Newspaper Page Text
John*$ Mother
Praises Doctor
There Isn’t a
er living who
agree that no
elck child should
the subject for
experiment
medicines of
tain merit.
your child is
headachy,
bad breath,
no appetite or energy, you know that
nine times out of ten it’s a sign his
little stomach and bowels need purg¬
ing. And when you know that for
over fifty years leading physicians
have endorsed one preparation for
this condition, there doesn’t seem to
be any reason for “trying” things.
Rich, fruity California Fig Syrup
clears the little stomach and bowels
gently, harmlessly and in a hurry. It
regulates the bowels, gives tone and
strength to them and to the stomach;
and helps to give your child new
strength, energy and vitality. Thou¬
sands of Western mothers praise it.
Mrs. Joseph W. Hill, 4306 Bedford
Ave., Omaha, Nebraska, says: “I’ll
never forget the doctor who got me
to give my baby boy, John, California
Fig Syrup. Nothing else seemed to
help his weak bowels. That was
when he was just a baby. He suf¬
fered a good deal before I gave him
Fig Syrup, but it stopped his trouble
quick. I have used it with him for
colds and little upset spells ever
since. I consider him a Fig Syrup
boy.”
Insist on the genuine article. See
that the carton bears the word “Cali¬
fornia.” Over four million bottles
used a year.
Too Many
“Mother, when tiie depression Is
over may 1 have a pony?”
“n eli see, Bobby. Wliat did dad¬
dy say?”
“He said I could have a dozen
ponies, but I wouldn’t know which
one to ride if I had that many.”
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POISON
in Your bowels!
Poisons absorbed into the system
from souring waste in the bowels,
cause that dull, headachy, sluggish,
bilious condition; coat the tongue;
foul the breath; sap energy, strength
and nerve-force. A little of Dr.
Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin will clear
up trouble like that, gently, harm¬
lessly, in a hurry. The difference it
will make in your feelings over night
will prove its merit to you.
' Dr. Caldwell studied constipation
for over forty-seven years. This long
experience enabled him to make his
prescription just what men, women,
old people and children need to make
their bowels help themselves. Its
natural, mild, thorough action and
its pleasant taste commend it to
everyone. That’s why “Dr. Caldwell’s
Syrup Pepsin,” as it is called, is the
most popular laxative drugstores selli
Dr. W. B. Caldwell s
SYRUP PEPSIN
A Doctor's Family Laxative
1,200 Air Voyager* Daily
More than 1,200 paying passen¬
gers travel daily on air lines in the
United States. Their average flight
I "I or chest I I ALES
4. ONEY
_
H| 41 remedy A home of H H OP
■SlIOREHOUHD Bp
safe, de- ANDIAR
pendabie. Eg
30c at all druggists
For aching teeth oae Pike’s Toothache Propg
Very Much More
Josenuff— What’s sillier than two
women kissing each other?
Leewilks—Two men!
for
JOSEPH’S
eftid you always get.
TABLETS OF
GENUINE PURE
Wrapped, in ASPIRIN
Moisture 1 | World’s
Proof $ Largest
Cellophane Seller
St.Josephs
..GENUINE
PURE ASPIRIN
feverish, rest¬
GEORGIA
NEWS
Happenings Over
the State
The Bibb Brick company, at Macon,
which has been closed down about a
year, resumed full-time operations re¬
cently, putting 100 men back to work.
James R. Atwater, of Thomaston,
was re-elected president of the Geor¬
gia Peach Growers’ Exchange at an
annual meeting of that body at Ma¬
con recently.
Christmas clubs conducted by the
banks of Savannah will pay out to de¬
positors the first of December and
during the first week of that month
approximately $350,000.
Virlyn Y. Jones, Montezuma, a
senior in the Georgia State College
of Agriculture, recently was elected
president of the Agricultural Club, an
organization of students in that in¬
stitution.
Mr. Winfield B. Johnson, 61, of
Manchester, widely known Georgian
and owner and editor of the Manches¬
ter Mercury, died recently at an At¬
lanta hospital. He had been ill for
three weeks.
The population of the state of Geor¬
gia has increased 38,214 persons since
the 1930 Federal census was taken, it
was announced recently by the Bureau
of Vital Statistics of the State Board
of health, at Atlanta.
A $3,000 deficit has been overcome
by the Society of Organized Service,
a Macon charity body, since early last
summer, it was revealed in a financial
report issued by the board of directors
following the monthly meeting of that
body.
The work of paving the link of the
Florida Short Route between Sasser,
in Terrell county, and through Lee to
the Dougherty county line is rapidly
progressing and recently more than
four of the 9,746 miles had been com¬
pleted.
Trustees of the Georgia school for
the deaf at Cave Springs, have re¬
cently called for bids on the erec¬
tion of a new infirmary on the school
grounds, the bids to be opened No¬
vember 24 by a committee from the
board of trustees.
At a recent conference of the coun¬
ty commissioners of Terrell and Cal¬
houn counties, it was agreed to com¬
ply with the requirements of the state
highway department for taking over
the ‘Dawson-Macon road as a portion
of the state highway system.
Dr. J. C. C. Newton, 83, noted fig¬
ure in Southern Methodism and mis¬
sionary to Japan for 35 years, says
the Wesleyan Christian Advocate, in
a recent issue, passed away at Atlanta
after several years of ill health. Dr.
Newton was widely known in the world
of Methodism.
Mr. Donald A. Loyless, president of
the Loyless Publishing Company and
prominent in Atlanta social and busi¬
ness circles, died Wednesday morn¬
ing in his room at the Atlanta Athletic
Club. The firm of which Mr. Loyless
was the head was the publisher of
several nationally known trade jour¬
nals.
A $50,000 memorial to the late Col.
L. P. Grant, who gave the city of At¬
lanta the tract of land that is now
Grant Park, the largest public rec¬
reation center in that community, is
proposed in the will of the late Mr.
Charles I. Branan, well known At¬
lanta business man, who died re¬
cently.
A temporary organization of the
Georgia Council of Co-operative Mar¬
keting Association was set up Thurs¬
day with J. E. Conwell, Atlanta,
chairman; J. J. Parish, Adel, vice
president, and C. G. Garner, market¬
ing specialist of the State College of
Agriculture, secretary - treasurer.
Twenty thousand farmers are repre¬
sented in this organization.
Dr. O. L. Rogers and Mrs. Roy Eng¬
lish, of the Washington county health
unit at Tennille, who have just com¬
pleted their rounds of the schools for
anti-smallpox immunizations, will this
month center their activities on the
examination of school children for de¬
fects, and also the giving of tubercu¬
lar tests as a preliminary to the chest
clinic to be held in the county in De¬
cember.
The General Missionary Baptist
convention of Georgia met in its sixty
first annual session in the First Af¬
rican Baptist church at Bainbridge re¬
cently. Rev. James M. Nabrit, of At¬
lanta, presided. Several sermons,
touching largely on problems with
which the world today is confronted,
and their solution, were preached, and
business for the good of the denomi¬
nation was transacted.
Mayor William D. Jennings has an¬
nounced plans for an investigation of
conditions at the Augusta city stock¬
ade, recently following charges
against three “trusties” of drunk and
disorderly conduct.
Dr. R. J. Heyde, Ware county agent,
recently urged that farm owners of
Ware county list their “rent farms”
with him or with the chamber of com¬
merce at Waycross. As a result of
putting his advice to the test, a num¬
ber of inquiries from North Georgia
and adjoining states with regard to
renting "farms have been received.
‘ :
CLEVELAND COURIER
ONLY ONE OF THEM
HAS RIGHT TO SMILE
It’s hard to tell whether the turkey
showing fright, or whether that fun¬
look is an attempted emulation of
broad smile his capturer is wear¬
But if it is a smile it won’t last
day is at hand.
Day’s True Spirit
Not Ourselves Alone, Is
Thanksgiving Motto.
Grow fat along with me
The best is yet to be,
last of life for which the first was
made; i
The ax is in his hand.
Assassination’s planned.
pat, get fat, nor be afraid!
Poor vaunt of life, indeed,
Were Turk but made to feed
On corn alone; to seek, to find and
feast,
When feasting ends, to howl
Is this the end of fowl?
Irks care the crop-full bird? No doubt
we’ll soon be fleeced.
Rejoice we are allowed
To grow and yet be proud
To grace the festal board, be stuffed to
burst,
Be turned upon the spit
Till we have browned a bit,
Then eaten up with one fell swoop,
that’s worst. *
So take and eat thy Turk,
Save carcass that may lurk
Amid the gravy’s lure; pick clean the
bones.
Next day, pray eat us cold,
Then hash us in a mold.
Soup comes at last, thanks be, to hush
our moans!
—With Many Apologies to Browning.
Like the turkey and the epicureans,
vvh are prone to eat, drink and be
merry, for tomorrow we may die. We
must have a particular day appointed
in which to give thanks, lest we for¬
get. We take so much for granted,
accept all the good things of life with¬
out stopping to count our many bless¬
ings, or to name them one by one, as
we were admonished in Sunday school
so long ago.
We enjoy years and years of health,
forgetting what a wonderful gift it Is
until illness lays us low. We accept
our friends who strew our path with
roses and cheer our way with kind¬
ness until one is gone, and we realize
how much more we might have been
to him. We think we love our chil¬
dren, but when they have all left the
nest, how gladly would we have them
back that we might show them how
much more we could prove our love.
The editor of the Outlook, some
years ago, expressed the true spirit of
Thanksgiving so effectively that I
quote him verbatim: “If the end of
society is to produce the largest num¬
ber of free human spirits, of generous
human hearts, of strong human hands,
of pure human homes, of noble hu¬
man lives; if the liberation of serfs,
the setting free of those in bondage,
the care and reverence for the man
as a man, the open door to the boy
and girl whose feet are eager to climb,
the breathing of the breath of life
through a stagnant world, means prog¬
ress toward the ultimate goal, then let
us reverently thank God that we were
born in an age and In a country in
which it is our supreme good fortune
not to be ministered unto but to min¬
ister.’’
“If we are to return thanks," he
goes on to say, “not for ourselves alone
but for all men; not for work done,
but for noble chances to work; not for
a finished civilization, but for the
greater civilization that may be de¬
veloped ; not for a few choice spirits,
but for the opportunity for all men to
lift themselves into the light; not for
things which make for our own com¬
fort, but for the things which make
for the healing of the world; not for
the life that has been lived, but for
the boundless life that is to be, theu
let us thank God that he has given us,
not things but chance of growth; not
comfort but opportunity of service;
not ease of spirit but the toils of the
unselfish life.”—Indianapolis News.
T'HE condemned bird showed no
signs of a breakdown, hut rose
iarly and ate a hearty breakfast
IMPROVED
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
CUNDAY Dchool Lesson I
(By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D. D., Mem¬
ber of Faculty. Moody Bible Institute
of Chicago.)
1931. Western Newspaper Union.)
Lesson for November 29
PAUL’S LETTER TO PHILEMON
GOLDEN TEXT—There is neither
Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond
nor free, there is neither male nor fe¬
male: for ye are all one in Christ
LESSON TEXT—Philemon.
Servant. PRIMAR| TOPIC— How to Treat a
JUNIOR TOPIC—A Servant Becomes
a Brother.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP¬
IC—A Slave Made a Brother.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP¬
IC—Christ Transforming Social Rela¬
tionships.
This letter is a private one. Phile¬
mon was a member of the church at
Colosse. Onesimus, his slave, wronged
him, and fled to Rome. At Rome he
came under Paul’s influence and was
converted. Paul sent Onesimus back
to Philemon with this letter—one of
the most tactful, tender, and beautiful
letters ever written, and the first anti¬
slavery petition ever penned.
I. His Salutation (vv. 1-3).
In salutation he refers to himself
as a prisoner and links Philemon to
himself as a fellow laborer in the
gospel, having as his special aim to
touch Philemon’s heart. He makes
mention of Apphia, Philemon’s wife,
and Arehippus, the son, who had al¬
ready enlisted as a fellow soldier.
II. Philemon’s Reputation (vv. 4-7).
Paul paid a fine tribute to Phile¬
mon’s character, reminding him that
he never prayed without bearing him
up before God.
1. His faith and love toward the
Lord and all saints (v. 5). It was
Paul’s hope and desire that Philemon’s
faith might bear fruit in Jesus Christ.
With such an approach, the way was
open to Philemon’s heart
2. His ministry to the saints (v. 7).
Philemon was most generous in his
ministry to the poor saints.
III. Paul’s Request (vv. 8-16).
He requests Philemon to receive
hack Onesimus, the runaway slave,
as a brother in Christ. Note the In¬
comparable delicacy and courtesy with
which Paul approaches Philemon.
1. He beseeches Instead of com¬
mands (vv. 8-10). Though conscious
of his right to enjoin, he pleads as
the prisoner of Jesus Christ for love’s
sake.
2. He makes his plea on the grounds
of grace (w. 11-14). He admits that
Onesimus has been unprofitable, has
forfeited all claim upon Philemon, and
that on grounds of justice his plea
might well be rejected and yet be¬
cause Onesimus was begotten In his
bonds (v. 10), was in a real sense a
part of his own suffering nature
(v. 12), he ventures to suggest that
he should be accepted. Though Onesi¬
mus hitherto has been unprofitable to
his master, he is now profitable to
both Paul and Philemon.
3. Paul desired that Onesimus be
received back, not as a slave, but as
a brother in Christ (vv. 15, 16). Here
is the real fugitive slave law. Paul
never attacked slavery, but emphasized
principles which destroyed it. Chris¬
tianity changes the whole face of hu¬
man society. The wise thing to do is
to get men and women regenerated
and thus transform society instead of
seeking change by revolution. Social
wrongs can permanently be removed
by the creation of a brotherhood
which can be realized only by faith in
Jesus Christ. Faith In Jesus Christ
brings the individual into connection
with the source of life. In Paul’s re¬
quest for Onesimus you can hear the
pleadings of Christ for sinners. All
men have gone astray and have be¬
come unprofitable. Though possessing
no merit, he has made us profitable.
We have been begotten In his bonds.
Through his passion, agony of heart,
we shall be changed. We can see and
hear him now pleading our cause be¬
fore God’s throne for love’s sake.
IV. The Basis upon Which Onesi¬
mus Is to Be Received (vv. 17-21).
The debt of guilty Onesimus is to be
put to the account of Paul, and the
merit of Paul is to be put to the ac¬
count of Onesimus. This is a fine il¬
lustration of the atonement of Christ.
Whatever wrongs we have committed,
debts incurred, all our shortcomings
are debited to him. Jesus Christ, on
behalf of all mankind, has said to God.
“Put that to my account. I have
writen with my pierced hand, I will
repay.” Onesimus was taken back,
not as a runaway slave, but as a be¬
loved brother in Christ.
V. Paul Requests Lodging (vv. 22-
25).
He expected a speedy release from
imprisonment and purposed to sojourn
with Philemon. In all probability this
was realized. What a welcome he
must have received! Jesus Christ is
saying to everyone of his redeemed
ones, “Prepare me a lodging.”
Yesterday, Today
As for the past, let it sleep If it
can. "Sleep on now and take your
rest,” is the gentle voice of Jesus
as to the past. “Rise, let us be going,
Vo he that betrayeth me Is at hand,"
is the next sentence. The past is past.
Let that sleep if it can. But there
is a future task right now to be done.
Don’t sleep over that.
Necessary
Before you can come into commun¬
ion with him you must come into
covenant with him.—Matthew Henry
Your children’s
FUTURE
depends build. Give on them the sound, Scott’s Emulsion sturdy foundation of Cod Liver you Oil. help theta
Doctors
say its Vitamin A potency aids in building resistance to child
diseases, and promotes correct growth. Its Vitamin D, along
with calcium and phosphorous salts, helps develop strong
bones and teeth. Good for adults too . . . and it's really
easy to take. Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. Sales Rep¬
resentatives, Harold F. Ritchie & Co., Inc., New York.
Listen to Scotr / 'Emulsion "Romances of the Sea" every Sunday
and Tuesday at 9.30 pm. (A. S. T.) over the Columbia basic networks
Scott’s Emulsion
' OI N O R II /: C, IA N C 0 D LI V L R OIL
MANKIND AWED BY
WORKS OF NATURE
Foundation of Basic Forms
of Religion.
Everything that man does or
thinks lias for its motive either the
satisfaction of his necessities, or the
avoidance of evils which menace
him. As in’s intelligence has devel¬
oped, at the expense of his physi¬
cal prowess, his necessities have in¬
creased, and so have his suscepti¬
bilities to pain and discomfort, both
spiritual and physical. In this evo¬
lution, until recently, at least, sci¬
ence and religion have kept pace,
the one ministering to man’s bodily
needs, while the other has afforded
solace and comfort in mental anxie¬
ties and spiritual uncertainties of
the future.
The race had not emerged long
from a brutish state when religious
theories and formulas began to be
conceived, taking definite form ul¬
timately in a cosmic theory which
installed a deity, first in the sem¬
blance of a man, and then in the
conception of an omnipresent spirit,
in authority and jurisdiction
throughout the universe.
These religions soon created a
sacerdotal caste which took upon it¬
self the function of intermediary
between the people and the divini¬
ties, but as this genus began • to
usurp and arrogate to itself powers
and privileges in secular, as well as
in spiritual affairs, demonstrating
the priesthood in many respects to
be no different and no better than
ordinary men, disbelief in their pre¬
rogatives and even in the existence
of the supreme being or beings they
professed to represent, has been
from time to time a general mani¬
festation.
But there has always been a re¬
turn to some religious system. Some¬
times man lias solaced himself with
a religion of mythology or supersti¬
tion, and sought to gain the favors
and help of natural forces or of in¬
animate things which lie has con¬
trived himself. With tiie develop¬
ment of reason and contemplative
vision, however, better ideals have
prevailed. The individual has per¬
ceived the vanity of all human ef¬
forts, desires and pretensions, and
at the same time has come to real¬
ize tiie vastness, harmony and beau¬
ty of his natural surroundings. In
trying to reconcile these discrepant
standards of achievement—these per¬
fections of nature witli tiie futili¬
ties of human science, lie has been
forced to confess that there are pow¬
ers and attributes in the physical
world immeasurably superior to any
creations possible in the functions
and faculties of man.
Thus, if science is incapable of pro¬
ducing anything except that which
is temporary, deficient and inade¬
quate, while the works of nature are
eternal, perfect and sufficient, there
must he in nature some factor which
does not exist in man’s knowledge
and calculations. All the theories
and opinions of science fail when
Upset Not Serious if
Bowels Get This Help
When you’re out-of-sorts, head¬
achy, dizzy, bilious, with coated
tongue, bad breath, no appetite or
energy—don’t worry. It’s probably
constipation.
Take a candy Cascaret tonight
and see how quickly your trouble
clears up. No more headache; no
gas on stomach or bowels. Appetite
improves; digestion is encouraged.
Take another tomorrow night and
the next night. Get every bit of the
souring waste out of your system.
Then see how bowel action is regu¬
lar and complete.
Cascarets are made from cas
cara, which doctors agree actually
strengthens bowel muscles. Ten
cents at all drug stores.
Tired, Nervous and Depressed ?
Health Suffers When Kidneys
Do Not Act Right
HEED promptly a nagging
regularities *■• backache, with bladder ir¬
and a tired, nervous,
depressed feeling. They may warn
of certain disordered kidney or
bladder conditions.
Users everywhere rely on Doan’s
Pills. The sale of millions of boxes
annually larity. attests to Doan’s popu¬
Youf dealer has Doan’s.
Doan's Pills the A Diuretic Kidneys for
they try to establish an accidental
or mechanical formation of the
world.
Such accounting never progresses
beyonr the obscure point where it
begins, for it disregards entirely the
presence of a designing, impelling,
and performing force in nature,
omnipresent and omnipotent, ever
beyond man’s ability to define, fath¬
om, or grasp. Tiie underlying, spir¬
itual and invisible quality, moving in
all and through all has become the
•fundamental axiom in all religions
which have raised and benefited man¬
kind. Measured by no instruments,
weighed in no balances, it has fur¬
nished the basic truths of Islam, Con¬
fucianism, Brahmism and Christian¬
ity.—El Nuevo Diario, Caracas.
Consoling Mother
“Now, Robert, you’ve made me
lose my temper.”
“Never mind, mother—it isn’t much
of a loss.”
Vanity indeed is a venial error; for
it usually carries its own punishment
with it.—Junius.
When
BAIN
Comes
1T7HAT many people call indiges
V V tion very often means excess
acid in _ the stomach. The stomach
nerves have been over-stimulated,.
and food sours. The corrective is an
instantly. alkali, which neutralizes the acids
And the best alkali known
to medical science is Phillips’ Milk
of Magnesia.
One spoonful of this harmless,
tasteless alkali in water neutralizes
instantly acid, many times. that much
and the symptoms disappear
at once. You will never use crude
methods when once you learn the
bottle efficiency of this. Go, get a small
to try.
Be sure to get the genuine Phillips*
Milk of Magnesia prescribed by
physicians fQr 50 years in correcting
excess acids. 25c and 50c a bottle—
any drug store.
i tmg
HANFORD’S
Balsam of Myrrh
Motion Picture Operators Wanted— Learn
Western Elec, and R. C. A. Free practical
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