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Candidafes’ Cards For Commissioner of Public Works I hereby announce my candi dacy for re-election as Commission er of Public Works, subject to the rules and regulations of the Demo cratic primary. I shall highly ap preciate your support and influence J. C. BROWN. For Mayor I hereby announce my candi dacy for the office of Mayor, sub ject to the rules and regulations of the Democratic primary. I shall highly appreciate your support and Influence. T. J. SD3ERT, SR McCormick messenger, McCormick, south carolusa '• '' f " ♦ • Thursday, January 30, 1936 $17,396,327.25 For This State PINCKNEY REPORTS THIS IS GRAND TOTAL OF FEDERAL FUB^DS WANT ADV. RAWLEIGH ROUTES OPEN \ for reliable men. Good profits ' for hustlers. Old established com pany. JTo experience necessary Pleasant, profitable, dignified work. Write today. Rawleigh Dept. SC A-77-P, Richmond, Va FOUND—One book, which owner get by describing and paying for'this adv. Call at the Messenger office. • FOR RENT—One nice 5 room bungalow situated in the town of Parksville at $4.00 a month. See Mr. Rob Bussey at Parksville or write Mrs. P. S. Hamilton, 12 Vienna St., Abbeville, S. C. Don’t 'p ■ > • . * <t . •• • •. \ . , • ( Guess But Know Whether the “Pain” Remedy You Use is SAFE? ? I, , Don’t Entrust Your Own or Your Family’s Well - Being to Unknown Preparations "PHE person to ask whether the A preparation you or your family ftaktag for the retief Of headaches our la SAFE to use family doctor. Ask about Genuine BA ASPIRI1 He will tell you that before the discovery of Bayer Aspirin most *‘pain” remedies were advised against by physicians as bad for the stomach and, often, for the heart. Which is food for thought if you aeek quick, safe relief. Scientists rate Bayer Aspirin among the fastest methods yet dis covered for the relief of headaches mid the pains of rheumatism, neu ritis and neuralgia. And the experi- . ence of millions of users has proved it safe for the average person to use regularly. In your own interest re member this. ;You, can get Genuine Bayer Asplrm ^t any drug store simply by asking for it by its full name, BAYER ASPIRIN. Make it a pblnt to do this — and see that you §et what you want. Bayer Aspirin McCORMICK DRY CLEANERS ' W. P. PARKS, Proprietor Well clean tot you, press for you, repair for you, yes even dye for you. Our business is to take care of your clothes. / < , Phone 31. McCormick, S. C. t 'SU 1 . 1 -Ja 1 .... 1 1 '1 -T.'.'f !'" LMSS Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial irritation, you can get re lief now with Creomulsion. Serious trouble may be brewing and you can not afford to take a chance with any thing less than Creomulsion, which r s right to the seat of tho trouble aid nature to soothe and htcl the Inflamed membranes os the germ-laden nhleem to loosened and expelled. ^pther remedies have failed, >couraged, your druggist is guarantee Creomulsion air money if you are not suits from the very first lulslob right now. (Adv.) A grand total of $17,396,327.25 in federal funds have been expended in South Carolina under the emer gency appropriation act of 1935, as of December 31, it has been an nounced by Lawrence M. Pinckney, state director for the National Emergency council. Mr. Pinckney said the figures, furnished by the treasury depart ment’s financial reports division, represent checks actually drawn for funds disbursed in this state. By departments .and agencies, expenditures were as follows: Department of agriculture, $975,- 778.57; department of labor, $75,- 775.20; navy department, $408,629.- ',8; treasury department, $55,563.- 14; emergency conservation work, $5,530,767.21; FERA, $8,354,218; PWA, $369,144.82; Resettlement Administration, $73,781.67; WPA, $1,4674204.09; all other departments, $85,265.57. Expenditures by general types of work performed by the several agencies of the government were: Roads, streets and highways, $885,740.58; public buildings, $674,- 699.27; housing projects, $91,683.89; public recreational facilities, $1,- 213,697.25; conservation work, $4,- 878,304.07; water sewage systems, etc., $209,498.01; transportation facilities, $116,162.83; educational facilities, $142,169.80; grants to state for relief, $8,354,218; rural re settlement projects $73,781.67; mis cellaneous, $637,840.03; adminis trative expenses, $318,531.85. X ;—: • Chevrolet First 10 * Sales Safety Course In High Schools CAROLINA MOTOR CLUB IS WAGING ACCIDENT PREVEN TION CAMPAIGN Days’ Detroit, Mich., Jah. 16.—Chevro let retail sales in the first 10 days of January virtually paralleled those for the same period last month, and established an all-time reedrd for the period in question, it was announced today at the offices of the Chevrolet Motor Com pany here. New car and truck sales reported by. Chevrolet dealers to talled 23,966, and used car sales 34,370. < \ T The new tnit sales figure repre sents a <215 >er cent increase over the corresponding figure for 1935, and the used car. figure, is 75 per cent above that tot the same period last 1 year. \ “Nowhere in the January sales annals of the company is there anything to compare with these records,” said W. E. HoUer, vice president and general sales man ager. “The closest approach, in new car sales, was in Jan. 1930, but it was 9,000 units under the January 1936 record. In used car sales, the jest previous first 10 days in Jan uary was in 1931, and it was 14,000 units under the figure just achiev ed.’’ Production for the month is set at 110,000 units, Mr. Holler added. Schloss Bros. & Co. . * ■» Representative At'!. II. Drucker’s Store February 3rd and 4th Mr. Charlie Gross, representative of Schloss Bros. & Co. of Baltimore will be at my store ip McCormick on Monday and Tuesday, February 3rd and 4th, for the purpose of taking measures for tailor made suits for men and boys for the spring and summer season. This is the only visit 1 jie will make to McCormick this Reason, so be sure to see him at this time if you need a tailor made suit for either spring or summer. H. DRUCKER. Charlotte, Jan. 18.—With Caro lina citizens more safety minded and aroused to the necessity of curbing motor vehicle accidents than at any time in history, a thorough course of study in high way safety will be offered high schools of North and South Caro lina by the Carolina Motor Club, according to Coleman W. Roberts, president. Since the club was organized in 1922 a perpetual accident preven tion campaign has been waged. In 1925 school boy patrols were in augurated in grammar schools. Success of the school boy safety patrol and safety studies in gram mar schools, not only in the Caro- linas but throughout the nation, is proved by the decrease in the death rate among children of gram mar school age, although the 'fatality rate among high school and college students and adults has shown a steady increase. In an effort to j&prove condi tions among this older group the Carolina Motor club,, which is the largest American Automobile as sociation affiliation in the South, has developed a far reaching course of study which will be made avail able to high schools. This material is now in the hands of printers and has been approved and en dorsed by school officials and citi zens and organizations interested in highway safety. During 1935 deaths on North Carolina highways set an all-time record. An average of three lives a day were sacrificed to bring the total to 1,095—which is 109 more than the 986 fatalities in 1934. Figures for South Carolina are not complete although a new peak will be set in the Palmetto state. In 1934 there were 353 motor vehicle deaths in South Carolina while for the 11 months ending November 1 the figure was 325. t ' In, addition to expanding its ac tivities to include high schools the Carolina Motor club will intensify and continue its program in gram mar schools and in molding public opinion for safety legislation, Mr. Roberts said. Ford Introduces New Finance Plan -m- Future Farmers Prize Winners • • •NIGHT CpiWkW Ch****®^ induelnfl R.* Just rub on WICKS V VapoRuO RELIEVES COLDS WITHOUT "DOSING —Adv. -LA. Columbia, January 25.—Fourteen Future Farmer Chapters won $42d.- 00 in cash prizes in the State Wide Chapter Contest, as announced by W. H. Garrison, Assistant State Supervisor of Vocational Agricul ture. The state has been divided into seven districts and each is awarded a first prize of $40.00 and a second prize of $20.00. These prizes are do nated by the Chilean Nitrate Edu cational Bureau, Inc. This Company also furnished 400 pounds of Nat ural Chilean Nitrate to the chapter to study the value of nitrogen top dressing on any two crops selected by the teacher and the chapter. In' selecting winners all phases, of Chapter activities were *takcn into consideration. The following chapters won. first district prizes of $40.00 each: Con way Chapter, C. G. Zimmerman Teacher of Agriculture, Conway, S C.; Duncan Chapter, R. J. Elliso i Teacher, ‘Duncan, 8. C.; McBee Chapter, R. M. Foster, Teacher, Mc Bee, S. C.; Orangeburg Chapter, R. H. Garrison, Teacher, Orange burg, S. CL; Ninety Six Chapter E. G. 4 Ford, Teacher, Ninety Six S. C.; Walterfeoro Chapter, F. E Kirkley, Teacher, Walterboro, S. C. and Westminster Chapter, D. W Stribling, Teacher, Westminster S. C. ’ Second District Prizes of $20.00 each were won by the following: Lake View Chapter, W. E. Gore, Teacher of Agriculture, Lake View, S. C.; Mauldin Chapter, H. A. Chap man, Teacher, Mauldin, S. C.; Sumter Chapter, W. C. James Teacher, Sumter, S. C.; Stoney Hil Chapter, F. N. Culler, Teacher, •rosperity, S. C.; Allendale Chapter, H. Sams, Teacher, Allendale, S. C^; Manning Chapter, J. M. Eaddy Teacher, Manning, S. C.; and Keowee Chapter, ^R. F. Nalley, Teacher, Seneca, S. C. •' 139 Chapters competed in this contest which is a part of a Nation (wide Future Farmer Contest. These prize winning chapters will use the prize money in “furthering some part of their educational pr in 1936. r* v- Dearborn, Mich., Jan. 3.-l jt new “$25-a-month” plan for financing retail purchases of new Ford V-8 cars is to be put into effect im mediately throughout the United States, Edsel Ford, president of the Ford Motor Company, announced here today. The plan, involving substantially reduced finance charges and broad insurance protection for the car purchaser, is to be offered through ?ord dealers by the Universal Credit Company, authorized Ford finance company. The plan has three important features: 1. Maximum monthly payments jf $25, plus the usual low down payment. 2. Finance charges at the rate of one-half of one per cent per month (6 per cent for 12 months), com puted upon the total of the origin al unpaid balance plus insurance cost. 3. Insurance protection at regular Conference rates, including not only fire and theft coverage, but also $50 deductible collision insur ance and protection against other accidental physical damage to the car. The number of monthly pay ments may be reduced, or monthly payments less than $25 may be ar ranged, if a larger down payment is made or if a late model - car, valued at more than the usual down payment, is turned in for exchange. The account may be discharged at any time by fuU payment of the balance due, in which event a re bate of a portion of the credit charge will be allowed. x Disastrous Effect Of Uncontrolled Erosion 14,000 Farmers Get PCA Loans NET PROFIT OF $70,746.71 IS SHOWN DURING PAST YEAR CJlemson, Jan. 25.—The disastrous effect of uncontrolled soil erosion on the productivity and the ulti mate use of the soil for agricultural purposes, especially in the Piedmont section, is so evident that it needs no elaboration, says Dr. T. C. Peele, associate soil technologist of the South Carolina Experiment Station. Soil erosion is a problem on which fartners have had attention par ticularly focused by the work of the Soil Conservatiqn Service in South Carolina. The effect of various cropping systems on the amount of soil and water loss is illustrated by data from test plots at various points in the Spartanburg area. Compara tive figures on pounds of soil lost per acre from these plots show that from a given number of gallons of rainfall per acre bare plots lost 56,522 pounds of soil per acre; cot ton plots, 37,745 pounds; com plots, 13,152 pounds; lespedeza plots, 2,360 pounds; Bermuda plots, 262 pounds. “These data indicate,” says Mr. Peele, “that the soil loss is largest when land is bare of any cover. Gtotton shewed the largest soil loss 6i any of the crops, with second, lespedeza next, and Ber muda grass least. More than 15 times as much soil was lost from the cotton as from the lespedeza plot and over 136 times as much soil was lost from the cotton as from the Bermuda grass plots. “These data emphasize the ne cessity of using close growing crops cuch as lespedeza and Bermuda ijrass on areas subject to excessive erosion. Steep slopes should be used for hay production, pasture, or be put‘back in woods. Clean cultivated crops such as cotton and com can not be grown on steep slopes over a period of years without ultimate ly ruining the soil for agricultural purposes. “The relative amount of soil in suspension in run-off from ter- .nced areas planted to different crops was investigated at a number 'jf locations. Terraces planted in espedeza showed 55 to 90 per cent s soil in suspension in the run- r f water than did the terraces mted in cotton. These measure- ents were made under field con- ions by catching running sarn ies of water at the terrace out- s during June, July, and August.” Columbia, Jan. 24.—The twenty- "our production credit associations serving South Carolina, after charging off all losses and making liberal provisions for any possible losses on last year’s operations, had a net profit of $7(1/746.71 for the year, according to figures released by Ernest Graham, president of the Production Credit Corporation of Columbia, whicty supervises the operations of the associations. The South Carolina associations, Mr. Graham said, made loans last year to 14,000 farmers for a total of $3,589,556. These' farmer-members paid only 5 per cent interest rate, Mr. Graham said, and only paid interest for the time they actually had use of the money. “The fact that after two years’ operations the capital stock of every association is unimpaired and the associations have begun building a surplus to take care of lean years speaks eloquently for the success of these farmer-owned, farmer-operated cooperative credit organizations,” said Mr. Graham “and best proof of the fact that the service which they are rendering Is appreciated by the farmer is attested by the splendid grpwth in membership in 1935.” There are twenty-four production credit associations in South Caro lina and service is provided for every county. Some associations serve several counties. There are associations at Aiken, Anderson. Barnwell, Bennettsville, Charleston, Chesterfield,^ Columbia, Dillon, Florence, Greenville, Green wood. Hamilton, Hartsville, Conway, Kershaw, Klngstree,, Lake City, Marion, Orangeburg, Rock Hill, Spartanburg, . Summerville and Sumter. There arc 96 associations in the’ third district, comprising the states of North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and Florida, and Mr. Graham said that the 96 associations had a net profit on 1935 operations of $232,726.86. Each of the associations, he said, had transferred its profit to sur plus so as to be prepared for any possible adverse years. The farmers of the third district now own $775,- 150 worth of Class B stock in the associations, he said. Notice Of Election Some Hens Laid Well In December Registration Books Open Clemson, Jan. 25.—The demon stration flock summary for De cember shows that on the 86 farms reporting before January 15, representing a total of 19,085 hens, the average egg production was 8,6 cents. per peli, says P. H. Gooding, extension poultryman. This is a good average, he states, for this season of the year. The hens ate 12 cents worth of comifeed each, and returned a total in come above feed cost of 15 cents per bird for the' month. The average monthly charge for interest on investment, deprecia tion on equipment, and all othei costs except feed, is approximately 3.5 cents per hen, according to records the past three years. De ducting this amount from the in come above feed cost, the labor in come for the month was 11.5 cents per hen. Highest producing flocks ranging from 51 to 200 hens were the 92 White Leghorns of Mrs. J. O. Ad dison, Cottageville, 21.1 eggs per hen; and the 110 White Leghorns of J. L. McMillan, Jacksonboro, 18.8 eggs per hen. In flocks from 201 to 500 hens the highest producers were the 319 White Leghorns of P. J. Addison. Cottageville, 17.7 eggs per hen; and the 267 White Leghorns of O. E Baker, Dillon, 15 eggs per hen. Flocks with 500 or more hcn f were led by the 578 White Leghorn- of J. F. Addison, Cottageville, 13.8 eggs per hen; and the 794 Whit Leghorns of G. L. Smoak, Round, 11.8 eggs per hen. The highest average of small flocks of less than 50 hens was that of the 41 Rhode Island Reds of Violet Mixon, Tillman, 7 eggs per bird; next highest the 34 Barred I Rocks of E. B. Keese, Westminster, 6.5 eggs per bird. G. C. Patterson has been ap- It is clear, Mr. Gooding points pointed supervisor of registration out, that the highest producers— for the Municipal Election. Regis-| those averaging 21.1 eggs per bird, tration Book located at Patterson’s for example—made a much more Clothing Company. C. K. EPTING, Mayor. j profitable labor income for their owners than did the vindifferent layers. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of McCormick, Town of McCormick. In accordance with the provi sions of an ordinance of theTowp of McCormick, a Primary Election will be held on the Second Tues day in February, 1936, (being the 11th day of February), at the Court House in said Town of Mc Cormick lor the purpose of nomi nating candidates for the office of Mayor and Six Aldermen for i the said Town of McCormick, S. C., for the term commencing April 6th, 1936, and said terms of office to be for two years, and also for the purpose of nominating a can didate for the office of Commis sioner of Public Works of the Town of McCormick for the term commencing April 6th, 1936, to succeed Commissioner J. C. Brown, whose term of office expires on said date, said Commissioner of Public Works to be elected for a term of six years. John Connor, Clerk; T. J. Sibert, R. G. Killingsworth and J. P. Deason are appointed Managers of said Primary Election. A second Pri mary will be held on Tuesday, February 25th, 1936, if same shall be necessary. Managers of said election shall open the polls at 8 o’clock a. m., and close them at 4 o’clock p. m. All candidates for the above named offices of the Town of Mc Cormick shall file with the Clerk, of the said Town a pledge in writx_ ing to abide the results of the Primary and to support the nomi nees thereof. All candidates for Mayor shall at the time of filing >aid pledge pay an assessment of $5.00 each; all candidates for Aldermen and Commissioner of Public Works shall at the time of filing their pledges pay an assess ment of $2.00 each. All pledges and assessments of candidates must be filed and paid on or before 12 o’clock Meridian of the last- Tuesday in January next, preced ing the Primary Election. No vote- for any candidate who has not paid his assessment nor complied, with the rules shall be counted. G. C. Patterson is the duly ap pointed Supervisor of Registration of the Town of McCormick and the? place for enrollment of voters for said Primary Election and for Registration of Voters of the Town, of McCormick is hereby designated , as the store of Patterson’s Cloth-, ing Company on Main Street in. the Town of McCormick. C. K. EPTING, Mayor. d R. STROM, ./ JNO. T. FAULKNER, C. H. HUGULEY, JNO. T. McGRATH, Town Council of the Town McCormick, S. C. ATTEST: J. O. PATTERSON, Clerk. of Auditor’s Notice FOR THE TEAR 1936 I will be at the following places, on the dates given below, to tak& tax returns on all personal prop erty, for the year 1936, to be made by owner, agent, attorney, guardiari; administrator, etc.: Office, Jan. 1st to 13th. Mt. Carmel, Jan. 14th, 9 a. m. to 12 noon. Willington, Jan. 14th, 2 to 4 p. m. Bordeaux, Jan. 15th, 9 a. m. to 12 noon. Joe J. Link’s, Jan. 16th, 9 a. m. to 12 noon. Young’s School House, Jan. 17th, 2 to 4 p. m. Plum Branch, Jan. 20th, 2 to 5 p. m. Parksville, Jan. 21st, 2 to 5 p. m. Modoc, Jan. 22nd, 10 a. m. to 12^ noon. Meriwether, Jan. 22nd, 1 to ,3 p. m. Clarks Hill, Jan. 22nd, 3 to 5 p, m. Morgan’s Store, Jan. 23rd, 9 a. m. ‘o 12 noon. White & Freeland’s, Jan. 23rd, 2' to 4 p. m. R. T. Mayson’s, Jan. 24th, 9 a. im 12 noon. Y. E. Scigler’s Store, Jan. 24th, 2 4 p. m. office, January 25 through Feb- *nry 28th, after which date the says a penalty shall be addecT " those who failed or refused to' r*ake returns. Poll tax age, 21 to« (^ years; road tax, 21 to 55 years; r’id you are required to make re turns for poll and road tax, sq> please make your returns. C. W. PENNAL, County Auditor.. * ,/ jJ