The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, May 01, 1969, Image 14
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6-B—THE CHRONICLE, ainton, S. C., May 1, 1969
Lydia Mill News
Ronald Abercrombie, sod of
Me. and Mrs. Billy Abercrombie
and David Bagwell, sod of Mr.
and Mrs. Forman Bagwell left
Sunday to go to Ft Jackson in
Columbia for induct!on inthe U.S.
Army.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Fuller and
son of Joanna, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Fuller of Greenville and
Mr. and Mrs. Furman Childers
and son of Clinton were Sunday
supper guests of their grand
mother and great grandmother,
Mrs. J. W. Fuller and their aunt,
Mrs. Lois Pos.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Young of
Mountville and Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt
Bagwell of Simpsonville visited
Mrs. Henry Abercrombie on
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin J. Aber-
ALUMINUM PUTES
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MR. BILLY PRINCE USED THEM TO
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109 Gary Street 833-0541
CLINTON
Long illness:
most hospital
insurance gives out
before gou get out.
Not this plan.
Before something happens, see your man
from Nationwide. He can save your savings.
JOHN C. HARMON
302 N. Broad — 833 3472
L.
' HEALTH - KOMI ■ CAB ■
N*
- .in i . 1^* » - - -1 - J — rt —, . .r>. ■ r ■ ■ .4 ^
. im men rron rwaaodwioe is on your uat
crombie of Fountain Ion visited
Mrs. Sidney Oakley oo Sunday.
Mrs. Alvin Roberts of Fountain
Inn visited ber sister Mrs. W. L.
Motte and Mr. Motte Sunday. They
all visited Mrs. Janet Reeder and
family in Joanna.
Mrs. David Hughes of Hickory
Tavern spent Saturday with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Morton. On Sunday of last week,
Mr. and Mrs. Morton, Mr. and
Mrs. Hughes, Mrs. Lottie Birch
and Mrs. Freddy Hughey attended
a birthday dinner inEnoreofor
Mrs. Morton’s father, Hobby Ora.
On Saturday evening, April 20,
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Black, Mr.
and Mrs. Tony Black and child
ren and Pfc. Danny Black of Ft
Gordon, Ga., who was spending
the weekend with his parents were
guests of their daughter and sis
ter, Mrs. Tommy Fellows and
Mr. Fellows for a cook-out at
their home in Newberry. Mr. and
Mrs. J. A. Black received word
the past Saturday that their son,
Pfc. Black had been in an auto
mobile accident in Gedrgla and
was in the hospital.
Mrs. Claude Gilstrap visited
her sons and their families, Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Gilstrap and Mr.
and Mrs. Nathan Gilstrap In
Greenville Sunday.
Rev. and Mrs. M. J. Sanders
and son, Pfc. Arthur Sanders, who
is on leave with his parents are
spending the week in Bradford,
Pa., with Mrs. Sanders’ mother,
Mrs. Johnson and other relatives.
Mrs. Verner Dees, Mrs. Kath
leen Willard and Bill spent Sat
urday in Charleston.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Fuller of
Greenville spent the weekend with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Fuller and with her mother, Mrs.
Wyman Milam in Clinton.
Visiting their granefearents,
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Trammell
were Jeff Stone and Phil Tram
mell of Anderson on Thurs
day night and Friday, Debbie and
Andrea Stone of Anderson for the
weekend and spending Sunday
were the Trammell’s son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Trammell, Phil and
Stephannie of Anderson.
Mrs. Charles Patterson and
children, Nancy and Kelly of
Woodruff visited ber mother,
Mrs. Fred Bodie, Saturday. In
the afternoon the Patterson’s,
Mrs. Bodie and Mrs. Jack Pitts
visited Mrs. Bodie’s niece, Mrs.
Billy
their
Mr.
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Mrs. ‘Boats* CsapbsQ with
Mrs. Wsyas Falter sad chOdroa
and Mrs. Dittos Wtldropof Uo-
rtns speat tbs wnlaad la At
tests, Gs., with tbs formers son
sod daughter-in-Uw, Mr. sad
Mrs. CampbelL They also visit
ed Mr. sad Mrs. Jack Davis.
On Sunday they all eojoyed (be
day at Labe Spiny, near Atlan
ta.
Mrs. Lacite Moors sod Mrs.
Sam Moors sod Ksttb at Union
wars Saturday guests of the for
mer’s brother, H. V. Williams
and Mrs. Williams.
Mrs. F. L. Thornburg of Rome
Ga. is visltlog Mr. sod Mrs. Ra-
boo R. Wyatt sad other friends in
the community.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Goss of
Nor cross, Ga., sod Mrs. W. P.
Smith of Lawrence villa, Go.,
were weekend guests of lbs for
mers parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Goss. On Sunday Mrs.
Frank Goss, Jerry sod Wells
Goss, Mr. sod Mrs. Warren Goss
sod Mrs. Smith visited Mr. and
Mrs. J. H. King in Columbia sad
attended the Dog Show in which
Mrs. Smith showed one of her
Dachhounds.
Mrs. Stella McLendon is visit
ing her son sod daughter-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Barry McLendon
in Sants Claire, Calit, having
gone by Jet plane from the
Greenvllle-Spertenberg Airport
WMS MEETS TUESDAY
The Lydia Baptist Woman’s
Missionary Society will meet
Tuesday at 7:90 p.m. at the
church for their monthly general
meeting.
All members, also all ladies
of the church are invited to at
tend.
WITH THE SICK
Mrs. Mattie Harvey is a pe-
tient in Bailey Memorial Ho^>i-
tal.
Mrs. James Campbtll and Mrs.
Ctoe Satterfield are ill at their
homes.
Mrs. Billy McGee was toeoter
Self Memorial Hospital yester
day.
Mike Crawford, who has been
a patient in Self Memorial Hos
pital for injuries to his Jaw white
playing ball returned to his home
the past Thursday.
LYDIA PRESBYTERIAN
WOMEN TO MEET
The women of the church will
have their monthly meeting
Thursday, May 1 at 7 p.m. at
the borne of Mrs. Sidney L Ayer
at 44 Peachtree SL
A film ‘Go That We May Know"
will be shown.
All women in the community
are invited to attend.
Mr. Ayer is pastor of the Lydia
Presbyterian Church.
BIRTHDAYS,
ANNIVERSARIES
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Black ob
served their wedding anniversary
April 20.
Happy birthday to Mr. Furman
Bagwell today.
Mrs. J. A. Black Jr. will ob
serve her birthday May 5 and
Mrs. Black Sr., hers on May S.
Mrs. Mamie Burnett, mother of
Mrs. Black Jr. will have a birth
day May 7.
May 2 will be Mrs. Mattie Har
vey’s birthday.
Mrs. Charles Gafteey will
celebrate ber birthday May 4.
Life With The Rimpies
rvi
men**
'4c*
r
Id feed >oo
NICE FAT ^
'WUS&LY ViORMS,
AN *»
By Let Carroll
FEEuTua
WEU.!
•* •
FARMS and FOLKS
BY HAROLD ROGERS
Assistant Extension Editor
CLEMSON - The day is com
ing, says a Ctemson Extension
specialist, when the poultry peo
ple will be growing out broilers
in cages.
This type bousing started ahot
trend in the laying business in
this state and Dr. Douglas Hamm
thinks it’s but a matter of time
until they put the broilers on
wire too.
He cautions against rushing in
to it, because, "we don’t have the
right hardware yet
"I hope that by getting a lot
of people thinking about it we
can keep it more or less at the
research level until the kinks are
worked out," Dr. Hamm says.
Should a person go into cages
in a large way today, be warns,
his equipment would be obsolete
long before being depreciated.
There are several reasons why
he feels the development is com
ing. Among them are space re
quirements, environmental poll
ution and contamination, and bet
ter housing.
"Labor is rapidly being dis
placed with capital plus ma
chines, and cages are machines,"
Dr. Hamm says. "We have had
so much success with commer
cial layers in cages that it’s only
logical to put broilers there."
He outlines what he considers
as three logical approaches to
imptementatloo of a cage pro
gram.
The most likely he feels—but
possibly the worst for the long
haul—would be to install cages
in today’s good houses. It would
require the least capital outlay,
could be done rather quickly, and
would increase the capacity of the
house about 90 percent
"My main concern for this sys
tem is that it may become ob
solete too soon," Dr. Hamm says,
"but it does have the big ad
vantage of utilising much of what
is in use today, especially the
organisational structure. ”
A second possibility be sees
would be radically different, a
company-owned housing complex
for all production and process
ing facilities at one location.
This would be a system baaed
on the processing plant as the
bub of a giant wheel
"The spokes would be grow-
out bouses with day-old chicks
starting at the outer rims of the
Ricky Blackwell and Curtis
Taylor will observe their birth
days May 6.
May 7 will be the birthday of
Wallace Bagwell.
Mr. George Howell will ob
serve hie birthday May 3.
Tommy Reece will be 8 years
old May 6.
May 8, Mrs. Jessia Mae
Owens will have a birthday.
wheel and moving toward the
hub," la the way Dr. Hamm visua-
lixes it. "By the time they reach
ed the center they would be ready
for market"
Included in the complex would
be hatchery, teed mill, waste dis
posal, water purification and
auxiliary facilities.
The third possible approach
outlined would be one based oo
the present organizational struc
ture of growers, processors,
etc., but with modifications in
tecillties.
The key feature would be a
grow-out cage that would also
serve as the transport coop from
term to processing plant When
broilers were ready for market
the coops would be electrically
moved to the load-out dock and
placed aboard a haul trailer with
a tilt body.
At the factory they could be
unloaded mechanically. "The
main idea is to save labor,"
says Dr. Hamm, "I’d suspect
that anything that can be auto
mated will be."
He sums up his outlook this
way:
"I’d say that broilers in cages
are on their way. By accepting
this idea we put ourselves into
a better position to thoroughly
discuss and even research cages
so that we can eliminate a lot
of blundering, stumbling steps
we’ve taken in the Industry with
all our previous major technique
changes."
Ik Old 1cm&i
T dragged my son to the
barber to get some of that
ridiculous hair cut off, but he
turned out to be the neigh
bor’s kid.”
|
Timely
Tips
WILD ONION CONTROL - Use
1- l/2 pounds of 2-4-D per acre
or for spot spraying 2/3 ounce
2- 4-D gallon in spring and fall.
This will not kill dormant bulbs
in the soil.
1969 SPRING PLANTING
GUIDE for Field crops. We have
a good supply of these guides so
stop by the County Agents Of
fice and pick one up or we will
be glad to mail you one. These
guides cover varieties, planting
time, rate of seeding and ferti
lization rates, etc.
PEACH THINNING The early
varieties should be thinned first
with other varieties following in
chronological order or In the or
der of ripening. This appllespar-
ticularly to mechanically thin
ning, but it also applies to touch-
up thinning with the use of a
chemical. Varieties ripening
earlier than June 18 in Central
South Carolina, June 20 In the
Sandhills, and June 25 in the
Piedmont should receive some
thinning as soon as possible. It
is suggested that these early
varieties have at least 60% of
the fruit removed as soon as
possible, and then they can be
spaced as desired later.
USE A DISCARDED TV- dinner
tray to store kitchen soap and
scour pads.
BRIGHTEN KEYHOLES with a
dab of luminous paint—much eas
ier to spot in the dark.
AN UNUSED DEH DRAINER
makes a good storage rack for
children’s phonograph records.
SPECIAL
BIO VALUI
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LOTION a
C8YSTAL CUAl
$
SB
Sodler-Owena
Pharmacy
110 Mutgrove St
NOTICE!
Noticos will bo mailed within the neact two weeks to all
persons owing taxes to the City of Clinton which are
now dolingimyL
Notices of delinquent taxee for the years 1965-1968-1967
and 1968 will be mailed, giving the taxpayers until July
L1969. to pay all taxee owed the city.
Council has directed that executions be levied against
all taxpayers who do not pay their outstanding taxes
by July 1.1969.
SIGNED,
BROOKS OWENB
Cmr CLERK AND TREASURES
MAYTAG
GIANT SALE
ALL MAYTAGS PRICED
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Clinton Service
307 North Sloan St — 833-4230
SALES AND SEBVICE NIGHT CALLS—27M7S4
» 4 'Hr.K