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McCORMICK MESSENGER, McCORMICK, SOUTH CAROLINA TKursday, February IS, 1940 Extra Fine Valpes In USED TRUCKS , , — and — POWER UNITS \S: • , « They are real bargains. Come and see them. GEORGIA TRUCK & EQUIPMENT CO. v •' . • ' V^ 9th and Reynolds St. AUGUSTA GEORGIA its of The Lander club will hold regular meeting in the home Miss Mary Puller Tuesday, Feb. 20th, at 3:30 with Miss Virginia Freeland assisting hostess. Miss Elizabeth Alexander of the Lander Faculty will be guest speaker. All members are urged to be present and alumnae who have not joined as yet are urged to join at this meeting. Mr. Charles F. Talbert of Au gusta, Ga., was visiting friends and relatives here one day the past week. and son, Gerald Bunn, Jr., of Au gusta, Ga., were visitors here and at Bordeaux Sunday afternoon. Mr. B. I. Bladon of Plum Branch was a visitor here Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Metz Price of Greenwood visited relatives and friends here one afternoon the past week. Mr. J. J. Collier of Plum Branch was a visitor here Monday. Mr. G. C. McDaniel of Modoc was among the visitors here Mon day. GREYHOUND PUTS “AMAZING AMERICA” ON THE AIR cfsw Type Prograift Features Strange and Unusual Places in the United States Mrs. F. L. Donnan, Mr. Mason Donnap and Misses Minnie Lee and Loree Donnan of Clinton and Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Donnan, Jr., of Laurens visited Mr. Austin Abercrombie and family last Sun day. Mrs. H. Drucker returned last Friday from ^ two weeks’ stay in New York City, where she bought spring and summer merchandise fpr the H. Drucker stores here and at Honea Path. Mrs. F. E. Williams returned home Monday from a three weeks’ j visit to her daughter, Mrs. J. W. Kinney, and Mr. Kinney, of West! Mr. J. C. Dansby of Troy was a : P alm Beach, Fla. Mrs. Williams II 12 7 4^5 <f o' ‘v-QEiSo visitor here Monday. left Tuesday for Greenville to spend awhile with her daughter, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Jennings of Mrs - R - J* Mimms, and Mr. Mimms. Greenwood spent the week end Mimms has been ill for some here in the home of his father, j time, but is much better now. Mr. J. L. Jennings. j Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Jennings, a nipe pound boy on Feb. 4th, 1940, who will be called Edwin Lewis. Mr. J. Talbert Reynolds of Plum Branch was among the visitors here Saturday morning. Cadet Morris Furqueron of Clemson College, Clemson, was a recent visitor here to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Furqueron. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Moragne, and two daughters, Miss Mabel Moragne, and Mrs. Gerald Bunn, Rev. A. Thad. Persons an nounces his sermon subject at the Baptist Church here next Sunday morning at 11 o’clock as, “Sunrise In The West,” and for the even ing service at 7:30 as, “Do You I Dare To Live The Life Eternal?” He will preach at Bethany Baptist • tarting this week Greyhound buses i be traveling the airwaves as ryl! as the highways. The premiere i&i Greyhound’s new and radically erent radio show takes place to- jflliKht on the coast to coast NBC Network. The program presents a departure in air show styling— Rad one that should prove highly en tertaining to all types and ages of ilisieners. According to preview re- poi Is, the highlight of the half hour’s entertainment is a battle of wits staged inst a background of America’s scenic and historic wonders. The aciual studio contestants are teams picked from the studio audience—but •the whole transcontinental audience ,ye:s just as much fun out of this new radio game as do the actual par ticipants. Cash prizes will be given to the teams engaged in this new test- your-wits game and also to listen ers who send in the prize winning questions, clues and answers used on the program. The musio of “This Amazing America” will be in the hands of Roy Shields and his orchestra, with songs by the Ranch Boys. “This Amazing America’s” combination of quips and quizzes, knowledge and nonsense, music and fun, should be a welcome addition to the nation’s air fare. __ ■* i Residents of this community can get the program over sta tion WLW on Friday nights at 8:00 o’clock. NATURAL AND MAN-MADE WONDERS DESCRIBED IN NEW RADIO PROGRAM TUNNEL THROUGH TREE In W a won a Grove, California a busy highway passes right through a giant redwood tree. BRIDGE OF GOD" Famed Natural Bridge of Virginia ; - was surveyed by Washington, owned' by Jefferson and works for a living by carrying a highway. Church that afternoon at 3:30. REMEMBER — You Always Save At.... GALLANT-BELK COMPANY RUG SPECIAL 18 x 36 Felt Base Rugs, each 10c 24 x 36 Felt Base Rugs, each _____ 15c 24 x 48 Felt Base Rugs, each _ _ 19c 36 x 54 Felt Base Rugs, each _ _ _ 25c 6x9 Felt Base Rug with C9 Aft border _ _ _ _ 36 x 72 Felt Base Rugs, each 39c 7 1-2 x 9 Felt Base Rug with border _ $2.98 9 x 12 Felt Base Rug with border 1 $3.95 9 x 12 Gold Seal Rug $5.95 98c values. WE SELL THEM FOR LESS. Pair Ladies’ every day high top work shoes. A real bargain in our Bargain Loft. $1.98 values. WE SELL Aft THEM FOR LESS. Pair ^ 1 Children’s Oxfords Straps and ties; also high top shoes in black and brown. Pair, Qfif* only hvf .jerrtn Greenwood’s Newest Shoe Department LOCATED ON Bargain Loft (Third Floor) GALLANT-BELK CO. * BIG SAVING ON SHOES! LADIES’ SHOES Ladies’ Oxfords in hlack, tan and tan and white; low and medium heels. Some of these shoes are regular $2.98 Men’s Work Shoes $1.19-$1.48 ~$1.98 Men’s Dress Oxfords In black and tan. Values like these to be found only at Gallant* £4 Aft Belk Company. Pair ^ " — — Bedroom Slippers Ladies’ 25C ^ a * r « v t Men’r< ^ 39C Buy Sheets, Towels, and all Linens at Gallant-Belk Co. this week and have them Monogrammed free at our store. The regular mid-week prayer service of the local Baptist Church will be held in the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Dukes next Wed nesday evening, February 21st, at 7:45. The prayer service for this week was held in the home of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Furqueron yesterday evening at 7:45. AWRN WptAtN DR. M -LfMAFFETT BRING YOUR OCTAGON COUPONS to Gallant-Belk Company’s third floor Bargain Loft and exchange for valuable gifts! SHOP AND SAVE AT GALLANT-BELK COMPANY Greenwood’s Largest, Leading & Best Department Store “ H i •• 1. GREENWOOD, S. G jf* President of the National Federation of Business and Professional Wo men’s Clubs, Inc. One of the oddest occupations for women is that of Miss Mary Pfeiffer, of Hoboken, N. J.,-who for fifty years has been custodian of the 200 spiders which work each spring in a precision instrument plant. Their use is to provide the silk which is inserted in the dia phragms of surveying telescopes. Miss Pfeiffer gets boys in her neighborhood to gather in the spiders for which she pays ten cents each. They must be field spiders, not house spiders. She keeps them in a large mosquito netting cage. They drink con siderable water and die after a few days of captivity. ,' So she re leases them before the ten days and gets a new batch. * * * Helen Tsang, the first and only woman dress designer in Shang hai, China, has come to the United States to show her designs for the benefit of her countrywomen. She has designed clothes for Anna May Wong, Le Ya-Ching, outstanding Chinese woman flier, and other leading Chinese women. Miss Tsang is the daughter of Chang Ching Kiang, former Gov ernor of Chekiang Province and former Minister of Reconstruction. Her first venture into the business world was in advertising, painting posters for automobiles, face creams, etc. Then she opened her dress studio, the Tsang-i Studio, which means “brocaded rainbow.” * * * Daisy Deane Williamson, State Home Demonstration leader in New Hampshire has made a study of Paisley shawls and owns a large and interesting collection from Holland, Switzerland, Japan, China, Scotland and what was once known as Czecho-Slovakia. ♦ * * For her outstanding contribution to the science of nutrition, Dr. Mary Swartz Rose, professor of nutrition at Teachers College, New York, has been awarded the annual prize by the Associated Grocery Manufacturers of Ameri ca. For the first time in history more than one hundred women took part in the Annual Congress of American Industry, sponsored by the National Association of Manufacturers. * * * Mrs. Julie Bulrich de Saint is founder of the Argentine Horti cultural Society. She is looking forward to the starting of a school of Gardening under the direction of the University of the Argentine. X WANT ADV. BABY CHICKS — BEST GRADE blood tested. Hatches Mondays and Thursdays. See us as to our livability guarantee before buying. Simkins Seed Co., Augusta, Ga. FOR SALE—One 1935 Chevrolet, De Luxe Coach in perfect condi tion. McGrath Motor Co., Phone No. 9, McCormick, S. C. SALESMEN WANTED l Author of Sister Mary’s Kitchen WANTED—Man with car. Route experience preferred but not nec essary. Rawleigh’s, Dept. SCB-77- M, Richmond, Va. INSURANCE Since modem designing and in vention have been turned kitchen- ward there are fewer mishaps for the cook to mourn over than there were in the days before heat con trolled ovens and the like. Nevertheless, just as long as the telephone will ring when there’s a batch of cookies in the oven or the small boy of the family will come in with wet-shoes t and stockings at the very mihqtfe T the vegetables are almost ready for buttering, there are bound to be minor kitchen catastrophies to most of us. Perhaps the most common acci dent in every home is the boiling dry of sauce pans in which vege tables are cooking. When this happens turn the contents of the cooking pan immediately into a fresh sauce pan but don’t under any consideration scrape the burned pan. Usually the burned portion of the vegetable will stick to the burned pan and the part in the fresh pan will be free from ah taint. If necessary of course the burned part can be cut away but usually when things have gone this far even the unburned mate rial will have a scorched taste and must be sacrificed. If you are using an aluminum pan as soon as the vegetable has been transferred to the fresh pan put the burned one into a larger pan of cold water. I don’t mean the inside of the pan to be filled with water—just the outside of the pan to come in contact with water. This makes the burned pan much easier to wash. A pan made of enamel ware cannot be treated this way because the sud den change of temperature might ruin the enamel. Lumpy sauces, too-thick sauces, too-thin sauces and too-greasy sauces each have their own reme dy. The too-thick sauce is easily remedied by adding more liquid. This may mean more seasoning Fire Insurance And All Other Kinds of Insurance In cluding Life Insurance. HUGH C. BROWN, McCORMICK, S. C DR. HENRY J. GODIN Sight Specialist Eyes Examined Spectacles And Eye Glasses Professionally Fitted. 656 Broad Street Augusta. Ga COLDS For quick relief from the misery of colds, take 666 Cause Discomfort 666 Liquid - Tablets - Salve - Nose Drops because the extra liquid increases the amount of sauce. Too-thin sauces can be thicken ed by adding more flour, stirring to a smooth paste with cold water or milk. Add just a little water or milk at a time to the flour, stirring vigorously. This prevents the paste from lumping. Unless the paste is perfectly smooth the gravy will be lumpy. The too-greasy gravy can be taken care of by adding more flour and since this naturally thickens the sauce, more liquid and then more seasonings. Very often the lumpy sauce can be made smooth by beating with a dover beater. If this fails there’s always the strainer to fall back on. Don’t forget that the sauce will cool during straining and must be reheated before serving.