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* / V mga H Thursday, July 31, 1930 McCORMICK MESSENGER, McGURMICK, SoutK Carotin*. MBm Page Number Tw© i • S. C. WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL REVIEW The following record of indus trial activity lists items showing investment of capital, employ ment of labor and business activ ities and opportunities. Informa tion from which the paragraphs are prepared is from local papers, usually of towns mentioned, and may be considered generally cor rect. Union — Service Cleaners & Dyers opened for business in Smith block. Hartsville — Stevenson Service Station will open for business on comer of Fourth Street and Caro lina Avenue. During the fiscal year closing June 30 the State Highway Com mission added 540 miles to - State Highway System, bringing the to tal to 3,962 miles. State Highway Commission ap proved and authorized additional hard-surfacing of 17 road sections totaling approximately 285 miles at cost of nearly $7,000,000. Union — Magnolia Golf Links opened to public. Belton — Miniature golf course established on Latimer property on O'Neal Street. Dillon — 1930 Dillon County Fair will be held October 14-17. Belton — Plans proposed for es tablishing star mail route from here to Greenville. Grading will start soon on Bel- ton-Cooley’s Bridge road. Highway from Danielsville to Abbeville County line by way of Elberton will be paved in the fu ture. Prosperity — Flower Show spon sored by Garden Club recently held at home of Dr. and Mrs. George W. Harmon. Spartanburg — Brcaday Motor Company formally opened for business. Prosperity — Pugh Bros., dry goods merchants, moved to Leap- hart building on Main St. State Park — New building at South Carolina State Sanatorium ready for occupancy. Sumter —First Flower and Vege table Show held in Clum Market building on Harvin Street. Andrews — Tobacco market will open here August 5th. Highway No. 26 will be paved from within four miles north of Manning to Andrews. Dillon — Plans discussed for es tablishment of canning plant here. McClellanville — South Carolina Power Company opened power plant and started operation. Dillon — Liberty Warehouse will operate under new management of Jones, Wood and Yarbo this sea son. Beaufort — Mr. Allen Paul open ed miniature golf course on vacant lot next to McDaniel’s Five and Ten Cent Store on Bay Street. Beaufort — Ritz Theatre install ed talkie equipment. Woodruff — ‘Woodruff Citizen" started publication here. Sumter — New Neon electric sign installed by R. T. Brown Tiife Company . ^ „ Greer Lanford Cleaners and Dyers plant remodeled. Newberry — Newberry County fair will be held November 3-8th. Abbeville — New X-rpy and Fluroscope installed at Abbeville County Memorial Hospital. Hampton — Advertising Cor poration of America!, capitalized at $500, filed articles of incorpora tion. Abbeville — Calco Manufactur ing Company resumed operations recently. • Cheraw — Mr. W. E. Reid ship ping plums in substantial quanti ties from his 11-acre orchard near here. Yemassee — Construction work on stretch of Coastal Highway be yond this city completed and op- a* ■■..f. 1 , 1 ■ ■■ ■ Adult* Contract Children'* Disease* csaif and do, contract many *8 diseases. And, usually, they from them much more than children do. For instance, many adults contract worms, an ailment usually associated with children. Sometimes they suffer intensely and take expen sive medical treatments, without reali sing-that worms are the cause of their troubles, same as and weight, _ lew sleep, itching of the uoeo and anus, and ahoominal pains. And, the some wurtfrinft that surely and harmlessly ex pels round and pin worms from children wfQ do the eaxpe for adults **— White's Cream Vermifuge, which you can get at STROMS' DRUG STORE \ Alee ting n~ - - ' the Needs of Ntillions Peeywfe 3T r-ri c=3 The low-priced automobile ha» brought greater opportunity and added hours of recreation to millions of men and women. B ECAUSE the automobile is such an im portant factor in the lives and pros perity of so many people, the purpose of the Ford Motor Company is something more than the mere manufacture of a motor car. Therfe is no service in simply setting up a machine or a plant and letting it turn out goods. The service extends into every detail of the business — design, production, the wages paid and the sell ing price. All are a part of the plan. The Ford Motor Company looks upon itself as charged with making an auto mobile that will meet the needs of millions of people and to provide it at a low price. That is its mission. That is its duty and its obligation to the public. The search for better ways of doing things is never-ending. There is cease less, untiring effort to find new methods and new machines that will save steps and time in manufacturing. The Ford plants are, in reality, a great mechanical uni versity, dedicated to the advancement of industry. Many manufacturers come to see and share the progress made. The greatest progress comes by never standing still. Today’s methods, however successful, can never be taken as wholly right. They represent simply the best efforts of the moment. To morrow must bring an improve ment in the methods of the day before. Hard work usually finds the way. Once it was thought impossible to cast gray iron by the endless chain method. All precedent was against it and every previous experiment had failed. But fair prices to the public demanded that waste ful methods be eliminated. Finally the way was found. Abetter way of making axle shafts saved thirty-six million dollars in four years. A new method of cutting crankcases re duced the cost by $500,000 a year. The perfection of a new machine saved a similar amount on such a little thing as one bolt. Then electric welding was de veloped to make many bolts unnecessary and to increase structural strength. Just a little while ago, an endless chain conveyor almost four miles long was in stalled at the Rouge plant. This conveyor has a daily capacity of 300,000 parts weighing more than 2,000,000 pounds. By substituting the tirejbess, unvarying machine for tasks formerly done by hand, it has made the day’s work easier for thousands of workers and saved time and money in the manufacture of the car. All of these things are done in the interest of the public —so that the benefits of reliable, economical transportation may be placed within the means of every one. FORD MOTOR COMPANY ened to traffic. Camden — J. Blackeney Zemp rebuilding old stables on South Broad Street. Newberry — Contract awarded to Contractor Livingston for construc tion of addition to Central Metho dist Church edifice. Myrtle Beach—54th annual con vention of South Carolina Phar maceutical association held here. Charleston — 2,700,000 feet of pitch pine lumber shipped to Buenos Aires. McCormick — Construction un derway on flat bridge across Lit- many special features, such as car toons, health talks, wise cracks, pithy paragraphs, etc. All of these features cost money. A good newspaper seldom mixes in politics. It’s not a good policy to take sides unless some issue vit ally affecting the welfare of the community or country is involved. A good newspaper must be fair and impartial. A good newspaper will pull for its town, its state and its nation. The editor of a good newspaper must be well balanced and have a inate journalistic courage and ser vice to money, but because it would defeat its purpose for existence should it become partisan in a commercial controversy that is nothing more than a private fight between rival mercantile interests. This paper carries the advertise ments of the chain stores and of the independent merchants. Both types of businesses are entitled to use of the columns of this news paper, and each advertiser has the privilege to list the prices of his merchandise and to express his views on the’question now pertin- good store of knowledge. He must tie River at old Chamberlain’s or not be easily influenced by any lo- ent in his advertisements. Searles’ mill site. . cal subject. | As we v iew the matter, it is not Lyman — Tie manufacturing He has a right to his own opinion, a news story. It is not a political plant recently opened for business his own religion and his own poll- quarrel; it is not a religious or fac- by Mr. king. tics, and every other thing that the tional quarrel. It is just a com- Hartsville — Tobacco season will moderns have. But he must not mercial controversy that resolves open here August 5th. try to force his ideas on his read- itself to a question of competition Columbia — Plans under consid- ers. He must be fair and unbias- in trade, eration for enlarged quarters for e d. The Unit ed States has always South Carolina Highway Depart- Newspapers are being criticized been a land of open opportunity in ment, niade necessary by increased in some quarters for not joining which a man, if he saw fit, could inc ^ dent to the one or the other faction in th. move his store, or open in a new ^ axt* 000 hl Jf hw ^ y ^ond act. fight being made against chain town. If he did well and increased. cBee — Construction work on. stores This criticism comes large- his stores, he was considered a good Route No 1 belov* this town pro- j from the , e that are affect • — gressing steadily. -X- WHAT IS A NEWSPAPER? ed. Now there is really no cause for the papers to be drawn into this argument. It 6 would not benefit a paper and it would not benefit the merchant, and no penalty was placed on enterprise and expan matter is that of a hope that the mercantile argument now in vogue has not been originated out of sel fishness and a desire for personal gain on the part of some of the leaders, and that the independent merchants are not being taxed to support a parasitic condition. The columns of this newspaper arc open to both sides, and we will publish any advertisement or com munications so long as it is not of a defamatory or libelous nature. X Shelled ISuts Form Soap Deposit In Glass Jars The mystery of the frostlike de posit frequently seen on the inside of glass jars containing shelled pecans, or other nuts has been solved by E. K. Nelson and H. H. Mottem, chemists of the United States Department of Agriculture. The deposit is soap, ohe chemists say, and it is formed by the action of the acid fat of the nuts on the alkali of the glass. It causes con siderable financial loss in the sale of the product. The unexplained presence of the soapy deposit has long been a source of annoyance to packers of shelled nuts and to some house wives in the South who put up STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA*. mi 1L, •:$ \ VT. C. ROUXTREE , M. D . ' ARE YOU m TOO SCON? Do you look older than you should? Do you feel older than you are? If you have the dark or yellow, wrinkley skin of old age, or any of the follow ing symptoms: Nervousness, bad circulation, fast heart, loss of sleep, loss of weight, stomach trouble, burn ing feet, general weakness, forgetful ness, despondency, bad mind, queer feeling in head, irregular bowel movements, and others, I have the remedy, no matter what your trouble has been treated for. Don’t think you are old at 40 or 50- when you are only sick. I have the remedy for such conditions. Write at once for my booklet and. questionnaire. ALL FREE. W. C. Rountree, M. D., Box 1150 »>epc. Itt-.v. Austin, Texas' MASTER’S SALE shelled pecans in glass jars when the nuts are plentiful and inex pensive. Although the soap does not impair the quality of the nuts, it presents an unsightly appear ance and reacts against the sale of the oroduct. County of McCormick, Court cf Common Pleas. THE FEDERAL LAND BANK OF COLUMBIA, o, against T. B. WOOD, ET AL. Pursuant to judgment of the Court and a decree of sale in the above entitled cause, I will sell at When the problem was presented Public auction on Sales day in Au gust, 1930 (the same bemg the 4th day of August), in front of the Court House door, in the city of McCormick, County and State aforesaid, during the legal hours of sale, on terms specified below, the following described real estate to> wit: All that certain piece, par cel or tract of land containing One Hundred Twenty-Five and Three- Twentieths (125 3-20) Acres, more or less, situate, lying and being on 1 Public Road. about to the chemists for solution, their first thought was that the jars might have been v/ashed with an alkaline cleaner and that some of the alkali, remaining on the glass, had come into contact with the acid fat of the nuts and produced the chemical change common in soap manufacture. Study proved this theory incorrect, however. Further investigation showed jg^ of‘thTTowrof U partevill“in Washington Township, County of that shelled nuts packed in ordin ary glass containers formed the white deposit, whereas nuts put up in hard-glass containers at the same time and under the same conditions formed no deposit. It was concluded, therefore, that the soap was formed by the action of the nut fat on the glass. Little Talk On Thrift MAKE SAVINGS PLANS ON PER MANENT BASIS—NOT JUST FOR BRIEF PERIOD (By S. W. STRAUS, President American Society For Thrift.) There are few' persons who have not at some time shown themselves able to save money. The trouble has been that a considerable por tion of these persons have been unwilling to continue these thrifty practices. Saving must be continuous. The person who pinches and saves every possible penny for a * short time and then gives up and quits, will- never resell the goal of. inde pendence or success. It is well always to have in mind the matter of moderation. Saving a reason able amount regularly gives in- creusing stabilization and strength. The^fe is such a thing as being- carried away by enthusiasm. The miser is an example of this. Goethe observed that, “enthusi asm is of the greatest value, when we are not carried away by it." This can be applied to saving money as well as to everything else in life. Being thrifty does not mean that we must be an extremist in the matter of saving money or in giv ing upv. beneficial pleasures. Cul tivate moderation. Do not save to the point of being a miser nor to the exclusion of the various up lifting elements that have a righ- ful place in our lives. On the other hand, we must u#j moderation in the matter of pleas ure and out of our earnings make sure that we are providing for the lean days that are sure to come. Plan your savings along sensible lines. Adjust them to your income and to the conditions of life as they surround you. Do not try to save too much be cause it is far better to put awa v money systematically and persist- i McCormick, State of South Caro lina, having such shape, metes, courses and distances as will more fully appear by reference to a plat thereof, made by J. M. Bussey, Surveyor, 4th March 1922, and be ing bounded on the North by lands of Mrs. J. J. Gilmer and R. N. Edmunds, on the East by lands’ of J. C. Morgan and J. J. Gilmer,. ! on the South by lands of Jas Rob ertson and on the West by landk of Jas Robertson and W. G. Black well. This being the same tract of land heretofore conveyed to the said T. B. Wood in two p^jrcels by C. C. Osborne and J. C. Parks, by their deeds dated September 3rd, 1919, and recorded in the Office of the Clerk of Court for McCormick: County, South Carolina, in Deed Book No. 4, at Page 190 and 192 respectively. As a condition precedent to the consideration of any bid the Mas ter shall require a deposit of Twp Hundred ($200.00) Dollars before considering any bid. Terms of Sale: One third of the accepted bid in cash and the re maining Two Thirds on credit, payable in three equal annual in stallments. Purchaser to pay for papers and stamps. L. G~BELL, .V Master. July 15, 1930.—3t. laou nsurance will provide i^ou with legal erense. sion. The task of supplying the nation iently thap to save intensively for : with food and clothes is a big one. ■while end then give it up. And it makes no material differ- ( Even in thrif: (here is harm ir cnce with the public whether it ever-enthusiasm. the buys from a chain store or an in- j X Discovery of new planets con- Frank C. RoMnson Insurance Agency , PHONte 66 McCormick (The Greenville Observer) A newspaper is a disseminator readers. of news, passing on to the public A paper can live only on ( everything of a news nature that money paid in by its advertisers, dependent store, so long as prices I Discovery of new planets con- j Once upon a time you could on- is printable. Naturally a paper would not take and service are comparable. , tinue despite the impossibility ox ly see bare limbs when the leaves Modem newspapers carry also sides, not because it would subord- Our only expression on the^hole finding any definite use for them.jeapie off the trees in the fall.. „ ... - . % 3 * ' . ' • ■ ■ if;. V m ■ . , i-