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% TMirsday, January 22, 1931 McCORMICK MESSENGER, McCORMICK, SOUTH CAROLINA PAGE NUMBER SIX ij YOU DON’T HAVE TO RISK ONE PENNY to find out just how good our foodstuffs are or how pleasing our service. Just ask your friends and neighbors there will be many of them to tell you. for fifty per cent or more will be our regular cus tomers. High quality is at no pfemium here. Our prices are consistently lower, enabling you to save money the year around. Our delivery service will save you much time and effort. Just phone Vis your order. X T. MARTIN Main Stret McCormick, S. C. \ * * & * . > ‘ a n Save your surplus earnings and put it to work for you in a savings account at this bank. * N . Put away a fixed amount each pay day and add any other surplus you * * t • • • may have, to it. • The resources of this bank are ' ,v • - * * ■' '* •** - . * • ' • , sound and strong. - The management is capable and the fire and theft pro- tection good. You’ll like the service and co-opera- tion we extend you. i THE PEOPLES BANK McCORMICK, S. C. PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED RIGHT There is an expert pharmacist in charge here at all times who can fill your prescriptions quickly and correct ly. Only the purest and freshest drugs are used and ev ery detail receives the most careful attention. When time is an important factor, you will find that you will not lose a minute at this store, for we use only the tftne that is absolutely necessary. If it is something you are needing for the sick room, we have it, for we carry a most complete line of all sick room and first aid supplies. And if it comes from this>store you can rest assured that it is .the very best quality to be had for the money. STROMS’ DRUG STORE McCormick, S. C. 33 Night after night I could not sleep,” writes Mrs. Mary J. Roberts, 117 West Franklin St., Raleigh, N. C. r T would lie awake half the night. I was dizzy and weak, suffered frequently with pains in my side and small part of my back. "When I was a girl, my mother gave me jpardui, and it did me so much ^ood, I thought I would try it agaim I took five bottles, and I feel like a new person. "I think it is fine... I would ad- vise every woman who is weak to try Cardui, for it has cer- Take Thed ford’s Black-Draught for Constipation. Indigestion, Biliousness. Only 1 oOnt a dose. a We Have The Tools You Need There are so many little repair jobs that you can do yourself, and many little conveniences that you can construct if you have the proper tools. It will occupy spare moments to advantage, and save the cost of hiring some one else to do it. WHITE HARDWARE CO. MAIN STREET McCORMICK. S. C. LSU 39 a Experience Service Facilities < Those are the important things in measuring the worth J - of a funeral director, and should be borne in mind when you have occasion to choose one DISTANCE IS NO HINDRANCE TO OUR SERVICE and there is no additional charge for service out of town J. S. STROM Main Street McCormick, S. C. Take a Tip From The French On Preparing Meat *• . •. French cookery is synonymous with good cookeir arid upon an alysis of the recipes we shall find that.it is also synonymous with economical cookery. The unfam iliar names attached to French dishes on the menu are likely to lead to the conclusion that all French cookery is fussy and extrav agant, but this is far from the facts. There are; two distinct types of French cookery: One is known as “La Haute Cuisine” which refers to the more expensive and time-taking cookery in the wealthy home; the other is called “La Cuis ine Bourgeoise” which is the name applied to the cookery of the fam ily of moderate means. The home economics department of the National Live Stock and Meat Board offers these recipes as examples of the unusual ways the French cook prepares meat dishes. Pork Chops* with Chestnuts. 6 pork chops 6 small onions 3 cups shelled chestnuts Salt and pepper. Parboil the chestnuts for ten minutes and remove the skins. Slice the onions and brown them in fat trirpmed from the chops. Re move the onions and in the same fat brown the chops well on both sides. Sprinkle with salt and pep per. Add the chestnuts and cook ed onions. Cover the pan closely, and cook slowly until the chops are tender, turning them from time to time. The browned chops and onions may be placed in a casserole with the chestnuts, the fat rinsed from the pan with a little hot water, and the cooking finished in a mod erate oven. The French method of cooking the round of beef may well be ad apted by the American housewife, especially the one who is interested in a new way of preparing meat to serve cold. Glazed Beef with Jelly 3-pound piece of round * Salt pork to lard 2 carrots 1 onion 1 stalk celery 1 sprig parsley 3 cloves 2 peppercorns 1 tablespoon white vinegar 1 cup stock Lard the meat with thick strips of salt pork. Put* it in a baking dish with the other ingredients; cover and cook slowly. When the meat is done, remove it; strain the sauce and allow to simmer, if it is not already thick. Pour over the meat. Serve cold when the sauce has iellied. Stock is used instead of water in nearly all recipes where liquid is | required. Since the stock pot in |the French home is never empty, it is possible to add a few table- spoonfuls or cupfuls as the case may be, and thus increase the flav or of the dish. This is one of the little tricks of French cookery that help to make it'famous for its piquancy. This Week b Arthur Brisbane Work for Farmers Italy’s Achievement Hope Deferred We Rebuke Liberia An important proposition for un employment relief, in which President Hoover is said to he interested, would use some of the money that the gov ernment will spend on improving country roads, connecting farms with great highways. On such work farmers with their horses, plows and wagons could be profitably employed. Highways need feeders in the shape of country roads leading to the farms, and farmers need access to highways. And they also need work. Duilding great highways of con crete, reinforced with steel, is impor tant. But that work gives no oppor tunity to the farmers. Done by spe cial machinery, heavy trucks, and a few workmen, it offers no opportu nity to the average unemployed. The fact is revealed that five of Italy’s finest flyers were killed, and three others injured on the marvelous “formation flight” across the Atlantic, to Brazil. The news was concealed at first, in order not. to spoil the joy of Italy at the great achievement. There is sorrow now, but the glory of the achievement is not diminished, but m^de greater by :the courage of the survivors, continuing their flight and completing it successfully, as planned, in military formation, ac cording to orders. 1 Men that die in the effort to add luster to the name of their country never die vainly. “Hope deferred maketh the heart sick.” That’s in the Bible, and it is also a decision handed down by the United States Circuit Court of Ap peals, telling Judge Clark of New Jer sey that he was mistaken. The prohi bition amendment was adopted legal ly. It stands, and is the law of the land. Secretary Stimson warns the negro republic of Liberia that slavery must be abandoned. Investigation proves that high officials of the negro re public, including* the vice president, are engaged in the slave trade, and , persist in it. . * This seems ^surprising considering that Liberia was planned as a haven from slavery. But many of our best people, North and South, approved of slavery a lit tle while ago, and we can hardly blame the Liberians for lagging a lit tle behind, especially as slavery is about their only source of profit. Good news for those that hear with difficulty on the telephone. The com pany will supply an “amplifying de vice” making the incoming voice louder. •Mr. Walter S. Gifford, president of the big company, informs the writer that all the Bell companies will sup ply the apparatus for use at a nom inal charge. A friend in Ohio to whom the writer suggested it tried the de vice, and writes: “For the first time in years I have been able to hear my children talking to me from the Pa cific coast.” If you are interested, write to your telephone exchange. “Men fear death, as children fear to go in the dark; and as that natural fear in children is increased with tales, so* is the other.” So Bacon said of our most wide spread fear. Marshal Joffre, who has the grati tude of his nation following him to the grave, quoted often the saying.* “Nul ne peut se dire heureux avant son dernier jour.”—“No man can call himself happy until fiis last day.” “Death hath ten thousand doors for men to take their exit.” And they all lead to peace, rest, freedom from the world’s worries, responsibilities and anxieties. It is fortunate for the race that divine wisdom makes us cling to life. If we were all as wise as Bacon and as philosophical as the old Greeks, many would be missing. In Britain 20,000 weavers have started the kind of strike that, in the long run, can never succeed. They are not striking against lower wages; on the contrary, better wages are offered them. They are striking against an arrangement that would enable each man, without overwork, to take cart of eight looms instead of four, and earn more. They say that if one man takes care of eight looms that will put other men out of work. That’s what stage coach drivers said when the locomotives came. Type setters said it when linotype machines were invented. There are more print ers than ever, better paid, and rail roads employ 1,000 times as many as stage coaches ever did. Germany has a startling idea for lighting unemployment. Adam Diet- rich, finance minister, suggests the use of government money to increase in dustrial pay rolls by subsidy, replac ing unemployment doles with actual, productive wages. Germany’s government, now paying at the rate of $750,000,000 a year to 4,000,000 men out of work, gets noth ing In return. , (©, 1331. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.) Improved Uniform International SundaySchool ’ Lesson T (By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D. D., Mem ber of Faculty. Moody Bible Institute of ChicaKo.) ((c). 1931, Western Newspaper Union.) Lesson for January 25 JESUS TEMPTED LESSON TEXT—Luke 4:1-13. GOLDEN TEXT—For in that he him self hath suffered being tempted, he is able to succor them that are tempted. PRIMARY TOPIC—Jesus True to God: JUNIOR TOPIC—Jesus True to God. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP IC—How to Overcome Temptation. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP IC—Conflicting Ideals. I. The Place (v. 1). The wilderness of Judea. The first man, Adam, was tempted in a garden with the most pleasant surroundings. The second man, Jesus Christ, was tempted in a barren wilderness, sur rounded by wild beasts (Mark 1:13). Adam shamefully failed, involving the whole race in ruin (Rom. 5:12); Christ gloriously triumphed, bringing Justification of life as a free gift upon all who believe (Rom. 5:18). II. The Purpose (v. 1). Christ was led into the wilderness by the Holy Spirit. His temptation w r as Messianic. Men today are not tempted as he was, but the same methods' are employed by the Evil One. The time had come for the Re deemer to enter upon his mediatorial work. Therefore, he went from the place of anointing and heavenly rec ognition as the Son of God to meet and to spoil the enemy of God and men (Heb. 2:14). 1. It was not a preparation for his work but rather his first conflict with the enemy. In his baptism we have the symbolic act of the dedication of himself to the work of redemption through the work of the cross. 2. It was not to see if Christ would stand fast, as to whether he w’ould fail under the most crucial test. Being the eternal Son of God, incorporated with the perfect humanity, sin and failure were impossible. 3. It was to exldhit Christ as an object upon which w ? e may rest our faith with unshaken confidence. He came as the second man, the head of a new. race, the very source of its life. The temptation w r as, therefore, a dem onstration of the Inseparableness of the divine and human natures in the incarnation. III. The Method (vv. 2-12). Christ as the world’s Redeemer sus tained a threefold relation—Son of Man, Son of God, and Messiah. There fore. Satan made each one a ground of attack. 1. As Son of Man (vv. 2-4). Satan made his first assault upon him as a man by appealing to the instinct of hunger. Satan urged him to use his divine power to convert a* stone into bread. The temptation was in satis fying a right hunger in a wrong way. To have yielded in this case though his hunger was desperate would have been to renounce the human limita tions which he had taken for our sakes. To do right in a wrong, way is to sin. 2. As Messiah (vv. 5-8). Here the temptation was to grasp his rightful dominions by false means. The Devi! offered to surrender unto him the wmrld if he would adopt his methods, would worship him. The force of this temptation was in the fact that the kingdoms of the world are Christ’s by God’s covenant with him. Satan has forfeited his right to rule. God’s meth od by wdilc.h Jesus was to possess the w'orld was his sacrificial death on the cross. 3. As the Son of God (vv. 9-12). Here Satan tries to induce Christ to presume upon God’s care. He quoted a Messianic psalm to induce him to so act. To do the spectacular thing in order to get notice is to fall into Satnn’js temptation. Tor Jesus to have placed himself in danger in order to get God's special help in delivering him would have been to sin. To test God as to whether he will keep his promise is the greatest distrust. IV. Christ’s Defense (vv. 4, 8, 12). It was the Word of God. He met and repulsed the enemy with “it is written.” In the most crucial hour of the world’s history Christ quoted from the Book of Deuteronomy, which the rationalists of the day reject as not being fully inspired. V. The Issue (v. 13). Satan was vanquished. He could not stand against God’s Word. Let t!ie Lijht Shine Christian, rest not until thou know- est the fall, the unbroken shining of God In thy heart! To this end, yield to every stirring of it that shows thee some unconquered and perhaps un conquerable evil! Let the light shine upon it, and shine it out!—Andrew Murray. Enmity With God Friendship of the world is enmity with God because the leadership of the world is directly against godli ness; and for this reason it is out of the question for any child of God to forsake the ways of godliness and con form to the sinful ways of the world —Doctrines of the Bible. The Empty Cup Do not let the empty cup be the first teacher of the blessings you had when It was full.—Macluren. cmraDs Plum Branch M. E. Church Schedule PLUM BRANCH ASBURY:—Sunday school every Sunday at 10:00 a. m.; Epworth League every Sunday at 7:00 p. m.; Preaching 1st Sunday at 11:00 a. m.; Preaching 3rd Sunday at 7:30 p. m. BARR’S CHAPEL:—Preaching 1st Sunday 3:30 p. m.; Preaching 3rd Sunday at 11:00 a. m. BORDEAUX: — Preaching 2nd Sunday at 3:30 p. m.; Preaching 4th Sunday at 11:00 a. m. ST. PAUL:—Sunday school every Sunday at 10:00 a. m.; Preaching 2nd Sunday at 11:15 a. m.; Preach ing 4th Sunday at 7:30, p. m.; Ep worth League every Sunday at 6:45 p. m. R. M. TUCKER, Pastor. txt McCormick Holiness Church Schedule McCormick —. Preaching service Saturday night before 3rd Sunday at 8 oVdcckj third Sunday, morning' at 10:30 o’clock and third Sunday night at 8 o’clock. A cordial* welcome la extended to all. O. E. TAYLOR, Pastor. txt A. R. Presbyterian Preaching at Mt. Carmel, S. C. f on the first and third Sabbath at 11 a. m. Pleaching at McCormick, S. C., on the second and fourth Sabbaths at 11:30 a. m. Sabbath school at both churches every Sabbath day throughout the year. ‘ LEON T. PRESSLY, • Pastor. ' txt 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. 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’clock, 2nd and 4th Sab baths; worship 4:00 p. m. J. H. BUZHARDT, Pastor. JXt McCormick Methodist Church Schedule McCormick — Sunday school ovary 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 fdUrtb Sundays. Prayer meeting Wednesday even ing at 7:30 o'clock. Board of Stewards meets Monday light following 1st Sundays. REPUBLICAN Sunday School at 11 a. m. on 2nd ind 4th Sundays. 1st and 3rd Sun- lays at 2:30 p. m. Preaching on 1st and 3rd Sundays at 3 p. m. Troy — Sunday school at 10:06 a. n. 1st, Srd and 4th Sundays; 2nd Sundays at 3 p. m.; preaching 2nd Sundays 8:30 p. m.; 4th Sundays 11 m. Beulah — Preaching every -dlb Sunday afternoon at 8:80 o’doek. W. S. HENRY, < Pastor.