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# THE CHRONICLE, CUnton, S. C., Oct. 8, 1970—1-C Hurricane Local Students Use System 80 SCIENTISTS MEET —The Univer sity of South Carolina Department of Physics was host to the Second Southeastern Magnetic Resonance Conference Thursday and Friday. Oct. L-2, at USCTs Capstone House. Among the participating scientists were, left to right: H. A. Farach of USC, William A. Parker of Wofford College, Carl Clark of S. C. State College, William Jackson of Presby terian College, C. A. Arrington of Furman University and C. P. Poole of USC. boms Back BY NAN DIXON OCTOBER 10, 1940 Presbyterian College stu dents have selected Saturday, October 19, for their 1940 Foot ball holiday. The holiday will follow the P. C. - Citadel game to be played in Sumter on the 18th. /■ The city of Clinton w ill again furnish roses at Whole sale cost. Please confine your order to not more than six varieties. Noland Suddeth and Reese Young, members of the fresh man class at Clemson, were in town over the week-end after attending the Clemson - N. C. State game Saturday in Char lotte. Both Noland and Reese played in the local high school band, and are members of the Clemson band this year. Ace Workman, Jr., a mem ber of the freshman class at Clemson, spent the week-end with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Payne and daughter, Virginia, ofClin- ton, visited Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Smith of Bush River. BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT CHANEY Mr. and Mrs. CarlS. Chaney announce the birth of a son; James Milton, on Sunday, Oct ober G. John Wayne and Charles Co burn. Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Smith had as their week-end guests Misses Lillian Crowder and Mary Erwin Smith ofElberton, Ga. fh SCHOOL i. LUNCH MENU I! FOR SALE - Fresh cows. D. E. Tribble. milk Thomas Baldwin, student at Clemson College, spent the week-end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Baldwin. Showing at The Broadway is “Three Faces West,* starring For The House of Representatives VOTE B.W. Crouch, Jr. Who Will Continue To Work For: • COUNTY-WIDE TELEPHONE SERVICE • COUNTY-WIDE WATER SYSTEM • COUNTY-WIDE FIRE PROTECTION • HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION TAX LAW FOR RETIRED All Of This Can Be Accomplished WITHOUT A Tax Increase YOUR VOTE AND SUPPORT SINCERELY APPRECIATED NOV. 8 WEEK: October 12-16, 1970 MONDAY - Milk, fish, black eyed peas, whipped potatoes, biscuits, butter and apricot cake. TUESDAY - Spaghetti sauce with ground beef and tomato paste, garden salad with let tuce, tomatoes and celery strips, hot rolls, butter and applesauce. WEDNESDAY - Milk,Chick en pie, green peas, crisp cole slaw, cranberry jelly, biscuits, butter and oatmeal raisin cook ie. THURSDAY - Milk, butter peas with Vienna sausage, spic ed beets, turnip greens, cand led sweet potatoes, corn- bread and butter. FRIDAY - Milk, hamburg er with onions, lettuce, toma toes, mustard, tomato catsup, potato sticks, buns, butter and peach pie. fShti Tit 5 H e a v y household appli ances, such as a washing machine or dryer, require a heavy oil, about SAE 20, if you are buying motor oil. Follow instructions for the where and how often and lubricate at least twice a year. Church Has Homecoming Homecoming will be observ ed at Hurricane Baptist Church October 18. „ Services will begin withSun- day School at 10 a.m. and Morn ing worship at 11 a.m. A brief history of the church will be given by Mr. Luther Nabors. A former pastor, Dr. Walter N. Long of Belmont, N. C. will bring the message. Immediately following the worship service, a brief Me morial Service will be held by Rev. J. C.Conoly, in the church cemetery at the grave of the Rgv. Elbert Linsy, who was the first pastor of the church. Lunch will be served at 1p.m. in the social hall. Plates, cups, ice and tea will be furnished. All members, former mem bers and friends are invited to attend. This special occasion will not be observed again until 1975. 189 Top Draft No. Hit In 70 Local Draft Board No. 30, Executive Secretary, Mrs. Nannie K. Armstrong, an nounced today that random se lection number 189 is the high est lottery selection number reached in 1970. The board spokesman said that the remaining calls probable can be met without going above the current high fandom selection number due to the numbers of registrants en tering the draft pool late in the year who have numbers below the “high’ already reached by the board. Mrs. Armstrong said that in compliance with the White House Executive Order an nounced recently, all re gistrants of Local BoardNo, 30 who hold the highest reached number and who have not been issued orders for induction due to any circumstances, will be considered for carry over into the extended priority selection group if they are classified 1-A as of December 31, 1970. Such young men will have their liability for induction extended for the first three months of 1971. The local board spokesman said that the Executive Order states that registrants who held numbers above the highest reached number of Board No. 30 and aie classified 1-A on December 31, 1970 will be pla ced in a lower draft priority group on January 1. * * * Treaties The practice of negotiating treaties began as early as 3000 B.C., when ancient rulers signed treaties with neighboring kingdoms. Some treaties ended wars and ethers settled boundary dis putes. Children today are growing up in an era of electronics and are as at home with teaching mac hines as they are with mechani cal toys. So, students are now having fun learning with System 80, a low-cost audio-visual ed ucational system recently in stalled in Clinton. Developed by Borg-Warner Educational Systems during cow past six years. System 80 was designed to help teachers pro vide individualized instruction in classrooms without distrub- ing normal classroom acti vities. It consists of an audio visual unit resembling a small table TV, 12 inch record and 80- frame filmsllde lessons, test materials, and record books. The lessons and tests are de signed to build arithmetic, reading, and language skills. The unique part of System 80 is its ability to let the student teach himself. Each frame in a lesson presents illustrations representing possible res ponses to the questions asked on the recording. If the stu dent selects the wrong answer, the question is repeated. If his answer is correct, the lesson moves on with a new picture and question. On certain key questions, the wrong answer will instruct the unit to present additional frames with supplemental or remedial Information. Tests conducted over the de velopmental years in pilot pro grams revealed that children using System 80 only 10 minutes each day progress at a faster rate than classmates who did not use the program. Coggins Is Finalist In National Contest David Coggins, 18, ofMount- ville was among the 10 finalists in the Eastern U.S. 4-H Trac tor Operators’Contest held re cently during the Virginia state fair in Richmond, Va. The son of Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Coggins, who operate a 500 acre dairy and peach farm in Laurens County, he earned the right to participate in the 20th annual event by winning county and state tractor eli minations. He placed sixth a- mong the 10 finalists. The win ner represented Indiana. American Oil Foundation sponsored the contestant who received an expense-paid trip to Richmond and other recog nition. A freshman at Piedmont Tech, Coggins plans a career in business administration. He has been a 4-H’er for eight years and in the tractor pro gram for five. “We feel Da vid’s 4-H work has helped him learn responsibility and per sistence — to work and to try a little harder if at first you don’t succeed,’his parents said. WELCOME, LAURENS COUNTY FOLKS TO PIEDMONT FAIR'S QUARTER CENTURY AND S. C. TRICENTEN NIAL CELEBRATION-FESTIVAL. OCTOBER 12-17 AT SPARTANBURG FEATURING: South Carolina Tricentennial s Lav ish "A Time To Remember" And Piedmont Interstate Fair’s 25th An niversary Celebrations — The Pied mont On Parade — The Finest In Agricultural Purebred Livestock. Educational. Cultural And 4-H. FFA, Art And Other Exhibits. Junior High FHA Leaders Attend Meet BY LINDA LAWSON FHA REPORTER Martha Dendy Junior High was well represented at the District 1 Leadership Work shop held at Ninety-Six High School Tuesday, September 22. The meeting of the Future Homemakers of America was enjoyed by Patricia Little, president; Brenda Austin, vice- president; Kathy Patterson, secretary; Dixie Simmons, treasurer; and Linda Lawson, temporary reporter. “A Dare of the Decade* was the theme of the meeting. Robin Welborn, President of the State FHA, challenged the leaders of each chapter to Dare, to be determined, to be invol ved, to serve, to resolve, to share and to challenge others in order to improve this or ganization. The contest was scored in various areas -- a written examination, a demonstration of ability to maneuver with a two - and then a four-wheel implement and overall safety practices. Coggins arrived in Richmond Sunday. He and other contest ants were guests at the annual banquet Monday evening after a day of touring the historic areas ofYorktown, Jamestown and Willimasburg. The actual contest and presentations were held today. Hosts for the events besides the American Oil Foundation included Standard Oil Company (Kentucky), the Cooperative Extension Service, Virginia Farm and Industrial Equipment Associatfon, the State Fair of Virginia and the National 4-H Service Committee. The Matchless House of Flowers. Free Fireworks and Band Concerts Reithoffer's Giant Midway Shows WE THANK THE CLINTON CHRONICLE FOR ITS WONDERFUL COOPERATION DURING OUR 25 YEARS TOGETHER. LAURENS IS A PIEDMONT FAIR CHABTEH MEMBER and a GREAT and GROWING COUNTY. through your PCA... with credit at cost If you’re in the market for a new car or truck, you should first arrange financing through your local Production Credit Association where you get Credit at Cost. A PCA loan can save you several hundred dollars. While the rates of various lending sources may be the same, the loan cost varies widely because of the way ft is computed. PCA calculates interest only on the outstanding balance for the actual number of days it is used. When you need credit, shop as wisely as you will for that new car or truck. For details see your PCA representative. See Mike Hogfaes TODAY At Palmetto PCA Jacobe Bofldiitg CUnton, S. C. 29825 Phone 8884)757 YOUR PHONE IS REPAIRED AT NO EXTRA COST. Your phone is about as tough an instrument as we can make. But if it ever needs repairing, we will fix it at no additional cost. Because it's guaranteed to work for as long as you have it. That’s just one more reason why telephone service is one of your best buys. WHAT ELSE CAN YOU SAY THAT ABOUT TODAY? @ Southern Ben WATCH OUR TV SHOW OF THE WORLD NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SPECIAL TUES. OCT. 13th, 7:30 p.m. Clinton’s Doorway to Better Banking mmm