The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, June 19, 1952, Image 10
1
Pape Two
THE CLINTON CHRONICLE
Thursday, June 19. 1992
FARMS.....
AND FOLKS
By J. M. ELEAZER
Clemson Extension Information
Specialist
of
■Wildlife Water
County Agent Alford of Colleton
tells me of a landowner there dig-
*:ng eight ^mall ponds as sources
« f water for wildlife on a 2,000-
rure tract of thickly wooded land.
vThey are small and deep enough
to go Jielow the normal water
Boys Are That Way 1
Kids think about all sor.ts
things. • . ■
I used to wonder where the buz
zards went when the storm-king
blew.
And where the fish-bait were
when I dug and they were not
there.
Morbid thoughts gripped me at
the graveyard, and I’d have bad
1 —dreams that night.
ties grow' many quail to restock | The spider’s dew’-studded w r eb
the denuded fields ot the county, was a source of amazement and
And bird clubs, game sanctuaries,; wonder, and how r a bird built a
and reserves are being established nest was beyond me. I tried and
here and there. i couldn’t.
- * * * ■ I looked into the mad skies when
I Appreciate This i the thunder-god was at work. I
During the height of the water- saw the thunderbolts hurled reek-
melon shipping season last year. I lessly across the seeting heavens
a room once near the tracks up there. The cannonading w r as
A bolt hit and shattered a
table. Thus water is assured at
all times for all . sorts of wildlife j had
that could not otherwise make I at an important rairoad switching heavy
their permanent homes in’ that
area in which surface water is
riot dependable.
point in our watermelon belt. The tree across the road and some cat-
shipments were- very heavy right j tie lay dead by the wire fence
then and-1 didn’t get much sleep! down the lane from there. The de-
It is*
5 heartenirig sign to see that night. It reminded me of a luge came to parched fields. Crops
folks lending wildlife a hand, dipping I had made some time be- w-ere saved and our dry creek took
About all most people have done tore of a letter that someone had on life that was to our complete
for ganu in the past is to run for ; written the railroad authorities af- liking,
n gun to shoot it with, every time ter spending a night like I
they saw a specimen! : Here it is;
But now I see hopeful signs like "Gentlemen:
had.
the above rather frecfuently.
*i-H bovs over the state
out nnny thousands ot
plant- on their firms in the past
n\v Year--. And some of ’them' pant and rant and howl and yowl
have grown • i<is* and .turned*and grate and grind and pull and
»n<Berafe sa.-s**
That thunderstorm moved on.
And in an hour all was serene.
The bright sun was out, diamonds
of water glistened on every leaf
Wildlife Federation
Launches Outside
Membership Drive
Columbia, June 14.—The South
Carolina Wildlife Federation has
launched a campaign for outside
membership to create a “booster
fund.”
This fund is sought to boost the
organization financially to the
point w-here it will be self-sup
porting through its regular $1
memberships, President - Harry
Hampton, announced today.
Brochures being sent prospecU
say the federation is the “militant
striking force” for conservation
legislation qf all kinds.
Other accomplishments chimed
include:
Its constant educational cam
paign resulted in creation of the
Wildlife Resources Commissi o n
and passage of two strengthening
laws by the 1952 General Assem
bly.
It was responsible for the co
operative arrangement with manu
facturers resulting in creation of
a st^te water pollution control au
thority.
It is cooperating with the W’ild-
.life Resources Commission for the
mutual objective of the best in re-
steelw-orkers are responsible for
any shortage of military steel pro
duction.
Fairless issued the statement
some 24 hours after Philip Murray,
boss of the steelw-orkers told a joint
strategy session of the USW Ex-
excutive Board and Wage Policy
Committee that industry doesn’t
have the expansion capacity to
produce steel needed for defense
requirements.
Said Fairless:
“There has not been one instance
in which we have failed to pro
duce what the armed forces have
asked us to produce. This will con
tinue to be our policy.
“Mr. Murray knows full well
that if there is any shortage of
steel for defense it is caused solely
by the strike w-hich he and his
associates must b£ar full responsi
bility.”
SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRONICLE
“The Paper Evevryoody Reads”
It
Tn. 1 Why is it thaf» your switch en-
have set gine has to ding "dong and fizz and and blade, birds sang in the trees,
birdfoot spit and clang and bang and buzz j the sky was blue, and all w;as well.
and hiss and bell and wail and there on the earth. The power be-! source administration.
hind the shower, and w-ho let loose [ * Title Federation publishes a
those thunderbolts? Where did the! monthly periodical, the Carolina
eminta
tin
local gam
FINAL SETTLEMENT
Ir . -tr-e > r-i^nk birds go then? -And-whaLmade-the ; Sportsman, which Hampton said
au thoi .- and moan and hoot, and toot and wind blow so? Where did it come naw, is almost self-sutpporting.
T..ko
e that on the 23rd day
J, I will render a final ae-
. \ ,jnn doings as Ad-
the, estate of Mary
otTi'.c~<5f‘the
t o
m :ne
to o. Laurens County
rn , and on the Same
for a final discharge
Administrator,
k’bted to said estate
;Iuired to make pay-
>: o that .date; and all
claims against said
ent them on or bo-
duty proven, or be
crash and grunt and gasp and moan from and where did it go? Jit recently set up an office and
and whist.e and squeak bnd Questions like these come thick employed a field secretary to con-
squawk and blow and jar and jerk V^nd fast to a boy. But not only to tact sportsmen’s clubs throughout
and'rasp and jing.e and twang and a 1> °. V Shucks, I still wonder the state, about 40 ndw groups
ilanir ; nd rumble and jangle and about them. 'Only ©ur faith in a having been organized in recent
nn_ an.dclattei and \e!p and howl great Power can answer them. months.
Tt is anticipated that the mem-
irow
burn and s
and thun
and jolt
h and sno
and throb
le and roa
and smoke
nan
and puff and
and—boom
nd iostle
and
ana
anc
quiver
rattle
smell
it long
572^0runken —
Drivers Lose
Licenses In May
toiek like hell all ni
Whew! I’m out of breath.
But
T Jaershqx of these clubs will mal'e
; the organization self-supporting
; by next year,” Hampton said,
i "whereas most successful orgari-
| zations are dependent upon heavy
^ endowments from large corpora-
Dunng Ma> ti.e South Carolina tions or hundreds of heavy annual
drew the,! contributors.”
: eve
WALTER G. COKER,
Administrator,
Box 225. Clinton. S. C.
19-4wp-
SIMMONS
Mute of South Carolina,
t
County of Laurens.
In.Court of Common Pleas
Ira
n rll r r | P.O j » ■ ■ >n CfS.
VS. "
J.lines Lester Ru.diton, Margaret K.i\ answer j s jt's not coming,
Rushton, and Eddie James Rushton, have it But that
Respondents. mean we will starve. Nor
TO THE RESPONDENTS
NAMED:
Highway Department withdrew
driving privileges of 584 registered
now I want you to know that fel- motorists, 572 of w’hom were driv-
,1 was sure describing it. i in g under the influence of intox-
.cants. Chief Commissioner Claude
Land's The Thing R. McMillan has anno unced.
Sonne fellow has figured out that j n April 607 drivers lost their
we wiU need an addm -nal UtO mil- licenses. 582 of them for drunken
lion acres of arable land to feed driving.
o :r folks in th.s country as well in — ♦ | Benjamin F. Fairless of U. S. Steel |
1*75 as they are now fed And SVBSCRIBE TO THE CHRONICLP Carp, said todav that striking CIO
.t looks like mat’s about right. ———
We are increasing now bv about _ . .
Fairless Says CIO
Strikers Responsible
For Any Shortage
PiftsbUrgh, June 14.—President!
THE OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS OF THIS
ASSOCIATION TAKE PLEASURE IN ANNOUNCING
3% DIVIDEND
AS OF JUNE 30, 1952, TO INVESTORS
TO BE PAID JULY 1
In addition to earning attractive semi-annual dividends,
the funds of each investor are insured up to $10,000.
Own Your Own Home!
WHEN YOU ARE READY TO BUY OR BUILD
WE ARE READY TO HELP YOU.
jjAND LOAN ASSOCIATION
A Clinton Institution Serving Clinton People Since 1909
Telephone No. 6
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS
B. Hubert Boyd. President J. P. Prather, Vice-President
J. Sloan Todd. Secretary-Treasurer
Mrs. Henry Hunter, Asst, Sec.-Treas.
B. Hubert Boyd
J. P. Prather
W. \V. Harris
J. B. Hart
T. D. Copeland
J. Sloan Todd
T. II. Copeland
J. W. Finney, Sr.
R. II. McGee
wo million a year.
® ^ ® IP _ Now what concerns all of us that
Chandler and Reatha Cooper ^ c j ()the? a , ld hKe to eat 1S this.
, wiaax.-ii-.thaL.IU0 million million.
h’TF?—timing—f rum’* Well. the
Come in for a
for we
doesn't
does it
ABOVE mean we will have to eat less or be
poorly clothed.
YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED jf things stayed as they are or,
. i requat'd to answer the petition were, the - above ialculation would |
: thi- on, of which a copy is need to worry us. But science is ini
hcrewilh served upon you, and to the saddle, and near miracles are* ’
: ,t a ropy of your Answer to the cieated by the plant breeder and 1
.-aid petition on the subscriber at his the patient experin.enter. And in
oilier, 2-3 National Bank Bldg., Clin- their magic lies the hope of an ex- 1
fro, S. C., within twenty (20) days, panding and abundant future here;
IT %■ ■hereaL.exclusivg^I T on Jlig. jgqqd earth.
‘he day of such service, and if you • The •m.-r.pn.ved i.,nge of the ](,-■■*
fail to answer the petition within the country is capable ot producing
time aforesaid, the petitioners in this perhaps something like 8 to 16'
jetion will apply to the Court for the pounds of beef per acre. Science;
relief demanded in the petition.
CECIL E. WHITE,
Attorney for the Petitioners.
Clinton, S. C.,
May 29, 1952.
TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE
NAMED:
j steps in there, clears it, studies the'
I soil, treats it as needed, and it!
| grows enough grass to make sev-
; eral hundred pounds of beef per
j acre. Then, go one step further
and irrigate it too, and you come
up with p>erhaps a thousand pounds
■rv.of beef per acre. That’s what they
PLEACH TAKE NOTICE: That the g0 , f rom t he Florida range,
original Summons and Petition in the! And so it is with everything. We.
auove cr.q.led action was filed in the used to think the fellow who said i
oflue r,f -he Clerk of Court of Com-. he made 10 o bushels of corn to an
mon Picas for the County of Lau- acrc was lying. Now. with applied
r-bou:h Carolina, on the 5th day science., we see fields doing that ni
of June, !f)52. practically every county in the
CLCfL IL WHITE, j-state. And. by applying science.
Attorney for the Petitioners, j la<t year we made over twice the
J9-3c. cotton per acre we used to make.
Right now your present cor is probably
i
Use Your
New Telephone Directory
The telephone directory that has just
been delivered contains many new
changed listings which make your old
directory out of date. Beginning at once
to use the new directory will help yon
get faster, more accurate telephone
service*
You can avoid many wrong numbers
by referring to the directory when in
doubt. “Information"’ will help you
when the number \ou want is not listed.
fSSiioa^%
-in trade on a new
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/ * ' *
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Dodge, feature by fea
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t i
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