Newspaper Page Text
Forsyth County News
Published every Thursday at
Cumming. Ga.
ROY P. OTWELL.. Owner A Editor
J. E. KIRBY .. . , Associate Editor
JAMES L. REEVES, Associate Editor
MARGUERITE FISHER, Social Editor
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE
Per Year, in advance SI.OO
Entered at the Post Office at Cum
mlng, da., August loth. 1010, as mall
matter of the a ecu ml class.
Official Organ for Forsyth County
Advertising rates made known upon
application.
CUMMING, GA., MARCH 9, 1933.
Truth in advertising won't hurt ad
vertising.
V/e men will admit that any vice
coats then money.
Forward looking punsters are now
planning for Ap.il Fool’s day.
Nearly every citizen believes he
o ,uld solve the world’s problems with
out assistance.
The ballot is about all the poor man
has and some master minds would
take this from him.
Subscribers who pay up their sub
scriptions in March will be sure to get
their paper in April.
As wo see it, the League of Nations
has scored the most points and Japan
has the territory.
It is about an even bet that the De
mocrats will fall out about how to dis
tribute their patronage .
The-P a-e a lot of people in the r- n |.
ted States who are willing to tell the
rest of us what we can’t do.
Now there are some people who will
lie inclined to hunt up the campaign
promises of the Democrats.
Leaders in Washington are said to
believe that war.with Japan is unthink
able. What does Japan think?
Most Americans wish the new ad
ministration the best of luck and all
<• f them know it will need lots of it.
One book publisher reports a gain
fn the r.uality of books. May the same
ho said soon about motion pictures.
One committee of “experts" has been
tillable to find the “tidal wave of i
crime” so often reported in the United |
States.
Moving picture people say that the
reason certain types of pictures are
n-.ade is that the people make them
profitable.
Public opinion is powerful when the
facts are clear and the culprit in the
open. The danger is that rascality is
concealed.
Cumming has about all that a com
munity needs to be prosperous. It is
time for us to get busy and make use
of our resources.
The cry “take the government out
nf business’’ has suffered some hard
Welts ever since the R. F. C. started
tending money to business leaders.
Wise political scientists recognize
Muit, the lobbying of powerful minor
ities is a menace to legislation in the
interest of the people as a whole.’
President Roosevelt has a hard
job ahead of him. if he succeeds in
loading the nation into better times
he will find the people extremely ap
preolateive.
Correct this sentence: “What this
country needs is more honesty and
less selfishness on the part of its
lenders, the men endowed with natur
al advantages.”
World prosperity can arrive only
when world commerce is revived Peo
ple must understand that two nations
can buy and sell to each other to the
advantage of both.
Baseball training camps are resound
ing with the wliams of hats against
halls, and the dope writers are getting
sot for their annual guess at the out
conve-of the pennant races.
A-large mail order and chain store
company lias had its first loss since
1921. Does that mean that people in
thousands of places like Cumming are
buying at home, or merely not buying?
THE RIGHTEOUS AND THE
UNRIGHTEOUS
J And if ttie righteous scarcely be
I saved where shall the ungodly and
the sinner appear. 1 Peter 11 and 18.
The Bible is God’s Book: By it all
His creatures shall be Judged, it is
a searchlite, a tri-square, a plumb line
liy which men are measured and tried
| it tolls of the fulu e destiny of men.
Whether righteous or wicked it classi
fies the inhabitanes cf this world in
to two classes, the Paint and the Sin
ner the righteous and the unrighteous,
the Godly and the ungodly, the saved
and unsaved, the saved and the lost.
I The B’ble reveals God’s plan for the
I redemption of man. If men could be
' saved by their own righteousness
I there would he no need of divine
' g ace, no need of the plan of the Gos
j pel, there would have been no need
| for the sufferings and death of Christ
i and there would be no need for the
p-ea h'.ng of the Gospel, and tt.ere
would be no fear of death and he'.'.
B it according to the teaching of the
word of God all our righteous are as
f i tly as rags before him with whom
,ve have to do. The only hope, the
onlv way of Salvation is to be found
in him not having our own righteous
hut that which is through the faith of
Christ. The-e is no ground for boast
ing of selfrighteousness.
Boasting is excluded all on com
mon ground all must be saved if sav
ed at all by the same plan all must
enter the same door the only way of
life. The rightuals who are saved by
faith have cause for deep humility
and gratitude and humble thanksgiv
ing. We are saved by grace. Not by
work of righteousness which we have
done, but according to his mercy he
saved us by the washing of regener
ation, and the renewing of the hoiv
Ghost; which he shed on us abund
antly through Jesus Christ our Savior
We have escaped the corruption which
is in the world by the grace of God.
We are escaped as a bird out. of the
snare and are not to forget the bond
age which we were once in nor the
pit of depravity from which we were
digged. There is no room for boast
ing only as one like David the Psalm
ist. may make his boast in the Lord
that the humble may hear thereof and
lie glad. The righteous may be said
to be scarcely saved yet they have a
complete and full salvation and prom
ise of abundant entrance into the ever
lasting kingdom of our Lord and Sav
for Jesus Christ. Being saved they are
saved from sin. They are saved unto
the uttermost and are entitled to an
inheritance which is incorruptable nn
defiled and which fadetli not away,
and thev shall have an abundant en
trance into the everlasting kingdom
of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
Thev shall be more than conquerors
through him that love ut. There is
oromise given that the righteous shall
inherit all things and beside what is
promised in the future they shall re
ceive a hundred fold in this life for
ail that is given up for Christ’s sake,
and in the world to come they have
the promise of everlasting life and
when Christ shall appear, they al o
shall appear with him in glory. This
hope is both sure and steadfast and
is like an anchor to the soul. But
where shall the ungodly and the sin
ner appeal ? What shall be their lot?
The Psalmist tells us that the wicked
shall be turned into hell, and all the
nations that forget God. The ungodly
shall not stand in the judgment nor
sinners in the Congregation of the
righteous, for the Lord knoweth the
way of the righteous but the way of
the ungodly shall perish. Sin shall
not go unpunished. There can be no
way of escape for the wicked. There
will be no chance of repentance after |
death as the tree falls, so it must be
as death leaves them, so the judgment
shall find them. The books will be
opened which give record of the evil
deeds of the wicked but not the book
of life for their names are not written
there. How terrible will be the death
and punshment of the wicked. There
will be weeping and gnashing of teeth
what will be the end of the millions |
who are rejecting the council of God I
indifference hoping to get to heaven. |
and who are living in sin, living in |
hoping to be saved, hoping to escape
in the hour of death Their hope is
not the hope of the righteous. There
shall boa separation hereafter be
tween the righteous and the wicked
and there must be a separation now.
The righteous are compared to sheep
and have promise that they shall re-,
reive the welcome invitation come. |
ye. blessed of my Father While the j
wicked shall perish without hope and ;
will receive the sad sentence depart, j
They shall be separated by the great j
gulf which is fixed as a boundry of
separation. These (the wicked) shall
go away into everlasting punishment;
but the righteous into life eternal.
Where shall the sinner and the ungod
ly appear? They shall spend their et
ernity in outer darkness, separated
j from the righteous, separated from
\ light and life, separated from God
' and heaven and the angels separated
from all that is good and pure, from
all joy and happiness.
Terrible is the door of the wicked.
S. L. WEST
Oak Grove
Mrs. Dorothya Martin and children
spent Sunday evening at Mr. S. T.
Grogans.
Mr. and Mrs. K. A. Waters and
daughter spent Wednesday night and
Thursday at Mr. Elmer O’Bryant’s.
Miss Maggie Patterson is visiting
her sister Mrs. Ivan Hamby.
Mrs. Nellie Hamby and Mrs. Ella
Hamby, visited at Mr. Roscoe Neicler
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawton Garrett spent
Saturday night at Mr. Joe Garretts.
Misses Ola and Kate Hamby visited
Mrs. Cora Holtzclaw Wednesday p. m.
, Mrs. I illie Ingram visited Mrs. S. T.
Grogan Sunday.
Misses Addle, Ezzie Waters and Jan
et Ruth Mincey visited Miss Velvie
Charles Saturday.
Mr. Earl Hamhy and family spent
j Saturday night at Mr. A. S. Hayes.
Misses Pauline, Agnes Walls vhjlted
Misses Inez and Nellie Kate Holtz-)
claw Sunday.
Mrs. Lillie Ingram and daughter vi
sited Mrs. Willamae Burruss one day
last week.
Mr. J. M. Carnes and family spent'
Sunday at Mr. R. M. Hamby’s.
Mr. Hoyt Tuck visited in this part
Sunday.
Mnssers Wyatt Hamby and Marcelle
Walls visited Mr. Clinton Gravitt Sun
day.
Mr. Dave Walls and brother spent
Wednesday at Mr. Ezra Walls.
Miss Ruth Hamby visited Miss Fan
nie Hamby one evening last week.
Mr. and Mrs. D. T. Mincey visited
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Mundy one day
last week.
Mrs. Sallie Hamby spent one even
ing last week with Mrs. Arvie Beard
en.
Mrs. Eula Corn and Mrs. Eula Bur
russ visited Mrs. Bobbie Grogan one
p. m. last week.
Miss Bertie Hamby and little sister
spent Saturday night with Mrs. Cora
Holtzclaw.
Mrs. Myrtle Walls and children vi
sited at Mr. S. T. Grogans one day.
last week.
ROUTE 4
March certainly is letting people
know it is here.
Mr. Colbert Buice and family from
Sharon spent Sunday at Mr. W. W.
McGinnis’s.
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Holbrook spdnt
Saturday night at Mr. J. C. Collins’s.
Mr. E. S. Bennett and family and
Mr. Carl Spence and family visited at
Mr. T. S. Bennett's Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. John D. Glover spent
Saturday night and Sunday at Mr. G.
W. Glover’s.
Mrs. Othella Fowler and Miss Mat
tie Stewart spent Friday afternoon i
with Mrs. Estelle McGinnis.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Satterfield and
daughter of Canton spent the week
end with Mrs. Kate Pendley and chilcfj
ren.
Mr. and Mrs. Wyley Mangum spent j
Saturday night with Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Bennett.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Guthrie of Atlan
ta visited at Mr. Curtis Vaughan’s
Sundav.
Mr. Carrol Elliott and family spent
Sunday at Mr. Jasper Cowart's.
Mr. Roy McGinnis and family spent
the weekend at Mr. Jesse McWhorter
near Brookwood.
Coal Mountain
Miss Ethel Light spent Saturday
night with Mr. J. S. Harrison and fam
ily.
Mrs. Minnie Heard, Mrs. Nellie Car
nes and baby visited Mrs. AI Martin
Sunday evening.
Mr. Clarence Moore and family of
Chaniblee spent Saturday night and
Sunday with Mr. Joe Brooks and fam
ily.
Miss Imogene Martin visited Mr..
Seth Gazzaway and family last week, i
Mr. Ross Akins spent Saturday
night with Mr. Duffie Akins and fam
ily- |
Mrs. Viola Mundy and children and
Mrs. Clarence Mundy visited Mrs.
Henry Holtzclaw Wednesday evening.
Mr. George Thomas and family vi
sited at Mr. Frank Merritts Sunday
evening.
Miss Martha Harrison spent Friday
night with Mr. Thurman Martin and
family.
Those visiting Mr. Joe Brooks and
family Sunday evening were Mr. Mou
ntie Martin and wife. Mr. Henry Wil
lard and family, Mrs. Lee Mundy anti
daughter Sylvia, Miss Beatrice Akins
Frances and Wynell Holtzclaw.
Mrs. C. E. Dougherty and Sybil Mar
tin spent Tuesday evening with Mr.
Lee Mundy and family.
Little Wilma Wofford is visiting her
grandparents Mr. and Mrs. M. A.
Smith.
Mr. Clarence Mundy and wife spent
Saturday night and Sunday “with Mr.
D. T. Mincey and family.
Those visiting Mr. J. S. Harrison’
and family Sunday were Mr. Frank
Light and family, Mrs. Jim Light and
children, Mr. Frank Harrison and fam
ily.
Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Smith spent a
while Sunday evening with Mr. Foster
Wolford and family.
We .are glad to say the sick in this
part are improving.
Miss Ruby Turner visited Mr. Edgar
Turner and family last week.
Mrs. M. J. Harrison spent awhile
Sunday evening with Mrs. Duffie Ak
ins.
*
Mrs. Athella Castleberry and child
ren spent Monday night and Tuesday
with Mr. Henry Willard and family.
Miss Vera and Dessie Mundy, Mrs.
Nellie Harrison spent Saturday even
ing with Mrs. Annie Wofford.
Mrs. D. T. Mincey and children vi
sited at Mrs. Jim Mundys Saturday.
DON’T STOP JOHN’S PAPER
Don’t stop John’s paper, editor,
For he could not live without;
Surely he will want to know
All the activities ’round from East
to West,
From North and South as well,
From Japanese and Chinese shores,
And the land of William Tell;
What’s new way down in Baniburland,
As well as up Northeast,
The news from Red Bird’s changing
day
And Europe's topmost crest.
Why, man alive, he’d miss the vison
Of his beloved church,
With teeming millions deep in need,
And leave them in the lurch;
He could not see beyond the borders
Of his own local perch,
He’d narrow down and shrivel up with
out the Inspiration
That comes from reading every week
your grand publication.
Now there are many other reasons
Why John’s paper shouldn’t stop,
But I know I need not give them.
And the subject we will drop.
From now on, Mr. Editor, whenever
a man writes in,
And tells you to stop his paper, you
should at once begin
To pray for that dear brother and in
quire as to the “Why”
For his pathway will be rocky and
things will go awry,
If this friendly weekly visitor ceases
coming to his door,
We’re fearful he will lag behind and
we’ll hear of him no more.
(E. S. Hengst in the Evangelical
Messenger.)
You can expect 3S€MiSK 31 SEES
and MORE SERVICE iVom tires
built like these
Tlie real secret of tire mileage is
inside the tire ... the way it’s built.
We’ve never yet seen a tire that
had more down-right quality put
into it than the Mansfield!
Our Mansfield customers all tell us
they’re getting comfort and safety,
• MANSFIELD
TIRES
OTWELL MO i UK CO. Inc.
YOUR BANK AND MINE
1. The Bank and the Community
By Gordon Lewis
There is much more to a bank than
merely a place in wflich to deposit
money.
The first anj most natural bank
connection begins, of course, with a
Savings Account. When a man or
woman has amassed a few hundred
dollars, part of this can be used as
the base for a checking account,
which provides the Dest and most sat
isfactory method of paying bills and
transferring money safely.
As the bank account grows, we nat
urally want to make some investments
and 1 have found the suggestions of
my banker valuable and helpful.
The bonds, real estate mortgage
papers and other valuable documents
which develop should be stored away
carefully in a safe-deposit box in the
vault of the bank where they are se
NEW AND USED
FURNITURE.
We have just received a car load of new and good
Used Furniture, including
Beds Springs, Mattresses, Dressers,
Tables, (hairs, Stoves, Etc.
Would be glad to show any one interested in buy
ing or exchanging furniture, our line.
Furniture Exchange,
By Edwin Otwell.
Subscribers who for reasons well
known to themselves have failed to
pay their accounts during the past
cure against fire and theft.
Later, should we wish to travel the
bank can safeguard our traveling
funds through letters of credit, for
eign drafts and travelers’ checks
which they can arrange for us.
If we are to be away for a consider
able period of time, the Trust Officers
of the Bank will look after our pro
perty and our investments at a very
nominal cost.
Those same Trust Officers are by
far the most logical means to use
when considering how our estate is
to be safeguarded for our family af
ter death. Naming your bank as the
executor or trustee of your estate as
sures your wife or children strong ex
perienced financial counsel to produce
sound income from your life Insurance
and your other assets.
month are assured that they can get
full reinstatement by paying in Feb
ruary.
and freedom from tire worries ..•
and thousands of extra miles of
service.
Aml you qi our i ow pr i C es for
suc h unusual values. Come in to
day .. . and see for \ouiself wliat
Mansfield tires are like.