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i i IH • < Thursday, November 10, 1932 McCORMICK MESSENGER, McCORxMICK. SOUTH CAROLINA NUMBER FOUR THE FAMIEY : DOCTOIR JOIN X)SEPH GAINES. M.0. “UNDEKEATING” I think I have written enough words about overeating to fill a book —a large one. The great American sin is overeating. Maybe it is the depression, but a late incident leads me to write this letter about not eating enough. Last evening an old-time ^dy acquaintance ate supper with us, and ‘ : a good time was had by all.” ^ This lady friend of our familyjks fNfeo grown daughters, and is her own house-keeper. She is visitiriffnere for "nerves.” She is a bundle of live wires—has lost weight, until her limbs are like casting-rods. She has “dieted,” yes indeed! She has not left her digestive tract enough nerves to do their work. In July, 1916. Dr. W. J. Cook, fishing in the Nipigon River, in On tario, Canada, caught a fourteen and a half pound brook trout. That is a record. Last year Zane Grey fishing off the coast of California with rod and reel, landed a striped marlin weigh ing 1040 pounds. Frank G. Menke in hunting around for unusual sports records S. C WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL RE VIEW The following record of industrial activity lists items showing invest ment of capital, employment of la bor and business activities and op portunities. Information from which the paragraphs are prepared is from local papers, usually of towns mentioned, and may be con sidered generally correct. Georgetown — H. Fogel preparing to open his department store in new building soon to be completed. Hartsville — Meat curing plant may be established here. Contract let for paving Harts- After a very hearty supper, she stood up before me. “Now just learned chat Tom oreenhill, of; V ille-McBee Hiehwav look, doctor,” she half-complained. “See how I am swetied.” Sne bu>tf a herself out in front to exaggerate the condition. “Does it hurt you in any way?” I enquired, “No—but iust look at it ” r»^-sistc:a; “u person oughtn’t tub out that way after eating should they?” “Well, you have eaten a good, wholesome meal,” I said; “and if it causes you no inconvenience—forget it.” This good woman had actually stinted herself in nourishment be cause she was afraid of “tubbing out.” Actually denying herself the necessary nutrition. Then her nerves were going “hay-wire” about her«mg thos3 darlings in school. There was no disease preying on her, not at all,—she was creating her own troubles. A season of com mon sense practice is all she needs. How many of my good mothers of daughters are like her—starving themselves into neurotics? CHECK THAT COLD NOW Don’t start the season with a lingering cold that will undermine your health nnd make you susceptible all winter. Check your cold right at the start. You can do it if you will. WE WILL HELP YOU We have every good cold remedy you can want. Laxative cold breakers, gargle, nose sprays, etc. Come in now and supply yourself. cough remedy, sore throat STROMS’ DRUG STORE MAIN STREET McCORMICK. S. C. Australia, back in 1928, punched a bag for 72 hours, ten minutes. Rube Waddell, eccentric southpaw of the Philadelphia Athletics a few years ago, once refused to sign a contract until a paragraph was in serted in the document that his room-mate was not to eat animal crackers in bed. Newberry — Eddie Kibler opened Kibler’s Shoe Shop in building on Main Street. Greer — R. E. Johnson consider ing re-opening Johnson Coal Yard on P. & N. tracks. Newberry — Efird’s department store being established here. Hartsville — Fifth Street Grocery opened for business by B. H. Red- fearn’s. Ball playing was popular in Egypt Work underway on U. S Highway 4 000 years ago and a leather ball No. 176 from Union to Whitmire has been used ever since in almost; preparatory to making it bitumm- every country. Batting a ball is a ° us surface treated. old Stuff Little Jimmy was a rather unemo tional child, so when his only aunt pre sented the family with a little cousin, and he showed some interest on his first visit to the baby, his parents were delighted. In a day or two his mother suggested: “Jimmy, how would you like to go to see your little cousin?” “Has Aunt Dot got another baby?” he inquired. “No.” said mother, “it’s the same one. Don't you >vant to go to see it?” “Aw, no, I guess not,” placidly re plied Jimmy, “I’ve seen that one.” PUTS ON AIRS modern invention. Baseball originated at Coopcrs- town, New York, in 1839. Rules v/ere first drawn up in 1845. In 1858 the first National Associa tion of Baseball Players was organ ized. In the same year the first game to which admission was charged was played by teams representing New York and Brooklyn. w rA v u il»- / \ The University of Minnesota football team scored a total of 775 points during the season of 1904. Knute Rockne coached at the University of Notre Dame from 1918 to 1930, inclusive. During those seasons Notre Dame scored 2847 points while opponents scored 625. The game of basketball was first played with real oeach baskets as the goal. Hence the name: basket- balL Playing for the Carlisle football team in 1912, Jim Thorpe scored 198 points during the one season. Green Bay, Wisconsin, won the National League professional foot TODAY and ’31, and is again making a bid for honor this year. FRANK PARKER STOCKBRIDOEl FLYING .... developes fast— Air travel and transportation of me'"'hflndise bv air have become a well-established part of the daily life of many businesses and busi ness men. Few people realize how modern science its first much dependence is placed upon j eyes. It was nearly two hundred the airplane for commercial pur- years, however, before the world of poses. science began to understand the M^re than a million oounds of significance of Leeuwenhoek’s dis- freight will have been transported coveries. It remained for Pasteur, bv air in the United States alone the great Frenchman, to find out this year, authorities figure. Most, that the minute “microbes” describ- of this is emergency transportation, i ed by the Dutchman were the germs to be sure, but none the less im- of disease and enemies of human- portant. A friend of mine whp ity. Modern scientific medicine be- publishes a newspaper on Long gan with Pasteur, but it was Leeu- Island found that a workman had wenhoek who furnished medical re left a wrench on the press gears, I search with its eyes. ; first observed that a convex crystal ball championship in 1929, ’30 and or a piece of glass had the power of magnifying objjects. The Chinese ! were wearmg spectacles a thousand years ago. It was only a little over 300 years ago, in 1608, that Johannes Lippershey of Middleburg made the first telescope, by putting two spectacle lenses into the ends of a tube; and it was some years i after when Anthony van Leeuwen hoek, a merchant’s clerk in Am sterdam, made the first practical microscope with which objects in visible to the naked eye could be seen. Leeuwenhoek was bom iust 300 years ago, on October 24, 1632, and lived to be 91 years old. He gave workable H. H. Seely, of Amherst, Mass., in 1875, chinned himself with two hands 65 times. X MAKE THE PULLETS LAY MORE EGGS WITH WET MASH whei he started up the machinery. New gears were needed at once. My* friend got out one issue of his pa-, per on a press in a neighboring town, but meantime telephoned to the press builders a thousand miles away. They sent replacement parts and a repair man by plane, and the damage was mended in less than 24 hours after the acci dent. Air passenger traffic all over the world has more than doubled in the past year. Why talk about “depression” when people are willing to spend more money than ever before for flying? GOLD . . . new adventure— Gold is worth more today than it has been in forty years. That is, an ounce of gold, worth $20 in U. S. money, will buy more food, clothing and every other kind of commodity than ever before in the memory of most of us. It is natural, therefore, that there should be more people prospecting for gold now than at any time since the great Klondike rush of 1897, while the old gold deposits are being worked more intensively than ever. Canadian gold mines produced 34 million dollars of gold in the first nine months of this year. In South Africa a great extension of the famous gold-bearing reef of the Witwaters Rand has been discov ered. The most amazing gold opera tion, however, is in the mountains of the island of New Guinea, just north of Australia, where gold is being mined a mile above sea-level, from deposits which can only be reached by airplane. Gold ore is brought down by plane, and all the machinery for modem mining op erations has been flown up into this inaccessible nountair •'•ountry. There is still adventT w't.h oos- sib 1 * rrofit at the end, for the ad venturous. EYES . . . Le'uwenhcek— Nobody knows how leng acr :nen X- BILL BOOSTEfTsAYS w WOTlCE POLKS GCUERAUN GET AS GOOD AS YWEn GlV£. “THE F€.\JLCM1 X4UO COMES OOVUM YO\WU 'V4 tUE MQRVUUG V1EAJRW1G A SCOVUL MEETS FOLKS VUWO SCOVJL BACK, VUW\LE E.UERMBOOV SMILES AT THE CHEERM CHAP'. „ e CLEMSON COLLEGE, Nov. 5.— Tbje trend in egg prices has con tinued upward and a poultry flock in 50 per cent production now is just as profitable as is a flock lay ing 80 per cent through the spring and summer months when egg prices are lower, says P. H. Good ing, extension poultryman, who be lieves that increasing the pullets to 50 per cent production at this time is a vital factor in increasing pro fits. Properly housed pullets have had time, he thinks, to adjust themselves to new conditions so they should be ready to produce high-priced fall and winter eggs. It is generally conceded that feeding a wet mash has a tendency to increase feed consumption and stimulate egg production. Mr. Gooding advises that the wet mash be mixed with skimmilk if it is available. Instead of a sloppy mixture, he suggests just enough liquid to make the mash crumbly and that it be fed To the birds at noon in troughs, though some pcul- trymen feed it about 4 p. m. and get good results. Other poultrymen are keeping grain before the birds and feeding a wet mash just be fore the birds go to roost. It is best to mix only enough for one feeding at a time, say three to four pounds per hundred birds, which they will clean up in 10 to 15 minutes. Plenty of grain in addition to the regular laying mash is suggested for the pullets. Camden-Kershaw County Fair held. Columbia — Gray’s Inc., lunch- eonett, soda fountain and cigar store, opened for business at 1333 Main Street. Rock Hill — Highland Park Man ufacturing Co., here announced re cently changes and replacement of machinery in its textile plant cost ing approximately $100,000, will be started at cnce. Spartanburg — Twenty-fifth an nual Spartanburg County Fair held. Union — Thomas C. McNally op ened lumber, shingle and paint concern here. Waltcrboro — Plans being con sidered to establish landing field near town. Columbia — New three-story chair factory plant at State peni tentiary formally accepted by Board of Directors. Grading underway on Abbeville- McCormick highway. Union — Central Oil Depot op ened for business on South Gad- berry Street. Construction progressing rapidly on Highway No. 26 between An drews and Xingstree. Columbia — South Carolina State Fair held. Newberry Fair held. 1X1 “That band leader puts on a good many airs.” “Yes, and some that his band can’t play.” Still at Large A rural mail carrier had a pet squirrel in a small cage to deliver. The squirrel got out and disappeared down the road. “Aren’t you going to catch him?” asked a bystander. “Don’t worry about that,” said the mail man. “He doesn’j know where he’s going. I’ve got the address here.” —Capper’s Weekly. Your Telephone Is "First Aid" When You're Lonesome Are you separated from your friends or your family? Does your work keep you indoors and away from people? Are you ‘‘blue” or lonesome? The cure is easy. Just reach for a telephone. For no matter how far away you are—whether it’s a few hundred feet or a few hundred miles—you can always visit by telephone. When you are worried or despondent, a telephone call may be worth ten times its cost in cheering you up— and keeping you healthy. Compared with its value, a telephone costs very, very little. If you haven’t a tele phone, order one installed right away. S. C. CONTINENTAL TELEPHONE CO. The Value of the Telephone Is Greater Than the Cost NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF AP PLICATION FOR DISCHARGE Too Much Digging “My speech was rather lengthy, I am afraid.” said the young statesman; “but I assure you that It contains nu merous gems of thought.” “Perhaps,” replied Senator Sorg hum. “But I have never allowed my self to take the slightest interest in these stories of buried treasure.”— Washington Star. — Newberry County Hear Through Bone He’d Better Learn Teacher—I give you 1(> nnts to share with your little brother. How many will he get? Bobby—Six. Teacher—Nonsense, you can't count Bobby—Yes. I can, teacher, but my little brother can’t.—Hummel, Ham burg. Playing Safe “Why does that author put such -dreadful tilings about himself in his autobiography?” “He’s playing safe,” answered Miss Cayenne. “There is a demand for scandal. And he knows he is not go ing to sue himself for libel.” PAS Miss Mae Wagner, New York, demonstrates the new devise per fected by Dr. Hugh Lieber, where by the deaf can hear through the conduction of sound through the bone structure of the head, instead of the ear . X Pecan Production NOT TO BE FOUND District Court of the United States Western District of South Carolina IN THE MATTER OF: JAMES CHARLES TALBERT, McCormick, S. C., McCormick County. No. B-1452 in Bankruptcy. TO THE CREDITORS OF THET ABOVE-NAMED BANKRUPT: Take notice that on October 19, 1932, the above-named bankrupt filed his petition in said Court praying that he may be decreed by the Court to have a full discharge from all debts provable against his. estate, except such debts as are ex cepted by law from such discharge and a hearing was thereupon ord ered and will be had upon said per-^~ tition on December 3, 1932, befofe said Court at Greenville, in ’said District, at 11 o’clock in the fore noon, at which time and place all known creditors and other persons in interest may appear and show- cause, if any they have, why the prayer of said petition should not be granted. W. D. WHITE, Clerk. Dated at Greenville, S. C., October 19, 1932.—4t. \ Novelist'—I’m looking for an honest lawyer. Artist—Then keep on traveling to the Never Never Land. Texas produces from a fourth to j a half of our total pecan crop, says! the United States Department of Agriculture. Pecan trees are native to the South Central States, but plantings of improved varieties have been made on a large scale throughout the east Gulf and South Atlantic coastal plains. Nuts from 666 LIQUID - TABLETS - SALVE 'I's/'r’«.* I'. r a’arm 3 da”S, Colds "rsf Hea ’aol.ei or Neuralgia in 1 minutes. 6 ? 4 LV V f- ?!F-*D COLDS Viol Speedy Rcirrjdica Known improved varieties come mostly a • from the Southeastern State*? and . . . A gr ^ 1 on mix V, l 5o I nuts from seedling and wild trees of 70 pounds of corn and 30 pounds come c hiefly from States west of ° T r y® 11 ™ C0 J n al ? nt : ^,' the Mississippi. Georgia frequently be used. If plenty of gram is fed p r0 duces about two-fifths of the it will lessen the danger of a neck i m p r oved varieties and Texas and molt which often lowers the year’s ok f ahoma together usually produce P ront - from two-thirds to four-fifths of the seedling nuts. Total pecan NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR production in the United States LOST TIME CERTIFICATE' from 1927 to 1931 ranged from 35,- €30,000 to 77,000,000 pounds. Oh-Oh! Hubby—Here is $10, dear. Don’t you think I deserve n little applause for giving it to you without being asked for it? Wife—Applause! Why, darling, I think you deserve an encore!—Se lected. Notice Of Dissolution Of Corporation STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of McCormick. Notice is hereby given that in ac cordance with the Statutes of the State of South Carolina in such cases made and provided that a.’ meeting of the stockholders of the? McCormick Drug Company, Incor porated, is hereby called at McCor- mickfcS. C., at 11 o’clock a. m. at the dHwes of the McCormick Drug. Company, Incorporated, on the 12: day of November, 1932, for the pur pose of considering and passing a resolution to dissolve, liquidate and’ wind up the affairs of the McCor mick Drug Company, Incorporated,, as a corporation, and to continue the affairs of the said McCormick Drug Company thereafter as a pri vate enterprise. This, the 10th day of October, 1932. J. A. HAMILTON, President and Secretary of the Mc Cormick Drug Company, Incor porated. 4t. Going Down a Peg Crazy Man—And who are you, may I ask? Asylum Superintendent—Oh, I’m the superintendent. Inmate—Is that so? Well, you won’t be for long. I was Napoleon when X first came here. -XXX- Notice is hereby given that Time Certifiratp No 9719 tn thp Government scientists who test certmeate No. 2112, issued to the watches for accurac y grew so weary undersigned by The Farmers Bank w inding all of the visiting time- of McCormick, S. C., on the 23rd pieces in their laboratory that they day of April, 1930, for the sum of 1 it in an electrical device which Forty-Five ($45.00) Dollars, has seedily does the job. All Right With Dad “Daddy, John asked me today to marry him,” said the sweet younff thing, “but I told him I couldn’t leave mamma.” “That’s all right,” said father, brightly; “take her with you.” been lost or destroyed. The same cannot now be found, and I will make application to the Receivers of The Farmers Bank of McCor mick, S. C.. on the 18th day of No vember, 1932, for a new Certificate, as provided by law. JOE MORTON, McCormick, S. C., October 5* 1932.—6t. ■>— Of all the silver fox pelts on the fuJ markets, only 2 are fro^Bild foxes. now Per cent -ixx- A battleship takes on its food ; applies, to the extent of about 100 I ns, once a month. X “Metabolism” comes from a Creek word meaning change, ana i.; used to mean the sum of physical and chemical changes resulting as tody substances are built up and .destroyed. j rfr Hog cholera is'causing th? deatr about 6,000,dtp hegs a ytar. His Memory at Fault “And why, my man,” asked the prison chaplain, “are you here?” “Well,” replied the prisoner, “just run through the Ten Commandments and I’ll tell you if I’ve missed any- thing.” Within His Rights “There’s a bug in my prunes,” com plained the boarder. “Well, you’re the first to complain,” Icily returned the landlady. “I hope you’ll excuse me. But—you see—I’m a vegetarian.” And Collects Interc “The banks are getting, wife puts our money ki h/ “Yes? So do^ hats.” Winthrop Cuts Budget Request COLUMBIA, Nov. 2.—Appropri ations for 1933 many thousand dol lars below what they were alloted this year were asked by the State department of education and Win throp college yesterday as they ap peared before the budget commis- James H. Hope, superintendent of education, requested $3,090,225, in cluding $350,000 for school bus transportation: This was nearly $700,000 less than the $3,788,581 ap propriated the department i/nis year, the 1932 sum, however, being subjected to a general 15 per cent. cut. . Winthrop’s request, presentee, by Dr. James P. Kihard, president, was $211,000, the college to be altowed uO keep its tuition fees for this year. Dr. Kinard presented an alteinaxe request of $295,000 less the tuition fees. Mr. Hope in presenting the 1933 budget for his department, outlin ed several proposed changes he said would save the state thou sands of dollars in school expenses. One was state-wide adoption of a county unit system of school nn- r 're and administration in -he p ace of the district plan: He al-. .* ' proposed equalization of teach> cr salaries ih certain classes and ages in tne school bus trans*- Pu tation act. txt More than 30.000 chimney swifts 've been toeged in an effort ;,o ind out. where these birds, go m : viator.. ' ) L