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/ ' / * i / Thursday, August 23, 1928 McCORMICK MESSENGER. McCORMICK, South Carolina. Page Numn^r ^ ^eii Faimers’ Bulletin 8S1-F (rovivd) ; California grape growers la^t sea- cqntains ieformati^ 1 on the nrev^r.-, con thought that a new riisca c had tion, diagnosis^»d treatment of h •; suddenly made, its appearance in cholera a. d r^ a y bo secured by writ-] their vineyards, and c^isiderablc ex- ing to the ^Department of A^ricul- c‘.te:nent prevailed unt:l Department ture. Ne^ v material in this publ ca-; of Agriculture specialists correctly tion, wh^h is entitiod “Hog Chcl- diagnosed the trcub’.o as injury by ora,” Preludes the immunization of lightning wh ch had struck the sudr 1 * 1 ^ pig s > the period of incuba-'t ellis wires. In one case the light- tio/ of the disease, and “breaks” in i ing* traveled about 200 feet along a immunity. wire. S. C. WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL REVIEW NO OPTIMIST IS REQUIRED TO- DAY TO SENSE THE CONTIN UING FORWARD COURSE OF AMERICAN BUSINESS— CHARLES M. SCHWAB TAKING THE DRUDGE OUT OF COOKING As every housewife knows, it is no easy matter to prepare three meals a day, week af.er week, aid no easy matter to make them different and appetizing. There is where we help the most for our splendid variety of good r oods enables every wife in McCormick to prepare pleas ing and d* fferent menus daily. We help take most of the drudge out of the daily task of cocking. TRY IT YOURSELF Trade here for your foodstuffs awhile and see if it isn’t easier. You’ll soon find that the preparation of each meal will be a sort of little adventure into the game of pleasing the family with something new. Prices are lower here, also, regardless o* the great var-ety and high quality. We’ll deliver ycur groceries if you will phone us your orders. McCORMICK, S. C. BEST PHEStRIFIIDNS make a specialty of accurately and promptly filling prescriptions from the best drugs to be had, and our prices are very moderate. We carry a complete line of drugs and drug sun dries and everything to be found in a first class drug store. Let us serve you.* STROMS’ DRUG STORE McCORMICK, S. C. FOR SALE-A N V T HIN G- EVEDVTHINGTT LESS IAN TOG EXPECTED ID PAY! Have you some desire for something that you haven’t satisfied because you couldn’t afford the price? You can get it through The Messenger’s col umns. Wearing apparel, cats, type writers, dogs, musical instruments, birds, jewelry, garden implements, furniture, houses are just a few of the items that appear in every issue. A GREAT MARKET PLACE The Advertising columns are the greatest market place, whether you want to buy or sell. The place where good people meet more good people, all in the mood to buy, sell or trade. Try it yourself and be convinced of the wonderful possibilities. THE McCormick, S. C 0 Sandy Branch—Farmers b?re busy with c: cpr, Andrews—Tobacco market opened in this place. Geo:grtown—Between 400 and 500 acres cucumbers will be planted in Georgetown County next season for pickling purpose's. Ccrway—Warehouse floor space for Conway tobacco market greatly increased fcT 1928 season Hammond—Farmers here busy gathering tobacco. Walterbo'.o — New Methodist Church under construction * at Rail road Avenue and Hampton Street nearing completion. Belton —New 5c and $1 store re cently opened here. Walterboro — Patterson Service Station remodeling block at Railroad Avenue and Hampton. JStreet. Walterboro—-Work nearly complet ed on new Zal' n store building at Washington Street and Railroad Avenue. Beaufort—$100,000 shrimp canning factory secured for this place through efforts of Edisto-Savannah Rivers Development Associatic-n and Beaufort County ‘Chamber of Com merce. Williston—>G. C. Eidson opens new electric cold storage plant here. Elio: ee—Considerable quantity of marl located in this vic’nity. Belton—Concrete • foundation wc rk of Belton-Anderson highway com pleted to Belton city limit:<. Sumter—Annual Poultry Farmers Day of South Carolina Poultry Breed ers Association will be held here Au gust 22. Conway—Plans making for con struction of new bridge across Wac- camaw Rivor. Dillon—Farmers Wva’-’ehouse here will be operated by Raper, Wood and W Ikins this season. Dillon—Cor.ti acts let for paving 5 miles Highway No. 9 toward Little Rock, and 5 miles toward Lake View Camden—Memorial Gateway tc CarmUn nears completion. Whitmire—Four-story addition be ing built to local plant of Aragon Baldwin Cotton Mills. Joncsville—New road be'ng con- ctructed through this town. Yemassee—'Building occupied by Baker’s Drug Store here repainted. Ridge land—CcVastal Highway be twi:en. Shoemaker’s store and Great Swamp opened to traffic. Estill—About 100 carloads water melons shipped from here during recent week. Sumter—Contract let for installa tion of modem* steam heating plant in Emanuel Church. Tobacco markets throughout South Ca.olina opened. Dornmark—J v R. Myrick opens new grocery store here in Guess building. Charleston!—Farm products being tested at special laboratory at Med ical College to determine iodine con tent. Sumter—Cantaloupes bore un- usually plentifu this year. Gaffney—G. C. Byers tc. open new dry goods store here soo*n. Brunson—‘Local melons being ship ped to No:<thern markets. Hampton—Two Hampton County concerns will co-oper^tc to study grade and staple of cotton. ;XI Where cdtton is harvested with a cotton sled, a method which has come into increasing use in the western Cotton Belt, only 6 or 7 hoars ol man labor are required to rled enough cotton to make a ^00-pound bale of lirt, whereas 70 or 80 hours are needed for hand picking the same amount according to records secured by the Bureau c. < ’ Agricul tural Economics, Department of Ag riculture. However, it has been found that even undei» favorable sledding conditions the cotton sled will Irave seme cotton in the field, principally since it does not recover the cotton which has fallen from the plant and that cotton which has been sledded or snapped usually sells for less than piclred cotton. —X Kinship Of Farm Tenant And Land lord Significant Farm tenancy has steadily increas ed since 1880, when the census first made a separate enumeration of own ers and tena. ts, until row tenant faimers ccmpri*' 33.G per cent of all farmers in the Un ted States. While the rate of increase has not been sc large in the la t decade, except in certain * ctions the country, the akeady large per centage cf tenant farmers is viewed with apprehensior by some who fear a tenant argicul- turc. It is therefore desirable to know who the tenants are and something of their opportunities for becoming la r. downers. Tenants who rent farms from relatives are much more 1 kely to be intie:«sted in the farm and the cr*nmunity than those who are rent- irjg from non-relatives, cays the Fourteen Chevrolet Factories Running At Record Pace W’ith production in fourteen great Chevrolet f actor'os running at a rec ord pace for this period of the year and sales continuing at the highest summer level in the history cf the company, W. S. Knudsen, president of the Chevrolet Motor Company and R. H. Grant, vice-president in charge cf sales, left Detroit last week for a three weeks’ business tour of the en tire vr stern half of the United States. In the course of the tour, which will include the leading bus ress centers of the wesj the Chevrolet ex ecutives will visit with Chevrolet dealers in each community, discuss individual dealer problems and study local business conditions as they per tain to Chevrolet. Before leaving Detro’t, Mr. Knud- Inside*’ Information A mint flavored gelatin is ap. etiz- ing with cold lamb. Sliced cucumb ers may be placed in the bott .m of the mold. Use the pressure canner ' 0 r all ron-acid vegetables. Send for Far mers’ Bulletin 147-F befo \: begin- ing to do any canning. United States Department of Agri- se n announced that production in the W’hat was probably the first “sire exchange” in the United States was held this year at the State Fair grounds in South Dakota, when live stock owners brought in their boars, rams, and bulls for trade or sale. To cover incidental expenses there was a charge of 25 cents for each boar culture. A study of landlords in dicates that 84 per cent of tenants related to landlords in the North and West are either sons or sons-in-law; in the South the comparable figure is 60 per cent . The son or son-in- law may pay the same rent as any .• her renter, but he has some inter est in the farm, and in most cases in the community. Among the States in which the number of tenants is, large, Wiscon sin has the highest per centago relat ed to the landlord, approximately 4,0 per cent, while North Dakota is the lowest, with slightly mere than 20 per cent. In more than half the counties of the Central States above 30 per cent of the tenants are related to theii- landlords. In the extreme Eastern and in the far Western States a larger proportion of coun ties have a lower per centage of re lated tenants. The fact that so Ijarge a proportion of tenants are relatives cf their land lords is significant, says,the depart- rnrnt, because such tenants are likely to have a degree of concc.'n in the upkeep and care of farms comparable with that of an owner operator, and many are operating as tenants pre- paratoey to assuming the full owner ship of the property by inheritance or some other mode of acquisition. X Little Talk On Thrift FALLACY TO ASSUME THAT FU TURE WILL BE BETTER TIME TO BEGIN SAVING THAN PRESENT (By S. W. Straus, President American Society for Thrift.) first seven months of the year to August fiitet totalled 869,297 cars and trucks, breaking by a wide mar gin all former marks fee this per iod and definitely indicating that the millionth car built in 1928 will come off the production line .early in Sep tember. More than 800,000 of the “Bigger and Better” models are r.ov in the hands of owners. Included among the cities to be visited on the executive tour arc the following and will be visitrd in this (•kler: Chicago, Kansas City, Lo r Ar.gelcs, Oakland, San Francisco Portland, Seattle, Spokane, Butte and Minneapolis. In Kansas City, Mr Knudsen and Mr. Grant will check the progress t'f construction work on the newest Chevrolet assembly plant new rising in that city. When com pleted this fall it will have a capacity of 350 cars a day and will bring Chevrolet’s production facilities up to 1,250,000 units annually. The party will return to Detroit September first in t’me to witness the production of the millionth Ch?v- lolet of 1928 about ten days later. X Paper Mulch In creases Yields Each child’s costume should have at least erne pocket. If poe’ets on the dress spoil the design or if they cannot bo used because of plaits or some other feature, make/o^e in the bloomers. Make both bloomers and dresses for little girls large enough to allow fer wide tucks and hems to be let down wher the material shrinks and the child grows. A tuck in the bloom ers on a level with the lower **r.d of the plackets will not show, nor will a wide tuck in the underwaisr of a two-piece dreis. Instead of stitching these allowance tucks just .'nee, stitch them every half inch A their width with a moderately long loose stitch. Each time a st'tcfcing is rip ped out one inch is added to the length. One of the sayings of Poor R‘ch- ard was: “A man may, if he knows net how to save as he gets, keep his nose all his life to the gi'indstone. and die rot worth a groat at last.” If you are not saving monpy today, dc rot make the mistake of believing that time will make the beginning easier. Even though ycur income may increase and ycur general cir cumstances in life become more pros perous, you will lind it just as hard to save money later as now.- One the most serious mistake made by many is the assumption that at some time in the future it will be easier to' save money and get ahead than it is at present. Human experience has shown that even with the attainment of a larger income, one is no more apt ta sav."' than before because when the in come grows the standard of living is quite apt to rise in even greater pro portion. Saving is not so much a matter of income or financial position as it is a question of inciinat’cn. Deter mination rather than material cir cumstances is the ’deciding factor. The man who goes along from day to day without saving is making the task harde:’ for himself. He is paying a usurious interest for his procrastination which may some day completely crush and overwhelm him. He is undermining his character, vitiating his will and gambling his time against fate. The saving of a small amount cf money today makes one better equip ped to save something tomorrow or next week. We are made stronger in character, and have the inspira tion of our bank account, our invest ment securities or some other con crete evidence of our progress. The hardest dollar of all to save About 15 years ago it occurred to the manager of a sugar plantation in Hawaii that, since the trash ct c:cp refuse collecting on top of the sugar cane acted as a suppressor of weeds, a cheap grade of paper would have the same effect and at the came time be much more durable. In con nection with the development of the use of this paprr mulch, :'t was no ticed that areas mulched with paper nreduced more vigorous crop plants Later the mulch was tried on pine apples with such rapid and maiked success that today more than 90 per cent of Hawa'tan pineapples are grown under mulch, one company ir the past year having spent $500 000 for mulching paper. These favorable remits led the Department of Agri culture to carry on experiments covering the past four yea:s, wntl p^per mulch f.i various crcps, and wh it* some factors in connection with its use are not yet well known, it is evident that the use of a paper mulch markedly stimulates growth (at least under conditions in the Easterr States). An impervious paper*mulch also tends to permit an increased water supply in the surface soil. In the case of a light rain (which, with out the paper, would only moisten the top layer and be qu'ckly lest) the paper allows the water to pen etrate to the plant roots. In add! rion, the use of the paper consider ably lessens the labor of weeding. The bulk of the v^eding is confined to the early season’s growth and practically all the weeding and eulti- vaticOi in hot weather is eliminated At the present time the chief objec tion to the paper mulch is its ex pense. Watch your posture while at vari ous household tasks. Keep you:! back straight and herd from the I.lps. Do not slcUch in a chair while sitting at work. Sit well back in you. .hair. If your tabi?a : sink, tubs, and other surfaces where you work n great deal are not the right height and cause you to stoop over, see whether they could not be raised. It pays even to have plumbing fixtures rais ed when necessary to save 'atigue. Machinery that is used in field or forest, such as engines or tractors, should be in such shape that sparks cannot get out of the smokestack or burning particles of carbon blow out, and thus set fire to the dry brush, timber, grasr« on grain. The ground should be cleared down to the miner al so 1 for a distance of several feet around a stationary .engine, and it is well to wet down the ground arounc it at least twice a day. t\j Tw<. diseases of alfalfa, bacterial wilt and winter injury which have i caused serious losses of alfalfa in is the first one. One dollar saved today is worth > many regions in the past few years, many theoretically saved tomorrow —a day which never comes. ix: Breakage of milk bottles in the United States runs into a loss and ram and 50 cents for each bull. 1 about $30,001*000 annually, and stud- The exchange aroused considerable its arc being carried on by dairy interest and favorable comment and specialists of the Department of Ag- are -described, and recommendations for their control are given, in Circul ar 39-C, “Bacterial Wilt and Winter Injury of Alfalfa.” This circular can of! be secured free fiom the U. £) De partment of Agriculture. tXX One of life’s greatest disappoint created an oppoiftunity for compari-! riculture to find means of reducing | ments canv to the American tourist son and discussion of the merits the various animals. of this breakage, espec'ally in milk who expected to find Rome lighted I plants.* I with Roman candles. Notice To Creditors Of Application Discharge IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES For The Western District Of South Carolina. No. B-1026 In Bankruptcy. In The Matter Of MRS. MARIE RICH MINARIK, Meriwether, S. C., Bank upt. TO THE CREDITORS OF THE ABOVE-NAMED BANKRUPT: Take notice that oi August 2, 1928, the above-named bankiupt filed his petition in said Court praying that he may be decreed by the Court to have a lull discharge from all debts provable against his estate, ex cept such debts as ane excepted by law from such discharge, rr.d a hear ing was thereupon ordered and will be had upon raid petition or. Septem ber 7, 1928. before said Court at Greenville, in said District, at 11 o’clock in thr forenoon, at which time and place all known creditors and other persons in interest may qppear and show cause, if a ny they have, why the prayer of said petition should not be granted. D. C. DURHAM, Clerk. Dated at Greenville, S. C., August 4. 1928—4t. Notice Of Final Settle ment And Discharge o On August 25, 1928, at 10 c-’clpck a. m. we will makp a final settlement and ask for a discharge in the office of Probate Judge at McCormick Court House, S. C., on the estete of E. H. Lagroor.e. All persons holding claims should present them pi\)perly attested before that day. J. H. LaGROONE, W. S. LaGROONE. ELLA LaGROONE, SUDIE RHODES. Administrators. July 25, 1928. DR. HENRY J. GODIN Optometrist Thirty Yean Experience. A Specialist Examining Eyes and Fitting Glasses at Your Service. 956 Broad St. AUGUSTA, GA. It is now possible to send light around a corner, but so far no suc cess has been made in getting it through a' square head. -- 666 Cures Chills and Fever, Intermittent, Ren^ittenl and Bilious Fever due to Malaria It Kills The Germs Doctors say that vegetablss will make t.ie sientior. An elephant is a good example, because they ane strictly vegetarians.