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A -km mmmm. McCORMJCK. MESSENGER. McGORMICK. StllJiH CAROLINA x sll*v . ? ^ Junusry 6, 1938 lr m. <n Wm m TV- i ■ ? 'Nf* K -:W ^ ism m 1 S<.V; JESTER'S CASH MARKET Phone No. 25 Main Street We Deliver McCormick, S. C. When you are in town be sure and come by our market and let us suggest your meat needs for you. We will give you your choice of meats.. Prices are Reasonable, Meats the Best. We carry a full line of Fresh Meats at all times and are always ready to be at your service. Fresh Fish and Norfolk Oysters, Thursday, Fri day and Saturday. We highly appreciate your patronage. Before selling your cattle and hogs, see us. We pay the market price for them. We have reduced prices on pork and are offering it at the following prices: SPECIAL Pure Pork Sausage 20c Pork Chops 20c Pork Roast 20c Pork Ham 25c Pork Ribs i- 20c We grind sausage for the public. Thirst knows no season It's so easy to pick up a few bottles of Coca-Cola at your dealers. It's the convenient way to provide the pause that refreshes with ice-cold Coca-Cola at home. i] Greenwood Coca-Cola Bottling Company Greenw’ood, S. C. 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 tor service out of town J. S. STROM Main Street : McCormick, a. C. B REAK winter’s spell with an invigorating in real comfort. The cost is absolutely minimum, with fares 25% to 65% lower than other travel ways. Round Trip Faros Greenville 2.70 Asheville 5.05 Knoxville 8.40 New York 19.55 Miami 17.40 Augusta $ 1.65 Richmond _ 12.45 Abingdon _ _ 9.45 Washington 14.25 Tampa 14.15 STROM’S DRUG STORE Phone 95, McCormick, S. C. Insurance Ml Fire Insurance Ami Oilier Kind* of Insurance I < ct pt Life. HI GH G. BROWN. Mct-OlLUICk. C Army Enlists Over 360 From Carolinas vith an average of about two- snths per person for the countri es a whole. The difference :n the mount of dairy products produced cr capita io even greater.” xx During Decexiber over SCO young men from North and South Caro lina were enlisted in the Regular Army. This exceeds the record of 356 enlistments from the Carolinas made in November, and is the re sult of the present recruiting cam paign to get the army up to the new authorized strength. Influenced by the desire co '.ravel; the opportunity for partici pation in outdoor sports and rec reation the year round afforded by the tropical climate; and the chances for practical education as well as rapid promotion, the ma jority of them chose foreign ser vice duty and will sail for Hawaii or Panama about January 6th. whlch st ‘>' be '°" g " T men ' ^ wa f Those desiring to remain in the ^pressed by this fact, I might call it almost a monopoly, when the APDfRN WPMfhl LmUcne White Prssideat of The Na« tioual Federation of Busi ness and Professional Woencks’s dubs, I*»r- Certified accountancy is a field y”, Mr. Gooding explains. “Pullets or hens subject to lights will lay a considerably greater lumber of winter eggs them those without lights. No ill effect upo fertility or hatchability of eggs will result from the use of lights and they are especially valuable for bringing slow-maturing, late- hatched, or inferior pullets into production. It is not necessary to use bright lights, experience shows. Two 10- watt bulbs to each 20-foot section of house will give sufficient light. Kerosene lanterns will give suf ficient light to increase egg pro duction, and in using lanterns the best practice v is to light them about 9:00 p. m. and let them burn the remainder of the night. One lan tern to each 20-foot section of a laying house will give ample light JXX Main Crop Economics Summarized By Clark Clemson, Jan. 1.—Certain ele ments in the situation regarding the two chief money crops of the Southeastern states, cotton and flue-cured tobaaco, make it ad visable for farmers to spend more than ordinary time and thought in planning their farming opera tions for 1938, thinks O. M. Clark, extension agricultural economist. “The prices of cotton and cotton- sachusetts!*Rhode Island, and Con-; who has come here for the purpose j seed a ^ e low but because of the necticuf Second Corps Are: New of studying the labor-saving de- 1 unusually large crop the total m- York New Jersey, and Delaware, i vices which have cropped up In «<>“>« fr ° m the «-°P. udm & P v ; In addition to these vacancies there j such numbers in this country. She are some for men with special 1 is also planning to take stock of qualifications as clerks, typists, MnH of meals American house- radio operators, airplane me- wives serve because she is of the was ^ood and the pnee very good chanics, cooks and musicians. opinion that the British are will-| 35 compared with pnees o f com - Men interested in filling any of ing to adopt a simpler menu. Miss Petmg crops, a situation which will these vacancies should make ap- Craig has been writing and broad- tend t0 stimulate increased plant- plication at the Army Recruiting casting to a British audience for in S- Station in the Post Office Build- some time, and she expressed re lief that the British women are States were assigned to organiza- _ * tions in the First, Second, and Amencan Institute of Accountants Fourth Corps Areas. , met recently to celebrate their fif- The recruiting drive will continue ' tletb anniversary. Out of two chou- thru January with vacancies in ^ ““ attending the gathering most branches for service in the 0"* three women accountants Hawaiian Islands and Panama Ca- :were noted. Miss Helen Lord, Miss nal. Assignments in the States can L. Eastman and Miss Mary be made for Coast Artillery, Field f, M ”Pby. all of New Yort Miss Artillery, and Infantry in the First Murphy is an associate of the In- Corps Area; Coast Artillery, Engl- stltute and the other two are mem- neers, and Infantry In the Second | oers - Corps Area; Field Artillery, Fort * * * Bragg, N. C. First Corps Area is; The British housewife can learn comprised of the States of Maine, I much from her American sister, ac- New Hampshire, Vermont, Mas- cording to Miss Elizabeth Craig ernment payments, will be about as large as in 1936”, Mr. Clark says. “The flue-cured tobacco crop ing in Greenwood, S. C. v Examination An nounced For Student Consumption of cotton during the current season will probably beginning to think about buying a : 136 about 40 per cent less than v,he mechanical refrigerator before get ting a fur coat. * Many _ cf us who have seen Fingerprint Classifier' those ioreign looking refreshment S3 I wagons with their bright yellow — awnings that are pushed through The United States Civil Service ; y or k City's parks have won- Commission has announce c.n ^ derc , d v;ho is reS p 0ns ible for thsi.* men competitive examination fer; design and their c i canli _ the position o. student fi n gc r pim;,, ne3s And j myself, was not sur- classifier in the Federal Bureau of j , j prised to hear that a woman, a . . . . . . . ir . or , . . investigation. The entrance salary ^ c MiS3 s Stearns , may be h.gher in 1933 should be is $1,440 a year, less a retirement . „ llar „ th „ borne in mmd in making p.an. 1937 production; and the disap pearance of flue-cured tobacco during the current season will be appreciably below the 1937 pro duction. “Therefore it does not seem like ly that farmers would be able to sell as much of these commodities at the same relative price next sea son as during the present season. This likelihood and the indications that certain production cost factor. 1 Treasurer’s Notice The County Treasurer’s Office will be open for the purpose of re ceiving taxes from the 15th day of September, 1937, to the 15th day of April, 1938, All taxes shall be due and pay able between the 15th day of Sep tember, 1937, and December 31. 1937. That when taxes charged shall not be paid by December 31, 1937, the County Auditor shall proceed to add a penalty of one per cent for January, and if taxes are not paid on or before February 1, 1938, the County Auditor will proceed to add Two Per Cent for February, and if taxes are not paid on or be fore March 1, 1938, the County Au ditor shall proceed to add 3 per cent for 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 are as follow’s: For State Purposes 5 mills For County Purposes 8 mills For Bonds 14 mills Constitutional School Tax_ 3 mills Alt. Carmel School District No. 1 2 mills Willington S. D. No. 2 5 mills Bordeaux S. D. No. 3 2 mills McCormick S. D. No. 4 and Bonds 14 mills Buffalo S. D. No. 5 4 mills Bellvue S. D. No. 6 10 mills S. D. No. 7 00 mills Bethia S. D. No. 8 8 mills Bold Branch S. D. No. 9 __10 mills Young’s S. D. No. 10 00 mills Wideman’s S. D. No. 11 2 mills Milway S. D. No. 13 2 mills Robinson S. D. No. 14 6 mills Dornville S. D. No. 15 2 mills Bethany S. D. No. 16 8 mills Lyon’s S. D. No. 17 8 mills Hibler S. D. No. 18 6 mills Vernon S. D. No. 19 4 mills Plum Branch S. D. No. 24 and Bonds 20 mills Consolidated S. D. No. 1, Parksville, Modoc and Clarks Hill, and Bonds, 18 mills All male citizens between the 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 is included in property tax receipt. RUTH Pv. DUNCAN, Treasurer, McCormick County. has entire charge of this feature jf the Park Department. She in spects and grants park concessions and has an assistant in each of the city parks. She is a Simmons Col lege graduate and was a student worker in the Women’s Educa tional and Industrial Union of Boston. * * * Have you noticed the new r pat terns in flat silver silversmiths are designing these days? Perhaps I shouldn’t call them “new” because they are revivals of the patterns of our grandmother’s days. Some of the patterns that were popular thirty-edd years ago are being made again, too, so now is a good time to complete that set of your mother’s or grandmother’s that lacked butter spreaders or parfait speons or some other piece of ser vice needed for modern dining. Not that butter spreaders v/eren’t used DR. HENRY J. GODIN Sight Specialist Eyes Examined Spectacles And Eye Glasses Professionally Fitted. ‘50 Croud Street Augusta, Ga deduction of 3 1-2 per cent. Applicants must have completed a 4-year high school course, cr must fee senior students now in at tendance in their last year of senior high school. They must have reach ed their eighteenth but not have passed their twenty-fifth birthday. Full information may be obtain ed from the Secretary of the United States Civil Service Board of Examiners at the post office or customhouse in any city which has a post office of the first or second class, or from the United States Civil Service Commission, Washington, D. C. xx- Outlook For Dairying Advises Family Cows Clemscn, Dec. 27. — All things considered, the outlook with respect to the dairy industry during • the next four or five years is more fav arable than it has been during the previous four or five years, C. G. ushman extension dairy special ist, states. Prices on dairy products probab ly will average as high during the next several months as during the corresponding months of the pre vious year, and feed prices will be substantially lower, he believes. “Encouraging the increase of dairy cows in South Carolina to the point where every farm home of the state is adequately supplied with milk and butter can be justi fied irrespective of the outlook for commercial dairying”, Cushman declares. “There has been a substantial increase in dairy cattle numbers in the cotton belt states within recent years. In South Carolina the num ber of dairy cattle increased 16 per cent from 1930 to 1937, whereas in the country as a whole the in crease was about 9 per cent dur ing this period. The number of cows milked on South Carolina farms as reported by the census increased 29 per cent between 1929 are lighted from October 1 to and 1934, and the number of farms I arch 1 will return about $25.00 on which one or more cows were more per 100 hens during those five milked increased 29 per cent during months than when they are not for 1938”, Mr. Clark advises. ■ , XX Auditor’s Notice FOR THE YEAR 1938 Vacancies In Marine Corps Twenty vacancies for service in the United States Marine Corps will be filled from this district dur ing January, it is announced by Captain A. C. Small, District Ma rine Corps Recruiting Officer, with Headquarters at Savannah, Ga. Young men between the ages of 18 to 25, not less than 64 inches I or more than 74 inches in height, white, without dependents and of good moral character will be con sidered. Entrance examinations for the Marines in this district are held at the Recruiting Station, Post Of fice Building, Savannah, Ga. Ap- at the turn of the century but now | plicants who are unable to applj c an uda them to certain pat- | in person will be furnished appli- ihat were made more than a j cation blanks and full mioimatio. hundred years ago. j upon request. Applications receiv- The reproductions cf the ’ early ed by mail are given immediate at tention. American patterns will naturally be in a silver of heavier weight than that found in the delicate old pieces. But the thin old tea spoons will add much interest to your table setting so don’t hesitate to use them with the new. These patterns are available in q Patterson has been ap regular stock and you won’t find it pointed supervisor of registration necessary to invest in hand made j for the Municipal Election. Regis- pieces unless you want to. A friend j tration Book located at Patterson’s Registration Books Open of mine made up a complete ser vice of flat silver from a neucleous of heirloom pieces for her daughter who is to be married next month. She used the same old intertwining of the brides and grooms first ini tials with the initial of the groom’s surname. Clothing Company. T. J. SIBERT, Mayor. All-Night Lights For Hens Advised Clemson, Dec. 20.—Hens which this period. “There is room for further in- mease in the production of dairy prcducts in South Carolina. There s an average of less than onc- .enth of u dairy ccw per person years, as compared *i«hts lighted, says P. H tension poultryman. “Morning or evening Gooding, ex lights to 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. Trespass Notice Slab Haulers and Trespassers, take notice: Any person hauling wood or trespaSvSing on our prop- stimulate egg production have been erty Including the Finley Land, widely practiced to advantage for Hunting or Fishing, will be prose- n South Carolina and at present all-night arc used somewhat general- cuted to the full extent of the law. Harry Ream. I will be at the different places on dates given below for the pur pose of taking tax returns, on Reai Estate and Personal property, ex cept the kind that is returned to the Tax Commission. All owners* agents, guardians, administrators, attorneys, etc., please take notice, and make returns. Office, Jan. 1st through the 15th. Mt. Carmel, Jan. 17th, 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. Willington, Jan. 17th, 2 p. m. to 5 p. m. Bordeaux, Jan. 18th, 10 a. m. to 12 noon. Joe J. Link’s, Jan. 19th, 10 a. m. to 12 noon. Young’s School House, Jan. 20th, 10 a. m. to 12 noon. Vernon School House, Jan. 21st, 10 a. m. to 12 noon. R. T. Mayson’s, Jan. 21st, 2 p. m. to 4 p. m. Mrs. Mattie Hollingsworth’s Store, Jan. 24th, 2 p. m. to 4 p. m. E. M. Morgan’s Store, Jan. 25th, 10 a. m. to 12 noon. Plum Branch, Jan. 25th, 2 p. m. to 5 p. m. J. o. Marshall’s Store, Jan. 26th, 10 a. m. to 12 noon. Bennett Mer. Co., Jan. 26th, 2 p. n. to 4 p. m. Parksville,, Jan. 27th, 9 a. m. to \2 noon. Mcdoc, Jan. 27th, 2 p. m. to 4 p. m. Office, Jan. 28th through Feb. 28th. After Feb. 28th 10% penalty on all who failed or refused to make •eturns. All male persons between 21 and 60 years are liable for poll tax. 21 to 55 years are liable for road tax or street tax. C. W. PENNAL, Auditor. FINAL SETTLEMENT STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA County of McCormick. In the Court of Probate. Notice is hereby given that L. L. Hester. Administrator of the es- tat e of Will Buggs, deceased, has this day made application unto me for a final accounting and dis ci'urge as administrator of the es- ‘-'e of Will Buggs and the 14th ^ v of January 1938, at 10 o’clock ” ; hxed for hearing of said or-ition. '.'I holding ejaims against estate arc hereby notified to V ^3ent errn^ rv^ or J. FRANK MATT - SOn! ’ ,Tr ' . ^’’obate, McCormick County, S. C. December 14’, 1937. 4t. , _ . - j