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T*U.-.N'; : fflMg*;/« « • r rJf ^w^.'v. 'Thiirsday, December 21, 1933 f ilcCORMICK MESSENGER, McCORMlCK, SOUTH CAROUNS * PAGE NUMBER THREE VS S= f. # If Yo Extra-F Demand GENUI A Want Relief Get sV> ‘^ECAU^E of in mailufacti Aspirin .Tablets integrate—or di . UY ; ydu take to work instc hold” eleven a -neuralgia, neurit -a few. minutes • 'And they'p for Genuine Bj not barm tb e hea QUICK and SA1 you get the real.F |or toe Bayer as shown above GENUINE BA1 every bottle sr ^Member I BAYER process snuine Bayer made to dis- re—-INSTANT- ius they start *—t ^taking - headache; rheumatic pain SAFE relief- ASPIRIN does So if you -want ” lie* see that cle. Look et on every tablet for the words' ASPIRIN on you buy. ^ R.A. GENUINE 8AYI DOES NOT HAW :R ASPIRIN \ THE'HEART Letters to Santa Clays Plum Branch, S. C., December 18, 1933. Dear Santa .Claus: . , •' I am a little girl 10 years of age and in the fifth gradfc. My teach ers’ names are Mrs. Lankford and Mrs. Banks. I don’t want much for Christmas. I Wattt a wrist watch, a rubber #loll, twb Roman, candles, ope box of sparklers, fruits, nuts and candy. Don’t forget my teach ers, my in other and daddy. Bring them something ^bod. , ... . . Your little girir ' ' Vivian Strother;.^. Plum C„ December 18, 1933. Dear Santa Claps r I am a little feoy> # years old. want you to bring, me a WagOn, an such a long way down here, but I have lots of little cousins up there. I hope you will pe good to them, too. My grandpa, Frank Singleton, used to tell Santa about me, but he is dead now, so that is why I am writing. Now, Mr. Mes senger, if you can find space to print this I will be glad. It is my first time ;to write to Santa. A little Georgia Cracker boy, •> Richard Singleton. McCormick, S C., December 18, 1933. Deat Santa Claus: We are two little twin girls. Our names ai*e : Vera Gladys and Vernon Grace Jennings. .. , . . Santa,-we want you to bring us a doll and doll carriage, wrist watch and a tea set’and lots of fruits and candy.- • . v -' Dear. Santa, -we 'are two little air rifle, fruits and ca-fldy. Please twins, our names are Jessie, Jr., remember my little ' sKter, ^ Mary an( j Julia Jeanett Jennings. Jessie Lee. ’ . .« r < j \;.jk ; v J wants a wagon and Jeanett wants I close, with love to Mn itad Mrs.' a an( j carriage, lots of fruits Santa Clans. Auditor’s Notice FOR THE YEAR 1934 White, Jr.. WANT ADV, SHRUBBERY FOR SALE—Nan- din as, Goldspire Ariborvitaes, Juni pers, Pyracanthas (orange berries), Eleagnus Lipustrums, Abelia. Cher ry Laurel. Frank Peason, McCor mick, S. C. . ——r FOR SALE — Fifty pigs and shoats at my hopie. Also about 100 bushels of ear com In the shuck, at the Wardlaw place i 4-2 miles northwest of McCormick. W. D. Morrah, Troy, S. C.J Route 1. * 111 '■ FOR SALE—3 8-weeks old Duroo-i the doz., or $1.50 will trade for Parksville, S. C. good thrifty >land pigs by and up, or J. M. Bussey, , Shotgun shells, 100 pounds of veal calves, chick ter. J. B. Blacr Broad Street, A1 FOR SALE—] sale or trade. J Cormick, S. C. cents a box; $4l60. Buying eggs and but- Market,, 1291 Ga. and horses for L. Smith, Mc- Troy, S. C , December 18, 1933. Dear Santa Claus: As I am thinking of you, thought I would drop you a few lines. I am a little girl 5 years old. I don’t go to school yet, but will go next vear. I want you to bring me a nursing set, tea set, cooking set, pocket- book, fruits and nuts. * ' Don’t forget my two granddad- dies, Mr. Young and Mr. Gibert and all the little children. I wil try to be good until you come. I am your little friend, Kathern Mae Young. and candies. McCormick, S. C., December 18, 1933. Dear Santa Claus: I am a little boy 2 years old. want you to bring me a coaster wagon, ball and leggings. Please bring Sara Godfrey a pretty doll And don’t forget Margaret, Norma and Faulkner. Your little boy, Perry Davis Holloway. berry Plants at $ljQr> per hundred. Bred at Coastal Phlin Test Farm, in the heart Of the itrawberry sec tion, at Willard, N. €. WM Blum Branch, S W All persons trespassing on my lands will be prosecuted by law. MRS.-W. G. BLACKWELL. Dublin, Ga., , December 18, 1933. Dear Santa Claus: I thought I would write to you this time. I am a little boy just 10 years old. I go to school every day and study my lessons good. My ore Straw-V teacher says I am a right good boy, but X am way down in Georgia, so you see I am a little Georgia Cracker, but my good old daddy was reared In McCormick County and he reads the McCormick Mes senger, too. It is lots of fun to see dad and mother run to get the pa per to read it first. Now, dear Santa, I want you to bring me a fountain pen and knife and a car and some fruit. I won’t ask for much this time, it will be A. Winn, •tdr/iur of V*THi^XiiASTER EXECUTIVE** SuppJjn a week to-week inspiration ftr the heavy-bortfene* who will hnd paraJIcied irf-tby eayg-woce« of "The Wan Nobody Kaowv.* McCormick, SC., December 18, 1933. Dear Santa Claus: I am a little boy 10 years old an,d go to school. I have to walk afbou two miles to catch the bus every morning. I know you are old and can’t get about good, but I hope your health is good. Dear Santa, I have been good, and I want you. to bring me a watch that will keep good time, a fountain pen, some fireworks, fruits, nuts and candy. Please don’t forget Cassie and ma ma and daddy, and please, Santa, do not forget little B. O. Long, my little uncle. Bring him a big truck. Also my other five uncles and one little aunt, she is 11 years old. You know what will suit her best. And also my little cousins, one boy and four girls. Wishing you and Mrs. Santa Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. Your little boy, Roy Mauney. P. S.—Oh, good Santa, please do not forget my< dear old grandma. Bring her a new dress. I will be at the following places on the dates given to take tax Re turns on all kinds of personal prop erty and real estate to be made by owner, agent, administrator, attor ney,- guardian, etc.: • Office, Jan. 1st through Jan. 15th. Bordeaux, Jan. 16th. 9 to 11 a. m. Willington, Jan. Idth, 11 a. jn. to I p. m. - Mt. Carmel, Jani. 16th, 1 p. m.‘to 4 p. m. Parksville, Jan. 17th, 9 a: m/ta : II a. m. -s •' fsA -v Modoc, Jan* mifivil a. m. to 1 p. m. In . f Meriwether, jan. 17th, 1 p. m*' to 3 p. m. t' Clarks Hill, Jan. nth** 3 .p. m. to 5 p. m. E. M. Morgan & So., Jan. 18th, 9 a. m. to 11 a. m. White & Fneeland, Ja*t. I8U4 11 a. m. to 1 p. m: r Plum Branch, Jan. 18th,. 1 p. m. to 5 p. m. Young’s School House, Jan. 19th, 3 p. m. to 5 p. m. Should any place not mentioned want a date, write me a card and I will make the appointment. Office, . January 22nd.. through February, the 20th. After then the law says a penalty shall be added to those who fail or refuse to make returns. All male citizens between the ages of 21 and 60 years are liable for poll tax. All between 21 and 55 years are liable for road tax. Should you not own any property you are required, to, make returns for poll and road. . ' C. W. PENNAL, / Auditor/ . •- 1 . , ■ Oklahoma Boy and Wisconsin Girl Win Highest 4-H Awards Nati< Leadership Champions for 1<&3 Doris Ester Clark, 18, of Goodman, Wis., and Hugo Graumann, 20, pf Granite, Okla., are the national 1933 4-H girl and boy leadership champions and winners of, the H. -A. Moses trophies. Doris completed 15 projects in five years and Hugo completed 48 projects in eight years enrollment. MASTER’S SALE a McCormick, S C., December 18, 1933. Dear Santa Claus: I am a little girl 8 years old. am in the third grade. I walk two miles to meet the bus. Dear Santa, bring me a big doll that will go to sleep and a cart to ride it in, some fruits, nuts and candy. I know you are old and can not get about good, but don’t forget to bring me these things for I have been a good girl Dear Santa, don’t forget Roy and and mama and daddy, and also my uneles and one little aunt. Bring them something nice. Please do not forget my baby uncle, B. O. Long. He is 5 years old. Also don’t forget my little cousin, Betty Wiley. She is 2 years old. And there are four other little cousins. Don’t forget them. Don’t forget dear old grand ma. Bring her a new dress. * Your little girl, Cassie Mauney. . 1 ^siTgreatest TRIBUTE A few minutes hiter Jesus re turned to the garde n to find the disciples sleeping. Even so short a vigil had proved too hjeavy for their feebleness. In the greatest need there from them. Again hje his spirit tom with iagony. He was ^oung, 33; he did not want to die. He cried out to-God that the cup mightj pass front: his lips; that he might have time to sweep away the changes of blai^hemy and evil hour of his iwas no help went away, lid which his ene: upon him. So he ing back, found This time he them. The high had subsided; had never dese the three, years steadied his muse it be not t cup, .pass from again, “then, Fai done”. It was the viet battle. With the conqueror he © the end. He had ni The soldiers were entrance of the ga until the armed m his presence and th "before them. “Whom seek >ye? Startled, awed, mumble his nptme, “Jesus of Nazare “I, am he”, he es had heaped rayed, and com*- again asleep, not disturb e of his revolt courage which him throughout red his soul. will that this w , he prayed (f, thy Will be iant after the peace of the take ready for long'to wait. idy at the m. He waited stumbled into rising, stood ie demanded, could only red proudly. They had expected angry denun ciation. But' such calm, such digni ty were beyond the boundaries of their experience. Involuntarily they gave way and, rough veterans as they were, some of them “fell to the ground”. It was a supreme trib ute. Then, Jesus, thought rebounding to these who had shared his tri umphs and his sacrifices through the years, “If therefore ye seek me let these others go their way”. But he had no need to think of the disciples’ safety. Already they had made their‘swift escape—the last of the deserters—First his home, then his best friend, then his relatives, then the crowd, finally the eleven. He was left to face his faith alone. Pleasant Lane, S. C., December 18, 1933. Dear Santa Claus; I am a little boy 4 years old. I have been a good boy. I bring in wood and coal for mother. I want you to bring me a big red wagon, a cowboy suit, fruits, nuts and can dy, also some firecrackers. Don’t forget mother and daddy. Your little boy, S. B. Campbell, Jr. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of McCormick. Court of Common Plfcas E. S. Tinsley, against J. M. Cox, as Trustee, and J. E. Phillips, as Trustee in bankrupt cy for J. M. Cox. Pursuant to judgment of the Court and a decree of sale in the above entitled cause. I will sell at public auction on Salesday in Jan uary, 1933, (the same being the 1st day of January) in front of the court house door, in the city of Mc Cormick. County and State afore said. during the legal hours of sale, on tenlTs specified .below, the fol lowing described real estate to wit: . All that tract or plantation of land situate, lying and being in the County of McCormick, State of South Carolina, containing Two Hundred and Ninety-Six (296) Acres, more or less, and bounded by lands of J. R. McCombs, lands of O. P. Moseley, lands of S. R. Cade, lands of Mrs. Yarborough, the Bradley Estate, and perhaps others, being the tract of land con veyed tq me under the decree of the Court' in the case of Taggart vs. Taggart. t Also; All that certain tract or plantation of land, in the County of McCormick, State of South Carolina, containing One Hundred Ninety-Eight (198) Acres, more or less, and bounded by lands now or formerly of the Estate of D. J. Wardlaw. Estate of W. K. Bradley, and probably others, being the same and identical tract of land this day conveyed to me as Trus tee by L. G. Bell, Master. No per sonal judgment having beten de manded and right to a deficiency judgment having been wavied in the complaint, bidding on the above described property will be closed on salesday. Terms of Sale: Cash. Purchaser to pay for capers and stamps. J. FRANK MATTISON, Master. Dec. 12, 1933.—3t. Chicago, Dec. *1.—The grit of ru ral boys and girls in finding oppor tunities for self - advancement against obstacles is graphically il lustrated in the records of the national 4-H champiohs in leader ship and achievement just announ ced by the National Committee on Boys’ and Girls’ Club Work which conducts the contests annually in co-operation with state and federal extension agents. The boy leadership champion, Hugo Graumann, aged 20, of Gran ite, Okla., determined not to let 4-H club work suffer when, in 1931, the county commissioners voted out the ther , n the elght yeara ht ^ county agent. He rallied his club mates, laid out a program and with their help carried on so successfully that his county became a famous 4-H center in the state. It sent demonstration teams to the state fair which captured two champion ships. The 4-H county fair was conducted with great success in spite of decreased premiums. To cli max his efforts Graumann ran a club mate for state 4-H president and had him elected. Now he has succeeded in having a county agent voted back. At the same time the boy has carried on a heavy program of practical projects. The total in come of his eight years of wprk is $4,423.75. Doris E. Clark, age 18, Goodman, Marinette County* Wis., chosen na tional girl leadership champion, succeeded in three years as a local leader in creating a live interest in 4-H work where it had been looked duced 7,900 birds which were fin ished for the best markets. Lillian Murphy, age 19, Bremen. St. Joseph County* Ind., national girl achievement champion, ac quired such skill in home arts she was chosen a junior leader. Ea this capacity she trained 22 dem onstration and judging teams which made fine records. In coach ing them she often had to travel distances and face hard weather. She personally took part in 44 pub lic exhibitions and contests, and through her work found a way to enter Purdue University this faR. Beautiful silVer trophies from President Roosevelt are awarded the national leader champions, knd similar trophies the achievement champions by H. A. Moses, West Springfield, Mass., paper manufac turer, who was once himself tl struggling farm boy. NOTICE OF TAX SALE Plum Branch, S C., December 18, 1933. Dear Santa Claus: I am so glad you are coming. I want a doll, a carriage, a wrist watch, a little broom, a little apron and a trunk full of doll clothing. Love, Alma Holloman. Plum Branch, S. C., December 18, 1933. Dear Santa Claus: I want you to bring me a red wagon, a gun, a wrist watch and a On. a barren hill beyond the city truck. I will thank you for it. walls they nailed his perfect body to the cross. Two robbers were cru cified with him. It was over. And yet— “Jesus.” It was the voice of one of the robbers. Jesus”, he says painfully, “remember me, when thou comest into thy kingdom!” Read that, oh ipen, and bow your heads. There have been leaders who could call forth enthusiasm when their fortunes ran high. But Jesus, when his enemies had done their worst, so bore himself that a crucified felon looked into his dy ing eyes and saluted him as king. , Yours truly, Virgil Wall. P. S.—Don’t forget Miss Brown. Bring her a box of candy. The End Copyright. Hobbs-Merrill Co. Plum Branch, S. C., December 18, 1933. Dear Santa Claus/ I am a little boy just 5 years old. I want to go to school but mama says I’m too little. I want you to come to see me Christmas eve night. Bring me a wagon and fill it full of fruits and candy. I will put the fire out early so you can come down the chimney. Love to you and Mrs. Santa Claus. Ralph Wilkie. Under and by virtue of a warrant issued to me by the County Treas urer of McCormick County, I have seized the following described prop erty to satisfy the taxes due the State of South Carolina and the County of McCormick, for the years 931 and 1932, and the same will be sold to the highest bidder for cash on salesday in January 1934, during the legal hours of sale in front of the Court House Door at McCor mick, South Carolina, and the pro ceeds of the sale will be applied to he payment of the said taxes and the cost of said seizure and sale, to wit: The property of J. C. Whatley, and is # described as follows: One Hundred Forty-Four (144) Acres of land, more or less, in School District No. 25, McCormick County, S. C., bounded on north and east by land of W. A. Winn: south bv Turkey Creek; west by land of C. F. Norman, and probably others. J. T. FOOSHE, Tax Cohector.'McCormick County. McCormick, S. C., December 12, 1933.—3t. Experience Service Facilities Those are the important things in measuring the worth of a funeral director, and should be borne in mind when you have occasion to choose one DISTANCE IS NO HINDRANCE TO OUR SERVICE and there is no additional charge for service out of town J. S. STROM Main Street McCormick, S. C. Acres of land, more or less, in 1933. • . School District No. 25, McCormick ! J. FRANK MATTISON, County, S. C., bounded on north Probate Judge for McCormick and east by lands of Georgia Buck- County, S. C. halter and Turkey Creek; south by v - 7: :: ——^ land of J. C. Whatley and Turkey CITATION OF LETTERS Creek; west by land of J, C. What- ley, and probably others. OF ADMINISTRATION NOTICE OF TAX SALE Under and by virtue of a warrant issued to me by the County Treas urer of McCormick County, I have seized the following described prop erty to satisfy the taxes due the State of South Carolina and the County of McCormick, for the years 1924, 1929, 1930, 1931 and 1932, and the same will be sold to the high est bidder for cash on salesday in January 1934, during the legal hours of sale in front of the Court House Dbor at McCormick, South Caroli- and the proceeds of the sale J. T. FOOSHE, / Tax Collector, McCormick County. McCormick, S. C., December 12, 1933.—3t. CITATION OF LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of McCormick. By J. Frank Mattison, Esquire, Pro bate Judge: Whereas, Mrs. Sallie E. Gilchrist made suit to me to grant Jier Let ters of Administration of the Es tate of and effects of W. R. Gil christ; These are. therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the kin dred and creditors of the said W. R. Gilchrist, deceased, that they be STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of McCormick. By J. Frank Mattison, Probate Judge: Whereas, Lillie Norman made and appear before me, in the Court suit to me to grant her Letters of of Probate, to be held at my office Administration of the Estate of Le- at McCormick, S. C.,' December vi Norman; 123rd, 1933, next, after publication These are, therefore, to cite and thereof, at 11 o’clock in the fore- admonish all and singular the kin- noon, to show cause, if any they dred and creditors of the said Levi have, why the said administration. Norman, deceased, that they be should not be granted. and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at McCor mick Court House on the 26th day of December next, after publication na, wifi be applied to the payment of 4 - ^ „ the said taxes and the cost of said hereof, at 10 o clock in the fore seizure and sale, to wit: inoon, to show cause, if any they The property of Mrs. Agnes Winn, have, why the said administration now W. A. Winn, and is described should not be granted. as follows: One Hundred Given under my hand, this 11th Given under my hand, this 11th day of December, Anno Domini, 1933 J. FRANK MATTISON, Probate Judge for McCormick County, S. C. * Published on the 14th and 2lsfe day of December, 1933, in The Mc Cormick Messenger, and on th& Forty-Four (144) day of December, Anno Domini, Court House door for two weeks,. V down upon. She traveled 5,577 miles visiting parents and club members* and staged many demonstrations and plays to visualize the value of 4-H training. Her success opened a way to continue her education at the University of Wisconsin. . Marcus Teeter, Jr., age 18, Gra* hada, Martin County, Minn., is na tional achievement boy champion. Gross income of his eight yeara In. club work is $5,238.00, a major part of v/hich was received from han dling the farm flock of turkeys; from which he received 10 per cent of the gross receipts from his fa- VV ail ■ •M sh