The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, October 07, 1965, Image 3

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1965 THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA PAGE THREE FARM •NOTtSlffitar *(< ARTIFICIAL BREEDING A MUST Most of our Newberry Dairy cows are bred in the fall and early winter. Therefore, a most import- ane decision now faces every dairy farmer. What bull or bulls will sire my next calf crop? That is the question. A better question perhaps would be, “What kind of cows will I need three years from now to «tay in the dairy business?” An analysis from this point of view demands that you use the very best bulls available on your dairy herd pow. Find out the answer to this question: “Does it pay to use artificial breeding?” Don’t take our word for it. Ask dairy farmers such as Max and Harold Cook, James Brown, W. D. Cromer, P. T. Harris, Marvin Hamm or Har old Pitts. These herd averages range from 9500 pounds to over 12,000 ponds of milk per cow per year. Cows in these herds are 50 to 100 per cent artificially sired. These dairy farmers will quick ly tell you they can’t afford not to use artificial breeding. This business of modem dairy farming demands first of all, a cow that can make a good profit above her cost of feed and board. The best cows are the result of the best breeding. Why not let your next calf crop be the result of the best bulls available thru artificial breeding ? KEEP COWS MILKING- FEED ’EM! Highest milk prices are paid for milk produced during Septem ber, October and November. If you check your records, you’ll find there’s less surplus milk on the market these months than any other time of year. Many dairy farmers are using “green-chop” to boost fall milk production. That’s fine—so long as it’s a good quality crop that’s be ing fed in this manner. But re member that “green-chop” is high in moisture, a good bit higher than silage. So with good supplies of both silage and hay on hand, it might be well to limit the feeding of “green-chop” and feed hay and silage in addition. It’s not the to tal pounds of feed that makes the most milk, it’s the total pounds of TDN (total digestible nutri ents) that enables a cow to reach the limit of her potential to make milk. And speaking of TDN, how a- bout your dairy feed or grain ration? We’ve run across several dairy rations being fed lately which contain only 60 to 65 per cent TDN. This is too low for top milk production. A good grain ra tion should contain not less than 70 per cent TDN for best results. A still successful rule of dairy farming is good cows, good feed and good management. How’s your milk production? A couple of weeks ago we wrote about Fescue pastures and sug gested that the addition of clover would make a better quality pas ture. Many farmers have tried to establish clover in fescue pastur es with disappointing results. In most cases, a good stand of fescue chokes out the clover. At Clemson, a good stand of fescue-clover has been maintained for several years. The secret? The fescue was planted in wide rows, 18 to 20 inches apart, then Ladino clover was seeded in the middles. But the best part of all was the beef producing ability of this clover-fescue pasture. Beef cows grazed on this “balanced’ pasture produced weight gains equal to cows which were grazed on pure fescue plus a daily supplement of 4 pounds of corn and 1 pound of cottonseed meal per animal. If interested in trying this wide row planting of fescue-clover pas ture, call by our office for a copy of the leaflet which gives instruc tions. Remember what a boll weevil fight we had this year? Then let’s help prevent this same situation next year. And we don’t mean by not growing cotton next year. We do mean by early stalk destruc tion, preferably before frost if you’re through picking. Early cut ting and plowing under of cotton stalks sends Mr. Boll Weevil into winter hibernation in a half-starv ed or weakened condition. If you can do that, he will likely not survive the winter. It’s as simple as that. So please help yourself and your neighbors by getting rid of cotton stalks just as soon as you finish picking. • •••••••••I Dean Manion IP ^ r .v, .- l THE MANION FORUM ••••••••••a THE NARINE CORPS BUILDS MEN! M. I. MARINI RECRUITER A *3 r Fair Time Is Getting Near OCTOBER 11th to 16th NEWBERRY-SALUDA FAIR GET YOUR EXHIBITS READY NOW! MEET OLD FRIENDS AND MAKE NEW ONES AT NEWBERRY-SALUDA FAIR! They Will Be There! AMUSEMENTS OF AMERICA With New Rides and Shows ON THE MIDWAY FUN FOR THE YOUNG AND THOSE WHO WISH TO STAY YOUNG GET YOUR PREMIUM BOOK AT County Agent’s Office IT’S FULL-TIME NOT PART-TIME WITH US Insurance Is no sideline in our business. Eight, ten, twelve hours a day, whatever it takes, our undivided efforts go to produce a service that is the best on the market. You will like the intense, personal attention that we give to your business. We hope we may have the opportunity to be of service. "YOUR PRIVATE BANKERS" 1418 Main Street Phone 276-1422 The Twist, we hear is Out. But there’s one twist that is very much In at the moment and it isn’t a dance. , It is called the Constitution Twist. You simply select a part of the Constitution and twist it around until it suits your fancy. And you may conveniently ignore any parts which do not support your point of view. Current Twists are mainly var iations on Amendments. A person invokes the Fifth Amendment when he is asked if he is, or ever has been, a Communist. The Fourteenth Amendment is being tortured into an excuse to give the Federal Government more power over the states. And the First Amendment is twisted by those who don’t think children should pray at school. One Amendment is, however carefuly ignored by the Twisters of the First, Fifth and Four teenth. Nothing is ever said a- bout the Tenth Amendment. This is not suprising, because the Tenth Amendment is heresy to the Liberals. It says that “The powers not delegated to the Uni ted States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States res pectively, or to the people.” The Tenth Amendment leaves more power with the States than with the Federal government, and so the Liberals have conveniently reversed it. “It is now assumed in certain quarters,” stated Con gressman John Buchanan on Man ion Forum Broadcast, “that all the rights not otherwise delegated are reserved, not to the States or to the people, but to the Federal government.” The reverse twist of the 10th Amendment has resulted in, am ong other things, a more power ful Central government. One manner in which the Federal Government can amass more au thority over the States is thru Federal Aid. “We are paying for all Federal benefits in terms of high taxation and continuing debt,” Mr. Buch anan reminds us. “Though we pay financially ourselves, and do not receive Federal benefits as free manna from Heaven, nevertheless, where Federal benefits and ser vices go, Federal control is sure to follow.” Such control has already fol lowed, of course, and there is more to come. Mr. Buchanan warns that “Unless we begin to assume personal and local res ponsibility for finding solutions to local problems, we could lose our freedom by default.” The Liberals hope that if they ignore the Tenth Amendment it might go away, thus removing all obstacles to the onrush of the Great Society. That is why Con gressman Buchanan has intro duced a Congressional Resolution to reaffirm the Tenth Amend ment. The outcome of the Resolution depends upon how many people know about it—and how many of them write their Congressmen. By Jean Kinkead, Women's Consultant, The Travelers Insurance Companies Home Vacations One of the keys to leading a healthy — and a long — life is a real, annual vacation. What is a vacation? Depending upon your point of view, it might be a fam ily fishing trip to the wilds of Canada, or a S lush second oneymoon in Paris. Still, when finances or unavoidr able conditions make a vacation away from home impossible, women in the know can arrange an altogether delightful vacation right at home! There are two basic musts for home vacations: a complete change of routine and a tempo rary respite from responsibility. There are all sorts of ways to change your routine. First, vary your eating habits. Have a late brunch and an early gourmet supper.Or, enjoy a meal a day at a restaurant and have fun dis covering a different place each day. Take up something entirely new during your vacation. Learn how to play tennis or golf or be gin studying French. And, you’ll have all the time in the world for that nearby summer theater, out door concerts and sporting events that you ordinarily just reac about in the newspaper. To lighten your responsibili ties, hire temporary heln to cook, clean, baby-sit and cut the grass. Export the small-fry to kim grandparents or make reciproca agreements with good friends. I s on're really brave, you won’, answer the telephone! I Looking Ahead •••by & r * S* iCTftfBfr PRESIDENT—NATIONAL jfe***y EDUCATION PROGRAM WHO’S TO BLAME? The nation's so-called civil rights leaders at last are discov ering for themselves that sowing the wind reaps destruction of whirlwinds. The Reds behind the scenes knew it all along, and now after the Los Angeles whirlwind of violence, with 37 lives lost, hundreds injured, and perhaps $200 million in property gone, the public also is waking up. Even liberal observers such as New York Times, the Denver Post, Governor Brown (why doesn’t Dr. Kirfg stay home?), and Senator Robert Kennedy all seemed ready to call off the agitative non-viol ence that wins peace awards a- broad and tears up cities at home. And what was the reaction of President Johnson? Lowering his glance, as if he might have pre ferred to say something else, the most powerful leader of the most powerful nation gave these same civil rights leaders (?) a go-ahead by solemnly predicting that such riots might break out elsewhere, even in Washington. He did not say that they must not, or should not, but that they could. Such permissiveness, Mr. President, is no way to keep the vote of clear headed Negro citizens, of whom there are many. 10 Years Of Preparation Not Washington, however, but Chicago seems to have been picked for the next big trouble. All the heckling of school officials and demonstrations on the streets could represent only trial runs. The civil rights crowd will doubt- les be offered plenty of assistance when the time comes from a group calling itself the Spartacists. This Trotskyite group is ready for the revolution. One of its incendiary leaflets already calls for Negroes td battle police: “Drive the cops out . . . the shock troops of the ruling class . . . No one can fail to note the similarity between Los Angeles and Vietnam.” Los Angeles Police Chief Par ker undoubtedly understands what is meant by the Trotsky sort of revolution. President Johnson, however, only recently is said to have greeted youthful visitors to the White House as “fellow revo lutionaries,” This is certainly grim humor if the President does not see, as Chief Parker does, that our ten years of civil disobedience propaganda has helped create the climate in which riots can break out here and there and appear to be spontaneous. Ri%t Wanted Anywhere As to Vietnam and the tie-in that civil rights propagandists are giving to it, there is a similarity between the struggle there and the rioting in America. The Commun ists are doing everything they can to expand the conflicts in South east Asia, as well as in America and throughout the world. To the Reds, civil disobedience and rioting point toward the same goals: lawlessness and anti-capi talism. They don’t care whether it takes place in Berkeley or L.A., as long as it happens. Their plans in South Vietnam, therefore, are not so far removed from those in America. Law and order are the point of first attack. Why cannot more of our leaders, the President, for instance, get the likes of Martin Luther King, ^rho come to ' t h e White House frequently, on the mat? “Look here,” they could be told, “the country has had enough of this anarchy of violating laws according to individual choice. Let’s talk about obeying laws, res pecting life and property, prac ticing self-restraint, and expecting responsible actions and proper conduct from all our citizens.” Can’t the bleeding hearts raise any money to teach people these things ? This Answer Inadequate It’s a fact not known to many, but the majority of our Negro cit izens are well-behaved, responsi ble, and respectful of authority. But let’s quit demoralizing the youth and making Communists of the rabble, who so easily can be victimized and in turn victimize their whole race by rampaging through the streets. Then we ought to find ways to punish the propagandists and intellectual in cendiaries along with the arson ists, looters, and snipers. The poor are not called upon to riot because they’re poor of unhoused. We’ll have to look deeper than that. What solution does Washing ton have to offer? Why, $29 mil lion in grants for 45 programs “tailored to meet social problems!” These, according to Mr. Johnson, are going to “wipe out the causes of violent outbursts.” Without denying the value of the right kind of economic assistance, may we submit that Washington is entirely on the wrong track when it tries to fix up immorality, weakness of character, and poor citizenship with dollar grants. NOW! ’66 CHEVR0LETS CHEVROLET \ NEW BY CHEVROLET Custom Coupe, Sedan and two luxu rious new Custom Wagons now. Liquid smooth ride. Power you can order just as smooth and pin-drop quiet Turbo-Jet V8 engines that go ail the way up to 425 hp. Shimmering new interiors. The look of hand-rubbed walnut trim. Elegance everywhere. Made by Chevrolet so you know what a beautiful value it must be. NEW CHEVROLET JET* SM0 We've again specially tailored those coil springs at every wheel to each body style. We've put in new softer shock absorbers. No Chevrolet has ever had a ride like this. Power begins with a thrifty Six at 155 hp, and goes on from there. Turbo-Jet V8's available at 325 hp, 390 hp and 425 hp in all the new Impalas, Bel Airs and Biscaynes. Model shown: Impale Super Sport Coupe. NEW CHEVELLE. SUPER SPORT 396 New 300's. New 300 Deluxe models. New Malibus. And two new Super Sport 396's—coupe and convertible—with en gines that tell you exactly what kind of Chevelles they are. Both are available with 396-cu.-in. Turbo-Jet V8's, either 325 hp or. 360 hp. And both come with special hood, grille, suspension, emblems, red stripe tires, floor-mounted shift Twelve beautiful new Chevelles in all—and all as new inside as the/ are outside, headlamps to taillights. CheveJ/e Super Sport396 Coupe ALL NEW CHEVY n It's so different we should really call it the Chevy III. Roofs are swept way back on coupes. Fenders, grille, hood, taillights and bumpers are new on all seven models. Interiors are richer. Power available up to a 350-hp Turbo-Fire V8. You can even order headrests for the front seats and Mag-style wheel covers. What's the economical, dependable Chevy II coming to? A lot of smart '66 car buyers, we figure. . 66 C0RVAIR UNIQUE Still America's only rear-engine car. And with the special steering and suspension you can add, there's no better way to rid yourself of prematurely gray driving. Lots new. Corvair, like all the '66 Chevrolets, has a padded dash, seat belts front and back, new fully synchronized 3-speed. Corsas, Monzas. 500's. Get one. Stay young. SEE THE NEW 1966 CAPRICE • CHEVROLET • CHEVELLE • CHEVY IT • CORVAIR • CORVETTE NOW AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALF^ t 'V-V' f • 'T A W 39 6088 KEMPER CHEVROLET COMPANY COLLEGE STREET EXTENSION NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA