McCormick messenger. (McCormick, S.C.) 1902-current, August 21, 1930, Image 3
Thursday, August 21, 1930
McCORMICK MESSENGER, MrCfTRUlCK, Soutn C*r*nmm.
Page NumEe? TEfii
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
County of McCormick,
In The Probate Court.
J. Arch Talbert, as Administrator
of the Estate of Fred Seigler, de
ceased, Petitioner,
against
Wylie Hardy, Henry Hardy, Geor
gia Hardy Walton, Georgia
Sharpton Talbert, and all other
heirs at law, devisees, legatees
and other persons, known and
unknown, sui juris, minors and
non compos mentis, having or
claiming to have any right or in
terest in or claim against the Es
tate of Fred Seigler, deceased,
the Estate of Joe Seigler, de
ceased, the Estate of Emma
Parkman Seigler, deceased, the
Estate of Malissa Parkman
Hardy, deceased, or the Estate of
Eliza Parkman Sharpton, deceas
ed, Respondents.
It appearing to my satisfaction
from the verified petition on file
in this action that the action has
been commenced and is pending
and that a cause of action exists
in favor of the petitioner for in
structions of the Court for the
distribution of the Estate of Fred
Seigler, deceased, and that the
parties named in the caption are
proper parties to said action, and
that the petitioner is unable with
due diligence to determine wheth
er there are any heirs at law, de
visees, legatees, or other persons
other than the above named
Wylie Hardy, Henry Hardy, Geor
gia Sharpton Talbert, and Georgia
Hardy Walton having or claiming
Governor Ritchie
Tenders Luncheon
To Road Congress
Maryland Chief Executive To Re
ceive Delegates to Sixth Interna
tional Road Congress at Anna
polis. Fifty Nations to Have
Representatives at Func
tion in October—Willar-
Thompson in Charge
WASHINGTON, D. C., Aug. 18.—
A reception and luncheon will be
tendered the delegates to .the Sixth
International' Road Congress on
behalf of the'State of Maryland,
by Governor Albert C. Ritchie, on
Saturday, October 11, the 'closing
day of the Congress, according co
announcement today by Thomas
H. MacDonald, Secretary-General
of the American Organizing Com
mission in charge of the Congress.
Representatives from more than
fifty nations will be present.
The reception will be at the
State Hous$ at Annapolis, while
the luncheon will be given at a
place yet to be decided upon that
will have facilities to accommodate
the approximately 1,500 delegates
PLY
PRICES
who are expected to be in attend-
to have any right or interest in! ance at the Congress
or claim against the Estate of
Fred Seigler, deceased or against
the Estate of Joe Seigler, deceased,
the Estate of Emma Parkman
Seigler, deceased, the Estate of
Malissa Parkman Hardy, deceased,
or the Estate of Eliza . Parkman
Sharpton, deceased, and is also un
able to determine with due dilig
ence whether any of such unknown
parties are minors or non compos
. mentis or whether they are resi
dents or non-residents, and is un
able to make personal service of
the summons in this action upon
such unknown parties; Therefore,
On motion of W. K. Charles,
Esq., and Messrs. Mays & Feather-
stone, Attorneys for the petitioner,
IT IS ORDERED that service of
the summons in this action upon
unknown respondents, residents
and non-residents, be made by
publication thereof in the “McCor
mick Messenger,” a newspaper pub
lished at McCormick, in the Coun
ty of McCormick, State of South
Carolina, which said newspaper is
hereby designated as most likely to
give notice to the said respondents,
once a week for three consecutive
weeks.
Governor Ritcnie’s reception will
come as a climax to a week of
study of international highway
transportation problems at the ses
sions of the Congress which will be
held in Washington. These ses
sions will mark the first time this
international body*has met outside
of Europe, previous congresses hav
ing been held at Paris, London,
Brussels, Seville, and Milan. The
Congress brings to the United
States the leading highway admin
istrators, engineers and economists
of the wprld, and will be held in
this country at the official invita
tion of the President of the United
States, authorized by the Congress.
It is considered the largest and
most important conference of
world highway experts. President
Hoover and his Cabinet are serv
ing as members of the honorary
committee sponsoring the event.
The trip to Annapolis will af-
It’s the Goodrich
Cavalier . . . highest
quality at unheard-of
low prices!
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that ford the visitors an opportunity to
** an y ^ sa } d unknown parties study a portion of the highway
hhJL,- ?£! S ( el < V h e f \ system of the state, which ranks
titioner that the petitioner may at
liis option make service of the said
summons by delivering same to
such respondent or respondents
personally, either within or with
out the State of South Carolina.
y L. G. BELL*
Judge of Probate for McCormick
County, S. C.
August 2, 1930.—3t.
MASTER’S SALE
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
County of McCormick,
Court of Common Pleas.
THE FEDERAL LAND BANK OF
COLUMBIA,
o 0’s* ii'icf’
JIM K. DUNCAN, ET AL.
Pursuant to judgment of the
Court and a decree of sale in the
above entitled cause, I will sell at
public auction on Salesday in Sep
tember, 1930 (the same being the
1st day of September), 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 of that certain tract, piece,
or parcel of land situate, lying and
being in Bordeaux Township,
County of McCormick, State of
South Carolina, containing Fifty
(50) Acres, more or less, and
bounded as follows, to wit: On
the North by lands of F. C. Robin
son. Republican Church Lot and
lands of Dr. R. G. Killingsworth;
East by lands of Dr. R. G. Killings
worth and L. N. Chamberlain;
South by lands of L. N. Chamber-
lain and West by lands of Mrs. A.
G. Chamberlain, L. N. Chamber-
lain and F. C. Robinson, being
more fully described by reference
to a plat thereof made by S. R.
Rosenswike, Surveyor, January 5th,
1922, and being the identical tract
of land purchased by Jim K. Dun
can from Sarah G. Mattison by
deed dated October 25th. 1919, and
recorded in the Office of the Clerk
of Court for McCormick County,
S. C., on October 25th, 1919, in
Book of Deeds No. 4 at Page 207.
As a condition precedent to the
consideration of any bid, the Mas
ter shall require a deoosit of One
Hundred ($100.00) Dollars before
considering any bid.
Terms of Sale: One-half of the
accepted bid in cash and the re
maining one-half on credit, pay
able in two equal annual install
ments.
Purchasers to pay for papers
and stamps.
L. G. BELL,
Master.
August 12, 1930.—3t.
i
FORD BATTERIES
r.
$7.95
WHITTLE BATTERY
SERVICE
922 BROAD PHONE 1169
AUGUSTA, GA.
among the first in the nation. Ar
rangements for the reception and
luncheon will be made by a com
mittee under the supervision of
Harry D. Williar, Jr., chief highway
engineer of Maryland, and J. True
man Thompson, professor of civil
engineering at the Johns Hopkins
University, who recently was nam
ed manager of the Congress, and
other members to be named by the
secretary-general.
The delegates will leave Wash-
ington on the morning of Satur
day, October 11, and go by bus and
automobile to Bladensburg, thence
over the Defense Highway to An
napolis. They will spend the morn
ing in an inspection of these roads,
and a visit to the United States
Naval Academy at Annapolis, re
pairing later to the State House for
the reception.
The opening session of the Con
gress will occur on Monday, Octo
ber 6, at Constitution Hall in
Washington, while remaining ses
sions will be held at the building
of the Chamber of Commerce of
the United States.
These Congresses are held at in
tervals of about four years, always
at the invitation of a government,
and attract the best thought of
the wnrld in the highway engin
eering and highway transport pro
fessions. They are under the gen
eral direction of the Permanent
International Association of Road
Congresses which maintains head
quarters at Paris. M. Mahieu, a
French Senator, is president of the
Association, while M. Le Gavrian,
professor at the National ' School
of Roads and Bridges, is secretary-
general. s '
President Hoover recently named
Roy D. Chapin, former president of
the National Automobile Chamber
of Commerce, as president, of the
American Organizing Commission
of the Association, at the same
time designating Mr. MacDonald,
v/ho is chief of the United States
Bureau of Public Roads, as secre-
tarv-general.
X
Government In
spection Aids Can
ning Industry
IV
//
29x4.40 ! $5.55
29x4.50 6.30
30x4.50 6.35
28x4.75 7.55
30x5.00 8.45
31x5.25 9.95
33x6.00 6 Ply 13.75
30x3 1-2 Cl. 4.89
30x3 1-2 Cl. Gt. 4.98
31x4 8.65
32x4 9.35
32x4 1-2 13.10 ( |
33x4 9.95
33x4 1-2 13.55
H ERE’S news for you . • . big
news! A 6-ply tire ... made
by Goodrich . . . priced at figures
you’re used to seeing on 4-ply
casings of only ordinary quality!
Six plies . . . half again the
carcass strength . . . not to men
tion bigger air cushion, thicker
tread, tougher rubber compound
... all for less money!
Goodrich didn’t make this tire
overnight. They’ve been working
on it for years. Finding ways to
bring production costs down while
holding quality up.
Developing, in short, a tire for
car owners who want to keep
first cost low . without taking
chances on second grade quality.
Here’s the result . . . the 6-ply
Cavalier. Bigger . . . thicker ...
tougher. Built to master any
road. And on every tire . ... that
familiar, meaningful name . . .
“Goodrich!” A guarantee of qual
ity . . ..of ability to take punish
ment ... of freedom from tire
worries.
We’re featuring Cavaliers right
now. Putting special prices on
them. Our line is complete ...
all passenger car sizes and two
sizes for trucks.
Come in to see them . . . but
come quickly. They’re going to
move fast at .these prices . . . and
we wouldn’t want to be out of
your size when you call. Make it
tomorrow • , • and play safe.
Ooodrich
-US-
Williams’ Service Station
\ ■ , . . 4 . v, •
Main Street, McCormick, S. C.
poison. Few experimented need
lessly, and the result was # that
ly there was no doubt about the} of tomatoes are used and to watch
the methods employed in packing.
Government scientists have so per-
careful people washed their hands i fected methods of analysis that
after handling a tomato. (they can determine the amount of
Today the tomato or a tomato | moldy tomato in a bottle of cat-
product is found on nearly every j SU P an y is present. Added wa-
table. In season we have salads of ter can be very easily measured
sliced tomato or in combination an y preservative is detected
with fruits or other vegetables, at once.
The result is that manufacturers
It is surprising that the tomato
we relish today was for 300 years
considered a rank poison. In those
days the way to test a poison was
to taste it; if death followed short-
green tomato pie, tomato soup.
After the vines are black we get
our old friend tomato out of a can
or bottle as sauce, soup, catsup, or
one of the many other products
made from this vegetable.
Along about 1850 the people first
found that tomatoes were an ex
cellent food, but even then toma
toes were used only in season. At
the start of the canning industry
the sale of canned tomato products
did not go so well, mainly because
some unscrupulous manufacturers
used bad tomatoes, failed to wash
them properly, left in the peelings
and cores, and sometimes added
water to reduce costs.
Government inspectors at that
time found a few manufacturers
running spoiled tomatoes, cores,
and peelings through a “cyclone”
machine which ground everything
to a pulp. This, with spices added,
was bottled and sold as catsup. A
chemical was often added to pre
vent further spoiling.
That type of adulteration is a
thing of the past. Today inspec
tors of the Federal Food and Drug
Administration, United States De
partment of Agriculture, visit the
seldom take the risk of adulterat
ing food. People have greater con
fidence in canned goods, and the
tomato canning industry has
grown 100 per cent # in the last 22
years.
Over a Billion Deadly Germe
in a Single Drop of Water
Germs are so small that there mayj
be as many as one billion, seven hun
dred million of them in a drop of
water. And just a few of these tiny
you so sick you
weeks—may cause the loss of a limb
through blood poisoning—may even
infect you with that most dreadful and
fatal of diseases, lockjaw.
Just because you can seo no dirt in
a cuff docs not mean that it is clean.
You cannot seo germs. Tho only safe
and sano thing to do, is to thoroughly
wash every cut, no matter how small,
with Liquid Bcrozonc, to kill the
germs, and then dust it with Borozono
Powder, to hasten the healing. Liquid
Borozone costs 30 cents, 60 cents, $1.20
and $1.50; Borozone Powder, 30 cents
and CO cents, and can be had ai»
STROMS’ DRUG STORE
. A statistical shark has figured
that Aihericans drink 75,000 cups
of coffee every second. And no
canning factories to see what kind Celling how many saucers.
Do you stand to
lose all this?
IF fire comes will it find
you uninsured with noth
ing, or but little, to help
you face the loss?
Or—are you adequately
insured so that a fire would
be only an inconvenience
" —not a disaster—and your
savings untouched?
The advice of this agency
has saved many a property
owner from loss. Why not
let us help you, too?
Frank C. Robinson
Insurance Agency
PHONE 66
McCormick
It Is no trouble to get a boy to
take baths. Just let him water the
lawn with the hose.
Bordeaux mixture is best for the
control of most diseases of garden
plants. It also wards, off flea
beetles. It is better to spray with
Bordeaux before rather than after
rains, provided the spray has time
to dry on the leaves. Intervals
between applications depend on
the weather. Spray more often if
It is rainy or muggy, with fogs and
heavy dews, which are favorable to
the development of diseases. If
the weather is dry, allow longer in
tervals between sprays.
1X1
If a child wakes up too early or
sleeps fitfully during the night,
perhaps his supper has not provid
ed quite enough nourishment to
carry him through to the break
fast hour. Make sure that the last
meal of the day provides some
milk, bread and butter, a vegetable
and possibly a fruit, such as scrap
ped baked apple.
X
It is always preferable- to build
a concrete feeding floor where the
soil drainage is good, but if this Is
impracticable, a porous sub-base or
cushion of cinders, sand, or fine
gravel should be laid. This will
prevent heaving caused by frost
and unequal settling when the
ground is wet. When a sub-base is
placed on stiff clay soils, drainage
outlets should be ^installed to car
ry off any water which may Col
lect under the^|kl(»r and cause in
jury by freezing*
Most of the tiills of being a
movie star seem to Ije held in court
rooms.