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& X. W-D U.S. GOVT INSPECTED E AT WHOLE CUT UP ^Pd sto5 iSKS W D FEVER N U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED FRYER PARTS PULLEY BONE CUT BREAST 59 ! »39* »23* DRUMSTICKS. > 39* W 0 FRYER BACKS 10* THIGHS W D FRYER WIHGS. w d fryer •W D FRYER SELECTO LIVERS TASTE O’ SEA lb »< SLICED BOLOGNA.. . W-D “HANDI-PACK”... MADE UNDER CONTINUOUS U.S. GOV’T. INSPECTION GROUND BEEF.. 3 VIRGINIA BRAND SLICED RED PERCH FILLETS . 39c TASTE O’ SEA FLOUNDER FILLETS , 49c 1.49 SUPERBRAND COTTAGE CHEESE Z 59c Palmetto Farm Liver Pudding or (25 Free Stamps per pkg.) LIVER MUSH . . . ^ 29c k 1-LB. PKG. ASTOR VEGETABLE—Limit 1 With $5 Order SHORTENINC a - lb. < CAN THRIFTY-MA1D CREAM OR WHOiE KERNEL GOLDEN W-D BRAND U.S. CHOICE BONELESS TOP ROUND STEAK or ROAST PINKY PIG WHOLE HOG . . 50 Free Stampi Sticker on Each Pkc SAUSAGE . . . = .l' CORN 2 ORANGE, GRAPE OR ORANQE-PtNEAP PLE SHORTENING SHOWDRIFT ic - GERBER MEAT & VEGETABLES Jars ALUMINUM FOIL ALCOA 25-Ft. Roll 303 CANS -C . 4 46-OZ. CANS 100 W-D BRAND U.S. CHOICE BONELESS TOP SIRLOIN STEAK lb. (OREENl I stamps] IBN STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE Of DAM or More Order FREI AT YOUR CLINTON WINN-DIXIE STORE ' Void After January 6 , unit one coupon * PM ADULT CUITOMER ASTOR—Limit 1 with S5 or more order COFFEE. :.“49t Dixie Crystal or Domino—L imit 1 with S5 or more order SUGAR..'39c ORI STA ARROW PINK, YELLOW OR WHITE '■* € i, § V - ROLL 910% a fl9! w c i TTriW f tUtO FARMS FOLKS By L. C. H am il ton (’lemson University I xtension Information Specialist (FDITOR’S NOTH: Today’s column is written bv Harold | Rogers, Assistant t \:tension Editor, for L. Hamilton, Extension Information Spec ialist) It’s no bifiLier. ocncrollw than a picnic ant. It has a much more v; >u personality In many countries it loro,, crusty mounds arc a hi t on the landscape And as a general |K' t it has t a hiiLh rank on tlu* |niont\' : list. This is the imported tire I ant, the nasty little nuisance j that’s making a name lor j himsell in many areas oi the state. j Right now, theta' s a con- j centrated state Icdcral cam- jiaign on to wipe out the ant* 1 ! in Jasper. Beaufort and Hampton counties. Also in volved in the aerial treatment i program are over one million acres in the adjoining (icor- j gia area. j This doesn't mean that the | S. C. counties included m the project art- tht' only ones in the state suffering from ! the foreign pest. Charleston is having its oroblems. Orangeburg lias been a trouble spot, two cas- j es of extremely painful stings have been reported in Horry; and a dozen or so oth er counties have experienced infestations and damages of i varying degree. Where did wo get this little ! ‘roublemaker Dr J H Cochran, profes- j ;or and head of the Depart ment of Entomology and Zooolgy at Clemson l imers ty, points out that the native of South America is believed to have slipped into this country about 191H with a I cargo unloading at Mobile. Ala. “This pest was first found | in South Carolina in 1952,'' ! Dr. Cochran says, “when telltale mounds were spotted in Charleston and Orange burg counties.’’ Since then, eradication or ‘reatment efforts have been arried out in a number of '■jnto\ including Spartan- | burg. Carendon, Marion Dil- lion. Kdpe’ield. Aiken. Lex ington, Richland. Florence, Horry an ] Calhoun Why is the imported fire ant such a particular pest — tmrre than any of our domes tic types? For one thing, says Dr. Cochran, they are so much more of a nuisance with their mounds, which may range i up to three feet in diameter j and two feet high. For an other, they are more vicious, with a potentially poisonous attack. “They invade fields, yards. Cemeteries, parks, and play grounds, or almost any other type of terrain,’’ the entomo- ’ogist explains. “T heir mounds are not only unsight ly, but of economic signifi cance in crop production, land maintenance, and even sale of property, land main tenance, and even sale of property. ‘'They can also be mean in attacking people or animals,’’ t»e adds. “Their stings leave bdil.-like sores, and people who are allergic to their ven- of often require hospitaliza tion.” Agricultural authorities be lieve that DCs imperative the imports be curbed now. “Unless we do,” says Dr. Cochran, “they will continue to spread and build up in population. It’ll be increas ingly difficult to combat them and it won’t be long before we’ll have a real problem on our hands, all ov er the state.” METAL WHITENER A small amount of nicke used as an alloying elem to whiten metals such as c per and gold. L«t the weak «ay, strong.—(Joel 3:10) Feeling* of weaknei o^come ne we hold thought that we are i in the Lord and in the His might To affir strength in the Lord is ea reinforcements, c «wves of power might: m aa. use but