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Thursday, June 21, 1928 McCORMICK MESSENGER, McCORM/CK, South Carotins Page Number Fit# J fERSlNAL AND ffiAL UK IBn-. N. C* Nava of Elizabethtor.. M'fnn., sperding' awhile here wi h Vht -snith':', Mrs. Lucy M. Ludwick. Mrs. M. L. Carroll has returned Troan a visit to her son, Mr. C. M. ikirrell, of Augusta, Ga. Master D. B. Woodward and M'ss lX.-Tothy 'Woodward are o n an ex- tonOed visit to relatives in Aiken. munds is Worthy Patron, and Mrs. Marshall is Worthy Matron of the local chapter. Mr. Edmu-ds is also a men!her <t’ one of the important ccmmitt.es of the Grand Chapter. U. D. C. Chapter Commissioner Urges ! Met Thursday, Further Restrictions M:. Ansel Price of Augusta spent a few days here last week with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Price. Regular Monthly Mooting At Home Of Mrs. M. R. LeRov Mirs Ann e Willis returned heme Saturday from two weeks’ stay in Washington, D. C., Alexander, Va., 1 and other points of interest in Vir-. ginia. On the way back she visited relatives in Greenville and Andorson, and while in Anderson attended the Andei'son Centennial, including the pageant. The Arne Carter Chapter, U. D. C. held its regular monthly meeting last Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. M. R. LcRoy, with Mrs. F.. C. Robinson and J. F. Mattison as' law s and the passage of further ro- ^ j strict ers, it was pointed out by Ccmmisslo.'er General of Immigra- WASHINGTON, D. C.. June 18.— The preservat on of a high standard ri’ American citizenship, in fact, the future of this country is dependent to a great extent upon the selection >? c’es’rable immigrants strict cn- forcemert of p: esem immigration dVfwii Edra Pettigi ew and. her mo- Ir.t r from Starr arc guests in the ti me of Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Britt f.' ^Sarulover. Mrs. Paul Thompson and daughter Y-'on Greenville, Texas, are spend ing s me time her^ v/.th her mother M s. M. L. Carroll. Mrs. M.ke McGrath and M’sses lit ttic and Annie Brown McGrath avin leave today for Elberton, Ga., to ^per.d the week end. While there tlhey will visit Mrs. McGrath’s sist er and mother. Mrs. Ben Brown and Mrs. Addic Dye. Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Smith and cbikllrcn spent last week with rela tives and friends in M llen, Ga. Miss Melba Deason has gone to Oreenwood to complete her commer cial course in Greenwood Business College. Mr. Joe Blackwell has returned from a week’s stay in St. Louis, Mo., •where he attended the meeting of telegraph operators. Mi'. Otis Fuller has gev.e to Char leston where he has a position with the J. M. Connelley Co., morticians. Mr. Fuller recently graduated fr~m the Cincinnati College of Embalm ing, Cincinnati. Ohio. Mr. S. W. Wideman announces his candkfcicy for cotton weigher at Plum Branch in this issue oc; Tho Messenger. Mr. P. C. Dorn became critically ill at h‘s home here last Saturday aftenoen and was immediately taken “to the Margaret Wright Hospital in Augusta in J. S. Strom’s ambul ance. Latest reports are to th? ef fect that Mr. Dorn is getting along very nicely. Mrs. A. J. Hendrix, president of the Ir-cal P -T. A., and Miss Emily Passmore, State Field Nurse, spent Tuesday visting the different sec tions of the county in interest of the Child Health Clinic to be held here June 29th. Mr. Sammie Talbert of Greens boro, N. C.. is on a visit, to his mo ther, Mrs. Sallie Talbert, of Sand- over. Miss Ruth Williams has retu nel to he:» duties at the * Wilhckvford Hospital in Augusta, after spending two weeks here with her parents, Mr. and Mis. F. E. Wili ams. Mrs. Georgia Talbert has return ed home from a visit to her daught er, Mrs. Edwin Barron, of Rock Hill. Miss Myrtle Martin is on a visit to her sister, Mrs. Hazen Johnson, of Fort Wayne. Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Brown have returned to their home in Atlanta, after spending two weeks here with h s parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. C- Brown. Mr. Rallie Bentley of Augusta spent Sunday here' with his mother Mrs. Isabelle Bentley. Mr. Henry Walker, Jr., left one day last week to accept a potior with his brother, Mr. A. R. Walker, cf Pine Bluff, Ark. .Aflter spending three weeks here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Strom, Miss Rosa Strom has re turned to her wo:‘k in Atlanta. Senator and Mrs. F. C. Robinson and daughter, little Mis s Margaret, accompanied by Miss Carrie Sue Tal bert, Were visitors in Columbia Mon day and Tuesday. Mr. W. K. Charles was a week end business visitor at Timmcmsville and other nearby points. assisting hostesses. In the absence of the president, Mrs. J. S. Strom, Mrs. J. E. Brad ley, vice president, presided over the business session. The meeting was opened with the reading of the ritual, followed with the Lord’s prayer in corcert. Reports from all the officers were heard and the roll call was answer ed with* the name of a Confederate ge.erali After the business was dispensed with the following historical pro gram was carried out: A very inst.uctivo paper on ‘ J f ferson Davis and His Family Lif ,” was road by Mrs. R. S. Owe s. Mrs. T. J. Price read a poem en titled “The Conquered Banner,” and this was followed by the chapter singing “My Old Kentucky Home.” During the social period the host esses served delicious ice cream and wafers. Child Health Day Here June 29th r THIS WEEK Mr. James Crawford of Aiken vis ited relatives and friends here the past week end. Miss Laura LeRcy of Willington spci t several days of the past week here- as guest of Miss Winnie Thur mond. Mr. E. B. Sharpton of North Au- is visiting here in the home of Ivs son, Mr. A. R. Sharpton. Miss Mary F ances Kennedy of Oovetown, Ga., Is spending some t'rne here as guest of her aunt, Mrs. A. Talbert. Rev. and Mis. Leon T Pressly re turned to their heme here Tuesday. Mr. Pressly helped Rev. W. S. Pat terson in a meeting at the A. R. i". Church n Lancaster last week, while Mrs. Prorsly spent the week with Mrs. T. G. Castles of Great Falk. Mr. Frank O. Black, Agricultural Statistician with the U. S. Depart ment of Agriculture. Bureau of Ag ricultural Economics, Columbia, S. C., was a visitor to McCormick yes terday. His main purpose was get- t‘rg f rst hand infdrmation on the acreage planted to certain crops throughout this section. His reports are published monthly in The Mes senger for the benefit of those who like to keep up with the progress of various crops. Dr. W. R. Campbell and little son, Walter, Jr., from Sanford, Fla., Mr. j -lack Bates and Mr. Jdhnrie Bates from Batesburg visited in the home j i f the former’s parents, Mr. and ( A.-s. A. B. Campbell, near town last ( Monday. Mr. Preston Finley caught a 17 pound German Carp on a trot line in Chamberlain’s Mill Pond in Little River last Thursday morning, land ing the fish by himself and without a ret. The fish apparently hadn’t been on the hook long, but Mi*. Fin ley didn’t let that good catch keep him at it. for he took his l : nes out and quit for the present. Many friends over the county will wtvret to lear n of the critical illness Miss Allie Middleton of Meri wether at an Augusta hospital. Mr. J. E. Bell cf G-’eenville was iimong the business visitors here Tuesday. Mr. Robert Dukes of Edgefield -pent Sunday here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. S- Duker. Mrs. J. J. Minarik of Meriwether vaf, u visitor here a short while ;y:/icrday. Mr. J. M. Gibert and family of, Will ngton were visitors here a short rvhJe yesterday. Gc rcral James M. Kennedy has re turned to Washington, D. C., after spending the week end hero with his sister and brother, Mrs. Douglass Haggard and Mr. W. H. Kennedy. General Kennedy stopped here en route from Cblumbia. where he had the honorary degree cf doctor of laws conferred bpon him last Thurs day by the University of South Car olina, his alma mater. After com- plft’ng.his course in medicine in Patlinn re. General Kennedy enlisted i i the medical .department of the United States Army in 1892. He made a fine record- during the world war, and since attaining the rank of brigadier general has been in charge of the Walter Reed hospital. H s boyhood days were spent about four miles above McCormick at the old home place cf h‘s parents, the late Mr. and Mrs. Boggs Kennedy. His many friends here are always glad to see him and .to learn of his ach ievements. . McCormick P. T. A. Sponsors The Movement, And Has Assistance Miss Emily Passmore, Field Nurse Perhaps you have heard o' the mpprtance of the day, Jun^* 29th' If r.ot let us tell you all about it The P.-T. A. of McCormick is spon- ering a Child Health Daw a day vhon all the children up to school age can be exam ned by Dr. Dottor- "r, the babv rpecialist of the State Board of Health. The clinic will be held in the Court House, beginning 9 a. m., June 29th. Wc want all the children from the ent'Ye county to attend. Dr. Dottcrer will help mothers solve some of the many problems of child care. We are hoping that arrangements can be made to run the school bus from Meriwether to the Court House, picking up the mothers and children from that district. For information, call on any of the school trustees of Washington School District. Mr. Dreiuian of Parksville is chairman #f the hmard. EMILY PASSMORE. Field Nurt-e. ~X British Motor Expedition Driving Buicks Nearing London After Trip From Pekin Over Continent FLINT, Mich.. Ju e 16—The Bri- t : sh mot:r expedition which left Pek- n la"t summer in two Buick cars, vith Lc'ndcn as its destination, is -ow on the last leg of its long jour ney, accoid ng to word reciived f om. the travelers. They have traversed lion, Harry E. Hull, in an address before the American Legion, at Cart eret, New Jersey. He reminded his audience of the menace that con fronted the nation at the time of the World War because of the vas L u - assimilated hordes that had crowded into our cities and industrial com munities from nations that were then hostile belligerents. “Our future as a nation,” he raid, “rests upon this zeal—the zeal and determination that the America of the coming century shall reflect a c’tizenship, the like o" which the > world has never known. Tha Ameri canization of Americans is the great task for us to fulfill, to reforge our civilization, and td make our Gov ernment a government for all the citizens of the Republic. “Indeed, our future citizenship must be nurtured and preserved. This means that to it there must be added only the higher type of the foreign newcomer—those whose background is not unlike our own, and who, af ter they have become permanent and naturalized citizens of the United States, will respect government, up hold the principles of the law, health and civilization for which the Amer- .ca n people have labored so zealous ly in the trying yeai’s which lie be hind us. Our democracy must be made safe for all time.” Upon another occasion Mr. Hull said: “Even n the face of the precau- ions which our immigration laws •'ave taken, it would appear that we •.hall need to take even more i n tho future yearn. It is estimated that even now there arc as many as 3,- 000,000 aliens m the United States who came here through illegal means. . . . “Stowaways, deserting seamen, and these who are smuggled in or who manage to creep across the bcrdei's uninspected, comprise a large part of each year’s group which has no right to be in the country, and thus point to the need of added financial assist ance to the Bui'eau in an effort to limit the alien classes to the 161,500 .allowed by law. •‘This great mass of ineligibles is indeed a menace to the nation. Being •acornpete; t to become citizens and aeing a charge upon the country’s resources, whether at large or avvait- ng depertat cn. they are a distinct ab lity to our money and our citi- .enship and should be reduced to a nrrnimum within the next few years. ••Our whole structure as a great aticnal commonwealth rests upon •he uninterrupted cont nuation of all ihc standards social, economic, and x Ltical, which have brought us for- .va:d from our first strike for inde pendence. “With a great national love fer all countries and the alien emissar.es vhich they would send to our shores, we must yet cling to self-preserJa- tion with sufficient zeal to see that our national customs and traditions are r.ot injured; thus our educational and health programs are not men aced by masses who are inherently J§ We have just received a car load || of government tested Calcium Arsen- ate in new drums which we are selling 41 j this week only at 7 cents per pound. M ? iXext week, beginning Mondav, June Jjg) \ 'j - ]| 25 th, the price will be 8 cents per f| pennd. • Get your supply now before the price advances. G. & J, J. McCormick, S. C. On Thrift jungle desert, and mountain, and a: 0 now i n Europe opeodin? twardj thrhlg'hAm'iri- tho Channel, with comparatively staI . dards „ reads under them. ! ^ When the expedition reaches Lon-- AT* 1 r P 11 don. it will have traveled one-third) A. JLilttlC J. alR of the distance abound the globe. The trip has been notable not only for, the great distance covered but for the hazards encountered along the way. Floods, snow, and sandstorms have threatened the expedition, some- t'me delaying its progress, but never turning it back. ' A recent article in the London Times, .from that newspaper’s Beiiut correspondent, sketched the experi ences of Major McCallum and his companions in journey. Through Earning, Saving And Spending Of Equal Importance In Personal Progress »B NECESSITIES IN HARHE Ice Cream Freezers, Fly Screens, Garden Tools, Tools for many kinds of cultivating crops. Namely, Hoes, Cultivators, Plows, Fenders, etc. Good tools are a help and good investments. Don’t forget our Gold Seal Rugs, Auto Casings and Sherwin-Williams Paints. Come to see us. WHITE HARDWARE CO. Main Street McCormick, S. C. So* -o- COMING TO THE -o- ;:;:;DIXIE THEATRE;:;:; FRIDAY AND SATURDAY June 22nd and 23rd, at 8:30 p. m. “PARTNERS AGAIN” WITH POTASH AND PERLMUTTER LAUGHS, ROMANCE, THRILLS. You’ll rock—You’ll roar an revel! Abe and Mawrus trying to use both hands to talk in a run away auto and aboard a dizzy airplane _You’ll positively scream! S e them escape a meb—see them flutter between heaven and earth in an airplane. With George Sidney, Alexander Carr, Betty Jewel ALSO—PATHE WEEKLY MONDAY AND TUESDAY June 25th and 26th, at 8:30 p. m. NORMA SHEARER IN AFTER MIDNIGHT 99 (By S. W. Sttfaus, President Ameri can Society For Thrift.) Andrew Carnegie., one of the their trail-breaking world’s greatest exemplars of thrift, French I ndo " ( was once asked which he considered China a part of Siam, down the Malay Peninsula, and thrcpgh led a, Baluchistan, and Persia was the : tiffest part of the ti’ip. In many cases the “read” was mere track, avith rain and snow to aggravate the difficulties of following It. Despite tho heavy odds, the Buicks pcrxrnied nobly, according »o the Times. The expedition is now! ioir.twhere between Constantirople i the most important, earning, saving or spending. He replied by asking which of the throe legs cf a stool was the most necessary. It would be well if this under- rtand ; ng cf thrift were wide spread. The three factors in the process of acquiring and using money are inter dependent and it is false doctrine to over-emphasize saving. We sco examples every day wh : ch Mr. aafi Mrs. R. N. Edmunds of PnC'Ev l!e 7i and Mrs. M. M Marshall,] -of Modoc, are attending the Grand Ohapt*r of the Order i«f Eastern which ©anvettfs a- Un.on ta.s week. They go as renroesntatives of Chapter JU8,Parksville. Mr. Ed M:’. and Mrs. Thayer Parks a v ou-eo tho binth of a C'irl to thun la t Friday. : nd its desiination, the longer r.nd t -nd to prove fhat qu.te a large per l arder portion cf its route behind it, j CO ntage of the people give insuffi- and the journey, which has no coun-' attention tc* spending cr invest- torpart i n the annals of motoring, i n g. There are opportunities on : Imrst at an end. \ evc:y hand for earning money and it X j i 3 not difficult in these times and A college professor in New York under presert conditions for the — — j has. announced that he Ic going to average person to save something !•• •. a-'.I ff is. R. B. McAllister cn- drive a taxi this summer for his out of h.s income. Bi|t the amount nour.ee tire b rt!i.,.<* " a Vy to them health. Could ar yon .' imagine a taxi cf money which is lost through the a:.t Sr.tuuay., •i driver doing that? §■ reel C-JVJ' She’ll show vou the town! Beautiful Nerma Shearer as a modest violet. Her sister a gold-digging lady of the night. And then Norma decides that goodness is th** bunk. You’ll be thrilled at what happens then! The popular star in her finest role—a film of gorgeous clothes and the drama that stalks while New Yc,rk sleeps. THRILLS! GAYETY! GORGEOUS CLOTHES! WITH LAWRENCE GRAY, GWEN LEE NOTICE!—This will end all Monday and Tuesday shows un til later. So see this one! ur.wive use otf savings is row said to be greater than the annual growth in nat'oral savings deposits. j With the vast majority of people, the accumulatioss of savings is a slow process requiring great pati ence ar.d persistence. The margin between income and the necessities of life is ;:ct wide. Hence it is all the more unfo: ur.atc that greater attention is not given to the prob- i Icms involved in the proper use of savings. The trouble very largely lie-, in the fact -that people do rot give r.uT- f cien' study to these problems. In cidents are not uncommon where persoi s have parted with the savings j of years on the representations cf i total strangers. Every saved dollar represent:, hard work and great patience. Just as much thought and care should be used in administering it as in acquiring and saving it. If this rule were appl’ed by every one, there would be a tremendous elim ination of lost or wagled-money.: It is the pail of good thrift to be as careful in letting go of your dol lars as you were in getting hold of them. tX* : . The train that broke all records the other day in England of travel ling 401 miles without stopping is quite a contrast to the old accommo dation train that used to make 401 sUps in every mile. 1—I Xl When you see a man rushing down the street nowadays, the chances are that he isn’t busy—he has just for gotten something.