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waee VU IH'S LAKGEST KODAK SUFrrLY HOUSE
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Fountain Pens, Stationery. Watehes, Flashlights,
REMOUNT DEPOT, CAMP GORDON, GA.
December 9, 1919, 9:00 a. m.
- 650—Artillery Horses, Heavy and Light—6so
40—Mules, Heavy and Light—4o
These animals are sold for the reason that
they are surplus and not needed by the govern
ment.
In addition there will be sold thé following
I. C. Animals:
THREE CAVALRY HORSES.
NINE ARTILLERY HORSES.
THIRTEEN MULES.
TERMS: Cash or Certified Checks Only Will
Be Accepted.
A halter and shank with each animal and assistance
will be given purchasers in loading their animals. An
imals must be removed froam the depot as fast as ship
{lllng facilities will permit. Railroad representative on
e grounds.
Hot lunches can be obtained on the grounds at reas
onable prices.
For further information apply to Remount Depot,
Camp Gordon, Ga., near Atlanta. Phone Camp Gor
ion 40.
Auttioneer:
MR. J. HALL MILLER,
. Miller-Union Stock Yards, Atlanta, Ga.
DWIGHT F. TINKHAM, '
Second Lieutenant, Q. M. C.,
Quartermaster.
NAME BAYER" ON
Identifies the true, world-famous Aspirin, prescribed by physicians
for over eighteen years
= Z '8
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BAY ER I
The “Bayer Cross” is the signature of the true
“Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.”" The name “Bayer”
is only on genuine Aspirin prescribed by physi
cians for over eighteen years,
In every handy “Bayer package” are proper
directions for Colds, Headache, Toothache, Ear
l
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- e e ) ;
Continued From Page 1. |
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and Ben 8. Thompson, chairman of
the Baptist Laymen's Movement in
Georgia,
The next step in the Georgia ma
chinery was the division of Georgla
into twelve districts and for each dis
trict the gelection of a man to handle
the work., These district organizers
have rendered a great service and
have had greatly to do with the suc
cess of the campalgn. They are:
Carl A. de Vane, Alex W. Bealer,
R. L. Bonsteel, H. N. Massey, W. T.
Smalley, A. J. Smith, W. F. West,
M. R. Gaddis, 8. F. Dowis, W. R. Deal,
Fred Eden Jr., W. Y. Hunt, John B.
Payne. Rev. 8. 8 Mathis has done
some work in the last few weeks as
an associate district organizer.
NINETY ASBSOCIATIONS,
An immediate task was given ‘hese
district men to get an organizer and
a publigity director for each of the
ninety associations of Georgia. This
was done in a remarkable quick time
and at Mercer University on August
14-156 the first big Georgia campaign
meeting wag held. There were lead«
ing men and women in the denomina
tion from every section of Georgia at
that meeting. It was the first high
note for the Georgla campaign. From
that meeting the enthusiasm was
never lowered and increasingly the
Baptists of Georgla came to the point
of sacrificing in order to do this big
thing for the sake of Christ and for
the good of humanity. Dr. L. R,
Scarborough and other leaders spoke
and led the conferences, This was
declared by many to be the greates:
meeting of Georgia Baptists in their
history.
From the Mercer meeting the as
sociation officials went to their homes
set to carry the organization into
every church in Georgia at the ear
liest possible day. September 156 was
fixed as a date to have every church
organized. This wag hardly realized
for the entire State, but there was
great progress by that date. The work
moved rapidly forward in organiza
tion and Georgia led the States in
carrying the organization out to the
last church,
There were certain outstanding
phases of the movement in reaching
the people, A number of speaking
\tnum were provided and through
these the people were given oppor
tunity to come in touch with the vital
currants of the campaign. The Scar.
borough-Truett tour was one of the
first big moves in this direction. Doc
tor Scarborough, Doctor Truett, J, H.
Anderson of Tennesseeé and Mrs. W.
J. Neel came to Georgia the last day
of September and toured the State,
touching every large city. Ben 8.
Thompson and Dr. Arch C. Cree ac
compianted these speakers. It is es
timated that not less than 25,000 Bap
tists attended these meetings.
Following the Scarborough-Truett
tour, the campaign arranged for what
was known as “Pulpit Exchange Day.”
On October 12 all the full time pas
tors in Georgia exchanged pulpits and
-
An Editor Recommends
& "
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Hh '.
Mr. L, P. Hill,editor Enterprise, Ensley,
Ala,, writes: "I want to tell you that I
have been living in this distriet for the
E:“ 27 years and there is no man that is
tter known than I am. Itell you this
because | want you to know that I am no
stranger to the people. About twenty
days ago I was down on my back with the
worst case of rheumatism and I began to
use your medicine and in sbout a week |
was on my feet again, People all over
Birmingham and Ensley were astonished
to see me got well wcfiuick and wanted to
know what medicine I took. 1 told them
‘5-DROPS’ and every man who has the
rheumatism knows of your medicine and
say they will use it. I am telling every
one of the virtue of your remedy and 1
amsure it will increasethe sale of same,"”
Such evidence as this should be suffici
ent to prove to any person the value of
“6-Drops” in rheumatie troubles,
“6-Drops’’ is sold by the leading drug
glsts in every part of the United States
and Canada.
———————
N Samrle bottle will
be mailed free, if ¥ou
will write to The
Swanson Company, Newark, O,
ache, Neurafgia, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Sciatica,
Neuritis and for Pain generally,
Tin boxes of twelve tablets cost only a few
cents. Druggists also sell larier “Bayer rack~
ages.” Aspirm is the trade mark of Bayer Manu
~ facture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid.
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN— A Newspaper for Peop[e Who Think — SUNDAY, DECEMBEE 7,191 v.
L —————————————————
spoke on the campaign, This one day
alone proved a tremendops stimulus
for the Baptists of Georgia.
The associations were meeting in
their annual sessions about that time
and the campalfn provided twol
‘strong speakers for each asgocliation
in the State. The assoclation offi
cials were'enerous in their co-op
eration with the plan and ample time
was given in every Instance for the‘
iprmenwtion of the campaign. The
leaders in every part of Georgia say
‘that the association meetings were
the greatest this year in all sxe days
of Georgla.
\ 400 MEETINGS.
~ The “All Georgia Tour” was an
' other striking phase of the work in
(teorgia. More than 400 meéetings
were arranged at which some out
standing minister or layman pre
sented the campaign. These meet
ings came between October 28 and
November 7. .
The Georgia Baptist convention at
Macon afforded the last outstanding
rallying point for the campaign. This
meeting was pronounced by Georgia
Ba tin@lto be the greatest assembly
of ?ta din the history of this State
There were over 3,000 Baptists at this
mighty meeéting. Dr. J. B. Gambrell
and Dr. L. R. Scarborough delivered
masterful addresess at the night ses
gions. ' This experience has suggested
to the Baptists of Georgia that the
night sessions of the State conver
tion may be made-into great inspira
tional héurs.
Theé Baptists four-minute speakers
proved to be the most efective single
medium of reaching the people. Geor.
gia led the other States In the num
ber of four-minute speakers and in
the number of talks delivered. There
are over 1,900 of these laymen in
(leorgia who did actual speaking and
their work will not stop with the end
ing of the campaign, but will con
tinue ag a permanent part of ‘the |
denominationss machinery, |
The women were all the whole hav
ing a part in the meetings and plans
outlined above and their development
under the work had been more strik
ing than that of the men. They had
their own organization of four-min
ute speakers for their local and dis
trict meetings,
A feature of the Georgia campaign
preparation was the local church or
ganization with the placing of the
gervice roll on the walls and the
drilling of the team workers for the
actual drive. Ely R. Callaway of
LaGrange suggested a form of or
ganization for the local church and
used the “service roll” as a channel
of getting every church lined up for
systematic canvassing.
The service roll is ‘a sheet with
blanks for names of team workers,
the name of the church, the quota of
the church, the association and the
State and space for names of the
church officials. It was attrac‘ively
printed and madé the organization of
the local churches very much easier
than could otherwise have been. :
VICTORY SCHOOLS.: i
Ceorgila hzd her service rolls on
the walls and was training her team
workers by the first of November.
Through the month of November Vic
“ory Schools were in session in Bap
tist Churches all over the State and
these schools proved dynamic strong
holds for the campaign, training the
forces in the actual work of the
drive,
The feature of Cleorgia’s period of
preparation was the spiri¢ of unsel
fishness with which the pastors and
the people gave way all other plans
for the sake of the campaign. Noth
ing was counted too important to be
sidetracked in order ‘hat the cam
paign might have a full chance. This
leads to the following observation:‘
A number of people, good people
and wise, sald that the Buptluts|
would never raise this money because
| they would not organize. They argued
' that the very freedom and ‘.heoryl
| of Baptist organization would defeat
' the amount of co-operation and er—‘
ficien™ necessary for such a task.
This prediction was defeated day by |
day as the Baptist people in *he cities
and in the country threw aside all
former traditions and buckled down
to a definite pull together for on defi
nite purpose,
. When the campaign was launched
it was agreed tha‘ the South should
undertake $75,000,000, Immediately
the question arose as to the distribu- |
tion of the amount among the seven.
teen States. 1% was not difficult to
determine what Georgia's part should
be. A study of Geergia's relation to
the Baptists of the South quickly re
vealed the fact ‘hat we are one-tenth
the strength of the others on every
count and so Georgia was given
$7,600,000—a tenth of the total has
been one of the slogans of the Geor
gla campalign.
. Last Sunday was “‘he great day.
it was the greatest day for Baptists
since the Mayflower anchored off the
American coast. It was to really
prove the metal of “he three million
white Baptists in *he Southern Statea.
In Georgia as well as in the South
the test was met by an army of
heroes. Victory was sure because
the people had come to the day in a
spirit of prayer.
All through the campaign the com
plete conviction that prayer was the
secret of the way to victory had come
to be the common experjence and be
liet of every on. Many days had been
set apart for speial prayer and every
day and every night many Baptist
men and women went to God in real
petition for the success of the move
ment,
At sunrise Sunday morning, No
cember 30, it is estimated that there
were more than 1,000 prayer meetings
held in Baptist churches in Georgia.
In many as the country churches the
service was impractical and could not
be provided, but in many other coun
try churches they met just as surely
a 8 the people did in the towns and
got the greater strength for the day.
At the 11 o'clock service the preach
ers left off the sermon and talked
to the people a little and then prayed
much and sang praises to God, In
the afternoon at 2 o'clock the teams
went out. With one plan of cards
and with one clear program of giv
ing, the Baptists from one end of
Georgia 1o the other put their money
on the altar and for one time set for
ward the Kingdom in a manner that
will always be & challenge to the
generations to follow,
The State headquarters office be
gan receiving reports at 3 o'clock
Sunday afternoon. From that hour
the telephones were constantly busy
and ‘elegraph messengers kept a hot
trall to the Tabernacle Building
bringing the messages of victory from
village and city and country side. All
that night the reports kept pouring
in. There was no time to stop and
{count up. In the minds of the State
offic;ale the quota was well nigh
raised, but not until Monday mocrn
ing was there timme to get a definite
total made. When the first count
was wmade, Georgia was beyond her
quota by $200,000. A note of victory
was sent to every State in the South
and from the headquarters in Nash
ville a word of triumph was wired to
every State director. Georgla has
maintained her lead on the oOther
States throligh the week and on Fri
day morning she is still leading them
by a margin of a half million dollars.
The leaders in Georgia were so im
e e @
Continued From Page 1.
meet General Pershing at the Ter-|
minal Station: |
Marcus W. Beck, Hugh M. Dorsey,
John M. Slaton, George Hiller, A.
G. Candler, R. I. Maddox, Courtland
8. Wynn, W. R. Joyner, J. C. Wood
ward, C. L. Ashley, A. J. Orme, J.
2. Nutting, Robert B. Haverty, Jo
seph A. McCord, W. R, C. Smith,
Henry C. Heinz, Lee Ashcraft, John
8. Cohen, J. B. Neyin, Clark Howell,
Forrest Adair, Kugene Black S. C,
Dobbs, Sam W. Wilkes, Bolling H.
Jones, T, C. Erwin, Paul Fleming,
Daa W. Green, L. M. Hollowell, H.
¥F. West, W. M. Poole, J. A. Manget,
O. M. Blackburn, J. J. Eagan,
.~ John E. Murphy, J. W. English,
Henry B. Kennedy, Edward H. Inman,
FPeter F. Clark, Willis M. Timmons,
' Mell R. Wilkerson, Henry 8. Johnson,
W. T, Newman, J. L. Pendleton, Nash
'R. Broyles, C. W. Smith, T. H. Jef
;frios, E. D, Thomas, H. M. Atkinson,
(J. L. McCord, L. D. Bharpe, M. H.
pressed with ths spirit of victory
which was sweeping the State that
they felt moved to sugges* that Geor
gia Baptists go to $10,000,000 as their
lgoal. The work of reaching this goal
has been as earnestly and enthusi
astically followed as ever that of rais
ing the original quota. There is lit
tle doubt now that Georgia will stop
ghort of this amount. Thursday
night the amount was well above
$9,000,000 and the instructions that
Sunday be made the final round-up
day will probably result in carrying
the State over $10,000,000.
It s the plan‘t the campaign in
this State to resin *the district or
ganizers through the month of De
cember in order that no church be
left out of the movement and with
the hope that the highest possible
number of individual members may
be brought to the point of subscrib
ing something. It is felt that the
greater victory rests just here, and
since the money hag been more ‘han
raised, the workers are now all the
more anxious that the campaign shall
prove & challénge for great enlist
ment and for the deepening of the
spiritual life of the denomination.
There have been many thrilling re
ports of individual sacrifice during
the week of canvass. Letters to the
State headquarters have read like
passages out of the Acts of the Apog
tles and many messages have breath
ed a spirit that is akin to that of
the men whose works are write in the
Book of AlPTime. To recount these
instances is forbidden both by space
and by the very sacredness of the
men and women who have ascended
to these high mounts of vision.
And so Georgia Baptist have come,
the last day of Victory Week, to a
notable mile post in the journey of
the sons of man. It is not to be
thou&ht of as a goal. It is rather a
gateway at the top of a high hill that
openg into an expanding field of
whiténing grain. The pull up the hill
in these last few weeks and months
has burned out much of the dross of
our people. We have learned again
the basic lessons of love for other
men and of cemradeship in service.
: . o
Trusses Can Not Be Fitted By Mail !!
““A prophet is not without honor save in his own country.”
Foreign fakers and Eastern, Northern and Western truss sellers
would have you think they have all the rupture and truss knowledge,
whereas Perryman-Burson Co.’s fitters know as much as they doabout
rupture, and we take you into our private room, fit you with a modern
appliance, specially adapted to your individual needs, with the exact
pressure required, which cannot be done by mail |
Why spend your time and three prices on heavy elastic belts and
clumsy oversized pads—(the belts absorb and exhale disagreeable odors,
are unsanitary, the pads fill the groin,are ten times larger than the ring
through which the intestine passes)—when we are capable of rendering
you the most efficient service and bring into play the most exact knowl
edge in fitting you and keeping you fitted. We fit and readjust without
charge and with pleasure.
Come to us with your rupture troubles with the positive assurance
of receiving polite, conscientious and expert service.
We also render expert service in fitting abdominal supporters,
elastic stockings, shoulder braces, etc.
Wholesale and retail dealers in Rubber Goods, Sick Room Supplies,
Electric Apparagus, Crutches, Invalid Chair, Hospital and Physicians’
Supplies.
Select your doctor’s and nurse’s X-mas present from our large stock.
PERRYMAN-BURSON CO.
vy 2964 107 N. Pryor St. Opposite Candler Bldg.
Abbott, Walter Rich, Morris Lichen
stein, W. C. Royer, J. P, Allen, G.
H. Kelley, C. H. Block, F. J. Paxon,
J K. Orr, W. A, Sutton, H. A, Mainer,
fiugena Orberdorfer, K. G. Mathew
son, Fred Houger, A. 8. Adams, W.
B. Alfriend, E. F. Lowenstein.
W. W. Orr, Clarence Haverty, St
Flmo Massengale, J. W. Grant, J.
‘Epps Brown, W. A. Candler, H. J.
Mikell, M. Ashby Jones, Caleb A.
‘Rldley, C. Q. Jones, Richard Flinn, C.
B. Wilmer, Thornwell Jacobs, David
Marx, H. Y. McCord, H. M. Willet,
J. A. Miller, N. D. Roberts, J. L. Zu
ber, C. B. Gramling, Willlam Van
Houten, E. N. McGee, C. W. McClure,
'J. M. B. Hoxey, G. C. Jones, Harry
| Schlesinger, Eugene ‘Watt, Bishop
P. D. Leete, A. G. Powel, J. B.
Bowen, G. M. Hope, Price Gilbert, P.
Calhoun, A, P. Morgan. |
Virgin Sheperd, A, A, Jameson, B.
N. J. Potter, C. P. Marse, Van Hoit
Nash, J. C. Woodward, H. F. Dykes,
Lucian York, Ivan Allen, E. H, Cone,
Frank Hawkins, R. L. Foreman, Har
ry Goodhart, Charles Bowen, R. M.
Stripling, Dean Halford, R. E. Hav
erty, B. M. Bailey, J. B. Connally,
Lawrence Stallings, G. L. Bell Jr,
Homer Watkins, Basil Stockbridge,
G. F. Wiids, J. 8. McClelland, W. R.
Sample, F. M. Inman, Bob Martin,
‘Meyer Regenstein, Buford Goodwyn
and W. J. Blalock.
l The Elks' reception committee to
meest General Pershing at Terminal
The Moon: “Cat, how's everything been
today.” 5
The Cat: “Fine. Had a god time.”
The Moon: “But you look awfully lonesome
now.”
The Cat: *“Yes, no one to play with. Since
their mother has been reading The Geor
~ gian's GOOD NIGHT STORIES to the
kiddies, they all hurry right off to bed so
she’ll read—and I'm all by myself.”
Start Reading the “‘Good Night Stories’ to Your
Kiddies—They Appear Every Day in The Georgian
Station, appointed by Exalted Ruler
John 8. McClelland, follows: :
Walter P. Andrews, D. W. Denny,
R. A. Gordon, Arnold Broyles, J, L.
Keyv, R. R. Arnold, T. H. Jeffries, J.
S. Floyd, R. F. Maddox, A. O. Bla
lock, George R. Donovan, Van Astor
Batchelor, Harvey Hill, D. W. Webb,
P. C. McDuffie, Henry Heins, Maj.
J. O. Seamons, J. M. Karwisch, R. M.
Savini, ¥. J. Paxon, Preston 8. Ark
wright, Walter L. Dunn, Lucian York,
James Leitner, Maj. Fred C. Benteen,
John 8. McClelland and A. L. Dunn.
The hotel committee, appointed by
Mrs. Samuel M. Inman, folows:
; H. M. Atkinson, chairman; B. Ya
Winchell, Dy, W. S. Elkin and W. W,
| Banks,