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I j-, 1^ 199?
'
' HERE and HEREAFTER
By DR. 808 JONES
President of Bob Jones University
IrTn Enrset not rny law,
I’. thinP heart keep my com
firs;
t th,rd cha P ter ° f
h . Man puts great empha
■ th . heart. God puts great
■’« nn thp hpart Adam and
I > the pursuit of knowledge
K'pvadise ^d cursed all un
■ jmeratinns. The devil got
ft and Eve to make an ex-
God had told them
ft no t tn do, and the devil
ft Ikom they had a right
mH see if what God
not to do would be
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— DOLLAR DAYS SPECIAL —
FRIDAY - SATURDAY - OCTOBER 17, 18
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a bad thing for them to do. In
the moral realm they made a
laboratory experiment.
All generations that have lived
and died since Adam and Eve
fell have demonstrated that God
was right and Adam and' Eve
were wrong. Man has no right to
experiment to find out if what
God says about a thing is so. To
experiment in this way is tn be
a rebel against God, who is the
sovereign head of this universe.
We read in the Bible that one
of the signs of the close of this
age is that men will he heady.
They will talk wise, boast about
their scientimic discoveries and
inventions. Everything would
seem to indicate that we are
going into the close of the age.
• » » •
Man can acquire knowledge, J
but he cannot acquire wisdom. 1
! Wisdom comes from God. Wis
dom has to do with an under
। standing heart. Knowledge has
। to do with what a man has in his
! head. Men can learn to make
atomic bombs, but they cannot
know how to use atomic bombs
i unless they have wisdom, and a
world out of contact with God
as this modern world is cannot
possibly have wisdom enough to
use the atomic bomb. Knowledge
never saves. Knowledge des
troys.
We, of course, mean know
ledge that man can acquire by
his own effort. Men quote glibly
the statement, “Ye shall know
the truth, and the truth shall
. make you free,” but they do not
even know what they are talk
ing about. There is nothing in
scientific knowledge, philosophi
cal knowledge, or any other
kind of knowledge that can
make men free. Jesus Christ
was Truth incernate. The man
who knows Jesus Christ is a
free man. “In him dwelleth all
the fullness of the Godhead
bodily.” The man whom Jesus
Christ makes free is free in
deed.
We are living in an age when
men are slaves to their own in
ventions and slaves to conditions
which they themselves have
created. We have built univer
sities and schools, and we have
popularized education, and yet
fear is world wide. The Bible
speaks of a time coming when
THE COY
men’s hearts will fail them be- (
cause of fear of what is coming
upon them. The young people
of the world do not know what
to do or which way to turn.
They do not know what is ahead
of them. Knowledge is wide
spread, but the leaders of the
world lack wisdom and the rea
son is the leaders of the world
have lost contact with God, and
wisdom comes from God.
Fire Losses
Reach Peak,
NBFU Reports
Fire losses throughout the Unit
ed States, when measured in dol
lars, are at an all-time high!
This was reported here today
ias the nation, spurred by Presi
dent Truman’s Fire Prevention
Week proclamation appeal, took
stock of its 1951 three-quarter
billion dollar loss in property
and 11,000 lives.
Basis for the report were sta
tistics of the National Board of
Fire Underwriters that put fire
losses for 1951 at $730,084,000.
In commenting on these losses,
the NBFU declared that the $730
million loss for 1951 was SBO mil
lion, or 12.3 percent more than
for the preceding year.
The NBFU statistics on the
number of fires, compiled from
reports submitted by fire chiefs
throughout the country, reflect
a substantial rise in the number
of building fires in urban areas
during 1951, when they amounted
ito 400,000, an increase Os 7.4 per
: cent over the previous year.
Much of this loss in lives and
property, he observed, resulted
from fire in the home and cited
the estimate of 856,703 fires in
U. S. Cities last year. Nearly half,
or 418,871 of them, were building
fires, nearly three-fourths of the
building fires, or 293,776 being
residences.
He explained that the figures
represent estimates of firee m
cities of 2,500 population or more
and did not, by any means, rep
resent all the fires that occured
in ah communities. This means
that one fire occurs every 36
seconds —with an untold number
of additional fires on farms and
in smaller communities.
The major cause of these fires
j was careless use of matches and
smoking. Sueh carelessness, he
declared, accounts for close io 27
per cent of the nation’s reported
i fire losses.
Other major causes of fire, he
concluded, were misuse of elec
tricity; exposure to fire originat
ing off premises; sparks on roofs;
overheated or defective chimneys
'or flues; lighting; overheated
. stoves, furnaces or boilers; igni
tion of hot greases; spontaneous
; combustion and explosions.
Agronomist Gives
Small Grain Seed
Treatment Advice
“Georgia farmers lose thous
ands of dollars each year due
to damages from seed-borne
diseases on small grain,” says
J. R. Johnson, agronomist, of
the University of Georgia Agri
cultural Extension Service, “yet
this loss can be prevented by
treament which costs only a few
| cents per acre.”
Johnson recommends use of
Ceresan M for oat smut, stinking
smut of wheat, covered smut and
stripe of barley and for partial
I control of Helminthosporium
and other seedling diseases. For
control of smut of wheat and
j barley, he recommends the hot
j water treatment.
“One-half ounce of Ceresan
M per bushel of grain is suffi
cient when used as a dust treat
ment,’* Johnson explains. When
th* slurry method is used, he
say’s that the following rates of
application are correct: For oats
—one and one-half pounds per
gallon of water; for wheat and
rye—one pound per gallon of
water; and for barley—one and
one-fourth pounds per gallon of
water.
“The moisture content of seed
grain should not be over 12 or 13
percent before treating with
Ceresan M,” he adds. Johnson
warns that Ceresan M Is a poi
son and should be kept from all
children and pets and that all
treated seed should be marked,
“Poison Treated.”
Rotation and the planting of
adapted varieties of small grain
| are other disease-control meth
। ods suggested by Johnson. He
' recommends: the Arlington. Vie
| torgrain, Fulgrain. Atlantic and
Terruf varieties of oats; the
Chancellor, Sanford, Atlas 50
and Atlas 66 varieties of wheat;
the Sunrise, Calhoun and Colo
nial varieties of barlev; and the
Abruzzi varlotv of rye.
Tn some cases happiness con
sists merely of forgetting the
past and ignoring the future.
MOTOR NEWS
People, Spots In The News
— A
* Wow
fc -* ft '2? > •
* *
«<• . .jju—umw i sap
AMERICAN beauty Elizabeth
Taylor of films elegantly sniffs
American beauty rose as she ap
pears at premiere in London. ।
-afIMHI
ab ? ■
fl
' ft
r j ■
• * M .w > . .
• . «
FROGMEN in Arctic. Navy and er water demohtion men are |
shown replacing gasket m voder water Juel hose that made 1
possible operation of newly disclosed top-o^-worW U.SL aw I
base at Tbule, Greenland. Kind of chilly for a frog swrtf * ’1
Wonder fid
toDrive!
A Great General Moton Vahnt
< .
—Ss4Slmmiiio^ a ’ 1
- i IBb Is*~- *
/I/T yf 4T If you want to learn how much fun
/s/t /\/I f \ it is to drive, get behind the wheel «f
IvIUIV IT.LUIu a Dual-Range* Pontiac. <
-jrw /* 7 *77 ' w > You’ll think every street and road you
Powerful! Economical! BSSS-3
Ranfte Pontiac does for you.
In Traffic Range you can feel the
■■■■■■■■■ «BWBBBUBUBM«BUB«uBueBi eagerness, rhe pep and the authority
of Pontiac’s threat high-compression
ftMfcL3, ... . v engine. On the open road, Cruising
! y Irrive II lourselj: Range takes over, reduces engine rev-
-X olutions an much as M per cent—for
ftHMk There'i only one way you ca« truly more go on i ess
ydU know th. grvutneM and exciting per-
. for ma nee of th* 1952 Pontiac. Gome C^t all rite facta and figures—it's so
/W in todaj and put thi. grand pet former easy to Jjive yourself the JOR Os OWfIAnR
.OK through lk* pace*. You’ll love it! a Pontiac. mmw a»r
Dol la r for Dollar you can't beat a
l^onliac
warca twi tv *oer«A« 4«m« or mt w««« ivtwy satu«»ay on nk TurvitioN-stAY tonio fob hinman hickman * roMisc show mh* WPW top
TRAINER MOTOR CO.
CLARK STREET COVINGTON, GEORGIA
fLtsrgowt Cov«r»g» Any Weekly In Th* State)
I RUBBER ESCALATOR near
■Columbia, S.C. lifts rock at <
Srate of 4UO tons an hour the
Speight of 20-st<xy building,
|ii om floor of quarry to ship- i
|ping level. B. F. Goodrich en- ।
■gineers who designed belt said
"it will last 2’a times as long as
Searlier metal pan system.
1
i ■ , 1-^ ■
, gr MRMmMRRMR
I CAREERS for over-65 “re-
Itirees” are outlined in new
|)>ook, “Ways and Means to
I Successful Retirement,” of
[winch Jirha G. Forrest, N.Y.
[Times financial edttor, is eo
• awtlwr wub Evelyn Colby.
Coal Provides Jobs
About one million persons are
engaged in the mining, selling ,
and delivery of coal in this coun- I
try, including railroaders whose
jobs are directly dependent upon i
the movement of coal.
All planting seed should be.
tested for purity and percentage ,
germination, according to agrono- ‘
mists for the Agricultural Ex
tension Service of the University
of Georgia. Commercial seed car- i
ry tit is informat ion on the tags. |
/ ™ggU
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COVINGTON : PHONf 4038
DOLLAR DAT SPECIAL*
Relieve the Miseries of
0^ CONSTIPATION
Dry, hard impacted waste matter in thft!
lower bowel causes straining at the stool»|
bearing down pains and stiffness in th^
hips and back, with gas, headache, upset
stomach, faulty digestion. J
This condition is quickly relieved by Df.
Hitchcock’s Laxative Powder. This special
All-Vegetable powder causes a pouring out
of the intestinal juices, thus softening tba
dry material and thoroughly unloading tht
impacted colon. Try this- special' prepara
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supply, order direct. HitchcPck Medicjp
Co.. 510 Whitehall St., S. W.. Atlanta 3