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V McCormick messenger, McGorshck, sooth oarolucx Thursday, Octoh©r 7,1937 REMEMBER — You Always Save At GALLANT-BELK CO HOME OF BETTER VALUES Bargain Loft V A LUES Friday, Saturday, Monday SHOP AND SAVE Yard Wide Curtain Goods 3 1-2c YARD Short Length Curtain Goods YARD « 39-Inch Unbleached Sheeting 3 l-2c YARD Yard Wide Prints 9c YARD i Large Size Rayon and Cotton Spreads $1,00 EACH 15 Boxes Octagon and ' OK Washing Powder 25c 4-String Com Brooms 13c If you buy $15.00 worth of other merchandise you have the privilege to buy a 32-piece set of China for $1.95. On this you save $2.00. This China would sell for $3.95 to $4.95 in a regular way. , 9x12 Felt Base Rugs $4.95 9x12 Rugs $1.95 60x76 Cotton Blankets 98c PAIR Ladies’ Hose 15c AND 10c PAIR One Big Table Piled High Ladies’ Shoes, Oxfords -Ties and Straps 25c PAIR Children’s Anklets 5c PAIR Men’s Dress Socks 5c PA,R Turkish Towels 5c EACH ' Men’s Dress Shirts 39c EACH Men’s Shirts and Shorts 10c EACH One Rack Ladies’ Oxfords and Straps 98c PAIR 80x80 Unbleached Sheeting 7 i -2c yard BARGAIN LOFT One Rack Ladies’ Dresses 25c EACH Men’s Overalls 59c PAIR BARGAIN LOFT REMEMBER — You Always Save at Gal- lant-Belk Co. Men’s Clothing from Gallant-Belk Co. Are Real Values! See Our Fall Showing of Clothing For Men And Boys! Hart, Schaffner & Marx, and Friedman and Harry Marks Clothing for Men Do Not Fail To Visit Our Ladies’ Ready To Wear De partment On Our Second Floor Friday and Saturday. Gallant-Belk Co. Are Giving To You The Most Wonderful Values In Every Department To be Found In This Section! Gallant-Belk Co. Are Furnishing Free To You Parking Space To The Rear Of Our Store. Park Your Car In The Big Vacant Lot While You Shop. SHOP AND SAVE AT GALLANT-BEK COMPANY Greenwood, S. C. fcWttwz/l /vpDfRNJ WPMfN Visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Chamberlain Sunday; were Mr. and Mrs. Albert Simms and Kr. and Mrs. G. A. Leverett Wmitf I of Lincoln ton, Georgia. j * j Pr*Md*iit of The Nm- - , tiouiai Federation of Busi« Miss Blanche Middleton has re- cess and Professional turned home after spending the summer at Craig Springs, Roanoke, Va. Wotn&a’c Clubs, Inc. Prices For Hogs Likely To Remain Near Present Level near Information received from the Bureau of Agricultural Economics, United States Department of Agri culture, indicates that prices for well-finished cattle and for lambs are likely to continue near pres- i ent levels for the next few months. To learn everything that is new, says County A g ent R - D. Suber. in American bathrooms, the Prin- ! Pri ces farmers receive for hogs. Miss Carolyn Freeland, student cess Guy de Faucigny Lucinge, a however - are expected to go down at Lander College, Greenwood, S. well known Paris decorator, has some as thsy usuall y do during the C., spent Sunday with her parents, come to New York to make a study, late fail and wint er months, Mr. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Freeland. particularly of hotels. She has vis- Suber pointed out. But even with ited the famous hotels in London tilis usual decline, hog prices are Mrs. J. E. Britt and son, Edward, and has done over most of vhe ex P0cted to average at least as have returned from a nine-day iicors in one of the largest hotels hish as a year ag0 - The Bureau’s trip through N. C., Virginia, Md., in Paris. She is the first to have reasons for this expectation include Pa., N. Y. State, Canada, Ohio, introduced a hospital unit in a the P ros P ec ts for a smaller tonnage Ky. and Tenn. Paris hotel and the bath room .ele- of hogs for mark et than a year ago phone is also one of her origina- and cont inued good consumer de- Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Smith spent tions. The Princess was born in mand for ^eats. Thursday in Greenwood with Mr. New York and has been back many About an average corn crop is and Mrs. Orien H. Bryan. j times since she took up her resi- fairly certain for this year. There- dence in Paris. While French tore, with prospects for lower corn Postmaster J. B. Harmon, Jr., women like decorating their own prices and a relatively high level attended the dedication of the homes, few of them become pro- °t hog'prices the hog-corn ratio new post office in Greenville the fessional decorators, she says. will be very favorable for hog feed- past week and was among those * * * jng and hog production during the who met Hon. James A. Farley, postmaster general. More women than men are inter- fall and winter seasons. The im- ested in book binding, according proved feed-grain situation also I to Mrs. Helen Haskell Noyes, sec- points to an increase in the num- Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Stabler who retary-treasurer of the Guild of ber of cattle and lambs fed this have been residents of McCormick Book Workers. This art never year, particularly in the Com Belt, for past several years are now proves very remunerative and most Mr. Suber stated, making their home in Seneca. Mrs. W. L. Martin and daughter, Sylvia Jean, of Columbia, are visit ing in the home of her grandfather, Mr. G. P. McCain. Treasurer’s Notice Miss Ruth Corley has returned home from a visit to her sister, Mrs. El win S. Titus, of Knoxville, Tenn. Mrs. Mary Wash of Cleora spent the past week here with her sister, Mrs. Carrie Talbert. Mrs. T. J. Haynes of Canton, N. C., and Mr. and Mrs. Orien H Bryan of Greenwood are visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. B Smith. The Susannah Wesley Bible Class will meet next Wednesday after noon, Oct. 13, at 3:30 at the home of Mrs. W. N. Smith. WANT ADY. SHRUBBERY FOR SALE—Am running special prices on all my shrubbery through the months of October and November, Balled and Burlapped at my nursery. Frank P. Deason, McCormick, S. C. FOR SALE—70 pound Shoats at of those who take it up do so as a pastime, or to bind their own book collections in handsome cov ers. The Guild follows the English 1 tradition in its bindings and the j French tradition in its decorations. Count / Treasurer's Office T’Kio i wil1 be open for the purpose of re- rhiis is an effort to combine me ceiying taxes from the 15th day of sturdiness of the Enghsh idea and September, 1937, to the 15th day of the beauty of the French. From April, 1938. time to time the Guild stages ex- 1 A1 it axe 5 shall be due and pay- r „ „ . able between the 15th day of Sep- hibitions which include examples tember, 1937, and December 31, of both amateur and professional 1937. work. That when taxes charged shall * * * not be paid by December 31, 1937, “WHOVO Ofs* . the County Auditor shall proceed Where are women s organiza- to add a penalty of one per cent tions tending?” is answered by Miss for January, and if taxes are not Rhoda McCulloch, member of the paid on or before February 1, 1938, national board of the Y. W. C. A. 1 County Auditor will proceed to and editor of the Woman's Press 1 ^d ifTaxes^f not pjdd ot bif- and other association publications, fore March 1, 1938, the County Au- “Women’s organizations are learn-1 ditor shall proceed to add 3 per ing to participate in a kind of spir- cei }t f?! March, and if taxes are not paid on or before April 1, 1938, the County Auditor shall proceed to add 4 per cent up to the 15th of April, 1938, after which time the County Treasurer shall issue exe cutions for all unpaid taxes, plus 7 per cent penalty. The tax levies for the year 1937 by many groups, and one that is ^ state “purposes 5 mills already planning an extensive pro- For County Purposes 8 mills gram of welcoming foreign univer- For Bonds 14 mills sity women is the New York branch Co n stitutional School Tax. 3 mills of the American Association of Mt ‘ ^Strict Na 10 ? 2 mills- University Women, whose president Willington S. D. No. 2 5 mills is Mrs. N. Philip Youtz. Mrs. Harry Bordeaux S. D. No. 3 2 mills Crum is chairman of the hospital!- M cCormick S. D. No. 4 tv committee and B 011 ^ 14 mills ty committee. , Buffalo S. D. No. 5 4 mills * 1 Bellvue S. D. No. 6 10 mills itual process of associating one’s self with others, with a real fellow ship,” Miss McCulloch says. * * * Hospitality will be dispensed at the New York World’s Fair in 1939 Miss Alice G. Carr, a native of S* !>• No. 7 “Si 3 10c a pound. B. P. Talbert, Route Qhi h t twentv vpar<5 nurs _ Bethia S. D. No. 8 8 mills 2, McCormick, S. C. t „, tU hT Bold Branch S ' D ' Na 9 ~ 10 mllls mg, having divided the time be- Young’s S. D. No. 10 00 mills tween the French battlefields, Wideman’s S. D. No. 11 2 mills American relief work in Central Milway S. D. No. 13 2 mills Eurone and nubile health work in R °binson S. D. No. 14 6 mills £,urope ana punne neaitn worK in Dornville s D Na 15 2 mills Greece - Bethany S. D. No. 16 8 mills Anna Lee Berry earned her way Lyon’s S. D. No. 17 8 mills through Kansas State Agricultural Hibler S. D. No. 18 6 mills Trespass Notice c ( 0, ‘ ege ( b ^ cooki " g f for m ® n S 0 Br!i,ch a°b. no'.'smT i students. The potato masher, she and Bonds 20 mills says, was her best friend during Consolidated S. D. No. 1, her college years. Parksville, Modoc and Clarks Hill, and Bonds. 18 mills All male citizens between the FOR SALE: Second Hand Din ing-room suit in good condition. Will sell cheap. Mrs. Carrie Tal bert, McCormick, S. C. All persons are hereby forbidden to hunt, or trespass in any man ner on my lands. Mrs. Carrie Talbert. McCormick, S. C., Oct. 4, 1937. Trespass Notice All persons are hereby forbidden to hunt, fish or trespass in anyway on my lands known as the river and Gilchrist tracts. W. G. BLACKWELL. McCormick, S. C., Sept. 25, 1937.—3t. COAL I am now ready to fill your or ders for High Grade Domestic Coal. Phone 82R, or see me. G. J. SANDERS. Sr., McCormick, S. C. Insurance Fire Insurance And All Other Kinds of Insurance Ex cept Life. HUGH C. BROWN, McCORMICK, S. C. A Precaution To Parents with children making low school grades . . . a complete optometric eye examination and service has changed lots of failures' into happy, successful stu dents, with as much as ten to forty per cent in crease in school grades. The offices and clinic at Greenwood are in charge of Dr. Aubrey J. Gore. Each Thurs day afternoon, he will have Drs. Odom or Gore, Senior, from the Home Office in consul tation, when requested. Drs. Odom-Gore and/ Associates Greenwood Office: Hodges Building Phone 5761 for Appointment Main Office: Greenville, S. C. Masonic Temple, Phone 930 Seneca, S. C. Bank Building, Phone 102 ^ j ages of 21 and 60 years, except those exempt by law, are liable to a poll tax of $1.00 each. The law prescribes that all male citizens between the ages of 21 and 55 years must pay $2.00 commuta tion tax or work six days on the public roads. Commutation tax if included in property tax receipt. RUTH P. DUNCAN, Treasurer, McCormick County. DR. HENRY J. GODIN Sight Specialist Eyes Examined Spectacles And Eye Glasses Professionally Fitted. 956 Broad Street Augusta, Ga. Casing; Vulcanizing o n I am prepared to do first class vulcanizing on casings and tubes. All work guaranteed. D. E. McGRATH, McCormick, S. C.