Newspaper Page Text
rift? x\
"Spp
n / /
6
/ ' ‘WBh\
«r*« <| | 111 I3t
1 ' "BKju
I JKS!s!kfe~b
\
VOLUME EIGHT
NUMBER FIFTY
GREAT GATHERING OF CHRISTIAN BUSINESS MEN
Atlanta, “The Get-Together City,” Will Witness Inspiring Interdenominational Convention of Laymen, February 9-10
Famous Speakers Will Stir the Crowds.
|l|l
'~
J. CAMPBELL WHITE,
of New York.
- - / j3k
/ 'ilia
1
: *
w
DR. JULIEN S. RODGERS,
of Atlanta, Ga.
ATLANTA, GA., FEBRUAx
By JULIEN S. RODGERS, Executive Secretary.
~ E
ness men were aroused to a new sense of re
sponsibility under the terms of the Great Com
mission. It is hoped now to enlist all the re
serves in a grand forward campaign, to the end
that the Church militant may soon become the
Church triumphant.
The distinctive purpose of this Convention is
to enlist the men of Georgia for the Man of
Galilee; to see in the wide open doors of the
nations, and the yet unreached millions, a
clearer vision of service and to realize in a
vital way, in the unlimited resources of our
people the “pillar of cloud and fire” lifting
before them, and directing them to greater con
quests for Him, who is “the desire of all na
tions.”
You Can Hear the Best.
The program will be rich in information and
inspiration. Mr. J. Campbell White, of New
York, the General Secretary of the Movement;
Mr. W. E. Doughty, Educational Secretary;
Lieut-Col, Elijah W. Halford, Vice-President,
and other noted speakers, representing various
denominational missionary interests, will be in
attendance, affording the attendants on this
Convention a rare opportunity to hear the best
that is offered along these lines.
Any man in Georgia can attend this Con
vention by paying the registration fee of one
dollar, which entitles him to a seat in the Con
vention, and to a reserved seat at the great sup
per, which is to be served at the City Audito
rium, Monday evening, February 10, by two
hundred of the representative women of At
lanta. The supper alone, will be worth the
price, and the money is used, of course, to
further the work of the Movement.
Apart from the sessions of the Convention
Monday, which are to be held in Wesley Memo
rial Church, the three appealing features of the
campaign are the mass meeting for men at the
Baptist Tabernacle Sunday afternoon, the mass
meeting for women, at First Methodist Church,
at the same time, and the supper at the Audi
torium, which is to climax the program. The
best speakers will be heard at all these gath
erings, which promises to draw together the
largest assemblage of men and women in the
(Continued on Page 4.)
IE second National Campaign Con
vention of the Laymen’s Mission
ary Movement, to be held in Atlan
ta, February 9-10, is expected to
mark another forward step in the
missionary progress of Georgia.
Three years ago, when the first
nationwide campaign was inaugu
rated, thousands of Christian busi-
ONE DOLLAR AND FIFTY CENTS
A YEAR :: FIVE CENTS A COPY
■ - il X','
/ 1 I
COL. E. W. HALFORD,
of New York.
mfr-
BBhk k
, s '-CA i p?. -jp / * Av” ,
W. E. DOUGHTY,
of New York.