McCormick messenger. (McCormick, S.C.) 1902-current, June 07, 1934, Image 3
Thursday, June
McCORMICK MESSENGER, McCORMICK, SOUTH CAROLINA
fts.
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ALLANT-BELK COMPANY
Greenwood’s Leading Department Store
HOME OF BETTER VALUES
Prints, yard wide,
yard _
10c
Play Cloth,
yard _
10c
39-40 Inch Good
Sheeting,
yard
Smooth
10c
Turkish Bath
Towels, each
5c
Yard Wide L. L. Sheet-
iS"” 71-2c
12 Cakes Octagon
Soap
25c
Good 4-string
Corn Broom
25c
5-string Red
Corn
Broom
Handle
29c
81 x 99 Bleached
Sheets, each
75c
Gingham,
yard
9 x 10 1-2 Felt Base Bor
dered Rugs
$4.95 & $5.95
9 x 12 Gold Seal Con-
* goleum Rugs
$6.95 & $7.95
9 x 12 Wool Napara Rugs,
Beautiful Flowered Pat
terns,
for
$12.95
Men’s Good Blue
Overalls, pr.
69c
Real Good Blue Work
Shirts for Real
Men, each "fOw
Men’s Extra Good Blue
Work Shirts, Long John
S_ Fu11 69c, 79c
32 Inch Dress 1 0C
Gingham, yard ■ WW
Ladies* Sum
mer Hats __
$1.00
These hats are values up
to $2.95 and we are giving
you end of season prices
at beginnin?.
Big assortment of Ladies’
Cotton Dresses
$2.95 $1.95
98c
You should see our big
display of cotton dresses
in our Cotton Dress De--
partment on our 2nd floor
Mann-Butler
Our Silk Dresses are
dresses which will make
you wonder how we sell
for such small prices these
big values. Prices:
$1.98
$3.95
$5.95
$2.95
$4.95
$7.95
$9.75
$12.75
’ And every one a real value
for price asked.
OUR 2ND FLOOR IS THE PLACE TO GET YOUR
Underwear
Big Assortment of Better Underwear and Our Price is Right.
COME TO GALLANT-BELK COMPANY FOR YOUR DEPARTMENT STORE
WANTS; YOU WILL BE PLEASED WITH YOUR PURCHASES.
FREE PARKING SPACE REAR OUR STORE.
GALLANT-BELK
GREENWOOD’S LEADING
DEPARTMENT STORE
COMPANY
GREENWOOD, S. C.
===g= °
THE HOME OF
BETTER VALUES
Good Old Days
Are Here Again
The City Market invites you in Friday and Sat
urday to get our prices and inspect our fancy line of
meats of all kinds. Western or Native. We specialize
in sausage, meat loaf, hamburger, boiled ham, cured
ham, fish and poultry. Also fresh vegetables receiv
ed daily. Give us a trial order. It is a pleasure for
us to serve you with prices as follows:
Steak 15c lb.; 2 lbs. 25c
Pork Chops 15c lb.; 2 lbs. 25c
Pork Sausage 15c lb.;'2 lbs. 25c
Mixed Sausage, lb. 10c
i
Hamburger, lb. 10c
Stew Meat 3 lbs. 25c
Hog Head, lb. 5c
Fish, lb. 7c
CITY MARKET
Phone 18 Augusta Street
McCORMICK, S. C.
'enswii
The meeting of the Susannah
Wesley Bible Class has been post
poned from June 8th until Friday.
June 15th, at which time it will
meet at tile home of Mrs. Jack
Scruggs at 4 o’clock, with Mrs. C.
W. Pennal, Mrs. T. J. Price and
Mrs. M. M. Major assisting hostess
es. Mrs. W. N. Smith has charge
of the devotional program.
Recent visitors in the home of
L. C. Talbert were Mrs. Julian P.
Stackhouse and son, Philip, Jr.,
of Asheville, N. C., Naomi Hayes of
Dillon and Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Mit
chell of Saluda.
Mr. and Mrs. Julius Smith Mann
announce the marriage of their
daughter, Sara Lillian, to Mr. John
Parrish Butler last Saturday morn
ing, June 2, at their home on Ave
nue 5.
The ring ceremony was perform
ed by Rev. J. G. Huggin, former
pastor of the bride, and Rev. D. W.
Keller, pastor of the McCormick
Methodist Church, in the presence
of the family and a few intimate
friends.
Mrs. Butler attended Winthrop
College, where she was employed
two years after her graduation.
For the past several years she has
made her home in Charlotte, North
Carolina, where she has held the
position of secretary to the mana
ger of the Southern branch of
General Dyestuff Corporation, rep
resentatives of the J. G. Farbenin-
dustrie, Germany.
Mr. Butler is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. John Miltson Butler of
Georgetown, South Carolina, orig
inally of Norfolk, Virginia. He at
tended the University of South
Carolina and is now special repre
sentative of the Jefferson Standard
Life Insurance Comp'any.
After June‘llth the young couple
will be at home in the Guthery
Apartment, Charlotte, N. C.
x
Quarles-Harley
Of cordial interest to their many
friends was the marriage of Miss
Mary Quarles to Mr. Stephen S.
Harley, which was solemnized May
19th at noon at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. H. M. Cassels in Ellenton,
S. C. Th; Rev. B. M. Foreman per
formed the ring ceremony in the
presence of a few intimate friends.
The bride’s only attendant was
little Mary Cassels, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. H. M. Cassels, who bore
the ring in the heart of a white
lily. She was dressed in a frilly
organdie with pink ribbon on her
hair and pink socks and white slip
pers.
The bride and groom entered to
gether. “ The bride was handsome
ly gowned in a handsome suit of
navy blue triple crepe with touches
of white.
Mrs. Harley is the daughter o
Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Quarles, of Me
Cormick, S. C. She has been the
efficient teacher of the first grade
in the Ellenton school for severa
years and is a graduate of the Mc
Cormick High School and Lime
stone College.
Mr. Harley is the youngest son o
the late Mr. and Mrs. William Har
ley of Ellenton and has spent his
entire life in Ellenton . and is
prominent business man and far
mer. He received his education in
the Ellenton schools and in Osborn
Business College in Augusta.
After a short wedding trip, this
popular young couple will make
their home in Ellenton.
'— x
Farmers’ Week Plans
Now Taking Shape
Clemsoi
■Qdjfcen
Messrs. A. C. Bradshaw and T. B.
Wood of Parksville were business
visitors here one day the past
week.
Miss Mary Elizabeth Britt is on
a visit to her sister, Mrs. Harold
Reeves, in Cleveland, Ohio.
Mr. R. E. Coleman of Plum
Branch was a business visitor here
one day the past week.
Mr. H. K. Faust spent the week
end in Williston with relatives.
Howell Cooper, Jr., who has been
spending several months with an
uncle at Springfield and has been
a student in the Springfield high
school for the past two sessions, is
now spending part of his vacation
iwith his father, H. W. Cooper, of
Bradley, and hopes to be one of the
number at Old Horeb Church next
Sunday where he is a member.
son College, June 2.—With
prQBUtpent visitors, including As
sistant Secretary of Agriculture
Rex Tugwell, Dr. Frank Bohn, Sen
ator James F. Byrnes, and perhaps
Secretary of Agriculture Henry A.
Wallace, and with a well balanced
general program in the making,
Clemson College Farmers’ Week
will offer farm people and other
citizens an excellent menu of good
things this year, says Dr. W. W
Long, director of the Extension
Service, who is chairman of the
Farmers’ Week committee. The big
gathering, which will be held
August 14-17, is the first since 1929,
and special effort will be made by
all departments of the college to
make it a real success.
In general plan, says Dr. Long,
this year’s Farmers’ Week will be
similar to those held in previous
years. Each day will be a five-sid
ed feast of good things: (1) Gen
eral meetings with addresses and
music for inspiration, (2) classes or
instruction on all lines of farm and
home activities, <3) practical dem
onstrations, (4) recreation for re
laxation and amusement, (5) even
ing programs for entertainment.
“Past Farmers’ Weeks were real
boons to farm people, thousands
who came have testified, and the
state’s agricultural college is now
ready to repeat this great service
to the people. With new facts and
ideas to stimulate, new visions to
inspire, new friendships to elevate,
new scenes to give pleasure, the
occasion should be a delightful out
ing and vacation as well as a
profitable course of instruction,”
says Dr. Long, urging everybody to
make plans to come.
V.
HOLLYWOOD THEATRE
McCORMICK, S. C.
Friday, June 8th, and Saturday,
• June 9th,
Pat Patterson, Herbert Mundin, Charles Starrett
in
rr
Call It Luck
Also
CARTOON AND LATEST NEWS
One Show Friday, 8:30 P. M. Two
Shows Saturday, Beginning
at 7:15 P. M.
Both of These Shows Are Fox’s
Latest Releases.
Monday, June llth, and Tuesday,
June 12th,
John Boles, Claire Trevor and Harry Green
in
"Wild Gold"
Also
FOX MOVIETONE NEWS
Two Shows Monday, Beginning at
7:15 P. M. One Show Tuesday,
8:30 P. M.
Beginning next week, our regular schedule will be
two shows Monday nights, one show Tuesday
nights, two shows Friday nights and
one show Saturday nights.
ADMISSION:
Adults, 25 cents; Children 12 and under, 10 cents;
Children 12 to 15, 15 cents.
Good Meats—
Prompt Service.
Visit this market or send or ’phone
in your order at any and all times for
Good Beef and Pork Cuts, and for Fish
on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays:
#
9
This market is up-to-date in every
respect and will at all times carry a full
line of fresh meats of all kinds.
A prompt delivery service in town
from 6:30 a. m. until 7 p. m. every day.
%
J. L. SMITH,
9
Phone No. 4 Main Street
McCORMICK, S. C.
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.
Carpet beetles do not restrict
their damage to carpets, but are
known to devour fur, feathers and
wool garments.
Flood lighting of crosswalks o i
important highways not otherwise
illuminated is proposed by the stnts
traffic commission of New Jersey.