McCormick messenger. (McCormick, S.C.) 1902-current, January 03, 1935, Image 2
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McCORMICK MESSENGER, McCORMICK, SOU1H CAROLfN
TLursday, January 3. 193S
IcCORMICK MRiSENGER 4-H Club Members’
Income $20,240,000
Published Every Thursday
Established June 5, 1902
IN
EDMOND J. McCRACKEN,
Editor and Owner*
1934; BETTER YEAR
PROSPECT.
at the Post Office at Mc
Cormick, S. C., as mail matter of
the second class.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
One Year $1.00
Six Months — .75
Three Months .50
i ‘ . ■■ i " 1 —
livestock Guide For
CHICAGO, 111., Dec. 31.—Achieve
ments of rural boys and girls in 4-H
clubs reached a new peak in 1934,
announces G. L. Noble, managing
director of the National Committee
on Boys and Girls Club Work.
Livestock, crops and handiwork
of the approximately 920,000 club
members in 1934 will total in value
about $20,240,000 according to care
ful estimates. I*rizes.-won in local.
1 * • state and national exhibitions and
January AttentlOU contests provided by hundreds of
individuals, business firms ana
CLEMSON COLLEGE, Dec. 29. civic, educational and agricultural
To start the new year right with groups reach nearly. $1,000,000.
livestock, extension livestock men I These include over 35,000 educa-
xoggest these ideas for January. tional trips and scholarships of $10
Animal iftisbandry to $400. All of these have been
See that all classes of livestock effective and wholesome incentives,
have shelter and ample bedding, j The new year, with higher price
Peed workstock all they will eat i levels for farm products, a drouth
of good quality roughage and just record severity past, less exac-
tnough concentrates to keep them
in good flesh.
If sheep are thin and have pale
skins treat them for stomach
worms. '
po not allow the beef herd to get
loo thin in flesh.
Keep salt before all animals.
tions on 4-H leadership for crop
control and relief, and a better
complexion in the rural field,
promises greater 4-H gains. Club
leaders and members throughout
the nation for seme months have
been hotly contesting for the larg-
i est single prize ever to be made, a
Haul out maritire and scatter on $10,000 completely furnished and
areas to be cultivated. * • landscaped community building
Allow plenty of- fresh-air in barns gift of Sears Roebuck to the county
but avoid drafts.
Repair pasture fences.
Dairying
Make inventory of livestock, feed,
and equipment. <
Decide now whether you will
Rave silage next fall and tflan for
jfcs production.
Analyze herd records ahd decide
where you can improve lh manage
ment and feeding.
- Repair pasture fences,dean out
anAergrowth, and stop washes in
pastures. •
Plan now for improving perm a-
nqpit pastures and for summer
crops to supplement ' permanent
pastures. • v>
fT Btart
Beeping daily milk and feed records
an each cow. v ; ^ ’
Poultry
Mate breeders for hatching eggs.
Make special breeding pen of best
Bans and pedigreed mUe to pro
duce cockerels for next year’s mat
ings.
Provide breeders ‘ With green
range. 1 ' : •
Get ready for baby chicks.
Move brooder houses 'to new
ground before Starting chicks.
showing the most progress in 4-H
work’ in 1934. Additional prizes of
$3,000 will be awarded three other
sectional winning counties in the
contest.
Farm groups are receiving the
active co-operation of civic, fra
ternal, church and other groups in
the counties in preparing entries in
the contest which is conducted by
the National 4-H Committee in
co-operation with extension agents
and the U. S. department of agri
culture. A non-profit* corporation
is to be set up in^ the whining
counties to administer the awards.
The building' presentation is to
be a gala national 4-H event to
take place early next summer,
CREOHULSION
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Peter’s Conversion and*Call.'
* -- - i X -
Lesson for January WHi;
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John 1:29-42.
Golden Text: MaVk 1:17.
The aim of the lessons of oqr
first quarter is to help each student
fto familiarize himself with the
stirring life of Peter, the leader of
the twelve disciples. This Sunday
we study the conversion and call of
fids large-hearted, impulsive figure
v’Marl^ a minister is an Andrew.
Not gifted enough to write import-
ai^t 1 books, or preach great sermons,
1 'htf'nevertheless performs important
routine work behind the scenes. A
certain curate of Trinty Church,
Boston, made famous by the elo
quence of Phillips Brooks, could not
preach well, and had no gift for
organization. But he was a tire
less pastor. In and out of the homes
in that great parish he went with
systematic fidelity. And when he
died 1800 people crowded into the
church for his funeral.
Few of us can be Peters. But all
who later became a veritable Rock
•f Gibraltar in his championship of ; us can he Andrews, using our in-
tifae Christian faith.
Now we must not overlook An
The Hew Ford V-8 lor 19& is
the biggest and roomiest Ford
car ever built. It is a strik
ingly handsome car* with mod
em fines and new. luxurious
appointments.
But meet important of all it.
is especially designed to give
you smooth, easy riding oyer
all lands o! roads—"a front-:
seal ride for back-seat riders."
This ease of xidiagtJj
achieved by the use of three
dples
NOW ON DISPLAY
* . . * • < ■
A New Ford V*8 That Brings New Beauty,
New Safety,'and a New Kind of Riding
Comfort Within Reach of Millions of People
basic design. You buy pre
mium performance when you'
buy ibis Ford V-8—full 8S
horsepower and capable of 80
miles an hour. All Ford V-0
cars for 1935 am
V
with Safety
e equipped
throughout
prin-
; {Vi
le Correct distribution of car weight
by moving engine and body forward
eight and a half inches.
2. New location of seats by which the
rear seat is moved forward, toward the
center of the car—away from the rear
axle and away from the bumps.
3. New spring suspension which per
mits the use of longer. more flexible
springs and increases the springbase to
123 indies.
The result is Center-Poise—which not
only gives you a new riding comfort but
adds to the stability of the car and its
of handling. * You ccm take curves
,v "***' ' JrL,
There are many new fnqffligr
Ford V-8 for 1935 which make the car
still easier to drive. New brakes give
more power for stopping ^quickly with
far less foot pressure on the pedaL
A new type of easy-pressure dutch
employs centrifugal force to increase ef-
fitiency at higher speeds. New steering
mechanism makes the car still easier
to handle. New. wider, roomier seats.
The New Ford V-8 for 1935 retains the
V-8 engine which has demonstrated its
dependability and economy in the ser
vice of more than a million owners.
There are refinements, hut no change in
at no additional cost
We invite you to see this
New Ford V-8 for 1935 at the
showrooms of Ford dealers.
You will want to ride in it—
to drive it yourself. You will find it a
new experience
j (T»
Hi
' rjl
•**.v
FORD V-8 PRICES ARE LOW
12 BODY TYPES-Coape (5 window* V.
$495; Tudor Sedan. $510; Fordor Sedan.
$575. DE LUXE—Roadster (with rumble
seat), $550; Coupe (3 windows), $570;
Coupe (5 windows), $560; Phaeton. $510;
Tudor Sedan. $575; Cabriolet (with rum
ble seat). $625; Fordor Sedan. $635.
TOURING SEDANS, with built-in trunk-
Tudor Touring Sedan, $595; Fordor
Touring Sedan, $655.
(P. O. B, Detroit. Standard ae
including bumeam -and on
body tvpeo haoo Salotr C
no additional coot* SbbcbI tiL, __
▼enient, economical tonne Ovough'tho Univoc-
aal Credit Company') v
too _
throughout.
NEW 1935 FORD V-8 TRUCKS AND COMMERCIAL CARS ARE SOW ON DISPLAY
TT-
aitev/, Peter’s brother, who brought
Aim to the Master. It is easy to
disparage Andrew in view of his
Back of special gifts. A common-
ferior capabilities with a noble de
votion.
Turning now to Peter it is well
to remember that he took the lead
from the first. He is the disciple
who appears most often in the
Visit The Show Room
—OF—
McGRATH MOTOR COMPANY, Inc.
FORD SALES AND SERVICE
McCORMICK, S. C.
place man, he was “a negligible gospel story. And he was close to
cipher,” as Dr. Grenfell says. So Jesus, for he belonged to that inti
Jar as we know he preached no ser
mon, wrpte no letter, performed no
miracle, founded no church. Yet
in bringing Peter to Jesus he per
formed a service of the highest
significance.
mate trio, Peter, James and John,
who were with the Master in the
home of Jairus, on the Mount of
Transfiguration, and in Geth-
semane. Peter loomed large in the
heart and mind of Jesus.
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.
State Gets Allotment
1,011 For Sixth CCC
Camp Enrollment
The State, Dec. 29.
According to information from
the office of F. M. Baker, adminis
trator of the South Carolina
emergency relief administration, a
total of 1,011 men have been allo
cated to this state for the sixth en
rollment in the Civilian Conserva
tion camps. Of this number 910
are white, 75 Negroes, and 26 vet
erans. The allotment by coun
ties are as follows: Abbeville, 14
white; Aiken, 26 white; Allendale, 3
white; Anderson, 39 white, f
Negroes; Bamberg, 9 white; Barn
well, 11 white; Beaufort, 11 white;
Berkeley, 8 white; Calhoun, 3
white; Charleston, 77 white, 12
Negroes; Cherokee, 17 white;
Chester, 17 white; Chesterfield, 11
white; Clarendon, 15 white; Colle
ton, 10 white; Darlington,‘18*white;
Dillon, 12 white; Dorchester, 8
white; Edgefield, 9 white; Fair-
field, 12 white; Florence. 31 white,
7 Negroes; Georgetown. 12 white;
Greenville, 73 white, 14 Negroes;
Greenwood, 18 white; Hampton, 9
white; Horry, 12 white; Jasper, 6
v/hite; Kershaw, 15 white; Lan
caster, 14 white; Laurens, 18 white;
Lee, 9 white; Lexington, 17 white;
Marion, 12 white; Marlboro, 14
white; McCormick, 7 white; New
berry, 16 white; Oconee. 17 white;
Orangeburg, 26 white. 3 Negroes;
Pickens. 18 white; Richland, 73
white. 11 Negroes; Saluda, 9 white;
Spartanburg, 73 white, 14 Negroes;
Sumter, 21 white; Union, 16 white;
Williamsburg, 13 white; York, 20
white.
Enrollment in the CCC camps
will begin January 2 and continue
through January 8.
WANT ADV.
, MAN WANTED for Rawleigh Route
of 800 families. Write today.
Rawleigh, Dept. SCA-77-SA.
Richmond, Va.
HUSKY THR
Overtaxed by
epeakfaic,etaC-
Inf, omokiog
DEPENDABLE Used Pianos $50.00
upward to select used piano?
$125.00. The* renowned Starr
Made Pianos $198.00 upward
John A. Holland, The Green
wood Piano Man. Greenwood.
S. C.
Auditor’s Notice
FOR THE YEAR 1935
I will be at the following places
on the dates given to take tax re
turns on all kinds of personal prop-
ery to be made by owner, agent, ad
ministrator, attorney, guardian,
etc.:
Office Jan. 1st through Jan. 14th.
Mt. Carmel, Jan. 15th, 10 a. m.[
to 1 p. m.
Willington, Jan. 15th, 2 p. m. to
4 p. m.
Bordeaux, Jan. 16th, 10 a. m. to
12 noon.
Joe J. Link’s, Jan. 17, 10 a. m. to
12 noon.
Meriwether, Jan. 18th, 10 a. m. to
12 noon.
Clarks Hill. Jan. 18th, 2 p. m. to
4 p. m.
Modoc, Jan. 22nd. 10 a. m. to 12
noon.
Parksville, Jan. 22nd, 2 p. m. to
4 p. m.
E. M. Morgan’s Store, Jan. 23rd.
10 a. m. to 1 p. m.
White and Freeland’s Store, Jan.
23rd. 2 p. m. to 4 p. m.
Plum Branch, Jan. 24th, 2pm
to 5 p. m.
Young’s School House, Jan 25th
2 p. m. to 4 p. m.
Should any place not mentioned
want a date, write me a card and
I will make the appointment
Office. January 26th 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 properly
you are required to make returns
for poll and*road. *
c - W. PENNAL,
- - Auditor.