The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, March 26, 1953, Image 6

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Pajre Six / THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Thursday, March 26. 1953 WANT ADS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES— • First Insertion — Minimum 50c up to 25 words, 2c each additional word. • Multiple Insertion — 5 times for price of 4. • Classified Display — 65c per inch, per Insertion. • Obituaries. Cards of Thanks and Trespass Notices charged at 2 cents per word. Minimum $1.00. • ALL WANT ADVS CASH DEADLINE: 9 a. m. Wednesday. BRONCO BUSTER FROM ABILENE HIGH CARBON steel sweeps tractor drawn plows, cas£L-Jtardened bolts. Blakely-Burton Hardware. Phone 188. FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms, 204 South Broad. See Mrs. Echols. Ip AIREDALE PUPPIES for sale, regis tered Americafi Kennel club. T. W. } (Bill) Abrams. Phone 101 or 291-W. 1 1c for. BABY DUCKS — We’ll have some next Monday, March 30. Call and j place your orders now in plenty of Jc | time for Easter. Farmers Feed^ & Seed Store. Phone 1025. 1c WANTED TO BUY- H. J. Pitts. -12 mules. See tfc PIANOS in excellent condition. Tuned and ready to go. Terms easy, prices low. The Trading Post, Lau rens, S. C. tic ^; ONE LOT stationery reduced, paper I is perfect, boxes slightly soiled. 55c box. Chronicle Publishing Co. 1c INCOME TAX forms prepared. Mrs. Tom Sease, 314 N. Adair St., Phone 399-W. tf POOR SALE—Two 30-inch Emerson air circulator fans. Can «be P^t on j after 3.30 stand or suspeiided from ceiling. Each fan has two speeds. Sunshine 1 PURINA STARTENA—Raise a nice Cleaners. * c I broiler or fry^r in 6 weeks on le£s feed. We welcome a comparison with Ads Propose That People , Love Neighbor Washington. — For some time, a mystery character around the East ern seaboard has been spending thousands of dollars preaching the doctrine of “love thy neighbor” in paid newspaper ads. At first it was a single verse on ( a full page. This cost the man some- j thing like $300 a page for the tab loids and double that or more for the ! regular sized papers in Washington. cry the doctrine of “love, the great est gift.” Or “love thy neighbor as thyself.' Spring Cleaning Becomes An Out-of-Doors Task New.York.—Spring cleaning ain’t what it used to be. i In recent years, more and more women have, given up that top-to- bottom scouring of the house that used to herald spring as much as the first robin and the Easter hat. From comments and reports all FLOOR SANDERS—Rent our sand-j a u other chows. Farmers Feed & ers, edgers and polishers. We have'5^ store. Phone 1025. 1c all the necessary material to make! 1 your floors beautiful. Reasonable 1 STERLING by Towle, Kirk, Reed \ Human Interest History of Wasson The plot thickened to the point °ver the country, „ looks as if the where the newspapers, their phnoe ] sc p unn £ de y boards jammed, asked' the man would he please sign his name? And what was he up to: At length Leon Ackerman con sented. Now he signs his name in small type at the bottom of the ad vertisements, although he never mentions his business. I went to see Ackerrfian, who confessed to be a former sinner who wants only to spread the word of God. “I came to this country as a poor lad,” he said. “I made a lot of mpn- ey. I made it all honest. But I sinned. I used to go to the bars. I over-ate. I over-swore. I over-smoked. I think schools and equipment with rais- that it is 0 ^ ly right that in my ad- rates. Cox Home Phone 12. & Auto Supply. tfc NOTICE—Absolutely no fishing al lowed on Lake Reynosa. Gillette FOR SALE Simpson and David Copeland. Ip Barton. Call Mrs. Dillard Boland, j 736-J. 608 Calvert Ave. Wilbur Rid- 1 die. Jeweler, Laurens, S. C. Lfc 1 es for teachers’ salaries. His con stant hard work in this field won him chairmanship of the Educa tion Committee of the state in 1940 and 1949. Having served as principal of Tenor banjo, almost! grow up .U f f ui S we K are , k,ds the Fountain Inn schools in Green- think of booming cowboys tram co Mf Wasson reallzed engineers or Indian chiefs when we;^ thjs ^ must .. di , pel ignor . new. Call 488-J. Ip of Robert C Tavern, who is AVON Cosmetics has opening for ■ ROOT bee supplies are now in stock, gress from the Fourth District. . .. . „ ^KiiHrort »v,o,r mature women to service a good we have a complete stock of hives j 8 ^ he was onl ,, years of i “ r ^* t0 ^IhS ^ Avon territory. Opportunity .to earn an d acetones Blakely-Burton he assumed the responsibility; ,e rc0 mmunHy" $2.00 an hour in spare time. Pleas- 1 Hardware. Phone 188. Ic; f ..p rotector and Provider” for , ., Batesbml s C A23-6p| YOUR DOCTOR KNOWS BEST : f hm>ly d ue to Ute early death.' most o( the dry fon . es Your doctor is an expert in the his father. No doubt this load . legislature. science of safeguarding health. Call on his young shoulders hastened p. . onoc/vK nr, ihn finnr ™ Ivirw Ore* crTckscfinn nf his maturitv for when he was on- During one speech on the floor vertising I should carry the theme forward that ‘he who understands love, understands God and God is love’.” Ackerman, a realtor, does not look like a reformer. He received me in his plush office in downtown Wash ington and offered me comfort in the form of smokes, deep-sitting chairs and ash-trays. , , . . . ... 11 d 0 not w * s b to let people think role of pioneering for better schools tha t I am trying to plTlicize my business,” he told me. “I probably But not so was the case : ance fTOm jts if it was t0 Wasson of Hickory, he running for Con- * , c, WANTED —Old coins, gold, copper, silver. Some coins will pay twice Lhier face value or more. We now have complete line of coin folders in stock. Roddy's Gift Shoppe. Ic on him at the first suggestion of ill-i his maturity, for when he was on f u. c ness and call on us for competent, b’ 16 years of age he was la y inR ut saying —si Sc careful compounding of his prescrip- plans in his mind to become a ^ying, tion. Call 101. member of the HOWARD’S PHARMACY House of Representatives. “On the Square” j Even at this young age he saw years to pay. We trade for anything' CHICKS Why order ,hat hi f vf e0 vP le need ^ d . good of value: furniture, cars, Ira.lers, etc. I wait and wonder when and NEW MOBILE HOMES as little as one-fourth down, 5% interest and 5 Mobile Home*, Inc., Greenville Hwy. -so he dedicated himself to this No. 25, Greenwood. tfc 1 what? We have reds and rocks, purpose. , I also limited number Arbor Acre' After-preparing himself by grad The liquor evil is South ” Carolina : ^ nown and South Carolina. ' I stand for a bone dry prohibition bill and no compromise at this hour. Since this stand will not be considered by some of you who block the bill are the powers that be, I hereby submit to a defeat for a season; but in this defeat we who GARDENS—Got started early, com-; .......vv, V * o*"*" uating from high school and at- plctc line of garden and field seeds, white rocks each week. Hrm^f tending Presbyterian college and your e?rffs, we’ll hatch ’em. Bur-: shudyi-ng - law -at- the.. University of ton’s Hatchery; Whitlrfire, 8; tV Sotrth-C-arolmaube-embarked cm his _ —. ' political career which saw- his C. BRYAN HOLLAND Real Estate ■ Phones 715, 23826 —- Laurens, S. C. (Over Brown’s Jewelry Store) Tomato,' cabbage, lettuce-plants.- By tjrid soed'emrr.'iespedeza-seed. Farm ers Feed & Seed Store. Phone 1025. Ic FOR SALE—Fine cow and calf. H. J. Pitts. Ic WANT TO BUY —Used baby play pen. Call 2582 Joanna. Mrs. T. H. Sutton. 2-2c FOR RENT — Two 4-room houses, three 3-room houses, a 6-room house with 100 acres land, and a 4-room apartment in Bays Apts. Also Pop’s Cafe. Also Copeland hall over Mc Gees Drug Store. See H. J. Pitts, tfc EASTER CHICKS — All' colors for children and grandchildren’s selec tion. Farmers Feed & Seed Store. Phone 1025. Ic LADIES — Have you seen the new youthful plans come true—he was elected to the House of Representa tives w r hen he was 24 years of age. Three more times he was sent BOXED ENVELOPES—100 to pack- to the House by the people of Lau- age, always neat and clean. Fpr ev- rens county. Each campaign he ery member of the family. Chronicle Pub. Co., Stationery Dept. used as a platform his record whicn included countless fights for legis lation he felt would benefit the BERKSHIRES—Purebred pigs, gilts, people of his county and state, and and boars, all ages, from best blood j just as many fights against adverse lines in S. C. Beljview Farms, An- and harmful bills, derson, S. C. Phone 310. M26-5p j While serving in Columbia, Mr. ~ . - -----—- — - - ; Wasson pitched in from the very -AECTROLUX Sales, Serv.ce and ^ m a crusade for a be „ er Supplies. H. L. Baldwin, Telephone 604-J. tfc that we have not fought in vain. Conditions left as they are shall spent more money for ads than any other man in the same business in this area.” No doubt the man has. “Is there any reason, he asked, “why I cannot spend some of this money to get God into every home? My motivation is not a self-seeking one. I want more and more men, women and children to think in terms of love. And to render service to the Golden Rule.” The ads he has be’en running have been in the Washington papers, in Baltimorf, Philadelphia, and Boston. “If my money holds out, and I have fought with a battle cry feel t hink it will, I hope to go to other cities, too,” he told me. "If you have sinned apd pverdone,” defeat their own purpes^-aftd-the., hg . sa id, -^here- ought-^ be some day- shall come when the first shall*- way to tell other folks how to avoid be last and the last shall be first.” the pitfalls. The only way to do it, if Mr. Wasson, who is very active you can afford it, is to advertise. FOR SALE Pitts. 10 good mules. H. J. tfc spring taffetas? All colors, plain and i _ novelty weaves. Nylon net to match. [ ADDRESS AND MAIL postals. Make 8c vard. Moore’s Cloth Ic 49c to Shoppe. WANTED TO BUY—Used 20” and 24” boys and girls bicycles. Western Auto Associate Store, 118 Musgrove St., Phone 602-W. 23-5c FOR SALE —Two 1950 1HC cubs, planters, cultivators, plows, harrows, mowers, 1948 John Deere B, Farmall F-30. Many other values. Laurens Tractor & Implement Co.,LLaurens. Ic over $50 week. Send $1 for instruc tions. Lendo, Watertown, Mass. 26-3p LESPEDEZA SEED, Korean, Sericea ■vH.J. Pitts. tfc(- FOR SALE—First year Coker’s 100 wil't-resistant cotton seed. Germina tion OO'x Cleaned, delinted, treated, in 100-lb. bags. T. Heath Copeland. 16-4c LAWN GRASS—For both shady and sunny yards. TV advertised. Fertili zers too. Farmers Feed & Seed Store. Phone 19(25. Ic USED CARS MIHBl Clean USED CARS When Better Used Cars Are Sold, We Will Have Them THIS WEEK’S SPECIALS 1951 Plymouth Cranbrook 4-door, radio and heater, blue. A nice car. 1951 Plymouth Concord, 2- door, heater, good rubber. Clean. 1949 Ford Club Coupe, ra dio. heater and overdrive. A real bargain. 1948 Ford 2-door Sedan, ra dio, heater, new rubber. 1946 Chevrolet, 2-door, areo, black, good condition. Visit Our Used Car Lot Before You Buy. See, Drive and Compare Ours With Others. Used Car Lot Opposite Post Office PLAXICO MOTORS, Inc. Yonr Chrysler-PIymouth Dealer USED CARS M C < o o u Iff 3 C (A PI O o > 9 (A For Sale REAL ESTATE Six-room modern home, well lo cated in Clinton. It has oak floors, plastered walls and floor furnace. If you are interested in a nice .home let me show r you this place. Seven-room house with two baths in good section of Clinton. If you want a pre-war hmoe with extra large rooms and a house that will last you a lifetime, this is the place for you. It is suitable for duplex. Six-room house near church, school, post office and town. If you are interested in an old house on large lot you might like this for $5,800. If you want some land and would like to drive out a few miles I have a large four-room house out on a highway. Four-room house on highway 5 l k miles out on acres for $2,800. House for colored, large four-room house with bath located in the Bell Street section. « . Five-room house with two-acre tract. Not much house but worth the $1,250 asked. Sixty-five acres with tenant house on highway out from Clinton. 40 acres on road now being black- topped, good building site. Lots in the subdivision at Joanna. Lots on U. S. 7B sft Joanna. Lots on Joanna-Whitmir^ highway. Lots on the Laurens-Clinton high way. C. B. HOLLAND , Laurens, S. C. in church matters, is a retired moderator of the South Carolina Presbytery, and presently an el der in the Friendship Presbyterian church. He also served as deacon for several years in the same church In asking the support of the vot ers, Mr.' Wasson said: “As a con- gresman I would listen to the voice | of the people. My life’s work, my religious beliefs, my political ex periences and my civic activities “I can afford it. Some of Ackerman’s latest ads have included a number of the verses from I Corinthians, Chapter 13 which fall. Women'these days concentrate on getting set for outdoor living in spring. When fall rolls around they do their furniture moving, wall washing routines to get ready for a winter inside the house. That doesn’t mean the spring cleaning job is any easier. It’s hard work, but work aimed at, beautifying the things that can be used for living in the outside. For instance, exterior paint jobs are a spring time chore. So is gardening. And so is the rehabili tation of porch and garden furni ture, barbecue equipment, indoor furniture that can double for out door use, and the re-decorating that brings a sunnier look to the home. In all of this outdoor emphasis, spring cleaning housewives have to keep an eye out for weathdr duar- bility. A seat cushion that may be fine inside may be perfectly awful out side if it wlli get soggy in the rain or fade in the sunlight. If you intend to redecorate such items as wrought iron chair cush ions and porch swing seats, stick to the materials that withstand weather, foam rubber, for instance, won’t get as soppy in a drizzle as feathers. There are plastics that shed water like a duck and look as nice as any hand-loomed fabric. And if you insist on fabric, get the fade-proof, washable kind, and make sure its marked “sanfor ized or pre-shrunk.” For camp chairs or those tubu lar steel seats, try the new Saran webbing which withstands parc- tically anything, including mois ture,' mildew and flame. There ar<\ now little clips to hold new web- ing on old tubular steel chairs whose seats have worn out. TbReUeve 666 0« WAUTS-MIM MAT l«U» schqoP system that included new r i have kept me close to the heart- ^ j 5 ea t s 0 f the good people of this district. I know what they want and it will be my earnest endeavor IF YOU DON’T READ THE CHRONICLE YOU DON’T GET THE NEWS LOANS When in need of a person al loan for your shopping needs, come to see us. Clinton Loan & Investment Co. Room 6. National (Upstairs) Bldg. Lois Page Goff will be in Page’s Beauty Shop THUR., FRI., SAT. She inviteFher friends and customers to call to get it done for them.” PROCESSING SERVICE WE CUT UP AND WRAP MEAT FOR YOUR FREEZERS Call Us For Freezer Supplies Country Market Phone 98 REAL We Buy or Sell. Also Handle Mortgages and Loans. FOR SALE House on Caldwell Street, excel lent buy, small down payment. • Five-room house with bath, 2 miles out Greenwood highway, ga rage and 2 acres land. Redwood house on Chestnut St., just completed, central heating, 6 rooms, breezeway and garage, tile bath. Eight-room brick home, centr|l heating system, College Heights, on corner lot, just completed. Modern five-room asbestos siding house, hardwood floors, tile bath, real bargain. Corner of Workman St. and Blalock Drive, Joanna. The Avalon boarding house, for sale or rent. RENTALS, LOTS, FARMS W. G. KING Real Estate, Appraisals, Mortgages Phone 438 or 728 — Clinton, S. C. ■* ’ 1 Student Bus Driver Training Schools For County In April According to J. Leroy Burns, county superintendent of educa tion, the State Highway Depart ment will conduct student driver training schools for prospective bus drivers during the month of April rather than after schools are out | as in the past. According to Mr. Burns, the ! schedule as arranged by Ralph ^ Durham, director of school bus j transportation in South Carolina, calls for two training centers for white trainees of Laurens county while at the same time only one such center for Negro trainees. It is important, Mr. Burns stated, that school authorities bear the time j and places of these schools in mind I and begin at once selecting pros- j pective drivers, boys or girls, who ! are at least sixteen years of age to take the training. According to the schedule as sent out from Mr. Durham’s of fice, the first training center for whites in Laurens county will be held at the Clinton high school be ginning Monday, April 6, and will continue through the 8th. The other school for whites will be hedl at the Garlington school in Lau rens beginning on the 9th of April and will run through the 1th. Classes begin at nine in the morn ing and close at five in the after noon. The one training school for Ne gro drivers will be held at San ders high school, Laurens, and it, too, will begin on Monday, the 6th, and run through the 8th. How ever, no conflict will exist because of two centers going at the same time as the state has many teams of trainers working. Mr. Bums states he is anxious to have at least two drivers available for each bus in operation next year. He therefore urges school authori ties to be diligent in their efforts to secure prospective drivers who are dependable and conscientious about their responsibilities. EXPERIENCED — ESTABLISHED JAMES E. WOLFE AGENCY 103 N. BROAD ST. — PHONE 610 INSURANCE • INVESTMENTS AUTO FIRE GENERAL •' STOCKS • BONDS • MUTUAL FUNDS WE DO ALL KINDS OF PRINTING —EXCEPT BAD CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. Meats Are Our Specialty Smoked SAUSAGE, lb. Country Style Pork ^ SAUSAGE, lb. 49C ' ' " —■ ' .ill, , , , T-Bone, Round, Sirloin STEAK, lb /SC PORK UVER, lb 29C Tasty Chuck BEEF ROAST, lb. ... ■ — -T ; t Aged New York State CHEESE, lb. . Mullets, lb :S9c Dressed Black Bass, lb. THE COUNTRY MARKET Lewis and Earl Pitts Shop by Telephone—No. 98 Satisfaction Guaranteed \ )