McCormick messenger. (McCormick, S.C.) 1902-current, March 27, 1930, Image 6
Thursday, March 27, 1930
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Pdge Numbci* Shi
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-o- COMING TO THE -o-
DIXIE THEATRE
• • •
• ••
• • •
If dt in boiHag water and fa hale
vapors; also snuff up
visas
UIOH JAWS U5EP YEARLY
McCORMICK, S. C.
FRIDAY and SATURDAY, MARCH 28-29, 8:15
Footlose Beauty In The Dens of The Orient
MARY NOLAN
in SHANGHAI LADY
She was the toast of the polyglot pleasure palaces
of the white man’s playground. She laughed at
love and scoffed at virtue. She scorned even the
creditors who ripped the fine clothes off her hack.
She could handle herself in any situation. Then love
came. She wanted to be a lady—for the man she
thought was a gentleman. See this smashing dra
ma of two souls fighting from the depths to the
heights IT’S GREAT.
Don’t miss this big program. So that everyone
can see this show, admission will be only 11 and 30c.
Matinee, Saturday 3:30; 10 and 25c.
ALSO Smitty and his Gang, in “‘Smiths; Baby’s
Birthday.” It’s a knock-out.
NEXT FRIDAY and SATURDAY
Special picture “COLLEGE LOVE
„ „ „ „ ^^
T c-—
$A\E
WORK and WORRY
By using HEALTH GUARD ICE you free your
mind of all refrigeration cares. Let HEALTH
GUARD ICE lighten your housekeeping.
HEALTH GUARD
ICE
PHONE NO. 9920
CAROLINA-GEORGIA SERVICE CO.
You may expect full weight from our employes.
O’.S ^^16M'M
MOSERS ARE KEEPERS
. <r .
When you leave securities, silver,
records, heirlooms, jewelry or other
valuables around the house and they
are stolen or burned, it is a case of
“losers are weepers.” You have lost
them and there is no compensation to
l i
be had.
KEEP YOUR VALUABLES
IN OUR SAFETY VAULT
A safe deposit box in our fire-proof
and burglar-proof vault costs but very
little and offers you absolute protec
tion. Rent one today and know that
your valuables are safe.
We have different sizes to accom-
modate your needs.
THE PEOPLES BANK
McCormick, S. C.
pfi
J. S. STROM
FUNERAL DIRECTOR,
EXPERIENCED EMBALMER IN CHARGE
McCORMICK, SOUTH CAROLINA.
FURNITURE AND STOVES
Night Phone, 55 — — — Day Phone, 76.
m
a
County"Council Of
Farm Women To Be
* % *
Organized April 5
The South Carolina Council of
Farm Women is composed of 43
County Councils. Under its de
partment of Education, Scholar
ships have been established by
which deserving 4-H Club Girls
may be loaned money, for the pur
pose of obtaining a College educa
tion. j k
This scholarship fund supported
by the State Organization, and
known as the Johnson-Walker
Scholarship, is enabling three girls
each year to attend Winthrop Col
lege. One of these girls writes as
follows:
“It gives me great pleasure to
tell you what benefit my scholar
ship has been to me and how much
I appreciate the generosity of
those who made this loan possible.
When I finished High School. I
wanted to go to Winthrop, but the
fact that I had a sister in college
at that time, and other circum
stances over which I had no con
trol, seemed to make my going
impossible. But through the co
operation of Miss Janie Ketchen,
my Home Demonstration Agent at
Bishopville, I secured a Johnson-
Walker Scholarship, and was there
fcv enabled to get an education.
Without this assistance I could not
have gone, and would today be
without a college education.
We hear on all sides what a col
lege education means today. In ad
dition to the self-satisfaction that
it gives, an education brings an
economic independence that would
be impossible without it. The loan
made possible by these scholar
ships is of inestimable value to
many girls. They must pay back
the money borrowed so that it may
be used by other girls, but even a
loan permits many to go to col
lege who could not otherwise go.
I want to thank you and all oth
ers who helped me by making it
possible for me to get this schol
arship loan.”
In addition to helping support its
State Scholarship each County
Council has as its goal, for educa-
tibnal purposes, the raising of
$100.00 each year to loan to a club
girl in that Countv who desires
help for her college education.
These county scholarships are be
ing called Marie-Cromer Scholar
ships, in honor of the first Home
Demonstration Agent appointed in
South Carolina. Greenwood Coun
ty was among the first to offer a
County Scholarship and has kept a
girl in Lander College for four
years. She writes as follows:
“In the spring of 1925 when Mr.
Benson, our principal, asked the
graduating class how many were
going to college, I hesitatingly
raised my hand. I knew that I
wanted to go to College, but
whether I would be able to go was
the question. All summer long I
sought different ways by which I
might be able to go to College, but
it seemed in vain, but I never al
together lost hope—even though I
failed to get to go that fall.
Next summer arrived. I was still
hoping to be able to go to College
that next fall. September came
and my wish to be able to go again
seemed in vain, but Mrs. Tedards,
the teacher of our little school,
came to my rescue. She had seen
a notice in the Greenwood Index-
Journal which stated that the
Greenwood County Council of
Farm Women offered a loan schol
arship, to a Club girl. I grasped at
the chance of a scholarship, for I
thought that perhaps I might be
the one to get it. Mrs. Tedards
carried me to see Mrs. Wakefield,
the President of the Council, to
whom I gave my application. Mrs.
Wakefield was very kind to us, and
wished me luck. She told us that
the Council would decide on Mon
day to whom the scholarship
would be awarded.
Lander opened on Monday. I
must have forgotten that the
Council would meet in the after
noon, for I rushed to meet the
postman at noon • on Monday,
thinking that I might get a no
tice saying to start to school on
Tuesday, but I heard not a word. I
lost all hope. x
At eight Monday night I heard a
car horn in our front yard. In a
few moments I heard my name be
ing called. I rushed forward. Mr.
J. B. Burnett, a neighbor, said—
‘Frances the scholarship is yours.’
I was very, very happy and quite a
bit excited. I don’t think I got any
sleep that night. I started to
Lander on Tuesday morning. I
found the work somewhat different
from high school work and I real
ly enjoyed it much more. My
Freshman year was the hardest. To
get an education was different
from what I had expected. The
: more. I studied the more I saw
there was to be studied. This
pleased me very much. I do not
see how it is possible for anyone
to render the best service for hu
manity unless he or she has at
least a college education.
I never could have gone to col
lege had it not been for the Coun
cil’s scholarship. My scholarship
has meant more to me than any
tongue can tell or any pen can
write. When I try to out on pa
per what it has meant to me I am
at a loss for words to c mress my
appreciation, i could write forever
and never really tell what it has
meant and what it is still meaning
to mp. I know ihnt T '■a i never
thank the Council of Women
enough. No amount of money
Middle Life
; v-
Suffering
r £S>,
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>\ Vo 1
if
ii. <py
"Three years ago,
I was in bad
health,” says Mrs.
J. B. Bean, of
Kirbyville, Texas.
**1 waa going
through a critical
time, and I suffer
ed a lot.
"My hack hurt
almost all the
time, and my legs
and ankles ached.
My head hurt me
until sometimes I
would be almost past going.
"As I had used Cardui be
fore, and knew how much I
had improved after taking
it, I got a bottle and started
taking it. I continued to use
it for several months. After
awhile I regained my health,
and I feel that I could never
have gotten through that
awful time without Cardui.”
CARDUI
Helps Women to Health
Take Thedford’s Black-Draught
for Constipation, Indigestion,
Biliousness. Costs only 1
cent a dose.
Doctors Disagree „
When children arc irritable and
peevish, grind their teeth and sleep
restlessly, have digestive pains and dis
turbances, lack of appetite, and havo
itching eyes, nose and Ungers, doctors
will not always agree that they arc suf
fering from worms. Many mothers, too,
will not believe that their carefully
brought up children can have worms.
The fact remains that these symptoms
will yield, in a fycet majority cf cases,
to a few doses cf Yrhitc’s Cream Ver
mifuge, the sure cxpcllant cf round
and pin worms. If your child has any
of tnese symptoms, try this harm
less, cld fashioned remedy, which
you ooT i ppt st T>cr bottle Trom
STROMS’ DRUG STORE
44-1
‘Willie, yoi'r arithme
tic paper is very poor.
I shall have to write to
your father.”
“Give him fits, teacher,
he wrote that paper.”
Be careful who writes your
insurance. Don't wait un
til the test of a fire or other
misfortunes comes to deter
mine whether they are prop
erly or poorly written. Con
sult this agency of the Hart
ford Fire Insurance Com
pany today.
Frank C. Robinson
Insurance Agency
O j
PHONE 66
/
McCormick
Cattle or sheep affected with
p oot rot should be promptly separ
ated from healthy animals, as this
disease spreads rapidly. In the
^arly stages, thorough cleansing
of the affected foot and an appli
cation of a carbolic-acid solution
(1 ounce to a pint of water), clean
stabling, and laxative feed will of
ten remedy the trouble. Preven
tive measures consist in cleaning
and disinfecting quarters where af
fected animals have been stabled,
and avoiding infected premises
and pastures. Cattle and sheep in
big heards are more liable to foot
rot, says the U. S. Department of
Agriculture, and the disease seems
to spread more rapidly where ani
mals are kept closely confined.
could possibly repay them.”
The ladies of the fourteen Home
Demonstration Clubs in McCor
mick County will meet in McCor-
[mick on April 5th for the purpose
i of organizing a County Council of
Farm Women. Plans for the day
are being completed and a p*»-
gram of the meeting will be pirb-
• :-:d next week.
MH8. : : ~ T T. A. STALlTOP/TH.
Homo F^mon^tratir.-- Agor.f
* • • v .r-<. c.s. •
Improved Uniform International
(By REV. P. B. FITZWATER’. 'b.D..
b^r of Faculty, Moody Bibla Institute
of Chicago.)
((£). 1930, Western Newspaper Uhlotr.)
-J*.
Lesson for March 30
REVIEW
GOLDEN TEXT—Unto us a child is
born, unto us a son Is given: and the
government shall be upon his shoulder:
and his name shall be called Wonder
ful, Counsellor, The Mighty God; The
Everlasting Father, The Prince of
Peace.
PRIMARY TOPIC—Jesus the Savior.
JUNIOR TOPIC—Jesus the Savior.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP
IC—He Went About Doing Good.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP
IC—The King Serving.
Since the lessons of the quarter are
hound together by the threefold unity
of one book, one theme, and one per
son, the best method of review for
young people and swlults is to present
the book of Matthew as a whole, and
each lesson in its relation to Matthew’s
central purpose. The central theme Is
Jesus Christ, the King, the fuliiller of
tiie Messianic hope.
Lesson for January 5.
Cod entered into eonvennnt with
David concerning the Kingdom (II
Sam. 7:8-10). Christ’s genealogy shows
His legal right to the throne of David
(1:1-17). The Messiah was not only
said to he the seed of the woman (Gen.
:1.j) and the son of a virgin (Isa.
7:1-1), hut the mighty God (Isa. !):G).
Jesus Christ, the King, was begotten
of the Holy Ghost and horn of Mary,
thus becoming Immanuel (Matt. 1:2.”,
cf. Isa. 7:14).
Lessor for January 12.
The King entered upon His official
work by being baptized. Christ’s bap
tism was His act of consecration to
the task of saving His people through
the sacrifice of Himself upon the cross.
Having received the official approval
from the open heavens, the King went
forth to the wilderness to meet and
overcome the devil (Heb. 2:44), Ills
victory demonstrated His ability to
accomplish the work of redemption.
Lesson for January 19.
The voice of John the Baptist being
stilled, the King becomes His own lifer-
aid. His message was the ftagme as
John’s, namely, “the kingdoip yt,heav-
en at hand,” which means the Messi
anic earth rule of Jesus Christ. He
called helpers to His side and went,
through Galilee preaching with tri
umphant success.
Lesson for January 26.
This lesson shows the characteris
tics and responsibilities of the sub
jects of the kingdom, the beatitudes
showing the characteristics, and salt
and light the responsibilities. The
life and testimony of the disciples arc
to light up the darkness of the world
and preserve it from decay.
Lccson for February 2.
This lesson displays the principles
which are to control the lives of the
subjects of the kingdom. They should
live a life of prayer, putting their
trust in the Heavenly Father for tem
poral blessings. Spiritual affairs are
to he first.
Leecon for February 9.
The subjects of the kingdom should
he free from censorious judgments, he
on the lookout for false teachers/avoi*
empty profession, and obey the words
of Christ, the King.
Lcccon for February 15.
In the performance of mighty works
the King demonstrated His ability to
adminster the affairs of the kingdom.
He showed His power over the chief
foes of mankind—sickness, sin. satanic
power, death, sorrow, and storms.
Lesson for February 23.
The kingdom was to he propagated
by sending forth twelve men to preach
the gospel of the kingdom. Their mis
sion was authenticated by supernat
ural deeds.
Lesson for March 2.
In the propagation of the kingdom,
violent opposition arose, resulting in
the plan to kill the King. Opposition
will he experienced by all who go forth
in Christ’s name.
Lesson for March 9.
The parables display the admixture
of moral and spiritual conditions in
the world between Christ’s crucifixion
and second coming. The parabolic
method of teaching makes clear the
truth to those who love it, hut con
ceals it from those who do not.
Lesson for March 16.
The parables of the wheat and tares,
mustard seed and leavened meal, show
the outward growth and inner decay
of I he work inaugurated by Christ in
the interval between His crucifixion
and second coming.
Lesson for March 23.
Though rejected by the nation, the
King continued His ministry of heal
ing and teaching.
Straightning the Kinks
The kinks and tangles in our lives
would straighten out wonderfully If
we would let them come oftener un
der the influence of the calm, clear
life of Jesus.—■Presbyterian of the
South.
Christians
The young Christian thinks himself
little; the growing Christian thinks
he is nothing; but the mature Chris
tian knows that he Is less than noth
ing.—John Newton.
CHinCMB
( ^-..y
McCormick Holiness
Church Schedule
McCormick —> Preaching service
Saturday night before 3r<l Sunday at
8 o’plock; third Sunday morning at
10:3b o’clock and third Sunday night
at 8 o’clock. A cordial welcome i?
extended to all.
O. E. Taylor,
Pastor.
-txt-
A. R. Presbyterian
Preaching at Mt. Carmel. S. ©•
he first and third Sabbaths at 11
Preaching at McCormick, S. C., o*
the second and fourth Sabbaths at
11:30 a. m.
Sabbath school at both churchee
•very Sabbath day throughout the
'•at.
Leon T. Preealy,
Paato*.
-txt-
Plum Branch Baptist
Church Schedule
Rev. J. L. BOBO, Pastor.
Sunday school every Sunday at
10 a.m., Luther Ridlehoover, super
intendent; preaching on the first
and third Sundays at 11 a. m.;
prayer meeting every Wednesday
evening at 8 o’clock.
Baptist Schedule
BETHANY—1st Sunday, preach
ing service, 3:30 p. m.; 3 rd Sun
day, 11:30 a. m.
BUFFALO—1st Sunday, Sunday
School, 10:30 a. m.; Preaching
11:30 a. m.; 3rd Sunday, Sunday
School 2:30 p. m.; Preaching, 3:30
p. m.
McCORMICK—1st Sunday, Sunday
School 10:00 a. m.; B. Y. P. U. 6r45
p. m.; Preaching 7:30 p. m.
2nd Sunday, Sunday School 10:00
a m.; Preaching 11:00 a. m.; B. Y.
P. U. 6:45 p. m.; Preaching 7:30
p. m.
3rd Sunday, Sunday School 10:00
a. m.; B. Y. P. U., 6:45 p. m.;
Preaching 7:30 p. m.
4th Sunday, Sunday School 10:00
a. m.; Preaching, 11:00 a. m.; B. Y.
P. U. 6:45 p. m.; Preaching, 7:30
p. m.
WILLINGTON — 2nd Sunday,
Preaching 4:00 p. m.; 4th Sunday,
Preaching 4:00 p. m.
W. H. BARFIELD,
Pastor.
-X-
Troy A. R. P. Charge
TROY—Sabbath school at 10:00
every Sabbath morning; morning
worship, 11:00. Y. P. C. U. meets
1st, 3rd and 5th Sabbath evenings
at 7:00 o’clock. Prayer meeting, 2nd
and 4th Sabbath evening at 7:00.
BRADLEY—Sabbath school, 3:00
p. m. 1st and 3rd Sabbaths; wor
ship 3:30 p. m.
CEDAR SPRINGS—Sabbath school
at 3:30 o’elock, 2nd and 4th Sab
baths; worship 4:60 p. m.
J. H. BUZHARDT,
Pastor.
-XXJ-
McCormick Methodist
. Church Schedule
McCormick — Sunday school every
Sunday at 10:15 a. m.; Preaching
at 11:15 a. m. 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Sun
days, and at 7:30 p. m. on fourth
Sundays.
Prayer meeting Wednesday even
ing at 7:30 o’clock.
Board of Stewards meets Monday
night following 1st Sundays.
REPUBLICAN
Sunday School at 11 a. m. on 2nd
and 4th Sundays. 1st and 3rd Sun
days at 2:30 p. m. Preaching on
1st and 3rd Sundays at 3 p. m.
Troy — Sunday school at 10:00 a.
m. 1st, 3rd and 4th Sundays; 2nd
Sundays at 3 p. m.; preaching 2nd
Sundays 3:30 p. m.; 4th Sundays 11
a. m.
Beulah — Preaching every 4th
Sunday afternoon at 3:30 o’clock.
J. A. BLEDSOE. Pastor.
Eyes examin
ed. Spectacles,
''b Eye Glasses,
and Artificial (Cyes fitted without
Drugs, Drops or Danger.
DR. HENRY J. GODIN
Optometrist)
956 Broad Street Augusta, Ga.
FORD BATTERIES
$7.95
WHITTLE BATTERY
SERVICE
622 BROAD PHONE 1168
AUGUSTA, GA.