The Bartow tribune. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1910-1917, January 01, 1914, Image 7

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SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON January 4, 1914. (Copyright, 1912, by Rev. T. S. Line cott, D. D.) Jesus and the Children. Mark ix:3o - 13-16. Golden Text—Gird yourselves with humility to serve one another, for God resisteth the porud, but giveth grace to the humble. I Peter v:5. (1) Verses 30-32— Why did Jesus at this time wish to hide his movements? (2) In which year of his three years ministry did Jesus first tell his dis ciples of his coming death? (3) Did Jesus know from the begin ning of his ministry that the Jews would reject and put him to death? Why? (4) About what time in the ministry of Jesus did the Jews definitely de cide to bring about his death? (5) Verses 33-35—How had Jesus learned what the disciples had been disputing about? (6) At what stage in the develop ment of our expressed thoughts does God become aware of them? (7) Why was it wrong for the dis ciples to look out for the best possi ble position in Christ’s coming king dom? (8) Why were the disciples appar ently ashamed to tell Jesus that they had been disputing concerning who should be greatest? Would you say or not, and why, that it is wrong for a layman or a clergyman to seek the highest posi tion in the gift of the church? (10) "Which most resemble Christ, and why, those who aim for the lead ing positions, or those who forget themselves, and aim to serve to the aitmost their fellows? (11) Verses 36-37 —What did It sig nify in this conversiation that Christ put a child before them? (12) What would you say are the two great laws in Christ’s kingdom? (13) See Matt. xviii:4, and say what •are the qualities in a little child which Jesus told his disciples to acquire? (This is one of the questions which may be answered in writing by mem bers of the club.) (14) What is true humility? (15) "Why does Jesus select a little child to be the representative of him self? (16) Is it literally so or not, and why, that a good deed or a bad deed done to a little child is the same as if done to Christ? (17) Verses 38-40—Why do certain Christian churches not permit any hut ordained clergymen to officiate in their churches or preach in their pul pits? ~ i (18) Why did the disciples forbid the one whom they found casting out devils in Jesus’ name? (19) If we find one today who with out any ecclesiastical authority is preaching the gospel with power, what should be our attitude toward him? (20) What different estimate does God put upon a godly minister and a WHENEVER YOU NEED A 6ENEAAL TONIC • TAKE GROVE’S The Old Standard Grove’s Tasteless chill Tonic is Equally Valuable as a General Tonic because it Acts on the Liver, Drives Out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds up the Whole System, For Grown People and Children, You know what you are taking when you take Grove s Tasteless chill Tonic as the formula is printed on every label showing that it contains the well known tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It is as strong as the strongest bitter tonic and is in Tasteless Form. It has no equal for Malaria, Chills and Fever, Weakness, general debility and loss of appetite. Gives life and vigor to Nursing Mothers and Pale, Sickly Children. Removes Biliousness without purging. Relieves nervous depression and low spirits. Arouses the liver to action and purifies the blood. A True Tonic and Sure Appetizer. A Complete Strengthener. No family should be without it. Guaranteed by your Druggist. We mean it. 50c jg; BEDS and PILLOW IBP YOU would like to own a brand new 36-pound featherbed and a pair of I 6-pound feather pillows, mail me $lO. I will ship them to you and pay the freight tc your depot. Best A. C. A feather ticking, guaranteed all live new feather*; if not as advertised your money back. Write for circulars and order blanks. Address D*k 44, Box 148, D. M. MARTIN & CO., Griffin, Ga. godly layman who is doing ministerial work? (21) Verse 41—What is the differ ence of the reward for a good deed done a sinner or a similar good deed done to a Christian? (22) Chapter x:l3-16—Why did the disciples rebuke those who brought their children to Jesus? (23) Why are children just as able to love Jesus as adults? (24) Why is Jesus anxious to have the children come to him? (25) What is the gravity of the of fense to prevent children from coming to Jesus? (26) What can we do more than we are doing to bring the children to Jesus? Lesson for Sunday, Jan. 11, 1914. The Mission of the Seventy. Luke x: 1-24. SANTA CLAUS MUST HAVE REMEMBERED ALL. Atlanta, Ga., Dec. 30. —The ‘‘empty stocking” myth was pretty well ex ploded in Atlanta this year. Though the papers printed pages and pictures about the poor little boys and girls who would wake up Christmas morn ing and find that Santa Claus had for gotten them, not a single authentic in stance was discovered, even among the poorest people, where this actually happened. This doesn’t mean that there wasn’t plenty of opportunity for charity. There were hundreds of homes where coal and even food were scarce; where fathers and mothers shivered in the cold on Christmas morning and lacked the bare necessities of life, but the poorest of them found something to put in the baby’s stocking. Many of them deny themselves actual food to purchase a simple doll or toy, others begged the toys, and some probably had to resort to even more desperate methods. But the Associated Charities and Salvrtion Army, which found plenty of misery, and plenty of fam ilies in dire need, did not find a single child whose Christmas stocking was absolutely empty. So much the better for the world. THIS IS SOME COW TO MILK HERSELF. Atlanta, Ga., Dec. 30. —Word comes to Atlanta of a farmer named Frank Stoddard, who has to put on skirts and a sunbonnet every time he milks his cow. The cow, a particularly fine Jersey, was purchased a short time ago from two maiden ladies, Misses Jennie and Alice Case. For a number of years passed they had" milked the cow regu larly, and the gentlest of bovines had never been touched by a rough male hand. ■ • * Stoddard bought it knowing it to be absolutely gentle, and was therefore astounded the first morning he went to milk it, when the cow gave one frightened glance at him, kicked over the bucket, and jumped the fence. It was the Misses Case who sug gested the expedient of the skirt and sun bonnet, and now Sookie stands just as calmly for Mr. Stoddard as she used to stand for the Case sisters. THE BARTOW TRIBUNE, JANUARY 1, 1914. MISSIONS II TREMENDOUS WORLD-WIDE BUSINESS. Protestant Churches of Christendom Contribute Over Thirty Million Dollars Annually—24,ooo Men and Women Enlisted—Native Church of Nearly Three Million Members—United Mis sionary Campaign—Using a Tent For Missionary Work—Telephone in Jerusalem —African Chieftain Enters Harvard. By SOUTHERN MISSIONARY NEWS BUREAU. Ida Clyde Clarke, Editor. It is a time of unusual opportunity to propagate Christianity among non- Christian nations. The foreign mis sionary work carried on for the past hundred years has been one of the principal causes of the great change* now taking place in Turkey, Persia, India, Japan, China and other coun tries. The foreign missionary enterprise has grown until it is a tremendous worldwide business, in which over 24,000 men and women missionaries are engaged and for which the Pro testant churches of Christendom con tribute over thirty million dollars an nually. Of this total, fully one-half comes from the United States which has come to be recognized as the most important single factor in the world-wide extension of the Christian faith. A native church of nearly three mil lions of communicant members has been built up, with four millions more of adherents. About six thousand of these natives have been prepared by long courses of training for the Chris tian ministry and are now ordained pastors of their people. But from every field there are call for great advan ces. The missionaries abroad believe that their total force should probably be doubled in order to meet worthily the present opportunity. Nearly 200,- 000 persons per year are now being received into church membership from these fields, but this number could probably be doubled if there were workers enough. United Missionary Campaign. The home and foreign missionary leaders of the United States and Can ada are engaging this year in a great combined effort to interest and enlist all churches more generally and more fully in missions. They have request ed and secured the Laymen’s Mission ary Movement to take general charge of the organization of the first cam paign. nh. . §o* The plan is to hold interdenomina tional conferences, lasting two days each, in as many cities and towns as possible. Already twenty-four teams of speakers have been organized for the United States alone, in addition to several teams in Canada. Some of these teams will conduct as many as forty different conferenc es. Several teams have already begun the holding of conferences, and pre liminary arrangements for others are going forward in nearly all sections of the country. The total number of conferences held will reach well over five hun dred. All of them are for the one pur pose of informing church people of the crying need of a great advance in mission work both at home and abroad, together with an exploration of those methods that have proved most effect ve in enabling churches and whole cities and denominations to multiply their missionary output. It is also found that the churches that do most for others are the best off themselves. The churches that are self-centered are apt to decline. It seems to be a normal and necessary fact that “the light that shines far thest. shines brightest nearest home.’’ A Tent For a Mission Rev. G. P. Bostick tells the following interesting story: “My brother and I and our wives are the sole representa tives of Christianity in the midst of four millions of Chinese people. We have no church-house at all, holding our services at our home station in a brick floored, thached room, thirty by fifteen feet, built for our Chinese men’s reception room. We got a tent out from America this past summer and have used it with much encour agement in the past two months. “We have a few Christians in an other city forty miles to the east. Early on a Monday morning several brethren started with the tent on a wheelbarrow and got to a busy mar ket town, six miles away, time enough to put it up for the market and preach in it until past midday, when the peo ple began to scatter. It was crowded all the time with people who seemed to listen with earnestness. Many por tions of the scripture were told. Then we moved seven miles further to an other market town. “We were off an hour before day the next mortiing so as to reach an other large market town before the market was well opened. Here the tent was again erected and filled for sev eral hours with earnest listeners. Then we moved fifteen miles to Rung Ching, the place of our destination, and got our tent pitched before dusk and it was soon crowded with people, most of them lingering until the hour we fixed the closing, 9 o’clock. We kept the tent here five days, includ ing Sunday, and had services about 10 a. m. and 3 and 7 p. m., each ser vice continuing for two or three hours. “Early Monday we started with the tent so as to reach a large market in the forenoon where we spoke to a tent full of people for more than two hours, and then moved to another mar ket town and put it up for the night and to occupy till noon the next day. So soon as we reached Pochow, our starting point, we put out west, where we spent four days at each of the two cities and carried on work in a simi lar manner, except that we had some one speaking in the tent almost con tinually during the day. “I estimated that something like a thousand people attended these meet ings daily. Many came again and again and sat and listened for hours. We strive to give them the word of God verbally and also sell portions o£ the printed page.” cS?-f’l" African Chief at Harvard. A full-blooded African chieftain has just passed his entrance examinations at Harvard and will enter the univer sity. He is B. Gbl Wolo. His people, 300,000 strong, are the Krud of Liberia. They have no written language, so that the only way he can communicate with his family is through traders on the coast who send the messages by word of mouth along the trail. Telephone in Jerusalem. A Bell Telephone system has just been installed in Jerusalem by the Ottoman government for its own use. There are ten stations connecting the government house with the court- GIRLS! DRAW A MOIST CLOTH THROUGH HAIR Try This! Hair Gets Thick, Glossy, Wavy and Beautiful at Once —Stop falling Out. Immediate? —Yes! Certain? —that’s the joy of it. Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluffy, abundant anti appears as -oft, lustrous and beautiful a, a young girl’s after a Danderine hair cleanse. Just try this- —moisten a cloth with a little Danderine and carefully draw it throug your hair, taking one small strand at a time. This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt or ex cessive oil. and in just a few moments you have doubled the beauty of your hair. A delightful surprise awaits those whose hair has been neglected or is scraggy, faded, dry, brittle or thin. Resides beautifying the hair. Danderine dissolves every particle of dandruff; cleanses, purifies and in vigorates the scalp, forever stopping itching and falling hair, but what will please you most will be after a few week’s use, when you see new hair — fine and downy at first —yes—but real ly new hair growing all over the scalp. If you care for pretty, soft hair, and lots of it, surely get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any drug store or toilet counter and just try it. house, military headquarters and sev eral police stations. Application has been made for a public telephone ser vice in Jerusalem, Jaffa and Bethle hem. Progress in China. Writing from Hwai-au-Fu, China, a missionary says: “Where two years ago we had one Christian young man, Li, today we have a hold upon six families, through the influence of his conversation and life—a veritable chain it makes. He first ‘found’ and ‘brought’ his wife’s cousin, young Li, now an earnest church member. Mrs. Li, the mother, became interested and took down every idol in the house. Mrs. Li, the young wife, and Mrs. Li, a cousin’s wife, are both studying with a will. Then Li’s married sister entered my bible class, and her old mother-in-law, over 60, began to come with a begin ner’s class of children, so anxious was she to learn. They have also brought to the services other family connec tions and we are hoping a seventh family link may be reached.” WHAT WILL 25 CENTS 3UY7 That depends a great deal on where you go to spend it. Some times it will buy at one place what it takes from 30c to 50c to buy at another place. There is one place and only one in Cartersville where you can get either or all the following things for 25c: 6 cakes Ivory Soap, six cakes White Naptha or 6 bars Star soap, six packs Star Naptha or Octagon Washing Pow ders, six spools Coats thread, 8 lbs Farm Bell Soda, 1 fine embroidered or lace covered corset cover, ladies heavy fleece lined vests or pants, ladies flanelett kimona, one and a quarter yards best table oil cloth, 2 aluminum pie plates, 3 plugs Brown Mule to bacco, 2 plugs double thick Sweep Stakes tobacco, 1 large enamel dish pan, 6 quart white enamel pudding pan, No 30 white enamel wash pan, 4 quart blue and white enamel sauce pan, 1 quart German china pitcher, heavy No. 1 glass lamp complete, heavy double thick 40c milk bucket. 2 cloth bound alger books, 1 14 inch mixing bowl and several dozen other 30c to 50c items at 25c that you can not get at that price any where else except Hardaways, the one place in Cartersville where everything is sold for spot cash at cut prices and noth ing added to the price of goods to pay bookkeepers nor for goods sold on credit and not paid for. So if you want your nickles, dimes, quarters and dollars to do nearly double duty for you and you want to live as well and for as little money in 1914 as some of your neighbors do just spend your money there where you get the benefit of those cut prices. , . Women and Wet Feet. Cold and wet feet are a dangerous combination especially to women, and congested kidneys often result. Back ache, urinary irregularities and rheu matic fevers are not unusual results. Foley Kidney Pills restore the regular and normal action of kidney and blad der and remove the cause of the trou ble. Contain no habit forming drugs. Ben C. Gilreath Drug Cos. RIB ATLANTA, CA. Open June 30, 1913 The South’s finest and most modem hotel. Fireproof. 306 rooms, Rooms with mnning water and private toilet $7 .00 per day. Rooms with .’cnneeting bath $1.50 per day. Rooms with private bath $2.00 per day and up Finest Rathskeller, Cafe and Private Dining Rooms in the Sooth. J. B. POUND. Pres. J. F. LETTON, Mgr. CHAS G. DAY, Ass’t Mgr. FOR SALE. One two story and lot on S. Erwin St. Ten rooms. All modern improve ments. Apply to Frank E. Matthews. FOR RENT —Four nice large rooms, water and electric lights, veranda on both sides, close in, rent reasonable. Address Box 450, Cartersville, Ga. To Prevent Blood Poisoning apply at onee the wonderful old reliable DR. PORTER’S ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL, a aur rical dressing that relieves pain and heals at the same time. Not a liniment. 25c. 50c. JI.OU John Wacaster, Postmaster at Murrayville, Ga., says:—“l suffer with a terrible cough whenever I take the least cold, and my bron chial tubes become affected. I never use anything but Foley’s Honey and Tar as I have found from experi ence that it is the best and surest cough medicine I ever used.” Ben C. Gilreath Drug Cos. E. W. BELL Paper Hanging, Cleaning Carpets, and Matting Laid, White Washing and Tinting. Over 250 Samples Wall Paper. Give me a trial. 12 Church Street. STOP in ATLANTA at HOTEL EMPIRE Opposite Union Depot on Pryor Street. Renovated and refurnished throughout. Reservations made on application. Hot and cold water, private baths, electric lights and elevator. First class accommodations at extremely moderate rates. Euro pean plan 75 cents up. John L. Edtnond.on, Proprietor. 2 Houses for Rent* 7-Rooms, electric lights, baths and good sewerage. Both houses in good con dition. Located on South Erwin street. Phone No. 67. W. H. FIELD. 1 notice. Persuant to the power vested in us by law we hereby order and declare The Bartow Tribune, published at Cartersville, Georgia, to be and the same is hereby made the official or gan of Bartow County, Georgia, for the oublication of Sheriff’s Sales, Ordi nary’s CHationr and all other adver tising commonly known and termed “Official or Legal Advertising” and required by law to be published in such county official newspaper, be ginning January Ist, 1914. Such order effective until January Ist, 1915. This December I st, 1913. G. W. HENDRICKS, Ordinary. W. C. WALTON, Clerk Superior Court. C. N. SMITH, Sheriff. STOCKHOLDERS MEETING. A meeting of the stockholders of The Bank of Cartersville will be held at its banking house on Thursday, January Bth, 1913, at 11 o’clock A. M. for the election of directors for the ensuing year and for the transaction of such other business as may legally come before them. C. M. MILAM, 1 3t Cashier. To Cure a Cold in One Day Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine. It stops the Cough and Headache and works off the Cold. Druggist * refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. GROVE’S signature on each box. 25c. There Is more Catarrh in this section of the country tbAn all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be Incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced It incurable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Cos., Toledo, Ohio, la the only Constitu tional cure on the market. It Is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teuspoonful. It acta directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it falls to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address: F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation*