Newspaper Page Text
Three »trong reasons urge you to buy the Ford car: First,
because of its record of satisfactory service to more than
fifteen hundred thousand owners; Second, because of the
reliability of the Company which makes it; Third, because of
its large radiator and enclosed fan, streamline hood.'
fenders front and rear, black finish, nickel trimmings, it is
most attractive in appearance. To these must be added its
wonderful economy in operation and maintenance—about
two cents a mile; likewise the fact that by reason of its
simplicity in construction anyone can operate and care for it
Nine thousand Ford agents make Ford service as universal
as the car. Touring Car $360; Runabout $346; Coupe let ^506
Town Car $595; Sedan $645—f. o. b. Detroit. On sale at Dr.
J. U. Whitehead & Co.
GEORGIA SOUTHERN * FLORIDA RAILWAY
Schedule* to Kacon, Cordels Tlfton, Voids sis, Jacksonville and Falktha,
EffectiveKsy lV# ''f
BECAUSE
It has proved to be the most success
ful method for securing contributions
for Church support and missions.
It applies the accepted personal
responsibility toward the support of
the entire work of the Church.
It discovers and develops many new
workers, thus increasing their interest
in the work of the Kingdom.
It promotes the acquaintance of
canvassers with the congregation and
•ith the community.
It secures increased contributions
from those who have had spiritual and
missionary growth during the prev
ious year.
It avoids constant appeals from the
pulpit for special offerings.
It provides an opportunity for pre
senting to each member a personal in
vitation to cooperate in entire work
of the congregation.
It avoids debts by giving accurate
information regarding the contribu
tions that may be expected from the
congregations.
It is the only method for-securing
an adequate financial support for the
increasing work of the local congre
gation and the enlarging work of our
mission fields.
Every wide-awake, up-to-date,, pro
gressive congregation desiring to do
its best for the extension of the king
dom of Christ in the best possible Way
will make an every-member canvass.
How about your congregation? ’
Men’s Record and Missionary Review
Mk« ".Urn* ■ No.'i2
Leave Vienna viaG S * *_***• in..2:3* p ®~f 2:10,a m
At Unadilla via G 8 * F 9:30 a nt ....2:64 p is
Arrive Kacon via G 8 A F 11:10 a m....4:2$ p m....8:68 a m
Arrive Atlanta via C ol 3 4:2O p m....7:5t p m....6:58 a m . ...
No. 1 Ne. 5
Leave Vienna via G S A F 1:24 p m....C:14 p m—
. Arrive Cordele via G 8 A F 1:43 p m....6:30 p m.
Arrive Ashburn via G S A F 2:46 p m....7:32 p a
Arrive Tiften via G 8 A F 3 :28 p a ....8:17 p a.
Arrive Sparks via G 8 A F 4:11 p a
Arrive Adel via G S A F.4:18 p a.
. Arrive Valdosta via G 8 A F5:06 p m
>Ar. Jacksonville via G 8 A F 8:50 p m.
Ne. S3
S 2:40 a a
2:68 a
-4:18 a m
7:00 a a
7:11a
8:00 a a
No. 11 No. 13
Leave Valdosta via G S A F....5:17 p m....5:02 a m
Ar White Springs via G S A F....7:04 p m....6:88 a m
Arrive Lake City via G S & F....7-:30 p m—7:01 a m
Arrive Palatka via G S A F—10:40 p m—10:05 a m
NOTE—f indicates flag stop.
Trains arrive Vienna from north 2:40 a m, 1:24 p m, 6:14 p m.
Trains arrive Vienna from South 2:10, a m, 9:04 a m and 2:30 p ra.
Pullman sleeping cars on train No. 32, “The Southland.” Atlanta,
Knoxville, Cincinnati, Louisville and Chicago. Close connections made in
Atlanta for Chattanooga, Nashville, St. Louis and Chicago, via "Dixie
Flyer” route.
Schedules given above show the time at which trains may b« expected
• to arrive and depart, and to connect With other trains, but such schedules
or connections at the tint stated axe not guaranteed.
J. W. JAMISON, C. B. RHODES, T. J. JIMMERSON,
T. F. A., Maces, Ga., G. P. A., Macon, Ga.. Tkt Ages}, Vienna, Ga.
MONEY TO LOAN
If you need quick money- on good farm land,
write me and send copy of abstract to your prop*
erty, which will enable you to get the quickest
definite action at the lowest possible rate of inter
est and commission. We mean business and will
let you know at once if we can handle your loan.
W. N. EDENFIELD
901 Flat Iron Bldg.. Atlanta, Qa.
Coffins, Caskets anil Burial Babes
We have a large assortment' to
select from and courteous and
careful attention will be given all
who need our services.
J. P. Heard & Sons Co.
■was tight
they do sai
LRU Figits for Missionary Fire*.
“Any man who has so much busi
ness that he Jf^SnOjtimc-to give’to'
God may be very sure that be has
more business than God ever meant
for him to have ’’
One of our subscribers writes: “We
want to thank you for the nice Bible
we received for getting up ten siili-
."cribers. It was well worth the time
and trouble, and we appreciate it very
much.”
The world's most crying need today
is for men and women who take their
ideals of life, not from the marts of
trade or the coteries of fashion, but
from fellowship with the Son of God.
—Egbert W. Smith.
The total home mission expendi
tures by the Churches of the United
States and Canada last year are es
timated at fifty-five million dollars, as
against a little less than nineteen mil
l'.on dollars contributed for foreign
missions.
A misionary returning from an iti
nerating trip in Brazil writes: “At
Tres Riachos I found about ten per
sons who wished to be baptized, the
fruits of seed sown some twelve years
ago by a colporteur who left two
Bibles in that vicinity.”"
Miss Annice Siler, of Salisbury, N,
C., has been accepted as a missionary
to Japan and sailed on August 2(
Miss Siler was for several years
tiacher in the Hiroshima Girl'
School and was a great favorite. He
return to Japan will be hailed with
joy.
The Japan Sunday School Associa
tion was organized seven years ago,
It now affiliates over sixteen hundred
schools, with an enrollment of over
cnehundred thousand. About twenty
books for teachers and workers have
already been written in Japanese or
tianslated.
Among those receiving decorations
at the coronation of the Emperor of
Japan was Madame JaJima, President
of the Woman's Christian Temper-
t.nce Union, of Japan. During th:
Russo-Japanese War this lady sup
plied twenty thousand comfort oagi
t < the army and navy.
The government w v.nina has sent
all of its students and agricultural
students from Peking to the Univer
sity of Nanking, a union missionary
institution. This is a great step of
recognition; and this Christian school
will have a great influence upon these
fine young Chinese leaders, many of
whom will go into government service.
A distinguished statesman says: “If
our boasted civilization and Chris
tianity mean anything, they should
mean this: No war is justifiable un
less the cause of object stands in just
proportion to its blood, in destruction
in human misery, in political corrup
tion, in social demoralization, in re
lapse of civilization; and even then
it is justifiable only when every expo
dient of statesmanship to avert
has been-thoroughly exhausted.”
“One day in a distant village,” say
Mrs. J. V. Dawes, of China,
: ounded by a score of women who ha
listened intently to the story of the
nch man and Lazarus, I paused a
ment for some response. This came
from the brightest looking woman
the croud: ‘Can a beggar be saved
The answer of the Word was a revn
lation to all of them that God is no
let pec tor of persons. A number of
to a dgarette than merely
ising your taste.** Other cigarettes* ho*
Chesterfields, can do that.
$ut Chesterfields do more—they begirt
where the .others stop. 1
Because Chesterfields satisfy!—they giro
yop the true meaning* of smoking!
Yet they're MILD! ’
This new combination (**satisfy,** yet miU)i
can be had only in Chesterfields—because no
cigarette maker can copy the Chesterfield
Try Chesterfields today!
CIGARETTES
10 for 5c
Also packed
20 for 10c
—and yet they're MILD
of I
Rev. L. W. Langston, a missionary
located at Soa Paulo, Brazil, writes of
a remarkable case of faith and liber
ality on the part of a Brizillan woman;
There is a widow who is a member
of the Church. She has no living rel
atives. She is fifty years old and
cooks in a boarding house for a living.
The pastor asked this woman for a
contribution to the Church fund. She
gave him two hundred and fifty dol
lars, the amount she had saved against
the time when she could no longer
work. She accepted the challenge of
Jesus and put the kingdom first, be-
l.cving that all things needed would
bo added to her. She had done what
she could.”
nual session, and this will be added
to a contribution of $6,000 secured
from Mrs. Russell Sage through the
efforts of MrvFelton, making a fund
o $18,600 to erect a dormitory. Wil-
mer L. Moore, of Atlanta, chairman
of the board of managers, who has
worked day and night for the success
of the school, was reappointed by Gov
ernor Harris.
CROWNING EVENT IN
MRS. FELTON'S LIFE
Atlanta, Ga., Sept.—Completion of
the Georgia Training School for girls
is to be the crowning event in the
long and useful life of Mrs. W. H.
Felton, of Cartersville, one of the
most brilliant and best beloved wom
en that Georgia has ever produced.
Known far and wide for her intel
lectual ability and splendid literary
talents, Mrs. Felton is likewise a wom
an of splendid executive ability, and
was selected to perform important
duties in connection with the Wom
en’s departments of the great Chica
go Exposition, the Cotton States Ex
position in Atlanta and the World's
Fair at St. Louis.
Now in her declining years, although
an old woman in years but a woman
whose spirit has the quality of eternal
youth, Mrs. Felton has devoted her
self to this state institution located
rear Atlanta, which hat for its ob
ject the reclaiming of wayward girls.
The Georgia Legislature appropriated
them said: ‘Then there is hope for all * $12,500 to the Home at its recent an-
conley household, hen comes the trite
with another tele of woe. “Judge, ye
honah, Jim pea picks on me all the
time, chokin’ and heatin’ me and date*
fus one thing and then another," de
clared Jim’s wife in recorder’s toed
a few days ago. The judge asked
Jim whet he had to say. "Judge, I
hope God stracke mo dead die mined*
if I ever hit dat unman in my life.”
JIM CONLEY SEEMS TO
LIKE THE COURTS | n||j Jim looIdng ^ recorder
in the eye. Neighbors testified ltd
they often heard Jim’s wife hoUeriac
Atlanta, Sept—What is the wife
of Jim Conley the negro whose tes
timony convicted Leo M. Frank, go
ing to do with her refractory hus
band? Recorder Johnson, who has
done his level best to bring about
peace in the family, says he'll be dad-
blamed if he knows. He's about ready
to pass up Jim to the rock pile and
charge him off the books as a bad ac
count. For every time the recorder
concludes that the little white dove
has alighted on the roof tree of the
for help. So the recorder gave Jim
a $10.76 assignment on the rock pile.
No. Six-Sixty-Six
This lea preecrlpUoe pee pared especially
Five or star does* will break any caae, aa4
if ukea then as a tools the Fever will aot
return. * It sets on the liver belles thee
Calomel and doe* *ri grio* nr sicken. 25*
When you buy lumber or any builders supplies you will got bet
ter material and save money by getting our prices. We can ship
promptly from our large stock in Macon anything yon need and
make you attractive prices delivered at Vienna or any point in the
surrounding territory.
When you are in Macon come down to our yard and let us show
you the quality of our material.
We pay the freight to any point within 75 miles of Macon.
Builders Lumber & Supply Co*
MACON, CA
Sixth Street from Poplar to Cherry Street
“We Sell Everything To Build A House.
»’
n
►
-
i.-.-