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SL& IAY, SEP'I_‘EMBER 23, 1928.
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GENERAL @ ELECTRIC
GEORGIA POWER COMPANY
A CITIZEN WHEREVER WE SERVE
Monday
in “R Regular Scout”
MODERN women pride themselves on
keeping house well — with as little
effort as possible. And one of the most val
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The planning of menus is made simpler . . .
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Refrigerator
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STRAND--- Monday and Tuesday
AND THE HORSE WITH A PERSONALITY—-SILVER KING
With MARY CARR, T. ROY BARNES and ROBERT McKIM
A Cy'clone of a Western, starting in a whirlwind of tragedy, rushing along to end in a
torrent of Adventure and Romance. And what a climax! You're going to love
every second of it!
Regular Admission Prices
STRAND
THE BANNER-HFRALD, ATHENS, GEORGIAL
Judge Green Scores !
Religious Intolerance '
In Talk To Kiwanis
(Continued from page one.)
ligious freedom where all men,
without favor and without fear,
could worship God according to
the dictates of the'r consciences.
Now permit me to discuss very
briefly this announcement, verily
this command, of religious free
dom. 3
First: What does it mean upg
der the Federal Constitution? It
is utterly impossible in this- brief
addressg to call w.tention to but
one or two ideas gs contained in
this ‘the jirst and Mderhaps the'
most important provision of our
Bill of Rights. {
Mr, Cooley in hig learned treat
ise: on Congt'tutional Limitations
~-said that these provisions mean
not only religious tolerance but
religioug equality. :
1 submit that today we have®
no religious equality; we have but
lit¢le religioug tolerance. I believe
it is a conservative statement to
say that man is as tolerant today
as ever in the history of vhe
world. We have become more re
fined, more humane, in the mani
festations of our intolerance. We
no longer torture, we have ceased
to employ the rack or to burn at'
the stage, but the intolerance of
private and public opinion is as
‘pronounced, as bitter, and as de
vastating as of vore. The manifes
tat‘on is not so cruel to the phy- i
sical man but fully as oppressive |
and humiliating ‘o the minds and
gpirits of those who suffer.
Next, despite the mandate of our
Constitution; °t is my opinipon that
this great Constitutional provision
will pever be appreciated or ac
cepted until we change our con
ception of God, untl we recog
nize a divine Constitution as well
ag a Fedefal Constitution.
What is your conception of the
greay God? It has been said that
a pegple’s conception of God has
varied with its intelligence and its
education. As glartling as the re- g
mark may appear, I believe that
in a sense, the average man to
day is as idolatrous as the ancient
man who created his God out of
wood andg out of stone, Oh, Yes!
We have advanced in education.
We are too intelligent to make
our God out of material matter,
but we carve him out of the small
ness of our own thoughts; out of
the littleness of our own natures.
That Infinite Be'ng is made and
limited according to our own lim
itations. We attribute unto Him
base human characterisiics. Can
we not get a different conception
of the Great Jehovan, that Infinite
Spirit that had no beginning and
‘Knows no end; that Being beyond
compare, whose beauty may be
seen in the blush of the modest
viplet and again emblazoped in the
gloripus tintg of the golden sun
set; that Personality whose whis
per may be detected in the sum
mer zephyrs and whose voice may
be heard in the hurricane's roar;
that God who it is true numbers
the hairs of your head and the
sands upon the seashore, but
whose grandness and greatness
and bigness, hasg created innum
berable worlds and flung them
spinning into infinite space. GCo
\o the mountain tops, rid your
self of your little human attributes
and get this vision of the Ruling
Spirit of the Universe. When yol
have done this, you will become
sshamed and the petty discus
sions of men will be forgoiten and
ignored.
What cares this Inf‘nite Spirit
whether you be Protestant or
Catholic, Gentile or Jew? He
made all men and gave them the
right to worship Him.
I have ofien pictured this Great
Spirit in the vastnegs of the un
known spaces looking down with
compassion and perhaps amuse
ment upon men as they fly at
each other’s throats in their bitter
discussiong over man made creeds.
When we grasp ithis vision of
our Creator, and of the divine Con
stitution, we shall then become
tolerant and there will be a relig
ious equality that shall lift men to
heighis yet undiscovered.
It will not only require a “Law
Human” as the law of the land
but a “Law Divine” to transport
man to that state where the law
of our land shall be recognized
‘and accepted.
Tennyson in hig “Locksley Hall”
has some such idea. It is true
he visioned embattled armies but
we have today embattled spirits
ag cruel as vindicative as any
marching, marauding army. Ten
nyson wrote:
«ill war-drums throbbed no long
er, and the battle flags,were
furl’d
!
: \
In the parliament of map. the Fed
eration of the world.
There the common sense of most
shall hold a fretful realm ia
awe,
And the kindly earth shall slnm-|
ber, lapt in Universal Laiw. |
EATS RAZOR BLADES
TORONTO, Ont.—lsrael Duby
eats razor biades. Yes sir, not
only razor blades. Only recently
he confessed a youthful passion
for his teacher’s spectacles and
once he ate an electric light globe.
He started out on a bet. One of
his friends bet him $3 that he
couldn’t eat two blades. Israel
ate the two blades, washed them
down with a glass of water, and
has been eating them ever since.
At last reports he was still alive.
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Five chassis— sixes and eights— prices ranging
from SB6O to $2485. Car illustrated is Model
610, five-passenger Sedan, $875. All prices
f. 0. b. Detroit.
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PENRANY |
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GRIFFITH MOTOR COMPANY
Phone 997 120 East Washington Street
GRARAM-BAIGE
READ BANNER-HERALD WANT ADS.
Owners are emphasizing how eas
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they enjoy in driving the open
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Athens, Ga.
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Tuesday
PAGE SEVEN