The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, June 26, 1952, Image 7

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1 X I! Pasre Seven Thursday, June 26, 1952 THE CLINTON CHRONICLE *» x <r • Society • • • (Continued from page three) blossoms. She carried a white ivory covered Bible on which rested a pur ple throated white orchid arrange ment and showered with stephenotis. Later in the evening the young couple left for a wedding trip. On returning they will reside in Green- villCi For traveling the bride wore a pink linen suit and hat with acces sories of navy and the orchid from her Bible. Mrs. Gregory is the only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Oneal Me-* Keown of Cornwell. Her mother is the former Miss Irene Blalock of this city. She was graduated from the ■Chester high school and attended Flora MacDonald and Winthrop col leges. Mr. Gregory is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Harrison Gregory of Greenville. He was graduated from the Greenville High School and at tended Clemson college. He served in the Army Air Force during World War II. He is now employed with the Dixie Home Stores main office in Greenville, and is associated with the operation of the International Business Machines. Among the out-of-town guests at tending the rites were Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Young, Sr., Mrs. Royane Ham ilton, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Blalock, Mrs. George R. Blalock and children of thls city: and from' the bureaucrats we hear one story, while the advocates of private power, private investment, tell another. Of course I need not go out to Idaho; here in South Carolina a very handsome and elegant gentleman, great friend of mine, tells me that we have a shortage of power here, and that I do not know what I am talking about when I say we have abund ant power. If mv friend is right, then I ask “what is truth,” for not only the Power Companies but our Corn- group, some days before his ar rest, “And ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you 1 missiener J. ftoy Jones, assures us free." I need not ramble about in; that we have abundant power. So, a religious discussion of what is why go so far as Idaho? In Idaho, easel And in general, there are more day dresses or town dresses ,than formerly—the kind of dress a woman can wear around the clock and feel neither too dreseed up or too ‘sportsy.’ Goodbye to the Fall Pyramid “The new full coats have flat back and front, with width at sides start ing at the point where the sleeves widen. The Chesterfield coat, be loved favorite for many years, shows signs of staging a comeback. Fur trimmed coats—the trimming often removable—are part of the fashion scene in coats once again. A new treatment is the deep muff-cuff of fox. A complete newcomer in coats is the tulip silhouette, with low- placed flare, and the fitted coat is staging a return engagement. The Sportawear Story “Sweaters have gone ‘novelty’ all tht way. They are styled like blouses. They combine colors. They feature such touches as scallops. They are middy overblouses, low - buttoned cardigans with a brand-new look, interestingly yoked with ribbed fill- ed-in effects, or fashioned into the Empire silhouette, or made to simu late Italian stales with many stripes and patterns o “Corduroy, gray flannel and wool’ plaid are prominent sportswear fab rics Wonderful blends of orlon keep pie its in seemingly forever. Knit wear is full of novcUy. Ribbed knit trimmings are here, there and every where. “And the winter cotton, apparent ly, has come to stay—in quiltings, in calico prints, cotton flannels, denims and tweeds—used in coordinates of all kinds,” Mrs. Copeland concluded. meant by “truth,” but as one of the millions of ordinary people I fre quently wonder what “the truth” as part and parcel of the public power question, is the idea of; cheap fertilizers through cheap of one side, of any question, that we of the rank and file hardly know where we are, or why. Out in Idaho there is a great hue and cry for and against Public Power. The Federal Government has fallen into the hands of a lot of zealous partisans of Government OFFICE SUPPUES Complete line, all the little items needed for the office. CHRONICLE PUB? J SUING CO. Phone 74 TO OUR CUSTOMERS: WE WILL CLOSED JULY 4-5 DELL’S BEAUTY SHOP PAGE’S BEAUTY SHOP RUBY’S BEAUTY SHOP We Will Be Closed All Day - FRIDAY, JULY 4 OPEN SATURDAY J. C. TODD GROCERY L- BIG BARBECUE • ••Silva* MOUNTVILLE Friday, July 4 Everybody Invited WALTER F. LYNCH, Cook G. H. WATTS AMERICAN LEGION BASEBALL CLINTON vs. WHITMIRE FRIDAY NIGHT, JUNE 27 Double Header—Consisting of Two 7-Inning: Games First Game Starts at 7:00 O’clock Admission 25c and 50c is in~'matters of public concern, powor. That idea v of cheap fer- j “What is truth”? That question, tilizer, cheap nitrates, was at the you well remember, was asked by | bottom of the Muscle Shoals devql-t Pontius Pilate of Jesus. Jesus em- i opment, which started o^it^s a phasized the truth, saying to a war idea and grew or swelled into' This nation, like most- other na-} the gigantic TVA. The TVC was tions is so full of press agents and to develop water power, after do- others, giving one side, or a part ing many other things, along with production of nitrates for explos ives and agriculture. Today TVA is building mammoth steam plants, to' use a hundred cars of coal a day. So, if you ask “What is TVA"? I might have to borrow words of Pilate and ask “What is truth.” j The Idaho tangle has so many i phases that I might quote the lat- i i est. i “The Idaho Farm Bureau Fed*j Jeration claimed Wednesday that ! electric power from the Hell’s J Canyon dam, brought into south- : ern Idaho on gQvenjjnenf trans- 1 mision lines, will not reduce the J cost of supertriple phosphate fer-! j tilizer, even if the power could be sold at 2.5 mills per kilowatt hour, j Rather, it said, the cost will be about $10 per ton higher than iti : is when made by the wet process. “Charts accompanying the ar- I tice go into detail on the cost of ; producing triple-j»uper commercial fertilizer by the wet process, the electric furnace process and the plast furnace method. All costs were figured for plants in south ern Idaho with the same capacity and with the esame captal invest ment. "Manufacturing costs are as fol lows, the farm bureau said: Wet process, $52.21; electric furnace, i l $62.85; and blast furnace, $66.47. * ; The two electric methods were fig- 1 ured on the basis of 2.5 mill pow- er, the bureau said Us-not and can-1 not become a reality in southern • Idaho.’ An electric furnace' with the same capacity as a wet process plant will cost about three times as much to build, it added. ‘This is but another example cf i how the farmers of Idaho are be ing misled into giving up their j water right for electric power that wiUbeoJ-no benefits to them.” Wln’—Snould aluminum, or any thing else, be produced and sold ; at a loss? Why should the Gov- I ernment subsidize the production of aluminum? It would be just ! as reasonable for the Government : i to sell beef at a loss of fifty per. cen.L^ftce beef us—sa rich .pro- 4 tein. I don’t mean to provoke any food specialist into a discussion of vegetable and animal proteins: I’m just assuming that the British, having established so great an em-| ■, ■, ,1, i,, n, i r- -jt - - -jt -- - - -t-f-j-pile on beef and mutton, those Sj meats may be classified as full of g j empire vitamins. Beef, washed ‘ down with tea, hot tea, at all hours, morning, noon and night, must be outstanding as a diet for heroic builders. ihtess A COMFORTABLE HOME ALL YEAR ROUND! MAKE YOUR HOME A COOI.ER PLACE TO LIVE! Insulation stops the heat at your roof and walls— keeps the summer sun from turning your home into an oven. In winter, enjoy freedom from cold drafts and save on fuel bills. > INSULATE AND WEATHERSTRIP NOW! Enjoy repairs or improvements while you pay. NO DOWN PAYMENT — NO MORTGAGE — No Collateral Required — Thirty-Six Months To Pay! Call or Write for Free Estimates— J. A. SMITH, JR. P. O. Box 144 — CLINTON, S. C. — Phone 295-J Representing Augusta Roofing & Metal Works Augusta, Ga. * * .. :: :: ♦ ♦ ♦ • Local Buyer Gives Foil Fashion Picture Barbecue JULY 4 At Eddy’s Place One Mile from Clinton on Whitmire Highway MEAT AND HASH ON SALE ~ AT 10 A. M. J. S. NORRIS Cook Mrs. Mary Copeland, manager of $?! Murray Garber, who has just return- }£! ed from New York, states that the «i fall fashion picture is an exciting one i because of the many new trends not- 1 I ed in her recent buying trip. “Fashion has gone soft,” she said. | “Gone is the crisped-out look in pa per-sharp fabrics. Everything is |{fluid and supple—in dresses, sports-1 ‘ I wear and coats, all expressed in both silhouette and in fabrics which are more luxurious and varied than words tan tell. The Crepe Dress Returns “It has been a ’ong time since the crepe dress was really an item, and it is refreshing to note its return, particularly in black. ‘The little black crepe dress’—backbone of the wardrobe—is on its way into our stocks in abundant variety, featuring every new detail. “Dresses, whether in crepe or in other fabrics, fall into many silhou ette categories. There is the middy type, with simulated or real cuff or edging around the hipline. Notable is the waistline clasped with wide! cummerbunds, cotselt midriffs or elastic waist-clincher belts. Subtle drapery, crumb-catcher yokes, a lot of the ‘covered up look,’ filled-in necklines (with detachable dickeys and yokes)—these are a few of the many features in dresses. Dress skirts have soft gathers or are gored. They are fluid and easy without the stiff look of last season. Bodices have • SAY: “I SAW IT IN THE CHRONICLE” THANK YOU BOTA SUMMER COLD TAKE ££ £t symptomatic OOO RELIEF IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT OF —f- ANEW Hospital and Surgical Insurance Plan that provides — UBERAL BENEFITS FOR YOU and YOUR FAMILY • Hospital Benefits ~ • Surgical Benefits • Polio Care (up to $5,000) • Maternity Hospital Gore EXTRA BENEFITS FOR YOU— Accidental Death Benefit Accidental I^oss Eyesight and Limbs (Waiting period for sickness and maternity benefits: immediate accident benefit: optional renewal) The Life Insurance Company of Virginia T. C. RAY, Agent Phone 395-W ENJOY j >5:| AT ITS BEST Outdoor Cooking WITH THE REVOLUTIONARY NEW TITAN FLAMELESS. - iv r. - MU . cooks Moots by INFRA a RED rays if Htre's the most unusual charcoal grill ever developed. A completely new type charcoal griH that will delight the expert as well as the amateur outdoor chef. It's scientifically designed to insure a long burning, FLAMELESS fire that gives uniform heat over the entire cooking area. Cooks meats right through without burning er charring. Uncontrolled flaming from dripping fats is elimh noted. Meats stay juicy and flavorful. BOOKLET TELLS WHY ...SHOWS YOU HOW! Thii helpful heeklet titled ’Outdoor Cooking ot it* loV* toll* why • Vleme- Iom’ fire it to important to the evtccme of tho oloal. H thowt 700 how to keild o fire in thoTitcn *fl«m:lou* CriU end explain* Lie infre-rod cook, tag principle. A copy it given with each Titan Oriil. fcrtra c—'m 0 ; SEE IhiS AMAZING NkW GRilL CASH IT S ON DISPLAY Hflfl A CREDIT TO SOUTH CAROLINA