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Pace Six INCOME TAX SERVICES—State and federal. At home after 3:30 end ajl day Saturday. Telephone 39®-W or come to 314 N. Adair. Mrs. Tom Sease. tfc 1 , ' LOST* OR STOLEN—A billfold from his mother’s handbag, con taining valuable papers and some money. If found please return to William Herman Nabors, Clinton* Reward given to finder. Tele phone 991-J. Ip FOR SALE—New Phileo electric refrigerator, 7.2 cu. ft. Was $179.95, Special price, $149.95. Economy Auto store. Telephone 188-J. 1c METAL filing boxes, boxes in various Chronicle. ELECTROLUX Sales, and Supplies. H. L. Telephones 9351 or 604-J. JUST RECEIVED ment of Rose Bushej shipment this seaso today. Farmers F Store. Phone 1025 lock The NOTICE—No trespassing on the lands of Mrs. Nonie Caudell. Ip FOR SALE—Long Boy lawn mowers Economy Auto Stoi 188-J. FOR RENT— room apartment iel, Phone 535 CREDIT FOR FARM THE CLINTON CHRONICLE :hip- Our last See them and Seed 3c-22 fe and Lawn it low prices. Telephone 1c ssirable 4- A. O’Dan- tf The Clinton Production Credit Association, a co- 6 * operative now completely owned by over 900 farmer members in Laurens and Newberry counties, can sup ply the credit needs of any responsible farmer. I»ans are made for any and all farming purposes, to purchase equipment, livestock, fertilizer, fencing, fuel. etc., or to pay any farm expense. Make your application now, get the money when and « • as you need it and pay interest only for the actual number of days you use Jhe money. 4 . Home office. Clinton, S. C. Rex Lanford, Secretary- Treasurer. Laurens office. Court House, Mrs. Lucile M. Watts, Representative. Newberry office, Caldwell St., R. C. Hunter, Representative. WANT ADS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES— • Pint Insertion — Minimum Me ap to 25 words. $c each additional ward. • Malt!pie Insertion — 5 times fsT price af 4. • Classified Display —65c per inch, per Insert tan. • Obituaries, Cards of Thanks and Trespass Netiees • charged at 2 cents per ward. Min imam Sl.M • ALL WANT ADV8 CASH DEADLINE: t a. m. Wednesday. — OFFICE Desks, Chairs, files and office Valets. The Chronicle. FOR SALE—Baby^crib with ad justable height mattress and springs. Both sides drop. Good condition. Mrs. Robert E. Wysor, 3rd. Telephone 631-W. 1c FOR RENT—One house on Liv ingston street. Phone 533-M. Mrs. Alford. Ip 'FOR SALE — Bendix Automatic washer, was $229.95, Special price, $169.95. Economy Auto Store. Phone 188-J; 1c FOR RENT—5 room house; 6- room house; 3-room house. Hu bert J. Pitts. tf LAST CALL FOR SCUPPER- NONG VINES—It’s time to get your vines out. March is the last month for planting scuppemong vines. Please get your ord^r to us qght away. T. B. Sumerel, Rt. 1, Clinton, S. C.' Phone 2421, Lau rens Rural. 2c-15 APARTMENT and cottage for rent. Reese H. Young. tfc PIANOS in excellent condition. Tuned and ready to go. Terms easy, prices low. Tne Trading Post, Laurens, S. C. tfc Worthmore Easter Candy JELLY EGGS 2 Special! Ann Page STRAWBERRY Preserve* A & P Brand—“Our Finest Quality- GRAPE JUICE -15 New! Vacuum Packed Salted Virginia A&P PEANUTS 2 59 27 33 r 24 Oz. Hot. Big 7 Vi Oz. Can Ann Page Full Of Zest and Flavor SALAD MUSTARD 2 25 Golden Ripe BANANAS Per Lb. Florida 12c ORANGES . . 8 Lb. Bag . . 43c Ann Page—Imitation VANILLA EXTRACT 117 Good Quality 2 No. 303 ^ Cans IONA PEAS Pasteurized Processed Mel-O-Bit ~ ' CHEESE LOAF 2-89 Young Tender Spears Of All Green A&P ASPARAGUS ^ 29 Sunnvfield PURE LARD-15 c 4-59 Lb. Ctn. Jane Pariter Old Fashion PEANUT COOKIES Pkg. f^PlSuper M ar tats ATiAWvsr a •«(»*« *ta tOMetw* These Prices Effective Thru Mar. 10 . JANE PARKER WHITE 16-0*. j a 24 0*.oa I BREAD ^ A4C Loaf ZUc l FOR SALE—rFish ing supplies, in cluding boats, trailers, and Buc caneer motors. Prices are right. Economy Auto Store, Telephone 188>J. lc FOR SALE—Two combines, one Allis Chalmers, power takeoff drive. One John Deere, 12A aux iliary motor. Both in perfect working condition. Reason for selling, I am purchasing a new, self-propelled combine. Can be seen at my farm any time., Clif ford T. Smith, Kinards, S C. 3c-8 FOR SALE—Two Phileo Electric Ranges — were $199.95 Special Price $159.95. Economy Auto Store, Phone 188-J. lc GARDEN TIME is here. . All gar den seeds and plants. Seed Irish potatoes. Lespedeza seed. Farm ers Feeti and Seed Store. Phone 1025. 5c-A-5 Or. Herbert Spaugh Everyday Counselor FOR SALE — 4 cows with young calves. Also want to buy mules. H. J. Pitts. tf FOR SALE — Mahogany office desk and chairs. The Chronicle. FOR SALE—Modern, almost new, six room house on Elm street. Nice location, good neighborhood. Gas furnace, gas water heater, large lot, 100-ft. frontage, 150-ft. depth. Telephone 265 after 6‘00 p. m. lc LADIES—Is extra money needed in your home? 4 hours a day will bring you a good income with Avon Cosmetics. Hours at your convenience. Experience unneces sary. Write Mrs. Reatha Singleton, box 408, Greenwood, S. C. M8-6c FOR SALE — Used typewriter. Chronicle. Underwood FOR RENT—Three room duplex apartment on Davidson street. Gas, water, and space heaters. $8.00 per week. See Cecil P. Wil son, Clinton Cafe, Phone 1596. tf FOR SALE OR RENT—One mod ern 6-room house in Joanna with all conveniences. Phone 5171, Jo anna. 5p-M-22 LOST — Pink and blue billfold. Please return pictures and papers, keep the money. Sara Kennedy, 905 Sloan St., Clinton, S. C., Phone 981-W. 2p-15 BOSTITCH, Arrow, and Mark well staplers and staples. The Chronicle. Phone 74. Dr. Spaugh LOTS FOR SALE on Lake Green wood, half mile below Cothran’s bridge. W. E. Crisp, Phone 373, Mountville, S. C. 5p-A-5 FOR SALE—150 square bales of Lespedeza and Bermuda hay, price $25.00 per ton at my home 9 miles south of Clinton on high way 56. M. A. Cannon, Phone 4117, Joanna. 2p-15 JUST RECEIVED — Wire spiral Ironclad Composition books, 49c Chronicle Pub. Co. ^ Patience is not a modern virtue although it is highly useful and con ducive to a healthful and longer life. Occasionally an outstanding lesson in patience comes to us through the news columns and by news broadcasts. One came to us recently from Memphis, Tenn. Eleven years ago a truck driver entered a jewelry store, picked out a $395 watch, paid a deposit on it and put it into the layaway. “It’s for my wife," he said fondly. “I’ll pa<y it out by Christmas ’’ But by Christmas 1944 his pay ments totaled only $51. "Keep it for me,” he told the store proprietor. “I’ll pay it out by next Christinas.” Christmases came and went. Everytime the jeweler was about to give the purchaser up, he would show up with a few dollars. “KeKep it a Ititle longer,^ he would say. “I’ll have the money by Christmas.” The watch aged, lost its market value. A two per cent state sales tax was imposed, later rost to three per cent. The federal tax dropped from 2® per cent to 10. The account was getting complicated. The story came to light this fall and was given publicity through the newspapers and radio. Money came in from well-wishers who wanted to see this husband give his wife the present he had worked for so long. Finally, the jeweler presented him the balanced owed as his gift. At long last, after an eleven year mara thon, one Memphis husband will make his wife happy at Christmas time. What a lesson in patience and determination. I’ve always felt that ooliticians. and I use the term in its best sense, learn this lesson better than any other group of people. Abraham Lincoln was an outstanding example of it. He literally climbed into the White House on one de feat and discouragement piled up on another. I will never forget a cartoon which I have illustrating this. It shows a log cabin at the foot of a cliff, on the top of which is the White House. Reaching from one to the other is a ladder. The caption reads, “The ladder is still there.” Since Lincoln’s time there have been many who have won election to high office after repeated defeats. Perhaps they remem bered better than most of us the old adage which I learned as a child, “If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again.” Some of you who read this are discouraged in your efforts to ac complish something on which you have set your heart. The prophet Isaiah wrote, “They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint.” If you are down to the walking stage now. walk on. On it patiently with your hand in the hand of God. Remember, “The ladder is still there.”' ; NOTE—Or. Spaugh’s books, “Pathway to Contentment,” “Every day Counsel for Everyday Living,” and “Pathway to a Happy Mar riage,” may be ordered from your bookshop or from P. O. Box 6036, Charlotte 7, N. C. The price is $1.00 a copy, postpaid. A new frozen fish stick was ready for its debut. But it was discovered that, despite the high- quality fillets and other materials used in its preparation, its taste- appeal was below the level of com petitors’ products already on the market. A new formuie was whip ped up and the new fish stick be came a star in the food galaxy. In each of these particular prod uct modifications toe manufactur er was guided by an instrument of growing importance in the food field: Sensory testing panels. Ihese are groups of persons whose taste buds and (sense-of-smell) nerves are used in an attempt to make an abjective determkiertion and meas urement of flavor. It’s something no machine can do. ‘It's surprising how many prod ucts get a long way in development before someone says let’* see if it’s any good.’‘Work of sensory panels has prevented a great many products, such as spaghetti sauce mixes, instant coffees and frozen meat pies, from going out on the market. Strangely enough, im provement is usually easy to come by and often can be achieved with less expensive processing meth ods. 4 Thursday, March 8, 19j56 ^ i. Flavors, of course, are chemical compounds. But the problem of studying them in their relation to the consumer is more than one of chemistry. Flavor researchers note it also embraces psychology, physiology and philosophy. For one thing, flavor is a com bination of odor and taste. It in cludes such sensations as hot, cold and pain as well as astringency, bite, texture, softness and fluidity. The four primary tastes of sour, salt, bitter and sweet are expe rienced by the tongue which may have up to 10,000 taste buds, de pending on the individual and his age. And experts claim to have detected upwards of 10,000 differ ent ordors.” But they didn’t tell us about goat’s milk, did they? ATTEND CONVENTION . Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Shields and Mrs. David S. Cook were in At lanta March 3 through 8 for the Southeastern Photographers As sociation convention. Mrs. Shields was invited to be on a panel discussion for a recep tion room clinic. Mrs. Cook at tended an on color and retouch clinic. Comment* On Men and Thing* By SPECTATOR JUST RECEIVED—Scripto ball point pens. The Chronicle. FOR SALE—Small garden tools, shrubbery trimming tools, Ferry’s garden and flower seed. Econo my Auto Store. Phone 188-J. lc JUST RECEIVED in stationery shop, notes depicting water color prints of •Charleston, Bermuda, and Nassau. The Chronicle. NOTICE—Save up to $100. Slight ly damaged Wurlitzer, Spinet and Sohmer Spinet pianos. Write 220 N. Main St., Greenwood.‘3c-M-14 FOR SALE — Spacious 4-room house on Shands street, reason ably priced. Call 813-J. tfc C BRYAN HOLLAND Real Estate Phones 715, 23826—Laurens, S C (Over Brown’s Jewelry Store FOR RENT—Six room house, 4 acres land, $25.00 per month. H. J. Pitts. - ^ lc SEE R. A. STEER for Venetian olinds, aluminum awnings and car ports. Also blind repair*. Telephone 611-W tf FOR SALE—Lespedeza seed, se ricea, com, seed Irish potatoes, Spanish peanuts, and all farm seed. H. J. Pitts. tf FOR SALE—Tract of land, with dwelling house and other im provements, containing approxi mately 24 acres, situate on east side of S. C. Highway 66, about 1-2 mile northeast of Bonds Cross Road in Laurens County. See or call Tench P. Owens, Attorney, 203 West Pitts Street, Clinton, Telephone 69 tfc SEE OUR new Shipment of sta tionery in Mon tag’s loveliest styles. The Chronicle. Phone 74. FOR RENT—4-room house with all conveniences. R. A. Steer, Phone 611-W. IP CLINTON Livestock Yard BIG SALE EACH TUESDAY BUYERS FROM SEVERAL DIFFERENT STATES Total number of livestock offer- ed—617. Trend—Steady. Good butcher steers—$16 to $19; fair to medium steers $13 to $15.50; choice butcher heifers $17 to $19; good butcher heifers $15 to $16.50; fair to medium butcher heifers $13 to $15; choice butcher bulls $15 to $16; good butcher bulls $12 to S13.75; fair to medium butcher bulls $10 to $12; choice veal calves $24 to $27.50; good veal calves $20 to $23.50; fair to medium veal calves $$16 to $19.50; utility and commercial cows $11-$13.50; can- ner and cutter cows $850 to $10.76; stocker steers and heifers $16 to $19; dairy cows $150 down; top hogs $11.75; sows $6.50 to $10. I’ve often wondered about cheese made from goat’s milk: does the goat’s milk necessarily impart a malodoiGus flavor to the cheese? Possibly not, since people who drink goat’s milk do not acquire the pronounced and well known flavor of the goats. Of course there are goats and goats, from the well- I bred goats to the alley goats, i I enjoyed goat meat—(baked goat —in Peru. That tasty dish was of just goat, old time “Nannys”; whereas I did not enjoy a baked goat of a very respectable rear ing and distinguished ancestry. My attention has been called to a deep research into flavors by some eminent scientists. “Food processors are striving to get better oomtroi of the three lit tle words which are at the base of their business: ‘It tastes good’ Flavor research’ is the way the problem is being tackled by such big concerns. Aid is coming from such an unexpected source as the Army Quartermaster Corps. Pri vate research concerns also are hard at work on such investiga tions, which involve cost-cutting as well as flavor improvement. So are smaller concerns among the 37,000 or so companies in the $68 billion a year food processing in dustry. Typical repent accomplishments- A chili sauce jjpoducer succeeded ’ in' Isolating the ingredient that gave his product its ‘snappy flav or’ and customer-appeal. He then substituted a different less-expen sive tangy maderial, without de tracting from the sauce’s charac teristic taste or quality, and was able to make a considerable sav- ing. ^ ^ # A new margarine was about to be launched when its manufactur er found that although it seemed to have all the taste attributes of butter it also had one flavor off- note. He managed to pinpoint this offensive flavor and remove it from toe product before the mar garine appeared in the stores. For Sale! 6 room brick house close in. Deep lot, 1 Vi baths, hard wood floors, steam heat. In sulated and weather strip ped. CecUP. Wilson Phone 1596 tf March Wind Specials! You come In like a LION; we’ll come out like a LAMB and give you a real deal on one of these fine can: 1954 Chevrolet, 210, tudor, has Bel Aire trim, nice. 1953 Chrysler, Windsor, lo cal, one owner, a real buy. 1953 Plymouth, 4 door, light blue, extra clean. 1953 Buick Special, local car, right all around. 1949 Dodge, plenty of life in the old gal yet. 1948 Ford, fishing ear. 1939 Chevrolet, 1$ runs when we run. Plaxico Motor* (Inc.) Chrysler-Plymooth Clinton, 8. C. WANTED Top Groceryman to manage Gro cery Department in old established % business. State age, education, ex perience and place of last employ ment. Write: Box A Care Chronicle NOTICE! Tractor Plowing -\ Landscaping — Top Soil Fill-In Dirt — Dump Tnick Service OX SEED CLEANERS — Since 1945 — PHONE 184-J WHEN YOU THINK OF FOOD!! THINK OF JOE WE GIVE SOUTHERN , STAMPS WHAT A SPECIAL!!! Sun Crest - Big ORANGE DRINKS 6 Bottle Carton 25c CAMPBELL’S TOMATO SOUP t ♦ Can 10c LOOK! LOOK! BALLARD and PILLSBURY 10 Cans BISCUITS 99c AUNT JEMIMA V ' CORN MEAL 1 10 Lb. Bag 49c ARGO SLICED—In Light Syrup PEACHES Big 214 Can 27c THAT WONDERFUL SECOND CUP 1 Lb. Bag COFFEE 69c - Produce Specials - GOLDEN Rlf]^ Pound BANANAS 9c LARGE STALK CELERY 2 for 15c FLORIDA Each GRAPEFRUIT 5c FRESH GROUND 3 lb*. 85c FRESH PORK LIVER lb. 19c SUCED BACON SQUARES 1 Lb. Tray Pack 25c LOOK! LOOK! FRESH MULLET FISH Pound 19c HoiamTs TOPPER STORE MUSGROVE STREET Food Center CLINTON. S. C.