The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, June 01, 1951, Image 5
FM5AY, JUNE 1, 1981
fttfi NEWBERRY SUN
Flpwers and Gifts for All Occasions
C A R T E R’S
Day Phone 719 — Night 6212
(Portrait
OF A BRIDE. . .
All the ephemeral radiance of
life’s greatest houf* all the
glowing promise of the happy
years to come are captured for*
ever in this portrait of a young
bride with the fidelity to be
found only in a
.ArcAo/j Portrait
is for Easy Payments
To suit Every budget! Our payment plan is tail
or-made to fit your needs! You can take a few
months or up to 15 months to pay. . .and our interest
rates are low! See us today!
For Details
Call 197
PURCELLS
"Your Private Bankers"
E. B. Purcell Keitt Purcell
FARMS
AND
FOLKS
FENCING
With the coming of grass to
much of our land, fencing be
comes more important.
How to properly construct a
fence is not generally known.
And good pasture a problem at
most places. ‘ Some farms have
what cedar and black, locust
posts they need. But more do
not.
These facts built up unusual
interest in the fence construction
and post treatment demonstra
tions that , many of the county
agents scheduled some time ago.
County Agent Bryant of Lee says
52 farmers attended theirs, and
“they carried the informat(ton
home with them and are building
fences accordingly.”
And County Agent Grey of
Darlington says Clemson’s Mc
Kenzie and Barker sure put on
“excellent demonstrations” for
them Farmers called these dem
onstrations in fence building and
post treatment “the best they
had ever seen.”
Clemson’s Extension Circular
262, ‘Longer Life for Fence Posts,
carries much of the information
given at these meetings. It is
free from your county agent.
BEES AND WEEDS
I stopped by County Agent Can
non’s office in Laurens the first
of May. He had Just come in
and had a handful of queen bee
cells, and several young queens.
He had been out to see why a
farmer’s bees weren’t doing any
good. He got as many as eight
mature queen cells out of a single
hive. , ..
No wonder those bees wern t
working right. They were too
split up raising queens. Good
management requires looking
through the hives along and keep
ing those surplus queens from
raising, he pointed out.
He was leaving in a few min
utes to go and check on weed con
trol demonstrations with 2,4-D in
pastures. I asked him how it
was working, as they have used
a good bit ofr it. He said it work
ed well. It hurt the clover some,
but it grew out of it. And it did
n’t hurt the grasses at all. It
rftODDJNG BERMUDA GRASS
The question before a group
was, “How to get a sod of Ber
muda grass?”
One fellow who has wrastled
long with it in the cotton patch
said, “Nothing but a crazy per
son would ask that question, for
who would want to do it any
way?”
But this new day we are grow
ing into with cattle sees all
grasses in a new light. And Ber
muda, handled right Is one of our
best summer grasses.
As bad as this grass is in the
cultivated field, it is right much
of a job to get it sodded on a
pasture.
County Agent Ezell of Newber
ry tells me that their SCS man,
T. B. Amis, has worked out a
good fast way of sprigging it in.
He fixes a manure spreader so
the load moves back slower and
the beater runs faster than nor
mal. He loads it with shoveled-
up Bermuda grass sod and scat
ters it on the land. Then he fol
lows that immediately with a
disc tiller that chops up the land
and covers the grass. He says
good stands have been gotten the
first season that way, and it
doesn’t take so much sod.
—
m
Today's Great Hope forThose
Suffering Aches and Pains
Due to lath of Vitamins Bi, B>, Iron and Niadn
m of Utousoads
Hodocoll
Mrs. Homer Hames,
R.D. 1, Newport,
Ohio: “I have been
having aches for a
* time, and I did
everything I knew
of to help without
success. So I took
three bottles of
HADACOL. I sure
feel good now.
couldn’t hardly do
mgr housework before, but now I can
Bet mgr work done good. I went and
Cot ms a job at the pottery and really
oont feel tired et the end of the day.
I can sleep good at night now. Thanks
a million for HADACOL. I wouldn’t
be without it. I am thirty-two years
A. M. Hurst, R.R.
#2, Box 205, Perry,
Florida: “I was
bom September 23,
1872. I heard of
your HADACOL
Having the vita
mins B„ and B, in
liquid form and
that sounded good
to me. I bought
and have taken two
small, one large and part of a second
large bottle. Now I do not feel any
nore aches and pains. I intend to
seep right on taking HADACOL.’*
J. L. Pappy, Bay
ard, Florida: “I
feel that I should
tell the world
about your won
derful HADA
COL. I have
suffered with
aches and pains
for the past years,
which worried me
considerably. But,
after taking two large bottles and
one small bottle of HADACOL, I am
now doing all my work again. »nd
feel better. I sleep good at night,
eat hearty all because of your
wonderful product. I am seventy-five
years of age, and far more active
than the average man, and feel sure
that If I bed not heard
COL, I would not of
achieve the thingi I have
taking it. I will always
wonderful HADACOL."
just about cleaned up most bad /
weeds.
They had stopped applying it
then, for cotton was coming up,
and that stuff will drift and mess
cottort up for sure.
grown and hale and hearty. They
have never had measles, dipthpria,
nor whooping cough. A shot of
blood taken from my hip saved
them from the former. And shots
of different sorts protected from
the two latter dreaded diseases
of childhood. Children are bound
to grow up stronger when they
are not set back by those weak
ening diseases. And, saved of
these worries parents are liable
to live longer too. So hats off
to science, medical science.
Hot Taniale!
THE RODS WOULD
tfi
THEN AND NOW
Typhoid fever used to be a
scourge In this country. It kill
ed one of my grandfathers rather
early and thinned hie children
out a lot too.
Now I take one booster shot
a year, go my way, live on, and
don’t fear this killer.
My father was a country doctor.
I drove the buggy for him a lot.
Many a time have I gone with
him to remote country homes
where typhoid took Its dreadful
toll. Sometimes it would wipe
most of a famly out, and leave
others thin and shaky from the
burning fever.
Now you seldom hear of ty
phoid, except the taking of the
occasional shot against It. And
many other diseases too have
just about conquered by science.
Our two children are about
AT 7:30 P.M.
TONIGHT
' hear
GABRIEL BEAMS
History-making NEWS
TURKEY TROUBLE
“Mud-fever,” ever hear of it?
It’s a widespread trouWe affect
ing turkeys. A national authority
will discuss it at the meeting of
the South Carolina Turkey Fed
eration at Yprk on June 4 at
noon. Also other features, in
cluding turkey broilers for din
ner. Make dinner reservations
with James E. Thaxton, Secretary,
York, S. C.
BOYS ARE THAT WAY
Early recollection carries me
back to the peddlers that trudged
through the Stone Hills on foot.
They were always newcomers to
this country, or “foreigners,” as
we called them.
They would come by home sev
eral times a year. Each carried
two enormous canvas-covered tel
escope valises. They would al
ways come several months apart.
They spoke very broken English,
carried all sorts of fancy work,
silk garments, linens and the like.
We kids were scared of ‘em. But
we were thrilled to stand sort
of behind our mother’s full skirlt
and "see the magic things he pull
ed out of those valises. With
wide-eyed wonder I watched as
he unloaded his treasure. I wond
ered how he would ever get all
that stuff back in ‘em.
He could not be easily turned
off and Insisted on showing his
wares. He would spread them all
over the room there. We kids
liked the bright gawdy things he
had and would nudge our mother
trying to make he buy thein. We
usually bought somthlhg, sort of
felt Oiurt if we didn’t, after he
had gone to all of that trouble.
Then he would pack everything
up, after giving us a handkerchief
or napkin, if we had bought
much. He would hook the straps
securely and then buckle the
harness on the valises good. With
a great heave, he raised the con
necting harness to his shoulder,
and you could hear the buckles
squeak as they took on their
load. With one large valise bulg
ing with gobds in front of him
and the other hanging from his
back, he would trudge on down
the road with a burden suitable
for San ox. I always wondered
where they stayed at night. Think
they must have slep out some
where. Yhey always looked pale
and ‘ undernourished.
Those fellows sure made it the
hard way. They were rather new
immigrants, usually alone in this
new country, earning enough pen
nies to send back to the Old
Country for passage for heir fam
ily. ‘ Many of them later opened
stores and grew into merchant
princes in towns both big and
small.
Paul Porter during an economic
mission to Macedonia, made a
speech- in which he said, “It is
a pleasure to be here tonight
with you good citizens of Greece.
You Greeks and we Americans
have very much in common. We
like to eat. We like to drink.
And we like to ait and talk.’” A
Communist daily in Greece re
ported the speech: “Ambassador
Porter said that we are just
like Americans—gluttons, drunk
ards, and gossiiA.*’
• •
—Inring Lee, In Cornet.
NEED A JOB?
There were 126,700 vacant
jobs in Australia at the end of
February according to official
figures issued in Canberra last
week. Of these, 80,000 were for
males, and 34,000 for females.
The vacancies were spread over
industry as follows: primary pro
duction 4,700; mining and quarry
ing 2,300; manufacturing 64,200;
building and. construction 21,400;
transport 7,500; commerce, fi
nance and communication 7,900;
service Industries, including
health and domestic service
17,700.
■ .
4
You don't
do this...
>
to
iH
ARLENE DAHL is ready to take
on any~bull in the ring just so
he answers to the name of “Fer
dinand.” Arlene recently com*
leted “Inside Straight** at
G-M. •
So...why
{ do this?
DAUGHTER DOES IT
, A twenty-four year old Aus
tralian girl, whose father called
her “the best cattle drover I’ve
got,” recently proved to the whole
Commonwealth that he was right.
Harry Zigenhine, a well-known
cattleman, was asked to take
1,500 head from Western Aus
tralia to Queensland, a distance
of tMOO 1 miles. - Unable to make
the trip, he appointed his daugh
ter Edna boss drover, with a
crew of eight helpers. Sev&L
months later, she and her cara
van arrived at Queensland with a
Ipss of only one hundred head of
cattle—reportedly the best record
of the season. (From Charm)
A.
That man lighting his cigarette on a $10 bill is
a piker alongside the hunters leaving the burning
campfire. They are going to bum down a forest
of growing trees and leave many acres of ruined
forests.
When you are in the woods remember: the
best fire fighter is the .man who prevents woods
fires. He helps Keep America Green.
Fairfield Forest Products Go.
Senator Dudley J. LeBlanc, the Man
Responsible for Today’s Great HADACOL
Senator LeBlanc has been in public
life since he was quite a young
man and he has always advocated
the cause of the oppressed and the
downtrodden. It was he who intro
duced the law in Louisiana that
gives every deserving man and
woman in Louisiana a pension of
$50.00; it was he who introduced
the law creating the office of Serv
ice Commissioner, the duties of
which office is to see that every
deserving ex-soldier and veteran
receives his just reward from the
Federal and State Government; it
was he who has consistently fought
the battle of the school teachers in
the halls of the legislature; he
worked untiringly for the farmers
and the laboring man. "
In view of the fact that this man
has worked so untiringly for your
cause and in your behalf, don’t you
believe that it was reasonable to
assume that in his untiring efforts
he would someday find something
to assist you besides rendering gov
ernmental assistance.
The word "HADACOL" has be
come a by-word throughout this
Nation. Read the testimonials on
this page. Ask your friends who
have taken HADACOL the benefits
they have received from it. Don’t
Hesitate. Place your confidence in
Senator Dudley J. LeBlanc
?. w bo has by his past activi
ties demonstrated to you that he
is your friend—that his heart beats
in sympathy with your cause—and
if you are suffering from deficien
cies of Vitamins B„ B„ Niacin and
Iron, don’t hesitate—don’t delay-
buy HADACOL ... the product
***®*le by the best friend you have
ever 1 — J
many doc
BBf'AJkSMFM
Refuse substitutes.
There’s enly ene
HADACOL
r-esirt' ‘J.'JfHJL'l>i • • Hfttj !///«//'/ V/
Qr/y MUMMC fiBS/ffli
© ItBl, The LeBlanc Corporation
Smith’s Drug Store
WKDKII
MUTUAL
BROADCASTING
COMPANY
SOME GAL
With the approval of the Turk
ish government, Major Sablha
Guekchen has volunteered to join
the United Nations Air Force as
a fighter pilot in Korea. Major
Guekchen, thirty-six, is an adopt
ed daughter of the late 'president
of Turkey, Kemal Ataturk. In
1937 she flew bombing missions
during the Kurdish rebellion in
eastern Turkey. (From Charm)
SHAPE YOUR FUTURE
WITH TODAY’S SAVINGS
The action you cake now - setting aside part
of every paycheck — will help decide your
future. Let us help, with an insured savings
account that earns for you, here.
NEWBERRY J
Federal Savings
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
OF NBWBERRY
J. K. Willingham, Sec'y
Newberry, S. C.
. !'!*■
.
■s 'v&'Htf! & A ,
•-
\»ssv*-.Y s
Shop pleasantly in cool air
conditioned comfort at
Carpenter’s
Our stocks at this time are
very large . . . with .new
arrivals coming
in daily.
Carpenter’s
% * ’ .j
-v: • ■'' *
.. ■ V •
-