The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, September 04, 1952, Image 10

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/ 6* Y ’ Pace Two THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Thursday, September 4, 195? Ever think of mustard with stung beans'.’ It's a new Mayor ,treat ing ground allspice as a seasoning. It makes a wonderful ••pepper- upper." Allspice is good too, with other vegetables such as carrots and to matoes, Just add V4 teaspoon of ground allspice to melted butter before pouring over vegetables. On a slice of rye bread, place a well worth trying. The beans, sllw of -boiled" ham and a thick whether they're canned, frozen, or ; i ayer of lettuce. Top with a slice of fresh, will taste better, you'll find, Swiss cheese, another slice of ham, il you blend a pinch of dry mustard , int j pjore lettuce. Pour thousand with minted parsley and melted j s ] an d dressing ov^r all. You butter as a sauce just before serv- C at this one with a’knife and fork! jng. ^ ' • ! Serve sizzling pork sausage links 'TVV 8 a ;*l 1. that the world ew , td of the bride the reason for her 1 expulsion from her suband’s hut. ! She did not compiain; she said, in I the qucchua tongue of her people, I and with complete resignation, "He said I have a sour mouth.” That, my friends, was in the dark ages. There was no clorophyl on hand, nor yet contrived, to keep us sweet. Inj that tribe the bride was ex pected 1 to chew the sugar cane and extract its juice by chewing. From What are the great principles of the juice they made chicha, a sort cnn America? We hear and read mucn of liquid lightning, that had the j about ‘‘principles.” The right to kick of a dozen mules, Fm told; work is a principle. I do not mean and syrup, too. though the chica es a job to me or was the usual product. If the COMMENT ON MEN AND THINGS By The Spectator “I Felt LOST From The Worid” vorsc n v ( nic of no service. Mover stewed corn with mashed potatoes, cooked peas „ , .n a pudding, or perhaps in Cheated with undiluted cream of: *0 anyone elw; I meap that no ar-, bride had > “sour mouth" she was < reamv, corn soup. For a more da- mushroom, soup, and a crisp tossed 1 lcla barner s °u s an ' j j ^ tween two men when one needs i help and the other needs a job. If we denv to a man the right to ond appearance, try us-, salad. « # • # #.♦ ^ - Sayings 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 and Supervised by the United States Government Laurens Federal Savings & Loan Association Telephone 22271 LAURENS’ LARGEST SAVINGS INSTITUTION 104 West Main Street Laurens, S. C. WHEN MINUTES COUNT! 'JOE, CAR WONT START- CAN YOU RUN ME TO THE STATION?' LITTLE problems would sometimes turn into real emergencies without your telephone. In business and at home, it puts you quickly in touch with the people you need. PEOPLE everywhere are depending on the tele phone more and more ... to help them earn a living ... . serve their family needs . . have hm ahd make friends. And the telephone plays a vital role in today’s most important job — national defense. — Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company. GOOD MANAGEMENT—improving methods and equipment, and working facilities to the utmost—is one of the reasons why the price of telephone service has gone up less than most prices. BEST POSSIBLE SERVICE ( » - r . LOWEST PdSSIBLE COST work we must logically provide for him at public expense; for if the law. directly or indirectly, so operates as to bar a man from work that same Government should feed and clothe arid house him. Nor should we dictate to an employer whom he should employ, or whom he should not employ, for it is his responsibility to guide and govern the operation, it is chargeable to : h:n. only if he is allowed to pro ceed according to his judgment. No Government has anv right to Some of the Indians belonged to the Truman school of conomics. At times of fiesta Indians would come to Lima from the Sierra and they and the little burro prepared to spend several days. The burro, had his bundle of alfalfa and the Indian had i few pieces of pottery. If asked the price of his pottery, the Indian replied, stating it in our money: 10 cents. But if you tried to buy ten pieces he probably wanted two dollars. If you under took to draw hi mout he might ad- mit^that if he sold all that he had there w'ould be no excuse for him to hang around. So he must keep interfere All this talk about the . . . ^ . . . . , , _ . t lus stock in order to remain in bus- cor.fusion of thought. It is not tne mess. One piece of pottery ten cents; ten pieces at 20 cents. Ex actly the way our Government fig- 10 concern of the slates. It is th?j urcs income *“«• isn '* U? f—proper concern ~of the men " whoy Our local assessor, does not say; perate business and those who! "A $5000 house at fifty mills and a instead of for the nation, is a mere FEFV txung a matter for the states, concern of the nation; and it is not th seek employment. Another thing,! $50,000 Tiouse at 90 mills, does he; The Government has no proper j Of course, as you know, there are concern to hold vour income down:' strange and wonderful things that on the contrary, the Government happen in assessments at times, should smile on prosperity, for' but my idea is that all such iniqui- that means better pay, more cm-1 ties are perpetuated in other states, ployment. sustained employment. I I would not have you think that And that means more support for'mental quirks are found only in all kjnus of business; more support, tax-assessors and Trumanite tax- for the churches and charities; j planners: I recall an insurance rat- more interest in cultural societies.j ing that baffled me a long time: An income tax should bear on all two filling stations, about the same alike: for example, if the rate of size, in the same town, on the same tax be 15 per cent, it should be 15 block, with exactly the same stock, What’s Your Telephone Worth? but with great difference in insur ance rate. Strange, eh? All the inspectors had seen one station— a comparatively new one—but no one, apparently, had ever seen the older station, just across the street. So. score one for the politicians: j they had nothing to do with the in- i surance! Of course that was years 1 per cent on all. There might be certain minimum standards, but the principle should be one of per centage. equality. There is no jus tice in charging the man of $5000 with 15 per cent; and the man of $25,000 with 25 per cent; ^nd the man of $50,000 with 35 pe'r cent: and the man of $100,000 with 50 per cent. We don’t do business; ago. that .way. We don’t charge one ——— man $25*00 for a car and another FOR ATHLETE'S FOOT man $3500 for the same car. Nor USE A KERATOLYTIC does the butcher sell steak to one BECAUSE— man for 75 cents and $1.25 to the It SLOUGHS OFF the tainted out- banker. Of course it may be done, er skin to expose fungi and kills it but it is done under cover. Theo- on contact. Get this STRONG, r 1-4-C—i any drug store. If you're not pleased IN ONE HOUR, your 40c back. Now at McGee's Drug Store. MRS. HONAKER * T Suffered Thirty-four Years From Spelfs of Smothering Gas Pressure Pains With Resultant Nervous, Dizzy, Blind, Head achy Feeling; Lost Weight and Strength. It Seemed That I Was On the Verge of a Ner vous Breakdown. I Feel Like New r On Scalf’s Indian River Medicine,” Declares Mrs. Hon- aker. Mrs. Ruby Honaker, Swords gratitude lor what it has done for me.” Why not profit by Mrs. Hornak- er’s experience. You can’t lose be cause you get your money back on the very first bottle of Scalf’s In dian River Medicine if not entirely satisfied with the results. Try it to-' day. g Our Public Service Commission would not permit a power company to charge a wage-earner eight mills and .a banker 25 mills. But that is the way we impose income taxes. We grow so accustomed to all sorts of devious procedures that we meekly yield, or, else, we sink without a trace, leaving nothing but bubbles. Some of qur theorists—chose be spectacled brethren who have vis ions and dream dreams; who con jure from nothing at all their wierd imaginings, would probably plan it this way: wages for the wage-earn er, when unmarried, $25 a week; when married $50 a week; and $10 j a week for each child. So one man, i however, incapable and lazy, might | draw $100 a week, if married and with five children; where as an ex pert, if unmarried, might receive only $25. The expert might be worth fifty of the other sort, in his g actual productive service. And, by | the same token, the Bank clerk with five children would drawl* more than a bachelor Bank Presi- j ^ dent. And then the best plan would be for Joe Stalin to take it js ever, lock, stock and barrel. Perhaps the dreamy fellow who plans for us in taking a leaf from Shakespeare’s idea of a poet. You remember that he says “And as the imagination bodies forth in forms of things unseen the poet’s e>e turns it to shape and gives to airy nothing a local habitation and a name." That’s all I recall, though this sultry weather makes me yearn for air, even Shapepeare’s “airy nothing.” When I was in France I recall that the French merchants and hucksters unblushingly had three prices; the lowest for the Frnech; the next for the British; the high est for the Americans and Canad ians. Yes, and they are the people who mark on their freight cars ”40 men or 8 horses."’ By the way, you mustn’t think I have a “sour mouth”—and thereby hangs a tale, again quoting Shakes peare. $ Padre Ginec was a Franciscan, a monk wearing the long reddish brown habit, with a cowl. He had come to Peru from 'France thirty years before I met him and had la bored among the head-hunters in the wilds of the jungles of the Amazon. He was a great spirit, a brave man, a devout and persever ing Soldier of the Cross. Padre Giner introduced the idea of matrimony with the blessing of the church, among those Indians of the Cholo type- He had per formed the ceremony, uniting a stalwart young Indian and a very attractive Cholo girl. A couple of days after the ceremony he found the bride at her father’s house, dis missed, but put away, by her hus band. The Padre, a very sympa thetic leader of the people, inquir- GOT A SUMMER COLD TAKE 666 symptomatic RElir RIGHT-WRONG r /— Right Urlag consists of regularity In our dally routliM. tbs correct amount of sleep, exeedee and fresh air combined with periodical physical examination by a Medical Doctor. It Is certainly wrong to neglect one’s health when preventative medicine applied at an ’ opportune time can eliminate many unneeseary Illnesses. Make an appoint ment to see your Doctor without delay, an hour spent with him today may save - fmmham m -S« m -•-rr*'-— *«Turw ClSCORUOn. , • Write Your Congressman “NO” on Socialized Medicine ;—rf McGee’s iDrug Store Phorte No. 1 Say "I Saw It In The Chronicle" — Thank You! I » Your White Cross Agent For 1 Laurens County Is Mr. Royce Albert | 1 Complete Hospitalization and Life Insuranne FILL COUPON FOR FULL PARTICULARS MAIL TO: MR. ROYCE ALBERT 259 Laurens St. LAURENS, S. C. Telephone 2-2637 PLEASE SEND ME COMPLETE INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR HOSPITALIZATION PLAN OR INCOME INSURANCE. Name- Age. Street. (Complete Please) Occupation- City. State- Creek, Va., is a respected mother of seYen sons and three daughters. In telling her experience with Scalfs Indian River Medicine, she states: “For thirty-four years I had spells of smothering stomach, pres sure pains which seemed to make me feel so weak, nervous, and run down that I could not stay on my feet long at a time and I often suf fered from blinding, dizfcy, head achy feeling, with loss of sleep. All this made me feel so out of heart that I felt like I was lost from the world. I believe I was on the verge of a nervous breakdown when I started on Scalf’s Indian River Medicine. “It is amazing how this grand herb stomach tonic helped me. My appetite came back, the smothering gassy stomach distress was re lieved, I no longer suffered from headaches, in fact I felt so much stronger and better on Scalf’s In dian River Medicine that j was like new. I felt so much happier and livelier that I could get more out of life. I am telling my friends about Scalf’s Indian River Medi cine and insisting that they try it, loo, for words cannot express my \ f : rr \ - •t K*