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f Thursday, July 31, 1930 McCQKMICK MESSENGER, McCGRMICK, Soul* Carotin* Page Number Sfif CARDS FOR MAGISTRATE , I hereby announce my candidacy for re-election as magistrate of the McCormick Magisterial District, subject to the rules and regula tions of the Democratic party. Having had 14 years* experience, which is a valuable equipment, I feel that I am qualified to fill the office, and I shall highly appre ciate all suppoprt and influence I receive in the coming primary. J. B. HOLLOWAY. FOR MAGISTRATE I hereby announce my candidacy for the office of Magistrate of the McCormick Magisterial District, subject to the rules of the Demo cratic primary, and shall highly appreciate the suffrage and influ ence qf the voters. H. C. WALKER. FOR MAGISTRATE I hereby announce my candidacy for re-election as Magistrate of the Parksville Magisterial District, sub ject to the rules of the Democratic primary. I shall highly appreciate your support in the coming elec tion. A. V. MORGAN. FOR MAGISTRATE • V • • 4 1 I hereby announce myself as candidate for Magistrate of the Parksville Magisterial District, sub ject to the rules and regulations of the democratic party. I have , had 12 years experience as magistrate, and feel that I can serve the peo ple efficiently, if elected. -Also, can and wfll be ready at' all times for such service. I will appreciate the support of my friends and the vot ers of this district. R. L. BODDIE. FOR MAGISTRATE I hereby announce my candidacy for re-election to the office of Magistrate of the Willington Mag isterial District, subject to the rules of the Democratic party. Your support and influence in the coming primary shall be highly ap preciated. J. M. GIBERT. FOR PROBATE JUDGE I hereby announce my candidacy for re-election to the office of pro bate judge for McCormick County, subject to the rules and regula tions of the Democratic party. I highly appreciate the splendid sup port I have always received at the hands of the voters and trust that my honest efforts to faithfully per form the duties of said office meet with your approval, and that I again receive your support and in fluence. L. G. BELL. FOR PROBATE JUDGE - I hereby announce'hiy candidacy for the office of probate judge of McCormick County, subject to the rules of the Democratic party. I shall highly appreciate the suf frage and influence of the voters in the coming election. JOHN C. CORLEY. FOR CORONER I hereby announce my candidacy for re-election as Coroner of Mc Cormick County, subject to the rules of the Democratic party. I shall greajtly appreciate your sup port in< the coming election. T. J. LYON. FOR CORONER I hereby announce my candidacy for Coroner' of McCormick County, subject to the rules of the Demo cratic party. I shall highly ap preciate the suffrage and influ ence of the voters in the coming primary. M. L. B. STURKEY. FOR CORONER I herqhy announce my candidacy for Corppar of McCormick County, subject ^ < ^he rulea of demq- cratic primary. I shalljgpeatly ap* predate jthe^suppdrt 'amMAfluence of the'voter? in the coming elec tion. * T. B. GOFF. POLITICAL CARDS FOR STATE SENATE I hereby announce my candidacy for State senator from McCormick County, subject to the rules . and regulations of the Democratic par ty. I highly appreciate the en dorsement received in the past, and earnestly solicit your suffrage and influence in the coming pri- marv. W. K. CHARLES. FOR STATE SENATE I hereby announce myself as candidate,for State senate from McCormick County, subject to the rules of the Democratic primary. I shall highly appreciate the vote and influence of the people in the coming election:. R. G. KILLINGSWORTH. FOR STATE SENATE I hereby announce myself as a candidate for State senator from McCormick County, subject to the rules of the democratic party. Your support will be highly appreciated. J. J. DORN. FOR HOUSE REPRESENTATIVES I am a candidate for house of representatives from McCormick County, subject to the rules of the democratic party. If elected, I pledge myself in defense of those principles which promote the wel fare of county and State. I earn estly solicit the support and influ ence of all the voters of the coun ty. D. LESTER WIDEMAN. T . * V I .. . FOR HOUSE REPRESENTATIVES I hereby announce my candidacy for re-election to the House of Representatives from McCormick County, subject to the rules and regulations of the Democratic par ty. I greatly appreciate the won derful voce given me two years ago, and earnestly solicit your suffrage in the next primary. J. O. McDANIEL. FOR HOUSE REPRESENTATIVES I hereby respectfully announce my candidacy for House of Rep resentatives from McCormick County, subject to the rules of the Democratic primary. The support and influence of the voters shall be highly appreciated in the coming election. W. D. MORRAH. FOR HOUSE REPRESENTATIVES I hereby respectfully announce my candidacy for House of Repre sentatives from McCormick Coun ty, subject to the rules and regul ations of the Democratic party. I shall highly appreciate the suf frage and influence of the voters in the coming election. T. A. DOWTIN. FOR COTTON WEIGHER t I hereby announce my candidacy for re-election as Cotton Weigher at Plum Branch, subject to the rules of the democratic primary. I highly appreciate the support received in the past, and earnestly solicit a continuance of same in the coming primary. S. W. WIDEMAN. FOR COTTON WEIGHER I hereby announce my candidacy for Cotton Weigher at Plum Branch, subject to the rules and regulations of the Democratic par ty. I rhall highly appreciate your vote and influence in the coming primary. W. E. FREELAND. FOR COTTON WEIGHER I hereby respectfully announce my candidacy for re-election as Cotton Weigher at McCormick subject to the rules of the Demo cratic party. Let me thank you for the support I have heretofore received at your hands and assure you I shall highly appreciate your suffrage and influence in the coming primary, : D. M. BULLOCK. Three thousand cases of Ameri can soap went over to Russia on a recent boat. Now won't aU of the street orators have a great time. POLITICAL CARDS FOR TREASURER I hereby announce my candidacy for the office of treasurer of Mc Cormick County, subject to the rules of the Democratic party. Due to varied business experiences I feel that I am fully competent to handle the affairs of the office, and if elected I shall conduct the same in a fair and impartial man ner. I am a World War veteran, having;;, served my country two years, J|one year in France and Italy, f shall highly appreciate the support and influence of the vot ers. YANCEY E. SEIGLER. FOR COUNTY TREASURER I hereby announce my candidacy for re-election to the office of County Treasurer for McCormick County, subject to the rules and regulations of the Democratic par ty. I highly appreciate the splendid support I received at the hands of the voters four years ago. Since elected ;tO’ this office, I have en deavored to discharge the duties in an economical, courteous and ef ficient manner, and if re-elected '/ill continue to protect the inter ests of the. taxpayers of McCor mick County to the best of my ability. I earnestly solicit your suffrage and influence in the com ing primary. T. J. PRICE. FOR TREASURER * K- *'* I hereby announce myself as candidate for Treasurer of McCor mick County, subject to the rules of the Democratic party. I feel that I am capable of handling the affair df this office, and if elect ed, promise to do so in a fair and business-like manner. I shall high ly appreciate the suffrage and in fluence of the voters in the com ing election. PAUL J. ROBINSON. FOR AUDITOR I hereby announce my cdndidacy for re-election for county auditor, subject to the rules of the Demo cratic primary. Your confidence and support will be appreciated. You have been very kind to me, for which I feel grateful. If possible, will try <to give even better service in the future. C. W. PENNAL. FOR AUDITOR I hereby announce my candidacy for Auditor of McCormick County, subject to the rules of the Demo cratic party. I feel that I am thoroughly competent to attend ta the duties of this office, and shall highly appreciate your vote and in fluence in the coming primary. T. L. EDMUNDS. FORD BATTERIES $7.95 WHITTLE BATTERY SERVICE 622 BROAD PHONE 1166 AUOUSTA. GA. 6 6 6 Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia in 30 minutes, checks a Cold the First day, and checks Malaria in three days. 666 also in Tablets Eyes examin ed. Spectacles, Eye Glasses, and Artificial Zyes fitted without Drugs, Drops or Danger. DR. HENRY J. GODIN Optometrist} 956 Broad Street Augusta. Ga. Unintentional Suicide Many people are slowly poisoning themselves just as surely as if they drank iodine every morning for break fast. They are daily absorbing the toxins, or poisons, created by accumu lated waste matter in their constipated digestive systems. Sooner or later disease wfll conquer their weakened bodies. If you have dizzy spells, headaches, coated tongue, bad breath, insomnia, no appetite, bilious attacks or pains in the pack and limbs, you are probably suffering/rornself pbisonin^caused by constipatiom Tqe surest and bleasan teat relief for this condition is Ilerbine, the vegetable cathartic which acts in the natural way. Get a bottle today froze STROMS* DRUG STORE Thin, Pale, * Weak 1 "I had been through a bad spell of sick ness which left me very weak,” says Mrs. Virginia Spruce, of Stapleton, Va. "I was pale and felt lifeless, and my strength did not return. ' ”1 spent most of my time on the bed. I was very nervous, and the least thing upset me. I did not have strength enough to lift a broom. At times I would have bad headaches, which would hurt me until I could hardly see. "Someone asked me why I did not try Cardui I had read of it, so I thought I would see what it would do for me. It was really remarkable how I came out. My strength re turned, and my health was bet ter than it had been in years. I gained in weight about ten pounds. My color was good, and I ceased to suffer from headaches. I have told my friends about Cardui because I was benefited after taking it.** CARDUI Helps Women to Health Take Thedford’s Black-Draught for Constipation, Indigestion. Biliousness- 1 cent a dose. £. 18 4 Quality Of Cit izenship Basis Of /) Development “Citizenship is and always has been a tremendous asset in goven- mental affairs. The higher and finer the quality of citizenship in a country the better the govern ment and the greater the progress and development and well-being of the nation.’* writes the Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska^ George A. Williams, in the United States Daily. He continues, in part: “In the last analysis, a commun ity, a state, or a nation is just what its people make it. This is particularly true in a representa tive government like ours, where the people have the right to make and alter their government and to choose their rulers and make their own laws. “How important it is then that we give heed to the character of our citizenship and seek to develop the qualities of patriotism and loy alty in the truest sense of the terms. ; . . “America should guard well the foundation pillars upon which the Republic is builded. I speak ad visedly when I say America needs today a new baptism of citizen ship. And another has said, ‘not a mere sprinkling at the altar but a regular orthodox immersion in deep running water.* '“The foundation of our Gov ernment is the Constitution. All the power and strength and beauty of this, the greatest Republic of all ages, together with our rights and liberties, can only be preserved to us by a secred regard for and a faithful observance of the prin ciples of the Constitution and the laws founded thereon. “There is too much disregard for law in our land. There is too much crime, and too many crimes going unpunished. No government is se cure when its citizens exercise a choice as to the laws they shall or shall not observe. “In our courts there are too many lawyers who ignore the fund amentals of our Constitution—jus tice and equity—and who prosti tute their profession in their ef forts to save criminals from de served punishment.” X Bovine T. B. Declines A steady decline in the preval ence of bovine tuberculosis in the United States has taken place in the last few years as a result of the co-operative campaign to eradicate the infection, the United States Department of Agriculture reports. The average infection among cat tle, for the entire country, is now 1.7 per cent, whereas in 1922 it was 4 per cent. On May 1, 1930, there were 946 counties officially designated as “modified accredited areas,” also 42 towns in Vermont, indicating that these areas are practically free from bovine tuberculosis. X The treasury department is con sidering a plan to wash our money, just as if a germ could live on oar wages. Improved Uniform International Sunday School v Lesson f (By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D. D.. Mem ber of Faculty, Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) (©. 1930. Western Newspaper Onion.) Lesson for August 3 NAOMI AND RUTH: A STUDY IN RACIAL RELATIONSHIPS LrJtSSON TEXT—The Book of Buth. GOLDEN TEXT—And hath made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth. PRIMARY TOPIC—Ruth a Helpful Daughter. JUNIOR TOPIC—Naomi's Faithful ness Leads Ruth to God. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP IC—Our Neighbors of/Other Races. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP IC—The Way to World Brotherhood. I. How Naomi and Ruth Wero Brought Together (1 • On account of famine In Bethlehem of Judah, Naomi with her husband and two sons sojourned in the land of Moab. After the death of her bus- band, her two sons married Moabitish women. After a time her sons died also. After the death of her sons, Naomi resolved to return to her home land, having heard that the Lord had visited his people in giving them bread. They went to Moab to escape trouble but only got into more. This is always the case when God’s people go into the world to escape difficul ties. It was not until Naomi was thus chastised that she resolved to return. When the time came for her to go. Ruth and Orpah accompanied her for a distance. II. Ruth's Nobis Choice (1:16-18). Greatly as Naomi loved her daugh fers-lw-law, she would not have them go Into this matter blindly. She wished them to know the seriousness of their action. 1. No chance for theiry to marry- again (v. 11). . Naomi told them that she had no more sons for whom they could wait. In that day for a woman to be un married was the greatest disgrace. Society differed then from now. No avenues were open by which women could earn their living. 2. Heathen gods must be renounced (v. 15). Idolatrous worship could no: be car ried on in the land where God’s peo ple dwelt. This was delioateiy touched upon when Orpah went back. She went back when it was plain that there was no chance for her to get a husband. After Or pah’s return Naomi put an ad ditional test upon Ruth, that of giving up her religion. Ruth was equal to the occasion. Her mind was fully made up. She was willing to accept as her God the One who was able to produce in his subjects the nobility of character she had observed in Naomi. Ruth’s determination was so definite and unfaltering that her expressions have come down to us in words which “no poetry has outrivaled and no pathos has exceeded, and which has gone through centuries with the music which will not let them be .forgot ten.’* She was determined to share Naomi’s journey, her home, her lot in life, and grave in death, whatever or wherever that would be. To crown It all, she renounced her heathen gods and worshiped Jehovah, the true God. III. Blessings Which Attended Ruth’s Choice. 1. She found the true God (1:1(>). Instead of a heathen god who was unable to help her, she had the Living God, the God of Israel. 2. She found friends (ch. 2). As she went to glean she was led to the field of Boaz, a man of grace and wealth. The servants of Boaz treated her with consideration. 3. A good husband and happy home (ehs. 3 and 4). 4. An honored place in the Israel* itish nation (4:13-17). 5. She became a link in the chain of the Redeemer’s ancestry (4:18-22 of. Matt. 1:5). The one who fully decides for Christ and gives up all for Him shall receive a hundredfold in this life and In the world to come eternal life. The story of Ruth is a fine example, first, of right racial relationship. The union of Ruth with Israel was around the true God. And, second, of dis pensations! truth: (1) The famine in the land indi cates the testing of the Jews in the great tribulation. (2) The going into Moab indicates the sojourn of the Israelites among the nations. (3) The sickness and death in Moab indicates the chastisement of the Jews and their sorrows in the present age. (4) The return to the land indi cates the gathering of Israel to their own land, Palestine. (5) Ruth’s decision indicates the gathering of the Gentiles through the influence of the Jews. (C) The marriage between Boaz and Ruth indicates the union of the church with Jesus Christ. Add* Charm to Ckaractor Small kindnesses, small courtesies, small considerations, habitually prac ticed in our social Intercourse, give a greater charm to the character* than the display of great talents and ac complishments.—Kelty. i . - Fmdiaf Happiaoss | Gpd made the world (to be happy in, but all -the happiness abme 1 people get is hunting for trouble on a dark night with a dim lantern.—Herald of Gos pel Liberty. Beery Woman Knows Every woman knows how easy it £s to bum or scald herself while working in her home. Every woman knows that these bums and scalds are painful and sometimes very slow to heal. Every woman should know that the pain of bums and scalds will, be quickly re lieved, infection positively prevented and speedy healing assured if Liquid Borozone is instantly applied. Get a bottle of Liquid Borozone and keep it handy in your medicine cabinet. Sola by STROMS* DRUG STORE McCormick Holiness Church Schedule McCormick —« Preaching service Saturday night before 3rd Sunday at 8 o’clock; third Sunday morning at 10:30 o’clock and third Sunday night at 8 o’clock. A cordial welcome in extended to all. O. E. Taylor, Pastor. , txt A. R. Presbyterian Preaching at Mt. Carmel. S. C H o* he first and third Sabbaths at 11 i m. Preaching at McCormick, S. C. # eft the second and fourth Sabbaths at 11:80 a. m. Sabbath school at hoik, rhnrcksa every Sabbath day throughout the wav. Leoa Tv Pveeely, 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. X- 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. 6:45 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. y 4th Sunday, Sunday School 10:06 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 Sabbatli 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 and 4th Sab baths; worship 4:00 p. m. J. H. BUZHARDT, Pastor. XX* McCormick Methodist Church Schedule McCormick — Sunday school ovary 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 fouftb Sundays. Prayer meeting Wednesday ovan- 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; tn4 Snndays at 3 p. m.; preaching SnA Sundays 3:30 p. m.; 4th Snndays 11 a. m. Beulah —* Preaching ovary 4tb Sunday afternoon at 8:80 o’doek. J. A. BLEBSOE, Pastor It is not the railroad crossing which does the damage. It is what meets there. ^ .j.