Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
SCOUT NEWS
CUB NEWS
By Burt Vardeman
The Cubs of Den No. 1, of
Mngcon, Ga . had its regutai
Saturday September 16, 1939. at
their den The meeung was opened
with the pledge to the Nag. the Cub
promise and law. The boys paid
; dues and gave good turns as usual.
Everybody was present and all
:have paid their registration except
;one and it will soon be paid.
* The boys were asked to get
many new members as they could
ao they can enlarge the den.
A hike is being planned for next
Saturday. The boy? ate planning on
having a good time The boys
•planned on luilding a hut to use
•for their weekly den meeting
A play is bring planned in be put
on in front of toe boys’ patents. II
it is a success to them, the play
will be put, on elswhere.
The boy® played games and the
meeting was adjourned.
Van Cochran and Burl Vardeman
were in charge of the meeting.
Two boys passed some of their
Wolf tests and are studying on oth
er tests. The boys are trying hard
"No hish levrl of employment anr
income ha,s ever been achiever!
without a large outlay on plan
equipment and new construction.
Dr. Alvin Harvey Hamen. Profess"
of Political Economy. Harvard Un>
varsity
Trv Joy-Joy Please?
Fitrhugh Lee’s Drink
Price f>ve cents
Viirng’s Soria Fount
Covington, Ga.
J. I. GUINN
AGENT
M, Born and Company, largest and oldest made-to
measure clothes in the world. 250 samples finest
domestic and imported woolens. Come and let me
show them to you. Satisfaction guaranteed. Easy
terms arranged.
GUARD HER SAFETY!
I
■
A ■
■ I#
[
A
WITH THE TIRE THAT STOPS 4 TO 993 FEET QI ItKER*
U.S.R 0 YAL MASTER ihk.
Come lu ‘Today !Make the dramatic wet
glass demonstration! It shows you in one
minute how deskidded Royal Masters
stop quicker..control skids..give protec
tion on the slipperiest of wet pavements.
c Ask Jor a Free ‘Demonstration _? *Tests 4 Prove 223 Feet Royal Quicker Masters Than Stop
to
Conventional New Tires.
CDYingion Service Station
and Ginn SVIotor Company
Weekly in I*’*
—NEWS FROM—
1.
FAIR VIEW /
BV MRS. I,. D. RAY
I
Mr Frank Underwood, Miss
Ruth Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Lin
ton Ray. Mr. G. H. Brooks. Mr.
and Mrs, CQ W. Watson and Mr
and Mrs r— J Manson attended
the South River Association at
Lithonia, Wednesday and Thurs
day.
Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Bentley and
family spent Sunday in Atlanta
with Mr. and Mrs. Blackman.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Mason visited
Mr .and Mrs. Hoke Deaton Sun
hay afternoon
Mr. and Mrs. Chess Ray visited
Mr and Mrs _ s p Owens. Friday
Mrs. P. G. Neely visited her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. R.
Womack, Sunday afternoon
Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Ray spent
Tuesday night in Stone Mountian,
with Mr. and Mrs. Parks Stephens.
Mrs. James Pratt, of Thomaston.
called to see Miss Helen Neely.
Saturday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Loyd visited !
relatives in Conyers last week.
Misses Vivian and Carolyn Dea
ton spent Saturday 1 •h i
Misses Jeanana and Betty Bentley, i
Miss Ruth Worn [■ ............. |
L. C. Rawlins, Monday.
Mr. P. G. Neely attended the
funeral of Mr. Harmon McDonald,
in Covington, Saturday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Ray visited
Mr. and Mrs. G. W- Maloy. Sun
day
Miss Ethelene Brilt spent Satur- i
day afternoon with Mrs Josie
Mason.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Davis visit
ed Mr .and Mrs. Fred Neely, Sat
urday.
Mr. and Mrs. Manson Milter, of
Pot terdale, visited Mr. and Mrs.
Luck us Miller, last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Linton Ray enter
tained friends from Atlanta, Fri
day night.
In the WFMTNEWS
I a
M t
i.m ■yy. y
t; ,
1 m ml U $
n Vi If : f ~ •â€“
m ■i
«
S4
j
■M ff rj* ,j|
::
s ' % ■ 4
*>vA
jAA
torpedoed SHIP SURVt
VORS—Crew ol the torpedoed
British freighter Blcrirlogie up
arrival in New York on a
on which res
U. S. Lines' ship
cued them after their ship
jell prey to German torpedoes.
m *t? Stir*
"•â€“V v •• hMA .
" ’ Kill •:•••••
■
P;
if Slllll: ■ mr m *
-
fh m y£% ■: / ■ ••' - i m
W:
'
y.
1 m
1 mil! •V
■ -
r »;
f 1 ry*
V
I
mm
i.
x- -Sf
mi
r
WORLD S CHAMPION PLOWMAN — Carl Hage
man ot Wheatland. I1L won the plowing cham
; pionship . o! the world in the 62nd annual competi
.
t tion held there recently. He won the title in 1923
-
I and came back to take it again 1$ years later.
GEMS OF THOUGHT
He most lives who thinks most,
feels the noblest, acts the best; and
he whose heart beats the quicket
lives the longest—James Martin
eau.
♦♦
THF, rOVINf.TON NEWS
\ #
,
SIX - YEAR ■ OLD
SWIMS HUDSON
RIVER Stephsn
"Sonny” Kola. 6
year - old Chicago
boy. drlnki a brac
ing cup of collet al
ter swimming the
mile-wide Hudson
Hirer between New
York and New Jer
ley. He is the
youngest person
ever to e .e. pt the
arduous swim, and
made the crossing
in 39 minutes.
JL
]
BOB JONES
OMMENTS
ON
fcf ' HERE an#
i HEREAFTER J )
“Is not the tendency to deify
sus more heathen than Christian?"
This question was asked by one of
the outstanding religious leaders
sometime ago. It so happens
this religious leader has neen brand
ed by representative of the Ameri
can Legion as a Communist.
man who will raise the question this
religious leader raised
the deity of Christ is not a safe
man to follow spiritually, it matters
not what titles he may have or what
ecclesiastical position he may hold
Jesus Christ is the Son of God. Man
does not have to deify Him. He was
God manifest in the flesh The
Bible teaches that any prophet who
denies that Jesus Christ has come
in the flesh is an anti-Christ. 11
Jesus was just a man when He
on earth I might reverence Hint
and honor Him. He is God, I will
worship Him. He is God. A young
man who came to Jesus called Him
"good master.’’ Jesus said, “Why
call me good? There is only one who
is good and that is God.” In other
words Jesus said, “If I am not God.
I am not good.” If He was less
than God He was the greatest im
poster the world ever saw.
In the second Epistle of John we
are told that if any man bring a
message which is not in line with
the doctrine of Christ and a per
son even bids him godspeed, such a
person is a party to the sin of the
false teacher. No Christian has any
right to support with his money or
influence, nor has he any right to
give any form of approval to any
ecclesiastical program or any cause
which is not in harmony with the
Gospel of Christ. For a number of
years I went up and down thb
country preaching the Gospel of the
grace of God and fighting for old
time evangelical orthodoxy. Yet, at
the same time I was
with my money the entire program
of my church knowing that some oi
the program was modernistic and
contrary to the Gospel. I read
first Epistle of John and
convicted. I made up my mind I
would not support any program of
my own church or any other church
that does not exalt Jesus Christ as
the Son of God. and does not
neve in the necessity of the new
birth, and does not stand for the
old-time faith of our fathers. It is
wrong for any religious leader to
influence any member of a church
to support any cause that the
church member’s conscience docs
not apprrv' Every cause in every
l church should stand on its own
(Our Advertiser* Are Assured of Results')
—NEWS FROM—
ROCKY
PLAINS
By MISS IRENE HARVEY
Mrs. T. K. Evans returned Sat
urriay from Covington, where she:
visited her daughter. Mrs. N. S.
Avery.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Boyd and
children, Billie and Betty, spent
the week-end with Mr. and Mrs.
R. W. Warren and Mr. and Mrs.
R. P. Boyd.
Mr. and Mrs. .E. L. Preston had
as iheir guests Sunday afternoon,
Mr. and Mrs. S. VV. Whitaker, of
Conyers. Gardner, of Oxlord, j
Mr Leroy
visited his sister, Mrs. W. B. Har
vey. Sunday.
Mrs. J. B Martin, Mrs. Nannie
Gunn and daughter, Miss Ruth
Gunn, visited relatives at Porter
dale, Saturday afternoon.
Mrs. Tom Cook spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cook.
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Hearn and
Miss Robbie Harvey, of Decatur
were week-end guests of their
mother, Mrs. Josie Harvey.
Miss Dorothy Lee McCart, Mas- [
ters James, Eugene and Raymond ;
McCart spent Sunday with Iheir
aunt, Mrs. E. L. Preston.
Miss Estelle Thompson, Mr.,
Chesnut Harry Stewart, attended Mr. the and funeral Mrs. C E. ol |
Mr. Harmon McDonald, in Cov
ington, Saturday afletnoon.
Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Harvey and
little son, William, of Atlanta; Mr
and Mrs. Ernest Smith and
Ernest, Jr., of Covington, weie vis
itors of Mrs. Josie Harvey, Sunday
afternoon.
Rally Day Program will be held |
at Hopewell Presbyterian church.
Sunday, October 1st. at 10:00 a. m
Preaching at 11:00 a. m. by the
pastor. Rev. T. P. Horger; sub -1
ject, “The Unpardonable Sin.”
You are * cordially invited to at
tend these services. j
To the bereaved family of Mr.
R. R. Fowler and to the family of
Mr. Harmon McDonald, in Cov
ington, we extend our deepest
sympathy and commend them to
God, who alone can give comfort
Mrs. Laura Sullivan Passes
On Saturday, September 16th,
God called home Mrs. Laura Sul
livan, a member of Hopewell Pres
byterian church, at the home of
her daughter, Mrs. Chester King,
of West Newton, with whom she
had resided for many years.
She was a loyal member of her
///
SUNK BY A GERMAN SUB
— The British arlcralt
der Courageous car
«0,000.000. which cost
, unk br a G „.
man submarine, wits said to
b * the lint sinking ot
,, “ war
•hip by . a •ubmarin*.
>M«*
named Country a.^TaL.r^nlV Momh^b'y
Home Magaiiae, who ha*
headed California Fruit Grower* Ex
change for 19 y,ars without salary and
greatly n ,, increased . Income ol its member..
! port from any cause which is con
j trary to the Gospel of Jesus Christ 1
*« *
“ First the Protestant churches
must unite; then this great Pro
testant church will meet with the
Greek Catholic Church, and unite,
and lastly, this great body could.
| meet with the Roman Catholic
Church and work out a plan for a
world Christian Churcn.’’ This Is
the statement of a minister of the
: Gospel who has the reputation of
. being a modernist in Is religious
views. In my wide evangelistic ex
perience covering a period of years
I have observed that the men who
talk most about organic union of
the churches are strongly modern
i istic in ,heir rel 'S>ous position. It
isn’t a big world church we need. It
is a Spirit-filled, divinely-anointed,
separated church that God needs in
this world. In the early days of the
Christian era when the curch wa
small and Spirit-filled it had pow
er. Jesus never emphasized bigness
He emphasized quality. When the
tfliurch became influential In n
worldly way. it lost its power. A few
years ago the organized church had
great influence but it hasn't had
P ower mar A a cia '- or e a ‘
j ^ >' ears organized Christianity has
lar S el y ,os< i,s influence, t sam
P° wer F° r influence, ow i i.
^ shorn of power an in uence, o
H *h e salt lases its sa '°^ s !
,
I° r nothing but to cas out am
trodden undei foot o m ^ n The
church that at one me a
influence in Russia vas
trampled undei tie oo o ma ■ '
clesiasticism is being trampled un
der foot in many countries in the
world today. It is not a world church
1 | we need. The world needs the church
j of Jesus Christ, Spirit-filled and set
apart for the task of pioclaimine
the Gospel to the en s o e eai ■
There Is a vei> temai a p P' c
in the Book of Reve at ion. ‘
picture of Jesus knoc mg a
door of the human heart and say
ing, “If any man will open the door
I will come in to him and sup wit i
] him and he with Me ’’ Jesus had
been shut out of the organize
hurch and so He comes to the in
j c th
dividual and offers to enter
j heart of the individual. Jesus in o
v has largely been shut out of the
ecclesiastical house, so He is no"
us j ne individuals. He is not tisiti"
|0 any gr r "t extent ecclesiastic®'
j machinery. He is using in men this dav art'
women a «. individuals
vrp h ear much about a social Gos
^ a nd world achievements and
j must movements, but it is signifi
ran) t ) lf ,t God is taking un a
^ pre an d another on» somewhere
f5 , p and ,,«ine these individuals to
carry on His work. Individual men
many of whom have limited ability
are doing more today to get the
Gosoel to the people than all the
ecclesiastical organizations in the
"v»’>itrv E-" , pciastical o-ganizntinm
- • - b.-— i "> V*» «r" "f tt’-m- ^
pelves and their own mac>s|nery.
h New 1940
\ i Eimo
m
is**
.. •
A A
■'*
s
it
M
4 I it A
yO u
\ 1 io io* iw A
You*
" Chevrolet's FIRST Again'
Thursday, Septembers?
church, being regular, interested
and a helpful attendant at all serv
ices until a few years ago, when
she was denied the privilege ’ol
attending regularly on account of
failing health. Yet she was with
us in spirit, and lived a beautiful
Christian life. She kept in con
stant touch with her Master’s
work. She was a devoted mem
p er 0 f the Woman’s Missionary So
ciety, and for years she was a
teacher in the primary department
of the Sabbath school. Three
weeks from the day she was bur
ied, she attended the revival serv
ices at Hopewell and seemed so
happy to be present.
Mrs. Sullivan was 83 years of
age. Her husband, Mr. T. T. Sul
livan preceded her to the grave,
October 11, 1917.
He was an elder of Hopewell
church for many years and had
been treasurer for 25 years,
For her, her Saviour has pre
pared a home not made with
hands, eternal in the joy of her
Lord.
May her worthy example in
faith, service, and trust in God,
ever be inspiration to us.
She is survived by one duagh
ter, Mrs. Chester King; two sons,
Clarence and Charlie Sullivan, of
Atlanta, and several grand chil
dren.
We extend to her devoted ones
our heart-felt sympathy and direct
them to the Supreme Comfortei.
w hose ears are ever open to the
sorrow'tng.
Funeral services were conducted
Suriday afternoon at Hopewell by
Rev. T. P. Horger, with interment
j n c hurch cemetery,
G. M. d AIITHIII A\(|
FUNERAL IIEI fiOl \
Jm : • •< r I I
y m
i yfi ’/.?.. ..... r.
jpf i
k i it
yy •
L
DAY PHONE 154-W NIGHT PHONE, 1M
Ambulance Service Day and Night
716 Floyd St. Covington, Q
l\u |jf ITC ‘
F 00l|
itching 0f r 1NG»J
SOld by dru * *»o«s.r J
receipt of price 50c and It,
GEORGIA e EMED , COM
Covington, (, Mr(it
THE
EMMS
SEfl 111
-^8B JACKSONVlUi
leading HOTI
Eviw ol wool iKk Holt! and J
SUMMER htKffl el doJ
COMFORT laclctonyjlle. I
loom with tj J
radio, ihower, m!i J
and VeneUan Hindi E
with lnnortprinq maltreuandtJ
lamp, Running ice water ontnqj
^OPUlAtPKiCIJ
COCKTAIL LOUNGE
COFFEE SHOP'
Otbtr J. | Found Hdilt
#«PeI Poften-ChoMonoogo — HottiDtSi