University of South Carolina Libraries
% McCORMICK MESSENGER, McCORMICK, SOUTH CAROLINA Thursday, August 17, 1939 -MEATS- ■ i i ii I. TROY MARKET Specials Saturday Veal Steak QC#* Per Pound fcww Roast 4 Of% Per Pound 1 Stew 4 Ef* Per Pound 1 Leg-0-Lamb 991* Per Pound Mutton Chops 9t\t* Per Pound fcUU Mutton Roast 1 Of* Per Pound 1 TODAY and || 11 ■ ■ ijXxKXvjll’S SXHVKJKXaH TROY MARKET TROY, S. C. JACK GABLE, Prop. MASTER’S SALE FLIGHT 1939 I have just flown from the At lantic to the Pacific between two days. I took a plane at New York airport at 5:45 Sunday evening and landed in San Francisco at 9 o’clock Monday morning. It was as comfortable as riding in a Pull man car. I flew in a “sleeper” plane, with regular berths like those on the railroad. It cost al most exactly what the railroads charge for first-class accommoda tions on their crack trans-conti nental trains. I had not flown for five or six years, and was amazed at the im provements since my last flight. Our average speed in the air was three miles a minute. We flew at a height of 10,000 feet, almost two miles, above the earth. We came down at Chicago and Salt Lake to take on gasoline, but otherwise were in the air the whole distance between the oceans. The thought which came to my mind many times as we flew was the Biblical line, that God has made man a little lower than the angels. One who believes in the ZMW v.} , filfj > >: kh: fBm i '&■ ■ gjii • J ►A* ■A j ■is vv;.; as* > mgmm- msi *:*::*$ m: mm iiiiflis STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County Of McCormick, In The Court Of Common Pleas. I ^ Persuant to an Order and De- Divine spirit guiding human cree of the Court in the case of thought and action could not help Mrs. L. L. Wescott, Plaintiff, a- feeling that Man’s conquest has Ste t Mo^aJ? n De?endante nd I f been ma ^ P ossible ^ inspiration sell to the last and highest bidder froin on *ugh or bidders for cash at public auc tion in front of the Court House *1 TiTfinF Door of McCormick County, S. C.J * * * * * * * yge on Salesday in September, the Everybody knows that the high- same being the 4th day of Sep- er up one goes the less oxygen tember 1939, during the legal there is in the air. As an elderly scribed'reEd 1 estate, H man »ith a tricky heart, lacked ALL of those certain lots or par- m y doctor about the risk before I cels of land situate, lying and be- started this long flight. He had County of made the same flight himself, and McCormick, South Carolina, one I ^... .. T , . ’ , of which lots fronts Ninety Five told fne ^ at 1 sot short of '95*) Feet on Maple Street and I breath the stewardess on the Ttmnlng back in a parallel shape plane would give me some oxygen. One Hundred GOO’) Feet to an to breathe alley and being bounded on the ° Dr e ' k « North-East by Maple Street; Sure enough, crossing the Alle- South-East by lands of Mattisons; ghenies, we had to rise to 13,500 South-West bv an aUey running feet to get over a thick mass of through said block and on the storm-clouds Everv one of the North-West by Gold Street of the f clouas * Ever y one ° r . the Tbwn of McCormick, S. C. Said fort y passengers was given a tube tract of land consists of lots No. through which to inhale extra 1, 2, 3 and a part of Lot No. 4, in OX ygen from a big tank of the Block B” of the Town of Me- lif _ Cormick s C life-giving gas, and none expe- ALSO:’ Ail of that certain piece, rienced the slightest discomfort, parcel or lot of land situate, lyirlg An air-line pilot who was riding T o WI ^ an ^ Co f Y n ~ as a passenger told me that the ty of McCormick, S. C., fronting 1 ii* mm <* “There’s nothing like the pause that refreshes Hard work—and hot work—call for a pause now and then. That’s when ice-cold Coca-Cola belongs on the job. •. to make your pause the pause that refreshes. Thirst asks nothing more. GREENWOOD COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. GREENWOOD, S. C. has a good education and has the crop should subsequent Fifty (50’) Feet on Maple Street new big P lanes now bein & built of the Town of McCormick, S. C., will have oxygen supplied in the and running thence back in a par- proper proportion, so that flights . s bapefor a distance of Two can ma( i e 20,000 feet eleva- Hundred Twelve (212’) Feet to * , ’ * \ “ Cherry Street and bounded on the tion at four miles a minute, and North-East by Cherry Street; the air will be just like we breathe South-East by lands of J. C.| a t sea level. Brown; South-West by Maple Street and North-West by lot be longing to McCormick Building 1 PILOTS training and Loan Association formerly From my flying shipmate, the and now by Miss Birdie Walker. . . ... , - _ „ As the Plaintiff has not sought tran sport pilot flying home from a and specifically waived the right vacation, I learned a lot about the to any deficiency judgment bid- men who navigate the great pas- served three years or more in hos pital training. She must pass rigid tests as to character, poise, per sonality and physical condition. To be a stewardess she must be not more than 5 feet 5 inches tall and weigh no more than 125 pounds. Weight and height count for something in flying. I have seldom met two more intelligent, well-balanced young women than the two stewardesses with whom I flew across the country, one from New York to Chicago, the other from Chicago to the Coast. ding will close on the date of sale but as a requisite to the accep tance of any bid the Master will require of any bidder other than the Plaintiff or her Attorney a deposit of 10% of the amount of such bid as evidence of good faith to be forfeited as liquidated damages should such bid not be complied with within five days from the date of such sale. The purchaser to pay the Master for papers and revenue stamps. J. FRANK MATTTSON, Master McCormick County, S. C. McCormick, S. C. August 16, 1939.—3t. HAY FEVER Test This Quick Relief Try one dose “Dr. Platt’s RINEX Prescrip tion.’’ Relief usually begins in a few min utes. A physician’s internal medicine in con- ▼ an lent capsules, tasteless—a boon for suf ferers from Hay Fever, Rose Fever, Head Colds, Catarrh, Asthma. Not habit-forming. Saeesing, wheezing, itching eyes, running nose quickly relieved. Satisfaction within a few hours guaranteed or money back. Your druggist recommends RINEX, 11.00. senger craft of the air. They are young, but they are far from be ing “kids.” It takes nine years from the beginning of training to qualify a pilot to command a big airliner, as long as it does to qualify to practice medicine. First, before he can be admitted to an Army or Navy flying school he must have had at least two years at a university. All the commercial pilots are Army or Navy or Marine reserve officers. It takes four years of intensive training for the ambitious young man to get his “wings” from the government. That qualifies him to fly a military plane, but not for, For Best Prices on Cattle, Hogs, and Calves, see J. L. Smith, McCormick, S. C. 81,209 malaria Cases reported in the U. S. in 1938! DON’T DELAY! START TODAY with 666 Checks Malaria in seven days. For Best Prices on Cattle, Hogs, and Calves, see J. L. Smith, McCormick, S. C. a commercial plane where other “Read ’Em and Reap” our ads people’s lives beside his own are at stake. He has to work as an assistant or co-pilot, perhaps for three or four years, before he is intrusted with mail flights on short and easy routes. Then when he has mastered the science and art of navigating entirely by instru ments, and otherwise proved him self qualified, he may get com mand of a trans-continental or trans-oceanic plane. * * * STEWARDESSES helpful Almost as important as the pilot and co-pilot on the cross-country passenger planes is the stewardess, the capable young woman whose job is to prepare and serve meals to passengers, look after them if they are “air-sick,” and in general to see to it that they are com fortable. The girls who get these jobs usually stay on them less than two years. By that time they have married either a pilot or a co-pilot or some passenger they have met. Most of them marry men in the air service. Every stewardess must be a registered nurse. That means she PICTURE America There is only one way to get a real picture of America. That is to see it from the air. The impres sion I got was that there are immense unsettled areas, even in the thickly-settled states of Penn sylvania and Ohio over which we flew before night fell. The West is even more thinly settled. From Salt Lake, where we stop ped at dawn, on to the Coast, over the high plateaus west of the Rocky Mountains, and across the Sierras, there was an appalling picture of barren mountains, as bare of vegetation as the coasts of Spain, with occasional fertile val leys hidden amid their depths. Not until we got into California did I see anything from the air that suggested possible prosperity in the creation of wealth from the soil. Once we had crossed Lake Tahoe and began to slip down ward into Sacramento Valley, however, it was easy to see why Californians regard their land as God’s country. It is a green and lovely land facing the blue Pacific, kept fertile by the rains and fogs sweeping in from the ocean. Cotton Report As Of August 1, 1939 A South Carolina cotton crop of 810,000 bales of 500 pounds grosr weight is forecast from condition as of August 1, according to repor issued August 9th by Frank C Black, Agricultural Statisticiar Columbia. This prospective ou’ turn compares with 648,000 half made last year, 1,023,000 in 19r and average production of 738,0C bales for the five years 1932-36. The reported condition of 80 pc cent of normal is the highest < record and the indicated yield pc acre of 310 pounds lint equals th record yield made in 1920. On the other hand a somewha - greater than average weevil dam age is expected from reported in festation on August 1 and weevil prevalence is sufficiently wide spread to cause serious damage to weather favor weevil activity. United States A United States cotton crop of 11,412,000 bales is forecast by the Crop Reporting Board of the United States Department of Ag riculture, based on condition as of August 1. If realized, this will be 531,000 bales less than the 1938 crop, and 2,388,000 bales less than the 10-year (1928-37) average. The average yield for the United States is forecast at 223.7 pounds per acre, which is 12.1 pounds less than the yield in 1938, but is 32.9 pounds more than the 10-year average (1928-37). In the Carolinas and Georgia, the prospective yields per acre this year are higher than in 1938, and also above the 10-year aver age. In Alabama and the States adjoining the Mississippi River, this year’s expected yields are less than the high yields of last year, but are still above the 10-year av erage. Yields in Oklahoma and Texas are indicated to be less than in 1938, and also less than average. In the irrigated areas of the Far Western States, relatively high yields are in prospect this season. The cotton acreage of 24,424,000 acres used in this report is the estimated acreage in cultivation on July 1, less the 10-year average abandonment. The acreage for harvest is slightly more than in 1938, which was the smallest cot ton acreage harvested since 1899. In interpreting reported condi tion in terms of probable yield per acre, the Crop Reporting Board has made allowance, as in the past, for probable loss due to boll weevils on the basis of reports re ceived through August 1 concern ing weevil presence and activity. These reports indicate that loss from this source will be about average for the United States, but somewhat more than average in the States east of the Mississippi River, except in Tennessee. In the States west of the Mississippi, less than average loss from weevils is indicated. materials for laying houses and equipment adapted to Southern conditions. The plans shown are for the open-front shed-roof type of laying houses, and for nests, mash hoppers, water stands, catching coops, and feed bins. The location of the laying house, the size of house and yards, sani tation, and location of roosting poles are also discussed in this new circular. The county agent points out that too often the poultry house is thought of as being merely a roosting place for chickens, whereas a good house is very use ful throughout the year both day and night. “Protection from ex treme heat is of as much value as protection from cold”, he says. “Comfort supplied in a well- equipped poultry house favors high egg production”. XXX— /^PDERN WPMfN Dr. m -l;Maffett President of the National Federation of Business and Professional Wo men’s Chibs, Inc. Thinning Pine Stands Gives Good Trees Room Laying House Plans In New Publication County Agent Shelley announces \ new poultry publication, Exten sion Circular 174, “Laying Houses and Equipment”, by P. H. Gooding, extension poultryman. The cir cular is issued by the Extension Service of Clemson College and is for free distribution from the county agent’s office or from the Publications Department at Clem son. The purpose of this circular, says Mr. Shelley is to discuss the important principles in construc tion and to give plans and bills of Expanded markets for pulpwood present an opportunity to many landowners in McCormick county to thin their pine forests by cut ting all crooked, forked, rough, and defective trees that would never produce good poles, piling, or sawtimber, according to D. Austin Shelley, county agent. “Thinnings provide an oppor tunity to sell a portion of the timber crop while the more valu able timber products are being grown,” says the agent. “Fre quently, by cutting out the unde sirable trees, landowners can re move as much as 10 cords of wood per acre, and still have the de sirable number of trees left for growth for poles, piling, and saw- timber. “Thinnings for pulpwood, as con trasted with destructive clear- cutting, permits the landowner to earn three to four times more from his pine timber.” Asserting that the same prin ciples can be applied to thinning pine timber as those applied to thinning com or cotton, Mr. Shel ley explains that the idea behind thinning is simply to give more growing space to the most desira ble trees. Frequently, in pine stands, the trees are crowded as a patch of One of the most air-minded young women in the country is Mrs. Brewster A. Gillies, of Syos- set, L. I., who flies about in her airplane just as other women do in their automobiles. She con siders it a comfortable and easy method of transportation, and she heps across Long Island Sound to lunch and back again as if she were miflnhg just an ordinary trip. Mrs. Gillies has recently become president of the “Ninety-niners,” an association of women flyers who originally numbered ninety- nine. Their purpose is to get more women air-minded, to simplify flying for women, and to promote their interest in the profession. Mrs. Gillies has been flying eleven years. She began when training at a hospital to be a nurse. She has three children. * * * With a gardener and four assis tants to help in the planting, Dr. Sylvia Colla conducted some inter esting and unusual plant propaga tion in the Argentine. In fact her work was so important that it at tracted the attention of botanists everywhere. The experiment was done withi 126,000 plant cuttings and layers in the delta section of the Argen tine at the mouth of the Parana River, in a suburb of Buenos Aires. The Minister of Agriculture spon sored the experiment and the gov ernment also is interested in her work. She uses a mixture that accelerates root growth. Dr. Colla has a doctorate from the Univer sity of Turin and was professor of botany in its department of agri culture. * # * Mrs. Larz Anderson, whose hus band’s ancestor by the same name served on Lafayette’s staff and received Cornwallis’ sword from him at the Yorktown surrender, is the only woman member of the Society of Cincinnati. She has. presented to the society her pala- corn would be in which a stalk occupied every square foot of the; ["aT house in Washington’ D. c" land. Naturally a heavy thinning is needed in each case to encour age development of the best tree' or stalks. READ THE AD$ Along With the News Sterne Carrington, radio author, is said to be the’first woman to have a play televised. “The Red Hat,” which she wrote and in .vhich Jean Muir appeared, was recently seen and heard over the National Broadcasting Company’s, facilities.