The Wateree messenger. (Camden, S.C.) 1884-1942, May 15, 1935, Image 5

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COLTS FOR 4 ? H CLUB BOYS < 1 Realizing the present and jprobable future acute shortage of work stock exsisting in the entire country, ar rangements are being made by Coun ty Agent Green to secure about IB good colta for 4-H Club boys of Ker shaw County to own and raise. Most ly mare colts will be gottea with th? plan of raising from these whan they mature. If the plan works well addit . ional colts will be brought in. Ar rangements are also being made for tlhte placing of a fine stallion in the County. The colts being secured are of work type and medium weight. Heavy draft type such as Percherons are not adapted to conditions and require ments here. Nor would light gaited horses be suitable for the need of our 4-H farm boys. These colts will be placed only with Club boys who have good pasturage, a good suipply of com, oats, and hay. . It is desirable that the boy feurdDas f ing a colt shall pay cash, but if this cannot be done arrangements can probaMy be worked out for financing if the boy can make a substantial cash payment and give some other fcecurity, such as a cow or hogs in addition to the colt. These colts, if well grown out, Bhould double in value by maturity. It should also prove profitable foi the club boy to raise (horse or mule colts from his mare while she per forms regular farm duty the same as^ another horse or mule. } The economic cycle on work stock j indicates continued shortage and higher prices for the next several t [years with the peak of higttl prices and shortage yet to come. The County Agent has gone to| much pains to investigate this matter > thoroughly and to locate colts, and it is believed the project will (prove of great value, not only to ti* boys involved, but to the county as well. There is no need for us to pay out thousands of dollars annually for new, young work stock when we can raise them profitably. I aim trying hard to help our farmers stop the dis astrous flow of money away from our county. Just as hundreds of our far mers in Kershaw County are saving .the money they formerly spent for| nitrogen fertilizer by the use of Crotalaria just so they can begin now to save the money being spent every year for work stock. All 4-H Club boys in the County wlhto are interested in securing one of these colts are requested to write the County Agent at once, giving def initely and accurately information as to the size and kind of pasture available, quantity of corn, oats and hay on fofcnd, and the number of live stock to be fed from such supply of foodstuffs. State the number of acres of bermuda or oarpet grass in the /pasture. Farm boys who are not yet y 4-H club merrfbera but who aro inter ested in getting a colt are eligible to secure one by becoming a 4-H mdrv ber and complying with other re quirements above. Cooperation of parents of club boys is requested in this connection These colts will be fed, handled, grown out and broken under th< supervision of the County Agent. Full information as to the age, weight, breeding and cost of these colts will be given tho club boys upon request. Henry D. Green, Co. Agt. Camden. Get Rid of Poisons Produced by Constipation A cleansing laxative? purely vege table Black-Draught ? la the first thought of thousands of men and women who have found that by re storing the downward movement of tht bowel* many dUagreeeble symptom* of oon*tipntlon promptly can be relieved. . . iCrT / p. Mnheffey, of Clinton, B. O.. mrltee: "t have found that Blaek-Draufht 1* y?ry effective In the eleenetng of the ?nr?t*m. When effected by tho doll head ache, the drow?ln?M and laeeltude eaueed . by ooneUpetlon, I take Blaek*Dr aught." j A natural, purely vece table laxative. " BLACK-DRAUGHT 'DOC' KINKAID JOINS GULF REFINING CO.'S AVIATION DEPT. 'Doc' Kinkaid, who?e aaechantoi genius enabled Lindberg, Uoamber lain, Byrd, Ruth Elder and others to fcuocessfully fly ,the Atlantic, haa joined forces with Capt. A1 Williams, world famous speed tyilot, as Lubri cating Engineer of the Gulf Refining Company '8 Aviation Sales Dept. Wil*' liams is the Department Manager. Admiral Richard E. Byrd, paying tribute to 'Doc' (T. Harold) Kinkaid as one of the greatest masters of air plane motors, recently wrote: "The real (men behind all great progress in aviation - the men who cnake the motors run sweetly hour after fooui under all kinds of flying conditions have never received their just due." "Had 'Doc 'Kinkaid not been abso lutely right when he put the final touch on our motors for polar and trans- Atlantic flights and calmly said, 'They'll Do', Lindberg, Chamber lain, Miss Elder and I might now be dead." Since 1909, when the development of airplane motors first started in ttois country, Kinkaid has been en gaged in building, testing and motor research work. As a member of the Contest Committee, National Aero nautical Association, he has attended every air race of importance in the United States. It is to 'Doc' Kinkaid that cnost racing pilots look for the final touch of perfection in the performance of their motors, just before the races. Pilots credit him with having them on tlheir way to ninety seven per cent of all money places in the National Air Races. With headquarters i-n Gulf Buil ding, Pittsburgh, Kinkaid will visit airports and airplane plants, ironing out motor problems for pilots and manufacturers and making lubrica tion recommendations. All the better Awning* In this section are ANCHOR AWNINGS. 1 hit is the Awn ing Season. See us for que JENKINS' REPAIR SHOP Camden, B. C. k I HI I. M -J Blood stained the snow on WINTER RANGE New Mystery of the Cattle Country By Alan LeMay Two murdered men oast over Bar Hook ranch a shadow of mystery as deep as the winter night. What was the answer ? Jean Ra gland thought she knew. Lone hand, she played her terrible secret against the law and the range. Then Kentucky Jones began investigatin'. Guns barked and the noose hung over a dozen hoada I Action, romance and a suspense that never lets you down fill this swift tale of smoking guns and sturdy hearts, by a mas ter of Western fiction. Watch for It Every Week (?This Newspaper Anaonthotiftt Examination The United StatoH Civil Service ('ommd?Rion han announced that ap plication?; will ho received until June 18 for the positioo of anaenthottat, U. S. Pirhlic Health Service. The entmnco salary in $2,000 a year, Ruhject to a deduction of three and one half per cent toward a re tirement a-nnuity. A deduction of $780 per year in made from the ?al ary when quartorw, Ruhaistance, and laundry are furnished. Specified education a'nd experience are required. Ordinary graduate 2turne experience will not qualify. Full information may he obtained from M. H. Moore, Secretary of Ktoa Untied State# Civil Service of Kxarn inera, at the post office in thifl Uriyj now A PREMIUM MOTOR OIL FOR 2^ Again Gulf offers you a saving . . . Now you can get a premium oil at a popular price! HAVE YOU ever wished for a pre mium motor oil? without a pre mium price ; ? ; ? Then ? listen to this . ? ? There is now a premium oil? with full premium oil qualities? that sells for only 25c a quarts It is the new Gulf-lube , For many months, Gulf technologists No other 250 motor oil gives you all these quality points ! 1. It 1* Hah! sol process ed. 2. Its already high mileage has been tapped up 20% to 25%. 3. Highly resistant to oxidation ? non -sludging... extra long life. 4. It has a high viscosity index-? thins oat less under heat ... easy starting yeai renrfLThw ovghly de>waxedL 1 5. Forms far less carbon. t 6. High film strength ? a pave \ ?olneral oil that will not cor rode new alloy hearing!. have focussed their efforts on a better method of refining motor oil. Out of their efforts has come a giant new Gulf refinery, operating upon a new refining principle ? the Multi-sol process. And from this new process and new refinery comes the new Gulf-lube! How the Multi-sol process works In ibis history-making process, solvents 'of two opposite actions are used. One action dissolves out the im purities and settles them to the bot tom of the extraction tanks.The other action selects the desirable parts oithe ' oil and floats them to the top. This selected oil is then "skimmed off," THIS BOTTLE of milk shows what the Multi-sol process does for Gulf lube. It separates the "cream" from the "milk." Selective solvents settle the impurities in the oil to the bot tom, and float the desirable parts to the top. This "cream" is then skimmed off. Gulf-lube is the only 25c oil made by this process. thoroughly de-waxed and filtered? the finest motor oil 25 c ever bought! t"j Try just one filling! Try this extraordinary new oil. Fill up, replace with the new Gulf-lube ? and you'll notice a difference before you drive your first hundred miles! You'll add less oil between drains? for Gulf-lube's already high mileage has been stepped up 20% to 25%/ You'll get less carbon, less sludge ? and far better motor protection. You can get the new Gulf-lube at all Gulf dealers ? at only 25c a quart . GULF REFINING CO. NEW CjULF-LUBE fiV CAMS Oil UULK U. D. c. CHAPTER NOTES The May meeting of the John D. Kennedy Chapter U. D. C., was held at the home of Mrn. S. C. Zemp, with Mrs. Burwell Boykin as aanintant hottMi. After the minuted were read the treasurer's report wan given and it wan stated that a Htraford program had been recently given at the school Auditorium. Dr. Gwathnay, president |of Converge College was the speaker. Mm. Robert M. Kennedy, Jr., in be half of the U. D. C. presented the Doctor with a lovely basket of flow er?. The school children contributed $9.80 on the Stratford fund. A motion was made to write Doctor Cwathnay a note of thanks for mak ing the address and also one to Mrs. Kennedy, for the lovely flowers. The Memorial Committee reported that the luncheon for the Confederate ftoldieiw had been planned for noon, Friday, May 10th *nd at B p/*. there will vbe exercises at the cemetery. George Wittkowsky will be the speak er. ?Mvs. fi. C. Zemp told of the work that ihad been done in cleaning said repairing the .graves of the unknown ?oldttm >buried in the Quaker rome ..... I A report of the district nrveetinpf wan f?iven by Mrs. Zeaip, Misses Mc Dowall and MrB. J. B. Cureton, which was held in Rock Hill. After* tifto business meeting a do liffhtful social hour was spent and delicious refreshments were served. Fish a nd Gai.ie Rally at Beaver Crack Lust Thursday An enthusiastic meeting of sporta ">nn was held at Beaver Creek last Thursday evening. The affair was a joint raJIy of tho three nearby .asso ciations , Kershaw, Lancaster acid! Chester. Among those present were officers of tJhfc three chapters, Ex Gov John G. Richards, and tnorm|l?erfl of tho fttate Association, and other gnents. Dens Boykin, president of tho lo cal chapter acted as toastmaster and fish stipper was served for 127 per sons. Th? occasion was nn)uch of a stteeesfl. Many of the sportsmen ar rived ciarly and spent tho afternoon fishing. Those who msde short npeedll es wwro Fx-Gov. J. G. Richards, Dean Boykin,, Klrklamd Trotter, Vice Pres ident {->tato AsstmiaUon for the 5th district, and tmiembers of the Lsn caster *nd Chester cha<pters. Junior Senior Reception At Karon DeKalb School Tho Juniors and Seniors of Maron DoKalb High Sdh<ool held their re coption in tho Homo Economics roonn of the school on iFrday night, May3. The color scheme was blue and gold. Tho room was beautifully decorated with spring flowers. Tho guoats assembled in tho audit orium and were led into tho Homo Economies room by the host and 'Ivost ess, Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Leo,Jr. Thero were seventy ono present. Tho following program whs car ried out. Welcome ? ToastitmiRtress( Willie Mae Horton. Songs ? - Response?-- Juniors to Seniors. Toast to Seniors ? Willie Mao Hor ton. Response, Juniors? Katherine Og bum. Toast to facultyv? 1/miso Hinson Response ? Mr. Lee. Joke? Albertus Thomas. Statistics of Senior*? Wilma (lay Statistics of Junior* ? Robert Hood Statistics of Faculty ? Fred F. Song, Isle of Capre? Evelyn Hor ton, IJoatrico Truosdale, Willio Ma0 Peach, Varnon Williams, Albortua Thomas, Fred Fletcher. Son# It's .June in January. Miss CatcH Aibertus Thomas. At the conclusion of the abovo pro Kr im the Kuefts woro invited to 4 farewell dance for tho seniors at UhN 4-11 club house. Albinistic Snake Caught on ('harlcston Streeta Charleston, May 13. ? Fronn ritfvit off ac ity street, the Charleston museum has received an albinistift snake specimen which may l>e the first on record. K. liurnh-im Chemberlain, curator of science, said it was a .Southorrt hoj^nose snake and so far as hn known n<? alhinistic snake r>f any specimen over has been recorded, although ih? added that he had not Jh? dun oppor (.unity tf> verify this bjr a thorough investigation. Tho snake, of a pftlG buff cronn? color with pinkish eyes, was pifcke<? up on a street by a na nwho present ed it to the museum. Ik is afboufc lfl inches lonpf. Tho normal color 1b brownish re*l splotches on ffrAyiah backffrou'nd. t