McCormick messenger. (McCormick, S.C.) 1902-current, July 02, 1936, Image 4
" McCORMICK MESSENGER, McCORMICK, SOUTH CAROLINA Thursday, July 2, 1936
VcCORMlCK MESSENGER! Hens Pay Best
In The Spring
Fablished Every Thursday
Established June 5, 1908
EDMOND J. McCRACKEN,
Editor and Owner
fctered at the Fost Office at Me-
Qennlck, S. C., as mail matter of
the second class.
EDB8CRIPTION RATES:
One Year $1.00
Biz Months .73
Three Months .50
July 4-H Broadcast
Of Special Interest
rp o IV/f K come of 45 cents Including sales of
AOo* IVlCIllDCrS corona and nnultrv leaviner an in-
Clemson, June 27.—The average
egg production of the 11,966 hens
in 67 farm flocks reported before
June 15 was 17 eggs each, accord
ing to flock summaries received by
P. H. Gooding, extension poultry-
man. The labor income for the
month was 18.5 cents per hen com
pared with 4.5 cents for October,
9.5 cents for November, 11.5 cents
for December, 13.5 cents for Jan
uary, 14.5 cents for February, 18.5
cents for March, and 19.5 cents for
April.
The hens ate 23 cents worth of
feed each, and returned a total in-
Clemson, June 27.—Theo Vaughan,
rural organization specialist of
the Extension Service, will be
one of the principal speakers on the
National 4-H radio broadcast, Sat
urday, July 4. South Carolina club
members, their families, and others
will therefore have special interest
In the program for that date.
Vaughan’s subject will be' “4-H
Club Camps A,re Popular 1 ’, and he
will discuss the work and value of
Camp Long, South Carolina’s main
4-H camp center, and similar
camps in other states.
Other speakers on the program
well known to Carolina clubsters
are Dr. A. B. Graham, of the Of
fice of Extension Work in Washing
ton, D. C., who has been heard at
Camp Long several seasons, and
Director C. A. Cobb, of the South
ern Region, Agricultural Adjust
ment Administration, well known
Southern agricultural leader. Dr.
Graham will speak on “What 4-H
Club Members Learn about Com
bating Pests and Insects”, and Di
rector Cobb will discuss “The Na
tional Program in Conservation of
Rural Resources.*’
The music by the U. S. Marine
Band, always a delightful part of
the national 4-H broadcasts, will
consist of a group of Songs That
Live, including Columbia, The Gem
of the Ocean; Battle Hymn of the
Republic; Lola’s Song, from Caval-
leria Rusticana; Roses of Picardy;
Silver Threads Among the Gold;
Sylvia; and Soldiers’ Chorus, from
Faust.
The broadcast will begin at 12:30
p. m. over WIS, Columbia; WFBC,
Greenville; WCSC, Charleston; and
other NBC stations.
eggs and poultry, leaving an in
come above feed cost of 22 cents
per bird for the month, the records
show. The average monthly charge
for interest on investment, depre
ciation on equipment, and all other
costs except feed, is approximately
3.5 cents per hen, according to
records.
The highest producing flock with
less than 51 hens was that of Misses
L. and M. Theilkuhl, Walhalla,
with 50 White Leghorns which av
eraged 21 eggs each. In the class
of flocks with 51 to 200 hens the
82 White Leghorns of W. W. Law-
ton, Lena, made the best record,
averaging 24 eggs each.
J. M. Hemminger, Willington, had
the highest producing flock with
201 to 500 hens, his mixed flock
of 247 hens averaging 21 eggs each.
In the class of flocks with 501 hens
or more J. F. Addison, Cottageville,
had the best record, his 508 White
Leghorns averaging 20.6 eggs each.
txt
Proposed Campaign
Schedule For County
Proposed campaign meetings for
McCormick County are as follows:
Youngs, July 17th.
Mt. Carmel, Jtdy 24th.
Washington Consolidated School
Building, July 31st.
Willing ion, August 7th.
Plum Branch, August 14th.
McConr.^k, August 21st.
If for any reason the above dates
will not be satisfactory, please noti
fy
J. A. Talbert, County Chairman,
or J. O. Patterson, Secty.
c&he QeeAorious fourth
by A. B. Chapin
r
rtn
THIS 15
SWELL •
SUMMONS FOR RELIEF
&
i: Tt^TS
v!
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o
CMA*.-
L
A Great Stimulus To
Livestock Industry
built here by one of the big com-! &orm infestation and give treat-
panies if we can produce the live- I ment, if necessary.
stock? We are confident that we
shall have such a plant in the next Mow pastures frequently,
few years. Destroy breeding places for flies,
The wonderful, grazing in the and use skimmilk-formaldehyde
valley of the Savannah river and poison (3 gallons skimmilk, 1 pint
my Gulf is the Gas
for the Fourth
si ^ m
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IKIliiS
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Editorial In The Augusta Chronicle,
June 28.
. Friday f n ^ gh ^ at alon S the hundreds of creeks and | of 40 per cent formalin, 1 pound of
i / “h™ 5 m ° St heart ® n ' i branches in this section, together sugar) in shallow pans to kill flies,
ing to those who are encouraging with the fertility of our soil, afford
a diversified agriculture in this | opportunities for livestock raising
section. The great, group of three | suc h ^ f ew sections of the uni
hundred people, composed of agri- | verse possess. And the Chronicle,
cultural and livestock experts,; w hich newspaper has devoted a
county agents, editors, bankers and g rea t deal of its space to agficul-
farmers from approximately twen- tural topics for the past quar t e r
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
County of McCormick.
In The Court of Common Plea£.
i^dwin Parker, Plaintiff,
against
J. Frank Mattison, as Probate Judge
in and for the County and State
aforesaid, and also all other per
sons unknown claiming any right,
title, estate, interest or lien upon
the real estate described in this
Complaint, unknown to this
plaintiff but herein desiernated as
John Doe and Richard Roe, and
National Surety Corp. of N. Y.,
Defendants.
TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE
NAMED:
YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED
AND REQUIRED to answer the
Complaint in the above entitled
suit, a copy of which is herewith
served upon you, and to serve a
copy of your Answer to said Com
plaint upon the subscriber at his
office in the City of McCormick,
State and County aforesaid, with
in twenty days exclusive of the
day of service thereof; and if you
fail to answer the Complaint with
in the time aforesaid, the plaintiffs
will apply to the Court for the re
lief demanded in the Complaint.
F. A. WISE,
Plaintiff’s Attorney.
Dated June 27, 1936.
TO JOHN DOE AND RICHARD
ROE AND ALL OTHER PERSONS
UNKNOWN TO THIS PLAINTIFF,
WHO ARE HEREIN DESIGNATED
AS JOHN DOE AND RICHARD
ROE; AND TO ALL MINORS, IF
ANY, WHO MAY CLAIM OR HAVE
AN . INTEREST IN THE MORT
GAGE DESCRIBED IN THE COM-
PLAINT HEREIN:
, YOU ARE REQUIRED each and
all of you to have Guardians ad
Litem for the infants, if any,
claiming to have, or having, any
interest in the mortgage described
in>the Complaint herein, to rep-
reseiif>you as required by law, and
in the event that you fail to have
such Guardians ad Litem a^
ed, the plaintiff through his
tomey herein will apply to
Court for the appointment of a
Guardian ad Litem to represent you
in the manner provided by law.
F. A. WISE,
Plaintiff’s Attorney.
Dated June 27, 1936.
TO JOHN DOE AND RICHARD
ROE AND ALL OTHER PERSONS
IF ANY, RESIDENTS OR NON
RESIDENTS OF THIS STATE WHO
ao „ MAY HAVE, OR CLAIM TO HAVE,
As milk production falls off, sup- ANY INTEREST IN THE LIEN OF
plement pasture with balanced , THE MORTGAGE DESCRIBED IN
n
Dairying
the
grain mixture.
Feed up to two pounds of grain
daily to growing stock to maintain
normal growth.
ty counties definitely launched a
Keep market cream container
of a century, congratulates the i n barrel or tub of cold well or
movement for increasing livestock chamber of Commerce and Chair- ‘ spring water
production in this area. It cannot man Dewey H Johnson and others
in charge - of the meeting Friday
night upon its fins success.
x-
GROWN-UPS SHOULD tCLE-
BRATE the Fourth too! Drive
somewhere. Do things. But to
get maximum mileage use a
gasoline that’s made specially
for July weather conditions in
this district. If you don’t, part
of your fuel will blow out the
exhaust zinburr.ed, wasted. That
Good Gulf Gas is “Kept in
Step wi'.h ths Calendar”—its
chemical formula is suited to
the season. That’s why all of it
goes to work, none of it goes to
waste. Try a tankful!
be done over night. Time, patience
and an educational campaign are
all needed. Farmers cannot rush in
to the production of livestock on a o L>
large scale who are not prepared 32 otcltCS i\6GU6St
As a matter of fact, practically i CottOIl Fclbric For
all of the farmers who will pro- Highway CollStrUC-
duce the livestock will do so as a O J
part of a diversified program, just i tioil TcStS
as scores are now doing in the pro-
duction of milk Twenty years ago foT^tot fabric and
there were few dairymen who sup- i. . . . . . . , .
plied the local retail trade and the , co on ma s ° e ”
^ new uses of cotton in highway con
struction have been made by 32
States, the Agricultural Adjustment
Administration announced June
25th. South Carolina’s request is
for 1,200 mats.
Requests for approximately 6,-
167,000 square yards of cotton fab
ric for use as a reinforcement mem
brane in bituminous surface-treat
ed highways were filed by 24 of
the 32 States. Estimates' indicate
that this material is to be used in
the construction of more than 575
miles of road.
A total of 23 of the 32 States
filed requests for more than 89,500
sotton mats for use in curing con
crete highways.
The project is being financed
with funds made available by sec
tion 32 cf the amendments to the
Agricultural Adjustment Act, ap
proved last August. This section
makes available to the Secretary of
Agriculture an amount equal to 30
per cent of the customs receipts
for uses which include the en
couragement of domestic consump
tion of agricultural commodities by
diverting them from normal chan
nels of trade to new uses.
r\ r
July Livestock Notes
THE COMPLAINT HEREIN:
YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NO
TICE that the Summons and Com
plaint in the above entitled suit
was filed with the Clerk of Court
in and for McCormicfe County,
South Carolina' on the 30th "day Of
June, 1936, and that such Summons
and Complaint are now on file in
said office, and there they may be
found for inspection.
F. A. WISE,
Plaintiff’s Attorney.
Dated June 27, 1936.
that goo a
OV" OAsot,% e
iy,?:;.:.:
drug stores and now there are
scores of farmers who produce milk
and send it to Augusta to the
creameries each morning in trucks.
It is made into ice cream, butter
and sold as raw or pasteurized milk
to the retail trade.
Since the advent of the boll
weevil in 1921 we have been under
going an agricultural revolution,
quietly, gradually, but none the less
surely. We found that cotton could
not be our only money crop for
it was too uncertain. We branched
out into dairy products, poultry,
increased our melon production
and grain, and over in South Caro
lina asparagus and other vegetables
are important crops.
There was much said at the
meeting Friday night which
thoughtful farmers took home with
them and will profit from. One of
the lessons to be learned is not to
try livestock production without
raising the foodstuffs at home and
another is not to undertake it
without proper pasturage for pas
turage is more than two-thirds of
the essentials to success. With the
foodstuffs being raised at home
and with proper pasturage the
bankers will supply necessary fi
nancing to responsible people. And
by responsible people we do not
necessarily mean people who are
well to do, for they can usually
finance themselves, but we mean
people with character and intelli
gence who make a good banking
risk.
If Augusta is to become the great
livestock center that we wish it to
be we should work to the end ol
having eventually a packing plant
here such as several cities in South
Georgia have now. Swift & Com
pany has just built a great cold
storage plant here at an investment
in excess of one hundred thousand
dollars. Augusta is becoming in
creasingly important to the packers
as a distribution center. And why
should we not have a packing plant
If retail milk producer with sur
plus at this season, dry off all low
producing cows that are bred for
fall freshening.
Poultry
: K Keep mash before laying hens;
it helps to keep their bodies cool OF PENDENCY
and stimulates egg production. ACTION
Reduce feed cost by culling non
layers and not by reducing feed.
Keep a grain feed before the
pullets and don’t start feeding a
laying mash until the birds are at
least five months old.
If troubled with roup or chicken
pox in past years, vaccinate pullets
when two to four months old.
x
The 3,000,000th
V-8 Ford
Dearborn, Mich., May 26.—The
3,090,000th V-8 Ford came off the
famous final assembly line at the
Rouge plant of the Ford Motor
Company this morning under the
eyes of Henry Ford and Edsel Ford
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
County of McCormick.
In the Court of Common Pleas.
Edwin Parker, Plaintiff,
against
J. Frank Mattison, as Probate
Judge in and for the County and
State aforesaid, and also all other
persons unknown claiming any
right, title, estate, interest or
lien upon the real estate describ
ed in this Complaint, unknown to
this plaintiff but herein designat
ed as John Doe and Richard Roe,
and National Surety Corp. of N.
Y., Defendants.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN,
that a suit has been commenced
and is now pending in the Court
of Common Pleas in and for Mc
Cormick County, South Carolina,
by the plaintiff above named, and
against the defendants above nam
ed, the purpose of which is to have
a mortgage hereinafter described,
and now in the possession of the
Probate Judge in and for McCor-
and a group of British cement
manufacturers headed by Viscount | micrcouViyTsouth'Ca^oiinaT sat-
isfied, in' order that said mortgage
Wbimer.
The car, which marks another
milestone in Ford production was
immediately driven to the new
Ford Rotunda after it had been in
spected by the Fords and their
guests. There it will remain on dis
play for a few days after which
it will be started overland to Dallas
for exhibition during the summer
in the Ford Exposition building at
the Texas Centennial Exposition.
The 3,000,000th V-8 unit was the
one-millionth Ford to be built
since June 13, 1935, a year less 13
days. Its production was hailed by
Ford executives as further public
justification of the new principles
of motor car engineering introduc
Clemson, June 27.—In midsum
mer livestock need careful atten- presented to the public four years
"ion, say Clemson extension spe- ago. It added one more unit to the
cialists in timely notes for July. more than 24,000,000 Fords which
Animal Husbandry have been built since the Ford
Keep hogs grazing on green for- Motor Company was established
age. June 16, 1903. The 25,000,000th Ford
Arrange to turn hogs on corn; will be built early in 1937.
may be cancelled of record bv the
Clerk of Court in and for the Coun
ty and State aforesaid, and the
Satisfaction aforesaid entered up
on the proper records. At the time
the suit was commenced, the prop
erty involved was located in the
County and State aforesaid, and
the said mortgage was recorded in
f he office of f he Clerk of Court
in and for McCormick County,
South Carolina, on the 20th day of
March, 1919, said property being
described as follows:
All that tract or parcel of land,
situate, lying and being in the
Ccunty and State aforesaid, con
taining Three (300) Hundred
Acres, more or less, and bounded
on the North by lands of Lewis
Leslie and the Augusta Road;
on the East by lands of Lewis Les-
ed when the V-8 Ford was first
South by lands of J. L. Kennedy,
when it is in the glazed stage.
Reserve some permanent pasture
to be grazed by beef cattle in late
fall and early winter.
Feed the workstock three times
a day.
The first V-8 Ford was produced
March 9, 1932. It was the first mo
tor car below the expensive fine-
car field to be powered with a V-
type engine. The 1,000,000th V-8
Ford was built June 19, 1934, and
and on the West by lands of J. L.
Kennedy.
F. A. WISE,
Plaintiff’s Attorney.
Dated June 27, 1936.
Change pastures for livestock if driven that afternoon to Chicago
possible. where it was at once placed on ex-
Provide shade and fresh
for all classes of livestock.
tured last June was driven to San
Diego where it was on display all
summer at the Ford Exposition
building at the California Pacific
International Exposition.
The 3,000,000th V-8 Ford is a
Fordor touring sedan, finished in
the new armory green and letter-
Observe the livestock for screw
water hibition in the Ford Exposition y®N° w to set it off from the
building at the World’s Fair. | hundreds of thousands of Ford V-8s
The 2,000,000th V-8 Ford, manufac- built this year.