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TRY THIS FOH
YOUH COLO
What you need is this sensible
and effective remedy. Dr.
Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey,
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As a cold is only dangerous when neg
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druggist with 25c and he will give you
the genuine Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey. j
(Advi.)
A New Book
SO many cancer patients have come
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treatment, that we have edited a book 9
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Write
DKS. ROOT & McNEiLL
Indianapolis. Ind. ■
ii— Saattarv r-uhOT, |
Br.: CT’-’ Sau.fw I
■ME3bB9Mm inn a»n n’ t Writ* «aretalet_ - I
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Did You Ever See
a Shoe LikeTbis
. dWh! -■ ■ *ggjo
o |
ITS insole was cut from paper —very likely
A the counters are paper, and also several lifts of the
heel are paper. Such shoes, when wet, won’t hold the
stitching their outsoles come off, the counters
break down, heels become spongy, and the whole shoe U
ill-shaped.
These things are used as substitutes for leather in the making M
of some shoes used because they are cheaper, and they are nearly
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Don't be persuaded to buy poor shoes in order to save money. §
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h FRIEDMAN-SHELBY BRANCH H
International Shoo Company 1 ' J
M.l„. „ St.loui. Cpywyp H
fl leafed ,i ■■ - T.Trr. Fl
10
BILLY SUNDAY
PLEAD FOR OLD
FASHION REVIVAL
“I Plead Not For a Modern
Revival. I Don’t Know Any-,
thing About Your Modern !
Dope. I Plead for an Old 1
Pentecostal Revival/’ He
Says
A defense of all revivals and a plea
for a great revival In Atlanta was made
by Billy Sunday at the Tuesday night
meeting at the Sunday Tabernacle.
”1 plead not for a modern revival,
he declared. “I don’t know anything
about your modern dope. Min* la as old
as the cross of Jesus; as old as the nails
that were driven through His hands I
plead for an old Pentecostal revival that
will make drunkards sober.’ that will,
make thieves steal no more; that will
make blasphemers to pray, that will
make men that are keeping somebody on
1 the side and disgracing their wives and
children go home and be decent; that 1
will make deadbeats pay their debts, <
and transform this God-forsaken? whis- 1
kev-soaked. t’hrist-baiting. Sabbath
’ breaking. Eord-damning, harlot-ridden
old world into a paradise of peace and|
| benediction and blessing.
I Billy began his sermon by reminding t
, his hearers that life is not long; that)
i “the sands of the hourglass of time are .
i fast sifting for many of you. and it -
, won’t be long before the undertaker will 1
1 puinp vou full of embalming fluid and ,
the quartet will sing 'Lead. lighf ’ .
\ amidst the encircling gloom.’
“Is what the world needs today more ;
money?" he asked. "Oh. no! The old |
world needs a baptism of the old-time i
religion that has wanned the world s
cold heart for two thousand years. There
are two crowds in every church- the (
ruts and the anti-ruts. I don't give a
rap how old methods are. if they are .
moss-covered, so long as they will de- I
liver the goods, but if they don't there j
is one place for them and that’s the
scrap pile. Some people are scared to;
death that somebod— may do something.,
out of the ordinary that will keep a sin-;
ner but of heli. Some of ‘them would. 1
i rather see him go there than that things ■
| should be done decently and in order ” |
"TKis is a day.” continued Mr. Sunday,-
1 “when you can take a basket of nickels..
on your arm and walk down the average.,
j Street and scatter them and lead the.
' bunch so close to hell they could smell. I
I the sulphur fumes vomiting from the in- .
frrno below. This is a day of isms and
| schisms and ologies; there never was a.
time when there were more isms wrig
gling their carcasses out of the pit of.
hell to lead people off on a tangent!
from the true God. The devil Is a smart
guy. He's been preying on this old
, world for six thousand years. He neven
has appendicitis or peritonitis; he s si-
1 ways Johnn-on-the-Spot.”
Billy told the ministers of the cityi
I iust where he stands. 'T try to be alk
things to all people so that I might wiE»
them to God. and if I don't stick to myj
text. 1 will try to stick to nty crowd.”
Ihe said. “And I want to say this
I city right now. right at the kick-off,
: that I believe the Bible is the word of
God from cover to cover. So you high
brow mutt preachers know where I
stand on this subject. . . When,
the consensus of latest scholarship says
one thing about the divine origin of the
1 scriptures, and the word of God says an
other. then I say that the latest scholar
ship can go plumb to hell for all we.
care.”
IF CITY ISN'T CLEAN,
IT’S ATLANTA’S FAVZ.T
It’s Atlanta's fault .if the city Isn’t
clean morally, declared the evangelist.
“And if your city sags morally; If
' men are staggering and reeling and vom
iting and spewing down the streets; if
girls are selling their womanhood—
hanging around your cabarets, hotels
and restaurants, over-nerfumed, over
leweled. over-fed and under-dressed, it’s
your fault.” shouted Billy. “Why, a
Q nan couldn't look at one of them with
i.rayer-meeting thoughts very long.
vou forget ft! I wonder there are
•. is many fellows keep their decency and
Ctheir morals as they do with what’s
flaunted in their faces today.”
And then he took a shot at church
possessed of a fondness for
productions.
M “If the devil can scare up more church
J,members at a leg show than at a prayer
the trouble isn’t with God,”
F he declared; “it’s with the members of
fl that church, so you can’t blame the Lord
a for these things.”
ks Mr. Sunday took occasion to voice his
of opinion with those who
hradvance specious arguments against re-
Mvivals.
K /'Some people say, *A revival is an ab
■normal condition.' And I say, "You lie,’ ”
Khe yelled with a smashing gesture. 'T
Dsay to you that a revival is a normal
that this is a low, dead, life
r,iess proposition—that’s an abnormal
Do you mean to insult God
®?by saying that anything that makes a
wman pray, kiss his wife Instead of beat
p ing her up, pay his debts- —do you mean
to tell me that that’s an abnormal con-
THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATI.ANTA. GA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9. 1917.
I Killed, 2 Seriously
Injured When Jitney
Is Run Down by Tram
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
ACWORTH, Ga.. Nov. 6.—Gib Coker
was instantly killed and J. B. Wing,
county commissioner of Cobb county,
and his fourteen-year-old son, J. B.
Wing. Jr., were probably fatally in
jured when a jitney bus in which they
were driving was struck by a north-
J bound L. & N. train in East Acworth
this morning. Mr. King and his son
were en route from Roswell to Acworth,
1 having employed Coker to bring them
here.
The cause of the accident has not been
definitely ascertained. Mr. Wing and
his son are being cared for here. The
condition of both Is critical.
Food Administration
Will Not Fix Price of
*
Stock Sold by Farmer
The following statement was issued
Wednesday by Dr. A. M. Soule, state
1 administrator for the federal food ad
ministration :
"The food administration has no in
tention to fix the price at which the
farmer sells his stock. It has, however,
‘the duty of directing export purchases
of beef and pork products, and proposes
♦o use this power to stabilize the price,
to support remunerative prices to the
farmer, and. by the exclusion of specu
lation. to protect the consumer ”
London’s Murder
Mystery Cleared
By Scotland Yard
lAJNDON. Nov. 6.—Scotland Yard to-
Iday identif ed the body in the first head
I less body mystery the metropolis has
had since the Dr. Crippen case. The
I trunk and legs—all that were found —
1 were positively identified as those of
• Mrs. Girouard, wife of a French sol
’ died, who resided in Munster square.
' A butcher who lived nearby was held
lon suspicion.
dition? Do you mean to say that when
i a man goes home drunk that that’s nor-
I mal? Or when he’s sober and decent
; that that's obnormal? Forget it!”
SCORES MINISTERS WHO
OPPOSE REVIVALS
Incidentally, he stopped long enough to
include* In his arrlgnment ministers of
the Gospel who oppose revivals.
"The history of the church is a his
j torv of revival.” said Billy, “and I don’t
see how any minister has the audacity
to insult God by lifting himself against
revivals and still claim to be a preacher.
In my opinion, he’s a disgrace to the
church. If he's your preacher you can
tell him so; 1 don’t care whether he but
tons his collar In front or behind.
“John the Baptist, the greatest man
born of woman, was an evangelist. He
had a great revival. The church ’was
born in time of revival. Paul was an
evangelist and they had to call out the*
cops to rescue him. and everywhere he
1 went he either had a riot or a revival,”
he continued. •
“Jesus Christ was a great disturber
of his day.” declared Mr. Sunday. “He
disturbed the self-complacency of th.it
pliable, plastic bunch of .ecclesiastical
1 crooks. He told that bunch where to
head in.”
“A revival is temporary, is it?” he
shouted, taking up another phase of the
argument. “So is a bath. Take one!”
Billy paid a left-handed compliment
to the class of Individuals who spent'
plenty of time getting products ready
for market, while they let their chil
dren scuffle along “any old way” tow
ard heaven.
“A revival is needed when religion
is not Ideal,” declared the evangelist,
“and religion Is not ideal when in th'
estimation of some so-called Christians
It consists of trotting out to church on
Sunday morning, keeping a little spot
seventeen inches square warm for half
an hour, listening to a sermonette, put
ting a plugged, counterfeit cent Intc
the collection plate and singing 'When
the Roll- Is Called Up Yonder.’ ”
That revivals sweep away prejudices
i tnd 111-feeling, was one of the asser
tions made by Mr. Sunday during the
course of his dissertation on the neces
sity of renewing the Spiritual life.
Feuds and factions and fusses are signs
of worldly spirit and worldly spirit is
just what revivals dissipate, he de
clared.
WORLD IS LOUSY
WITH HUMBUGS, HE SAYS
"The church is all right as long as
I she Is in the world; she’s all wrong
when the world Is in her,” he »said,
"and one of the troubles of the church
today, my friends, is that she’s joined
■he world, and that’s the reason why
the world won’t join the church. Oh
the world Is lousy with humbugs—ab
solutely. tAnd the churches are full of
eour-faced crabapples that are trying
to hand God a lemon.”
Mr. Sunday then launched Into a de
tunclation of church members who try
.0 dictate to the preacher as to the kind
of religion he shall discuss in his pul
pit utterances.
“If the preacher stands up to speak
the truth,” he said, “some God-forsaken
Old mountebank will object, but, take it
from me, Bud, I want to tell you that
you’ve got no more business to run the
j church because you’ve got a little dough
than the fellow who sits there that
hasn’t got a sou. Take your money and
go to the devil with it. You can dic
tate to some preachers because you*v»’
got a little money, but you won’t tell
this preacher how to preach. You’ve
put your eyeball on one you can’t tell
how to preach. It won’t do you any
good. Not that I know all about it. but
I know 1 am preaching to the people
and lam preaching for God. Any time
you don't like It, you can beat It.”
Atlanta is on the road to hell—at
' least Billy Sunday thinks so, and that
is the reason he decided to make a
trip south of the Mason and Dixon line
.to preach the gospel to the folks in
Georgia’s capital city.
"The only purpose of a great reli-
• gious campaign like this is to make mer
i and women as God wants them,”' he
shouted. "If it were not for that pur
pose you couldn't get me to come; you
haven’t money enough in your bank
vaults or In the government sub-treas
ury, my friends, to hire me to come
and work on that basis if 1 didn't be
lieve you were lost and on the road to
hell.”
“Ijet me tell you that there Ls hardly
a city on earth that doesn't need to be
taken down to God’s bath house a'td
have the hose turned on It for right
eousness and truth in the name of the
Lord ’’ *
“If President Wilson should tele
graph me or telephone me tomorrow and
say. ’Bill, will you change jobs with
me?’ I’d say ’Nothin' doin’. Woodrow.’ ”
The evangelist closed his discourse
with a thrilling appeal for honest feel
ing on the part of Atlantians who are
given this opportunity to grasp the
word of God and have its truths reveal
ed to them during the period ot the re
vival.
, “O Lord, revive thy work. In the
midst of the years in wrath, remember
I mercy," quot?! the evangelist as he
! concluded his sermon
NEWTON ROY HEAD, one of
the-two Georgia hoys killed when
the IT. S. transport Finland was tor
pedoed. Young Head was the son
of Mrs. V. E. Head, of Cleveland.
Ga. He is survived hy four sisters
and three brothers, in addition to
his mother.
t
raw
I Ml
I J J
giiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiyiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiH
I^/T| 7r ahain'rar&
lO C’i * C* •. 1 I
1 * TRAPPERS-MAKE RIG MONEY |
Ship AU Your Furs to Abraham Fur Co. AT ONCE ■
Here’s an announcement so unusual in the profit it opens up to you that you ■
will want to read every word of it. Here’s an opportunity to get an extraordinary price for
early caught ’Coon skins that is remarkable —another of the special Big Money deals we are constantly offer
ing trappers —an eager and ready demand for all the early ’Coon skins you can ship. g
If you have been shipping furs for any length of time you will appreciate the chance g
offered. You well know that as a rule fur houses do not pay much for the early caught skins, and for that
reason it will pay you big to take advantage of this opportunity and ship all your early caught furs to us at
once. Later when the better stock is on the market, the early caught unprime furs will be heavily discounted.
How can we do this? We have a large following among the manufacturing and export fj
trade and are ordinarily in a position to pay you more money for furs than you can get from any other fur
house in the United States. Right now we have a large manufacturing customer who has given us an order
for a large quantity of Raccoon skins for immediate use. For this reason we are in a position to pay you an =
gxtra price for this article if you will ship them to us right away. We can also use your Mink, Skunk,
Opossum and all other furs at top market value.
This opportunity for big prices on ’Coon skins is offered Only By Us. No other fur house gj
in the United States is in a position to pay you as much money for the furs at this time of the year as we can =
say you, especially on ’Coon skins—we specialize in early caught ’Coons and have manufacturers who will
Day us a big price, enabling us to beat all competitors. =
Remember, we charge no commission; when we say we pay highest cash prices we g
mean the actual cash sent you for your shipment; absolutely no deductions for handling as we are direct g
buyers of Furs. Get busy—trap or buy all the furs you can and Ship them to us Quick.
Don’t overlook our facilities for supplying you with TRAPS, BAITS, SMOK
= ERS and all other supplies at FACTORY PRICES. Write for additional
g shipping tags and copy of illustrated booklet “Fur Facts” sent FREE.
I Abraham Fur Co., 307 Abraham Bldg., St. Louis, Mo. JI
g * -
UseThisTag I ; Co.;
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Simply cut out along dotted lines, 'fill in I „ |
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filllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
TICK ERADICATION MH '
: PLANNED IN 50. GEORGIA
■Dr. J. F. Fahey, Stationed at
Waycross, to Aid in Vat
Building
i < Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
WAYCROSS. Nov. 7.—After a confer
em'e with A. K. Sessoms and other of
ficials of the Georgia Land Owners’ as
i speiation Monday, Dr. W. M MacKellar,
j inspector in charge of the bureau of
, animal industry, announced the assign- i
ment of Dr. J. F. Fahey, veterinary in- ‘
j spector, to permanent headquarters in •
: this city for the purpose of aiding in
I the work of extending tick eradication
■ to the several counties of this section
! of the state.
This action has been taken as the re
: suit of a large number of inquiries that
are coming to Dr. MacKellar’s office as
well as to the office of the Georgia
i Owners’ association, whose headquar
ters are in this city, from individual
I farmers and from eou’nty officials for
| information and assistance tn the mat
: ter of building dipping vats in order
. to prepare against the day, fixed as Jan
-1 uary 1. 1918, by the Davis-Townsend
| tick lbw, when it will be unlawful for
i any owner of cattle in tick-infested
I territory to move them to market or
| elsewhere to tick-free territory.
Dr. Fahey will have offices with the
Georgia Land Owners' association and
w’ill visit farmers and county, officials
in this and adjoining counties who are
ready to construct dipping vats and
give them free instructions as to the;
building of the same.
The government’s plans and specifica
tions provide for the cheapest possible
method of construction, and it is polnt
i ed out that the farmers and county of
' ficlals should be sure that the plans’
j followed by them are first approved by |
I government or state officials.
Hundreds of dipping vats are being i
constructed in south Georgia, according !
to information reaching the office Os the ,
Georgia Land Owners’ association, and i
almost without exception the county!
commissioners are making plans to pay i
for the construction of the vats while:
the government and state experts are
giving free supervision.
The government is planning to meet
' the demands for state-wide tick eradi
cation and has set apart a substantial
! fund for this purpose. It is pointed
' out that the county commissioners who
refuse to spend county money to build
dipping vats are likely to entail upon
the farmers In their counties in the
’Admittedly Sane, His
Defense for Arson Is !
A Plea of Insanity
CHARLOTTESVILLE. Va„ Nov. 7.
Admittedly sane today, through a re
cent surgical operation, S. Dabney Cren
shaw. University of Virginia student
charged with looting the university
chemical laboratory of platinum and
burning the building to conceal the
theft, began his fight here today to
prove himself insane at the time of the j
act. Removal of a blood clot on his <
brain, it will be advanced, has now re- j
stored his mental soundness. If ad
judged Insane, Crenshaw will be in the
anomalous position of being legally In
sane and medically pronounced sane.
‘ Farmers Have Money
And Don’t Need Loans
WASHINGTON, Nov. 7.—One of the
most striking indications of farmers’
prosperity under war prices reaching
the federal farm loan board was a re
port today from the Houston, Tex., bank
that many farmers have abandoned
plans to take loans because they re
ceived enough from this year’s crops to
pay off thejr farm indebtedness.
matter of fines for violations of the law
which is to become effective January 1,
1918, su’rns far In excess of the cost of
dipping vats, as it is the determimd in
tention of the state veterinarian to pro
tect the premises of those who begin to
dip their cattle from the encroachment
of tick-infested cattle whose carelestj
owners may fail to fence them in or to"
join their neighbors in tick eradication.
I " 1 - i »
Your Health
CASCARaE QUININE
The itandard cold cure for 20 year*—
in tablet form —safe, aure, no opiatea
—curea cold in 24 hours —grip in 3
days. Money back if it fails. Get the
genuine box with Red top and Mr.
Hill’s picture on it.
© EeS ®
GIRLS! DRAW A MOIST
CLOTH THROUGH HAIR.
DOUBLE ITS BEAUTY
Try this! Hair gets thick,
i glossy, and beauti
ful at once
i Immediate? —Yes! Certain?—that’s
the joy of ij. Your hair, becomes light,
wavy, fluffy, abundant and appears as
soft, lustrous and beautiful as a young
girl’s after a Danderine hair cleanse.
Just try this a cloth with a
little Danderine and carefully draw It
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time. This will cleanse the
hair of dust, dirt or excessive oil. and in
just a few moments you have doubled
the beauty of your hair. A delightful
surprise awaits those whose hair has
been neglected or is scraggy, faded, dry,
brittle or thin. Besides beautifying the
hair, Danderine dissolves every particle
of dandruff; cleanses, purifies and Invig
orate the scalp, forever stopping itching
and falling hair, but what will please
you most will be after a few weeks’ use.
when you see new hair—fine and downy
at first—yes—but realy new hair grow
ing all over the scalp. If you care for
pretty, soft hair and lots of It, surely
get a small bottle of Know-lton’s Dande
rine from any drug store or toilet coun
ter for a few cents. —(Advt.)
Folding DOUBLE X-RAY.
this X-Ray y°u
can apparently see
bra doth or wood. See bones in the body, makes
he flesh look transparent. Lbte of fun. 10 cts by
nail. The ARDEE Co. Box 218 Stamford Coan.
GIVEN
RTnt« today for U pack. Smith's Hair
Tonfe to sell at 10c per
P'<c- Raturn 91.20 .rd
We will sand weddin<
and bracelet, warranted.
SMITH DRUG CO. Box 161. Woodsboro. IM.
Money Saving
' tTFence Book. Over 150 Styles.
'Hhaw' Gates-Steel Posts-BarbWlreßsc3srEXF
DIRECT FROM FACTORY-FREIGHT PAID
WR-y- Ja 411 heavy DOUBLE SiI.VANIZED WIRES. 13*
par rod Get free Book and Sample to toat.
Wa THE BROWN FENCE a WIRE CO.,
Desk (7- .Clewlesa Ohio