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Thursday, April <13v 19.33 McCORMICK MESSENGER, McCORM|CK. SOUTH CAROLINA *'AGfc IN UMBER FOUR 4> A** s it A s L> • ‘i* » ‘ V.Vf ^ ■ 3 -v. .* 4 » ; ( •& ♦w Special] reductions on | manent waves for limited wlme. ' * -0:'T-.' $7.50 5.00 Wave 3.5,0 + 3.50 Wave ; 2.50 . Finger Wave 25c We specialize in hair dyeing Beauty culture in all its branches by expert operators. ] La France Beauty Salon Mrs. ^nn Sheehan, Mgr. 3 * < Telephone 1255 . 318 Herald Building Augusta, Qa. Phone or write for appoint ment. Watch \hur 1 Kidneys/ Boat Neglect Kidney and blrnddr regularities If botb<- /ith bladder It* regularities, iting up at night and nagging backache, heed promptly these symptoms. They may warn of some dis ordered Iddney or bladder con dition. For 50 years grateful users have relied upon Doan's l Pills. Praised the country over, by all dftlggists. I' i I A Diuretic for the Kidneys V T" KT** . i, j r V. > ff l aw prepared to take care of your fertilizer needs with* the best fertil izers at very lowest .7 . ’ vv ’, t •. ; j . ) . • prices. > v in- tfirfi .BROWN McCormick, S. C. Doctors To Meet * < v At Spartanburg Next Tuesday SENECA, April 10.—Tlie program f the 85th annual session of the >outh Carolina Medical association convening Tuesday, April 18, in .partanburg, was announced, here aday by Dr. E. A. Hines, secretary. The convention will last three days. • Reports of the various states ommittees will be heard at the Lrst gathering at the Cleveland toWI Tuesday evening. The Sci- mttfie program gets tinder way on We$hfesday morning at 8 o’clock, ,vi)h the association president, Dr I. R.. Young, of Anderson, deliver ing his address. Three guest speakers have been secured {or the meeting. Dr. Olin West, of Chicago, present secretary and general manager of the Ameri can Medical Association, will ad dress the physicians on “The Aims and Ideals of the Medical Profes sion” on Wednesday evening. Dr. WUliam Davis Haggard, of Nash ville, Tenn., professor of Surgery at Vanderbilt University, will talk at noon Wednesday on “The Base of Diagnosis” of cancer of the colon and rectum and Its curability. On Thursday morning Dr. P. P. Mc Cain of Sanitorium, N. C., one of the most eminent authorities on tuberculosis in the country, will ad dress the convention. Delegates from this section will include: Anderson: Dr. F. M. Lan der, Williamston; Dr. D. J. Barton and Dr. B. A. Henry, of this city; Greenwood: Dr. W. A. Simpson, Dr. J. C. Harper, Dr. O. J. Scurry and Dr. J. L. Ward; Ocdnee: Dr. J. W. Bell, Walhalla, and Dr. J. S. Stribling, Seneca; Pickens: Dr. W. A. Tripp, Easley, Dr*W. A. Sheldon, Liberty; Dr. J. H. Cutchins^Easley ,and Dr. N. C. Blackett, Pickets. . _ • i . I.. .x » \ v ■ ]•' •*. ,. . \ Livestock On Roads Says Her Husband Lost 16 Pounds In 4 Weeks WANT ADV. FOR SALE—Some good mules, cheap. Jamie L. Smith, McCor mick, S. C. PLANTS FOR SALE — Tomatc Plants—Baltimore, Marglobe, Red Peauty. Sweet Potato Plants— * Triumph, Porto Rico, Nancy Hall end Big Stem Jersey, all $1.00 per 1000. Cabbage Plants— Charleston, .Jersey, Succession arrl Copenhagen Market. Onion Plants—White and Yellow Ber muda, all 50 cents per 1000. Pep per Plants—Bun Nose and Ruby King, $2.00'per 1000. Send re mittance for prompt shipment. Dorris Plant Co., Valdosta, Oa. MEN WANTED for Rawlelgh City Routes of 800 Consumers in Cities of McCormick, Greenwood, Edge- field and Colliers. Reliable hustler can start earning $25 ' weekly and increase rapidly. Write immediately. Rawlelgh Co., Richmond, Va. Dept. SC-D -33-V. PERMANENT WAVES, $1.95, $3.00 and $5.00; Finger Wave and Shampoo, 35 cents. Oregon Beauty Parlor, Greenwood, S. C. '• * f v FOR SALE—Oats at 40 cents per bushel at my house; you furnish bags. T. A. Dowtin, Rt. 1, Troy, i P. P, Charleston Evening Post. t . . . State . highway patrolmen have been instructed to make out bases where possible against persons who permit U?eir cattle and hogs to. run at large on the highways, but their task Is a difficult one, states W.’ V. Sutherland, director of the motor vehicle division of the §tate high way^ department, in ac fetter to the Charleston chamber Of commerce. Recently, following a meeting of the committee on t streets, highways and bridges, the chamber wrote to he commission urging the Import ance of keeping the highways clear of straying animals and inviting suggestions as to what might be done locally in this matter. Mr. Sutherland’s letter, in reply, fol- ows; “The law enforcement division has been endeavoring to rectify the condition mentioned in your letter. Our patrolmen have all been in structed to make cases where pos sible a&ainst parties who permit their cattle and hogs to run at large on the highways. The law on this subject is rather difficult of Interpretation and it has al most been impossible to get a con viction. In the first place, owner ship of the cattle must be proved, and iirthe second place it must be shown that the owner wilfully per mitted his stock to run at large. You, of course, realize that this is almost impossible since no one will claim any animal which has caus ed injury, nor will they admit own ership when approached by a man in uniform, knowing what his mis sion is. “We will continue to use our best efforts under the circumstances to improve conditions in this respect. We hardly know how to suggest a procedure for you to follow in this matter, but we feel that local or ganizations would have a better opportunity of success in bringing this matter before the owners of cattle in each county and that persuasion may bring better results than threats and arrests. The local sheriff in each county should not have any difficulty in tracing own ership of the cattle and we feel that a warning through him would bring the best results.” /. x . Colored Man Dies ’*1 have never found a medicine that ‘peps’ you up like Kruschen Salts and better still, leaves you ‘pepped up.’ I take it two or threj times a week-r-not to reduce but merely to feel good and clean. My husband took it to reduce, he lost 16 pounds irfs4 weeks.” Mrs. E. A. Ferris, Washington, D. C. (Decem ber 29, 1932). To lose fat and at the same time gain hi physical attractiveness and feel splHted and youthful take one half teaspoOnful of Kruschen in a glass cf hot water before breakfast every morning. A Jar that lasts 4 weeks costs but a trifle at any drugstore in the world but be sure and get Krus chen Salts the SAFE way to reduce wide hips, prominent front and double chin and again feel the joy of living—money back if dissatis fied after the first jar. Adv.— In Spring finds much interest the new pattern for linger!?, j The model of the gown and j jacket combination shown is cut full enough for comfort apd yet Says Corn Smut Not Seed-Borne Disease SANITATION, ROTATION, AND SEED SELECTION ADVISED TO CONTROL TROUBLE CLEMSON COLLEGE, April 3.— The smut of corn which causes the repulsive looking growth on the tassels, ears, and stalks is not a seed-borne disease and cannot be controlled by seed disinfection, ac cording to Alfred Lutken, extension entomologist, who advises "that sanitation, rotation, and seed sei^ ection are important factors in con trolling the disease. v . r • ' “During the late summer the smut galls break up and thd spores become scattered on the ground,” suys Mr. Lutken, explain ing .the nature of the disease &nd best practices'^ti^ ipJlQW.l over-winter in sol£ compost;, ahd manure. In -early surmner, with sufficient, moisture arid tempera ture,* the, spoj;eS germinate and .give rise to a dp of seed-like . bodies^ Tlie.se are’.t&rrleii by Jhe wftid‘to cornfields where they bause new infections on the young and suc culent tissues. r r ' “Cutttpg put . arid' tppging the diseased stalks before the smut balls break will; greatly reduce the soiirce ’.of * infection if carried' out for a number of years. This prac tice, supplemented by turning der the com stalks in the fall and rotating so that com will be plant 1 * fed at some distance from old corn fields, should eliminate much of the disease. * By selecting seed from disease-free stalks a strain with some resistance to smut can be de veloped.” :_x— For a pattern, size 34. 36. 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 pr 48, send 15c in coin, your 'Name, Ad dress, Style Number and Size to Kay Boyd. 103 Park Avenua, New York. Complete and simple sewing chart with each pattern. -'Hr * John Cartledge, age 58, died at his home near Farksville Tuesday, April 11th, after being ill about a week. He Is survived by his wife and several children and other relatives. Funeral services were held yes terday afternoon at 2 :S0 o’clock at 1 Mt. Level Church' . and interment made In the church cemetery. I J. S. Strom funeral director. Feed Syrup If Needed To Keep Bees Strong CLEMSON COLLEGE, April 8.— Recent cool weather has been hold ing back the honey flow and in some sections of the state little or no food is coming in to feed the large amount of brood that is be ing reared, says Ned Prevost, ex tension bee specialist, who believes that it may be advisable to feed bees that are low in stores so that the colonies will not dwindle away before the honey flow starts. For feeding bees Mr. Prevost suggests a sugar syrup of twe pounds of granulated sugar to om pint of water, this syrup to be fed a quart at- a time until the bee: have a sufficient amount. He adds that care Should be taken not tc feed colonies that have a gooc food supply or the brood may br crowded out. . , > , « ,, Governor of Alaska has smart lines. :£t, may be made . of silk crejjie, using the deljjgh^ui touches of ech- broider^ ' lap^V ^thd ribbon on-.tifie jacket, with the gown held at tiie waistline by a ribbon. This easily-made model is de signed in four sizes: Small, 34 to 36; Medium, 38 to 40; Large, 42 to 44; . arid Extra Large, 46 to ; 48. , Size Medium, 38 to 40, ^requires 4.i2-3 yards of material,; 35 inches wide. The gown alone requires 3 1-8 yards, the jacket alone 1 2-3 yards. —-«* ; . Easy To Save Eggs For Use Next Fall I i J .V , John W. Troy, 'publisher of the Ahttlra Daily Empire at Juneau is the new Governor of Alaska. He is a native of. yVashington State and has been in Alaska ffnee the gold rash 64ys. His nomination was sent to the Senate by President Roosevelt. CLEMSON COLLEGE, April 8 — With eggs selling at ten cents per dozen every family living ill town will save money by preserving eggs for cooking purposes next fall when they usually sell for thirty cents or more, suggests P. H. Gooding, ex tension poultryman, who states that eggs may be kept easily and cheaply in sodium silicate or water-glass. “One quart of liquid water-glass and a five-gallon container wiL be sufficient for 15 to 18 dozen eggs,” says Mr. Gooding, giving simple directions. “Nine quarts of water should be boiled and thor oughly cooled, the water-glass solu tion mixed with it in stone jars, crocks, or galvanized vessels that have been sterilized with boiling water. Pour the containers half full and add more liquid, if neces sary when the eggs are in the solution, to cover the top layer of eggs two or more inches. “Use only fresh eggs with sound shells. Place the eggs in the so lution as they are gathered with the littl? end down. A plate oi cover placed over the eggs will pre vent? any from coming to the sur face. Cover the vessels to pre vent undue evaporation and store jn a cool place. Examine the ves sels occasionally and add more cold boiled water if necessary. "Eggs may be kept also in lime solution made by dissolving two pounds of unslaked lime in a small vi antity of water, and diluting the solution with five gallons of cold toiled wa^er. This mixture should stand until the lime settles, and the clear liquid then poured into u i earthenware crock or jar that lias been sterilized as in the water- glass method. Then proceed as in the use of water-glass. “If eggs preserved by either of these methods are to be boiled, a small hole should be made with a pin in the larger end of the shell •before they are cooked in order to allow the air to escape,” Mr. Good ing cautions. / 30 Per Cent Acreage Cut Requir ed For Crop Loans Reduction of 30 per cent in the acreage planted to cash crops wiL be required this year of farmers ...io procure crop production loans, Secretary of Agriculture Arthur M. Hyde announced recently in mak ing public the regulations govern ing the 1933 loans. In making available for crop production-loans this y'ear $90,000,- 000 of Reconstruction Finance Cor poration funds, Congress specified that the Secretary of Agriculture might require, as a condition of any loan, “that the borrower agree to reduce his acreage or production program on such basis, not to ex ceed 30 per centum, as may be de termined by the Secretary.” The Secretary’s regulations, however, stipulate that acreage reduction will not be required of farmers who, in 1933, plant no more than 8 acres of cotton; 2 1-2 acres of tobacco; 40 acres of wheat; 20 acres of com; 2 1-2 acres of truck crops; 12 acres of sugar beets;* 8 acres of potatoes; 30 acres of rice; 8 acres of peanuts. Farmers seeking crop production loans this year are advised to ob tain application blanks and copies of the regulations in their home counties, rather than from Wash ington. Field agents of the Crop Production Loan Office are now designating representatives in each farming county to inform prospec tive borrowers of the requirements governing loans and to distribute application blanks and other nec essary forms. These agents will assist farmers in filling out appli cations, without charge. Accompanying the required 30 per cent reduction iri acreage planted to cash crops, above uhe established minimum, the .1933 regulations limit the amount avail able to any farmer to $300. In 1932, crop production loans were made to 507,632 farmers, averaging .$126 each. No loan in excess d $100 will be made to any appli cant who: is in arrear^pn,^ many as two previous loans made by tho Secretary qf^^griculture. As last year, interest is fixed at 5 1-2 per cent, to be deducted when the ad vance is made. All not^.are due October 31, 1933. Adva^s .To borrowers may be made ip install ments, the regulations state, inas much as expenditures for crop pro duction are usually made over a considerable period. One million dollars of the $90,- 000,000 funds is aV$lflble for live stock feed in drought or storm stricken areas.' Charging a fee for the prepara tion of a borrower’s application is expressly forbidden this year in Section 3 of the Act of Congress authorizing the crop production loans. Congress further/declared these loan funds “to be impressed with a trust to accomplish the pur poses provided for by this resolu tion—and it shall be unlawful for any person to make any material false representation for the pur pose of obtaining any loan or to as sist in obtaining such loan or to dispose of or assist in disposing oi any crops given as security for anj loan made under authority of thk resolution, except for the account of the Secretary of Agriculture, and for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of this resolution. Teeth for Section 3 are provided in a clause which orders a fine not exceeding $1,000 or imprisonment not exceeding six months, or both, for any person found guilty of vio lating the above provisions. The remaining regulations an nounced by Secretary Hyde art similar to those An absolute firs crops grown by is required by where fertiliz used, the ra exceed $3 an crops, and $1 crops, includi: ties where fe used, accord: representative! of Agricultur exceed $6 an crops, $10 an Don’t Bo o Messenger Boy USE YOUR TELEPMONE! We know a man who»noth ing but a messenger boy. He doesn’t realize it, of course. In fact, he can't afford to be, either. But he just hasn’t learned how to put Che tele phone to work for him. Don’t be like this man. It’s extravagant. Even if your time was worth only EQcents an hour, your telephone is much cheaper—as a>messen ger. Save your time fbnvalu able work. Your telephone can save you many a: round trip. Use it as often as. you need it—it is still one off the greatest economies in thisday of many economies. Nothing else that costs so little, gives so much, as your telephone. S. C. CONTINENTAL TELEPHONE CO. The Value of the Telephone Is Greater Than the Cost only ony oi :rtment ust not eral field tacco, and $20 an acre for truck crops, includ ing potatoes. Not to exceed $1 an acre of loans made at any of these rates may be used for repairs and miscellaneous expenses of crop production other than seed, fertil izer, feed for workstock, and fuel and oil for tractors. Special provision is made for ad ditional loans—within the maxi mum allowed per farmer—Cor the purchase of materials for spraying and dusting, to protect crops from insects and diseases; for payment of water charges, electric power, etc., necessary to crop production Time counts when you’re in pain I: Insist on - genuine Bayer Aspirin, not only for its safety but for its speed. The tablet that is stamped Bayer dissolves at once. It is many ihiiiutes^ faster than remedies that are offered ; in its stead. * * . >■ * • If you saw Bayer Aspirin made., you would know why it has such uniform, dependable action..; If you ■ have ever timed 1 w - tablet slam E ts to worL. _ is any effect. Stick to genuine Bayer/. You know what you arn ^ You know it is harmless; nothing it to depress the heart. You know you will get results. For headaches, colds, neuralgia, rheumatism, tho safe and eertam relief is atways tbe tablet stamped— t 1 on irrigated land; for production expenses, including employment' of hand labor, on sugar beets, sugar cane, hops, and rice. Loans may also be made this year for summer fallowing, not to exceed $2.50. an acre for acreage not in excess of' that planted in 1932, provided a first lien is given on all crops growing, or to be planted, grown and harvested jn 1933 sufficient to cover the advance. In addition to the reduction this year in acreage of cash crops, bor rowers must agree to plant a gar den for home use and a sufficient acreage of feed crops to supply feed for their livestock. Acreage tak*- en out of cash crop production may be planted to any soil-building, crop. Loans will be made, the rcgulav- tions further declare, “to farmers who are unable to obtain loans for crop production during the year- 1933 from other sources. These loans may be made to such indi viduals as are found by the Sec retary of Agrlcuture to have acre age fit for seeding and who , arc^ without means to purchase the supplies necessary for crop produc tion during the year 1933. . . No> loans will be made to any applicant who has a means of livelihood other than farming... Loans will not be made for the purchase of machin ery or livestock, or for the payment of taxes, debts, or interest on debts. Leans will not be made for the feeding of livestock other than workstock used in crop production.’* Although the time for making application for loans extends to the first of May, those desiring to make application ‘for loans are requested to do so at once.. V