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~1 i I Thursda). August 1 1S51 THE CUNTON CHSONICLB Pafft TkrM }y$AHO - *HOA\E Save time preparing meab by seasoning three pounds of hambur ger according to your taste. Make a long roll of it and wrap in heavi ly waxed paper. Freeze. Cut off what you need for hamburger sup pers or meat loaf dinners. Spiced prunes are the ideal gar nish for roasts, chops or fowl be cause you can prepare them in ad- vance and refrigerate. Use 3 cups whole prunes, 1 cup cider vinegar, 3 cups water. 2 cups brown sugar,ii tightly packed, and stick of cinna-I] mon. Stick whole cloves into the. prunes and simmer in the syrup made of the other ingredients until the prunes are plump. New salad combinations are al ways welcome: pineapple chunks, thick banana slices, halved mara schino cherries and a sprinkling of coconut take nicely to sweet French ( dressing or whipped cream with mayonnaise. tzzxsai FARMS..... AND FOLKS By J. M. ELEAZER Clemson Extension Information Specialist SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRONICLE “The Paper Everybody Reads” Old! inter The other day I turned from the beaten path to a rural lane that led Sillyettes •>' A. B. C. Finance Co. // . . . and George . says that plan of A. B. C. Finance Co. for 10-minute ser vice is the 'hottest' thing he's seen in years. mecca of childhood’s fondest fancy. It had some 5 or 6 stores, a rail road station and water tank, and a f; back through the stone hills of the I Pasture wherein we played ball. Dutch Fork section, where I was; from early age. Colonel Fricks ‘ drug store was my main point of interest. It was not a drug store as wife hoeing corn where I had seen them doing the same job and in the same field 45 years ago when I was 10 years old. You bet I stopped to talk. And it was a glad reunion. They remem- bered me and them, for we had met “DIE FOR ALL YOU ARE WORTH” # Hugh L. Eichelberger NEW YORK LIFE MAN 29 Years Experience PROFESSIONAL INSURANCE INFORMATION FURNISHED FREE Member The National Association of Life Underwriters A. B. C. Finance Co. QUICK CONFIDENTIAL LOANS 104 Pitts Street CUntom S. C, raised. Memories crowded each I mile. I saw a colored man and his a few times since. And they said they saw my picture every week in their paper. Their children had all married and gone. And so had the grandchildren they had raised. We talked of many things, and of how the world had changed in our time. I remarked to them that this was the best com I had ever seen Painful Leg Condition Relieved By Dr. Hart Tn June 1943. while on military duty as a tail-gunner of a B-2S. dunng the Battle of Midway. I received machine gun wounds which fractured my right femur. ’Recovery was slow and I received some relief from phys iotherapy. massage and light treatments However. I did not receive Chiropractic while in k following my discharge. I returned to civilian life and the condition of say right leg began to get worse The right leg was cold all the tune due to poor ctrculatKML There was "•as above the right d a pncfclMg seam- aU along the right leg I was nervous and had vary little energy Upon standing or walking any length of tarn. 1 suffered artth lota of pain tn my right leg. *T was of the opinion that Chiropractic treatment could help my condition, so I suited Dr. C J. Hart of tens. S. C DEJfDY 133 Dupont Drive Greenville, g. C. “Spinal adjustment* given by Dr. Hart and excel lent results were obtained for the first time in five years there was a warm feel ing in my right leg. The p nek ling sensation and the pains were relieved by Chiropractic adjustments I began to have more energy and the nervous condition improved “After receiving such wonderful results from Chiropractic. I advise anyone, suffering with ill health, to consult a Chiroprac tor for their health problems.” Ex-Service men by the thousands are turning to Chiroprac tic for relief of their ilia. Veterans of this area are urged to consult Dr. Hart about their health problems. Dr. Charles J. Hart 254 WEST MAIN ST. — LAURENS, S. C. Parking Space — Ground Floor — Hours t-12 and 3-6 Nsxl to First Mathodist Church — Telephone 22501 grow in that field. And he said. “Dis here some er dat Clemson Plan com I hear you talk about on the radio on Satday.” *■ , And there it was. Much thicker, rows closer, planted with good seed, fertilized much better I could tell. an and laid by early. One acre of that would likely make what three acres used to make with the old way. We talked at length. ... . I hated to leave. But the sun wag de i * rit - sinking. And they had a pretty ! good size patch of Johnson grass to J fight out yet. That grass is a big pest in a cultivated crop, especially com under the Clemson Plan. For when you lay it by early, com can’t overcome it as easily as it can other weeds, and it will soon be al most as big as the com So they were in there chopping it out of the drill in the few spot* where It appeared As I jumped the ditch and start ed towards the car. he picked up his hoe. spat in his hands, rubbed them together, and then took firm * hold on the handle and went back 1 to fighting Johnson grass out of his * torn I thought of hoar the Vote* of the far we know it today. It was a sort of; general store, specializing in patent, medicines; a glass showcase carried, the only assortment of penny can-' dies I had ever seen; and the milk- shaker was a contraption turned by hand. This emporium had the first soda- water to come to the stone hills too. We would help them fill the tank with water, hitch it to a tank of gas, and rock the tank as the gas was turned into it. With this fizz water, bright colored drinks of or ange, red, and yellow were made for a nickel. Miss Fannie, the Colonel’s sister, was the one and only clerk. Her specialty was “pineapple ice." She shaved the ice from a large block by hand and filled the glass. Then she poured simple syrup over it|M added a heaping spoonful of * crushed pineapple. This was stirred into a mouth-watering consistency in that frosted glass and set before the customer. How I dreamed of aa I looked down the long rows of grassy cotton dunng the week. But alas, all was bliss as I sat there with clean overalls on, on Saturday afternoon and partook of that delight before the ball i started. Next week HI tell you of the clock in there that collected the money and paid out premiums. DRINK J t ops tor quality tops for quality game More Bounce To The Ounce COOL SPARKLING SMOOTH MORE PEOPLE ARE READING THE CHRONICLE THAN EVER BEFORE! Dr. Felder Smith Oplometriet Laurens, S. C IM EA*T MAIN If pail are uneer tth pour county agent He has all of the mformatton there u on the subject And. in addiUon. he has good common sense about that mf'WmatMjn We have too much tn this cotton; crop, we need it to bad, and the country needs it too much for us to falter now and let the weevil make a great inroad on it PERFECT Savings Accounts 3%—DIVIDEND—3% We invite savings accounts from the people of Clinton and vicinity. You will like our friendly and efficient ser vice, and you will receive your dividend promptly each January 1st and July 1st. Any amount — from $1 up — opens an account. Each account is insured up to $10,000 by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. Two people may have up to $30,000 fully insured. Accounts by mail promptly acknowledged. Chartered ond Supervised by the United States Government Laurens Federal Savings & Loan Association Telephone 22271 LAURENS' LARGEST SAVINGS INSTITUTlpN 104 West Main Street Laurens, S. C. South Carolina a coming along, in ttw poultry businma. Everything poinU to thia. And In the breeding of fine poultry we are not lacking either Our extension poultryman. P. H. Gooding, tella me that Seven Oaks farm, of Spartanburg county, placed ISth in the National Chick en-of-Tomorrow contest recently closed at Fayetteville, Arkansas. The 40 finalists from the contests held in all parts of the country competed there And the showing made by this South Carolina breed er was a real accomplishment, ac cording to Mr. Gooding. Thu contest is aimed at promot ing a better all-around chicken. Breeders send eggs that are hatch ed. grown, and handled clear through under as nearly the same conditions as is humanly possible. There they are able to get records and compare them for economy of production, dressing quality, egg production, hatchability, broiler weight, feathering, uniformity, and the like. Congratulations to O. H., Green (Clemson graduate), owner and op erator of this poultry farm. Six teenth in the national is no small honor. Irrigation Facts We are very new with irrigation here. Facts are few. But as they come from experiment and experi ence, we begin to know that new riches lie there. Fall before last three county agents and I were enabled by the Camp Irrigation fund of Clemson to observe irrigation up East. One of the most interesting places we visited was the H. R. Talmage farm up at Roverhead, Long Island, in New York state. In this column I told you about it then. Cornell uni- versity has published a bulletin giving the irrigation facts develop ed there on the Talmage farm. They conclude that a 15-bushel-per-acre increase in Irish potatoes there will justify irrigation. For the eight years they have irrigated potatoes there, they have averaged increas ing the yield by 57 bushels per acre. In a very dry year the in crease was 211 bushels per acre. We are developing similar facts here. Boys Are That Way Chapin was our nearest town, four milgs away through the stone hills of the Dutch Fbrk. It was the Results WITH X It's "Table-Tested" — For Goodness! Ask For ADLUH At Year Favorite Neighborhood Grocer! !' f IUJ5D AND DISTRIBUTED FRESH DAILY BY ALLEN BROS. M'LLING COMPANY, Columbia ond Groonwood NEXT TIME YOU BUY MEAL — INSIST ON ADLUH'S OLD FASHION CORN MEAL