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MMMiNljitam! Thursday, February 23, 11)30 THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Pasre Se-ven Joanna News (Continued from Page six) ments of the evening were presented. charge of preparing and serving the banquet. Campbell Will Speak Willard D. Campbell, Supreme Councipian of the Loyal Order of Legrande Shealy was in charge of Mosoe, of Columbus, Ohio, will speak the decorations. at the new Moose home which is lo- During the serving of the three- cated on the highway in the old course banquet a delightful pro- Blalock hpme, Tuesday night, Feb. gram wa$ carried out with Bud Carr 28; All members of the Moose are 3*5 toastmaster. Rev. James Mitch- invited to fRi present, ell gave the invocation and Mrs. Louis Murphy the welcome. Miss Myrtis Rice gave the response A lovely poem was given by Bar- Birth Announcements Humphries Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Humphries of Shields. Johnny Buchanan Kings Creek, announce the birth of led the young folks in songs with a son, Rickey Dale, on January 27, Miss Dot Carr and Miss Joyce Frady at the Blacksburg hospital, at the piano. Rev. James Walker of the East- side Baptist church, Newberry, was the speaker for the evenirtg. The banquet was carried out with the heart motif throughout each course. Mrs. E. J. Willingham had Mrs. Humphries was before mar riage Miss Havilene Walker of Gas tonia, N. C. Mr. Humphries is a former resident of Joanna. nounce the birth of a daughter, Linda Dianne, at Newberry hospital on Feb. 19. Mrs. Lever is the former Miss Hattie Woodard of Kinard, and Mr. Lever is formerly of Joanna. Crawford Mr. and Mrs. Alec Crawford an nounce the birth of a son, Walter Joseph, February 20 at Joanna- hos pital. Mrs. Crawford is the for mer Miss Frances Ruth Edwards of Clinton. Abrams ! Mr., and Mrs. J. L. Abrams an nounce the birth of a son, James Larry, Jr., on February 21 at Jo anna hospital. iMrs. Abrams is the former Miss Olivia Attaway. • Lever Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Lever an- 1921-1949 Hugh L. Eichelberger NEW YORK LIFE MAN 28 YEARS EXPERIENCE PROFESSIONAL INSURANCE INFORMATION FURNISHED FREE Member The National Association of Life Underwriters Birthday Party ! Little Miss Sue Thomas was sur prised Saturday afternoon with a party in honor of her 4th birthday. Sue had gone riding with her (father and upon‘her return 20 little guests gathered around a two-tiered pink and white birthday cake with lighted candles, greeted her singing happy birthday. Games in keeping with birthdays and little folks were played on the lawn. Mrs. Bill Thomas, Sue’s mother, "assisted by Mrs. Johnny Moore, serv- i ed ke cream, cookies, candies and orangeade. Each, guest received ,a 1 cololed plastic spoon and ballon as a favor. ' j Sue was' showered with a box of lovely gifts. - — Yes, folks afe funny people. Edi tors too. And there is a lot of human nature in all of us. We want what we have not got. Ads just come along, I guess, and those fellows have to eat too.' Boy* Are That Way By mid-afternoon the lucky boy who got the bladder at hog-killing time had it pretty well dried, in flated, and was beating it with a few cowpeas in it to rattle. By that time too the fat meat had chilled so it would grind well for lard. And that was put in a pot to cook the lard out slowly. Then one of the last jobs, as dusk descended, was to press that lard out, leaving rich brown cracklings that made good cornbread for weeks after that. In the rich broth that was left from cooking the puddin' meat, we stirred corn meal and made, scrap ple, or puddin’ mush, as we called it. And the final event of the but chering day was to fix up a pan of “fresh” for each neighbor. It con tained a family serving of sausage, puddin’, spareribs, etc. Then, after the glorious day at home from school, next morning’s dawn saw us trekking down that path through the orchard and across the frosted fields and woods ^o the schoolhouse again. And like Christ mas, the next butchering time seem ed a long way off to us kids in the Stone Hills of the Dutch Fork. Congress Ready For Real Action On Two Top Issues Washington, Feb.. 20—Congress f gets~-down to real business this week after a long period of relative inac- tion. Test votes are possible on two top Truman jssues—displaced per sons and fair employment practices. After two weeks of marking time while- members ranged the country fpr political speeches in the names of Lincoln and Jefferson-Jackson, the Senate may. take up by mid-week a bitterly-contested bill to open the gates wider to European refugees. The'Ffcuse may get, a chance Wed nesday to decide whether it will de- bate the Fatr F-mployment Practices (FEPC) bill being fought vigorously by Southern Democrats. '.LBSCIUBE lO rHf. CHRONICLk 'tfEATS^ Save $$ and Shop For Meats With Us! Center Cut PORK CHOPS, lb. ..... 55c Morrell’s ... — BACON, lb 39c Morrell’s—Readv to Eat—Whole or Half E Z CUT HAM, lb 69c Meatv BEEF SHORT RIBS, lb. . .... . 35c Sliced , BACON SQUARES, lb. 25c Tenderized : — STEAK, lb : . . . . . .. .. ..-, 79c The Country Market TELEPHONE NO. 98 Farms Sl Folks Anderson's Observing Second Anniversary Gene Anderson’s, one of the city’s I well known and popular stores with women buyers, is celebrating its sec- i ond anniversary with a sale an nounced in today s paper. The store opened here two years ago. The own ers also operates Gene Anderson's in ! Anderson. Mrs. J. K. Haselden i manager-of the Clinton store. is MIDWAY Drive-In Theatre NEWEST AND FINEST CLINTON — JOANNA / FRIDAY-SATURDAY FEBRUARY 24-25 THE BIG CAT Preston Foster and ,Lon McCalister MONDAY-TUESDAY FEBRUARY 27-28 MY DREAM IS YOURS Doris Day and Jack Carson : ♦ : WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY SHAGGY Brenda Joyce and GeorKe Nokes MARCH 1-2 ALSO SELECTED SHORT SUBJECTS ADMISSION 40c Children under 12 admitted FREE Shows Start at 7:00 By J. M. ELEAZER, Clemson College Extension Infor mation Specialist We Eat When We Can Hogs got down to 3c in 1932. That year we ate 70 pounds of pork each in this country. In 4946 they were bringing 10 times that. Y et we ^averaged eating 75 pounds of pork a year then. High priced porl^. didn’t.^ keep us from eating it then, for we had the money to buy it with. The farmer has a big stake in gen?, eral payrolls over the country. And this applies specially where you are producing a food product! And par ticularly in the richer foods like an- i imal and poultry products. I We are growing rapidly towards the production of more such prod ucts., And less of ourdand and ef fort- is going to cash crops. Not that ithe latter is being abandoned. But diversification is bringing more of the other things. i And this adds^up all to *the good. | For during hard times folks can and will patch up and wear old clothes a bit. But they will eat good food, if there is any way to get it. And, we are safer if we grow some of that to. What- Ah Opportunity | One farmer out of every seven in i this country will have had special I farm training when the present vet erans’ traning program is completed, II am told. What meaning this could carry! f For that many young farmers to have a little better know-how for applying science to their acres can mean much to our future farming potential. I have met with a number of these veteran groups. A specially alert and. interesting one is being handled by Mr. Haigler at Cameron. They had some sort of contest among themselves when I was there, and I got the impression that these were up. and hustling young farmers. Their wives \fc’ere there too that night, and we partook of a fine supper they prepared at Hutto’s pond. Those Lupines! I was shocked when County Agent Searsbn of Allendale tqld me they had 25.000 acres of blue lupines growing there now. For that’s a very small county, and that adds up to a lot of acreage for them. After that I rode with him on a routine trip over the county. We were seldom, if ever, out of the sight of great, fields of this crop. And lu pines are beautiful on the land in the »winteiv As rich " and dark green as alfalfa, full knee high new, and so thick on the ground that we could hardly walk through them. Many of these fields will be left and harvested in June for seed. It makes a good money crop, as well as land builder. But a lot of them will be plbwed in and the land pre pared for summer crops. Nitrogen applied to a crop following that will make little if any difference, Sear- son says. They made 75 to 100 bush els of corn to the acre the past year with no nitrogen except what the lupines added. And down in Hampu>n they have a similar story with lupines. This crop is suited, to the southern part of the state only. It will winter kill if you plant it too far up. Folks ’ Are Funny; Editors Too Four editors, two of afternoon pa pers and two of weeklies, asked mo to give them the break on some thing like my first column, “Seen Along The Roadside,” gave the mor ning dailies. (It’s released on Sun day.) So two’ years ago I started this one, “Farms and Folks.” It is used by most of the afternoon and by 80 re- ce*t‘. o' ‘.he ■wcc’.;!ie :e^u'.aily. Delegates To Attend Atlanta Soil Meet — — Soil conservation leaders from all parts of the country will go to Atlanta, Ga.,_ Monday, February 27, for the annual convention of the Na- i tional Association of Soil Conserva- 1 tion Districts. I The Laurens County district will be repre-sented by Ryan-LawMm -amf Supervisor J. W. Tinsley. SPECIAL sncc / ace - EMULSIFIED CLEANSING CREAM Ural for dry ckinn. Rich in lanolin. * HNK CLEANSING CRE \ M ErTrc-liinpc for i'‘-<rmal and oily skin Gi>ca •kin a kcahit 100L. $ 1.75 size now *3.00 .-izu hum J 1.0.") Plus tax LIMITED TIME ONLY Your >kin is'‘'special**—it needs its own kind of cleansing. That's whyTussy makes twoj different cleansing creams. One of them is for vou —as right . for you as your best hat. J J Now—for a short time—vou can buy 1 ussv Cleansing Creams at stock-up-and-save prices! Young’s Pharmacy Phone 19 We Deliver CIGARETTES Camels, Luckies, Limit 2 Cartons ■ Chesterfields To A Customer 1 .68 JL CTN. Cleveland Bolted WHITE MEAL, 10 lbs 35c ■ .Green-Glo 1 ENGLISH PEAS, No. 2 con .... 10c TOMATOES No. 2 Can 10c Green and White LIMAS, No. 2 can 10c 1 Toilet Soap 1 LUX, reg. bar, 4 for 29c ^ TC'C? Tube Rose, Navy, Small size — 10c II J* £* Society, R.R. Mills LARGE SIZE 30c Chopped COLLARDS, No. 2 can ,10c I Pie | CHERRIES, can 23c OCEAN 1 r* Cranberry oauce 15c Kouty KistWhole Kernel CORN, 12 oz. can 10c ■Chopped j TURNIP GREENS, No. 2 can 10c SHORTENING 4 lbs. 55c DUKES MAYONNAISE pt. 29c Jim Dandv GRITS, 2-lb. bag 13c j Mahatma Long; Grain | RICE, 2 lbs. 29c TOP QUALITY MEATS Boiled " I Morrell or Armour HAM, '/2 lb ,45c | BREAKFAST BACON, lb. ... 43 c Aged N. Y. State CHEESE lb. 49c Carolina Pride I Fresh Pork SAUSAGE, lb. cup 39c | NECK BONES, lb 15c FRESH BEEF LIVER lb, 55c John R. Holland SELF-SERVICE GROCERY AND MARKET 200 Musgrove St. On the Square Phone 130-J xszwzc