University of South Carolina Libraries
McCORMICK MESSENGER, McCORMICK, SOUTH CAROUNA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1946 Mrs. R. D. McDill and daughter, little Miss Betty Fuller McDill, of Due West, are here on a visit to Mrs. McDill’s mother, Mrs. T. E. Fuller. Mrs. Ruth Culbreath of John ston is here on a visit in the home of her cousin, Mrs. J. L. Bradley, and.Mr. Bradley. Mr. W. M. Freeland of Plum Branch was among the visitors here Monday. Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Deason and son. Hazel J., Jr., of Charlotte, N. C., spent several days here last week in the home of the former's m 31 BARBECUE IN imUCK ON FRIBAV, AUGUST 9TH I will serve a barbecue and hash dinner to the public in the park near the community house in McCormick on Friday, August 9th, the day of the county campaign meeting in McCormick. Will also sell meat and hash by the pound and quart. Will be ready to serve or sell by 10 o’clock a. m. ALBERT WOOD parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Deason, and with Mrs. H. J. Dea- son’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Dansby, of the Clatworthy’s Cross Roads community. Misses Emma and Annie Cole man of Plum Branch were visitors here Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. B. Price and daughter, little Miss Frances, from Greenville visited relatives here the past week end. her sister in Port Anglous, she made a trip to McCormick where she is klso visiting Mr. and Mrs. G. C. McKinney fend family. Mr. W. A. Winn of Plum Branch Route 1 was a visitor here Tues day. Mr. L. W. Ridlehoover of Plum Branch Route 1 was a visitor here Monday. Mrs. B. A. Mattison has returned home after an extended visit with her daughter, Mrs. H. B. Grose, and Dr. Grose, of Augusta, Ga. Mr. R. E. Coleman of Plum Branch was a visitor here Monday. □Bn m ENTER THE UNCROWDED FIELD OF SPECIALISTS Learn STENOTYPY and hold a professional persons’ po sition in ten months. There are calls innumerable for STENOTYPE SECRETARIES, STENOGRAPHERS and RE PORTERS. Many of these positions offer excellent sal aries and full assurance of permanency and opportunity for advancement. Write, call or phone Stenotype Secretarial School* 16 18 JOHNSON BLDG -AUGUSTA, GA. Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Parks and daughter. Miss Virginia, of Brown Summitt, N. C., spent last week here with his mother, Mrs. B. W. Parks. Mrs. Elmer Creighton has re turned home after attending a short course for school lunch su pervisors at Winthrop College. Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Crawford of Loris spent last week here with his mother, Mrs. J. R. Crawford. Misses Lily and Hortense Long have returned to their home in Greenwood, after a visit of several weeks here with tiheir sister, Mrs. L. K. Simpson, and Dr. Simpson. Mrs. Simpson went with them for a week’s visit while Dr. Simpson is at Antioch this week in a meet ing. Mr. N. Gerard Thomas of Law- renceburg, Tenn., spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Britt at Buffalo. Mr. J. P. Robinson Route 1 was a visitor day the past week. of Troy here one Mrs. E. Widincamp has returned home after a four weeks' stay in Asheville, N. C. Her father, Mr. M. M. Wall, is staying a few weeks longer. He is getting along very nicely. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Minus have returned to their home in Mem phis, Tenn., after visiting relatives in Greenwood, McCormick and St. George. Price Office Still Open Here Mr. C. L. Wideman of Plum Branch was among the visitors here one day the past* week. Mrs. Frank G. Del La Reyes has flown home from Anchorage, Alas ka, to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. C. McKinney. She was accompanied to Seattle, Wash., by Mrs. Jake Tyseling and two chil dren. After a week’s visit with Remember — You Always Save At... GALLANT-BELK COMPANY The Price Office will be open in McCormick at the same location until further notice. Lauree M. White, Chief Price Clerk. LAYAWAY Sale Of Blankets IF YOU WANT TO BE WARM this winter, we advise you to buy your t blankets now. Make your selections from a complete stock of the nicest ar ray of blankets we have been able to show in a long time. Use our easy lay away plan and have your blankets paid for by the time you need them. PEARCE—Queen Anne Blanket. 100 per cent wool and generous 72x84 size. 9.95 CHATHAM Lamsdown Blanket. 100 per cent all wool and large size. . . . . 72x90. ’ 15.95 ' PEARCE Nu Plaid Blanket. 100 per cent all wool and size 72x84. 12.95 PURREY Blanket by Nashua. 6 ft. wide and 7 1-2 feet long. 88 per cent rayon and 12 per cent wool. 5.95 Blankets Street Floor GALLANT-BELK COMPANY , HOME OF BETTER VALUES GREENWOOD, S. C. “AIRLOOM” 72x90. 25 per cent cotton, 75 per cent wool. Blankets by Chatham. 7.95 CHATHAM Woolshire Blanket. 100 per cent virgin wool. Size 72x90. CHATHAM _ Magnolia Blanket. In white only. 100 per cent wool and size 72x90. 12.95 CHATHAM Summer weight Blanket. 100 per cent all wool and large size of 72x90. 7.95 SILVERDALE—72x90 Blanket by Am erican Woolen Mills. All wool. BEACON BLANKETS _ Size 72x90 and 100 per cent all wool. 14.95 CHENILLE SPREADS In solid colors. Green, rose, yellow. Double bed size. Special 10.95 W. J. Bryan Dorn CANDIDATE For CONGRESS Third District Will speak in the park near the community house in Mc Cormick cn Wednesday P. M., Aug. 7th, at 4:00 o’clock. Immediately following his talk a hash supper will be served to all by friends of Brydn Dorn. The public is cordially invited. Come enjoy a good talk from' a candidate who will practice his philosophy. » (Political Advertisement, Paid For By J. A. Bannister, J. E. Scott, And Other Friends Of Bryan Dorn In McCormick County.) INSURANCE Fire Insurance And All Other Kinds of Insurance In eluding Life Insurance. HUGH C. BROWN. McCORMICK. S r ATHLETES FOOT ITCH NOT HARD TO KILL. IN ONE HOUR, If not pleased, your 35c back at jany drug store. TE-OL, a STRONG fungicide, contains 90% alcohol. IT PENETRATES. Reaches MORE germs to KILL the itch. Today At STROM’S DRUG STORE WRITE A WANT AD CASH IN ON STUFF IN THE ATTIC =J More and more peo ple in South Caro lina are saying that.. Jno. C. Taylor is the best qualified man in the race for GOVERNOR, The Trend Is to TAYLOR!! HIS LIFE IN BRIEF .... Born on a farm near Honea Path, in Anderson County, on March 2, ^QO at nine years nf age John C. Taylor went to work in the Fork Shoals Cotton Mill in lower Green ville County. At the age of 19 1-2 he started to school in the fourth grade. World War I interruoted his educa- t’on and work. He served as a private during this con flict. Returning to sehool. and to wori^ during the summer, he finisned the University of South Carolina when he was 29 years of age. In 1920 he wns elected and served as Clerk of Court and Register of Deeds for Anderson Coun ty from 1921 to 1932. Ho was then elected to Congress from the Third District of South Carolina where he served three terms. , In December. 1920, he was married to Evelene Brown of Laurens County. They have two sons. Dr. John C. Tavlor, Jr., who is now in service, and Lee Brown Taylor who is a student at the University of South Carolina, hav ing been recently discharged from service. He is a d’rt farmer pod is now actively engaged in farming and looking after other business interests In Anderson. He is a F^otist Mason. Legionnaire and a charter mem ber of the S. C. Farm Bureau. HIS PLATFORM And PRINCIPLES PE tp'vv’s: to a sen e end weR-nianned co-ordination of all deuartments of the state government so as to give the orreatp^t oncHsig efficiency at a minimum cost to the people of the State. HE FELJE^es tv our Democratic form of ^ovewiment and the Bill of Rights as applied to each individual citi zen. He Is against, ail communistic and subversive move ments such as C. I. O.’s Political Action Committee. PE BEIJFVES TN expanded security benefits within the * State’s ability to pay. HE BELIEVES strongly in an expanded agricultural and industrial development of the State, with the State itself taking the lead in encouraging the development of in dustry, oarticularly that industry which may b° develop ed out of the raw products we produce in this State. HE BELIEVES THAT the farmers should share equally with other groups in all efforts of the Government to raise the standard of living for the American people, in cluding parity payments based on the cost of farm labor. # HE BELIEVES IN increased pay for school teachers com mensurate with t^e ouality of their work and the ability of the people of the State to pay. HE BELIEVES IN a substantial expansion of the capaci ties of our state institutions of higher learning so as to adequately accommodate all the boys and girls now seek ing admission to them. HE BELIEVES IN the state shouldering its proper share of any reasonable program designed to make available to veterans the benefits to which they are entitled. He is personally and politically DRY and has always voted dry. HE BELIEVES that LABOR is management’s greatest as set and as such is entitled to proper compensation. Like wise he favors labor giving value received for that com pensation. HE BELIEVES IN encouraging a mutual understanding of the problems of ttibor and management in order that each may work together more harmoniously for the good of all. HE BELIEVES that the laborer should be free: FREE to loin anv organization he may choose; FREE to choose the sort of work he is to perform; FREE to choose the color of the people with whom he is to work; FREE to strike individually or collectively; FREE to oppose a strike and to go to and from his work unmolested and unafraid: FREE to pay dues and free to refuse to pay dues; just as he may choose. But in no case should the laborer’s right to a job be de termined by anv choice he may make with respect to the foregoing matters. HE BELIEVES IN the need for the individual citizen un derstanding and taking part in the affairs of government, thereby precluding any regimentation of the people that ~ paves the way to dictatorship. (Political Advertisement) • ’ . . > e • * r\ HENRY J. GODIN O. D. Doctor of Ocular Science. Exclusive Sight Specialist. Do not dispare or give up if your Eye Physician or Spectacle Dealer cannot prescribe the glasses your eyes need to make you see comfortably and satisfactorily, just remember there is a rea son. Perhaps it is their unexperience and knowledge of the marvelous new developments to aid subnormal Vision. I espe cially invite the half blind and most complicated cases for ex amination. CONTACT LENSES FITTED. ARTIFICIAL EYES FITTED. Offices 956 Broad Street Augusta, Georgia