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THE ATLANTA GEORGTAN .o ow READ FOR PROFIT—GEORGIAN WANT ADS——USE FOR RESULTS vo @ ... NOVEMBER 1917
: AUTOMOBILES.
REAL BARGAINS
A In Used Cars ‘
8 |
wg have a limited number of usedi
care that are mechanically good—over- |
hauled, With new paint andytops.
One Chalmers, 1916.................86501
One Buick, 7-passenger, a pick-up |
B coesescibenrsrsintrncersrosnsesssJoßo]
One Premier, T-passenger, a pick-up
B BF iit riiieianinans db e 340 D
One Buick Roadster, a real car at a
price that will move it Immediately:
ONIY WS vessniovatancessnsvnesssissssßiOo
Also a number of nther real bargains.
HAYNES AUTO €O,
181 PEACHTREE STREET,
ATLANTA.
L s
BEAUDRY MOTOR CO.,
*
~ Authorized Ford Dealers.
169-171 Marietta St.
118-120 Walton St.
Full line Ford parts and acces
' sories.
e _No wait necessary for commer
cial bodies. Styles meeting all
requirements in stock.
We are equipped to repaint,
re-cover and upholster. . 1
Radiators rebuilt; also any
other Ford repair work.
We employ experienced men
~and cive prompt service. |
M. °93-2245-4285; Atl. 1426, i
FOR SALE—Hudson Six
eylinder, five-passenger,
in splendid condition. Will
sell at a bargain. See Mr.
Venable, 255 Peachtree St.
USED CARS.
’ + 1917 Light Overland Roadster.
1917 Light Overland, six-cyilnder.
Maxwell Touring Car.
Chevrolet Tourhig Car.
WILLYS-OVERLAND, Ine,,
USED CAR DEPARTMENT,
236 PEACHTREE ST.
Authorized Sales and Service.
- PRICHARD-ORR SALES CO,,
. WEST END—EAST POINT.
' Gordon and Lee. Main Streot.
Phone West \5. Phone E._ P. 138
} FORD taxicab body, good condition, SBS:
also 20 acres of timberland in 3 miles
~ of Emerson, Ga., to exchange for au
tomobile, Ford preferred. 127 Marietta
street.
FOR SALE—I9I7 Ford, perfect condi
tion. Good tires., A bargain for quick
sale. Also I would like to buy an Oak
land. Mr. Buice, 809 Marietta street.
FOR SALE-—One 5-passenfer Buick car,
in perfect condition; self-starter and
lights; will take $385 if taken at once.
'@. W. McLain, Acworth, Ga.
COLUMBTUS electric coupe in good con
dition; batteries Fractlcally new; a
‘good bargain. Call Ivy 1702 for demon
.
OVERLAND, Country Club, 1917, ex
cellent coaditlon. Almost new. Cash
or terms. Address Box 895, care Geor
glan.
. BUICK, 1917 flve-passenger, practical
' ly new; excellent condition; good tires.
. Address Rox 893 care Georgian.
1917 BUICK roadster, used very little,
extra equipment. Can be seen at the
Cain _St. Garage. 8 E. Cain Bt. :
FOR SAlFE—Five-passenger Dodge au-l
tomobile. in good condition. Apply C.
L_Barnwell, 18 W. Mitchell t.
DODGE. 1418 model, cash or terms to
‘ responsible party. Address Box 894,
R eaoreian, s v
\ FOR SALFE—I9I6 Ford tonring car; in
good mechanical eondition. 'hone Ivy
1035-7 J. E
‘ N 2B Aut 0.,
‘USET) ( AR’S 183y';;§r9e.u1? S(‘I:GL ‘
Specin! harzains in used cars. Hubbell
_Oakes Motor Co. 155 Peachires T 2839,
STUDFRAKFER USED-CAR MARKET,
1 316-18 Perachtree St. Special prices.
.~ SEVERATI, bargains in used cars. At
| lanta Cadiliac Co., 183 Peachtree.
BARGAINS in used cars. J. G. Lewis
_Motor o, 232 Peachtree Bt.
‘ FOR SATE -Used cars, good a 8 new.
14 North Pryor street.
USED car bargains. The White Co., 65 |
R Street. i o
AUTOS FOR EXCHANGE.
| WAN’T‘EI‘L--:I‘O exchange a good truck
‘ for Ford car. 159 Whitehall. M. 3326_.1
‘ AUTOMOBILES WANTED. |
| WANTED- To buy a Ford car; must bo‘
| i good condition; will pay cash.
~ Write Andy McCline Porterdale, Ga. |
WANTED To buy used Ford cars. Good
prices. Puice. 809 Marietta street |
FORD STARTERS. |
. AGENTS—SeII Ford starters evergl
where. Ford Starter Spec. Co., 92 N,
Forsyth.
AUTO PAINTING.
| A A AN AN AN AAAR AR A AAAANANAAAAIAAASAARD
CARS REPAINTED.,
Tops re-covered and repaired; wheels,
prings and axles repaired.
Bodles built to order or repaired.
120-122-124 Auburn Avenue.
TIRES.
B AAN AAAANAAA AR A A AAAS
JUST received, three cars assorted 3,500
to 6,000 miles automoblile tires; selling
at 50 per cent discount. McPherson
Rubber Company, 64 North F(]l;}yth St.
GRORGIA DOUBLE TREAD TIRE CO.,
66 EDGEWOOD AVE., Ivy 1756-J.
Tires couble-treaded, stitched or wvul
canized. We gnarontee all work.
A} Vulcanizing work. New 30x3%
=L non-skid $15.00 guaranteed un
called for Goodyear Diamond tread,
£15.00. 497 Whitehall st.
MOTORCYCLES AND BICYCLES.
AA A AN ANT NI NPT NI NI NI NININSNININI TIPS
REPAIR bicyeles, motorcycles, vulcan
ize inner tubes, locksmith, gunsmith,
iweltering, soldering and general repair
ing. Prompt attention and right prices.
Cut Rate Repair Shop, 255 Marletta St.
oO e s e
. WWANTED—One hundred second-hand
__bicycles. Tvy 65260.
ROOMS AND BOARD.
A A AAA NAN AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAASAAANS
TRANSIENTS AND VISITORS
TO BILLY SUNDAY MEETINGS.
Room with or without board. All con
veniences: 12 min, walk to Billy's Ta
bernacle. 305 Fast Hunter St., M. 2862,
PERMANENT boarders and students
may obtain room and board in ele
gantly furnished home. Electric lights
hot wat heat. 308 East Hunter St.
M. 2862,
90-22-24 COOPER ST.
BO ¢f to $8 per week, elec., steam
héfiDt\;‘- ;'\[;zd s}lwwr-r bath. M. 3692-J.
g tub d SHOWEr DRii. I e
WANTED Roomers and boarders; hot
and cold water; $6 and $6 per week,
| 107 Sonth Prvor street. Main 5048,
WANTED__Couple or two men to board.
m},&‘,fi.’p,.:‘.me family_North Side,
Rl\ conveniences. Ivy 7658-J.
WO eounlos or 4 young men to board
w 0 inoflel?!‘ér(h’fs.; home; close in. 204
~ Washington. i
’ ROOMS AND BOARD. \
N AAAAAAAAAN AANANAN AN NPT AP, |
'STEAM-HEATED boarding house, good
} table, closa in, $5 and SBFSO per week.
131 S_Pryor.
STEAM-HEATED rooms, ¢
ness women or men;
Tvy 8889-J.
WANTED—Men boarders; ver
week; conveniences. Rates .....uable,
192 Ivy st |
ROOM and board for one voung man;
—reasonable. Private family. Ivy 2840,
FRONT room; all convs.: best residence
_Section; priv. home. W. 1420-J.
WILL give room and board in exchange
__for wool blankets. M. 5154-J,
ONE large front room for couple; North
Side. Ivy 05043,
e
BOARD WANTED.
AR A AN AR AR AN AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA A
WANTED—Room and board by quiet
young lady stenographer. Must be
reasonable. C., 127, care Georgian.
RESTAURANTS.
AAAAAA AAA A A A AL
h Yo Restaurant, 132-134 Peach
b Olsom S tree. Southern cooking.
FOR RENT—ROOMS. v
AA A AAN AP AAAAAAAA, NP A PAANAAPNA A
FURNISHED.
AAA A A A A N AP AN AR AN AN AN
THE MARTINIQUE
ELLIS AND IVY,
Operated under the best management.
Each room connected, with bath and
kept in excellent condifion. Hotel serv
fce 21 per dav
s Q ] Rooms, with ¢r with
bl{hbtlAl\lour bath; elevator,
steam heat, shower baths. 17 W. Cain.
LARGE, steam-heated room with pri
vate bath; also vacancies for men; ex
cellent meafs. Phone W. 664. '
FURNISHED room, with sleeping porch
attached, for gentlemen. McGowan,
Aartment 8, 54 Juniper St.
ALL or part of nicely furnished home;
best residence section N. Side. For
partioulars, call M SO4), .o 8 b
NICELY furnished, steam-heated room
for gentlemen. 99 W. Peachtree, Apt.
8. Phonelvy 6818 J. . oos =
FURNISHED room, hot and cold run
ning water; exclusive apt., refined and
brivate. lvy 8869. = o @
ONE or two neatly furnished rooms, up
stairs, walking distance. 110 W, Har
ris street, Apt. B.
NICELY furnished room, reasonable,
kousekeeping if desired. 162 Court
land Bleco it oo a s eVe
STEAM-HEATED room, business wom
en; walking distance; close in. Ivy
8889-J.
THE ARGYLE.
34512 Peachtree St. N
10% EAST HARRiB, bache-
A])()]'J‘Flor rooms de luxe. T 3071,
200 W. PEACHTREE—~Large rooms; all
__conveniences; also garage. I 1712-L.
TWO nice rooms for men only; conven
_lences; close in. Phone Ivyy 4877.
FURNISHED rooms, conveniences. 14
_West Baker. Apt. 2. Ivy 769.
NICELY furnished room; all conven
_Jlences; private home H. 270-L.
TWO nice rooms; close in; all conven
dencel (Call Tvwaßbd Lo o 0
LOWER floor of 4 rooms for rent to
adults. Ivy 4110-J.
FURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING.
FURNISHED room in home with couple.
Furnace heat; garage. Can arrange
for light housekeeping. West 1406-J.
FOR RENT—Two neatly furnished
rooms. adjoining bath, electricity;
conveniences. Ivy 3254-L.
TWO large furnished housekeeping
rooms, convs., reas. 20 East Plne.
TWO nice fur. rooms, furnace heat, all
convs., priv. family. W. 1420-J.
UNFURNISHED.
A A AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARAAAAAAAAAS
LARGE upr‘airs front room and kitch
enette, with one or two bedrooms:
very convenient for light housekeeping;
close in; reasonable. Ivy 8748-J. = .
THREE connecting rooms, with owner;
all modern conveniences. 25 Kuhn
street, near McLendon. Ivy 1398-L.
TWO unfurnished rooms for reént; mod
ern_conveniences. 330 Highland Ave.
TWO or three unfurnished rooms for
_rent cheap. Main 1931-L. 209 8. Pryor.
TWO or three unfurnished rooms for
rent cheap. Main 1981-L. Atl. 834.
TWO pretty rooms, all conveniences, on
car line. 382 Whitehall.
UNFURNISYED HOUSEKEEPING.
TWO rooms with sink: couple; no chil
dren; one servant’s room to old negro
woman to help about house. 98 Jose
phine street. e
TWO large and one sinall room, suitable
for housekeeping. North gide. 46
West Linden st.
HELP WANTED—MALE. HELP WANTED—MALE.
NN NN NN NNINNNI NI NI NINT NN NI NSNS NN NPOS NSNS NN N NSNS NP NN NN NN SNPNININN NI NI NININPP
300 colored laborers to work on dam at
Bridgewater, N. C,, ten miles from Marion,
N. C. Wages $2.50 per day. Pay every Sat
urday night. ;
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.
A P A A A I AP AAPAPAP AP PP AP AP AP
THE RIGHT KIND OF REAL ESTATE TO BUY.
A few years ago the buyer with real money had to compete with specu
lators who had none. Now speculato rs and professionals are entirely out
of the muarket; those possessed of actual money have all the advantage.
Some of the best purchases to be had now are in the shape of good, sub
stantial buildings, which were erected a few years ago, went vacant in the
depression and now are rented at lo w rates—just enough to pay expenses.
Investments of this class can be had at big reductions. On the turn of
the market these places will make a k illing.
FORREST & GEORGE ADAIR.
HOMES REDUCED.
WE MEAN JUST WHAT WE AD VERTISE under this heading. Owners
are anxious to sell. These homes are iess than two years old. Owners have
slashed prices for a clearance. ;
6-room, new brick veneer, West End ......ccc000000:0....53,300
6-room, new brick veneer, West End .......cec000000....34.000
RSt FItH strast, & NOW BEPOST ... il coitusssarctsssesss3.3oo
West Peachtree, near Seventh. Think of 1t!................iG..’i00
Atlanta avenud, 6-room bUnNgAIOW - ......ccviiiennececesass 92,600
QUINBY REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE,
612 FORSYTH BUILDING. IVY 17698.
FOR RENT—HOUSES. FOR RENT—HOUSES.
AN AANANAAN AA AP APt NP PN PP AAP A PPN AN NP APPNP AP A PPN PRSI PPS
UNFURNISHED. UNFURNISHED.
AA A A A AAA AA A I A A i A B AP s
TO LET—SOUTH SIDE HOME.
347 WASHINGTON STREET—Eight rooms, servant’'s room, furnace, e¢lec
tric lights; all rooms have been newly papered. SSO per month.
NORTH SIDE BUNGALOW.
53 WEST TWELFTH STREET-—Between Columbia avenue and West
Peachtree, six-room bungalow, electric lights, furnace and two servants’
rooms. $42.50 per month.
BENJAMIN D. WATKINS & CO.,
IVY 670. 201 4TH NAT. BANK BLDG.
FOR RENT—ROOMS.
AAAA AA A AA A AAP
UNFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING.
TWO connecting rooms with Kkitchen
ette, with housekeeping conveniences.
Ivy 3899-L, L
TWO unfurnished rooms, convenient for
_light housekeep_lng. 417 Pledmont ave.
UPSTAIRS flat, three or four rooms,
near Cleburne and Highland. I. 3244-J.
FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED.
AAAA AA A A A A ANt
TWO large, light, alry roms, furmshed
or unfurnished; modern; private fam
hy. Near car line. Ivy 8412-X3 .
ONE furnished or three unfurnighed
rooms, close in. Call M. 5110,
FUR. or UNFURN. HOUSEKEEPING
AA A AAN A AAA A AAP
156 W. PEACHTREE.
ONE room with kitchenette. I 2239.
FOR RENT—APARTMENTS.
A AARAAAAANAAAAAAAAAAAAA AN AAASAA
FURNISHED.
A AR ANARAAAAAAAAAAAAAANAAAAAAAAANS
FURNISHED—A NICE, CLEAN LIT
TLE APARTMENT; THREE ROOMS,
KITCHENETTE AND PRIVATE
BATH; FREE WATER AND PHONE;
WITH OR WITHOUT GARAGE. HILL
STREET, NEAR GEORGIA AVENUE.
NO CHILDREN. PHONE MAIN 4686-J.
UNFURNISHED.
AAA AA A AP A A A A AA A A
APARTMENT: six rooms: bath, sleeping
porch; S4O. 705 N. Boulevard. ’,'.24_?-_
WANTED—APARTMENTS
AA A A A A ALAAAAAAAAAA At
FURNISHED.
A A A AAAN AN AAAAANA
WANTED — SMALL FURNISHED,
STEAM-HEATED APARTMENT;
T™WO ROOMS, WITH BATH AND
KITCHENETTE, BY TWO BUSINESS
WOMEN. ADDRESS BOX 126, CARE
GEORGIAN,
FOR RENT—HOUSES.
AR A A A AAAN AP ANAPAANAPPAP AP
FURNISHED.
AR AAA AR A AA A AAAAA A AAA A
COZY six-room bungalow, nicely fur
nished; every convenience. Ivy 3825-La.
UNFURNISHED.
ELEGANT 3-room house at No. 6 Balti
more place, electric lights. S6O, Also
a 9-room house at 55 FEast 13th street,
electric lights. Jenkins & Lythgoe.
Ivy 482-3. s o
142 ALEXANDER, Bix rooms and kitch
enette, suitable for 2 families. Phone
Hemlock 1521-L.
Consult our Rent Bulletin
SMITH. EWING & RANKIN.
WANTED—HOUSES.
AA A AAA AP A AP ARSI APAPPS
UNFURNISHED.
AR AP AAAAAAAAAINAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN
WANTED—ABOUT SIX
ROOM HOUSE, IN
Y Y
SUBURBS; MUST BE ON
ORREAL CLASETOCAR
LINE; LOT MUST B&
LARGE ENOUGH TO
KEEP COW. TERM S
e \
MUST BE REASONA-
I KRB 0, OARE
GEORGIAN.
BUSINESS PROPERTY FOR RENT.
A A A A AA AR AN AN AAA AAP A
ENTIRE second floor over Tom Pitts’
store at Five Points, center of ‘axe city;
also second floor, corner Peachtree and
Walton, over Gunter-Watkins' drug
store; great location. See Massengale
Bulletin System. 56 Edeewood avenue.
SEEDS, PLANTS AND TREES.
AAA AA A A AAA AN A AN AR AT
ALL VARIETIES
RHUBARB, asparagus, horseradish,
fruit trees and winter beans. Mark
W. Johnson Seed Co., 35 So, Pryor Bt.
CABBAGE PLANTS.
AR AN P AANA NS AP ANIANANA AN AP NP SIS
CABBAGE. PLANTS—EarIy Jersey and
Charleston Wakefleld, Succession,
Flat Dutch, from pedigreed seed; imme
diate shipment; by express, 500, for $1;
1,000, $1.50; 5000. at $1.25; 10,000 and
up, SI.OO, f. o. b, Young's Island; dellv.
ered by parcel post, 100, 25c; 1.000, $1.75.
Enterprise Company, Inc.. Sumter, 8. C
MISCELLANEOUS.
AP RA RN AT AAINAIAR IS APRPAINPISS
SNEED Nurseries, 312 Oakland avenue,
Atlanta. - Will mail you free catalog
on fruit treass, vines and plants.
SEEDS, PLANTS AND TREES.
AA A AANANA AAP AR
OATS.
AAt A ANI
APPLER SEED OATS FOR SALE—
Bpechll{ selected, $1.20 per bushel in
6-bushel bags; order quick. Vandiver
Seed Co., Lavonia, Ga. |
PECANS.
AAAAAAAA AANAAN A A AAR
PECANS-—Southwest Georgia paper
shell pecans for sale; varieties, Stu
art, Protcher, Schley and others; 50
cents per pound f. 0. b. Box 245, Al
bany, Ga.
POULTRY, PET AND LIVE STOCK.
AAU A A aAR AAR A
GAMES.
A A AAAASAN AA AP AP ARAAAAAA AN
FOR SALE—Eslin Red Quills, Hopkin
son War Horse, Grist Gradys and
Shawlneck same chickens. H. Roqus
more, Mansfleld, Ga.
RHODE ISLAND REDS.
A A A AN A A AAAAAAAAAAAAANANAAAAAAA
RHODE ISLAND REDS—Prize-winnin
stock. One breed 9 vears. Eggs, 3’5
R‘er 15, Wade Farrar, Chattanooga,
enn.
S o R Ry
GREEN GROUND BONE. -
POSITIVELY will make your hens lay
_Campbell Bros.. 77 Decatur street.
PIGEONS.
AAAAA AN AAA AA A AAAAAAAANAAANA A AAA
HAVE a few pairs of English Pouters
and Muffed Tumbhlers at a bargain.
Visitors welcome all day Sunday. Su
therland Squab Plant, 23 Sutherland
drive, Kirkwood, Ga.
QUALITY RUNTS AND FANTAILS.
FANCY, PRIZE-WINNING STOCK.
JAMES R. MAY. KNOXVILLE. TENN
FOR SALE—Working Carneaux pigeom‘
at $1 pair. J. 8. Stokes, Fargo, Ga.
DOGS.
A A eAANANNAN AP AN PP
TRAINED coon and gosaum hounds:
also rabbit and bird dogs. J. W. |
Mo L, T
THOROUGHBRED lox_ terrler pups;
perfectly marked; §4. Ivy 1428 =
ONE first-class opossum dog. Price 525,‘
R _H. Crawford, Clayton, Ga. b
CATTLE. ‘
AA A A A A A ANt
DIXIE STOCK FARM |
FAYETTEVILLE, GA., |
REDWINE BROS., Owners. ‘
Reg. HEREFORD CATTLE.
A{e herd bull, Star Grove, No. |
468526, which stood second at Kan. |
sas Clt{ American Royal Bhow, ‘
1917, at head of herd. |
ANXTETY 4TH CATTLE FOR SALE. |
POLLED DURHAM |
CATTLE
JUST WHAT YOU fiEED
ON YOUR FARM.
Pflze-wlnninf registered stock. |
Safe and valuable investment.
LEEMON STOCK FARM,
HOOPESTON. ILL. :
FOR BALE—Three carloads good feed
ing steers. Also one car shorthorns
and Aberdeen heifers.
J. T. ALDER,
968 Marietta St. Phone Main 516.
PIGS. ?
AAR AA AR AAARAAAAAAAAAAAAAARIAAA AAR A~
FOR SALE—Pure-bred Duroc-Jersey
pig‘s’ at twelve and a half dollars. Hid
den Valley Plantation, Route 1, Somer
ville, Tenn.
CALVES.
A AAA A A A A AANN AP A
EITHER sex, 15-16ths pure-bred; from
heavy producers, five to seven weeks
old, $25. crated and expressed to any
station, express charges Gaid here; send
orders or write Lake View Holstein
Place, Whitewater, Wis.
COWwWS.
AAAA AA AN AAAAAAANAANAAA A AAAAAAP AN
FANCY Jersey cow fresh in milk. 10
Racine street. west 1265-J.
Bt s i
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.
ADMINISTEATOR’S SALE.
A A A A AA A AAN AN
On Tuesday, December 4th, at the
Courthouse, No. 170 Curran street, all
improvements. Rents for $10.60 per
month. For information upsly to
Frampton E. Ellis, County Administrator
627 Healey Building,
Phone: Ivy 8740.
MODERN; all conveniences; West End
Park: big, level iot, 50 by 190; gretty
lawn. Price $3,500. (Cash payment SSOO,
balance §25 per month. This tremendous
bargain is to effect a quick sale. Phone
West 1307-J.
PEACHTREE ROAD HOME--$6,500,
FINE FRUIT, GARDEN. 100-FOOT
LOT; YOUR TERMS., QUINBY REAL
gSTATE EXCHANGE, 612 FORSYTH
LG, VT e e
LAOT 100 by 155, Peachtree Terrace sub
division, sacrifice for immediate sale.
Will take small cash payment, balance
terms. R. P. Kenyon, Main 1243,
TWO improved lots, Westview property;
one business house, one five-room cot=
tage; will sell at bargaln. M. 5304, Atl
751. Leon Call. = A 2
ELEVATED corner lot 50x140, West
End, concrete pavement, §BOO, S2OO
cash, $lO monthly. W. H., 204 Equitable
Bldg.
BUNGALOW and two-story home,
Kirkwood, East Lake line. R. F. Gil-
Ham, Lawyer, Fourth National. M. 351
FOR SALE—Five-room house, corner
Pulliam. Owner leaving city. Phone
Main 3289-7 J.
e i
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE OR
EXCHANGE.
FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE-—Beautiful
building lot in Ormewood Park; will
sacrifice for cash or exchange for any
thing of equal value. Address J. H.,
Box 9018, care Georgian.
WILL sell cheap or exchange for auto,
two lots, 50 by 200, Peachtree Road
Park subdivision. Main 4202-L.
FARM LANDS.
AAN A A AN ANt
ALABAMA,
AA A N IIANAAA AN AP A
3,000 ACRES level, unimproved land; lo
cated on good roads, rural route, and
within four miles of good town; will sell
in large or small tracts; small cash pay
ment, balance ten years. This land will
grow any and all crops. A splendld op
portunity to own a farm.
JOHNSON & RIDDLE,
e eSOt RIS L
FARM BARGAINS—AIII sectlions of Ala
bama. Write for free lists. Ingram
Land Cn., Birmingham, Ala.
-~ GEORGIA.
FARM FOR SALE BY
3 & Y Al
OWNER.
750 ACRES. in Gilmer County, 215 miles
from Ellijay, on Carter l(:ly River;
about one-half in cultivation, balance in
oak, hickory and poplar timber. This
land is very productive, for 75 acres of
it is In bottom land. The farm has run
ning spring water through the 7-room
residence on the place; other bulldings
consist of six good tenant houses, one
large barn, and three smaller ones. The
price is $15,000. We offer terms, if de
gired.
WE also offer 750 acres in South Geor
v gia, in Early County, 5 miles from
Blakely, on cherted road; rich mulatto
land with red clay subsoil; lies level:
can cultivate with machinery; 6 good
tenant houses; one-half in open land,
balance in oak. hickory, poplar, cypress
and other timber; will sell for $25 per
acre; terms if desired.
If you are in the market for good
farms, it will pay you to see these before
buying. :
Either of the above farms is worth
double the price asked.
C. H. ARNOLD.
CARE MARION HOTEL,
ATLANTA.
FOUR acres in city limits of College
Park; a nrice six-room house, large
barn and a small storehouse i 8 on this
tract. Spriag branch and about 2 acres
of rich bottom land. Street on four
sides. Close to school and in walking
distance of a A-cent ten-minute ecar
service into Atlanta. Price $3,600;
$1.600 cash, balance SSOO par year.
Brotherton & Callahan, East Point, Ga.
Bell Phone East Point 416.
STRONG PLEA MADEBYBILLY
Continued from Page 14.
then—you see the sky become
blackness, and the wind sweeps
the mistletoe from the trees: it
uproots the gigantic oak trees that
have defied storms for centuries,
and it takes the barn in its awful
power and tears it to shreds and
scatiers it like toothpicks through
the darkening woods. It unroofs
the house over yonder. You hear
the, shrieks of the dying and the
wounded. Where is your God of
smiling sunshine and babbling
brooks and singing birds?
“No, you can not read from
rocks and stars that God is love.
I can, study astronomy, but it
won’t tell me of the Star of Beth
lehem that rose 1,900 years ago
over the Christ for my salvation.
I can study geology, but it will
not tell me of the Rock of Ages.
I can study mineralogy, but it
won’'t tell me of the pearl of
greatest price.
“T can study biology, but It
won’'t tell me of Jesus Christ.”
Some people pay no heed to the
Bible. They will gulp down the
novels as they are taken from the
press each day. Some of you have
not looked into the Bible for
months and years. Don't blame
God, then, if you wake up in the
mouth of hell. But you will go
home tonight, disrobe, jump into
bed and reach vp and grab a novel
and begin to read:
“He reined his panting steed
and smote his breast with three
rapld smotes. Upon the vine
clad veranda stood the silly, friz
FARM LANDS. }
AAA AA A AAAAAAA AAAP AN APASARA
GEORGIA. |
R e et A PPN it N
CLINE REALTY COMPANY'S FARMS. |
FORTUNE in farmlnf good land llke‘
this: 182 acres, 14 miles from Atlanta,
8 miles from Decatur, 1% miles from
Tucker and Seaboard Rallroad. We
know every foot of this farm. We be
lieve in it and can show you that it
is one of the best around Atlanta. 100
acres in cultivation; nearly all new land; ‘
and more new land beim;\ put into cul
tivation all the time. Three good set
tlements, barns, etc. SB,OOO,
CHEAPEST good farm near Atlanta; 78
acres, ' $2,000; more than half culti
vated; good strong land; 3% miles be
vond Chattahoochee River bridge. Seize
this land while you can. ‘
350 ACRES that can be sold in tracts
of 220 and 130 acres each. Several
good settlements, fine barng, outhouses,
ete. One desiring big farm, a big mon
ey-maker and fine investment, see us on
this. It's worth your time. SSO per
acre.
CLINE REALTY COMPANY,
_4lO SILVEY BUILDING. IVY 410,
FOR SALE-—BBO acres of land, 3 miles
from Nicholls, Ga., on A, B, and A.
Rallroad; 235 dcres in cultivation, 200
acres stumped; fine range for hogs and
cattle; four mules, glow tools, two two
horse and one one-horse wagon, plenty
of corn, hay and fodder to run place an
other year; hay press and rake, mower,
reaper and binder; in fgct, everything
to carry on farm succpsgfully; one six
room house, two four-room houses, one
two-room house, two one-room houses;
will sell ¢heap for cash, or make terms
on one-half of purchase price. 8. J.
Stubbs. Douglas, Ga.
5.200 ACRES on A., B. and A., between
Atlanta and Birmingham, with station
on property; lies in a dry basin, with
1,000 acres choicest bottoms; 80 per cent
of upland lies well enough for cultiva
tlon; small acreage in cultivation; about
2,000,000 feet choice yellow pine, 3 .000.000
choice head timber; splendid logging;
land adjoining of same grade exactlg in
high state of cultivation held at S4O to
§3O per acre; timber on this will pay for
it at price asked. $8.50 per acre; terms.
A 5 C Conwr?y, 529 Candler Bldg.
450 ACRES, Cobb County, 26 miles of
Atlanta, 5 miles of a good town; lies
almost level on main road, in goood
neighborhood; good improvements, about
) acres o&;en and rented for 1918 for
yut $2.000. Purchaser could open up
: for several plows additional by
clearing original timber. Land has red
clay subsoil and dgrlvelly dark loamy
soil; is highly productive. Special rea
son for selling. s3l per acre. Terms.
T. C. Conway, 529 Candler Bldg.
FOR SALIZ--80 acres land; one 4-room,
one 2-room house and good barn. This
place made $1.610 worth of cotton and
plenty corn for Black last year; 2%
miles from the best town In Georgia;
1% miles from three schoolhouses and
churches. Lot of this land will make
one bale of cotton per acre; on Fumh'
road, For quick sdle will take $2,450.
Address G. W, McLain, Acworth, Ga.
YR
270-ACRE FARM.
SSO AN ACRE: % mile front on main
county road, 16 miles from Atlanta;
near National Highway{ 214 miles from
car line; creek running through place,
with 75 acres rich bottomsg; 170 acres
in cultivation. $1,500 casgh, balance In
eight yearly payments, Phone Waest
1207-3
223 ACRES, 5 miles from Americus, Ga.,
on publie rcad; a home place and two
tenant houses; about 65 in fresh land;
school and churches convemnient: six
horse crop under cultivation; $32.50 per
acre; can arrange terms. Brotherton &
Callahan, Wast Point, Ga. Bell Phone
Tlast Point 416. .
I MAKE a epeclarty or Georgla farm
lands. Thomas W. Jackson, 1018-19
Fourth Nat. Bank Bldg. e
IF YOU can’t fight, do. your bit! Buy a
farm. Will mail upon reauest a de
seriptive bulletin of fifty good farms.
Brotherton & (Callahan, Kast Point, Ga.
Bell phone East Point 416. 2
LIST wour farm lands with us. Chue
Realty Co., 410 Silvev Bldg. ‘
TEXAS,
AAAAA AAA A A AN AP AN
601 ACRES rich sulphur land, Cu!h@rnoni
County; $25,000; half cash, balance to
sult Fred G. Irby. Van Horn. Tex}g}_i
FARMS FOR EXCHANGE. |
AAN AP ARSI AP APPIP A |
WILL trade equity in_good farm for
Dodge or Buick car. Decatur 100-I..__
FARMS FOR RENT, |
AR A A A A A AN AAR PAP s
FOR RENT--Two-horse farm, near
Stone Mountain: good buildings, pas
ture; standing rent. Also two-horse
farm near Buchanan; 25 acres bottom
land; rent reduced. Leo Grossman, 670
Washington street.
FARMS WANTED.
AN APAN ARG A AP P API P SRIS
DO you want to sell your farm? We can
sell yvour property and turn it into
money. Write us. Carolina Realty Co.,
Raleigh, N. C. o A
WANTED— A small farm near Atlanta.
Comfortable house. Reasonable rent.
26 Delta place, Atl. E. 374-M. ‘
zle-headed Reta, her eyes red with
weeping, because our rich,
haughty daddy would not have
our poor hero for a son-in-law.
They jumped on the horse and
away they go for the distant city”
-—and then you skip three or four
pages and read the closing scene
-—~“twenty-five years later, same
old horse, same old bridle and
hero, same old shero, a little dis
figured but still in the ring. Our
hero has gone West and he has
put it over on a lot of suckers,
sold mining stock and came back
with diamonds on his vest. The
old man is hobbling out with the
burden of 80 years on his shoul
ders and an old maid daughter on
his hands.
. S'he looks and says, “Po, it is
e.
‘“Reginald,” she screams.
“Reta,” he shrieks. He leaps from
his panting horse and with arms
outstretched they rush together
like two freight tralns. The old
man hobbles vut upon his crutch
es and he says, “The Lord bless
you, my children,” and the whip
poor-will joins in his lonesome
song by the brook.
Then you blow out the light and
have four or five nightmares, one
after the other.
A fellow says to me, “Bill, here
{s this immortality business. This
soul busincss worries me. Hereo
is my dog, my horse, my cat, my
cow! You say they have no
soul?"’
“Yes, I say they have no soul.”
‘“You say I have?”
“YPS;"
“What makes the difference?"
I will first call vour attention
to a picture of that creative morn,
in ornate language, by Dr. Mun
sey, a preacher of other days. He
sald when the fiat had gone forth
then God said, “Let us make
man,” he imagines the quadruled
mamalia, each species in turn,
walking by and saying, “Make
him llke unto one of us.”
God said, “No.” Then the fishes
of the sea swam by,and each
srecies made their appeal. “Make
hltvm I.lke unto us.” The Lord sald
“No."
The birds of the air flew by,
and dipping upon their pinions,
sang their sweetest songs and
said, “Make him like unto one of
üb't God seld. YNo.. Let us
make man In our image.”
Where did He get the plural?
I beieve when He created man,
He gave him a body like unto the
glorious body of our Savior. He
gave him a mind to dominate
brute creation. He breathed into
man the breath of life, and man
became a living soul.
If a man had been making this
Bible he would have had God
chasing around with an elephant
or a hippopotamus.
Only in man did God breathe
the btreath of life. Man became a
living soul, he was created in the
image of God Almighty, in this
old universe,
i Now, Dr. J. B. Murphy, of Chi
cago, one of my neighbors, after
describing his successes as an
anatomist and the grafting of the
bones on lower animals on hu
man belngs, hile they were found
successful, it was found later on
that the chemicals of the human
body dissolved the bones of the
lower animals and we found the
bones of the lower animals could
not be grafted while those of the
human being can . You take a
bone from ny human being and
it will graft perfectly on the
human, the bodily functions will
do this, but bonse of animals will
not do that and the bone grafted
though unlike it forms a bone
that will grow and become like
the bone whose place it took.
Human must grow like human.
llf man evolved from a monkey
he would have enough of the
monkey element for a bone to
grow on him. So I don’t believe
in vour theory of evolution.
A man sald, “Look here, we
read of will, judgment, reason,
memory, imagination, faculties of
the soul. You say my dog has
no soul?”
NG
“My dog has a mind.”
“Has a body.” “Yesn.”
“Well, sir, if he has all these
they are facultles of the soul,
he has them in a limited degree,
and T have them in a higher de
gree, what is the difference?”
A horse has memory. You can
go out into the country and bnv
a horse and bring him to town.
Drive him down town and home,
down town and home, down town
and home, and then down town
and let him loose and he will go
home. That is more than some
folks could do. Oh! ves, he has
a memory. The cat has a mem
ory, ves, the cat came back. The
hog has will-power. Any man
that can grab a hog and not lose
his religion will stand without
hitehing.
Here is an elephant and he lives
to be 500 years old. He has &
memory, he has intelligence, sure.
In a Zoological Gorden an ele
phant had become afflicted with
cateracts. They sent for a fa
mous zoologist and he said: “We
will have to put him to sleep,” and
th 'y chained him and t;q)ut him
down and operated on him and
the doctor said: “We will have to
repeat putting the medicine in
once a week.)” And every time
that elephant saw that doctor
coming he would lie down and
atretch his head up. Why? He
had a memory.
A fellow said: “If judgment and
will power are the faculties of the
mind and T have them in their
higheat development, why is it
that T have a soul and the dog
has not?”
Here, listen t ome! Will-pow
er, judgment, memory, imagina
tion, are the faculties of the
mind. Seeing, hearing, smelling,
tasting, touching are the prime
facnlties of the body. But my
goul, your soul has three prime
faculties that are neither mind
or body faculties. Faith, moral
and ccnscience faculties.
Then says tha infidel, “My dog
has faith.” 7Yes, he has faith in
somebody that he has seen but
has no faith in somebody he nas
never seen and you can not lodge
one thought in the brain of that
dog about somebody or some
place that he has never seen.
An elephant has the highest
intelligence. but you can’t teach
him about somebody he has never
gseen but you Ilte him see them
and he will never forget. 'That
becoues a faculty of the mind
but not of the soul.
A man says: “If T ecould only
believe. T would be a Christian.”
A fellow down South was sit
ting on a log with his cap over his
eves, and mittens on, and an
asvercoat. and a fellow says to
him, “Why don’t you get busy?”
“Why,” he says “I am kaiting to
get up a sweat.” But let him lay
hold of an axe and begin to ex
ercise and the sweat will come,
The muscular system of your
body develops by exercise, and
the muscular system of your soul
develops by prayer, and doing
the things that God tells you to
do to develop your spiritual na
ture; th esame as you must do
the things God tells us for the
physical nature, If you git and
wait you will wither and die, It
is the process of nature.
I can strap this hand to my side
and by the time these meectings
close 1 will not be able to lift my
hand to comb my hair. Why?
Because I have lost the use of it
through disuse. There was a
time I could use it and wouldn't
use it. Now when I can use it
I can’t use it because I wouldn’t
use {lt when I could use it,
Take my ecye, for instance. 1
can shut that eye and bandage
it and keep it shut for three
weeks; that eye would grow
weaker through disuse and the
other would Brow stronger
through use and when I remove
that bandage I can’t see your face
when I leave you. That is the
principle of religion,
The man in the cave used to
cover his eyes, having no use for
eyes in the dark subterranean
caves, and be became blind. If
you don't use what God is giving
you to use, God will take it away
from you. All through life you
will see it.
Now you eat what I tell you to
eat and let alone what I tell you
to let alone; but if you want to
know if what I say is true, you
will have to will to do what I
tell you to do.
Now then, all foods must con
tain three things, or none of
three things; carbonates, ni
trates and phosphates. Carbon
ates and niirates for heat and fat
and phosphates for brain and
nerve, If we ate nothing but
foods that contained all carbon
ate products we would all die.
Butter, and cocoa, and chocolate
are foods that contain all of these
three qualities to build you up.
There is more nourishment in
milk than an one diet in the
world, known to the human race,
If our stomach was large enough
we could all live on milk. Now,
if you want to know if what T
say is true, will to do what I tell
you to do.
We believe in the light of evi
dence. I can go down to the
courthouse and convict anyone of
vou on a charge or I can set you
free. For 1900 years the light of
evidenas has flashed about Jesus
Christ until He stands out the
grandest individual.
So, man is the only being on
earth to whom we can teach
something about God. Man can
tell. I can teach you something
about a place you have never
seen or about a being you have
never seen, God and Heaven.
Man is the only being that has
a soul and therefore he is the
only one to whom you c¢an teach
anything about something he has
never seen,
Moral faculties—dld you ever
see a dog that had morals? No.
Cow? No. ‘Cat? No. HOrse?
No. Why? They have no soul.
Cat, dog, cow, horse, hog, they
do not know right from wrong.
They have no moral conception.
‘Why? They have no soul.
You know right from wrong,
therefore you are capable of be
ing taught for you have got an
immortal soul and it is that thing
that knows right from wrong and
that God Almighty wants to save.
If you ever had been born in
Chicago over in little Hell, you
would have heard nothing but
vile words and you would not
have as high moral {deals as you
have now. You can educate
yourself that that 18 right when it
is wrong. 2
So therefore, the conscience of
man, memory, imagination, will
power, they are all faculties of
the mind. Seeing, hearing, smell
ing and tasting and touching are
faculties of the body, but the soul
has three faculties which neither
the mind cr body control. First,
mind; second, faith; and third,
conscience.
A fellow says to me, “I will fol
low my conscience.” You are like
the farmer that follows the hind
wheel when he comse itno town.
It 18 the first thing that comes
into town and the last thing that
goes out of town,
A fellow said to me, “Didn't
your God make conscience as a
guide?”
“Maybe He did.”
‘When he created Adam and
Tve he gave them a conscience,
But Adam and Eve ate the for
bidden fruit and sin came to the
world through disobedience,
Thelr conscience and faith and
;noral faculties went down in the
all.
Anl therefore God Almighty
stepped In and inspired men and
women with the Holy Ghost to
write His Word and there is the
only infalllmle rule of faith and
prayer for any belng on earth.
God's Word.
Your eonselence 1s a good gulde,
if it has been regenerated, but if
it has not it will take you to hell.
There are men and women fol
lowing their conscience and they
are 80 close to hell that they can
look into the pit now. Let me
illustrate,
1 jump on a horse outside of the
Tabernacle and T ask someons,
“How far is it to such a place?”
“Sixteen miles.”
I drive the spur into the horse
and I ride and ride and ride and
an hour goes and the steed is cov
ered with foam and I stop and
say. “How far to ————-7"
“Thirty-two miles."”
“Why. they told me it was six
teen miles.”
“Yes, but you have ridden six
teen miles in the wrong direc
tion."
I had followed my conscience.
T thought T was going the right
wav but that did not cut any ice.
Follow your consclence and it
will take you nearer to hell and
further awav from Heaven.
Out in India at the time of the
plague, an Indian mother would
take her baby out to the chop
ping block in front of the idol
and pick up a hatchet and chop
off its fingers. If that does not
stop the plague she will carry it
back and chop off the hands. If
that does not stop the plague she
wil earrv her bleeding and moan
ing child back and chop off the
arms and if that doeg not stop
it she will carry the chold to the
gacred Ganges and toss it into the
mnauth of the croendiles and she
will stand as it crushes her baby
into a pulp and she will look upon
the blood-flecked foam, then she
will turn around and humming a
welrd Oriental air, she will go
back to her bungalow, her con
science bearing record that she
did a good religious act.
She was taught that that was
right; she followed her conscience
when she did it. You were taught
that was wrong and you followed
your conscience when you did not
do it. So conscience is not a
guide at all. The Word of God is
the guide for anybody in this
whole universe.
Here is my body. Fourteen ele
ments, seventeen different com
binations. Yes. My eyes close and
they say I am dead. They put
me in a coffin, lower me into a
grave, fill up the grave, wherein
the process of slow decay takes
place, and in fifteen io twenty
years I will go back again into
the dust of the earth. Or they
can shove me into a crematory,
where I will be reduced to ashes.
The lighter gases go up Into
the air. They are redistilled and
God sends them back in the rain
and dew. There they are in
God's great big jars on the
shelves of His laboratory, waiting
for the day to come when hy the
law of chemical affinity T will
build a body for men to live in.
and wnen you sit out there and
look at me and I look at you, we
are simply looking at the houses
You and I live in.
When God tells you to do some
thing you are moved. When God
Fays you have lived here long
enough you move over there, then
you are put into the grave. They
won’t put you in the grave., They
will put the old shell that you
used to live in. That is the thing
that God wants to save, and at
last, when you stand on that nar
row neck of land and the waves
of eternity are washing the stains
from about you and beneath vou
feet and you stand alono witlh
your memory and conscience and
it will say, “Remember, yon
heard.” And you will say, “God,
I have forgotten it.”
Lord Bacon says, “The human
and intelligent never forget.”
At some time in your life
everything you have ever known
will pass in front of your mind
like a panorama, and™ at lost,
when you stand and God turns
the secret spring, your memory
will do its work. You will again
Bee my face and hear my voice.
You will again have it all brougnit
back to you; the opportunities
you had and rejected and would
not yield yourself to Jesus,
Over in Assyria they dug up an
inscription and they read the his
tory of Babylon and Assyria
Every day you live and every aer
you perform and every deed is
being written down in the sof*
clay of your memory, and when
Ged touches the secret spring
yYour memory will do its work.
You will recall all the sermons
you heard. God pity you. I ean’t
do anything for you. Wny
should 1?
I read the other day of a man
who had vast estates and he
saved, and after nearly 60 years
of work and toil he was going to
sunny Italy, there to build an old
vine-clad castle, and there spend
the last years of his life in com
fort; and he sold 211 his estates
and bought a pearl of fabulous
price. To guard against anything
happening to it he had a rose
wood jeweled case made, inside
of which he placed his pear);
and he locked that case with «
gold lock and a gold key.
Still dissatisfled with the pro
vigion for its safety, he had =
stronger box made, inside of
which he placed rne former, and
he locked that with a silver lock
and a silver key.
Still dissatisfied with that, he
had another made, and he placed
the case inside of this box and
locked that with an iron lock 'and
iron key. And to pass away the
time of the wearisome journey he
walked on the deck of the ship.
and, seeing a boy selling apples
from a basket, he berrowed one-—
two-—three, up to nine, and these
he tossed into the air, and be
catse of his skill, the passengers
applauded him. He, flattered by
their words, returned the apples
to the boy. Bowing low, he sald.
Thank you"
This to the lacies: “If you will
walt a few minutes I truly will
show you my skill. This i 8 no
test.”
He hurried into the cabin, and
put the iron key in the iron
lock—the silver key in the silver
lock—the golden key in the gold
en lock—and, reaching into the
rosewood casket, he took the
pearl from its velvety nest. He
pressed it to his lips. He said:
“Captain, this pearl représents
the toil, the sweat and hardships
and the savings of a lifetime, and
I am going to exchange it for a
castle and a life of ease and for
the turquoise skies of Italy.”
The captain said, “Don’t lose
"
“Ha, ha, ha,” replied he. “You
don’t need to have any fear.”
Returning to the deck, he
passed it to the ladies. They
were charmed by its beauty.
They handed it back to him, and
he stepped to the gunwale of the
ghip. Leaning far over, he tossed
it into the air. Watching it, he
caught it as it descended, saying,
“There it is.'
T.eaning farther over still, he
tossed it again and caught it
again.
A lady screamed, and, selzing
an apple from the little boy, sald,
“Here, take this; and if there is
any further evidence of your skill
needed, use the apple! Give me
the pearl!”
He laughed her to scorn, and
said, “My eyes are as keen as an
eagle’'s, my nerves are as true as
the compass’ magnetic needle.”
Leaning far over, he threw it
hizgh into the air, watching it as
it descended—when suddenly the
ship gave a lurch! Down into
the fathomless depths went his
pearl! The ship sped on. He
emote himself upon his breast.
rying:
. :'Fos:)l, fool that I am to risk
my all, with nothing for pay but
the plaudits of a passing crowd.”
And in that resvect the lives of
some people are like him. You
give up your lives for the ap
plause of the people, for the priv
ilege of sitting with your feet un
der their table, for the privilege
of having them call you a “dead
game sport!”
Some day you will toss it for
the last time. You will toss it
too far. Some day that old frah
bark will give a lurch, and down
into the fathomless depths of hell
yvou will go, and you will be )2
forever, because you wouldn't
God’'s will.
Jesus, we pray now that Thee
wilt bless thls great thromg. Y
am too tired to say mere
Amen.
17