McCormick messenger. (McCormick, S.C.) 1902-current, April 06, 1939, Image 8
McCORMICK MESSENGER. McCORMICK. SOUTH CAROLINA Thursday, April 6, 1939
! [churchT,
ifNNOIINCIMEyp
BUFFALO BAPTIST
•‘Hail the day that sees Him rise.”
AN EASTER SERVICE, 9:00 A. M.
- Sermon by the Pastor. .
CHURCH SCHOOL, J. Chas. Tal
bert, Supt., 10:00 A. M.
McCORMICK BAPTIST
“He is risen.” . ,
Every Christian attends Church,
Easter!
CHURCH SCHOOL, J. S. DuKes,
Supt., 10:00 A, M.
Officers and Teachers will meet
At 9:50 A. M.
CHURCH WORSHIP, 11:00 A. M.
Organ prelude.
Call to worship. .
. Hymn: “Christ The Lord Is
Risen Today.”
The doxology.
Invocation.
The Lord’s Prayer.
A hymn of Easter Joy: “Christ
Arose.”
Responsive reading of Scripture.
Gloria Patri.
Scripture lesson.
Easter anthem.
Prayer.
Organ response.
Offertory. „
Hymn of Easter praise “Crown
Him With Many Crowns.”
Sermon: SUNRISE!
Closing hymn: “All Hail The
Power Of Jesus’ Name.”
Closing prayer and benediction.
Organ postlude.
TRAINING UNION, J. F. Buzhardt,
Director, 7:00 P. M.
A “Class” for every age. Chil
dren, boys, and girls, young people,
men and women! Let us all enjoy
the hour together! and then
UNION WORSHIP, A. R. P-
Church, 8:00 P. M.
WILLINGTON BAPTIST
“Come ye faithful, raise the
strain.”
AN EASTER SERVICE, 4:00 P. M.
Sermon by the Pastor.
“Let The People Praise Thee;
Let All The People Praise Thee.”
Christ Is Risen!
A. Thad. Persons,
Pastor.
PLUM BRANCH BAPTIST
CHURCH SCHEDULE
PLUM BRANCH—Preaching 1st
and 3rd Sundays at 11:30 o’clock
a. m. Sunday school every Sun
day at 10:30 a. m. B. T. U. every
Sunday evening at 7:30 o’clock.
TROY—Preaching 2nd Sunday
at 11:00 a. m., and 4th Sunday at
3:30 p. m. ^Sunday school one.
hour before preaching.
BETHLEHEM — Preaching 2nd
Sunday at 3 o’clock p. m. Sunday
school at 10:30 o’clock a. m., ex
cept on preaching day, when at 2
, o’clock p. m.
I PARKSVILLE — Preaching at
111:30 on 4th Sunday morning:
Sunday school every Sunday at
10:30 a. m.
MODOC — Sunday School at
10:30 a. m. every Sunday. Preach
ing at 3:00 o’clock p. m., on the
first Sunday.
G. P. LANIER,
Pastor.
FRANK PARKER
srocKBRioeEl
DORN’S CASH STORE
MOVINfi TO NEW LOCATION
On Saturday morning, April 8th,
we will open in our new building on
upper Main street, and extend a cor
dial welcome to our old and new
friends and customers to come to see
_ • 1 • v *-
us there.
On that day we will hold a one cent
sale on ice cream, as follows:
IRntOf ]E C
Ice Cream wm+Jr \*
1 Pint Of
Ice Cream At
Or, 2 Pints Of 4
Ice Cream
DORN’S CASH STORE
T. M. DORN, Mgr.,
McCORMICK, S. G
JESTER’S CASH
SERVICE STATION
*
You can get service night and day. Stop by and
give us a trial.
We carry a full line of Groceries and Fresh
Meats.
Hot Lunches and Cold Drinks. f*. i; w p
Sanitary, and a good place to stop.
Located 2 miles from McCormick on Greenwood
Highway. .
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 for service out of town.
J. S. STROM
Main Street McCormick, S. C.
MT. CARMEL A. R. P. CHURCH
Preaching, the 1st, 3rd and 5th
Sabbaths at 11 a. m.
Sabbath School every Sabbath
at 10:15 a. m.. Miss Lennle Covin,
superintendent.
Rev. S. W. Reid.
Pastor.
PRESSLY MEMORIAL A. R. P.
CHURCH, McCORMICK.
Preaching, trie 2nd and 4th Sab
baths at 11 ai m.
Sabbath School every Sabbath
at 10:15 a. m., Marshall Creswell,
Supt.
Rev. S. W. Reid,
Pastor.
The Rev. R. E. Craig makes the
following announcements concern
ing the services at the churches in
his charge:
TROY A. R. P. CHURCH
Morning service on the first,
third and fifth Sabbaths at 11
o’clock. Afternoon service on the
second and fourth Sabbaths at
3:30 o’clock.
Sabbath School on the first,
third and fifth Sabbaths at 10
o’clock and on the second and
fourth Sabbaths at 2:30 o’clock.
Y. P. C. U. on first, third and
fifth Sabbaths at 7 o’clock.
CEDAR SPRINGS A. R. P.
CHURCH
Morning service on the second
and fourth Sabbaths at 11:15
o’clock.
Sabbath School on the second
and fourth Sabbaths at 10:30
o’clock.
BRADLEY A. R. P. CHURCH
Afternoon service on the first,
third and fifth Sabbaths at 3:45
p. m.
Sabbath School on first, third
and fifth Sabbaths at 3:00 o’clock.
You are invited to worship with
us.
Rev. R. E. Craig,
Pastor.
METHODIST CHURCH
SCHEDULE
McCormick Methodist Church—
Sunday School every Sunday at
10:00 a. m.; Preaching at 11:00
a. m. 1st. 2nd and 3rd Sundays,
and at 7:30 o’clock every Sunday
evening.
Prayer meeting Wednesday even
ing at 7:30 o’clock.
Intermediate League every Sun
day evening at 6 o’clock, and
Senior League at 6:45.
Troy Methodist Church.—Sunday
School at 10:00 a. m. 1st, 3rd and
4th Sundays; 2nd Sundays at 2:30
p. m.; preaching 2nd Sunday 3:30
p. m.; 4th Sunday 11 a. m.
The Epworth League meets 2nd
and 4th Sundays at 7 o’clock.
Rev. M. E. Derrick,
Pastor.
LONG CANE A. R. P. CHURCH
Services at Long Cane on the
First and Third Sabbaths of each
month.
Sabbath School at 3:00 P. M.
Mr. Horace D. Brown, Superinten
dent.
Sermon by the pastor at 4:00
P. M.
The public is cordially invited to
these services. *
W. C. Kerr,
Pastor.
X
The Crow
Aletha M. Bonner, writing in
“Our Dumb Animals,” says, “The
crow is considered an undesirable
neighbor in most agricultural
communities.
“Farmers charge him with pull
ing up sprouting com, pecking
holes in their melons and other
mischievous and destructive deeds,
but they lose sight of the bird’s
serviceable work of followjng in
the wake of the plowman’s fur
rows, and picking out from the
fresh unturned sod, legions of
worms, field mice, larvae and the
tike, which if not destroyed would
in time damage the growing croo.
“One should not forget the mil
lions of flies, spiders, caterpillars,
grasshonpers and grubs. not to
overlook weed-seed, all of which
go to make up the bird’s menu.
The cawing fellow might really be
given the sobriquet of ‘G-bird’,
because of his untiring work
of helning to rid the field,
orchard and garden world of the
ever-increasing insect menace. It
is a regrettable fact, however, that
this useful bird, who does his part
in keeping the insect-public-ene
mies under control, has so many
hands turned against him. No
country, state or federal law pro
tects him, and in certain commu
nities a reward is offered for his
head.”
INVENTION profits
If you can invent something
new and useful, for which people
xre willing to pay money, you can
make a million dollars—maybe.
It has been done, and it is being
lone all the time.
We Americans are the most in
ventive people in the world. It is
in our blood. Our pioneer fore
bears had to invent or starve.
They were tackling the job of set
tling and developing a raw, new
land with nothing much but their
bare hands to work with.
Tools and machines that would
do more work than men alone
could do, and do it faster, are
what have made our country
what it is, the most prosperous
and best-equipped nation in the
whole world.
I know and have known many
inventors. Most of them have had
inflated ideas of what their in
vention was worth. What few
realize is that it takes a lot of
money and time to develop a new
invention into marketable form.
Unless somebody is willing to
take the speculative chance of
large profits by financing the
development of a new invention,
there is little chance of making a
million for the inventor.
There is a new idea being talk
ed about in Washington—the idea
that inventors should be required
to license anybody who wants to
use their patents. Nothing aould
mere effectively stifle invention;
for the inventor’s chance of profit
lies in the seventeen-year mo
nopoly which the patent laws give
him. Nobody is going to spend
the money to develop an invention
if the whole world can share the
profits.
GLASS non-shattering
I received an invitation the
other day from the Franklin In
stitute of Philadelphia to attend a
dinner in honor of the people who
have spent some six million dol
lars to perfect a single invention,
a new type of safety glass for
automobiles.
The guests of honor were the
representatives of five great cor
porations, the du Pont company,
Libbey-Owens-Ford glass company,
Monsanto Chemical Co., Pitts
burgh Plate Glass company and
Carbon & Carbide Chemical Cor
poration.
Those great corporations are
not the inventors, of course, of the
idea of a “glass sandwich,” with a
sheet of tough plastic material
between two sheets of glass to
keep the car windows and wind
shield from shattering in case of
accident.
The patents of the orginal in
ventors, an Englishman named
Wood and a Frenchman named
Benedictus, expired long ago. The
safety glass made under those
original patents was net good
enough, so the glass-makers and
chemical companies joined forces
to try to find a better way tc
make still safer glass.
Hundreds cf laboratory workers
experimented for six years before
;he new kind of plastic “filler” fo:
afety glass was perfected anc
eady to put on the market. Thai
s the way most of the great nev
iventions cf modern times are
le vc loped.
DEAS iron?
Many people have a notion tha
11 an inventor has to do to ge
ich is to think up a new idea
We’ve all had ’em. But you can’
patent an idea; you can paten
only a machine, device or methoc
chat will make the idea work. An'
^hc.t usually takes a lot of time
and money.
In this column seven or eight
yer rs ago I told of a young Yankee
mechanic who got an idea from
watching the firebox door of the
steam boiler in the factory where
he worked. It “buckled” or chang
ed its shape whenever the tem
ps ature got too high. The idea
hr got, from noticing that, was
f' r an attachment for electric
firtirons which would automatic
al: / throw off the current when
tt iron got too hot.
Just a few weeks ago I learned
what had come of young John
S:.rgent’s idea. He took it to
Professor Vannever Bush of Mass
achusetts Institute of Technology,
who interested some capitalists in
it.
It took eight million dollars to
perfect the invention and com-
mercialize it, but Prof. Bush told
me recently that more than ten
million electric irons are now
equipped with the Sargent ther-
mcstatic control, and it is being
used in many other lines as well.
The young inventor has got
ich but it took a lot of other
people’s money to make his in
vention make money for him and
FGO - ) meats
We naturally think that, after
Tme millions cf years of human
experience with foods, there isn’t
anything more to learn about the
things we' eat.
But scientific investigators have
been working at the Mellon Insti
tute of Industrial Research for
four years on the problem of mak
ing all beefsteaks tender, and now
they’ve got it.
Dr. M. D. Coulter of the Insti
tute announced the other day that
by exposing meat to ultra-violet
rays for two days the toughest
“critter” becomes as easy to chew
as a piece of cheese. The promise
is held out that this new methoc
will not increase the cost of meat
tc the consumer, so everybody can
look forward to having tender
roasts, steaks, potroasts and ham
burgers, such as only the well-to-
do enjoy now.
Who hasn’t wished that hg
could increase his physical energy
and endurance by “taking some
thing?” The newest biological
discovery is that you can find
that “something” right in the
kitchen shelf at home. Dr. G. R.
Ray of the Long Island College
Hospital, reporting on the results
of a long series of experiments on
all sorts of people, from athletes
to office workers, says that ordi
nary gelatine will do the trick.
Plain, unflavored gelatine mixed
with water, orange juice or what
have you, a couple of ounces a
day, not only adds to one’s physi
cal pewer but increases mental
energy and activity. Other re
searchers have confirmed Dr.
Ray’s observations. .Anything
hould grow at least enough yel
low corn to feed their chickens!
County Agent D. Austin Shelley
advises.
Yellow corn contains vitamii
A, which white corn does not con
tain. This vitamin is necessai
to make hens lay well; to make
the eggs hatch best; to make
chicks grew fastest; and to pre
vent an eye disease known asl
ophthalmia or nutritional rouplj
which is very similar to commori)
roup except that the discharge!
from the eye is whiter and doesJ
not have the disagreeable odor as]
in common'roup. \
About 45 bushels of yellow corn 1
together with other ingredients 1
will be required to brood 306
chicks and grow 100 pullets out
of this brood to laying age, and
one bushel is required for eadh.
hen in the flock per year. From
these facts and the approximate
yield of com per acre, the agent
suggests that the farmer decide
how much <56rn to plant for poul
try.
Yellow com, as a rule, is an
early-maturing corn and to get
the largest yield, it should be
grown on fertile soil. If seed is
used from yellow com which has
been grown in the state lor some,
years the yield is as good as that
obtained from white corn.
Trials at Experiment Stations in
South Carolina in 1937 show that
Mill’s Yellow Dent, Marrett’s Yel
low Chief, and Wood’s Improved
Golden Dent yield about as much
corn per acre as common white
varieties. There are probably
other good varieties of yellow com.
WANT ADY.
FOR SALE!—Fifty bushels of
Ccker-Wilds No. 9 Long Staple
(1 1-4 inch staple) Cotton peed,
1 year from Coker, absolutely^
pure, at $1.00 per bushel. L. W. j
Ridlehc#ver, Plum Branch, ? S. C. \
which makes it easier to
do the
day’s work is certainly
a revS-"
lutionary discovery.
V
Cotton Ginnings
Given By South
Carolina Counties
COTTON GINNED IN
SOUTH
CAROLINA:
CROPS
OF
1938 AND 1937.
The Bureau of
the Census an-
ncunces the preliminary report on
cotton ginned,
by counties, in
South Carolina,
for the crops of
1938 and 1937.
? Quantities are in
running bales.
Linters
are not
included.)
County
1933
1937
The State —
641,491
996475
Abbeville __ —
11,677
15,174
Aiken _ _
18,583
33,107
Allendale __ —
7,307
10,730
Anderson --
43,684
74,816
Bamberg __ ___
8,804
13,380
Barnwell — —
14,596
19,645
Berkeley
2,902
3,391
Calhoun __
13,907
23.123
Charleston __ __
345
750
Cherokee __
11,953
19,251
Chester
13,424
'15,651
Chesterfield -
20,825
32,794
Clarendon —
15,445
23,551
Colleton __
7,476
12,642
Darlington __ __
14,651
26,620
Diilcn
15,190
29,932
Dorchester __ _
5,598
9,62£
2dgefield -- —
12,783
16,34'
Fairfield __
7,829
8,131
Florence __
14,753
31,330
Treenville __ --
32,675
51,791
Treenwood -- --
8,206
13,331
Hampton __ —
7,138
10,771
asper __ __—-
631
1,555
Kershaw
10,711
1 i,94C
Lancaster __ —
10,757
12,337
Laurens
21,709
30,827
- CHICKENS—Two-pound*
for sale at reasonable price.
£
Mrs.
C. H. Workman, McCormick, S. C.f
>6 19,783
Lexington — 12,141
McCormick __ -- 3,764
Marion — 4,998
Marlboro 21,000
Newberry --- 16,411
Oconee -- ' 12,981
Orangeburg __ - 52,766
Pickens 15,942
Richland 4,878
Saluda __ 7,668
Spartanburg --- 48,455
Sumter —-- 22,016
Union __ 8,633
Williamsburg 15,306
York 19,526
All other __ -- 1,661
30,202
18,053
4,521
10,649
39,341
19,172
21,441
72,366
30.889
8,179
9,541
69,809
38,418
13,301
22,757
30,103
3,511
-JXt-
Grow Yellow Corn
For The Hen’s Sake
FOR SALE — Hastings’ Super-?
prolific White Seed Corn, 1 year
from breeder, bought in sealec
bag, at 75 cents per peck, delivered’
anywhere in McCormick County*
W. A. Winn, R. 1, Plum Branch*,
S. C.
i
>■
Come in and see how we can re-r
pair your Crepe Bottom Shoes orj-
short notice. Prices very reason
able. Arrington’s Shoe Shop, Me-]
Cormick, S. C.
FOR SALE — Louisiana Suga^
Yam Sweet Potato Plants, certi
fied stock, now ready; $2.00 pef
thousand at my farm. C. E. Wil4
kie, R. 1, Plum Branch, S. C.
t
REMNANT SALE — Saturds
April 8th, at 10 o’clock—5c eacl
piece. Browns’ Inc.
TOMATO PLANTS FOR SALE-J,
early prolific and Marglobe. Mrs;
Frank P. Deason, McCormick, S.
BOAR—I have a good
China Eoar for service.
Rheney, McCormick, S. C.
Yellow corn is better than white
for all classes of livestock, but
since chickens are smaller units
and very sensitive to lack of the
right ingredients, minerals, and
vitamins in the ration,
farmers
JUST
LIKE
NE 1
In your closet is a su:
that will look 100% bet
ter when it is properly
cleaned. Let us show you
how well you can look in
a suit we have put in
first class shape. It will
be like having a new one!
Greenwood Dry
Cleaning Co.
o
“Dependable Cleaners*’
J. C. Dalton, Mgr.
f: