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HeCOBMICK MESSENGER. MrCORMTCK. SOUTH CAROLINA Thursday, Septemher 8, 1938 flcCORMICK MESSENGER Published EYery Thursday Established June S, 19M PRESENTS LEGION INSURANCE POLICY EDMOND J. McCKACKEN, Editor and Owner at the Post Office at Mc Cormick. 8. C.. as mail matter of second class. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Year $1.00 Months .75 Three Months AO W. P. A. Workers Declared Ineligible For Benefits Columbia, August 29.—W. P. A. employes are deemed to be “in employment’* and are therefore not ^eligible to unemployment benefits, R. Brice Waters, admin istrator for the South Carolina unemployment compensation com mission, said today in clarifying misunderstandings relative to the status of these workers. “It has been determined in South Carolina”, the adminis trator stated, “that while engaged on a Works Progress administra tion project, an individual cannot be considered to be unemployed and, therefore, under the state law, no benefits can be paid to him by the unemployment com pensation commission. ‘“Claimants are required in fil ing their claims to report all wages earned, including wages from W. P. A. work, for the week tor which benefits are claimed Withholding of such information constitutes a violation of the law”, the official added. x —,.... Ford Sunday Evening Horn-, Sunday, Sept. 11 Detroit, Aug. 31.—John Charles Thomas, popular baritone of the Metropolitan Opera, will be the guest star on the opening pro gram of the fifth series of the Ford Sunday Evening Hour, to be broadcast at 8: p. m. (EST), Sun day, September 11, over Columbia Network (coast to coast). As a veteran guest of Sunday Evening Hour broadcasts, Thomas will, be making his fifth appear ance with the Ford Symphony Orchestra. The program also will mark his third appearance as an opening guest star in a season’s inaugural broadcast. Eugene Ormandy, celebrated director of the Philadelphia Or chestra and familiar figure to ^symphony, theater and radio jjandiences throughout the country, will conduct the 76-piece orches tra and the 26-voice chorus in the inaugural broadcast and three ling programs. The short by W. J. Cameron which liave been a feature of the Sunday Evening Hour broadcasts since * y We~ iUftsr/ Columbia, Sept. 3.—^Department Commander J. Earle Bethea, of the American Legion, is present ing to R. K. Wise of Columbia, the department commander-elect, the first American Legion Insurance Policy in South Carolina. This policy is free and is issued to all eligible Legionnaires in the state of South Carolina. It lists therein the benefits which are available •r.v.y >▼ J to all ex-service men. These, plus the adjusted compensation and many others, have been brought about largely through the efforts of the American Legion. The membership drive this year begins Sept. 6th, and Commander Bethea is driving to get one-half of South Carolina’s quota by in stallation exercises on Oct. 11th.” their inception in 1934 will be con tinued. Mr. Thomas will come to De troit for the broadcast at Masonic Temple Auditorium . refreshed and invigorated by a summer spent aboard his 101-foot yacht The Masquerader” cruising and ishing off the eastern Maryland coast. He likes to tell his friends the j reason the boat has that name is ;hat by living aboard so much of ; the time he is masquerading as a wealthy person. Actually he finds such a life economical because it makes unnecessary a large city home. Thomas also owns an eighty- foot yacht called “The Memory” and several runabouts, speedboats and fishing skiffs. ^ He is seriously nterested in motorboat racing and has won numerous cups, medals and trophies. He has do nated a large silver tray as a trophy for the American Power Boat Association which is pre sented annually to the winner in the 225 class. Collins Denny, Jr., To Speak Against Unification At Spar tanburg Sunday, September 11. Columbia, Sept. 2.—Methodists in upper South Carolina opposed to the merger of the Methodist Episcopal Church. South, with the two other branches of this de nomination, will hold a meeting in Spartanburg, S. C., on Sunday afternoon, September 11, at 3:30 o’clock, in the Carolina Theatre, First Floor, Montgomery Building, at which Hon. Collins Denny, Jr., Asst. Attorney General of Virginia, and son of Bishop Denny will speak on this subject. Mr. Denny is a strong, magnetic speaker, who worked actively against the plan at the Birmingham Conference and is thoroughly familiar with the subject and the means em ployed by the church leaders to Wherever it goes, CLALSSEN’S OLD lii\]L.Y Bi»EaL> finds a warm weirnme waiting at meal lime. For I-vak last, lunch or dinner, you’ll 7 find f;l \DS- SEN’S OLD TIME* BREAD lends ' assistance in making each mea! sucti a wonderful success that vou'il alwaya insist on OLD TIIVIEI’S presence. UI^ D TIMEY BREAD is‘'AioCondiliovK . . is always fresh at your grocci u. consummate it. All Methodists interested in this matter are requested and urged to attend this meeting as it will give them an opportunity to hear a great speaker on a vital subject. Wilimgton H. D. Club Meets Life’s Farewells The Willington H. D. Club met at the club room Sept. 1, 1938. with 7 members and one visitor present. ’ Meeting was opened with Scripture • reading by the presi dent, and the Lord’s prayer by club, and song “He Leadeth me.” Club reorganized, holding the same officers of last year—Mrs. R. W. Cowan, president; Mrs. C. T. LeRoy, vice president; Mrs. J. M. Hemminger, secretary-treasurer; Mrs. A. B. Andrews, and Mrs. J. W. Morrah, local leaders; Mrs. W. H. McNair, reporter. The year’s business was out lined by Miss Bell. Plans were made to plant shrubbery at our club house, also to have Mrs. Dora Walker to be present at that time. Miss Bell gave out bulletins on how to make home-made jellies, jams and preserves. Reporter. xx i Cotton Best For ' Auto Tires t .WEEKLY BULLETIN MS S.C.Came fJlSH Association ^ftru Statewide G>operaii»n Game. ■Jish 4 can bzMaitrialhfr increased for the benefit of.4n. New Developments in Processing Cotton Provide Heat Resistant Cord More Durable Than Rubber / Compounds. Macon, Ga., Sept. 1.—Taking issue with an article appearing in a recent issue of Time Magazine to the effect that synthetic rayon cord for automobile tire fabric might displace cotton and there fore lose for cotton farmers one of their largest markets, Wm. D. Anderson, President of Bibb Manufacturing Company, one of the largest producers of cord fab ric in the world, pointed to re cent developments in the process ing of cotton, which, he stated, produced a Heat Resistant Cord far superior to any synthetic type. “Therefore,” he added, “there is little likelihood that the con sumption of cotton in the manu facture of automobile tires will ever be displaced by any other material. “The new Heat Resistant Cord we are now producing,” said Mr. Andei*son, “outlives and outlasts any rubber yet compounded for automobile tires. Cotton fiber is as strong as steel. The tensile strength of cotton cord depends upon the resistance to slippage of the individual fibers. Through a revolutionary new principle in processing cotton, a way has been Columbia, Sept. 2.—(Special)— South Carolina hunters and fish ermen will gather in annual con vention in Columbia September 15 to review their year’s work and set new goals. Several hundred delegates from the county chapters are expected to gather at the American Legion hut and lake on the Camp Jack- son reservation for the one day’s celebration, according to West Jacocks, state secretary. The morning program will be given over to the business of the con vention, and following a barbecue dinner, an elaborate entertain ment program is planned for the iftemoon. Dr. Havilah Babcock, head of the department of English of the University of South Carolina, and nationally known writer of game and fish stories, will make the principal address at noon. A feature of the program will be the presentment of papers by John D. Nock of Cheraw. Stockton Jenkins of Pinewood, and Ingram Wilson of Summerton, resulting from their studies into phases of the game and fish life and pro- action in the state. The Richland county chapter will serve a barbecue dinner to the visitors at midday. Chris G. Langley is president of the host chapter. During the afternoon a dozen contests will be held for the sportsmen, ranging from plug and fly casting and competitive shoot ing to log chopping, axe throwing and archery. C. Y. Reamer is chairman of the entertainment and has about three dozen Colum bians handling the details of the program. An exhibition of fancy and ex- nert shooting will be put on by Herbert Parsons, and in the even ing there will be moving pictures of outstanding interest. “State officials of the ganie and forestry departments, as well as the federal officials, are coop erating with the sportsmen’s local committees in making this con vention the greatest ever held by the organizaton” declared Secre tary Jacocks. “While only the of ficial delegates will have the power of voting in the convention, our doors are wide open to every one interested in the conserva tion work of the association and they are invited to all sessions.’* discovered to soften the natural gums and waxes inherent in every cotton fiber and to fuse the cot ton fibers with these gums and waxes as they are rehardened so that they become set and bonded to a degree never before attained. The new process provides a cord which retards to a remarkable degree the generation cf heat in an automobile tire, but even more important, this new process pro duces a cord which maintains uniform tensile strength under the high temperatures necessarily generated in any tire when sub jected to hard use and heavy loads at sustained high speeds. Under operating conditions this new type Heat Resistant Cord is 25% stronger than ordinary cord and flex breaks have been elimi nated. “With this increased strength comes a more compact, lighter cord, which enables the tire manufacturer to secure the strength and safety of a 6-ply tire with a 4-ply construction. Synthetic cord (rayon) loses a great part of its tensile strength upon contact with moisture. The Insurance r Fire Insurance And Ail Other Kinds of Insurance In* chiding Life Insurance. HUGH C. BROWN, McCORMICK, S. C. Heat Resistant Cord, prevents ‘tire growth’ and tread cracks, which cause premature tire failure, “Mr. Anderson explained. Leading manufacturers are now using the new Heat Resistant Cord, es pecially in the manufacture of heavy duty truck tires. “The future problem of the Tire Industry is not to find a substi tute for cotton,” Mr. Anderson concluded, “but to develop new rubber compounds, which will last as long as the Heat Resistant Cord fabric now at the command of the Industry.”