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) ■ ^ Page Six THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Thursday, May 14, 1935 , < * t 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. Bell Street School Hblding Closing Exercises, Programs During the campaign the Hepub-1 budget year will show a deficit of 9 licans made it a main issue, oon-! to n« billion dollars the Bell LETS TALK TURKEY—We are in terested in contacting responsible parties interested in raising turkeys. Contact us now. Farmers Feed & Seed Store. Phone 1025. 1c NOTICE—Draying in the city limits of Clinton. Phone 175-J or 500-1*. Press Chaney, 706 Elizabeth St. 14-3p FLOOR SANDERS—Rent our Sand ers, edgers and polishers. We have all the necessary material to make your floors beautiful. Reasonable rates. Cox Home & Auto Supply. Phone 12. tfc WILL PAY CASH for a used piano FOUND—Key The junior class presented annual oratorical contest at Street school recently. Students participating were those maintain ing an average of 85 and above from the 9th through the 11th grades. First prize was won by Eliza Mae Davis. Ann)* Ruth Little ■won second prize and honorable mention was given to George ring with nine keys. Leake. Other speakers were Jac Also pair, qX glasses, on Woodrow St. Owners ‘may get some at Hays hospital by identifying articles and* paying for this ad. 1c quelyn Henry, Evelyn Young, John Henry Payne and Clara Sanders. A gala May Day festival was WE NOW have baby and started ^ eld Bf U Street school on May Wow tanrf the crowning- of the fifth grade contestant, little Miss Mary as queen, and Master James Richey as king, highlight- demning what Uhey called the Tru ro a n administration’s wasteful spending. They promised economy if they got in and talked of balancing the budget. And they have tried hard, during their almost four months in office, to find ways of reducing government expenses to the point where they did not exceed government income, thus achieving the budget balance. • The day jrfter Humphrey’s state- menVSen. Taft Of Ohio, the Repub lican Senate leader, said he was ‘very much disappointed’ with the spend ing outlook for fiscal 1954, startisg July I. ^ He predicted Eisenhower's first unless changes are made.” But if Humphrey was /‘distressed” and Taft “disappointed” by the out look for fiscal 1954, at least one Re publican was made hopping mad by Humphrey’s quoted views. This was Rep. Daniel A. Reed, New York Republican and' chairman of the House Ways and Means Com mittee, which handles the problems of boosting and cutting taxes. For months Reed has been anxious to cut taxes but the Eisenhower ad ministration tried to hpld him back until it had a chance to\see how much spending it could tutS^ ~ knew that a tag cut—meaning — before to lAatch less government revenue spending could be reduced income, would leave the country not only with an unbalanced bud-getj but perhaps an even bigger deficit. “I am amazed,” said Reed, “to see the white flag run v up downtown. , They seem to be surrendering to 'the V spenders. They'll never balance the budget until they remove the shack les from business by reducing taxes.” And then yesterday Secretary Humphrey, so gloomy last Friday suddenly became optimistic althougn nothing has happened publicly to ac count for the change in mood. He told reporters the government hopes to get out of red-ink spending by the middle of 1954. chicks (as hatched and cockerels). Will have plenty all pullets, New i w r Hampshire reds, after Monday, May 1 es e > - 4. All top grade chicks. Burton’s Hatchery, Whitmire, S. C. 7-2p NEWLY ORGANIZED SCABBARD AND BLADE CHAPTER AT P. C. HAY baling wire, binder twine and baler twine. Water keys. Blakely- Burton Hardware. Phone 188. lo’from each class. ing the activities of the day. His and Her majesty marched trium phantly to the throne followed by a court of thirty; two members The royalty was HOUSE with store room and 20 acres' then entertained by dances, races,. land for sale, on Ora-Clinton road. in good condition at at a good price. 1 Near church ancTschool. Near Good Write ■ Piano,” care The Chronicle. 1c the wrapping of the Maypole, and| a softball game. FOR RENT — Furnished apartments at Crescent Beach, S. C. For infor mat.on, cal! Mrs. Gus young, 181. " — 21-5c win's dairy. Price $6,000. See T. B. I Sumerel, Laurens Rt. 1. Ip SADDLE and two bridles for sale, also farm trailer with high body. | T B.. Sumerel, Laurens Rt. 1. Ip j FOR SALE WITH THE SICK Friends of Mrs. Clyde McCrary Rabbits, frying size. 1 win be 8 Iad to know she has ^ re - ■vfw \iriRii F HOMFS as little as Also excellent quality breeding stock | turned home after a se\eral days NEH MOBILE HOM « Zealand whites Reasonable. at Hays hospital. We trade for anything w Chisholm, Rt, 3. Ip; Phil Holland, son of Mr. and xT Z 7~~ f vTT Mrs. Jack Holland, underwent a NOTICE — Nursery school for chil- „ ... ... ... •r , . . , . ., .; tonsileetomy this week at Hays efren of busy or working mothers. I , J 1 hospital. one-fourth down, 5% years to pay. of value: furniture,.cars, trailers, etc. Mobi 16 Homes, Inc., Greenville Hwy. tfc No. 25, Greenwood. will keep your child all day. Chil- ^vY P< .. . .... . . . i dren will enjoy story time, games . , * , . ! E HAVE new : 1 nar.d'v5>TC-aaa9^ ^so omdoo.’ kn ^ n ^ ’“, S - i ls0 .°i vxert-ise. Noon-day lunch atrved. 1 »*' ** /'ll? " h chicks—New Hampshire reds. Barred' ‘ ' * ^ ,. „ . , . _ . . „„ .. .. ^ i Children 2 to 6 years old. Reasonable Rocks and White Rocks. Farmers j Feed & Seed Store. Phone 1025. , | prices. Phone 920 Friends of Mrs. George W. Bailey’ improv-} here she; I has been a patient the past week and expects to return home the FOR SALE White dinner j at '^ e f* PIANOS in excellent condition size 42 long, worn only twice. Price ‘ reasonable. See Phone 296-J. Johnny Adair, or 1c. FOR RENT — Nice 8-room 2-story residence on Cedar street. Three baths. Central heat. Available now. Mrs. George R. Blalock. Phone 110 or 31. le ^ .FOR RENT—Small first floor apart ment. Unfurnished or partly fur nished. Private entrance and bath. Mrs. E. T. Woodruff, 514 W. Main St. Phqne STl-W. — Ttr TOR SALE — Duplex apartments, Caroline Stl, very nice rental invest ment. $4,500. Lots on Prather Circle, - SoOO and $600 -eaeh-.~M. - H. - Wwiter; Real Estate, Laurens. Phone 23851. tfc See Mrs.' Leroy Sanders, or , „ . , c I latter part of the week. Mrs. Homer Calvert is improving at the Blalock clinic where she un- Tuned and ready to go. Terms easy, > derwent an operation, prices low. The Trading Post, Lau-| Little Florence Ann Oxley, rens, & C. tfc* daughter of Mr. and - Mrs. TrecTOx- KEEN KUTTER hand mowers andi^y, 0 * Laurens, underwent a ton- Reo gasoline and electric power' silectomy this week at Hays hos- mowers. Each a great name in lawn j pdal. equipment. Blakely-Burton Hard- i Friends of Mrs. W. '§• Porter will ware. Phone 188. le !be t0 k now she was able to ———— —, ———~ return home after a several days STERLING by Towle, Kirk, Reed & at Hays hospital. ?o a J t ? n c n o a i 1 1 Mr ! , * Dlll ^ d ,u B0l | n J d ' Mrs- C. E. Dunaway underwent 736-J. 608 Calvert Ave. Wilbur Rid- an O p era ti 0 n yesterday at Hays hos- dle. Jeweler, Laurens, S. C. t - fc i pital Gene Ray Adair, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Adair, of Joanna, un derwent an appendectomy Tuesday SOY BEANS, Milo, Sweet Sudan, Hegari, etc., are all pretty scarce this year. Lot us know your needs taday. We have just a few bushels of yellow hybrid seed corn left. Farmers Feed & Seed Store. Phone 1025. 1c FOR SALE—Good used sewing ma chine, 4-piece blonde bedroom suite, green studio couch, odd dresser and a Fngidaire refrigerator. All in good condition, priced right to sell. See or call Perry M. Moore, Phone 44-J or 827. 1c tfcj, GOODRICH Koroseal plastic lawnj hose must be good. Also rubber hose. Blakely-Burton Hardware. Phone 188. v With the exception of Tommy Llde, second from left on top row, who is now enrolled at a medical college, these twelve senior ROTC cadets constitute the newly-organized Scabbard and Blade chapter at Presbyterian college. They are, bottom row, left to right: Richard Childers, Richard Bass, Joe Kirven, Charlie Woodson and Tommy Jordan; middle row; Tommy Sheriff, Mike ShoLr, Jim Robinson and Ken Thompson; top row: Henry Hay, Llde, John Covin, and A. B. Plexico. 1c ■ at Hays hospital. C. BRYAN HOLLAND Real Estate Phones 715, 23826 — Laurens, S. C. (Over Brown’s Jewelry Store) Mr. and Mrs. Grady * Smith of ; Chester, and Terry Medlock of this j city, who were injured in an auto- ! mobile accident, are patients at the Blalock clinic. FOR SALE — Used Magic Chef gas' Brenda Medlin. daughter of Mrs. range, automatic lighting. Good as; Maud Medlin, underwent a tonsil- new. See it at Rsjjdwin Appliance i ectomy this week at Hays hospital. Co. or call 82. Ipj Patients at Hays hospital include Mrs. Roy Trajnmell, Mrs. FOR SALE — Lawn mower in good condition, price $5.00. Call 509. Mar vin DeYoung. ELECTROLUX Sales, Service and ^ xnunmcu, Minnie Supplies. H. L. Baldwin, Telephone „ t 4 . ,. . . 504 r t * Patients at the Blalock clinic in- — 'elude Mr?. Fayte Fuller, Mrs. Res- "THE STATE” —- rgyg'^'Mae Hickman and Mrs. Tom Subscription or complaint j Shetley. Phone 626-R. Small house} PEAS—Milo, hegari, sudan grass, soy beans,, orange cane molasses cane, lesepdeza, serecia seed. H. J. Pitts. < r " tfc — — f . »■ - .... FOR SALE—5-room house on Bla lock Drive in Joanna, just being completed. R. L. Littleton, 401 Sims St., Joanna. Phone 5091. 28-3p FOR RENT — Joanna Beauty Shop, completely equipped, 4 booths, air- conditioned. See M. C. Duncan, Jo anna Stores. 28-5c Call Edd Wells WANTED TO RENT in good neighborhood. Reply by let ter to “Y,” care The Chronicle. Ip FOR RENT—Three-room downstairs apartment. 405 Musgrove St. Phone 269-R. ' Jc WANTED TO BUY—House or farm with home. Marvin Turner, Box 7, Joanna. 1c FOR SALE — 5-room house at 303 Shands St., freshly painted inside. Pay reasonable down payment and assume loan. Spoon’s Liquor Store, Musgrove St. 14-3p Timmerman Motor Co. Building Own Home FOR SALE—Frigldaire electric table top water heater, also Coleman su per-circulator oil heater, 55,000 BTU, Both in excellent condition. Priced reasonable. Mrs. Fuller Reese, Cedar St., Phone 344-J. 21-2c FOR SALE —New Emerson electric sewing machines. Any. style — port able, cabinet or console. A good ma chine made by established, reliable manufacturer. Inexpensive — $99.50 up. Cash price or terms arranged. Moore’s Cloth Shop, or see Perry M. Moore, .6 National Bank Bldg. 1c USED CARS USED CAR SPECIALS^ 3 D M • 3 1951 Ford 2-door Cuotom, black, radio, heater. Extra clean. 1950 Ford 2-door Custom, blue, radio, heater, overdrive, and white sidewall tires. (This is a Northern creampuff). 1949 Ford 4-door Custom, light C green, radio, heater. (North en» car). q 1949 Plymouth 4-door, bin ready to go. Priced to sell. j§ 1949 Chevrolet Fleetline, bine, radio, heater. Extra clean. 1948 Chevrolet V4 ton Del. Cab Pickup. Guaranteed A-l me chanical condition. Several Good Pre-War Cars To Fit Any Pocketboek. PLaxico Motors Clinton, S. C. USED CARS FOR SALE — 10 good mules. H. J. Pitts. tfc Timmerman Motor company of this city, distributors for Oldsmobile | automobiles in this county, broke ground this week for the erection of a ne.w building on East Carolina avenbe adjoining the property of J. W. Finnqy, Sr. The building, Mr. Timmerman states, will be ready for occupanoy in about three months, and w’ll be modern in every detail. It will pro vide large garage and parking space department with roomy show rooms in the front for attractive display of new cars. The firm will move from their present location on Gary street when their building is completed. bU JOHN R. HOLLAND Self-Service Food Store MUSGROVE ST. “Your Topper Store’ Fresh Produce — Quality Meats Phone 130-J ROASTS X FOR SALE 1952 Chevrolet Ai-ton pickup with less than 4,000 miles. » 1952 Farmall M tractor, brand new. 1949 Case 5-ft. combine. 1953 Golden Jubilee Ford tractor with equipment. These and many other good buys priced to sell LAURENS TRACTOR AND IMPLEMENT CO. Laurens, S. C. Phone 3036 Fill-in Dirt. Top Soil Yard Gardening and Land scaping. Power Mowers and Hand Mowers Sharpened. COX SEED CLEANERS 609 E. Florida St. Phone 184-J tf IF YOU DON’T READ ' THE CHRONICLE YOU DON’T GET THE NEWS Competent Chiropractic Health Care THE It c. BOLEN CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC Edward Anns Apartment Bldg. S. C. Phone 1-6210 Balanced National Budget Big Topic Washington. — Now you see it, now you don’t: the balanced budget. At the moment there’s a little con fusion. No one has contributed to it more than Secretary of the Treasury Humphrey. Around Washington Humphrey is credited with being one of the smart est and smoothest members of Pres ident Eisenhower’s cabinet. Last Friday he went before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Later the committee chairman, Sen. Wiley, Wisconsin Republican, told newsmen Humphrey had * in formed the committee: “Although I am distressed that we cannot balance the budget this year (fiscal 1954), I do not Relieve it should be balanced. The risks that would involve our security would simply be too great.” And Wiley quoted Humphrey fur ther: ’ ’ • 5. wtM x,: “There is no prospect at all for anything but an increase in the na tional debt at the present moment. We have not been able to make the reductions I personally hoped to make” and “the legal limit on the size of the national debt may have to be increased.” The reason for Humphrey’s “dis tress” in giving such views was ob vious enough: The entire Eisenhow er administration is self-conscious about the problem of balancing the budget, which might .mean .a cut for everyone. Sterling SALT 1 lb. 10 oz. — pkg. 3 for 23c SAUSAGE IZ lb. 35c Large Sunkist LEMONS doz. 29c Texize BLEACH • -.a • .( y i : qt 10c In Cello CARROTS .. .-.T. t pk. 10c Shortening 3 lb. ct. 63c No. 3 . , ■ CELERY - , t*. < bunch 10c CTAD/^IJ Cho-Chem O I AiXCn Liquid qt 10c Austex <■ BEEF STEW - 15 oz. can 31c POTATOES gsU 5 1 # • ' lbs. 19c Carolina Longr&in RICE . 2 lb. box 39c North Carolina COUNTRY CURED HAMS le ■ — V .. ■*,.y..J£