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'hursday, August 22, 1940
BOB JONES
OMMENTS
ON
7* ’ HERE AMe
hereafter
____ —-f
m would be an
gedy for Great Britain to
eated in the present
is the idea of a missionary
at
Africa whom it was
m writer to meet
sileg e of the
,. b ie Conference recently.
Ming to this missionary,
(2J LVworld 600 Protestant and 12,400 of them
[ f under the working British under flag. the
, 50 o
nch flag and only 15
Italian H 08 L have not check
the figures, but I am inclined
think that the intelligent mis
y who gave them to me,
, ar is talking about,
„ what he
(land. like all other nations,
blots on her record and has.
L er nations, been guilty of
iy sms m God’s sight, but Eng
l'has stood missionary for many work years and a
n(i 0 f God’s
stessed the value of
id. When the writer was tour
,he British Isles, he found
s of God’s Word written in
lie buildings and many other
es ’‘Lord knoweth them are
was chiseled on the tomb
. soldier, After
he unknown
ing the address delivered rec
by Lord Halifax, I found
elf praying with tears in my
foi England. There has, as
as the writer knows, never
a more Christian address
by a statesman in any
try at any time in the history
ie world. I have traveled in
jr lands, and in America I
i many personal friends from
nany and from other coun
; but I can not help feeling
lit would be to the best in
it of even Ger.many for Eng
to win this war. I have
tling that this baptism of
1 may drive England to her
s, and that out of all the hor
jnd tragedy of suffering there
come a world-wide revival.
taows best. He has made
he blood all nations of men
[dwell on the earth, but He
fixed the bounds of their hab -
in, However the war turns
we Christians have nothing
*ar. “Our citizenship is in
|n.” We shall be safe if all
as are destroyed, “The
lations of God standeth sure,
le Lord knoweth them that
■£’’”7 may be fhaT we' are
I, as many Bible scholars he
lm the close of the age. Eng
kay go down. Germany and
may come out victorious,
may soon come back to re
His own. No one can know
ply of the what will struggle. be the out- We
present
pm walk by faith, and not
iht. We do not ask to see.
i "’orld says, seeing is be
ll. To Christians believing is
• This does not mean that
lermits us in this world ro
ery detail of His plan for
ture It does mean that
are always holes in every
which hangs over our head
h which we may see His
i face. There are no guns
oan can make which will
P° l° u d that we shall not be
• hear Him say, “I am with
**’ays even until the end of !
! e '" and. “Behold, I come
^ pile and my reward is with
Me every man according
shall be.”
r the P ro Phet like most
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31 Covington, Ga.’
People, Spots In The News
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SHOWERS and cooler is
the forecast for tiny Vir
ginia McTighe, 3, as she
escapes New York City’s
blistering pavements by
•“going informal” under
community children’s sprinkler at a
aid society
shelter.
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FISH FILM STAGE .. .Hollywood movie makers may soon go “on
location at Marmeland, Fla., to make full-length feature “starring”
denizens of deep in huge oceanariums, world’s only specially-de
signed underwater studios. C. V. Whitney (inset) was principal
sponsor in construction of fishdom’s Hollywood, a magnet for scien
tists and laymen.-
preachers seemed to be deceived
by the people who attended public
services. Ezekiel according to cer
tain statements in the Book of
Ezekiel was under the impression
that idols had been destroyed and
the people were engaged in wor
shipping the true God. God said [
“Son of man, hast thou seen what
the ancients of the house of Is
rael do in the dark?” Ezekiel said
that God brought him to the door
of the court where he looked
through a hole in the wall. The
prophet “got an eye full.” He
found the “best people” worship
ing idols and engaged in the viol
est orgies. If some of the pastors
of the big churches in America
could see what some of their lead
ing .members sometimes do in the
dark, they, if they are true pas
tors, would release thunderbolts
at some of the Sunday morning
services that would shake eccles
iastical machinery like an earth
quake. The writet cannot under
stand why it is necessary for
preachers to peek through a hole
in a wall to find out what unre
generate men do in the dark in
our day. The preachers who laid
the foundations of the evangelical
churches in America believed in
the old doctrine of “total deprav
ity,” which simply means that
man is born into the world with
no spark of divinity in his nature
and that it is absolutely necessary
for all men to be born again if
they are to see the Kingdom of
God. Many of our preachers who
learned their theology in some of
our modernistic church schools
and seminaries no longer believe
that man is naturally a sinner, and
that it is necessary for him to be
born again- According to these
false teachers, who are “blind
leaders of the blind,” all that is
necessary is to surround young
people with a sort of protecting
and stimulating environment and
they will be all right. Jesus taught
that men must be born again.
God ’ s Word says, “That which is
born of flesh is 4lesh and that
K OR SALE!
he residence of
the late
J. Adams
1 ^ College H. Street
ADAMS
Monroe, Georgia j I
(Our Advertisers Are Assured of Results)
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WINGS OVER TEXAS . . Uncle Sam’s
grant “West .
Point of the Air,” Randolph
field, Texas, looks small to this cadet
roller and looper, but under accelerated
training program there nearly 1,300 new cadets start
every five weeks, and it
accommodates ’em all. Applications are
coming Washington. in fast to Chief of Air Corps,
l Rattlesnake
Bites
wo In One Attack
A three-foot rattlesnake bit
Jack and Grover Bell, young sons
of John Bell, on his farm about
| three miles south of Alexander.
! The boys were struck when they
I went to the well for a drink of
water.
After receiving first aid treat
ment they were rushed to Way
nesboro, and, according to reports
of their physician, are recovering.
Peanut Conference.
A conference of peanut growers
and others interested in the pea
nut industry will be held in Wash
ington on August 15, to discuss the
peanut situation and a probable
peanut surplus removal program
for the 1940 crop, C. G. Garner,
marketing specialist for the Geor
gia Agricultural Extension service
reports. Operating policies of the
program also will be discussed.
The meeting is open to all inter
ested in the peanut industry.
Over 21,500 berry bushes and
637,500 strawberry plants were set
out in 1939 by Georgia farm fam
ilies under assistance of the Exten
sion Service.
Farm population on January 1,
1940, was estimated to be 32,245,
000 persons, an increase of 186,000
over 1939.
which is born of the spirit is spir
it.” Flesh is man in the raw, man
in his natural state as he was born
into this world. The Bible teaches
that the natural heart is “incur
ably sick.” God has judged men in
the flesh and has declared that
in the flesh is no good thing: that
is, nothing that can save from the
consequences of sin. As far as
morals are concerned some men
are better than others. This may
be because of training or it may
be due to the fact that some men
have more sense than to take
chances on violating the moral
code, but “all have sinned and
come short of the glory of God.”
The writer wonders how much sin
is going on in the dark in this
generation when thousands of cars
are parked by the roadside every
night and when there are so many
dark corners which can be reached
so easily in this machine age; and
so few preachers who are crying
out like John the Baptist saying.
“Repent for the kingdom is at
hand,” and so many preachers say
ing such soft things in such a
wicked age. If under Ezekiel’s
ministry the people sinned so gre
viously in the dark, I naturally
wonder what they must be doing
in the dark under the superficial
preaching of our day. God has not
called me as a preacher to peek
through any hole in the wall. A
person traveling as I do can see
enough in wide open daylight in
this day. In the old days sinners
were ashamed to sin in public.
There is always some hope for sin
ners who are ashamed of their sin.
God pity our generation when
people sin in the open and never
even blush in shame.
THE COVINGTON NEWS
w.vMfv.-.! •: ■ y-v.y : ; -r.
^IAT^PURCRA«^ SEAL A
OF
^
- ’V r , 9 4.* M - J^SOLD WITlTI\>l W\
IQMONEY BACK
r t/uab–fitZeeel fa SATISFACTION
MARKET ROGERS SEALOTUmSMCmK X ...
libby s peeled ^ A 1i • *- > w* <4
APRICOTS RSP' i, <1 m
No. 2 19 * * >t- ... ...,%/Av.i• M < Fat Back
Shortening Can 37c FANCY BEEF MEAT
JEWEL . . 4-Lb. Ctn. l 6
Silrerleaf STEAKS 29 *°
PURE LARD 4 ib cm 28c ROUND OR c
Armour’s Star SIRLOIN LB.
PURE LARD 4 ib c.n. 26c
Bed Diamond
MATCHES 2 Boxbs 5* KINGANS RELIABLE LEAN CUTS CE NTER CUTS
Lucky BUTTER Strike Peanut 25c BACON 17£c 23c FANCY STREAK
2-Lb. Jar Lb. «-■>•
Georgia Maid Cross-Cut Dill 0-LEAN
PICKLES 18-Oz. Jar 10c Sliced Rindless Tendered Hockless Smoked Squares Lb. 10c
Dromedary Date-Nut
BREAD BJ-Ox. Can ll|c BACON PICNICS BACON FRESH GROUND
Harris 15c 17c 12c
CRAB MEAT » o, c.n 23c Lb. Lb. Lb.
Colonial LEAN
MILK Large Can 6c Fancy Beef POT OR CHUCK * l MEATY STEW BEEF HAMBURGER
Whit e house ROASTS 15c 10c
VINEGAR Qt. Bot. 10c “> Lb. 15c
Bed Label Spaghetti nr Lb.
MACARONI 2 pis.. 5c WINKIE PORK 1007< PURE PORK
Shipped Fresh SAUSAGE 5S 20 SKINLESS
EGGS Doz. in Ctn. 24c ° WEINERS
Facial Tissue
KLEENEX Pkg. of 150 10c Lb 20c
Sauer's Lemon or Vanilla -
EXTRACT l-Oz. Bot. 00
Harm el's
SPAM 12-Oz. Can 27c
I ne *c*o7^-] BREAD Triple-Fresh Pullman Loaves 21-Oz. 0 . \\ apmifPM ▲
I POTATOES | FOODS All Baby Brands 4J-Oz. Cans O I J
L 3 “■ iSc I PEACHES Evaporated Cello 1-Lb. i- C ROGERS FRESH J
BEANS 4 U1 TRIPLE
Standard No. 2 0 BREAD
/ Cut Green Cans
p «T~] | TETLEY'S Quality Fine Tea e i-Lb. k5 21* 8ic
/ E4J?S BROOMS Standard Each 0 Loaf
SALMON Colonial Pink 2 No. Cans 1 0
COMET RICE 2 1l-Oz. ID 0 CHEESE 19*
Pkgi. Land O’ Lak« Lb.
CALIFORNIA O. K. SALT 2 ID 0 GRITS ID 13*
LEMONS Pkg«, Hominy Lbi.
Large Size COFFEE Chast 8 Sanborn 1-Lb. Pkg. CM o 0 RICE Blue Rosa ID lbi. 19T
taen 19c CATSUP Stoktly 2 14-Ox. Boti. CM w 0 COFFEE Double-Froih Silvar Labal 1-Lb. Bag 14if
CIRCUS OLIVES Grand** A*«ort»d 4i-Oz. oi 0 COFFEE Doubla-Fraah Gold Labal 1-Lb. .. 18*
lot. 3 14c
12-Lb. Bag 24-Lb. Bag MILK 3 20 * JELL-0 Boxes
30* 59* Silver Cow-Pal-Carnation Larg*
Cam ROYAL ^
JELLY 1-Lb. 15* Tapioca Pudding Pkgi.
Rogers “37” lama llackbarry Gian HONEY J-Lb. /1 !TSi^»
12-Lb. Bag 24-Lb. Bag BEANS 15* 3 lass Strained
No. 2 Glass c
35* 69* I and M Baked Ctn CORN
Southern Manor No. 2 H
clorox no* 19* Cream Style Cen
Arm SODA and Hammer WAXTEX Smell 5 e IDEAL DOG FOOD mm i-Lb. Cens n
Lunch Paper Roil APPLE BUTTER 28-Oz,
3 »k gs io c GAUZE TISSUE 4 0 Whitahous* Jar
Roll Palmolive
SOAP 3 Bars 17*
Blue Package.
COLONIAL CATSUP 2 14-Ox. Bottles 19c SUPER SUDS Larga Six* 19*
Beetever
GA. MAID DILL PIICKLES zz-ox. j.r 10c ORANGE JUICE 46-Oz. Can 15*
Colonial Sliced
! j! PINEAPPLE No. Can U
BEST EVER ORANGEJUICE3 No. 2 Cans 20c Blue MAYONNAISE Piute Pint u> # i *
Jar t <
Lutianne Bed and Green
II O. K. SALT 2 Boxes 5c PEPPER SAUCE I-Ox, <0 *
Bob
Good Luck *
i MATCHES 2 Boxes Sc Georgia Maid Sweet
■ ■ Margarine Lb. 18c Relish 10-Oz. Jar 10c
Superior Brand Tomato Sauce ;
SODA CRACKERS Butter i-Lb. cm. 30c Sardines is-o*. can 9e
Nun-So-Crlsp Lb. Box 8c Margarine NuTreat 2 23c Mix Dromedary Ginger Bread
■ Ub. etna. 14-Ox. Pkg. 19ft
* CHEESE Kelloag’e Corn Lifeguard Grapefruit
KRAFT 2- Lb. Box 47c Flakes 2 b ox. Pk # i. 13c Juice 4 No. 2 Cam 25«
O and C. Potato Weston Shortbread
Sticks 2 VOx. C.n. 15c Cookies 2 Mb. Pkg*. 25s
in the State)
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