. Davis
Glenn Davis
C. R. Workman
H. D. Payne
|
R. P. Hamer
D. M. Vaughn
John T. Young
D. L. Monroe
Jack H. Davis. Jr.
Mrs. Leo Boozer, and Eddie
• o
K
Hubert Boyd
Gentry
3
J. B. Williams
J. W. Craven
51
J. R. Crawford
M. A. Cannon
S
G. F. Buford
Viola Johnson
w**
Richard F. Buford
Hayne B. Workman
t:
Jim Crawford
J. O. Barre. Sr.
•V
Don H. Boyd
E. >L and H. B. Hen-
L. D. Bedenbaugh
derson
• e
J. F. Bedenbaugh
Stewart O. Brown
K
P. C. Workman
A. A. Ramage. Sr.
K
x
W. C. Dobbins *
G. P. Copeland
John Earle Smith
Van C. and M. W\
C. H. Longshore
Oxner, Jr. .
s
J. G. Young ,
Geo. C. Johnson
X
t:
C. T. Smith
T. J. Johnson
SB
J. F. Crowder
John Davis
?!
W\ F. Cromer
W. P. Dickson
«
Erwin Merchant L. F. Davis
§
rt
a
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