The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, December 27, 1956, Image 6

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. . -- . Paire Sfx fX THE CLINTON CHRONICLE Thursday, December 27, 1956 WANT ADS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES— • First Insertion — Minimum 50c op to 25 words. 2c each additional word. • Multiple Insertion — 5 times for price ol 4. • Classified Display —*■ 65c per Inch, per Insertion. • Obituaries. Cards of Thanks and Trespass Notices charged at 2 cents per word. Minimum SI.00 ) J — • ALL WANT AD VS CASH OFADLlNt l a. m. Wednesday. FOR SALE PIANOS in excellent condition. Tuned and ready to go. "Terms easy, prices low The Trading Post. ,Laui/ens. S C tfc ROSES—itOSES Just received now shipment of Texas roses. Top quality bushes and plenty varie-1 ties U) choose from. Farmers Feed & Seed Phone 1925. 27-5tc FOR SAIJ?—1 saddle horse. 1 pony horse. H. J Pitts. tf . — • i SPECIAL^ —Aluminum trivets, as | light "as a feather, for use in kitch en, or, coffee table or as decora. Lions. Selection of colors and de signs. Fine for Christmas gifts or! bridge prizes Only 79c each eff 6| for S-4 24 Farmers F'eo.i & Seed' Store Phone 1D25 27-5tc' tXJR RENT—6-room house with 15 acres of good-land H J. Pitts.- tf FOR RENT One good 4-roorr housed wired for electric stove. Between Clinton and Joanna. Citi zens Loan a fid Finance Co., KM N. Br6ad St. tf FOR RENT—One 4-room house, two 3-room houses; Pitts Imple ment Co. building; 2 warehouses on railroad H. J. Pitts. tf NOTICE TRACTORS AND PARTS wholesale for CAT. AC. INT. Write for •FREE. glANT LIST CATALOG General Corp 555 Norlhside Atlania, Ga. Ip FOR RENT FOR J! FA T Four room house with modern conveniences, with fully mechanized truck farm equipped for irrigation to intelli gent and responsible couple with out children and not over 46 years old' Farming-experience prefer red Good proposition to ac ceptable couple Gredna • Farm. Joanna. SC * 2cJ-3 WRESTLING TWO BIG TAG TEAM MATCHES FEATURE MATCH GEO. BECKER & PETE MANAGOFF —versus— < TINY MILLS & All MILLS 2 out of ,‘I falls, 60 min. time limit ALSO A LI BEY & JIM ALSTERIA —versus— TOM BRADLEY & HERB LARSON 2 out of 3 falls, 60 min v time limit SATURDAY DECEMBER 29 — 8 P. M. MEMORIAL A S P A HT A N’ 8 UR ’SSj ML for good ILiwIelgh busi ness now available in S. W. Laur ens county. I will help you get started R P Drummond! .R. F. D. 3. Woodruff, S C , or write Raw- .letgh’s. Dept SCL-81-514, Rich- l mond. Va " • 4a-27 R A STEER for Venetian afinds, aluminum awnings and car ports. Also blind repairs Telephone 611-W tf WARNING Start the New Year right by pre paring for a happy and success- j ful future. Jobs waiting $50 to ; $150 a week. You can work your | way through our schoql. GI ap proved. Write: Charlotte Beauty School Charlotte. N. C. 3p-D-27 ELECTROLUX Sales. Service, and Supplies H L. Baldwin, Telephones 9351 or 604-J. tfc from Clinton off Spartanburg highway, cheap. Telephone 514r W. - . tf FOR SALE Real Estate Six room home with two baths, good location in the city. Modern three bedroom home, located in the southern section of town. Large five-room home on nice lot in good residential section, close in. , ■ - t - Seven room house .on 15-acre tract three miles frdim Clinton. Dwelling with seven acre tract on Joanna-Whitmire .highway. 200 acre farm on-highway near Clinton; has dwelling with bath. 65 acres on highway out from Clinton: no buildings; price $2,- 500.00 Lots on Airport Road sqitable for business or colored residences. If you are interested in buying or selling real estate see me. C B. HOLLAND Laurens 1c those moved into modified-certi- fied brucellosis-free area. They By C. B. CANNON, County Agent Farm Account Records ! into any state with comparative It will not be many weeks*unti’. 'ease. Cattle frein-brucellosis-free people of all walks of life, \vho 'herds and areas require only an meet certain requirements, will 'official certificate. And officially file their income tax reports.^’ j vaccinated animals under 30 Farmers are making a short m ° nths can 1)0 with crop this year and are 'entitledjo- ^ ^ ^ mfU ; a ' e ' * XC ^ pt certain deductions from income tak, provided they can produce: . , information to justifv such dedust have, in addition, a permit dueUons Nothmg :s ' more valu- j the livestock sanitary offi- oble for such proof than farm ac- i cia l s of the state of elestination. count records of farm operation Regulations also govern the A rather large number of farm movement of official vaccinates people secured their fa'rm account ; °' er months old, non-vaccin- record book free from the county ates over 8 months old, and beef agent's office last January for use . hulls and females - shipped for during the year Such* records grazing only. The new regulation are important for social security. deals with cleaning and dis and farmer will neekl all the as-; infecting vehicles and the mark- sistance they can get to make soc-: in g records to indicate that re- lal security benefits ... great as' actors are in shipment, possible i Dr ‘ Cartor suggests that inter- A new year is almost here, and! ested persons obtain further de- it is time’to begin that new rgc : tails or copies'of the regulations crd. Any farmer wishing to se- from his office or from the Ani. cure a farm account record book nial Disease Eradication Branch, free from the county agent’s of - ‘Agricultural Research Service, U. fice may call or write for same. S. Department of Agriculture, Guess work is fine if guesses are | Washington, D. C. tr- * tel. Vern Cutler, of Argent Lum ber Co., Hardeeville, is chairman of the group and presided at the meeting. . -jl ’ The committee’s action brought the number of Tree Farms in South Carolina to 206. The slate’s total acreage is now 1,389,670. A Tree Farm is a privately- owned tax-paying woodland ded icated by the owner to repeated forest crops. Protection from for- est fires is one of the qualifica tions a tree farmer must meet before certification. The committee certified a to tal of 77,842 acres at the h^eeting, I while subtracting 7,322 acrer^rs a j result^of a sale by one tree farm- ! er. - Hiutm Js Bom by c * ^ irGl CUNT BONNER Qlorious Things Of Thee ■ Are Spoken The favorite hymn of a military genius the war changed Its course when h# HELP WANTED WANTfcD — Chef, waiters and waitresses at Roddy’s Restaurant, now under new management. Ap ply in person Mrs. K Morelli. 1c WOMAN with car to call regularly each month on established Studio .Girl.:..Cosmetic clients .in and around Clinton making necessary 1 deliveries, etc. 3 to 4 hours per day. Route will pay up to $3.50‘ hour. Write Studio Girt Cos- ! metics, Dept 39.3H, Glendale. I Calif. . 2p-D27 Housekeepers Maids, Cooks, need ed. $125.00 to $180.00. New York City Area. Write me yoyr age, then pack your clothes. P. O. Box, Manhassett, New York. 4P-J10 } REAL ESTATE FOR SALE—7-foqm house, 8 ac-. |ueo Tmore or less) land T'-s miles right, provided the other person wlil accept the statement by mquth as sufficient proof. Lamb Pool Sale Haley M. Jamison, Clemson Col lege extension sheep specialist, has notified the County Agent’s office that J. C. Bennett, agricul tural agent, Seaboard Air Line Railroad company, has arranged Comments (contihuad from page 2) be answered only by deciding in each case whether the immediate case is deserving of aid then they would have to be answered In the affirmative. i But if we do that, we have left unanswered the greater question, how and when do we stop? And until we are willing to tackle that question, we will have no way of stopping. The United- States, out of its wealth and generosity has been subsidizing the nations of West ern Europe as long as the bulk of the U. S. population can re member. In the 1920’s and 1930’s there was the question of the ‘war debt’ from World War I In the early 1940’s there was Lend- Lease. In the late 1940’s there was th$ Marshall Plan, how grown into a permanent world wide aid program.- So the 75 per cent of our popu lation under forty cannot remem ber a time when we were not res cuing the Old World. Aid to Eu rope has survived the interna tionalist era of Wilson, the isola tionist era of Harding and Cool- idge, the one-world era of Roose- vent and Truman, and has de volved. unsolved, upon the shoul ders of President Eisenhower. What is the result, thus far, of all this aid 0 wm killed at Chancellonville . . . shot in th# night by mistake by his own men. They made fun of him. They named four of his cannon •'Matthew." “Mark. ,, “Luke" and "John" because, they said, they spoke the gospeL But they would have charged)the gates of hell to the last'man If Old Jack had given the order. The general couldn’t sing very well. The simplest tunes gave him trouble. But there was one hymn he could sing better than the rest. It was his favorite. It was written back in 1779 The general was Just 37 years old but his men tortans called him “Old Jack." He was 6 feet tall and of regular build. His boots were never polished and he wore an old slouch hat and a faded uniform with half the buttons gone. N On the battlefield he would have asked no quarter of the devil himself. But when he tried to lead a praygr in church he got so scared his knees buckled and he had to sit down. But he was forever praying. He prayed so much that his men said, “When Old Jack aint a-fightin’ he’s a-prayin’.” ■«. — — — • And when he wasn’t fighting and praying he by English Preacher John Newton, the converted was singing hymns. Even in battle, with bullets slave-ship captain who wrote "Amazing Grace, ' whizzing around him, he wouldn’t drink water how sweet the sound. That saved a wretch like from his canteen without first offering up • me” and 287 other hymns for his congregations, prayer of thanks. He wouldn’t read or write • The general marched his Army of the Shenan- letter on Sunday. At the Virginia Military In- doah 52 miles that day in 1862. When night came stitute at Lexington, where he taught natural they bivouacked in the valley and each man science and military tactics, he held prayer meet* fell in his tracks with dread that he might be ings in his classrooms. He organized a Negro awakened for watch detail. Baptist Sunday School and paid the bills for When the cold gray of dawn broke tike men its upkeep. awoke one by one to a strange sound on The hilL The. general’s religion bordered fanaticism. He There sat the general where he had watched never took credit for any of his victories. He over them all night With his old slouch hat In just reported. “God blessed our arms with vitfe^hlg hands. Stonewall Jackson was singing as best tory.” And his victories were so many that hi* tf Could, his favorite .hymn. Glorious things ot thee ore spokery Zion, city of our God; He, whose word connot be brokefy Formed thee for His own abodef On the Rock of Ages founded. What can shake (thy sure repos*? With salvation's walls surrounded. Thou moy'st sn/ile ot oil thy. fotfc See, the streams oPIiving waters. Springing from eternal love,. . Weil supply thy sons ond daughter*, And oil fear of wont remove: Who con faint, while such a river Ever flows their thirst to assuage? Croce which, like the Lord, the Giver, Never fails from age to age. p Hound each habitation hov'ring. See the cloud ond fire appear For a Igory and a cov'ring. Showing that the Lord is near! Glorious things ot thee ore spoken, Zion, city of our Cod; . He v ; o-e word conn t be broken. For.. :j S . fjr f : s o.v.n oboe a. One clear thing is that our bil lions have not accomplished what was intended. Economically all those billions have done little more than re lieve recurring symptoms so that no one had to take Jt>iR er medi cine. The British have not had to curtail their welfare spending, lions have not even bought us because American taxpayers ) strong allies, made made that economy unnec- The case for more aid now may essary. The French have not tax- be persuasive. But so will it be ed themselves to shore up their 1 on the next occasion. And so will shaky finances because the U. S. it be without ending until we was there to relieve the ‘dollar decide and tell the world where shortage.’ Militarily, our bil- we will stop.” New Bruceollosis Control Regulaioins Cattle producers or "buyers will be confronted with a new brucel losis control effective January l.jf°r a Lamb pool to be held Thurs- Interstate movement qf all cat-.day, January 10, between 8:00 a. tie except steers, sprayed heif- lm - an d 10:00 a. m. The pool will ers. and calves under 8 mbnths|be held at the Seaboard stock old comes under federal control r Pens across the tracks from th6 starting January 1. ot curb tli' Henderson Roller Mills in Mon spread of brucellosis (Bang's 4K- roe, N. C: sease). the U. S Department ot Any 'sheep producer having Agriculture recently announced j lambs for sale may dispose his .Dr,—R. W, ' Carter L director, I surplus animals in this pool. state-fedefal livestock disease , eradication ..program, explains that the new rulds^are aimed pri marily at strengthening and uni fying control of interstate move ment of cattle relatives to brucel losis—paricularly to counties and states already designated modi fied certified brucellosis free un der the accelerated federal-state Good Used Cars 1950 Ford 2-Door Radio & heater. Two speak ers, wsw tires, big hubs, skirts, lowering blocks. A real gone boat! ^bnly $118 down. 1949 Chev. 2-Dr. A one-owner car. Has big heater. 53,000 honest miles. Extra clean inside and out. Ready for onlv $76 down. Landowners Praised For Forestry Work » ^ Recognition of good work in forest management has been ac- cooprative brucellosis eradication | corded more South Carolina land- owners by the state Tree Farm Committee as it certified six properties as Tree Farms at a re cent meeting. in addition, supplemental acre age for-two existing Tree Farms was certified by the committee, which met at the Columbia Ho- 1947 Chevrolet 2-Door Radio and heater. Black. She eats and drinks, hut she don’t smoke or chew! $35 down. State Motor Co, Joanna - Whitmire Highway JOANNA, S. C. “We Will Not Be ( ndersold — Out Traded or Out Talked” program Violation of the regu-j lation is a federal offense. Dr. Carter calls attention in brief form to some of the rules which will govern, interstate movement of cattle. A regulation already in force will still apply after January 1 to reactors to the brucellosis test. Eartagged and branded, they may move under official certificate to slaughter plants under federal in spection or specifically approved by the department, or to an ap proved public stockyard for sale to such slaughtering plants Under the new regulations cat tle not known to have brucellosis also'can be shipped to such plants for immediate slaughter or to a public stockyard or one approved by the department. They must be accompanied by a ■waybill or sim ilar document or certificate sign ed by the owner or shipper. > Two classes of cattle can move Good Used Cars State Motor Co. Joanna-Whitmire Hwy. JOANNA, S. C. “We Will Not Be Undersold — Out Traded or Out Talked” GREATLY REDUCED ** One Lot. „ NICE STATIONERY Al Few BOOK SATSHELS and SCHOOL BINDERS I o Chronicle Publishing Co. Stationery Dept. IT'S TIME TO CHECK YOUR PRINTINC NEEDS * * About this time of the year we-have many calls for rush printing orders. People call us and say they have just run out of this or that and need “state ments by in the morning at Uje latest.” a • > Of course we are glad to help them over these tight spots ... but we would like to point out that we can save customers many dollars an4 do a bet ter job of printing if we get your orders well in advance. This also insures your having the forms and statements you need for your business when you need them. We suggest you— CHECK YOUR JOB PRINTING NEEDS THIS WEEK And let us have your order. In that way you'll be sure of having your printing when you need it. We appreciate your business and are always anxious to serve you better. Your doing this in the next few days can help us do a better job. Won’t you (or have your employees) check your needs and give us your order now? . • . JOB PRINTING DEPT. ’ CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. Job Printing Of AH Kinds Phone 74 Clinton, S. C. Your Local Paper is '. ’ 1 \ Way Out in Front WHEN IT COMES TO GIVING YOU THE MOST FOR YOUR AD VERTISING MONEY-THAT’S US! SMART SHOPPERS MAKE IT THEIR THRIFTY RULE TO MARKET BY “T H E CHRONICLE” ADS. DOLLAR FOR DOLLAR YOU GET GREATER VALUE IN YOUR WEEKLY NEWSPAPER IN TERMS OF: ^CIRCULATION ♦COVERAGE ♦READERSHIP ♦FLEXIBILITY ♦IMPACT " “ ♦SALES J ■ _ . The Clinton Chronicle