McCormick messenger. (McCormick, S.C.) 1902-current, April 30, 1942, Image 2
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McCORMICK MESSENGER, McCORMICK, SOOTH CAROLINA Thursday, April 30, 1942
fcCORMICK MESSENGER
L
■ raMtotaed Ktwj Thanday
Juno S, IMS
PDMOND J. MeCBACKBN,
Editor and Owner
at the Post Office at BSe-
jOarmick, 8. CX, as nkafl matter af
*
\
I
f EOBSCRIPTION BATES:
[ One Tear $1.00
Btz Months .75
Three Months JO
CALLING ALL HOUSEWIVES
TODAY and
Q6n Robinson
SWORD
pens
ernment’s report to the people.
EDITOR .... problem
To many a newspaper editor,
those releases are the bane of his
existence. If he is conscientious
about covering the news, he
doesn’t dare miss one of them
and seldom uses any of them.
He reads those first paragraphs
with one question constantly in
mind: “Is this something which
will interest the readers of my
I wonder i f anyone except news- newspaper?
paper men has any conception
of the quantity of publicity stories
which are sent out from govern
ment departments each day?
I have just spent an hour
thumbing through the “press
He may begin to nod over his
humdrum job of noting subject
matter and tossing the release
into the wastebasket, when sud
denly a paragraph jolts him into
action—a paragraph about a lo
cal company which has been in
Notice. —C|A No. 322. —United jRt. No. 2, Plum Branch, S. C.; Fil-
States Of America, Western Dis- * e Morgan, Rt. No. 2, McCormick,
trict Of South Carolina, In The s - c ‘> J- E. Morgan, Plum Branch,
District Court, Greenwood Divi- ^’•1 Mrs. Lula C. Morgan, Plum
sion. United States of America v. Branch, S. C.; R. E. Morgan, Edge-
2,260.8 acres of land in McCormick field, S. C.; Mrs. Bessie Morgan,
and Edgefield Counties, South Edgefield, S. C.; T. P. Morgan, Mc-
Carolina,—Heirs of W. A. Rey- Cormick, S. C.; Mrs. Irene W. Mor-
nolds, deceased, et al. The follow- & an * McCormick, S. C.; W. H. Mor-
ing tracts of land are included in £ an * North Augusta, S. (j.; Mrs.
this suit: No. 395—situate, lying -’ennie W. Morgan, North Augusta,
and being in Edgefield Township, Andrew T. Moseley, adjoin-
McCormick County, South Caro- 'hig owner, Rt. No. 2, Aiken, S. C.;
lina, on the waters of Wine Creek, Jac l cs011 Barks, Rt. No. 2 V Plum
a tributary of Turkey Creek, of Branch, S. C.; Eugene Paul, ad-
Stevens Creek and Savannah Riv~ i joining land-owner, Greenville, S.
er, situate about 1-4 mile east of iC -J ooseph Raddin, Greenville P
Key Road, about 3 miles north of c -» Beuford Reynolds, C|o Federal
Key Bridge and about 12 miles Land Bank, Columbia, S. C.; C. C.
northwest of Edgefield, S. C., con- Reynolds, Rt. No. 4, Greenwood. S.
taining, according to survey, two C -I Mrs. Carrie C. Reynolds, Rt. No.
hundred fifty-nine and 4-1G 4 » Greenwood, S. C.; Ed Reynolds,
(259.4) acres, more or less; No. McCormick, S. C.; Mrs. Julia C.
o tt . releases” which came in my mail,-— ™
So ^ Uncle Sam wants waste f rom Washington during the past dieted by the department of
pB ^ r ‘ 24 hours and am left with a feeling Justice—an order which he real-
That s all the American public Q f mental exhaustion from trying izes will put hundreds of local
AAs! AS? 4" A TV* 4 *7 0 ...
395a—situate, lying and being in
Edgefield Township, McCormick
Reynolds, McCormick, S. C.; H. M.
(Mitchell) Reynolds, Edgefield, S.
County, South Carolina, on waters 19-» Mrs. Ruth T. Reynolds, Edge-
need ed to know. In every town, ^ find my wa y through that
f*** “ d . vll 3 a ^ e . wa3 * e baskets storm 0 f paper and words.
immediately^ became war saving If there is anything to thelB^^^^M
baskets, voluntary plans were theory that the pen is mightier buy some popular household mer-
camed out to collect waste paper than the sword we should win chandise.
men out of work—or a regulation
which means the people in his
town will no longer be able to
of Wine Creek, a tributary of Tur
key Creek, of Stevens Creek and
Savannah River, about one-half
mile east of Key Road, and about
seven miles east of Plum Branch,
S. C., containing, according to sur
vey, eighty-five and 6-10 (85.6)
acres, more or less; No. 395b—sit
uate, lying and being in Kibler
field, S. C.; J. T. (Talbert) Rey
nolds, Plum Branch, S. C.; Mrs.
Fannie W. Reynolds, Plum Branch,
S. C.: Will Reynolds, 356 E. Cres-
well St., Greenwood, S. C.; Mrs.
Bessie D. Reynolds, 356 E. Cres-
well St., Greenwood, S. C.; Annie
Gilchrist Seigler, Callison, S. C.;
J. H. Gilchrist, Callison, S. C.;
from every home and in no time this war in a walk . The « pen
a thousands of tons of waste arm y in our capital (which these
^ °* days is a typewriter brigade) is
‘shooting out words at a speed
unprecedented in the history of
e world.
Yet everyone of those words—
paper Were back in the
the paper mills.
So successful was the
to this campaign that
the paper mills were flooded
pond their capacity and prac
all of the mills,'Which were
fering from shortages, are
township of Edgefield County. Mrs. Bertha Reynolds Seigler,
those releases—are of interest to
some individuals and some
. . __ groups of business men. Many are
able to meet all current demands eal news for the vast ma j 0rlty of
lor paper.
That doesn’t mean there
be any let-up in the waste
drive. To keep the paper
supplied it must be continued
the current rate. But it
show that, when the Ame;
public finds something it can do
to aid our war program, the re
sponse is terrific.
If the paper collection plan
stays at its present level, there
isn’t going to be much to worry
about as far as paper is con
cerned. So everyone should keep
•on saving paper as they have been
doing—make that routine—and
then add new salvaging habits.
Probably the greatest need
right now is for scrap rubber.
Today the nation faces a crisis in
rubber very similiar to the crisis
in the paper industry a few
months ago. By concentrating
on salvaging every possible pound
of rubber, we can do the same
Job for the rubber plants as we
already have demonstrated we
could do with paper.
So everyone of us should search
the attic for old rubber—old
tires and tubes, hot water bottles,
rubber bath mats, old raincoats,
rubber jar rings and even the
dog’s old rubber ball. .
The nation is relying on the
American housewives to make it
possible*for the rubber-reclaiming
plants to produce on the vast
scale needed to make necessary
materials for war.
—Buy War Savings Bonds—
X-
people in this country. They tell
e day-by-day story of what is
g on in Washington—an
azing story of hundreds of
thousands 6f government workers
who have a finger in hundreds
thousands of pies.
iiuL . i . . ... releases
The government mail tells the
new priorities, rationing,
new
s
leaders,
trition,
and a
subjects,
paragrap
Wash
this:
“With
sumers’ d
to fractio
Community Can
neries Of State
Surveyed
Clemson, Apr. 25.—About 140
community tanneries are in ex
istence in South Carolina and
ready to operate during the 1942
canning season, with a total ca
pacity of about 6,300,000 No. 2
cans per year, according to figures
from a survey made by Dr. James
If. Stepp, research specialist in
rural industries of the South Car
olina Experiment Station.
“There are, therefore, ample
community canning facilities in
South Carolina to contribute sub
stantially to the 100 per cent in
crease in home canning which has
been requested by the United
States Department of Agriculture
in the interest of victory for
the allied nations," says Dr. Stepp.
“It is up to the rural popula
tion to produce the products to
go into the cans and up to the
community cannery managers and
the housewives * to act as leaders
in bringing about a fuller use of
the canning facilities under their
control.”
The results of Dr. Stepp’s sur
vey are published by the Experi
ment Station as Circular 61, “A
Survey of Community Canneries
In South Carolina”.
Dr. Stepp calls attention again
to the fact that tin cans will be
available to community canneries,
the War Production Board having
announced that restrictions on
purchases of tin cans by commer
cial canneries do not apply to
community canneries that do not
pack for resale.
Copies of Circular 61 may be
bad free through county agents
or directly from the Publications
Department at Clemson.
jnts, census figures,
government
ivice on nu-
arrests—
id one other
Ice through first
daily mail from
something like
duction of con-
goods out, or cut
ounts for the
duration, next pinches will be
felt in clothing, household fur
nishings . . .”
“Senator Bunker’s statements
made in a speech on the floor of
the senate today accusing the RFC
of wrongdoing are unworthy of
a United States senator and . .”
“Specifications governing the
use of rubber as insulation on
neutral electrical' wires |M11 be
come effective on May 1 . . .”
“The War Production Board to
day amended Rubber Order M-15-
b to prohibit the manufacture of
blowout shoes ”
“Fourteen retail coal dealers in
Akron, Ohio, have been informed
by the Office of Price Administra
tion that they have not furnished
justification for any increase in
retail coal prices . . .”
“Ten concerns having millions
of dollars in war contracts were
told to cease discriminating
against available workers because
of their race or religion . . .”
•
MADHOUSE . . . * • deluge
Speeches, orders, counter-or
ders, regulations, information—
pile upon pile of it—^reflecting
the hectic action of a city that
has become a madhouse, a govern
ment that has grown like a mush
room and continues to call in
brain power from all over the
nation to help out in the dual
job of running a gigantic war
and keeping a complicated eco
nomic system from going to
smash.
It is a story of clashing per-,
sonalities, trial and error schemes,
scandals and world-shaking de
cisions. It is the story of a revo
lution, of great social and eco-
• nomic shake-ups, which ordi
narily would take years to bring
about, being put overnight be
cause of the war emergency.
To the newspaper editor this
story of the temporary reshaping
of America is told in such piece
meal, hour-by-hour fashion that
it often seems dull and monoto
nous. It is an unco-ordinated,
sprawling sort of story reflecting
a government that is growing
faster than it can organize. It
comes in by mailbag full, floods
the editor’s desk with an uninter
rupted barrage of change, change,
change.
Many an editor has written to
the government asking that the
releases be turned off—that they
be sent in summary form—that
they be confined to real news.
But still they come, an endles
stream of them . . . the cov
in Washington, each newspaper
publisher has hundreds of govern
ment-paid reporters working for
or (or “on” him), grasping at
every straw of news which could
conceivably interest him and
shooting it into the mail. If a
lot of newspapers use it, fine.
If it interests a few, it was worth
sending out. If no newspaper •
uses it—well, that’s ancient his-
tory anyway, there’s a new story
in the mail.
—Buy War Savings Bonds—
ixi
South Carolina, on the waters of
Lanier Branch of Cyper or Cypress
Creek, a tributary of Turkey Creek,
of Stevens Creek and Savannah
River, situate on both sides of
South Carolina Hifrhv/ay No. 43,
just west of S. C. Highway No. 67,
Edgefield, S. C.; R. D. Seigler,
Edgefield, S. C.; J. C. C. Seigler,
adjoining owner, Rt. No. 2, Mc
Cormick, S. C.; James F. Seigler,
Rt. No. 2, McCormick, S. C.: Tom
Seigler, Rt. No. -2, McCormick, S.
C.; D. P. Settles, Rt. No. 2, Plum
WOMEN in
the NEWS
By JANET CUPLER
WOMAN of the Week: The Or
der of the Red Banner, a very
important decoration conferred
by the Soviet Russian govern
ment for outstanding service, has
been awarded to Mme. Alexandra
Kollontai, the present Russian
minister to Sweden and the first
woman in the world ever to hold
the rank of full ambassador. In
1917 she was Soviet Russia’s first
minister of public welfare. Later
she was named minister to Nor
way and then ambassador to
Mexico. She has been minister
to Sweden since 1930.
« * ♦
SYMPATHETIC: According to
one correspondent, the British
women are in sympathy with
those of us who are faced for the
first time with the problem of
clothes restrictions. Their opin
ion is that rationing has helped
rather than hindered British
glamour. The English women
are wearing brighter colors, es
pecially red, and a good deal more
mascara, rouge and nail polish.
Whenever possible, they wear
long haircuts. And they have ftin
doing it—blitz or no blitz!
* * *
IT’S HER BUSINESS: Dolly
Jacobs is one of the few women
who make their living as animal
trainers. She is with, the Olym
pia, circus . . . Another young
wowm, known professionally on-
lyPus Ylla, photographs animals
Instead of training them. Now
29 years old, she began photo
graphing animals in her back
|rard when she was 18.
* * *
D CROSS TROOP: At least
omjf*group of young women has
formed a mounted troop of the
Red Cross motor service. They
feellthat such a troop will be of
servA in an emergency, because
on rlDrseback they can cover
groi%d that would be impassable
for Mtomobiles or even motor-
C3
about 3 miles east of Liberty Hill, Branch, S. C.; Eugene Settles,
S. C., and about 14 miles north- Plum Branch, S, C.; Land Settles,
west of Edgefield, S. C., contain- Rt. No. 2, McCormick, S. "C.; Will
ing according to survey, one hun- S 0 tt.' o< 5 Rt. No. 2. McCormick, S.
dred ninety-four and 9-10 (194.9) C.; Will Settles, Rt. No. 2, McCor-
a- res, more or less; No. 395c—No. mick, S. C.; Bishop Shipley, Rt.
395c—I—situate, lying and being No. 2, McCormick, S. C.; Mrs.
in Kibler Township, of Edgefield Bessie C. Shuford, Rt. No. 2, Mc-
County, South Carolina, on the Cormick, S. C.; E. C. Shuford, Rt.
waters of Pike Branch and Cyper * No. 2, McCormick, S. C.; W. C.
or Cypress Creek, tributaries of Strom, adjoining land owner, Mc-
Turkey Creek of Stevens Creek i Cormick. S. C.; Mrs. Lillian Sulli-
and Savannah River, situate on van, adjoining land-owner, Calli-
the west side of the Old Five son. S. C.; J. P. Talbert, adjoining
Notch Road (S. C. Highway No. land-owner, Allendale, S. C.; Mrs.
67) about 11 miles northwest of Lula Gilchrist Talbert, Callison,
Edgefield, S. C., containing ac- S. C.; Tax Collector of Edgefield
cording to survey, one thousand County, Edgefield, S. C.; Tax Col-
seven hundred eleven and 7-10 (1,- lector of McCormick Countv, Mc-
711.7 acres) acres, and nine and 2-10 Cormick, S. C.; The Security
(9.2) acres, more or less, respec- Bank, (mortgagee) Edgefield, S.
tively, all of which said tracts are C.; Treasurer of Edgefield County,
more particularly described in the Edgefield, S. C.; Treasurer of Mc-
petition herein, on file in the of- Cormick County, McCormick, S.
fice of the Clerk of the United C.; Mrs. Robert West, adjoining
States District Court for the West- land-owner. Rt. No. 2, McCormick,
ern District of South Carolina, at s - C.; Mrs. Agnes C. Winn, Mc-
Greenville, to which reference is Cormick, S. C.; E. P. Winn, Me
in vited for a more particular de- Cormick, S. C.; Calvin Winn, ad-
scription thereof, and known in joining land-owner, Rt. No. 2, Mc-
this proceeding as the W. A. Rey- ! Cormick, S. C.; Edith May Winn,
nolds Estate Tracts, and in which adjoining land-owner, Columbia,
the following named persons, s - C.; Emmie Winn, adjoining
firms or corporations have, or land-owner, Rt. No. 2. McCormick
claim to have, an interest, to wit: s - C.; E. P. Winn, adjoining land-
Resident Defendants — Millege | owner > Rt - No - 2 - McCormick, S.
Bland and wife, if married, Rt. No. I c -: J - E - Winn, adjoining land-
2, Plum Branch. S. C.; Elijah ow ner. Rt. No. 2, McCormick, S. C.;
Brown, (adjoining land-owner) Minnie Lee Winn, adjoining land-
m. No. 2. Plum Branch, S. C.; Ral- I owner. Rt. No. 2, McCormick, S.
lie Brown, Rt. No. 2, McCormick.! C.; Ralph M. Winn, Plum Branch.
S. C.: Ed Callison, (adioining C.: Mrs. Lula C. Winn, Plum
land-owner) Rt. No. 2, McCor- Branch. S. C.: Marion Wren. Cal-
mick. S. C.; Fred Cheatham, Rt. Jjson, S. C.; Mrs. P. W. Manley,
No.* 2, Plum Branch, S. C.; Lizzie Williamston. S. C.; T. C. Wmn,
Gilchrist Coleman, Edgefield. S. adjoining land-owner, Rt. No. 2,
c.: G. S. Gilchrist. Edgefield, S. Plum branch, S C.; Virginia
C.; J. C. Corleyf McCormick, S. C.; Winn, adjoining land-owner, R.
Julian M. Corlev, Rt. No. 2. Me- p - McCormick, S. C.; Mrs. W. L.
Cormick, S. C.: Emily M. Corley Winn, adjoining land-owner Rt.
(Mrs. Julian M.) Rt. No. 2, Me- No. 2{ McCormick, S. C. W. L.
Cormick, S. C.; L. E. Corley, Rt. | Winn, Jr., a minor Rt. No
No. 2, McCormick, S. C.: Mrs. Irma ^rmick S. C.; Willie Nell Wmn,
H. Corley, Rt. No. 2, McCormick, R t. No. 2, McCormick S. C.; D.
S. C.; Sarah G. Corley, Greenwood, ’Wren, Callison, S. C^ Mrs.
S. C.; William G. Corley, McCor- Mamie Reynolds Yeldell, Phoenix
mick. S. C.: W. M. Corley, Rt. No.
2, McCormick, S. C.; Mrs. Grace
W. Corley, Rt. No. 2, McCormick,
S. C.; Mrs. Agnes M. Culbreath,
Greenwood, S. C.; T. B. Culbreath,
Greenwood, S. C.; Mrs. P. P. Doo
little Est., C|o Eugene Paul, Green
ville, S. C.; Mrs. Kate Revnolds
St., Greenwood, S. C.; Mr. W. R.
Yeldell, Phoenix St., Greenwood,
S. C. Non-Resident Defendants
—Mrs. Annie Sue Cochran, 4110
Springfield Blvd., Jacksonville,
Fla.; Mrs. Bessie Reynolds Con
nelly, 114 Sharpe St., Lake Wales.
Fla.; Eugene Connelly, 114 Sharpe
SINCE 1919: When she
enters the Westinghouse graduate
course* in Pittsburg after her
graduation from Oregon State
college, Mildred Perman will be
the second woman, the first since
1919, selected for that training.
Her classmates will be 400 top-
ranking college men.
* ' * *
SUNNY SIDE UP: A woman in
Iceland recently sent an urgent
message to the Chicago Chamber
of Commerce asking for, among
other things an ice cream freezer.
It seems she is seriously con
cerned about the fact that Ice
land has no ice cream parlor and
is determined to do something
about ty. . . .
—Buy War Savings Stamps—
Fuller. Edgefield, S. C.; W. W. Ful- ISt., Lake Wales. Fla.; Claire Corley,
ler, Edgefield, S. C.; Edmond Gar- j a mmor, 505 1-2 Ellis St., Augusta
rett. Rt. No. 2, Plum Branch, S. !<**•: ^argaret Corley, a mmor, 505
C.; Chamberlain Gilchrist. Rt. NoJ 1-2 E^ 15 St., Augusta, Ga,; Mrs. S.
2, McCormick, S. C.; Charlie Cum- S. Crouch, Martinez, Ga.; Mrs.
ming Gilchrist, Rt. No. 2, McCor- ; Dorothy C. Culpepper and Lus-
mick, S. C.; Eloise Gilchrist, a mi- i band, Augusta. Ga.; Ldwm N.
nor, Edgefield, S. C.; Ernestine! DeYoung, a minor Rex, Ga.;
Gilchrist, Edgefield, S. C.; George Glenn W. DeYoung, U. S. S. Oma-
Gilchrist, Rt: No. 2, McCormick, S. i ha, C|o Postmaster, New York, N.
C.; Hugh Gilchrist, Edgefield. S. Y.; Lieut. G. O. DeYoung, 22nd.
C.; Ike Gilchrist. Rt. No. 2, McCor- Inf., Ft. McPherson, Ga.; Mrs. S
mick, S. C.; J. W. Gilchrist. Edge- W. Dykes, 113 N. Sheppard St.
field, S. C.; Mrs. Myrtle M. Gil- Houston, Texas.; Mrs. F. C. Eng-
christ, Edgefield, S. C.; J. W. Gil- ; land, Broxton, Ga.; Mrs. Ella Mor-
christ, Jr., a minor, Edgefield, S. gan Jennings, 2041 Starnes St.
C. ; James Gilchrist, Rt. No. 2. Me- Augusta, Ga.; Mrs. Mary Lou
Cormick. S. C.; Joe B. Gilchrist. Reynolds Johnson, 2837 SW 16ti
McCormick. S. C.; Mrs. Mamie W. Ter., Miami, Fla.; E. S. Moon anc
Gilchrist, McCormick, S. C.; Mrs. husband, if married, Eastman,
Lula Gilchrist. Callison. S. C.; Max Ga.; Mrs. G. M. Parkerson, East-
Gilchrist, adjoining land-owner, man. Ga.; Annie Reynolds am
Rt. No. 2, McCormick. S. C.; Mor- husband, if married, 1110 Merry
ris Gilchrist, Edgefield, S. C.; Mrs. St.. Aueusta, Ga.; Benjamin Pc
Myrtle M. Gilchrist, Edgefield, S. nolds, Hepzibah, Ga.; Bob Rey-
C : Robert Gilchrist, adjoining nolds, Jacksonville, Fla.; Mrs.
owner, Rt. No. 2, Parksville. S. C.; Georgia S. Reynolds, Jackson-
Sam Gilchrist* adjoining owner, ville, Fla.; G. C. Reynolds, Pavo.
Rt. No. 2, Plum Branch, S. C.: Sam Ga.; Ruby G. Reynolds, Mrs., Pavo,
Gilchrist, adjoining owner, R. F. ua.; George S. Reynolds, Jack-
D, Plum Branch, S. C.; Sam Gil- sonville, Fla.; J. C. Reynolds, 3140
Christ. Rt. No. 2, McCormick, S. C.; NW 21st Ct., Miami, Fla.; Mrs.
T B Gilchrist, adjoining owner, Nannie H. Reynolds, 3140 NW
Rt. No. 2, McCormick, S. C.; Est. 21st Ct., Miami, Fla.; J. I. Rev-
of W. R. Gilchrist, Co Robt. Gil- nolds, Eastman, Ga.; Mrs. Mamie
Christ, Rt. No. 2, Parksville, S. C.; Reynolds Sanders, Griffin St.,
Wyatt Gilchrist, Parksville, S. C.; Eastman, Ga.; W. M. Sanders,
Rev M. C. Gordon, Rt. No. 1. Edge- Griffin St., Eastman, Ga.; Essie
field S. C.; T. B. Greneker, Adm. Seigler and husband, if married,
Est. of W. A. Reynolds, deceased, Milan, Ga.; Mrs. Jeffie Reynolds
Edgefield, S. C.; Arthur Higgins, Seigler. 846 Chaffee St., AugusLi
Rt No. 2, McCormick, S. C.; Will Ga.; C. S. Stalnaker. Broxton,
Holloway, Rt. No. 1, Edgefield. S. Ga.; E. T. Stalnaker, Haines City.
C ; Platt Holmes, Parksville. S. C.; Fla.; F. R. Stalnaker, Broxton.
Andrew Jones, Rt. No. 2, McCor- Ga.; J. W. Stalnaker, Crescent
mick, S. C.; Lillian Jones, Edge- City, Fla.; Olive Stalnaker, Brox-
field, S. C.; Tom Jones, Rt. No. 2, ton, Ga.; R. T. Stalnaker, Haines
Plum Branch, S. C.; O. D. Lamb, City, Fla.; S. C. Stalnaker, Brox-
Adm. Est. of Mary Reynolds Stal- ton, Ga.; Anna Seigler Wells, Mi-
naker, Edgefield, S. C.; O. D. Ian, Ga.; T. J. Wells. Milan. Ga.;
Lamb, Adm. Est. of Mattie Rey- Mrs. Mattie Seigler Williams, 809
nolds Hall, deceased, Edgefield, S. S. Sherman St., Fitzgerald, Ga.;
C.; Mrs. Aurelia Mayson, Rt. No.; J- C. Seigler, 809 S. Sherman St.,
2, McCormick; S. C.; Wallace May- Fitzgerald, Fa.; Mrs. Robert
George Merck, John Terry, David
Seigler and Edward Settle. The
spouses, heirs and ! or assigns of
the following deceased persons,
whose names and addresses are
unknown: Mary Morgan Corley,
Mrs. Emmie DeYoung, Mrs. P. P.
Doolittle, Sallie Reynolds Gil
christ, W. R. Gilchrist, Mattie
Reynolds Hall, John Holloway, B.
B. Jones, Eb Reynolds, Edgar
Reynolds, Joe Reynolds, P. C. Rey
nolds, Whit Reynolds, Lizzie Rey
nolds Seigler, Mrs. Mary Reynolds
Stalnaker, and Nannie Reynolds
Wren. -In addition to all of the
Arties named above, there may
ue other persons who may own
some part of, or have some in
terest in some part of, or lien, or
encumbrance on or against said
lands, or claiming or holding some
right, title, or interest therein,
whose names are unknown, and
petitioner avers that reasonable
diligence has been used to ascer
tain the same without success, and
all persons, firms or corporations,
known or unknown, having a \v
right, tittle, interest, demand,
lien, encumbrance or claim of
any kind or character whatso
ever are made parties defendant
in this proceeding. Take Notice,
that O. H. Doyle, United States
Attorney for the Western Dis
trict of South Carolina, under the
direction of the Attorney General
of the United States, has filed an
application in the District Court
of the United States for the West
ern District of South Carolina,
! stating that the United States is
desirous of purchasing the above
described lands, and that you are
the owner, or supoosed owners of
the said lands, or have some right,
title or interest therein, and de
mands that all issues of fact
arising, or to arise in this action,
particularly those of value, com
pensation and acreage, be deter
mined by jury trial in the due
course of this proceeding. Where
fore, you are required to come
forward on the 4th day of June,
at ten o’clock, a. m., at the United
States District Court po be held at
Anderson, South Carolina, and
file objections, if any you have,
to the proposed purchase of said
lands, otherwise a judgment will
be entered against you. The in
fant defendants and persons un
der any other legal disability
hereinabove named are further
notified that the order of court
provides that unless they procure
the appointment of a guardian
ad litem to represent them in
said proceeding within twenty
days after personal service of the
said notice upon them, or in case
service is made upon them by
publication, within twenty days af
ter the said service has been com
pleted, the court, upon petition of
the undersigned, will appoint a
guardian ad litem for said de
fendants. Done by order of the
court this 21st day of Aoril, A. D.,
1942. O. H. Doyle, United States
Attorney. Witness my hand and
seal this 21st day of April,
D„ 1942. W. D. White, Clerk,
United States District Court for
the Western District of South
arollna. (Official Seal). ,
WANT Ain
FOR SALE—Three mare mules,
'veighing from 1,050 1,100 to 1!200
rounds; all plow tools, one good
wo-horse Webber wagon; also
?otton seed for planting. W. A.
TT inr>- R. 1 Plum Branch. S C.
FOR SALE—Improved Louisiana
Yam Sweet Potato Plants, State
nspected, for delivery after 10th
April, at $2.00 per thousand, at
my home. C. E. Wilkie, R. 1, Plum
Branch, S. C.
CUSTOM HATCHING —Monday
only. 2c per egg in 100 lots with
rebate of 1c per fertile egg fail
ing to hatch. Walton’s Hatchery,
McCormick Highway, near Or
phanage, Greenwood, S. C.
Two furnished rooms for rent.
F. P. Deason, McCormick, S. C.
son, Rt. No. 2, McCormick, S. C.;
B. M. Mayson. adjoining owner.
Rt. No. 2, McCormick, S. C.; Eliza
Mayson, adjoining owner, McCor
mick, S. C.; W. W. Mayson, Rt. No.
2, McCormick, S. C.; Metropolitan
Life Ins. Co., adjoining owner, Co
lumbia. S. C.; Grady Moozier.
Parksville. S. C.; Charlie Morgan,
Wynn, Eastman, Ga.; Jesse Wrex;
315 Asaph St., Alexandria, Va.;
Edgar Wren, 1109 Duke St., Alex
andria. Va. The following persons
and their respective spouses, if
living; if dead, their heirs and |
or assigns, whose names and ad
dresses are unknown; Batte
Evans, Charles Jones, Joel Mann,
WANTED—Pulp Wood, unpeeled
pine at $7.00, loaded on Southern
Railroad, also peeled gum, cotton
wood and poplar, at $9.00 loaded,
on Southern or C. & W. C. Rail
roads. All wood five feet, 160
cubic feet per unit. R. M. Winn,
Plum Branch, S. C.
Milch cows for sale or trade.
J. L. Smith, McCormick, S. C.
Primitive Methods
HI Need Not
Be
Followed
in
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