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pr'A Thursday, November 10, 1932 McCORMICK MESSENGER, McCORMICK, SOUTH CAROLINA PAGE NUMBER THRES 'enronaf Rev. and Mrs. G. N. Dulin of Can ton, N. C., announce the birth of a sen, Max Wade, on November 4th Mrs. Dulin, before marriage, was Miss Clara Abercrombie of McCor mick. ‘Mr. and Mrs. George Deason an^ "Miss Mary Cloy have returned from Atlanta, Ga., after visiting relatives and Attending the C. A. <C. Association. Mr. A. B.- Barden of Columbia is Isere on a visit to his daughter, Mrs. Jtf. G. Rankin. Mrs. R. J. Mims of Woodville spent Tuesday here with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Williams. Mr. S. D. McCutcheon of Colum bia was a week end visitor :.n ohe borne of Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Bullock. Mr. and Mrs. Rempert Truluck of Spartanburg spent the week end here with her parents, Capt. and Mrs. Jack Scruggs. Mr. and Mrs. Willie Talbert were visitors in Charleston Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Gilliam and son, James, of Iva, S. C., were re cent visitors to Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Robinson and other relatives here. Mrs. Klugh Connor, Mrs. J. S. Heiss and Mrs. J. W. Milford were visitors in Cross Hill Tuesday. « ' * - — -- i Mrs. Edgar Brown attended the Anderson Fair several days last week. She also visited Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Rankin and Mrs. W. C. Acker while in Anderson. i Mrs. Wistar Harmon, Mrs. J. B. Harmon, Sr., Miss Florence Burgess i and Miss Sara Bowles spent Satur day of last week in Columbia.' i Mrs. R. L. Faulkner and Mrs. H. N. Coleman attended the funeral of the latter's uncle, Mr. W. H. Jones, in Columbia Tuesday. Hon. and Mrs. F. C. Robinson of Columbia spent Monday and Tues day here with relatives. The T. E. L. social and business meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Arch Talbert Friday after noon, November 11th, at 3:39 o’clock. All members are request ed to be present. * The Susannah Wesley Bible Class will meet at the home of Mrs. A. C. Earnhardt on Friday after-! noon at 3 o’clock. Mrs. J. M.! The parasol was a symbol of rank Brown, Mrs. J. B. Britt and Miss and authority in the far east for Lucy Brown, assistant hostesses. many centuries. Peace, Peace, Peace! r.-tv.jr.*- /ilfert 7' Held Notice To Hunters All who expect to hunt in this! {county this season must get hun:-i : ing license. I am on the job and ' expect to see that the hunting law' is enforced. , J. M. BROWN, Game Warden. BATTERIES FOR ALL EIGHT CARS $6.65 WHITTLE BATTER* SERVICE 622 BROAD PHONE 1166 ATTGTTSTA. g v >v \L fc A** :■ W O' j lidififtiii) 3e ELECTED! » • m ■ . By An Overwhelming Majority GALLANT-BELK CO. AGAIN ELECTED “Greenwood’s Leading Department Store” 6 years ago when we opened for business in Greenwood, we were then and there elected “Greenwood’s Leading Department Store.” The store that sells for less. And each year since we have gained additional votes. More people are trading at this store now than ever before. There must be some reason . . . and here it is . . . BETTER GOODS FOR THE SAME MONEY_SAME GOODS FOR LESS MONEY f| CREAM OF Gallant-Belk Co. Gallant-Belk Co. Gallant-Belk Co. Gallant-Belk Co. Gallant-Belk Co. Gallant-Belk Co. GALLANT-BELK GOODS—BUTTERMILK PRICES Sells Better Shoes For Less. Sells Better Ready-To-Wear For Less. Sells Better Work Clothes For Less. Sells Better Floor Coverings For Less. Sells Better Ladies’ Hosiery For Less. Sells Better Cotton Goods For Less. CO. SELLS EVERYTHING FOR LESS ANNIVERSARY AND ANNUAL HARVEST SALE r 72x30 Part Wool i YARD WIDE PRINTS BLANKETS Extra Special Per Pair 3 Yards For 25c $1.29 NOW IN Good Quality RiT' Outmg, yard vsytW 66x30 Part Wool DOUBLE BLANKETS FULL Per Pair 39-Inch Unbleached $1.59 SWING Sheeting yard 70x80 Cotton Blankets, pair — ^ * Come Visit Our Store— And Save On Every Men’s Work Cm Sox. pair 72x84 Good Quality Cotton Aft Comforts ^ 1 Purcliase 81x90 Bleached QQ r Sheets, only WW V j Yard Wide Prints Big Special O 1-3jj yard ** We Are Offering Wonderful Values In Every Department 72x108 Fancy Stripe! Bed Spreads sale price & 3 Yards 25c Prepare For Winter Buy your shoe needs 12 Yard3 $1 i here. We fit the f?e: and sell the shoes. • GALLANT-BELK ‘OREEN\V(rEV$ I.EAWYG DKPA 1 * * VLV: ^TOKIv* **rm mi mi “THE HOME OF BETTER VALUES” ESE=== Mi u nI 11 iOSlsESi Y n m ! j'fM it IQ, ° Bi| Palrkia Dow ° -»»»>>)—««««— What Is It Safe Pleasant Way To Lose Fat There is something awfully swag ger and mighty comfortable that makes for the popularity of the nits*# |» lips | PI Wm&m Wmm yyy te :*><: y: Ssgj; | $ fii} ai§r & i'mm You would never guess, so we’ll tel! you ... It is water pouring from a common kitchen faucet photographed at 1/50,000 of a sec ond by means of a new electrical control developed by Prof. H. L. Ldgcrton and K. J. Germeshausen at Mass. Inst’t. of TechnoLoont THINGsVoRTH KNOWING - How would you like to lose 15 pounds of fat in a month and at the same time increase your energy and improve your health? How would you like to lose your double chin and your too promin ent hips and at the same time mak'* your skin so clean and clear that it will compel admiration? Get on the scales today and see how much you weigh—then get a bottle of Kruschen Salts which will last you for 4 weeks and costs but a trifle. Take one-half teaspoon ful in a glass of hot water before breakfast every morning—cut down on pastry and fatty meats—go light on potatoes, butter, cream and sugar—and when you have finished the contents of this first bottle weigh yourself again. Now you v/ill know the pleasant way to lose unsightly fat and you’ll also know that the 6 salts of Krus- chen have presented you with glorr ious health. But be sure for your health’s sake that you ask for and get Kruschen Salts. Get them at any drug store in the world and if the results one bottle brings do not delight you— do not joyfully satisfy you—why money back. —Adv. An agricultural expert points out that the farmer in Holland makes his small acreage yield four times as much produce to an acre as the American farmer does on his bigger farm. knitted sweater suit and three- piece ensemble. . . . While the crew nock sweater is favored by many the surplice type, as shown above! continues to be one of the leaders . j Note the knitted blouse and belted I sweater with broad shoulder and j sleeves comfortablv full, i Tweed effects in‘knitted suits are i very much in demand, with interest centered on the jacket type as shown abovo The mixture tweed knit with ribbed waistline is among the leaders. The model above is the zephyr knit. Old gold and : orange as basic color with almost any harmonizing yet contrasting trim is being worn. Monotones beige, white and browns are also popular. When a flapping scarecrow failed to keep the birds from robbing his orchard, an English farmer gave his scarcecrow a radio “voice,” and the noise from the radio loudspeak er quickly banished the bird invad ers. ??•!•!!!•!•!;!.■; rrrr rTrr.r-rw- SAFETY FIRST Argentina has three head of cat tle to each human being. The brain of an adult elephant weighs about eigin pounds. Scholars of ancient Greece rec ognized the power of lodcstone to attract iron. * X FEDERAL JOBS OPEN WANT ADV. FOR SALE—Four rolls of 36-inch hog wire, cheap, or will trade. W. E. Rheney, McCormick, S. C. FOR SALE—Pedigreed Appier Oats at 40 cents per bushel; Red May Wheat, 90 cents per bushel. T. A. Dowtin, Rt. 1, Troy, S. C. A" 1 ■ 1 „ FOR SALE—Appier Seed Oats 40 cents per bushel; Coker and Blue Stem Wheat at $1.00 per bushel. fY. E. Seigler, McCormick, S. C. •’OR SALE—Good SeedV)ats bright and sound. 35 cents ner bushel. Y. E. Seigler, McCo^^lL. S. C. The United States Civil Service Commission has announced ooen competitive examinations as fol lows: Cotton Examiner (Foreign Staple), $3,200 a year, less a fur lough deduction of 3 1-3 per cent and retirement deduction of 3 1-2 per cent; Bureau of Customs, Treasury Department, Boston. Moss. Assistant Actuary, $2,600 a year, less a furlough deduction of 3 1-3 per cent and retirement deduction of 3 1-2 per cent; United Stales Bureau of Efficiency, Washington. D. C. All States except Delaware, Iowa. Vermont, Virginia. Maryland, and the District of Columbia have re ceived less than their share of ap pointments in the apportioned de partmental service at Washington, D. C. Full information may be obtain ed from the Secretary of the Un ited States Civil Service Board of Examiners at the post office in any city which has a post office of the r^st, r? the second class, or from the United States Civil Service Commission, Washington, D. C. / THE PUBLIC should be prudent in seeking relief from pain. Take nothing which docs not have the approval of the medical profession. BAYER ASPIRIN will never do you any harm, and almost always brings the desired relief. But remember that the high medical endorsement given i>ayer Aspirin does not apply to all tablets for relief of pain. THE DOCTOR is careful to specify Bayrr Aspirin for these important reasons: H has no injurious ingredients. No coarse particles to irritate throat or stomach. Nothing to upset the system. Not even any disagreeable taste. The Bayer process insures a pure, uniform product. INSIST on the tablet you know to be safe. And the one that has speed. Bayer tablets dissolve so quickly, you got immediate relief from vour headache, neuralgia, or other pain. Erosion of soil in a single coun ty in the southeast has .urned r ' ■ • 000 acres of land, formerly culti vated. into land unfit for agried-- ture.