University of South Carolina Libraries
7 Page Two THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Thursday, February 19, 1953 '4 FARMS AND FOLKS » By J. M. ELEAZER Clemson Extension Information . Specialist Balanced Farming Urged As Keynote For 1953 Production Ijocal Marketing “Marketing starts ri^ht on the farm," says our marketing man Jim my Younjalaod. Dorchester county | for fanning in 1953 is efficiency local shipping point. This was made an( j i n order to be efficient a farm- possible by the A&P Tea Company. | er mus t have a well balanced farm In this 4-H £9ntest, future growers i business, of this g^eat food crop are being | According to C. B. Cannon, Lau- ias proved the ii'Uth of that in build-j trained. So, if the future wants more rens County Farm Agent, balanced ing a hog industry during the past j sweet potatoes, we -will have a nu- f arm j n g simply means doing a good iO-odd years. , j clous of trained growers, as these a ii. roun( j j 0 b of farming. He said That was one of the early places y° un £ s * crs grow up. Cleimson is jt i s a well-rounded system of A-here the < miration v,\>.s then no ...... . . . .. , — ^ Vo consign tl»em to distant markets, they have registered some big Scndes f arrner( along w'ith the best prac- This didn't prove too satisfactory. So ;n that direction. It is likely that a t j ces - n production and market- mey organized the Dorchester Mark-] taller mechanization •will bring this cr0 p s anc j livestock for the ('ting Association. And along through, crop into its own as a source o. hum- f arm aS a w hole. Furthermore, • he years it has handled their hogs f 00£ l 3;K 1 ^ 3 ma j° r irionej ciop balanced farming involves planning , i weekly shipments that have 1 here. the farm home for utility, comfort ,rSwn until Ibis day. j .Control MmmMm I" Tobwco beau , y countv Auieiil Kinfi tells me that , An “ G * r,lens . 1 It is important to the economic . . .”7 3Tl S* his the pas.! .merest of the county and state > 3 r for 552 farmers. This amounted ^ ? . , ? e . aih lhe S nx . ' that each individual farm business i 214 cars and brought $598,543.17.; tol i trom ^ ^ u^^rbe so organized and operated that . charge of one peivent is made for j and tr0; " ' r ^ k ^ ‘ "folks i 11 c0l i tribute s the maximum income • the h0 B5 . OU, of this the, PM. ^siLnt. of course, with sound farming and conservation prac tices. The 1953 agricultural pro- is ca.^P At nrst iney nau | V... atynnt w th^ ! gram for South Carolina sponsored '-i borrow money against the hogs i n ordt-r to pay cash lor them at time! f delivery. But now far some years ' neir cash balance has been such, ...... ,, When I was a kid that was a well known term and it had great mean- often the farmer who produces out standing yields of cotton, tobacco, and othef crops, or who develops an outstanding beef cattle or dairy herd, may be extremely weak in other enterprises on his farm, and profits made on one enterprise may be lost on another on the same farm. For example, profits may Greater production, per acre, per be less from a livestock enterprise animal, and per man will be needed | because the farming program does this year. This means the keynote,not provide high yields of such have, why the said Administration | day of February, A. D., 1953. shquld not be granted. ' ^ | J. HEWLETTE WASSON - , Given under my hand this llth l9-2cw J. P. L. C. feed crops as corn, small grains, hay, etc., may not bring the farmer a profit because hei does not have sufficient high quality livestock through which to market these products. CITATION FOR LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION .mdlir.g ay expenses and have accumulated .-.sets o: $22,657,84, 'of which prac- .. a!ly all is cash. At first they had j over the state have gotten good re suits frbm treating, tobacco and gar den soils tor the control of the pest. You Country agent has the details. Boys Are That Way I never hear of “breaking" shoes now. Shoes must be made more nearly jiat they do not have to borrow . ioney :or this purpose any more. Grow the right sort of quality stuff ; in ‘ e> ' . nd you can usually sell it all right.' And that’, wiiat the Dorchester far- lllce y° ur f eet now > f° r tbe y f eel S 00 ^ icrs have done with hogs. Theirs ^ r(>m start. Not so when I was a kid. A shoe, the sort we got, was a thing of Judge: Whereas, Ardena B. Lark made suit to me to -grant her Letters of Administration of tlje estate and ef fects of Clarence Lorenzo Lark. These are, therefore to cite and admonish all and singlar the Kin dred and Creditors of the said Clar ence Lorenzo Lark, deceased, that they be and aptpear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Laurens Court House, Laurens, S. C., 1 on March 5, 1953 next, after publi cation hereof, at 3:00 o’clock in the afternoon, to show cause, if any they 1 FARM- BUREAU AUTO ACCIDENT INSURANCE AND LIABILITY COVERAGE * 1 r v THIS INSURANCE COSTS LESS AND IS AVAILABLE TO FARM BUREAU MEMBERS ONLY. MORE FARMERS ARE URGED TO JOIN THIS ORGANIZATION. TWO AGENTS TO SERVE YOU IN LAURENS COUNTY: DON BOYD Of the Hopewell Community, Phone 4114 Joanna BOBBY RIDDLE Gray Court Community, Phone 5671 Gray Court Contact Either of These Agents for This Protection •un a very high percentage of num ber one hogs, and there is always a 1 jr ..... ready demand 4or Dorchester hogs, torture until it got "broke to your \t first meij' county agent largely : And breaking one wa=, a fixed by the State Agricultural Commit tee and the Clemson College Ex tension Service points out that few er farmers must produce more food, feed and fiber for an increas ing population. In discussing further the sub ject of balanced farming Mr. Can non said, “A balanced farming program aims at the improvement of the whole farm as a unit. Too tandled ‘h " work of assembling, routine, like breaking a young mule rading, and marketing their weekly 1 t0 hipments. But -it gradually got on 1 •s own feet, and for years now the ssociation of growers has hanclled ■ie marketing entirely, enabling the ;ent to give his time to production . b’.::r. in the (field and only come j in an > ivisory way as needed on leir marketing work. * | Sweet PoUte Champions Most farms- grow what sweet pota- oes they need. (But - the crop has een a rather spotty commercial one ur South Carolina. Not many years .... .... ... . •jL-hi-n the going w'as tough fof^ tore and blackanith j>hop at the Often a younger brother was call ed upon to help break ’em in and limber them up a little. And then you’d just wear ’em when you felt like punishment. They hurt your feet j just about everywhere they touched 1 ..them; And they were as stiff and unyielding as heavy cardboard. Those shoes that just came in a few numbers, no lasts or widths, were called brogans. And we got ’em for about a dollar at the country together with sticky red clay. Once I was snoozing by the open fire on a winter day, with my feet poked out on the hearth. A coal of fire popped out and went down the side of my open top shoe. I must have broken a record ih waking up, a little while loosing that buckle, and getting that taking a little s^oe off. For, you know, you can MODERN Boking Equipment . Helps Moke ClauSSen’S AMER/M'f FINEST BREAD! work fast in times like that. if r 1 foot ot -the hilL - FINAL SETTLEMENT Take notice that on the 13th day of March,’1953, I will render a final account of my acts and doings as Administrator of the estate of Salin] F. Roddy in the office of the Judge of Probate of Laurens County, at 10 Tboy had nn ftl.^rs^Qblnf.k a.m.. am? on the same day ,*nHrvn jv i joktKl for a while as , ,, ... , , getting Under way 'wiu" Qttt hc-d-^-ogethei-. ib-fbu>nt by | will - apply—for- a vu wire ^ w _ ___ -•wee. poutoe;* as a money crop. 3 buckle -Aith three slo.* for ^d- <>rangeburg, a sort of center of this! ju ^ men ^ ’° ani ^ e - ievelopment, -put on a very credit-, dld no L^^ lt . 3round .ble Sweet Potato Festival, afnd the e '- ber - That would have hurt. They •■ame thing was done across the line open a bit around your leg. n North Carolina at Tabor City. The j Bu ‘ not enough for your foot to come rixtension service -got in several car- | ou ‘ without unbuckling it. •oads of improved seed stock from. Once you-got those brogans broken Louisiana, and Clemson v s Edisto ri § ht to >' our f f et - ^ wore good. Station at -Blackville did a lot of' ra . w lecher would last a work improving sweet potato pro duction methods and varieties. In the past few years sweet pota- :oes have slipped a lot as a money -rop here. Li fact census reeorda <how that we are not producing any more now than we did 75 years ago. Some points that grew a lot of ’em, produce practically none for market now, Lee county, for instance. I ask ed County Agent Bryant there what caused this. He said it was twofold. First, unrestriced cotton acreage with the prospect of fair prices caus ed fanners there to go back to cot- ion. And, second, the labor short age also caused them to give up po tatoes on many farms, they requir- ng moft hand labor at times than <■ otton. A bit of commercial sweet potato .nterest is being kept alive by our state 4-H sweet potato contest. The past year the Darlington county team of six 4-H club.boys was the win ning group. The reward, other than their fine potatoes, 1 was a trip with neir county agent to New York with iheir car of potatoes to fodlow the crop through the marketing chan nels, after the potatoes had been packed and loaded out right at their long time, if you keep ’em greased. We used tallow and lard for that, which helped make ’em waterproof too. For we had no rubber overshoes then. And the stone hills were tied final from my trust as administrator. Any person indebted to said es tate is notified and required to make payment on or before that date; and all persons having claims against said estate will present them on or before said date, duly proven, or be forever barred. PHILLIP L. RODDY, Administrator. Feb. 13, 1953. 12-4cw WE DO ALL KINDS OF PRINTING —EXCEPT BAD CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. *< In The Hoppy Sunshine Yellow Wropper STAYS FRESHER LONCER! NOW-more than ever- •o 0 \ % Dodge gives you the most truck fnr vnnr mnnot/l ^New, more powerful engines! mi your monoy - ANew super ^ brakes! ^ I^New Truck-o-matic transmission! STOMACH TROUBLE When gassy stomach trouble causes you pain ful, sleep less nights, and rest less days, do as thousands of oth ers are doing ev ery day — turn to Scalfs -Indian River Medicine for prompt relief Mrs. Clella Car- penter, Thom Hill, Tenn., writes: “For two years l suffered from spells of gaseous stomach with resulting heartburn and severe -pains which robbed me of sleep and rest, and caused me to feel nervous and rundown. Scatfs Indian River Medicine began to help me at once. Now I can eat heartily, feel so much better that H want oth ers to try ScalTs -Indian River Medi cine, too. Scalfc Indian River Medi cine is wonderful and I wouldn’t do without it in my medicine cabinet.’’ If you need • good stomach tonic, start on Scalfs Indian River Medi cine today. Your money back on the very first bottle if not entirely satis fied. On sale at aU drug stores. Mrs. Carpenter Yes, of the 3 leading makes of trucks, only Dodge offers you: 7 powerful engines, 3 of them brand- new, with 100 to 171 h.p. . . . ad vanced dual-primary type brakes in 1- through 4-ton models, for sure stops and easy servicing.. .Truck-o- matic transmission with g£rol Fluid Drive, available on >£- and %-ton trucks, for the best in no-shift driving... f ... plus all of the other Dodge exclusives shown at right! Find out how these Dodgeextras can save money. See us today! / ft-tN ttmth 4-toa DODGKbWTRUCKS OF THE 3 LEADING MAKES, ONLY DODGE TRUCKS ARE "Job-RrttU” TO DIVE YOU THESE AND MANY MORE A0VAHTAGES - r- •• Greatest maneuverability of the 3 leaders— saves you time and effort. Greatest vision area of the “big 3” lets you see more .. . increases safety, handling ease. Widest seat of the 3 leading makes. More power in the 1^- and 2-ton ranges than the other 2 leading makes. More pick-up bodies than the other 2 lead ers, including new 116'’ wheelbase j^-ton pick-up. Greatest %-ton panel payload and capacity of the 3 leaders. 2 fuel filters on all models to assure cleaner fuel and a cleaner engine. Floating oil intake selects clean oil at top, avoids sediment at bottom of crankcase. Water distributing tube on all models directly cools valve seats ... means longer valve life. 4-ring pistons on all engines save oil, upkeep. Independent parking brake on all models is simple, efficient, powerful. Rivetless Cydebond brake linings last longer, can’t score brake drums , . . linings are tapered and molded on many models for quiet stops. Orifiow shock absorbers on %- and 1- ton models give smoother riding, greater driver control on roughest roads. Better-balanced weight distribution for extra payload. Dodge pioneers . . . others follow! Many features—just adopted by other leading makes—have been standard on Dodge trucks for years! For example: chrome-plated top - piston rings in complete line, spark-plug covers, 45-ampere generators, abort wheel base, rustproofed sheet metal. My Dwfft builds truth that mu “Jub- Rated" to St your hautug seeds. 1 COOPER MOTOR COMPANY 211 W. MAIN STREEET.— TELEPHONE SIS ..J . .. .