McCormick messenger. (McCormick, S.C.) 1902-current, January 21, 1932, Image 7
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Thursday, January 21, 1932
McCOludlCK MESSENGER, McCORMICK, SOUTH CAROLINA'
PAGE NUMBER SEVEN
Notice Of Election
STATE OP SOUTH CAROLINA,
County of McCormick,
Town of McCormick.
Hi accordance with the provis
ions of an ordinance of the Town
of McCormick, a Primary Election
will be held on the Second Tues
day in February 1932, (being the
9th day of February) at the Court
House in said Town of McCormick
for the purpose of nominating
candidates for the office of Mayor
and Six Aldermen for -the said
Town of McCormick, S. C., for the
term commencing April 6th, 1932,
and said terms of office to be for
two years, and also for the purpose
*of nominating a candidate for the
office of Commissioner of Public
Works of the Town of McCormick
for the term commencing April 6th
1932, to succeed Commissioner J. S.
Strom, whose term o^ office ex
pires on said date, said Commis
sioner of Public Works to be elect
ed for a term of six years.
J. C. Corley, Clerk; J. M. Brown,
MASTER’S SALE
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
County of McCormick,
Court of Common Pleas.
J. S. STROM, T. J. SIBERT AND P.
J. ROBINSON, AS RECEIVERS
OF THE FARMERS BANK OF
McCORMICK, S. C.
against
NAPOLEON WIDEMAN AND J. M.
BROWN.
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 Feb
ruary, 1932 (the same being the 1st
day of February), 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 tract or parcel of
land situate, lying and being in the
State and County aforesaid, con
taining One Hundred and Five
(105) Acres, more or less, and
Hulls Oats
For Farmers
• A •
m
Joseph Holloway and A. J. Hendrix bounded as follows; to wit: On the
are appointed Managers of said North by lands of Gabe Wideman;
Primary Election. A second Pri- On the East by lands of J. A. Pat-
mary will be held on Tuesday, Feb- terson; on the South by lands of
ruary 23rd, 1932, if same shall be
necessary. Managers of said elec
tion shall open the polls at 8 o'clock
a. m., and close them at 4 o’clock
p. m.
All candidates for the above
named offices of the Town of Mc
Cormick shall file with the Clerk
of the said Town a pledge in writ
ing to abide the results of the Pri
mary and to support the nominees
thereof. All candidates for Mayor
shall at the time of filing said
pledge pay an assessment of $5.00
each; all candidates for Aldermen
and Commissioner of Public Works
shall at the time of filing their
pledges pay an assessment of $2.00
each. All pledges and assessments
of candidates must be filed and
paid on or before 12 o’clock Merid
ian of the last Tuesday in January
next, preceding the primary elec
tion. - No vote for any candidate?
who has not paid his assessment
nor complied with the rules shall
be counted.
G. C. Patterson is the duly ap
pointed Supervisor of Registration
of the Town of McCormick and the
place for enrollment of voters for
said Primary Election and for Reg
istration of Voters^ of the Town of
McCormick is hereby designated as
the store of Patterson’s Clothing
Company on Main Street in the
Town of McCormick. v
C. K. EPTTNG,
Mayor.
. J. W. CORLEY,
L. N. BROWN,
r . C. H. HUGULEY,
- C. R. STROM,
J. T. FAULKNER,
J. L. JENNINGS.
Town Council of the Town of Mc
Cormick, S. C.
ATTEST:
J. O. PATTERSON,
Clerk.
Jan. 12, 1932.—3t.
W. O. Starkey and on the West by
lands of T. J. Britt. The above
described land being known as my
home place.
As a condition precedent to the
consideration of any bid, a deposit
of One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars
will be required before considering
any bid except such as may be
made by the Plaintiffs or their at-
«omey.
Terms of Sale: Cash.
Purchaser to pay for papers and
stamps.
L. G. BELL,
( Master.
January 12, 1932.—3t.
MASTER’S SALE
Books Registration
Open January 8th
Books of registration for the town
of McCormick, S. C., opened Fri
day, January 8, 1932, at Patterson
Clothing Company’s store and will
remain open for a period of 20
- days, with Mr. G. C. Patterson serv
ing as supervisor of registration.
To participate in the coming
town elections each voter must put
his or her name on the books dur
ing the twenty days the bobks re
main open.
McCormick Town Council,
C. K. EPTING,
Mayor.
ATTEST:
J. O. PATTERSON,
Clerk and Treasurer.
McCormick, S. C.,
January 6, 1932.—3t. ,
Although Germany, Belgium and
Holland all together cover less area
than France, they have twice as
many people.
666
666 Liquid or Tablets used intern
ally and 666 Salve externally, make
a complete and effective treatment
for Colds.
85,000 in Cash Prizes
Ask Your Druggist for Particulars
On the wall of a prehistoric ruin
in Arizona is a design like the so-
called “Labyrinth of the Minotaur”
which is found on coins of ancient
Crete.
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
. County of McCormick,
Court of Common Pleas.
J. S. STROM, T. J. SIBERT AND P.
J. ROBINSON, AS RECEIVERS
OF THE FARMERS BANK OF
McCORMICK, S. C.
ugainst
NATHAN CUNNINGHAM AND EDD
CUNNINGHAM.
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 Feb
ruary, 1932 (the same being the 1st
day of February), 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 piece', parcel,
or tract of land, situate, lying and
being on the Plum Branch-Edge-
Jield Road, in the County of Mc
Cormick and State of South Caro
lina, containing One Hundred and
One (101) Acres, more or less, and
bounded on the North by lands of
Dr. R. F. Talbert; on the East by
lands of Dr. R. J. Talbert; on the
South by lands of Col. W. J. Tal
bert, and on the West by the Plum
Branch-Edgefield Road. and be
ing the same tract of land hereto
fore conveyed to us by Deed of T.
P. Holcomb, dated the'2nd day of
January, 1919, and recorded in the
Office of the Clerk of Court for Mc
Cormick County, South Carolina,
in Book of Deeds No. 2 at page No.
•158.
As a condition precedent to the
consideration of any bid, the Mas
ter shall require a deposit of One
Hundred ($100.00) Dollars before
considering any bid, except such as
may be made by Plaintiffs or their
Attorney.
Terms of Sale: Cash.
Purchaser to pay for papers and
stamps.
L. G. BELL,
Master.
January 12, 1932.—3t.
BOWELS
need watching
Let Dr. Caldwell help whenever your
child is feverish or upset; or has caught
cold. .
His simple prescription will make that
bilious, headachy, cross boy or girl
comfortable, happy, well in just a few
hours. It soon restores the bowels to
healthy regularity. It helps “break-up”
a cold by keeping the bowels free from
all that sickening mucus waste.
You have a famous doctor's word for
this laxative. Dr. Caldwell’s record of
having attended over 3500 births with
out the loss of one mother or baby is
believed unique in Americ*» n medical
history.
Get a bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup
Pepsin from your drugstore and nave
it ready. Then you won’t have to worry
when any member of your family is
headachy, bilious, gassy or constipated.
Syrup Pepsin is good for all ages. It
sweetens the bowels; increases appetite
—makes digestion more complete.
ORANGEBURG FARMER’S SER
VICE FOR NEIGHBORS MAKES
FINE FEED
Dr. W. B. Caldwell’s
SYRUP PEPSIN
A Doctor's Fftmily Laxative
MASTER’S SALE
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
County of McCormick,
Court bf Common Pleas.
S. STROM, T. J. SIBERT AND P,
J. ROBINSON, AS RECEIVERS
OF THE FARMERS BANK, OF
McCORMICK, S. C.
' against
MARTHA THOMAS.
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 Feb-«
ruary, 1932 (the same being the 1st
day of February), 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,
ORANGEBURG, Jan. 16.—A. L.
Fairey, a farmer in the East Or
ange section of the county, has re- \
cently installed a machine for
hulling oats, a process which by
removing the hulls makes practi
cable the feeding of oats in large
quantities to hogs and poultry, and
which if adopted over the state
would greatly extend the use nf
and market for a crop now wide
ly grown in the state. At the same
time it would provide an excellent
home-grown feed for all kinds of
livestock.
Unhulled oats are high in crude
fibre which makes them objec
tionable in feeding
chickens, says J. T.
tension agricultural
states that at the
Fairey’s huller and one operated by
a feed mill in Spartanburg are the
only two in the state, and he be
lieves that the installation of oth
ers would be profitable to produc
ers of grain and livestock.
Mr. Fairey is doing custom work
in hulling for his neighbors at a
price of four qents per bushel or
one-eighth toll. Reports from
R. F. Kolb, county farm agent, are
that local oats are turning out well
when hulled in comparison with
western oats, yielding from 60 to
73 pounds of ljulled oats, or groats
as they are known, for each 100
pounds of unhulled oats.
X ^
to hogs and
McAlister, ex
engineer, who
present Mr.
„„
LOOKS A1
BpSESfftVER
\
the following described real estate','! chair. He
to wit:
All that certain piece, parcel or
lot of land with buildings thereon
situated, lying and being in Mc
Cormick County, South Carolina,
and containing One Hundred and
Fifty (150) Acres, more or less and
bounded as follows: On the North,
by a part of the Rountree Estate,
now owned by M. G. & J. J. Dorn;
on the East by lands now or for
merly owned by Mrs. Richie and
lands of Bell; on the South by W.
K. Charles, Esq; on the West, by
lands of George Brown and G. B.
Smith.
The above described property be
ing the identical property purchas
ed by Henry Thomas from The
Bank of McCormick, S. C., Deed
dated February 24, 1923 and re
corded in Volume 5 at page 263 in
the office of the Clerk of Court of
McCormick County, S. C .
As a condition precedent to the
consideration of any bid, a deposit
of One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars
will be required before considering
any bid v except such as may be
made by the Plaintiffs or their At
torney.
Terms of Sale: Cash.
Purchaser to pay for papers and
stamps.
L. G. BELL,
Master.
January 9, 1932.—3t.
My wife had occasion to have
some work done recently and she
dropped in at the dentist’s office.
Peering into the doctor’s operating
room, she saw a girl, who was ob
viously a member of the theatrical
profession, perched in the dentist’s
was busy about her
teeth.
As the dentist worked,
Americans eat about 3,000,000,000
cucumber pickles a year, the de
partment of agriculture reminds
school boys and girls, in pointing
out a farming project that they
can carry on profitably in summer.
and Artificial Eyes
Drugs, Drops or Danger.
DR. HENRY J. GODIN
OptometrisU
95b Broad Street Augusta.
the chorus
girl held a book high in the air and
kept reading the whole time he was
Working, except when his arm got
in the way. Then she shifted the
book to her other hand.
Sand Hogs’ Troubles—
Men who work in the under
ground tunnels when they are be
ing built have to live in an air pres
sure 6f thirty-five pounds to the
square inch. On coming out they
have to pass from one air cham
ber to others, the air pressure be
ing gradually lessened until they
dre fitted to go back in the outer
air. Otherwise they get thd
“bends,” an affliction that some
times kills. Bends is another word
for gas pains with which we are all
familiar. / 1
The other day one of the work
men was ‘phoned that he had just
become a father. He hurried so
much to get tojiis wife that he cut
out tfre slow wait in the condition
ing chambers and rushed to the
hospital. After visiting his wife
and new baby he went out in the
hall and an attack of the “bends”
hit him and he fell out of a win
dow four floors to the street. /
Even that did not kill him, two
clothes lines, breaking his fall. The
doctors now say he will be as good
as new in a few weeks, when his
broken bones heal.
One Novel Line—
One most curious business here,
and one which has not spread to
other cities as far as we know, is
the one which repairs damaged
suits. If you sit on a nail, and
tear a huge hole in your trousers or
dress, you do not have to throw the
clothes away. Instead you take it
to one of these places and they
weave goods right over the hole so
you cannot tell where the damage
was.
Most of the workers who do this
kind of work are expert French
good- needlewomen who earn good
money. Charges vary from about
j fifty cents to $1.50 a job and is well
A little warmth, a little light ; worth the price'. That is cine reason
%
Si*'
‘A LITTLE WORK”
By George du Maurier
A little work, a little play
To keep us going—and so,
day!
Eyes examin
ed. Spectacles,
Eye Glasses,
fitted without Of love’s bestowing—and so, good- New Yorkers are
Gs.
night!
A little fun, to match the sorrow
Of each day’s growing- and so,
good-morrow.
about the
best dressed people in the world.
txt
The rapid development of the
quick-freezing process of pre-
The bread fruit tree of the South
Sea islands is a near relative of the
Ccagc ci^ngc.
A little trust that when we die
We reap our sowing! And
good-bye!
serving fresh-cut meats for sale in
j package form has been called the
jinost revolutionary development in
so— ; food selling since the invention of
j canning methods.
-O
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o-
LET HE MESSENGER
DO TOUR
#
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IfCORMIGK
McCORMICK, S. C.
7.
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