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f Page Six THE CLINTON chrWcle '—^Thursday, December 15, 1949 WANT ADS TO RENT — TO FINiy — TO BUY — TO SELL Everybody Reads **ie Want Ads Terms Cash NOTICE Rates lor want ads are 50c minimum for 25 words, all over 25 words 2c per word. All want ads are cash except to firms carryinp monthly charge accounts with The Chronicle Publishing Co arm FOR S\L»F California broad breast-. HOUSES FOR SAIjE—4-room house r-keys. Corn fed. Telephone ic ' with bath. Large 3-room house 1 and Ethel. d with bath in Clinton. C. B. Holland, ed tu Mary Ellen, Lou Jones 22-2.- Phone 715, Laurens. 1c Milk Pelletizing Aids Poultry Feed Milk Products Are Found Important to Egg Output That milk products are still FOR SALE—Oil heater, 35,000 BTU THE GIFT SUPREME — Electrolux Phone 342-W. Ip for her. H. L. Baldwin, Sr., Phone among the most important ingredi- '604-J. 4c-22. rn t s j n a laying ration is indicated CHRISTMAS SPE(. IAL One group tutiTtxtv ^ in results of a series of feeding Arrow pattern shirts, regular $3.6j i INDELIBLE INK and sets for mark- , tegts conducted with high-produc- and $3.95 values, reduced to $2.49. ing clothes. Chronicle Pub. Co. , jng nocks in New England poultry Adair’s Mens Shop. Phone 243-W. ELECTRIC TRAIN FOR SALE— areas earlier this year. Lionel, in excellent condition. 4! The tests, which rah an average SEVERAL good used pianos. Tuned j cars, 4 switches, 80 tracks, one cross of 164 days, were conducted at a and ready to go. $95 up. Easy piece, bridge, and transformer. $60 state agricultural college, a county terms The Trading Post. Laurens, .value. Will sell for $35. Chris Patte. vocational agricultural school and Telephone 271-J. 22-3c, commercial poultry farms. Re- TULIPS, HYACINTHS, Daffodils, . suits showed an average additional Peonies, Fritillaria, Lilies, Bleed- FOR SALE^—New Perfection table profit of 26 cents each for hers fed ing Heart. Red Hot Poker and Ama- top oil stove. Reasonable price, ryllis. Blakely-Burton's Hardware Irby Holland's Grocery. Call 286-J; Si Seeds. Telephone 188. [after 7 p.m. 1c ELECTROLUX Sales, Service and Have you seen the Polisher? It is; Supplies. H. L. Baldwin, Telephone the last word in nice attachments, 604-J. tfc for your Electrolux cleaner. H. L. Baldwin. Sr., Phone 604—J. 4c-22; i FOR SALE — Several good Singer sewing machines, dining room and CURE YOUR MEAT with Colgin’s breakfast room suites, china closeis £>uga. Cure, Smoke Cure, Con- The Trading Post, Laurens. tfc densed Smoke. Sausage Seasoning,! Sage, Black Popper, Sta-Fresh and Skipper Compound. Blakely-Burton's | Hardware & Seeds. Telephone 188. SAUSAGE MILLS priced from S3.95 to $6 95 Number 10 size Repairs for all makes of Sausage Mills. We; also have Food Choppers and Lard FDR SALE About 100 cords good Presses Blake’.v-Burton’s Hardware sound pine slabs. These are at the A Seeds Telephone 188. 1c Bell brick house on Duncan’s creek.; See J. H Bell. Telephone 3902. at' HOUSE FOR SALE—6-room house Renno. 1c with bath on 12-acre tract 6 miles from Clinton. Paved road, electricity. LOST—'Last Thursday, female pup- C. Bs Holland. Phone 715, Laurens. py. black back, blue speckled legs, lc red and blue speckled face. About. | four months #ld. Also, a small black WANTED TO BUY — Heatrola and and blue speckled puppy. $15 reward. wood-burning stove. David T. Fmder please return dogs to J. C.' Pitts. Telephone 627. lc Rice, Route 2, Clinton, near Stomp' STRAYED from my pasture, bay Spring. 8-4p mare mule, weigh: 1100 lbs H. J• j CHRISTMAS SPECIAL—One group Pitts. * tf; Arrow pattern shirts, regular $3.65 TOWLE STERLING —For informal ; and 95 v , ah i < ** ^u^d ^ tion and delivery in Clinton con-i' Adair s Men s Shop. Phone 243-^V i tact Mrs. Dillard Boland, Calvert . Avenue. Phone T36-J. Wilbur Rid- lc Joseph Ruzzo, Hope Valley, R. I., is shown at his egg can- dler-grading machine. Raising from 12,006 to 13,000 birds an nually, Ruaxo says he has re corded a 12 per cent Increase in egg production from his test flock which was fed pelletised milk products In the 1048-49 lay ing season. die. Jeweler, Laurens. tfc PORD TUDOR SEDAN for sale '37 model. 60 h.p. Reconditioned mo tor. New transmission Ratchford Boland. 1948. See lp milk products in addition to rations regularly fed on the test farms. Nearly 3,000 birds. New Hamp- shires, Rhode Island Reds, Barred Rocks, and a Barred Cross were in- C. BRYAN HOLLAND Real Estate Phone 715 Laurena, S. C. (Over Browm’s Jewelry Store) FOR SALE—Seven foot Coldwall re-' volved On each farm flocks were *! | fngerator. Also boy’s 20-in. bicy- 1 divided into test and control pens. FOR SALE—Seed oats, both Appier' c : e Call 138. lc The control pen received the ra- and Coker’s 45-67. Recleaned i tion normally fed on the farm. For Pitts-Dillard Implement Co. tf ( CHRISTMAS TREES Spruce and instance, the state college fed the Cedars in your choice of sizes. Also New England college conference Holly and Mistletoe soon. Blakely- laying ration, the county school NOTICE For QUALITY Radio Repairs Rowland's Radio Shop Gary St—Phone 430 j Burton’s Hardware & Seeds. Tele- used its own formula ration, and j phone 168. i the commercial poultrymen fed iGIVE ELECTROLUX —The nation’s various corrfmercial laying mashea. most popular cleaner. H L Bald-) In Mch , test and control pens ' wm. Sr Phone 604-J 4c-22 wer « <* ** san ^ * nd bre<?d * ing, and received the same care PANSY PLANTS Giant Mixed Col- SHOATS FOR SALE—Poland China,; and management except that the ors in large out-door grown plants. grazed on high-priced land, fed test pen was fed a pelletized dairy They’re nice Blake’.y-Burton's 0 n high-priced feed. Strong and products feed in addtion to the Hardware A Seeds. Telephone 188. healthy. Priced ri^ht Emerson John- normal ration. Accurate feed cost GIFTS--All leading magazines have SO n t B e n road, one mile Jrom Dun- and egg production records were special prices now. Call me for gift can creek. 15-2p kept. For purposes of making prof- rate catalog. I handle all mag 31 * 0 * 5 . vvvr .^ v i 1 comparisons, 55 cents a dozen new and renewals, and meet all pub-; NOTICT-For the was u<ed as an average egg price. PhTne 5 535 T' ^ * rances C ’dirt, raking land, dump truck ser-' Wh ' n results were tabulated and Pho 535 ’ J 1 vice, see Ernest E Cox at Cox Seed averaged, it was found that the Cleaners. We are equipped for clean-• P° ns the nnilk product, laid ing any seed Telephone 293 29-4c an average of 8 per cent more eggs -land made an average of 12.3 per RENTAL — Floor sanding machines, cent more profit. Egg production new equipment. All necessary ma- for test birds averaged 64 per cent terial to make your floors beautiful, throughout the tests, compared to America’# Finest HOT POINT Home Appliances HOME SUPPLY CO. Next to Bailey's Bank 59 per cent for control birds. Aver age feed cost per dozen eggs was 29 cents for test pens. 28 cents for control pens. Culls and deaths in test pens averaged 15 per cent. Highest average egg production Reasonable prices. Home Supply Co. WANTED —Curb boys and g.rl or Phone 433. tfc woman for inside work. Experi- NOTICE—Radio service at a reason- unce not necessary Roddy’s Drive- able'price. All tubes checked free. In, near Armory. Ip Smith’s Radio Service. 200 Enter- FLOOR SANDERS—Rent our sand- P rise st - In **»• old Wheel location. ers, edgers and polishers. We have Telephone 278-M. 15-2p was 74.4 per cent made by a test all the necessary material to make ROSES 2-year old Texas Grown pe " °! Barred Rocks at the countv your floors beautiful. Reasonable No. 1 Bushes in many varieties and; ^ C h h ° 0 J rates. Cox Home & Auto Supply, colors Patented and Regular B’ake- ^ bere cor V r<d pon averaged 69 Phone 12 tfc ^ 01 o rs ^ a . ie " iea ana K ; g “‘ ar . “ifr | per cent production. Birds in the rnone iz. uc ly-Burton s Hardware A Seeds. Tele- r , „„„ , test averaged So.06 net income per FOR SALE--Circulating oil and coal phone 188. _ _ __ lc ! bird (eggs over feed), compared heaters. Automatic ga 3 water heat-j-pj-y our ncw cleaning and polishing to $2.71 per bird in the control pen. 2 bathroom gas heaters. Plate-. ^. ax on yaur floors . H . L . Bald-!. win. Sr., Phone 604-J. 4c-22 er. glass mantel mirror. China and kitchen cabinet. Reasonably priceu lor quick disposal. Mrs. W. H. Rob erts. 501 N. Broad S.reet. Telephone 136. Ip FOR SALE—Good second-hand bi cycle. 2 coal stoves. Fresh Green collards. T. L. Cooper, N. Adair St., 1 CHRISTMAS LIGHTS for Indoors and Outdoors. Also extra bulbs in three sizes. Blakely-Burton’s Hard ware A Seeds. Telephone 188. TRESPASS NOTICE —No hunting or trespassing of any kind on my Bumper Yield Phone 210-M. 15-2p land A L - Nabors. J5-5p FOP. SALE—4-room house with'45-, WOMEN WHO KNOW AVON will acre tract on paved road 4 miles appreciate this fine opportunity from Clinton. The price rs right. C. for ( 2 ) smart women to earn good. ? B. Holland. Phone 715, Laurens. lc money in spare time. Opening in ^_r *r-* c'wr-,/-,, * t ~ Clinton and Joanna. Write Mrs. CHRISTMAS SPECIAL One group Julia Scrgeet Box 219, Aiken, S. C. I Arrow pattern shirts, regular $3.6o, , J5_5 C and $3.95 values, reduced to $2.49.! Adair’s Men’s Shop. Phone 243-W. JFOR SALE—Philco combination ra le’ dio-phono, table model; also small ( —, ; r—. Sonora radio. $15 each. See Harry STRAYED from our colony herd c La ^ on at Chromcle om „ about November 1, Hereford cow, weight about 600 lbs., no horns. Any CHRISTMAS SPECIAL—Fun Fare, information will be appreciated. | ^20 pages of Reader’s Digest wit State Training School. lc and humor, $3.50 value for only c at -r /, u* : $1.89. Get one for yourself or give FOR SAIX-Caltforriia broad breast- for , card sent an- ed turkeys Corn ted. Telephone 16. ouncing l(t Miss FrInces c win Mary El.en, Lou Jones and Ethel. i pj, one 22—2c i 15-2p This is the type of bumper wheat yields which may be ex pected by the fanner who prac tices good soil conservation procedure wherever such is necessary to fall crop produc tion. Soil conservation, selec tion of good seed and attention to good farming practices gen erally alwaya pay dividends. MOTHERS—Do you realize that you can save the drudgery of washing > diapers at home for as little as $1.60 per week, and also protect the health of your child by being sure of sani tary and sterile diapers, that have been washed through a total of 10, rinses. Baby Dy-De Service, Phone 665, Laurens. tfc CHRISTMAS SPECIAL—One group Arrow pattern Shirts, regular 83 66 sod $3 95 values, reduced to $2.40. Adair's Men's Shop. Phone C46-W lc EXPERT WATCH REPAIR WORK Shop In the Rear of L B. Dillard's Store We wn Appreciate An Te Serve Yen A. F. ANDERSON Animals, Fowls Experience Man's Disease Conditions Teetotaling dogs, tur’ieys and chickens which drink nothing stronger than water sometimes get the same diseases which human beings develop from over-indul gence or high living. Veterinarians’ rteords show that turkeys and chickens sometimes develop gout, a^d dogs and other animate gat cirrhosis cf the liver. Many otter dteaaas conditions of to -4. EDITOR S NOTE: This is tbt second of a series of articles on irrigation, o'ie of today's most important agri cultural developments. rpODAY S FARMER, plagued by ^ frequent crop failure from droughts and patchy rainfall, is turning to supplemental irrigation as the positive means for providing s iflicient moisture throughout his entire growing season. Irrigation got its start In arid regions. Its history is as old as man’s. Its beginnings were in the Biblical lands. In Egypt, in the year 2084 B. C., a rainless land was made fertile when the waters of the Nile were channeled into a lake and released in times of drought In what is today Iran, a complex scries of canals sent streams over the desert plains and watered the arid Babylonian terrain. Travelers carried news of these and other Middle Eastern irriga tion systems, which rate today as engineering marvels, to the Far Fust and to all parts of the then civilized world. The Roman empire te re sponsible for introducing irriga tion methods to England. The invaders set up systems that are still employed by the Eng lish farmer for flooding fields along the River Avon during the coldest months of the year to protect the sell against front and to stimulate the growth cf grass for grasing ' WES i A • » O'Sx'' : - ‘ .<• ' V.;: > . • •• - . • < With the decline of the Roman empire, the Arabs became the lead ing users of irrigation systems they had learned from the Persians. When the Arabian Moors invaded Spain, their knowledge was spread to the hot dry plains of the Central Massif, which then numbered among the most productive regions of Europe. On this side of the globe, the inhabitants of Peru, Mexico and southwestern United States prac ticed irngation thousands of years ago When Cortez and his followers set out to conquer the empire of Montezuma, they found on the high piateau where Mexico City now stands an advanced agricultural The main canal in Kittitas Wash., project te evidence cf land of the went. civilization based upon extensive and skillful irrigation. Irrigation United States were In the meet arid New Mesiee ef duels parte ef to Mexie# fornix alee founded agricultural common]tie* that praetteud te ll was the who in 1047. introduced largo scale taTigatiou to the west, when they settled In tbs barren valley ef the Orest Salt Lake. As they introduced irrigation to toe west, agriculture to the east also wm beginning to M • ad an industry, lbs began to notiee some of the lied efforts of farmers to fight their battles against weather and blight, and set up. in 1882, during the Civil War, the two acts which estab lished an agricultural policy in the United States—the land grant act. ef the Yakima, to utilising fathered by Justin S. Morrill of Vermont, which provided for agri cultural colleges which would help educate farmers in each state, and the homestead act, which assured them farm sites. Since that time public interest has turned to the need for con serving America’s greatest source of wealth—its soil The reclamation act of 1902 authorized an extensive building program of dams, canals and irrigation structures, under the bureau of reclamation, to restore arid and semi-arid land beyond the reach of smaller projects. The work of this bureau, and then that of the toil conservation service of the department of agriculture evi dence governmental and public recognition of Irrigation as one ef the important elements in conserv ing and increasing the productivity of the soil. While the earliest beginnings of irrigation were in arid and semi- arid lands, the modern trend is the use of Irrigation in the so- called “humid" parts of the try. to supplement normal f»IL Time Now to Make Your Selections WE HAVE A COMPLETE BOXED ASSORTMENT MOST REASONABLE IN PRICE Hint—Buy now, avoid disappointment. Two weeks for delivery. Chronicle PubUshing Company STATIONERY DEPARTMENT YOUR PRINTING NEEDS CAN RE SUPPUED IY CHRONICLE PUR. CO.