Newspaper Page Text
Improved Uniform International
SmdayXchool ’ Lesson ?
(By REV.. P. B. FltrzWATER, D.D., Dean
Moody Bible ragtltuteof Chicago.)
1H28. Westerly Newspaper Union.)
Lesson for January 6
OUR heavenly father
LESSON TEXT—Matthew 6:24-34.
GOLDEN TEXT—Like as a father
pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth
them that fear Him.
PRIMARY TOPIC— Our Heavenly Fa
ther.
JUNIOR TOPIC—Our Heavenly Fa
ther.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP
IC—What the Heavenly Father Means
to Me.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP
IC—The Fatherhood of God.
Half of the lessons for the year 1929
are of a topical character. Tire aim of
the committee seems to have been to
place.before of the Sunday-school pupils ]
some the great doctrine- of God’s
Word, as well as teachings on prac
tical life.
°l – °7)"' Heavenly Father ‘
(Genesis the^ T
He is Almighty God who cre
ated the universe. God was before
all things. “Before the mountains
were brought forth, or ever thou hadst
formed the earth and the world, even
from everlasting to everlasting, thou
art God.” The universe came into be
ing by the will and act of the personal
being called God. Man himself is n
creation of God. He was createo in
the likeness and image of God. God is
tiie infinite and perfect spirit in whom
we live and move and have cur being.
Ht is omnipotent, omniscient and om
nipresent. He was not only before
all things, but the cause of all things.
II. What the Father Does.
1. He loves us (1 -John 4:9, 10).
His This only love begotten was expressed by sending [ !
Son into the world
that we might live through Him. He
not ouly loves the redeemed, but He |
loves the world (John 3:1G). In the
very essence of His being God is love !
(1 John 4:8).
2. He redeemed us (1 John 4:9).
He might gave live His only begotten Son that j
we through Him.
,‘i. God preserves us (Ps. 103:1-14).
The preserving mercy of God em
braces the following gracious bene
ficial acts:
(1) He forgives all our iniquities
(v. 3). This He is able to do because
of the righteous provision lie made
for sin in tiie atonement wrought out
by Jesus Christ.
(2) He henleth all our diseases (v.
3). This healing refers to the body
and soul.
(3) He redeemeth the life from de
struction (v. 4). Redemption implies
tiie payment of all demands against
tiie debtor.
(4) lije satisfieth thy mouth (v. 5).
This means that God satisfies all
legitimate desires so rhat youth is re
newed like the eagle’s.
(5) He executes righteousness and
judgment (vv. 6-12). Tiie wrongs of
life are righted and man is thus re
lieved of their burdens.
(6) He pities His children (vv.
13, 14). The pity of an earthly fa
ther for his children is but a faint
suggestion of the sympathetic heart
of tiie loving God, our Father.
III. Our Responsibility to the Heav
enly Father (Matthew 0:24-34).
Christ came to reveal the Father.
j /The will subjects love Him of the heavenly kingdom
as the child loves its
father.
1. He will give unto him undivided
attention (v. 24).
The child of God makes the un
equivocal choice between the heaven
ly Father and the world. The word
“mammon” Is a kind of personifica
tion of worldliness.
2. Will not be anxious about food
and clothing (vv. 25-32).
The child of God who knows Him
as a Father will not be supremely con
cerned about what It shall eat or
what it shall put on because anxiety is
(1) Useless (v. 27).
Regardless of what thought or con
cern one exercises concerning food
; and clothing, it will be provided only -
according to His will. In Him do we
live, move and have our being. God
supplies all our needs (Phil. 4:19),
(2) It shows distrust of thtf Father
(vv. 28-30). In the measurt that one
is anxious about these needs, he shows
lack of faith in the love of God.
(3) It is heathenish (v. 32). That
, those who are ignorant of God should
manifest anxiety is not to be won
dered at, but for His children, those
who kno\, God as the Father, to do so
is to play the heathen. He knows that
we have need of temporal blessings.
3. Will diligently seek the Kingdom
of God and His righteousness, (vv.
ai, 34).
This means that he will subordinate
temporal tilings to the tilings of the
Spirit. It does not mean that a child
of God will fail to exercise proper
i ; forethought in providing for himself
and family.
The Reality of Life
Silence Is In truth the attribute of
God; and those wiio seek Him from
that side invariably learn that medi
tation Is not the dream, but the re-ul
ity of life; not its illusion, but its
truth; not its weakness but its
strength.—Mnrtlneau.
God’s Promises
God’s promises were never meant to
ferry our iuziness like a boat; they
are to be rowed by our oars.—Henry
Ward Beecber.
—FOB SALE—
A good running Dodge Car for
Sate >110.00.
Jss. A. Carter,
KJngaland, C*.
President Finds
t) 1 aracnse i.
From aH accounts the Island of
Sapeloe, off the Georgia coast, owned
by Howard Coffin, on which President
and Mrs Coolidge spent their- holidays,
is a bit of paradise. Its historical back
ground is interest!or.
As early as 1556 “the Golden Isles”
of which Sapeloe is larges; of the
group of six, became the seat of Span
ish settlements. The English came and
took over the islands in 1734 and held
them until the Revolutionary Waa
Later on the Spalding family held
Sapeloe for two generations and during
their time the island became one of tne
most famous of ante-bellum plantations
It became rich ip products of sea is
land cotton, sugar cane, oranges, lemon
olives, figs, pomegranates and other
cultivated tropical fruits.
The Civil War wrecked the fortunes
of the Spaldings who had prospered
through slavery days. Large numbers
of these slaves were occupied a groat
part of every year in digging and main
taining an extensive system of ditches
drainage and irrigation of the
When Howard Coffin secured Sapeloe
he found the canals and ditches and
the drainage system, which unmeasur
ed years of slave labor had
had filled in with large trees and ac
cumulations of Spanish moss. Human
m 4<m ! m
li 2ft
%
■ft;
unnm
x
)
A Dollar Dinner For Four
HE cost of - the keener appe
tites for fall can be offset by
the careful housewife who does
her marketing with discrimination.
Here is a dollar dinner for four
which will not only satisfy, but
please. The prices quoted can be
obtained from most of the cheaper
stores throughout the country.
Vegetable Soup Rolls
Salmon Steak tvith Creamed Sauce
Baked . Potatoes
Jellied Fruit Salad with Mayonnaise
Cookies Coffee
In the menu above vegetable soup
makes a green vegetable unneces- cook
sary. The fruit salad, with
ies, serves both as salad and des
sert. As to prices, a can of vege
table soup costs 10 cents, eight rolls
cost 10 cents, a small can of evap
orated milk for the creamed sauce
costs 6 cents, potatoes, 5 cents, a
can of pink salmon costs 17 cents,
mbs a
H ,F. RUDULPH B. RUDULPH J. R. BACh».0TT i
i.
RUDULPH BROS.
St. Marys Georgia
Large and Complete Line of
GENERAL MERCHANDISE’
BUILDING MATERIALS
AGENTS FOR BUCK'S STOVES
fsnsr _______ J
When In
BRUNSWICK
Stop At The HOTEL ROYAL Where You
Meet Your Friends
Our Dining Room Serves The Best Home
Cooked Meals.
ivOFAL MOlKi
F. B. CASEY, Prop.
Brunswick Georgia.
BUCK’S GROCERY
BARGAINS EVERY DAY
Free Delivery Anywhere In Town
We Are Prepared To Meet Competition
N. B. Townsend, Mgr.
Kingsland Georgia
*
THE SOUTHEAST GEORGIAN, KINGSLAND, GEORGIA JANUARY 3, 1929.
NOTICE
License for shad fishing can be had
b.v applying at my office. Fishing
license are $2.00, bateau license $5.00
And .25 cents for metal tag for boat.
Jan. 1st, 1929.
Emmett McElreatii.
accomplishments had been wiped out
by vegetation and the processes of na
ture. Mr Coffin engaged the du Pont;
organization to build a new system of'
ditches and waterways. The result is
that explosive engineers have blasted,
blown and dug approximately one hun
died miles of ditches and large water
ways on Sapeloe. It represents an un
equaled record of achievement that has
been obtained in a comparatively short
space of time by the use of explosives
an a private estate - - in strange con
trast to slave time mehods.
Sapeloe of today, as it was enjoyed by
the Coolidges, exceeds the glory it ob
tained in more romantic times. Mr
Coffin has missed no opportunity to
take frill .advantage of the wave-swept
location and the .natural beauty of
Sapeloe to develop what would seem to
be the limit of the island’s possibilities:
yet the owner apparently has not fully
realized his dream of what eventually
ean be accomplished*- Nature, romance,
vision, enterprise and dynamite have
each contributed to make Sapeloe what
it is - a bit of Arcady.
one-haif can fruits for salad costs
15 cents, one tablespoon gelatin, 5
cents, mayonnaise, 4 cents, sufficient
lettuce, 4 cents, cookies, 5 cents, and
coffee, 5 cents. This totals 86 cents,
leaving 14 cents for butter and in
cidentals. —
Jellied Fruit Salad : Drain one can
of fruits for salad, and use half
of the syrup and half of the fruit
for this recipe. (Reserve the re
mainder of the fruit and syrup for
fruit cup the following day)-. Soak
one tablespoon gelatin in one-eighth To
cup cold water for five minutes.
syrup from the fruit add enough
water to make three-fourths cup.
Heat to boiling and dissolve the gel
atin in it. Add one tablespoon lemon
juice and allow to cool. When just
ready to stiffen, add one-fourth cup
mayonnaise and the fruit which has
been left in whole pieces. Mold and
chill. When ready to serve, un
mold Serves and garnish with lettuce.
four.
Chevrolet News
Detroit, Mich. Dec. 29.—When the
N - sv ' York Automobile Siam op ms this
wee!: with more than 45 domestic manu
lacturers exhibiting their 1929 models.
Chevrolet Motor Company will again do
awarded first place at the show. This
award carries with it the honor position
in the exhibit, an award coveted by all
manufacturers because of its allotment
011 a strict merit basis.
Each year the National Automobile
Chamber of Commerce which sponsors
both the New York and Chicago auto
mobile shows makes the av.'ard. And
each year the standard of computation
has been the same. Manufacturers are
ranked strictly on the amount of busi
ness transacted during the fiscal year
ending the August prior to the time the
showing is held. The first place award
applies for both the New York and
.-nicago shows.
Chevrolet’s choice once more for :his
signal honor serves to emphasize the
position of leadership the company lias
assumed during recent years. It also
es to open auspiciously a yea
which W 8 Knudsen, president «m<
general manager of the company, ha
.'.icted will see the company surpass
ig all of its former sales and produc
;ion records.
The new lines of sixes which Che
. volet will display at the show this yea
is already been viewed at advanc
. bowings throughout the country b;
millions of people. Since- the mid
:ovember announcement of the new
ne, Chevrolet’s vast productive facili -
ties have been rapidly getting under
ay at all the Chevrolet assembly
giants, so that within a few weeks
Chevrolet will be running close to full
capacity.
The first of the deliveries of the new'
car are scheduled to take place through
out the country immediately after Jan
1st. Already the 10,000 Chevrolet deal
ers who comprise Chevrolet’s greatest
retailing drain in this country, have
been supplied with models of the new
line.
Today is also important in Chcvrolqts
calendar because it marks the date
by company heads for a grand national
showing of the 1929 models in all deal
ers show' roomsjn the United States.
ir% ® j 1
\i ( j wi i -1 \ E [1 I) 1 i m «snv : H
o n
m out .iOfuwom
Today von can see the most sensational auto
mobile eve:- i ;reduced—The Onf Lunung
Chevrolet of C .evrolet History, a Six in the
price ran: -.’ of the four!
This net 13 now ) display in cur ■ OW
rooms a: >rc [v invite you to come
in for a 1 ction!
When v ei i e Kood and see the new six
cylinder va in-heud engine you will
realizQ that : sv era has dawned, for the
buyers of to riced automobile:). Reute
senting foil, rs development, nute acl ■y i
this new pov )h. ;i t i j a ma r vel of va; icec
design. It develops approximately Chevrolet 32 ( , lore
power than any previous speed cr.;,:.)c. and
U displays sensationally greater this
faster acceleration. And yet, despite
brilliantly improved performance, it main
tains Chevrolet’s worldwide reputation for
economy—averaging better than tf verity
r iles to the pa Hon of gasoline!
Great Array of New Features
Matching this spectacular advance in per
formance is the greatest array of new
features Chevrolet has ever announced.
The new four-wheel brakes not only assure
positive safety, but are exceedingly quiet in
operation. The new two-beam, b id
lamps v.-ith foot control dimming de .i-.e
were never before available in Chevrolet’s
price class. Ar.J so on throughout the c : h e
chassis, you will find feature after feature
demanded in the finest automobile-, rod
now offered on the Outstanding Chevrolet.
Distinctive New Beauty
But, however impressed you may b_ . ,he
mechanical superiority of the Outstanding
Chevrolet, your admiration will reach e en
greater heights when you study the car’s
distinctive beauty.
The marvelous new Fisher bodies represent
a masterful example of artistic coach-»vork.
Never in Fisher’s long and illustrous savvies
to the automotive industry has Fisher ffyle
supremacy been more clearly revealed!
Come in and see these Beautiful New Cars on display in our showrooms
HARPER CHEVROLET COMPANY
Kingsland, Ga.
QUALITY AT l ojw c;ols *33
Paper Mills Look
To South
Atlanta, Ga.. Dec. 28.—In quine.i
have been made of the Georgia Forest
Service concerning available supplies of
timber for establishing one or more
. aper mills in the southeastern part pi
Georgia.
Sate Forester B M Lufburrow is
mg a survey for more exact informal,o.i
than now exists. Leading iai lao
■ave been asked for detailed informa
tion as to cords of wood available.
Saw mill operators have also been ques
tioned as to amount of sidings and ot
her waste material which could bo ob
tained. Boh pine and hardwood- ma,
erials are included in the survey.
State Forester Lufburrov; is c ; .he
opinion that the South is to be one < f
the main sources of wood pulp nf t he
future for making paper, rayon, and
other cellulose produces. He ’.ays that
r..where rise ni ire country can wood
be grown as lapidly as with p’ is
one belt of the South. This , 8*
i the long growing s
abundant rain fall and Llie rapid A
-h liabit of the pine.
– ♦ O * -VO
Competition The
World Round
That competition is the life of ti.id
•as been said before, in effect. Jusi
row the world seems to be serving a
an example.
There is Spain, for example, “co ni»
. ack” into high sea competitive com
merce. There is Japan, with ancient
cotton competing with rayon now ,e.
han forty-years old. Rapp: fo” i.
.ustry each of these market i repo:
improvement. There is England, ■ly
ing tnat rayon competition again:
cotton is leading to improved fabric
noth classes, the older textile bein';
put on its metal to interest a mark,
•aught „y he beauty and du 'ability .
the younger,
And who would overlook the advent
the “Public” in stock ma a
ing which has resulted in stock ac-.
vances for everybody, so th.
competition is not the soul of trade, it's
a very canny pave.it at any rate!
gassy"''*"-. PlP
Oil are
/ COr diali,
attend 'F tir y lnv ited to
lniti 7 *lsho
c lUlTi gof
ltsta -ndj n ^
/ a e Jottrf
ni n Ft- f.
Itl c.
L f! •y
Ta'.» ■
p wmm
rC 1
X*
ZJC
The $ 525 The Sport *695
Io:\dster . . . , Cabriolet .
The $ 525 The Convertible
Fhacton . . . , Landau . ... I J
The d595 Sedan Delivery .”595
Coach . .
. . . . ”400
The $ 595 Light Delivery Chassis
Coupe . . , . , X ^/2 Ton Chassis $ 545
. • -
The .*675 hCab ”650
Sedan 11/^Ton Chassis wit
. . , . ?>fleh.
All prices f. o. b. Flint,
Objectionable Sign
Boards
Commercial bill boards that obscure
ranger signals and hinder the free view
o! standard markers erected on the
highways have aroused the indigation
f the United States Bureau of Public
Heads, and the Director of that Ser
’ ice ir » his annual report expresses the
hope that “means may be found by
... .able legislation to effect their corn
elimination upon all roads con.
tructed in part with money appropriat
:d by the National Government.”
Self Regulation
Of Industry
Many of the principal industries of
the country are availing themselves of
g od offices of the Government which
guarantees them safey and protection
in the holding of trade conferences for
the purpose of devising ways for the
: ■ -1 (-regulation of industry. The Fed
g.i Trade Commission says that bar.
, :ass and industry is just a little betta:
od just a litle cleaner than it has cvc
been before, thanks to the regulatio
from within.
*#*
Postal Savings
Postal savings banks of the countr.
:ow have deposits of more than $152
000,000. The Postmaster General :a
that the former feeling of hostility o
the part of the banking fraternity ha
epee red as the conduct of the pos •
•,il saving system has been such as t .
remove the feeling that these bank •
• ere competing -with private bank
Evidently the postal savings has served
to promote the idea of thrift in hi
country.
Utilities Not Suffering
Despite all the reports of the wrong
doings of certain utilities the Gov.vn
rrent reports show a steady increase in
the net profit of telephone and tele
graph companies, gas, electric light,
heat, power, transaction and water ser
vices throughout the United States.
PAGE-tHRfeE
Tree Surgeons Being
Sent South
Kent Ohio— Ailing trees of the South
land can look toward the future with
renewed hope.
Four hundred expert tree surgeons
just as well qualified to feel the puls?
of a tree and treat a sick patient- art
now practicing their profession in the
southern states.
They are employed by and under the
directin of the Davey Tree Expert
Company of Kent, Ohio, which con
ducts the only school in the world for
i.'.structin in tree surgery.
The large number of tree surgenss
sent South this winter reflects the
great economic strides taken by the
South according to Congressman Mar
tin L Davy, president of the Davey
company. “We nave been sending par.
of our tree surgeons South for the past
fifteen winters," said Mr. Davey, “but
there has never been such a demand
lor them as during the past five years
We find that this is a pretty good
barometer of increasing southern pros
perity.
Many of tne trees treated are of lus_
torical vaiue. Because of the care which
has been given them they have been
saved for future generations. One of
the most noted of these is the horse
•hestnut tree a Fredericksbury, Vir
ginia, ne only one remaining alive of
nirteen planted by George Washington
to commemorate the original states of
the union
Death Rates
It is encouraging to know that the
death rate per 100 dropped off nearly
one per cent for the year 1927, in which
year the rate was 11.4 as compared with
12.2 in 1926.
6 6 6
Is a Prescription for
Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue,
Bilious, Fever and Malaria.
It is the most speedy remedy known