McCormick messenger. (McCormick, S.C.) 1902-current, June 26, 1930, Image 6
Thursday, June 26, 1930
MeCOHATICK MESSENQEH, McCOHAflCK, Sotttfl Carolina.
Page Number Si*
A RECEIPT FOR EVERT
Paying your bills with cash is running the risk of
having to pay them again, probably by mistake and
possibly by dishonest design.
All risk and worry is automatically eliminated if
you pay by check, for if you save your cancelled
checks, you have a defnite receipt for every trans
action.
Any argument is easily settled when you produce
your cancelled check.
AVAIL YOURSELF pF THE SERVICES
OF THIS BANK
We suggest you open a checking account at this
hank which offers all the safety, protection and fac
ilities that could be wished or expected in a modern
bank.,
»
You’ll find it mighty convenient and pleasing to do
business here, besides the protection that is afforded.
Save every penny of your surplus earnings for the
needs of tomorrow. It's a mighty wise idea.
THE PEOPLES BANK
McCormick, S. C.
QA
Jioast Lamb
Served In Numerous
Combinations
Have You Been Enumerated?
If not, or if you have any doubt, fill out this coup
on, place it in an envelope, and* mail it to
Walter S. Peterson,
Supervisor of the Census,
Greenwood, S. C.
On April 1, 1930,1 was living of the address given
below, but to the best of my knowledge I have not
been enumerated, either there of anywhere else.
Street and No.
1930
*1*. Nm.
xJuae 1930
I. w. k. ht s«.
2 3 ,4» 5 6 7
9 K> tl t2 13 Ml
15 16 17 IS 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 25
29 30 >.9. « *
ir
In the Month of June-
ADVERTISE
The time of year when everything
about you takes on new life. Buzz
ing 1 bees, sweet scented flowers and
beautiful sunshine revive ambitions.
. . . Pep Up Your*Advertising . . .
Get the business that is rightfully
yours through the columns of this
prQgressive newspaper. Just phone 58.
We have a supply of suitable pictures
to go along with advertisements.
ITORMICK MESSENGEi
McCormick, S. C.
Custom has placed special em
phasis on two accompaniments to
roast lamb—peas and mint sauce.
But there is no rule, social, culin
ary, or dietary, requiring this com
bination, or preventing the use of
other relishes and vegetables. Var
iety in the menus and contrast in
flavor, color, and texture are as
sured by changing occasionally to
other combinatio-ns, says the Bu
reau of Home Economics, United
States Department of Agriculture.
Vegetables which in themselves
are pronounced in flavor are es
pecially appropriate with a roast of
lamb. The same is true of lamb
chops, stuffed breast of lamb, and
other lamb dishes. In a lamb stew,
onion, green pepper, and turnip, all
having decided * flavor of their
own, give zest to the meat flavor.
And when roast lamb is reheated
there is the fine and unusual relish
obtained by making a cur.ry sauce,
which seems to be especially ad
apted to lamb.
For the roast relisl^es like cur
rant jelly, spiced conserves and
pickles, and horseradish sauce are
all good, in addition to any vege
tables served. English cooks some
times have caper sauce or mint
sauce, both of which are made with
vinegar to give a pleasant mild
acidity of flavor. American cooks
seem to like their mint occasional
ly in the form of a green-colored
jelly made from apple pectin and
flavored with mint, as mint gelatin
served as a salad or a garnish.
There is no logical reason why
other vegetables may not be served
in place of peas or to accompany
them. For a change, the home-
economics specialists suggest but
tered shredded string beans, or
quick-cooked spinach, or onions,
baked or boiled or creamed, or as
paragus, or turnips, white or yel
low, or cauliflower. Nor should the
possibilities of good salad flavors
be overlooked. Plain lettuce with
a tart dressing is sufficient for a
dinner salad; tomato, cucumber,
and lettuce, in season, is always an
appetizing salad with any meat
and excellent with roast lamb;
kumquat, endive, and watercress
salad is unusual and colorful
enough for a company meal;
good tart dinner salad. As roast
grapefruit and lettuce, too, is a
lamb with a gravy is somewhat
rich a light French dressing is pre
ferable to a heavy mayonnaise
with all these salads.
SEES HEM CLAIMS
ON FUTURE BANKER!
American Bankers Association
Oificial Declares That Banking
Changes Creating Large Bank
Systems Will Call for Broader
Social Viewpoints.
-txi-
Paraffin On
Honey Sections
Paraffining sections of comb
honey, though not a common prac
tice, is one that should be followed
by all honey producers, say agri
culturists of the U. S. Department
of Agriculture. Paraffining makes
comb honey more attractive to the
consumer. Unused paraffined sec-
cions will keep for another season
without becoming dirty and dis
colored. Use only paraffin of the
oest grade and the highest melting
point. It should be heated to a
«emperature of 180 degrees to 190
degrees Fahrenheit. With an ordin
ary varnish brush, give a chin,
:mooth coat to the tops of the sec
tions after they are in the supers
and before they are given to the
bees.
— X -
Guard Against Bloat
To prevent “bloating” of live
stock after pasturing -on sweet-
clover, be sure the animals are not
turned into sweetclover pasture
when they are hungry. Bloating
is usually owning to stock gorging
themselves on green, succulent
teed, especially in May and early
June when the grass is tender.
When the cow r s are stabled for
milking, feed some hay, silage, or
grain before returning them to
pasture. Animals on sweetclover
pasture continuously, need access
:o hay, straw, or growing grass. In
sections having soft water, put
: .ime in the drinking water.
t 1X2
Fruit enough to nake vinegar
for a year’s supply is wasted on
many farms. Surplus or inferior
fruit will make good vinegar. Ap
ples, grapes, peaches, ora )e •-
cimmcns, and some berries are sat
isfactory, say scientists of the J. S.
Department of Agriculture. Any
fruit containing enough sugar will
serve the purpose.
Larger scale group or branch bank
ing will /inevitably bring a new era of
banking organization and operations
to the United States and bankers will
have to develop “new conceptions, new
administrative methods and new eco
nomic views,” Rudolf S. Hecht, Chair
man of the Economic Policy Commis
sion of the American Bankers Associa
tion, recently told tho members of the
American Institute of Banking.
The institute is the educational sec
tion of the association and he empha
sized the point that the new e^a in
banking demanded “that we must step-
up our education so that banking shall
be fortified for new responsibilities.”
What the Future Calls For
“We must broaden our social concep
tion of banking,” Mr. Hecht said. “Not
only for the technical operations of the
new hanking must we fit ourselves, but
both as individuals and an organized
profession we must charge ourselves
with serious consideration of the so
cial problems that are involved. Al
ready we hear murmurings and fears
an^ doubts as to whether the changes
that are coming about in hanking in
the extension of group and branch sys
tems do not constitute the looming of
a new financial menace, a monopolistic
threat not only to the Individual unit
banker, but to the financial liberty of
society in general. I am stating these
things merely as facts that 'must he
taken into consideration in our studies.
“Public opinion cannot he ignored
by any business, least of all by bank
ing, which is admittedly semi-public
in character and is, therefore, subject
to special supervision by the- consti
tuted authorities. If banking develops
tendencies that, give rise to public
fears, we must so conduct ourselves
as to reassure all doubts.
“For this is true,—that business suc
ceeds only by serving society—that no
business can permanently prosper
which does not both render service to
the public and at the same time con
vince the public that it is rendering
that service. Banking, therefore, must
take cognizance of what the public is
saying of this new era in its develop
ment.
“It must be part of the technique
.of modern hanking administration,
whatever form our enlarged institu
tions take, to avoid the creation of
monopolies, or ever, the appearance of
such a centralization of financial
power as to be able to exercise an un
due influence over public or private
finanee or other lines of business. Tho
public’s right to the safeguards of fair
competition must be observed.
Must Preserve Individual Initiative
“It must also bo an item of man
agement that individual initiative and
opportunity shall bo maintained. If
America has outstripped other nations
in the distribution of the benefits of
its progress, it is due to the fact that
there are no barriers of social caste
or business tradition against advance
ment for character, ability, and initia
tive. American business has learned
that it serves itself best by encourag
ing by every practical means individ
ual ambition and initiative, and hurts
itself most by repressing or neglecting
them. Competition for efficiency, both
within an organization and between
organizations, will prevent any insti
tution from long enduring in which
maintenance of opportunity and recog
nition of initiative are not controlling
principles of management. As heads
of the greatest of our financial and in
dustrial institutions stand men who
started from the humblest of begin
nings. Through ail tho grades of ex
ecutive authority and reward stand
men in positions in keeping, generally
speaking, with their individual merits.
I, personally, see" no reason for fearing
that the enlarged banking organiza
tions which the future may hold would
necessarily supply, future hank em
ployees with any less opportunity for
achievement than unit hanking.
“Again, a major consideration of ad
ministration in any multiple form of
banking organization must he its pub
lic relations in every community it
touches. Its foremost consideration
must be actually and visibly to serve
tho economic upbuilding of that com
munity. No system will he long tol
erated whose local members work, or
are suspected as working, to draw
economic strength from one placo to
enlarge the finanical power of another.
The local unit bank has always been
part and parcel of the communities
where it lives—and no system can last
which does not make it a major prin
ciple of operating technique to serve,
and not exploit, the communities into
whose business lives it enters.”
Growth of Banking Education
DENVER, Colo.—At the American
Institute of Banking convention held
here last month tho growth in the
effort among hank employees to pro
vide themselves with hanking educa
tion was shown by the fact, as re
ported by one speaker, that 12 years
ago tho institute had SO study chap
ters, today 20S, and that its enroll
ment in the study courses had grown
from 11,000 to 45,000, or an increase
of over 300 per cent. The graduates
number nearly 14,000. The institute
is tho ccThcallcnal section of the Ameri
can Bankers Association through
which bank workers are given instruc
tion in theoretical and practical sub
jects relating to their business.
Improved Uniform International
SundaySchool
’ Lesson’
<By TiEV. P. R FITZWATEP.. D. P., Mem
ber of Faculty, Moody Bible JnstituUj
of Chicago.)
((c). 19.T0. Western Newspaper Union.)
Lesson for June 29
REVIEW: THE GOSPEL OF THE
KINGDOM CONTINUED
GOLDEN TEXT—Thou art the Christ,
the Bon of the living God.-
PRIMARY TOPIC—Making Jesus
Known.
JUNIOR TOPIC—Believing in Jesus.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP
IC—What. Shall I do with Jesus?
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP
IC—The Meaning of Christian Disciple-
ship.
An Unpleasant Subject
All of the functions of life are not
pleasant to consider. Perhaps this is
why some mothers refuse to think that
such symptoms as restless sleep, loss of
flesh, lack of appetite or itching nose
and fingers in their children, can be
caused by round or pin worms. Many
mothers have proven, however, that a
few doses of White’s Cream Vermi
fuge, that sure and harmless worm
expellant, will make these symptoms
disappear. You can getAVhite’sCream
Vermifuge for 35 cents per bottle from
STROMS’ DHUG STORE
chum cm
McCormick Holiness
Church Schedule
The plan of review must always be
determined by the teacher in the light
of the grade of the school and the
aptitudes of the pupils. Fop senior and
adult classes the best method will be
to recall that all the lessons of the
quarter are from the book of Matthew,
whieli lias as its theme Jesus Christ,
the Messianic King, and Mis Kingdom,
and to present each lesson in its rt'*
lation to this Ventral purpose. The
lessons have a threefold unity, name-
kv, one,book, one theme, one person.
Lesson for April 6. To prepare the
disciples for the dark hour of the cross,
Jesus sought to lead them to a clear
apprehension of His purpose and mis
sion. After Peter’s confession of. Him
as the Messiah. Jesus showed to the
disciples that He must come into His
place of triumph through the tragedy
of the cross.
Lesson for April 13. The greatest
in the kingdom are those.who possess
cldldlike humility. The condition of en
trance Into the kingdom Ts true c*on-
version, or birth from above.
Lesson for April 20. In this lesson
we have divine instruction as to he
havior in ('use of ill Treatment. Those
who are <’IiristliUe shall suffer perseeti
tion. Those who have entered the king
dom by birth from above—those who
have received forgiveness from God—
will forgive Nieir fellows.
Lesson for April 27. Riches are de
ceitful. Possessors thereof are prone
to put their trust in them. It is most
difficult for those who are rich to give
place to spiritual things.
Lesson for-May 4. Those who would
be greatest in the kingdom should,
like Christ the King, take the place
of self-abasement. In love, Christ gave
Himself for others. He substituted
"the greatness of love for the love of
greatness.*’
Lesson for May 11. To the nation
which rejected Jesus as King and was
endeavoring to kill Him. at the ap
pointed time, in the councils of God,
He officially presented Himself as
King, in •fulfillment of prophecy.
Lesson for May 13. Under the figure
of a mgrrtage. Jesus set forth the
privileges and benefits of the kingdom.
He used marriage, the highest ideal of
love and friendship known to man, to
show the benefits of the kingdom.
Lesson for May 25. In the Olivet
discourse Jesus outlined the events lie
tiie world to take place in the inter
val between His crucifixion arid flis
so^md coming. The parable of the ten
virgins shows the right behavior of
believers in this present age in view
of the coming of the Lord.
Lesson for June 1. By talents is
meant whatever faculties and powers
one possesses as God’s gifts, such as
physical strength, reason, knowledge,
speech, song, or money. All these
should be employed so as to honor God
who gave them. A reckoning time is
coming when account shall be ren
dered for their use. Tfiis wiii be at
Christ’s second coming.
Lesson for June 8. Mary of Bethany,
because of her keen apprehension, saw
that the Lord’s body would be broken
and that His precious life would go
out at a time when no one could lov
ingiy minister to Him. She therefore
anointed Him as against that dread
day. When the disciples criticised her
act, she was defended by Jesus.
, Lesson for June 15.—Jesus did not
die as a martyr or as an example, but
to make an atonement for man’s sin.
The supreme value of the lessons for
the quarter centers in the cross. Teach
ers. it is not a matter of getting your
children to learn the lessons of at
great teacher, but to induce them to
have faith in Christ’s sacrificial death.
Lesson for June 22. The resurrec
tion of Jesus demonstrated His Mes-
siahship and deity. The conuuaind of
Jesus to preach tiie gospel in ail! the
world is backed by His resurrection
power.
McCormick —. Preaching service
Saturday night before 3rd Sunday al
8 o'clock; third Sunday morning al
10:30 o’clock and third Sunday nighl
at 8 o’clock. A cordial welcome i*
extended to all.
O. E. Taylor,
Pastor.
-txt-
A. R. Presbyterian
Preaching at Mt. Carmel. S. C n oa
he first and third Sabbaths mt 12
l m.
Preaching at McCormick, S. C., o*
the second and fourth Sabbaths mt
11:30 m. m.
Sabbath school mt both rhnrrhem
svery Sabbath day throughout the
ear.
/ Laos T. Preasly,
Paatas.
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.
The Oil of Joy
Christinnity wants nothing so much
in the world as sunny people, and the
old are hungrier for love than for
bread, and the oil of joy is very cheap,
and if you can help the poor on with
the garment of praise, it will be bet
ter for them than blankets.—Henry
Drummond.
A Moral Pivot
The Hindu professor of modern his
tory in a South India college said.to
me: “My study of modern history has
shown me that there is a Moral Pivot
in the world today, and that the best
life of both East and West is more
and more revolving about that center
—that Moral Pivoting is the person
of Jesus Christ.”—E. Stanley Jones.
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. 6:46
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 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. XL 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’clock, 2nd f.nd 4th Sab
baths; worship 4:00 p. m. ’
J. H. BUZHARDT,
Pastor
-txt-
McCormick Methodist
Church Schedule
Force of Character Necessary
The most brilliant qualities become
useless when they are not sustained
by force of character.—Segur.
McCormick — Sunday school every
Sunday at 10:15 a. m.; Preaching
at 11:16 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; tuf
Sundays at 3 p. m.; preaching 2nd
Sundays 3:30 p. m.; 4th Sundays 11
a. m.
Beulah — Preaching every 4tli
Sunday afternoon at 3:80 o’clock.
J. A. BLEDSOE, Pastor