McCormick messenger. (McCormick, S.C.) 1902-current, July 15, 1937, Image 5
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MeCORMICK MESSENGER, McCORMICK, SOUTH CAROLINA Thursday, July ^,1937
Remember - You Always Save At Gallant-Belk Co.
GALLANT-BELK CO
Greenwood’s Leading Department Store
We close Thursday, July 15th, at 1 p. m. and each
Thursday afternoon at the same time during July
' and August.
lUYBLA
They!! Cosi
ONLY 50c DOWN
Just 50c down will lay away any blanket you choose
. . . and by paying just 50c a week, will often more
than pay for your blanket before the cold days get
here. ;
CHATHAM BLANKETS
Chatham Blankets are warm. The strong under
weave holds the blanket together . . . and the soft,
t
downy nap interlaces it. . . making tiny air cells to
hold warmth. Chatham Blankets are durable. The
strong-spun woolen yams should give years of
service under ordinary use. The colors of these
4 \ •
blankets were chosen by a leading interior decorator
to harmonize with the newest bedroom schemes.
Chatham Blankets are made in North Carolina . . .
and there is none better made. Be safe—buy Chat-
hams and know you are getting the best. . . and at
prices you will be glad to pay.
COTTON BLANKETS 98c UP
WOOL BLANKETS: Cheapest that are
#
good to the best made!
LAY-AWAY-PLAN
It is the sensible way to have all the blankets you
need for WINTER. And all prices are rising ....
but we bought blankets months ago when they-were
much cheaper than they are now ... and we are glad
of the opportunity to pass the savings along to you.
Use Our Big Free Parking Lot to the
Rear of Our Store!
Use Our Lay Away Plan—Small Deposit
Reserves Any Article.
Meet Your Friends and Shop and Save at —
GALLANT-BELK CO
For Ten Years — Greenwood’s Leading
Department Store
Greenwood, S. C.
Miss Elizabeth. Brown had as
her week end guests Miss Billie
Beacham of Newberry and Miss
Lois Nix of Pickens. Miss Catherine
Boozer of Newberry came Sunday
afternoon for a week’s visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wilson of
Stapleton, Ga., are the guests of
their daughter, Mrs. J. S. Dukes.
Mrs. C. W. Matthews, Mrs. Texie
Johnson, Misses Mary Catherine
and Marion Reese, Arthur Reese
and Miss Evelyn Norris of Warren-
ton, Ga., were week end guests of
Mrs. C. H. Huguley and Mrs. J. S.
Dukes. Misses Marion Reese and
Evelyn Norris remained for a
week’s visit with Mrs. Huguley.
of Mr. R. H. Wall, father of Mr.
M. M. Wall, who is in his 98th year
and enjoying good health. He has
4 children, 16 grandchildren, 27
great-grandchildren.
Mrs. Eunice Bodie and daughter,
Betty Lue, have returned from a
week’s stay in Chimney Rock and
Asheville, N. C.
Milk Recip es Make
Dairy Products More
Valuable As Food
There will be a regular meeting
of the Chamber of Commerce
Tuesday night, July 20, 1937, at
8:30 at the Court House. All mem
bers are urged to attend.
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Cad e-Mitchell
Mr. J. P. Holloway announces
the marr’age of his niece. Miss
Sallie Lou Cade of McCormick, S.
C., vo Mr. William Gregory Mitchell
of Bordeaux, S. C. The ceremony
was performed by the Rev. Rex
V. Martin at Plum Branch, s. C„
The Rev. and Mrs. J. S. Dukes, j on April 17> 19 3 7 The couple will
Jr., and Joe Dukes, III, are visit
ing Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Dukes.
Miss Dorothy Jean Hoskins of
Pikeviile, Ky., is the guest of her
cousin here. Miss Imogene Sanders.
The Rev. and Mrs. A. Thad Per
sons and children visited friends
in Augusta Tuesday.
Dr. and Mrs. S. W. Reid have
been at Bon darken Assembly
grounds in North Carolina for the
past several weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. P. C. Dorn, Jr., Mr.
and Mrs. Paul R. Brown and Miss
Alice Talbert have returned from
a week’s visit at Pawleys Island,
S. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Carpenter
were week end guests of Mrs. J. T.
Britt.
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Horn and chil
dren spent Sunday with relatives
in Union. Mrs. Horn’s mother re
turned home with them after a
visit of two weeks here.
Mrs. C. R. Strom, Miss Birdie
Walker and Carl Henry* Strom
spent Sunday at Clemson and
Seneca with relatives. Rudolph
Strom, Jr., returned with them
after a week’s stay at Clemson.
Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Cobb of Co
lumbia spent Sunday here with
Mrs. Cobb’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Austin Abercrombie. Mrs. Cobb re
mained here for a visit of several
days.
Mrs. R. L. Blalock and two small
sons, Roy Lee and Don, returned
to their home at Mt. Gilead, N. C.„
Wednesday after a visit here with
make their home in Bordeaux.
:o:
Winii-Godsey
Mr. and lilrs. R. M. Winn an
nounce the marriage of their
daughter, Sara Cornelia, to Mr.
James Coleman Godsey, of Green
wood, on Saturday evening, July
3. The single ring ceremony was
performed by the Rev. J. D. Holler
at his home in Edgefield, in the
presence of a few relatives and
close friends.
The bride is the eldest daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Winn, of Plum
Branch, and a blonde of unusual
beauty and charm. She wore a cos
tume of beige crepe fashioned on
simple lines with a finger tip cape.
Her accessories were black.
Mrs. Godsey received her educa
tion at Greenville Woman’s college
and Young Harris college. She is a
member of the Phi Delta Sorority.
During the past several months
she has been employed in the main
office of the Ware Shoals Manu
facturing company.
Mr. Godsey is the eldest son of
Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Godsey, of
Greenwood. Since his graduation
from Greenwood High school, he
has been an employe of the Green
wood Drug company.
After a short wedding trip to
Charleston, the young couple is at
home in Greenwood.
NOTICE
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
County of McCormick.
In the Court of Common Pleas.
D. J. McAlister, Plaintiff,
vs:
Effie Belcher Johnson, Defendant.
Pursuant to Order of the Court
in the above entitled matter, I will
sell before the Court House door
in the Town of McCormick, Coun-
Rock Hill. July 10.—Milk is the
most nearly perfect of all human
foods, says Miss Myra Reagan, ex
tension nutritionist, pointing out
that it contains the proteins for
body building, the carbohydrates
snd fats for energy, the minerals
for bone building, and the impor
tant vitamins A, B, C, D, and G val
uable for various purposes.
Yet, adds Miss Reagan, the com
plete and varied.uses of milk and
its products are unknov/n to some
and imperfectly known to most
people. Hence the failure of so
many to give milk a really impor
tant place in the family diet.
An important aid in this direc
tion, which not only farm women
but others as well will be glad to
have, is to be found in a new pub
lication of the Extension Service,
Bulletin 100, Tire Use of Milk and
Its Products on the Farm. In this
publication Miss Reagan discusses
meal planning, me»us, and recipes
with milk in its proper place as a
food.
The recipes, about 75 in number,
include miik drinks, soups and
other creanfi dishes, cream recipes,
desserts, sour milk and buttermilk
dishes, sour cream recipes, butter
recipes, whey recipes, cottage
cheese recipes, and American
cheese recipes—a wide range of
tempting dishes for the effective
use of dairy products.
Another section of Bulletin 100
discusses the production of milk
and the making cf butter, butter
milk, cottage cheese, etc. C. G.
Cushman, extension dairy special
ist, is joint author of the publica
tion with Miss Reagan.
Sick Soil Healing
From Erosion Wounds
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Austin
Abercrombie. En route home they i JY of McCormick, State of South
t> a ,, or,,* ! Carolina, on Sales Day in August,
expect to visit the Rev. and Mrs. the sarrie being the 2 day of Au-
N. G. Dulin and family at Peach- gust, 1937, in the usual hour of
land, N. C. sale, the following described prop-
erty, to wit:
tv/tjco v,oo r-o ALL that tract or plantation of
Miss Ruby Abercrpmbie has re- land situate lying and in
turned home from Williamsburg, McCormick County, state of South
Va., where she attended the first ~ ~
session of William and Mary’s
Summer School.
Mrs. T. D. Davis has as her guests
this week, her sister, Mrs. J. E.
[orton, and son, Johnnie Horton,
of Laurens.
Miss Violet Hughes of Columbia
is the guest of her aunt, Mrs. D.
C. Talbert, and Mr. Talbert this
week.
Carolina, containing Two Hun
dred (200) Acres, and bounded by
lands of J. E. Watson, Hal Belcher,
Estate of L. P. Paschal, and others,
the same being the tract of land
convej^d to Effie Belcher Johnson
by J. K. Glenn on the 5 day of No
vember, 1929, deed being recorded
in Book 12, page 430, in the office
of the Clerk of Court for McCor
mick County, South Carolina.
TERMS of sale cash, purchaser
to pay extra for deed and stamps.
J. FRANK MATTISON,
Master for McCormick County, S. C.
July 14, 1937.—3t.
Miss Nan Workman is spending
this week at Lake Junaluska, N. C.
Mr. T. R. Bentley and son, Billy,
of Brooklyn, N. Y., are the guests
cf the former’s mother, Mrs. Isa
belle Bentley.
NOTICE OF SALE
Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Deason and
family spent last week visiting in
Kershaw, S. C., also Ashboro,
Winston-Salem and Greensboro,
N. C.
Mrs. Jack Bradley and son, Ed
win, have returned home from a
ten days’ trip in Savannah, Ga.,
and Tybee.
Miss Margaret Holloway is visit
ing Miss Mary Bradley in Ninety
Six.
Mrs. D. C. Britt, Miss Lavilla Britt,
and Mr. Ernie Zuber, of Little Falls,
N. J., have returned to their home
after a visit with Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie Britt and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Wall and
family, Mr. and Mrs. J. Ed Wall
and family, Mr. and Mrs. W. L.
Wall and family spent last week
end in Chimney Rock, N. C., and
attended the Wall reunion in honor
NOTICE is hereby given that I
will sell, before the Court House
door, at McCormick, South Caro
lina, on Sales Day in August, 1937,
during the usual hours of sale, a
V-8 Ford Coupe, bearing Georgia
1937 license No. 231-195, Motor No.
40-6050A. Said car was seized upon
the highway in McCormick Coun
ty, South Carolina, as being used
in the illicit transportation of al
coholic liquors.
Notice is given that the Universal
Credit Company holds a mortgage
on said automobile in the amount
of One Hundred Thirty five
($135.00) Dollars and this sale will
be subject to said mortgage.
TERMS of sale cash.
W. T. STROM.
Sheriff of McCormick County, S. C.
McCormick, S. C.
July 13, 1937.—3t.
Anderson, July 10.—The farm of
Dr. J. O. Sanders, Anderson, which
was severely gullied and washing
badly two years ago, is now an
outstanding evidence cf the value
of terracing and other soil conser
vation practices, according to E.
C. Turner, Jr., extension soil con
servation specialist. This is the re
sult of the “treatment” outlined
for the farm by the Soil Conser
vation Service and rigidly followed
by Dr. Sanders, Turner states.
“Dr. Sanders, being a physician
who realizes that proper diagnosis
and proper treatment are essential
to curing human ills, thought it
logical that sick land would re
quire the same sort of attention”,
Mr. Turner says. “Brought up on a
farm, he could tell from the gullies
and eroded spots on his 570-acre
farm in Anderson county that the
land was sick.
“So when the Soil Conservation
Service demonstration area was es
tablished in Anderson county, he
called in the land specialists for a
consultation, and the results of
the remedies applied speak for
themselves.”
Dr. Sanders now rents to all his
tenants with the understanding
that they are to cooperate fully
in all methods of erosion control.
Some of them grumbled a little at
first, but when terraces were built
on one tenant’s farm the others
began asking when they were go
ing to get their land terraced.
“I didn’t know what those boys
were going to do”. Dr. Sanders
said, “but I felt that they couldn’t
make a bigger bust than I had
made at farming during the past
30 years. Now I realize they came
along just in time to save my repu
tation as a farmer.”
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WANT ADV.
PEAS, PEAS, FOR SALE—Straight
Irons, Iron Mixed, Hay Peas. These
Iron Peas planted last July, ripe
in October, picked in February,
Still sound. Come and inspect peas
and get prices or write for samples
and prices. Geo. D. Kirkland,
Farmers and Merchants Bonded
Warehouse, 556 Walker St., Au
gusta, Ga.
Asiatic Elephant Intelligent
Many naturalists rank the ele
phant, particularly the Asiatic va
riety, as the most intelligent of all
animals. And a. good memory is
one of the evidences of intelligence.
In nearly all instances of elephants’
memories, however, fear is the rea
son. There is the old, old story of
the man who was supposed to have
fed tobacco to a circus elephant and
five years later the elephant show
ered him with water in retaliation.
But zoologists scoff at this, saying
Mr. Elephant has been known to
relish a quid every now and then.
txt
Incriminating Documents in Shark
At a trial in Port Royal, Jamaica,
in 1799, the master of a ship was
about to be acquitted of the charge
of carrying contraband, through lack
of evidence—the ship’s papers which
he had thrown overboard while be-j
ing captured—when the master of
another vessel walked in with the
incriminating documents. He had
just found them in the stomach of
a shark.—Collier’s Weekly.
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