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• LIKED BY MANY • CUSSED BY SOME • READ BY ALL
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I,- hA Co all our jnentls and neijkkort we jive voice / I
f ' to jrcetin ja in the true Ckrietmaa tradition. / WU
i With them jo our very beet wiekea for a happy koliday ... ,
full of joy and peace, good kealth and contentment.
Ml BRYAN OIL COMPANY z®
KJ Shell Gas and Oil Lanier, Georgia ?®®i
-EfIIITIEST LUISHES
■ 1
"HRISTIIiHSTimE
PEMBROKE DRUG COMPANY
"Service With A Smile"
PEMBROKE, GEORGIA
I WIM! ]
Wehope that you will enjoy this Christmas
■Hh | surrounded by all the things dearest to
A ycwr heart. And may the New Year
bring to you all the success and happiness
that make for a rich and meaningful life.
BRYAN MOTOR COMPANY
BWIM ’ CHEVROLET - OLDSMOBILE
SALES AND SERVICE
PEMBROKE, GEORGIA
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Bryan County
PMA News j
1953 Agricultural Conservation
Program
The farmer-committeemen have 1
contacted farm operators of Bryan
County with the exception of a
I few who were not at home during
the contact period. Letters have
been mailed to these farmers ask
ing them to contact their com
munity committeeman or to come I
by the county PMA Office before |
January 1, 1953. Copies of the |
County Handbook have been mail
ed to farm operators describing
: the specifications of performance
. and dates * o report, etc, sometime j
!e"o If livre a n ■ stions I
-m ;..e 1' ': t'r; ct ' i 1 ( mser
vation Program piease contact
your cc, imunity committeeman or
the Coimty Committee or come by
I. Gou ity Office.
PEMBROKE JOURNAL, PEMBROKE, GECRGIA
Approximately 65 percent of the
farmers contacted have requested
assistance, amounting to over
$21,000, which goes to show, ac
cording to Mr. W. C. Payne, Chair
man, County Committee, that
there is a great need for con
servation practices in the county
Mr. Payne also state that prio
to January 1, 1953, all farmers
will be notified as to the amount
of minimum assistance that will
be guaranteed in carrying out
practices that have been request
led on the 1953 A CP.
HOUSE WANTED — Anyone
having a house for rent please
contact me as I have a party that
wishes to move to Pembroke.
F. 0. Miller
WANTED TO RENT—Modern
house for one of my mechanics
I will pay years rent in advance
and guarantee rent.
Lorin C. (Buck) Lam
THE * J
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'^ ■ ' ' Interra'.ionel Undarm grZ^zM
I Sunday Schoo’ lawns W/j^W^
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SCRIPTVREt MaUhtw 8.
DEVOTIONAL READING: JeremUb
• «3:3*H.
Gifts to Christ
Lesson for December 28, 1952
WHAT the world brings to
Christ is never to be com-
I pared with what Christ brings the
' world. Not all the Christmas gifts
i that ever were, including those
given to the cause and in the name
of Jesus, equal a small part of the
| value of Jesus himself to the world
Nevertheless, ever since the time
of the wise men from the east,
gifts have been brought and laid
at the feet of Christ, in one way or
another.
•• • •
Wisdom
Many treasures of wisdom.
I through these 19 centuries, have
I been poured out for the Master’s
I service. Not that men can make
19
laO
Dr. Foreman
God wise; but the
wisdom and
learning of man
kind can be, and
have been, put at
the disposal of
Christ and his
cause. To take
one fact alone:
the translation of
the Bible into
hundreds of lan-
guages through
out the world. The work of trans
lating can never stop, because lan
guages keep changing; the English
and the French of this century are
not the same aa they were cen
turies ago, and Bibles translated
for those times become hard to
: understand in our day.
Not that a new English transla
tion is needed every few years; but
(Somewhere, all the time, into some
language or other, this work is be
ing carried on. It is no simple job;
* translator must not only know
• Greek and Hebrew, but also, and
Very thoroughly, the language into
' Which he translates. Most good
1 translations are made by groups,
r for many heads are better than
•ne, at this work.
I When we add to the work of the
translators all that other scholars
1 ^ave done, all the brain work that
rone into the printing and bind
ng of the books and distributing
Stm in many ways; we can see
s Whai the devotion of intellectual
t talents has meant, through the cen-
I turies, to the Christian religion,
t»• • •
Wealth
Think what a difference it would
Brake, if suddenly every Christian
In the world decided that the
e Lord's work could get along just
e ts well without being offered an
t ®ther cent. No new churches would
be built; existing churches would
fall into decay because no one
Would pay for their repair (and
tree labor wouldn't do It. because
n iihat too is a form of wealth). Home
i ®nd foreign missions would come
e to an end. Christian schools, hos
pitals and colleges would close
town. No Christian books of any
' kind could be printed. Radio re
- Sgious broadcasts would cease, be
•ause there would not be any one
bo pay for them, and even the
•tree” time, which always costs
station something, could no
(longer be offered.
• • •
From Each His Own *
Christianity is today an interna
tional religion, though it started
>®ff as the religion of a few Asiatic
Jews. But Jesus was scarcely out
®f his cradle before those men of
the East came, and they were the
first of a long line from every na
tion and race in the world
In America we think of Christian
ity as almost an American re
ligion; but it is not. Americans
have brought much to Christianity,
•-their energy, daring, pioneering
Spirit. their practical slant on
everything,—these have given to
Christianity in North America a
•'color” and a "style” all its own.
But we are not the only Chris
tians, perhaps not even the best
•nes. There are Indian Christians,
and Chinese Christians; there are
Christians among the Eskimos and
tulus. There Is some Christianity
behind the Iron Curtain; it is found
in Scotland. Sweden, Spain, El Sal
vador.
And while we are all brothers
tinder the skin, the fact remains
that it takes all kinds of Christians
to make the Christian world, and to
make the world Christian. Our
missionaries do not go out to make
American Christians; they go to
make Christians. And every one
Who comes to Christ brings some
thing which is specially his own.
As Rev. John Monsell's hymn has
it:
"Fear not to enter His courts in
the slenderness
Os the poor wealth thou wouldst
reckon as thine:
Truth in its beauty, and love in
its tenderness,
These are the offeri’'f- 'o lay on
His shrine. ”
(tanrdsht IM* b' ' ">ln or
Cbrb.n on education, N ! Council
If the Chur rhea of Cb. I' e ( oiled
taler f tmerlrc n - W
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We Greet You at
Zkc yuletide 1
May you enjoy its every happiness
kyl: d. smith
W h
IIE, as Christians, have the .--5^ x
rare privilege of
knowing the true meaning of Christmas.
May joy and happiness
be yours in abundance,
our Yuletide wish.
| GREETinGsMb^
J. C. MSKELI
Groceries — Fresh Meats — Vegetables
PEMBROKE, GEORGIA
Santa Claus WtshesVbu^
ft MERRY CHRISTMAS^
v and a Ar
^^APPYNEW YEM! / A
x i
~ .pind so do wew
J. C. LEWIS TRACTOR CO.
PHONE 4-7251
2407 Bay St. Ext., Savannah, Ga.
1
NP24O [iiTiiiJCiil
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1952