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0 McGORMICK MESSENGER, McCORMICK, SOUTH CAROLINA Thursday, October 14, 1943 trCORMICK MESSENGER ffukiistaed Every Ttannday j BitaMlshed Jane •, IMS sdmond j. mccracken, V Editor and Owner gniercd at the Post Office at Me- Cocra'i-, ? C M as mail matter of flw second class. ECBSCRIPTION RATES: flttie Yfar $1.00 mk Months .75 Three Months .50 Six Inch Sermon MW REV. ROBERT H. HARPER ommandment to keep the sab bath day holy, with the reasor ?iven that the Creator rested or the seventh day and hallowed it; the teaching of Isaiah that the sabbath should be a delight, and the attitude of Jesus toward the holy day. When the disciples plucked grain on the sabbath and were condemned by the Pharisees, Jesus indicated that it is right to satis fy hunger on the sabbath. David and his men were not held guilty of impiety when they ate the shewbread of the tabernacle. Al so, in the case of the man with a withered hand, Jesus showed by His own example that it is right to labor to do good on the sab bath. dopted by Christians as their holy day. Life is more complex than when the commandment of the sabbath was given. Cessation of 11 work on Sunday would disrup; everything. As Jesus declared He came ■»ot to destroy the law but to ful fill it. We are in no danger of icing too strict in our observance, but we are in danger of being too lax. Let us permit ourselves only that which is absolutely necessary, and ensure to ourselves things for which the sabbath is designed— the rest we need, and opportuni ty to worship God and minister to our spiritual nature.” X Conservation News Jesus and the Sabbath. Lesson for October 17: *t: 8-11: Isaiah 58: 13, 14; r:23—3:6. Golden Text: Mark 2:27. lesson text includes The Lord’s statement that the Exodus J “sabbath was made'for man, and Mark j not man for the sabbath” should guide us in deciding what is right for ourselves on the sabbath, that the is, on Sunday, which has been a- :] ' 0 i 4 11 i I n .! BRIGHT FUTURE FOR BUS RIDERS (hn no fortune teller, but 1 don’t need a crystal ball to predict that a heap of guys in uniform will be takin* joy rides by bus when they get bade in erwies. You're learn* In* from war travel how much more yon see by busjiow lit tle it costs to ride, and how Greyhound covers the coun try just like a hair net covers a gal’s permanent wave. We’re crowded now, but are lookin’ forward to makin’ travelers happy again when you chaps mop up the Axis. P*<S. Don't forget—Buy an extra War Bond this month! ti GREYHOUND MARES AND MULES Just received a nice shipment of Good, Sound, Young Tennessee Mules and Mares. Call at my stables on Cedar Street and look them over. Why not trade in the one you don’t like for one you do like? Just received a shipment of new one and two- horse wagons. Terms to suit anybody. J. L. SMITH Cedar Street McCormick, S. C. Buy Your Furniture From J. S. STROM Easy Payment Plan. No Carrying Charge. r,. M McCormick, S. C. . (By Benj. W. Crouch) Mr. J. M. Gibert has signed three cooperative agreements with the Savannah Valley Soil Conser vation District Supervisors. These farms are located in the Willing- ton section of the county. The plan calls for 49 acres of sericea lespedeza, 21 acres kudzu, 18 acres pasture, 30 ae. strip cropping and 182 acres of new broad base ter races. Part of the 49 acres of se ricea lespedeza will be used for pasture. It will be planted in the pasture without an additional fence. 1 Mr. Edwin Parker has planted 10 acres of legumes and small grains for spring grazing. He is also using a car load of lime this year. Mr. E. C. Cheatham is building a few’ acres of new terraces in preparation to establish a strip rotation on the field in front of his house. x The loneliest person in the world is the war prisoner. Lest confinement affect his future usefulness as a man, w*e must follow him with our gifts even to the prison camp. By interna tional law, the Y. M. C. A. has the privilege of doing this work. When you give to the United War Fund, part of it goes to help our boys in enemy prison camps. We are making pictures Wednesday, October 20th, at the McCormick Hotel, Me-* Cermick. If you live out of town and do not have an appointment we will be glad to take care of you. Hours, HALL-GENTRY STUDIO. PHOTOGRAPHS WANTED Wanted to buy large quan tities of 4 foot Pine Cord- wood. Also, Pine and ‘mixed Hardwood Slabs. Prices are good. See or write, J. C. WINN - PLUM BRANCH, S. C. FINAL SETTLEMENT STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County Of McCormick. In The Court Of Probate. Notice is hereby given that Mrs. Lillie C. Bussey, Executrix, of the estate of J. M. , Bussey, deceased, has this day made application unto me for a’ final accounting and discharge as such Executrix, and the 10th day of November. 1943. at 10 o’clock. A. M., has been fixed for the hearing of said peti tion. All persons holding claims a- gainst said estate are hereby noti fied to present same on or by a- bove date. J. FRANK MATTISON. Judge of Probate, McCormick Co., S. C. , October 9th, 1943.—4t. WANT ADV. Pot Plants, Cut Flowers and Baskets, Floral Designs and Sprays at reasonable prices. Telephone 113-R. Mrs. Frank Deason, Mc Cormick. S. C. WANTED — Small used stove suitable for bedroom. Phone 117 Mrs. J. E. Bradley, McCormick, S C. Just received shipment of New One and Two-horse Wagons. J. L. Smith, McCormick, S. C. “Mission to Moscow’ Great Military Need For Waste Fat Lewis A. Emerson, WPB Execu tive Salvage Secretary for South , Carolina, said^ today that many housewives have been neglecting to salvage waste kitchen fats and turn them in promptly to neigh borhood butcher shops so they can be channeled to war plants. Preliminary figures for August, released today, indicate that col lection of kitchen fats in this state during August were only 59.3 per cent. “Many people do not yet realize the great military need for this waste fat.” Mr. Emerson said. “It is essential in the manufacture of i glycerine, and glycerihe is neces sary to produce explosives, and for many medicinal purposes.” Mr. Emerson explained that glycerine is present in tincture of opium and gentian, used as seda tives to ease the pain of wounds, ; n sulpha diazine ointments, in "Meet the ff • • • (Each week In this space will be presented a picture and word portrait of someone whose name is news.) Gen. Sir Harold Alexander army man, he has many staff officers, of war tactics. • “Attack, attack, and attack again, even when you are on the defensive,’’ says Gen. Sir Harold Alexander, the British officer who is com mander of all Allied ground forces in the European war theater. Paradoxically, he is probably best known for conducting two of the war’s most successful retreats—the Dunkerque withdrawal, and the campaign in Burma, where he delayed the Japanese for four months. • General Alexander has advanced swiftly and has served on many assignments. During World War I he saw active service as a 25- year-old major. He went over the top 20 times before he was wounded. In 1934 and ’35 he commanded troops on the northwest frontier of India. •He is a middle-sized man, but remarkably strong and athletic. His toughness and deter mination are proverbial. Though a career not fallen into the mdssback traditionalism of , He is said to take a thoroughly modem view * smallpox vaccine, and in some insulins prescribed for shock, “supplies of which must be great ly increased as our armed forces advance farther into battle •\reas.” National figures show that only a little more than half the amount of fats and grease needed to keep our glycerine stocks at a safe level is being turned in by housewives in the United States. — X Ace From Spokane Maj. Eugene Roberts of Spokane. Wash., who shot down six German planes. He is shown walking from his plane at a British fighter sta tion of the USAAF in England. X One American dollar is worth twenty Chinese dollars. If give to the United War Fund, part of it will go to Chinese iv. lief where its value would be multiplied by twenty. Ten dollars here would be two hundred dollars there. /"Arabian Princes in Washington, D. C. \ ' Two sons of King Ibu Sand of Saudi-Arabia are pictured as they arrive in Washington, D. C., where they met President Roosevelt. Ado ph A. Berle Jr., assistant secretary of state, is shown greeting Abdul ivah- man Al Faisal A1 Saudi, left, and Abdul Azizibn. German Fliers Captured Off Iceland Off the north coast of Iceland fliers of the United States Army Ain forces shot down a German Focke-Wulf Condor plane. Seven prisoner** from Its crew were captured. They are pictured under guard la Iceland two days later.