McCormick messenger. (McCormick, S.C.) 1902-current, May 04, 1933, Image 4
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Thursday, May 4, 1933
McCORMiCk MESSENGER, McCORMICK. SOUTH CAROLINA
PAGE NUMBER FOUR
\
How She Lost 18
Pounds Of Fat
FOR LESS THAN $1.00
“Will say in regards to Kruschen:
I took it to reduce. I lost 18 pounds
after using one bottle and feel fine.
Just bought one more bottle today
and expect to lose 18 more pounds.
I now wfeigh 148 and feel fine.” Mrs.
Harry Robinson, Akron, Ohio (Jan.
6, 1933).
Once a day take Kruschen Salts
- one half teaspoonful in a glasspf
hot water first thing every mqjh-
ing. Besides losing ugly fat
SAFELY you’ll gain in health and
physical attractiveness—constipa
tion, gas and acidity will cease to
hother—you’ll feel younger—more
active—full of ambition—clear skin
—sparkling eyes.
A jar that lasts 4 weeks costs but
a trifle at any drugstore in the
world—but demand and get Krus
chen and if one bottle doesn’t joy
fully please you—money back.
‘ —Adv.
\ Asp’
JkSAFE!
\ Everyone accepts the fact that Bayer
'Aspirin is the swiftest form of relief
/for headaches, neuralgia, neuritis,
periodic pain, and other suiTering.
If you’ve tried it, you know. But no
one need hesitate to take these
tablets because of their speed. They
an perfectly safe. They will not
depress the heart. They have no ill
effect of any kind. The rapid relief
t they bring is due to the rapidity
! with- which they dissolve.
So, keep these tablets handy, and
keep your engagements—free from
pain or discomfort. Carry the pocket
tin for emergencies; buy the bottle
of 100 for its economy. The new
reduced grice has removed the last
reason for trying any substitute for
nuine Bayer Aspirin—each tablet
* stamped w»th this cross:
Don’t Get Up Nights
THIS 25c TEST FREE
U It Fails
May Farm Calendar
CLEMSON COLLEGE, May 1.—
Better farming hints for attention
ih May suggested by extension
specialists include the following:
Agronomy
Soybeans and cowpea seed are
’ncreasing in price. Buy seed now
to plant a large acreage for'feed
and soil improvement.
Better increase the corn acreage
-,o be sure ^o have plenty of feed.
Side-dressing corn and cotton
vigi nitrogen gives good returns
til^fertilizer money.
' Karly sw<}etened prison cot
on will kill the early weevils and
’et the early squares develop.
Horticulture
Sow tomatoes for July trans-*
anting. /
Sow cabbage and collard about
ov 15 for August transplanting.
Mulch tomatoes heavily with
straw or leaves to hold moisture
md prolong fruiting.
Do not cultivate beans while the
oliace is wet.
Apply nitrate of soda to garden
crops if not growing well.
Do not cut young asparagus too
closely; fertilize and manure the
bed after cutting season.
Agricultural Engineering
Sharpen harrow disks for cutting
in cover crops.
Use weeder, spike-tooth harrow,
or rotary hoe to break crusts form
ed over young seedlings.
Equip the two-horse cultivator
with disk hillers or small sweeps
for early cultivations.
Keep working parts of machines
greased or oiled as this is cheaper
than repairs.
Order repairs and recondition all
machinery for the grain harvest.
Recondition poultry laying
houses. Provide screens for dwell
ings, milk houses, etc.
Insects and Diseases
Spray fruit trees for curculio,
codlihg moth, and diseases.
Spray pecans with Bordeaux to
control scab.
Band apple trees for codling
moth by May 15.
Control melon anthracnose with
4-4-50 Bordeaux spray.
Control Irish potato and tomato
diseases and insects with Bor
deaux-lead arsenate spray.
To avoid serious budworm injury
plant corn in lower South Carolina
about May 5; middle South Caro
lina May 10; upper South Caro
lina May 20.
X
Newberry College
Commmencement
Starts On June 4th
Physic the bladder as you would
the bowels. Drive out the impuri
ties and excess acids which cause
the irritation that wakes you up.
Get a regular 25c box • of BUKETS,
made from buchu leaves, juniper
oil, etc. After four days, test, if
not satisfied, go back and get your
2&c. They work on the bladder sim
ilar to castor oil on the bOwels.
Bladder irregularity is nature’s
danger signal and may warn you
•of trouble. You are bound to feel
better after the cleansing and you
get your regular sleep. Stroms’
Drug Store say BUKETS is a best
seller.
—Adv.
NOTICE OF ELECTION
FOR SCHOOL TRUSTEES
On May 16th, same being the 3rd
Tuesday in May, there will be an
election held in each school district
In McCormick County for the pur
pose of electing school trustees in
the various school districts in the
said county.
In school district No. 4 there
shall be two (2) trustees elected.
Three members of the present
board of trustees in district No. 4
shall remain according to an Act
of 1927.
The remaining school districts in
the said county shall elect three
(3) trustees, all of whom shall be
elected as provided by law, Act
1927. No. 288, except Plum Branch,
which shall elect five (5).
Said elections shall be conducted
on same rules and regulations as
democratic primaries are conduct
ed in the said county.
School trustees shall act as
managers or appoint managers of
the said election.
The voting place of the respec
tive school districts shall be at or
near the school house in the said
^districts: polls open at 8 a. m., and
close at 4 p. m. All returns of said
election shall be fUed with the
County Board of Education in ten
days after date of election.
* T. J. 6IBERT,
•P. J. ROBINSON,
W. H. PARKS,
“County Board of Education,
McCormick County.
V Afgfl 25, MJSr-St,
Manufacturing In
This State Under !
Level 12 Years Ago
WASHINGTON, April 23.—Manu- |
facturing in South Carolina has
sunk below the 1921 level, accord
ing to a census of manufacturers
in the Palmetto state just released
by the department of commerce.
The census, based on figures col
lected in 1931, shows that there
were 1,044 operating establishment::,
in the state, paying wages of $50.-
926,463 and using $119,769,018 worth
of material and producing products
valued at $229,462,316. No estimate
as to salaries of manufacturing
companies or their profits was giv
en by the department.
In 1929 there were 1,659 manu
facturing establishments is South
Carolina, paying wages of $73,223,-
327, using $226,541,603 worth qf ma
terials, and producing products val
ued at $385,892,252. In 1921 there
were 1,107 establishments, paying
wages of $51,409,995, using materi
als valued at $141,901,655 and man
ufacturing products valued at
$236,420,578.
There were 87.010 industrial wa^^
earners in Sout£i Carolina in 1931,
108,777 in 1929, and 76,251 in 1921.
The textile industry of course
led the manufacturing field in
South Carolina. The 1931 census
shows 144 cotton mill estaBlish-
ments, who paid 59,777 wrorkers
$33,370,083, purchased $69,443,475
worth of raw material and manu
factured products valued at $135,-
211,976. 'There were 14 establish
ments classed as dyeing and finish
ing textiles which employed 2,770
persons and turned out $15,361,927
worth of goods.
Lumber and timber products in
1931 were valued at over ten mil
lion dollars.
Many different products were
manufactured in South Carolina
during 1931 as shown by the list of
industries which, in part follow:
Beverages; boxes; bread and
bakery^-products; butter; canned
and preserved fish, crabs, shrimps,
oysters and clams; canned and
dried fruits and vegetables; caskets,
coffins, burial cases, and other
morticians’ goods; cereal prepara
tions; clay products; coffee and
spice, roasting and grinding; fert
ilizers; grain mill products; furni
ture; ice; ice cream; knit goods;
marble granite, slate $nd stone;,
mattresses and bed springs; pat
ent medicines; printing and pub
lishing; turpentine and rosin and
others.
Quail Eggs To Be
Distributed Free
WANT ADV.
SUMTER, April 28.—Bob White
eggs from the Clark game farm at
Milford will soon be available to
sportsmen, M. S. Boykin, president
of the South Carolina Game and
Fish association, announced here
today, at the same time urging all
those who might be interested to
make application at once so that
the proper arrangements for dis
pensing the eggs might be made.
The eggs are made available
through ttoe generosity of Emory
W. Clark of Detroit and Sumter
countv. Mr. Boykin said, and it is
Mr. Clark’s desire that they be as
widely distributed as possible
throughout the state.
Eggs will be distributed to those
who indicate that they are prepar
ed to receive and care for them in
applications made to Mr. Boykin.
Instructions for the care and hand
ling of the eggs and chicks have
been -prepared by Mrs. Manning
Richardson, manager of the Mil
ford Game Farm, and will be furn
ished along with the eggs to those
who make application.
The eggs will be distributed only
to these who agree to raise birds
for restocking purposes only.
Some 2,000 or 3,000 eggs will bs
made available through Mr. Clark’s
generosity, Mr. Boykin said, and he
expressed the hope that the sports
men of the state would respond to
this kind offer with the enthusiasm
it deserves.
“I believe the sportsmen of the
state,” Mr. Boykin said, “can do
wonders toward restocking Soqth
Carolina with game, by a little ef
fort, as a result of Mr. Clark’s gen
erous co-operation. He has given
us a wonderful opportunity and the
least we can do is to show our ap
preciation by helping ourselves.”
X
Menus For
Spring Days
NEWBERRY, May 2.—Com
mencement exercises of Newberry
College will begin this year with
the delivery of Use baccalaureate
sermon in the Church of the Re
deemer on Sunday, June 4, at 11:30
a. m. by Rev. C. A. Linn, Fh. D., for
six years pastor of the Lutheran
Uhurch of the Ascension, Savan
nah, Ga.
Dr. Linn, a graduate of Hartford
Theological seminary at Hartford,
Conn., has done graduate study in
the field of church history with
sptecial emphasis on the modern
period. He has served pastorates
in New Jersey, North Carolina and
Georgia. Personally, Dr. Linn is a
man of pleasing appearance, is a
gifted speaker and conversational
ist, and is a man of vigorous intel
lect, right thinking and sound op- 1
inion.
On Sunday at 8:33 in the evening
the Music Department of the Col
lege will render a program in the
Newberry High School Auditorium.
The Sophomore declamation
contest will be held Monday morn
ing following at 10:30 o’clock in
Holland Hall.
The annual meeting of the board
jf trustees will be held Monday ai-
temoon at 3 o’clock in the college
offices.
Senior class day exercises will
take place on the campus at 5
o’clock on the same afternoon.
Seven candidates will compete
for honors in the junior oratorical
contest, which will be held in Hol
land Hall at 8:30 o’clock Monday
evening.
Graduation exercises will take
place in the college gymnasium
Tuesday morning, June 6, at 10:30
o’clock. There are 90 young wo
men and men in the senior class
this year.
The annual meeting of the al
umni will be held in the college
auditorium Tuesday at noon, to be
followed an hour later by the col
lege luncheon.
Planning meals sometimes be
comes a puzzling problem in
springtime, even though tempting
foods are overflowing the markets.
Sometimes it seems a task to think
up ways of combining them into
balanced meals. Here are a few
suggestions for menus suitable to
spriDgtime, suggested by Inez S
Willson, home economist:
Menu No. I
Roast Lamb with Brown Gravy
Creamed Celery Browned Potatoes
Waldorf Salad
Hot Rolls and Butter Currant Jelly
Chocolate Ice Cream Coffee
Menu No. II
Stuffed Beef Heart
Baked Onions
Glazed Sweet Potatoes
Buttered Beets
Bread and Butter Tapioca Pudding
Menu No. Ill
Broiled Sweetbreads
Au Gratin Potatocr
Tomato Stuffed with Cucumbers
Graham Bread
Watermelon Pickier
Ice Cream and Cake
Menu No. IV
Sliced Ham Creamed Potatoes
Spring Salad Mustard Pickles
, Hot Biscuits with Tart Jelly
Strawberries and Cream Coffee
Menu No. V
Chartreuse of Tripe
Baked Potatoes
Cucumber Salad with
French Dressing
Rolls and Jelly Baked Pears
Chartreuse of Tripe
Cut a pound of very thin tripe in
to thin shreds and then cut these
crosswise into inch-long pieces.
Slice a Spanish onion in very thin
slices and cook in bacon fat or but
ter until the onion is yellowed. Add
tripe and heat it through, taking
care not to burn it. Blend in 2
tablespoons of flour and a cup of
stock or water; stir until it boils
and the flour is cooked. Season
with salt and enough paprika to
give it a red color. Serve in a deep
Newberry College is owned and dish with an inch-thick blanket of
supported by Lutheran synods in
South Carolina, Georgia-Alabama
and Florida.
fresh chopped greens over it, wat
ercress or lettuce, cooked spinach
or cabbage.
CROQUIGNOLE WAVES $6.50. Al
methods. Spiral waves, $1.95,
$3.00, $5.00. Oregon Beauty
Parlor, Greenwood, S. C.
NEW
4-II CLUB RANGES CATTLE
Way up in the Rocky Mountains
in an unfenced cattle ranging val
ley would seem to be the last place
to find a 4-H club doing business,
but there is one serving a splendid
purpose in the North Park basin in
Jackson county, Colorado. En
trance to the basin is made over
the highest passes in the Rockies.
It is so high that frost can be seen
most any summer morning. Cattle
raising is the main industry of the
basin, and it is almost entirely a
grazing proposition. Despite this,
the herds have been greatly im
proved through the selection of the
best animals for breeding purposes,
use of purebred sires, and appli
cation of other methods.
The 4-H club was organized with
some assistance from State Club
Leader C. W. Ferguson of the Col
orado State College to instruct the
ranch boys and girls in the ways of
improving the herds. Three years
ago the club got under way with 12
boys and 3 girls as members. Each
secured a heifer calf from their
father, as the club project was to
teach members how to build up
high class producing herds. This
was the major problem in the cat
tle business of the valley.
As all of the herds range free U
was necessary for the club mem
bers, the same as the ranchers, to
brand their animals. One of the
first things they did was to apply
to the brand inspection office of
the state at Denver for an official
brand and have it registered. This
establishes ownership to an ani
mal anywhere in the range country
or at a livestock market. As an old
cattleman had registered the 4-H
(Four-bar-H) brand years before
the club had to adopt another
u "and to go with their individual
brand. They chosp the 4|H brand
jr four-slash-H, as it is called in
nncher language.
Members of the club have had
' ! enty to do. They study disease
control. Mow to dehorn and vaccin-
; e. Learn judging and the history
of the beef breeds. They ride 40
or more miles on some of their
tours to study cattle raising prob
lems. They also learn how to select
and fit show animals and to show
them. They go to market and see
how animals are sold, and how
they kill out. Their parents are
strong for the club.
xxx
Accidents occurring at home
cost the lives of 24,000 people in
this country last year.
MEN WANTED for Rawleigh Routes
of 800 Consumers in City of Mc
Cormick, parts of Counties of Ab
beville, Greenwood and McCor
mick. Reliable hustler can start
earning $25 weekly and increase
every month. Write jgpiiediately.
Rawleigh Co., Richmond, Va.,
Dept. SC-E-33-S.
FOR SALE—Some good mules,
cheap. Jamie L. Smith, McCor
mick, S. C.
PLANTS FOR SALE —Tomato
Plants—Baltimore, Marglobe, Red
Beauty. Sweet Potato Plants—
Triumph, Porto Rico, Nancy Hall
and Big Stem Jersey, all $1.00
per 1000. Cabbage Plants—
Charleston, Jersey, Succession
and Copenhagen Market. Onion
Plants—White and Yellow Ber
muda, all 50 cents per 1000. Pep
per Plants—Bull Nose and Ruby
King, $2.00 per 1000. Send re
mittance for prompt shipment.
Dorris Plant Co., Valdosta, Ga.
FOR SALE—Oats at 40 cents per
bushel at my house; you furnish
bags. T. A. Dowtin. Rt. 1, Troy,
S. C.
Public Sales
Made Monday
Judge J. F. Mattison, • master,
conducted one sale at the court
house here Monday, as follows:
Mrs. Rena P. Johns vs. Claude S.
Calvert et al., 235 acres of land, to
C. A. Mays, attorney, for $1,200.00.
The two tracts of land offered by
J. T. Fooshe, tax collector, were bid
in by the county.
NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that pur
suant to order of Hon. E. C. Dennis
Judge of 4th Circuit, made in th&
case of Elliott Crosland et al, plain
tiff, against Lincoln Reserve Life
Insurance Company, defendant,
dated January 30th, 1933, all policy
holders and creditors having claims
or demands against Lincoln Reserve
Life Insurance Company are re
quired to file same duly verified
with the undersigned Receiver in
Bennettsville, S. C.
Further notice is given that fail
ure to file such claims within
ninety days from the first publica
tion of this Notice, all persons fail
ing to so file their claims are bar
red from participation in the assets
of the said company in South Caro
lina.
N. W. EDENS,
Receiver for Lincoln Reserve Life.
Insurance Company in S. C.
May 1, 1933.—4t.
MEAT CURING PLANTS
Special reductions on per
manent waves for limited
time.
$7.50 Wave $5.00
5.00 Wave 3.50
3.50 Wave 2.50
Finger Wave 25c
We specialize in hair dyeing
Beauty culture hr all its
branches by expert operators.
La France
Beaut jr Salon
Mrs. Ann Sheehan, Mgr.
Telephone 1255'
318 Herald Building
Augusta, Ga.
Phone or write 'for appoint
ment. ,
The Spartanburg Herald.
The curing plant established at
Columbia last November handled
almost 30 tons of South Carolina
pork during the . season. Next
season its work should be much
enlarged. It offers to hog growers
a safe plan for preserving their
meat and makes them independent
of weather conditions.
Automobiles and good roads
make it possible for the farmers to
slaughter their hogs regardless of
temperature and drive to a meat
curing plant a hundred or more
miles distant without fear ofjosing
a pound.
These curing houses should <k) for
the pork raisers what the ^drying
houses have done for sweet pota
toes. There should be room for
plants in other parts of the state
and hundreds of thousands of
pounds of South Carolina meat
should be cured every year.
— t,x x
DANIEL WEBSTER UP-TO-DATE
X
io Dow<»
««««—
Cool and comfortable is this at
tractive frock for morning wear. It
is easily made, easily worn,, and
easily laundered, due to the simple
lines of its design.
It may be developed ini the smart
diagonal striped cotton;.in:red and
white, blue and White, or green .and;
white, with- bright. coJOrecli buttons
and slide giving accent to the white
Wilmington (N. C.) Star.
As appropriate and as timely to
day as when delivered in Detroit 94
years ago arc these words from
Daniel Webster:
“In times like these, we find our
selves in the midst of a serious
financial and industrial crisis. It
just seems inconceivable that con
ditions can ever right themselves
enough to have prosperous times
in the country again. Trade and
industry throughout the land are
disorganized. Banks by the hun
dreds have failed. Securities havv
fallen to one-half or even one-
quarter of their former value. Tin
problem of unemployment has be
come general and in all large cities,
special committees have been or
ganized to provide food and cloth
ing for the poor and unemployed.
In addition to this effort , soma
cities have caused relief work to be
instigated by public bodies. Wide
spread want and distress have led
to labor strikes. The failure of the
corn crop has increased distress
and the lessening demand for
wheat exported to Europe has
caused American wheat to sell in
the West for less than 5tt cents a
bushel. Extensive competition,
lowering prices and unwise specula
tion have brought about a crisis
abounding in rumor reports, most
of which have no foundation and
do great damage. The renewal of
confidence and the allaying of. vio
lent fear in the minds of the peo
ple, which will allow for active
buying, rather than money hoard
ed, must precede business recov
ery.”
I<yirurwj.
c Ji»ck
{/}.
11819
For A PATTERN, err 84, 36, 38, 40, 42,
44, or 46, tend 15c in coin, jonr NAME,
ADDRESS, gTVLE NUMBER and
SIZE to Kay Boyd. 103 Park Are, New
York. Complete and ample sewing chart
with each pattern.
\
trimming and belt. Or cotton flow
er prints, linen, or tub silk may be*'
used.
' The shaped’ trimming on the
waist and the belt are made of
contrasting materiel, and the" cap-
elct sleeves are ideal for spring and
summer wear.
Designed in sizes? 34 to 46, size 38
requires 3 2-3 yards of 39 inch ma
le ial with 1-4 yard of contrasting
material, 35 inches wide, for the
belt and waist trimming. The width
of the dress at the lower edge, with
plait 'fullhess extended.. is two.
yards.. x