The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, June 19, 1969, Image 4
V0
STORES
104 MUSGROVE ST.
100 Count
Paper Plates
Reg. 89c
59c
4-Oz. Spray
Solarcaine
Reg. 2.09
l 59
Chigger Sticks
Reg. 49c
Hershey's
Cocoa Butter
Reg. 25c
SAVE-WAY STORE IS NOW OPEN
ALL DAY WEDNESDAY
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THROUGH JUNE 25. 1969
- : Farms and Folks x-x-x x-x-xs-xrx-xtxyxrxsvw:^^^
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Rogerses Wouldn't Have Made It
BY HAROLD ROGERS
Assistant Extension Editor
CLEMSON - I don’t believe Pa
and his crowd ot Rogerses would
have ever made it in today’s
dairy business.
It kept running through my mind
while I looked over those mo
dern layouts in Newberry Coun
ty--and hea^d, about some of the
others over the state.
This business is a science now.
Feeding, milking, handling, keep
ing the books. Every phase has
to be exact. A man may not have
to be a college graduate to stay
in dairying, but he’s got to be a
real manager.
That’s why we wouldn’t have
made it. We just weren’t too par
ticular.
Like most everybody there in
Williamston we had to run a cow.
We were town folks. Had no pas
ture. but this didn’t stop us from
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TANNINE BUTTER
Reg. 1.50
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4-Oz. Ban Deodorant
ANTI-PERSPIRANT
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25's
ALKA SELTZER
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NIKOBAN
Root 9 96
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2 09
Delinquent Taxes
And Business
Licenses Deadline
JULY 1,1969
Delinquent City Taxes And Busi
ness Licenses Must Be Paid By July
1. 1969.
After July 1st Executions Will Be Is
sued Against Property For Taxes
With Additional Costs.
keeping a cow at the barn out
behind the house and trotting her
out to somebody else’s pasture
every day. With 10 children, there
was no other way to put milk
on the table.
Wasn’t a whole lot of science
about our dairying though. If a
ball game ran a little late it
just meant the trip to the pasture
was delayed. Milking had to wait.
For feeding we threw some cot
ton seed hulls and meal together
in a tin tub. Just enough to keep
the old girl still long enough
for somebody to take her milk.
How different now.
That’s what I was thinking as
Harold Pitts wheeled us through
his spanking new dairy layout at
Newberry. Cows are pushed
through the milking barn in al
most assembly line fashion.
Feeding stations have dial sys
tems. Rations are figured ac
cording to the individual cow’s
need. The dial is set and feed
pours in automatically.
Machines do the milking. Care
ful production figures are kept on
each animal. Health Standards
have to be observed all the way
on milk handling.
And it’s this way throughout
the milking business in this state.
All of the people who have
stuck with it have strained all
the way, pouring money into it to
keep systems modernized and
mechanized. The biggest bene
ficiaries, it seems, have been the
consumers.
Through their sweat the milk
people have squeezed a high de
gree of efficiency into the over-
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all operation. In the last 20 years,
authorities say, dairymen have
raised the production of milk
cows more than 67 percent This
is a national figure. But dairy
ing is one area where S. C. opera
tors don’t lag behind. They can’t.
Through increased efficiency
and automation, milk production
per man hour of labor has been
increased more than two and a
half times during that 20-year
period.
This has kept milk prices down
some. They’ve gone up, certain
ly, but not as much as on some
other fronts.
Calvin B. Reeves, associate
Extension specialist in dairy
science, says if today’s housewife
paid for the nutrient value of
milk at current prices of other
foods it would cost nearly 50 cents
a quart.
Comparing that with the actual
price speaks well for the industry
and the people in it. They de
serve tribute for a job well done,
and observance of June as dairy
month is one way to do it.
Bonds Cross
Roads News
Friends of Mr. R. C. Frank
lin will regret to lear.i he is a
patient at Bailey Mem 'rial Hos-
pita, and Mrs. R. C. Franklin
has been confined to the home
due to a back injury.
Claudia Johnson spent the
weekend with her mother, Mrs.
Texie Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne McCul
lough and son David and Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Crapp of Rock
Hill visited “Six Flags over Geor
gia" recently.
Ernie Locklear has joined his
mother, Mrs. Josie Locklear in
Boone, where he will be working
for the summer.
Mr. and Mrs. Travis Crapp and
young daughter, April, spent Fri
day night with Mr. and Mrs. Til-
man Crapp.
Mr. and ttos. PhU Crapp and
Philip spent Friday In the moun
tains of North Carolina.
Mrs. Maggie Marshal has re
turned home after a visit with
her daughter, Mrs. Gladys Pra
ter in Crowder and a visit with
her brother W. R. Webb in Flo
rence.
Miss Kay Shouse, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Shouse
is spending this week at Camp
Fellowship at Junior Church
Camp.
Mr. and Mrs. James Johnson
were dinner guests of Mrs. N. A.
Shouse Sunday night, along with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Johnson and
Albert Johnson.
Mrs. LoVell Henderson and
daughters have returned home
after a visit in Florida withMrs.
Henderson’s parents.
HOSPITAL
NEWS
Patients currently in Bailey
Memorial Hospital from Clinton
are Gertha Patterson, Josephine
Wilson, Annie Lawson, Margaret
Setter, Lucille Woody, William
Henry, L. L. Herring, Charles
Wofford, Baby Girl PhiUips,
George Thrift, Roslyn Burton,
Baby Girl Toland, Sybil McCall,
Ethel Finley, Canzater Hill, Mat-
tie Lankford, Mattie Hardman,
John Little, Lloyd Weir, Mary
Strickland, Ethel Hannon, Kathy
Parris, Caddie Barton, Minnie
Ray, Sarah Conner, Toni Wooten,
Johnnie Butler, Mayme Todd,
Theodore Blakely, Sara Jones,
Sharon Snipes, Etta Fuller, Ruby
Thomas, Ruth Phillips, Lurleen
Toland.
Patients from Joanna are Dor
othy Patterson, Rolfe Clark, Bell
Streetman, Louise Kramm, and
Betty Mont joy.
Patients from Kinards are R<
becca Robinson, Willie Smit
Btrto Kinsey, and Lizzie Hendei
son.
Patients from Mountville aj
Eva Leaman, Mae Alexande
Lodema Graham, and Calvin Si
her.
Patients from Cross Hill ai
Cora Moses, Pauline Wade, ai
Locile Boyce.
Stock up now!
Patient from
George Fields.
Laurens is