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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 11*21.
V. S. ACADEMY
•- . -
The Four <'minty Kinging choir Ims
♦toon organized with L. E. Wood, pres
ident ; I.*e Maddox, vice president;
1 jester Stone, treasurer: Frank Smith,
chaplain. We are looking for some
good singing next year; They will
.ii)g at Macedonia the Fourth Sunday
afternoon.
The Bible class of Sharon met with
their pastor, Rev. J. It. Burel, at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Mauldin.
Several from here attended the sing
ing at Liberty Sunday afternoon and
reported it fine.
Misses I toll and Fannie Sims of
County Line spent Sunday with Miss
Eva June Lancaster.
Miss Lois Langford had as her guest
Sunday Misses Parks and Alma Dea
ton.
Mrs. Lula Davis and little daughter,
Magnolia, spent. Sunday with Mr.
Herschel Davis and wife of Thomp
son's Mill.
Messrs. Ralph and Julia Simpson
spent Sunday with Messrs. Hoke and
Utah Deaton.
* I —*
PENTECOST.
———
* Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Elrod and chil
dren of Tyro were the guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Job Ilaynie Sat unlay night
and Sunday.
Messrs. R. L. and Alvali Ray and
Claude Freeman of Bishop were here
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Wages and little
son. and Mrs. Dewey Crowe and chil
dren spent Sunday with their par
ents Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Miller.
Miss Marie Ilaynie was the guest of
Miss /ora Hammond Sunday.
Misses Minerva and Lannln Sims of
Winder were guests of their sister.
Mrs. It. C. Pentecost Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Wall and chil
dren spent Sunday afternoon with Mr.
and Mrs. Leonard Cook at Tyro.
Messrs Frank Haunt and Foster Ba
kcr were guests of Mr. Marvin Couch
Friday night
Mrs. J. L. Lyle and children spent
Thursday night with her mother, Mrs.
H. A. Hardigree.
Misses Ora and Annie Lou Mineey of
Atlanta spent Saturday night and
Sunday with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. F. Mineey.
Miss Pearlie Hammond spent the
week end with friends tit Jefferson.
Miss Norma Hardigree was the
guest of Miss l.ueile Miller Saturday
night.
The farmers here are all busy sowing
COUNTY LINE.
Misses Hirtie llu<lgins and ('liristine
Attn way visited Missel 1 tsinii and
law-lie Murphy Sunday.
Miss l.ueile Nigmon was the guest
of Miss Mil-tie House Sunday.
Mrs. Mary Sims and daughters. Pel
and Fannie and Eltstwlielh and Mis
Clifford Freeman and children visit
sl Mrs. .1 (I. AttaWay Friday after
noon.
Mr. .Monroe Manus and family of
near Cuupton s| ■ -nt Tuesday night
with Mr. M 11. Hudgins anil family
Mr. and Mrs. At ficus Wheeler are the
proud parents of a son.
Mr. A. P. Murphy and little daugh
ter and Mis K. A. Castleberry and
children of ttainesville spent Sunday
with Mr. F P. Murphy and family.
Mr. and Mrs. .1 U. Attaway sient
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
M. 11. Hudgins
Mr. and Mi-. Arthur House visited
to ur Parish Sunday.
On last Wednesday afternoon neeurr
ed the marriage of Mr. William Fow
ler and Miss Annie Attaway.
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Yanderford vis
ited Mr. .1. T. Yanderford and family
Sunday afternoon.
BOX Sl’Pl’Eß.
There will he a box supper at Sha
ron church next Saturday night, Nov.
ft. Everybody has a special invitation
to come and bring well tilled boxes.
Mr. 1,. F. Wood will act as auctioneer.
Miss Eva Jane Lancaster,
Miss Lois Langford,
Mr. Hoyt Cruce,
Committee.
FARM FOR NAI F.
IfcM.a Afros of Him* farm land: -M
acres in cult ivatitm, balance in fine tim
ber, good four room house and good
out buildings; flue pasturt* and good
well of water. Four miles east of Win
*r. In one-half mile of church, and
* mile of good school.—Mrs. \V. V.
Segars. Winder, (sa. .‘tt-25-pd
Chamberlain's Tablets Have Done
Her a World of tiood.
‘'Chamberlain's Tablets have done
me a world of good.” writes Mrs. Ella
Ij. Button. Kirkville. N. V. "I have
recommended them to a number of my
friends and all who have used them
praise them highly." When troubled
with indigestion or constipation, give
them a trial and realize for yourself
what an excellent medicine it is.
DISARMAMENT
(Paper read by H. D. Boss at the meet
ing of Methodist Men's Club.)
The ancient fallacy that the best way
to secure peace is to prepare for war
has proven a delusion. We have
imsseil through the fiery furnace of the
late world war for the protection of lib
erty, against it deadly menace—forty
years of preparation for war by the
Impcriol German government.
Our president, to his lasting honor,
has summoned a conference on dis
armament. The world is groaning un
der the terrible weight of debt and
taxes. Au enlightened public opinion
has been directed to the folly, the risk
and the burden of bloated and extrav
agant expenditures upon the machin
ery of war. Children yet unborn will
rise to call blessed those who point out
the true path of peace.
According to statistics compiled re
cently, of the total of more than 4,-
tiOO.IMiO.OOO appropriated to maintain
(lie United States government this year
..*!,t!77,01d.is to meet obligations
arising out of past wars and current
military and naval requirements, as
against only a little more than $1,000,-
000.000 to he expended for all other
purixiscs.
In other words 77.5 per cent of the
total amount of money the American
people will have to pay into the feder
al treasury this year will go to meet
requirements occasioned by war and
military preparedness, while only 22.•>
per cent of it will be applied to meet
jpg the non-military obligations and
needs of t lie government.
This represents the cost to America
alone. Think of the trem bras
amount of funds the civilized and the
heathen nations of the world are pil
ing up that they may be prepared at
i moment's notice to commit murder.
I .ike individuals, nations that go heav
ily nriaed are quick to use their arms.
President Harding has called togeth
er representatives <d' the civilized na
tions cf the globe that, in the calm
moments of serious thought, under the
w hite winged dove id peace, the Pur
most thinkers of the age may discuss
and devise some plan if possible to min
imize ihe horrors of future wars. This
is no time for Christian men and wom
en to stand back and quibble over sour
and futile fears which weaken, but do
not purify the heart.
It is a time for sobriety, for union,
for consecration, it is a time 'when
•very Christian soul should he kneel
ing ‘at the altars of Almighty Hod,
praying for His omnipotent presence
ami directing spirit at this cpoch-mak
i,,g assemblage at Washington.
There are only two sides for lion
,st men and women to take. One is
Ihe side that means the side of thing
as they tire, with generations of
equally desperate and hopeless coin
Imttants and generations of help
|,.s S non combatants. Idling the soil
with their graves. The other is I In
side of things as they ought to he, lim
ited .armaments to insure domestic
tranquility, with liberated races, un
der governments of their own choice,
working out their salvation in peace
and in order. There is yet no court
with power to enforce decisions, hut
when arbitration is made tinal by uni
versal agreement, or when the dream
of a world empire Ls at last realized
such a court will exist.
1 have given statistics as to the costs
,f war. .lust think of the great benefit
to American citizenship should these
vast sums he turned Into the channels
of Christian education. Knowledge is
-lower. The republic’s future army of
defense is today encamped in its pub
lic schools. We no longer measure
giants by cubic inches, nor compute
wlmt men are worth to the world in
the paltry mathematics of mammon
I’hc demand of the age is for trained
intellects. Even the titanic engines of
war are today propelled by brain; skill
i- at a premium, even in the brute em
pire of fore.*, ami a nation's deadliest
hnmlerholts are hurled liy its thinkers,
f we must have war. il would he Pet
•er to disband the ignorant hirelings
of the army and navy and by educa
tion instill patriotism in the breasts
of America's young manhood.
To use the words of another: "Our
inheritance from th * past and our
mission to the future alike forbid that
we should imperil the cause of liberty
by neglecting its rightful and proper
safeguards. Too dearly have we pur
chased our freedom to leave it unpro
tected. We must continue, therefore,
to look to our battleships; hut the
time is fast coming in the cyclonic
sweep of events, when we will no lon
tor settle our quarrels in the arena of
combat.
Militarism is staggering to its down
fall, drunk with the wine of its own
dotal, and we can set* its doom fore
shadowed with the same linger of deity
which wrote for Belshazzar upon the
walls of Babylon. The rightful mon
arch. seated upon a throne of charac
ter. must wield a sceptre of intellect
and wear a crown of gems. The true
uijesty of man has been transferred
o the realm of mind. and. even in re
publican America, we can respond to
this sentiment with a lusty shout:
“Long live the King."
We are at peace today because of
the part which an all-wise God has
fitted us to play in a great world crisis.
The last effort of Divine Providence in
behalf of the human race is this gov
ernment of ours dedicated to civic
righteousness, and if we fail to make
good, the ark of liberty is once more
afloat. The beckoning angels of pence
are calling to-day to advance the cause
if human liberty around the world:
"In the beauty of (he lillies,
Christ was bom across the sea,
With a glory in his bosom
That transfigures you and me;
Vs he died to make men holy,
Let us live to make them free—
While God is marching on.”
When the principles of disarmament
re carried out in the councils of the
world and when the spirit that called
together the representatives now gath
ered at Washington permeates the life
and shapes the character and guides
lie destinies of men, then will bat
leships no longer plow the seas and
ami standing armies keep perpetual
vigil on the shores, then will Isaiah's
vision of a golden age lie realized. Then
we will have peace; a peace regulated
by law and grounded upon righteous-
ness ; a peace whose mission it is to
rouse mankind to action; a peace
whose mission it is to encourage in
dustry, to foster science, to promote
iterature, to nourish art, to extend
digital, and in every phase of life to
out threatening darkness and to spinal
tdvaneing day; a peace whose fruits
• righteous laws and prosperous cit
ies and happy homes and splendid
schools and towering churches. In the
FARM I OANS!
I make loans on lands in amounts from $500.00 to $100,000.00, for
live years’ time in Barrow, Walton, Jackson and Gwinnett counties. I
am in Winder on Fridays of each week; my office is on the second floor
of the Winder National Hank Building. Write to me or come to see me
if you need money.
S. G. BROWN, Banker
Private Hank—Not Incorporated.
mos.—22 LAWRENCEVIIJ.E, GA.
Edwards-Pollock
EVANGELISTIC COMPANY IN
i
Revival Services
The First Christian Church
WINDER, GEORGIA
Beginning Wednesday, November 2
Mr. Edwards Preaches the Gospel with Unusual Power and Attractiveness
Good congregational singing. Speaking the Truth in Love
THE WINDER NEWS
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC.
State of Georgia vs County of Barrow
No. 497, Barrow Superior Court, De
cember Term. 1921, Petition to confirm
and validate bonds.
,'otlce is hereby given that on the
11th day of November, 1921, at 0:30
o'clock. P. M., on said date, the above
cause, being a petition filed by W. O.
Dean, Solicitor General of the Wes
ern Circuit, in the name of the State
,f Georgia, against the County of Bar
row to validate and confirm $50,000.00
f bonds, the proceeds of which are to
o be applied only to the completing,
finishing and equipping the Court
House in and for said county, will be
heard and determined in the room for
merly used as the court room of the
Superior Court of said county, in Wiu
ier. Oh., and any citizen of the State
of Georgia, or any other person,
wherever resident, who has the right
object, may become a party to these
proceedings.
This 31st day of October, 1921.
A. T. HARRISON, Clerk,
2t Superior Court Barrow Cos. Ga.
interest of such peace we plead and
pray for the happier time when swords
shall be beaten into plowshares, and
sircars into pruning hooks, when wars
and rumors of wars shall fret the na
tions of life no longer, and when
God's great peace unbroken shall rest
upon the land win love, from border
unto border, even as it rests at twi
light upon the summits of the moun
tain, steeped in the silence of the stars.
“ INSURANCE
Your neighbor's home burned only a few days or months ago and a
''kely to strike this section at any time, so INSURE with US
do t night with a clear conscience and a peaceful mind. Don’t
DELAr. ay mean the loss of your home. Any man can build a home
once. A WISE man insures his property in a reliable insurance company
so that when calamity comes he can build again. He owes the protection
that it gives, to his peace of mind and the care of his loved ones.
Kilgore, Radford & Smith
WHEN YOU THINK OF
INSURANCE
THINK OF
NORTH GEORGIA TRUST &
BANKING CO.
LIFE : FIRE : HAIL : LIGHTNING : CY
CLONE : PARCEL POST : ACCIDENT
HEALTH : AUTOMOBILE : (Fuli Cover
age) : LIABILITY : COMPENSATION. :
Phone 82
S. F. MAUGHON, Manager.
Winder, Ga.
Subscription Price: $1.50 Per Year.