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I • * / ^Tlmrbday, February 16, 1933 McCormick mk^ejnger, Mccokmick. sooth Carolina PAGE NUMBER FOUR, NOTICE OF SALE t3y virtue cf s certain Ex:cu- 1 01 directed by J. O. Patterson, * ^wn Clerk and Treasurer of the ' "-'wn of McCormick, S. C., I have ! .dcd upon and will sell in front of the residence occupied by Dr Garnett Tuten on Main Street in Ihe Town of McCormick, County of McCormick, State of S. C., on the 1st Monday in March, (the same being the 6th day of March 1933) the following personal property, to-wit: I Library Table, 1 Electric Table Lamp, 3 Rockers. 3 Center Tables, 1 Large Rug, 2 Small Rugs, 1 Hall Rack, 1 Pedestal. ; 1 Three Piece Wicker Suit, 1 Wardrobe, ‘ 3 Dressers, 1 Iron Bed, 2 Wood Beds, 4 Dining Room Chairs, 1 Dining Room Table, 1 China Closet, 1 Buffet, 1 Cook Stove, 3 Kitchen Tables, : 1 Safe, ' 1 Refrigerator, ’ 1 Writing Desk, 1 Singer Sewing Machine, ‘ 1 Wash Stand, 1 Willow Settee. : 2 Pair Bed Springs, Miscellaneous Small Items. The above property levied upon and being sold as the property of W. L. Acker. Dated at McCormick, S. C., this 14th day of February 1933. C. H. CRAWFORD, Chief Police —3t. Schedule Of Home Demouslralion Work For Next Week Monday, February 20. a. m., of- Ice; p. m., Mt. Carmel H. D. C. Tuesday. February 21, a. m., Grammar School; p. m., Rehoboth H. D. C. Wednesday, Febniary 22, a. m., IcCormick 4-H 10th Grade; p. m., McCormick H. D. C. Thursday, February 23, a. m„ of- ice; p. m., Meriwether H. D. C. Friday, February 24, a. m., Mc Cormick 4-H 11th Grade; p. :n., Parksville H. D. C. Saturday, February 25, office. \ Lespedeza—3 Uses IS IMPORTANT LEGUME FOR GRAZING, HAY, AND SEED, SAYS AGRONOMIST JEFFORDS POULTI WANT ADV. CITATION OF LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, ■* * County of McCormick. BY J. FRANK MATTISON, PRO BATE JUDGE: WHEREAS, E. H. Miller, has made suit to me to grant him Let ters of Administration of the Estate and effects of Charlie Richardson THESE ARE, THEREFORE, to cite and admonish all and singular the Kindred and Creditors of the said Charlie Richardson, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at McCormick Court House on 27th day of February, 1933, next, after publication hereof, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said Adminis tration should not be granted. GIVEN under my hand this 23rd day of January, Anno Domini, 1933. J. FRANK MATTISON, Probate Judge. CITATION OF LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of McCormick. BY J. FRANK MATTISON, PRO BATE JUDGE: WHEREAS Rev. Leon T. Pressly made suit to me to grant Miss Susie Patterson Letters of Administration of the Estate and effects of Mrs. Fannie Patterson; THESE ARE, THEREFORE, to cite and admonish all and singular the Kindred and Creditors of the said Mrs. Fannie Patterson, deceas ed, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at McCormick Court House on the 24th day of February next, af ter publication hereof, at o’clock in the forenoon, to show c&ise, if any they have, why the said Ad ministration should not be granted. GIVEN under my hand this 7th day of February, Anno Domini, 1933. J. FRANK MATTISON, Probate Judge. NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND CREDITORS Ail persons holding claims against the estate of R. B. McDade, deceas ed, should present same to me duly verified, and all persons owing said estate should make payment to me. J. C. McDADE, Executor. McCormick, S. C., January 30, 1933.—4t. CLEMSON COLLEGE, Feb. 11.— When buying lespedeza seed insist on seed harvested in the fall of 1932, advises S. L. Jeffords, exten sion agronomist, who states that lespedeza should be planted the last of February and the first of March. “If seed are to be planted on permanent pasture or in small grain for grazing and soil improv ing purposes, it will not matter if there is a small amount of dodder seed mixed in,” he continues. “If the seed are to be planted in small grain or on specially prepared land for producing hay or seed for home consumption, then one should in sist on dodder free seed. “The common lespedeza is prob ably the best all-round variety for permanent pastures and for sow ing in small grain to be grazed or for soil improving or a combination of both. For sowing in the pasture a bushel or 25 pounds per aero should be the rate of planting. For sowing on small grain for grazing and for spil improving purp’oses, 25 to 50 pounds per acre should be sowed. “The two best varieties for hay purposes are Kobe and Tennessee 76. These should bi sown on very ertile soil at the rate of 25 to 30 pounds of seed per acre. The Kor ean variety does best at an eleva tion of 2000 feet or better. Under avorable conditions, the Korean variety will produce at lower alti tudes than this. The Korean is a leavy seeder and is not adapted to as large a range of soils as the oth er varieties. It is a month earlier han the common variety and pro duces a coarser stalk and leaf. “The common, the Kobe, and the Tennessee 76 may be harvested for seed with a pan attached to the mower bar. The Korean variety must be mowed and thrashed in a grain thrasher.” MIME Poultry Shipment Schedul as follows: Mt. Carmel, Monday a. m.. February 20. McCormick, Tuesday a. m., February 21. Prices to be paid as follows: Heavy Hens, 10c lb. Light Hens and Leghorns, 8c lb. > Roosters, 5c lb. Grown Young Chix, 10c lb. Stags, 7c lb. Pfew Broilers, colored, 1 1-2 to 2 1-2 lbs., 14c. New Broilers, Leghorns, 1 1-2 to 2 1-2 lbs.‘, 12c. Buyer: E. E. Eller Produce Co., North Wilkesboro, N. C. Do not bring chickens with feet tied. Do not feed day of sale. FOR SALE—Nice pigs and shoats, cheap. See me before buying. Frank P. Deason, McCormick, S. C. FOR RENT—Four room dwelling, on North Main Street in McCor mick: lights, good well of water, garage, one acre land under wt Reasonable price. C. E. Newby. BUDDED PAPER-SHELL PECAN TREES, Schley, Stuart, Pabst and e U to 10 foot 35 cr*' - ^ o. B. Putney, Ga. Cash with order. H. M. Broach, Putney, Ga. MAN WITH CAR WANTED for local tea and coffee route. No experi ence rueeded. Must be satisfied to make $32.50 a week at start. Write Albert Mills, Route Mgr., 2297 Monmouth, Cincinnati, Ohio. Sweet Clover’s Value For Soil And Grazing Popular Bulletins In the three years 1930 to 1932 the United States Department of Agriculture received from farmers and housewives more than 6,700,000 requests for its 20 most popular bulletins. Of the 20 “best sellers,” 11 are about home-making subjects. For nctance, the one in greatest de mand, Canning Fruits and Vege tables at Home, was requested by 739,275 people in the 3-year period. Next in demand was one on clothes. Stain Removal from Fabrics, of which 691,750 copies were requested in the same period. Other bulletins for which the de mand was nearly as great included Farm Poultry Raising, Home Bak ing, Roses for the Home, and Care of Food in the Home. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLE MENT AND DISCHARGE Take notice, that on the 14th day of March, 1933, at 11 o’clock a. m., I will make a final settlement as administrator of the Estate of Jno. M. Bell, deceased, In the office of the Probate Judge of McCormick County, S. C., at which time I will ask for a discharge. All persons holding claims against said Estate should present them properly at tested before that date. J. E. BELL, Administrator. McCormick, S. C., February 8, 1933.—4t. In making their heavy boots, Eskimos use coast whale sinew for thread. Have to Get Up at Night ? Peal Promptly with Bladder Irregularities Are you bothered with blad* der irregularities; burning, scanty or too frequent passage and getting up at night? Heed promptly these symptoms. They may warn of some dis ordered kidney or bladder con dition. Users everywhere rely , on Doan's Pills. Recommended 50 years. Sold everywhere. Doajv’s ills A Diuretic for tha Kidneys E. L. ROGERS, Co. Agent. MRS. NELL STALLWORTH, H‘. D. Agent. THINGS WORTH KNOWING Yellowstone National park is the last stand of the trumpeter swan, the largest of all American water- fowl. • Two professors who have studied the designs on the arms and legs of Peruvian mummies have con cluded that tatooing was once used by these prehistoric Indians. The Atlantic salmon differ con siderably from those of the Pacific. In Mt. McKinley national park, Alaska, caribou run in herds of a thousand or more. Life-size rubber models of the human body are being used for in struction purposes in medical schools. Trees grow faster in spring than in summer, the springtime cells ap pearing larger and lighter in color than the layer of cells added to the tree trunk in summer. Tea must be kept in glass or some other air-tight container, if it is to retain its individual flav or, declares a federal tea examiner, for the dried tea leaves readily take up flavors of other foods nearby on pantry shelves. The center of population of the United States has moved steadily westward, but has remained close to the thirty-ninth parallel of lati tude. The hairy chestnut of China has proved immune to the chest nut blight which is wiping out Am erica’s chestnut trees, and it is hoped that a cross may be devel oped which will replace the lost trees and resist the blight. Alligators make themselves use ful by eating up alligator gars which destroy food fishes and by eating crawfishes. In the seventh century Sweden struck copper coins weighing as much as thirty-one pounds. Limestone is being built at the bottom of the ocean at the rate of an inch a century. Glacier national park, sometimes called the “Trail park,” has nearly 1,000 miles of horse, foot and fire trails. SPARTANBURG, Feb. 11.--Sweet clover is a valuable legume for planting in February in small grain for soil-improving and grazing purposes, especially on the clay soils of the Piedmont section of South Carolina, states S. L. Jef fords, extension agronomist. A firm seedbed, scarified seed, inocul ation of the seed before planting, and an application of lime or basic slag are essential factors in secur ing a good stand of sweet clover in South Carolina, he says. Citing the records from a num ber of farmers in 1931 and 1932, Mr. Jeffords shows that those far mers who produced successful crops used the following methods in es tablishing sweet clover: They planted 20 to 30 pounds of seed per acre; the seed were inoculated with either commercial inoculation or dirt from a burr clover or alfalfa or sweet clover field; the seed were mixed v/ith either ground agricul tural limestone or basic slag and the mixture seeded at the rate of 500 pounds per acre with a grain drill. The discs of the drill were set to run very lightly and the press wheels or drag chains at the back of the drill were removed, leaving the seed and the lime or basic slag mixture in a shallow open furrow. A few farmers produced this crop successfully by broadcasting the seed and broadcasting the lime or basic slag and harrowing the mix ture lightly, but did not secure as good or satisfactory stands. The variety giving the best re sults is the biennial white sweet clover. The biennial yellow and the annual white and yellow varie ties do not produce a satisfactory growth as compared with the bi ennial white variety. IXJ Auto Accidents Take Heavy Toll TWENTY-ONE KILLED ON HIGH WAYS IN JANUARY (The State, February 11.) Twenty-one persons died as a re- 'uit of automobile accidents or 'ieuth Carolina highways during Tanuary, as compared with 12 in he same month cf last year, a re port issued yesterday from the state highv/ay department shows. There was a total of 99 accidents, is compared with 82 in the 31-day oeried last year. Nine of these /ere reported to have resulted 'rem “recklessness due to liquor”; 20 to careless driving; 23 to reck less driving; 14 to speeding. Nins »f the vehicles were driven off the oad and 12 overturned. Defects of motor vehicles caused six cf the vrecks. T n addition to the fatalities. 35 -••sons were inlured, seven seri- f sly and 79 slightijr. In January, 1332, 75 were hurt, )f those killed last month seven "e pedestrians. This compares h six for the same period of last ar. The Veport reveals that 82 acci- nts occurred on straight roads, 17 on curves, 19 at public road c ossings, six at or near bridges and r~ne at railroad grade crossings. Fifty happened in the daytime and 43 after dark; 83 on paved roads; four on unpaved roads and 12 on bituminous surfaced roads. Forty-four of the wrecks were due to collisions between motor vehicles and seven to collisions be tween motor vehicles and other vehicles. 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