Newspaper Page Text
FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 1920,
:
<[ 4
e’ . Trails to
é/ B\ ‘*‘v\?
xogat_~ Iwo Moons
Do you like a story of the sort that’s
called ‘“red-blooded”? Of the big,
open country, of men who fight for
right, of life and death, of women who
love sometimes not wisely but too well?
A romance full of thrills and adven
tures? Youdo? Thensubscribe now for
and start with the first installment of
Trails to Two Moons. It’s a story
that is like THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN
itself—big, outdoors, vital, throbbing,
virile.
Through Me—s 2 Big Issues—For Only $l.OO
- ROBERT L. GLORE
P. O. BOX 52 SMYRNA, GA.
The Country Gentleman The Ladies’ Home Jo;nnl The Satarday Evening Post
52 issues—sl.oo 12 issues—sl.7s 52 issues—s2.oo
{ . ~
Black Undertaking Co.
—— 108 Winters Street——mm———————
Funeral Directors and
~ Embalmers
CALLS ANSWERED Established 1875 and doing
DAY OR NIGHT business in same place since
DAY PHONZ 400 NIGHT PHONE 246
ARRIVING AND DEPARTING TIME AT MARIETTA, GA.
a—daily ARRIVE LEAVE
Cincinnati and Louisville xa 7:29 .am xa 10741 pm
Cincinnati and Louisville a 4:43 pm a: 1145 am
Murphy, Knoxville and North 8 810 am 8 4008 bhm
Blue Ridge and Copperhill a 4:10 pm e 9320 am
Atlanta a 9:256 am a 8 4:10 pm
Atlanta a 4:05 pm 3 8 8:10 am
Atlanta a 11:45 am a 4:43 pm
Macon and Jacksonville .xa 1041 pm X 8 729 Pm
Trains marked (x) will stop only to take on or let off passengers for or
from Xnoxville and beyond and for or from points on the through car line,
Macon and beyond. Effective Sunday, November 2, 1919.
LOST BANK CHECK
When a Bank Check that is drawn in
favor of a definite individual or firm is
lost, its payment at the Bank may be
stopped. When money is lost, it is im
possible to trace and recover it. The
check is the best and safest method of
making payments, as your money is
safe and secure at the Bank until the
check is actually paid to the rightful
person and then you have the paid
check as a receipt for the money. An
account subject to check at this Bank
will protect your money.
MARIETTA TRUST AND
BANKING CO.
MARIETTA, GEORGIA
Capital and Surplus over $117,000.00
The Marietta Journal $l.OO Per Year
Within the past two
months there has ap
peared inTHECOUNTRY
GENTLEMAN a splendid
complete novel that you
will pay $1.75 to get in
book form. Folks who
subscribed for a year
two months ago have
read that story; they
will read Trails to Two
Moons, and four or five
other novels to follow for
only $l.OO. If thatisu’ta
bargain I don’t knowone.
And, better still, these
stories are extras in THE
COUNTRY GENTLE
MAN. All the rest of its
many pages each week
are filled to overflowing
with farming, farming,
farming. Read it! Get
to know it! Let it help
you make more money !
Buy it TODAY!
(By REV. P. B. FITZWAER. L. D,
Teacher of English Bible in'the Moody
Bible Institute of Chicago.)
(Copyright, 1920, Western Newspaper Unlon)
—_———————————==
LESSON FOR MARCH 21
JOHN’S PICTURE OF WORSHIPR
IN HEAVEN.,
LESSON TEXT—Rev. 7:9-11. :
GOLDEN TEXT—Blessing, and glory,
and wisdom, ahd thanksgiving, and honor,
and power, and might be unto our God
for ever and ever. Amen.—Rev. 7:12.
PRIMARY TOPIC — The Heavenly
Home.
JUNIOR TOPIC.—A Giimpse of Heaven,
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC
—A Vision of the Glorious Future.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC
—Permanent Message of the Book ot
Revelation,
I. The Worshipers (vv. 9-14).
1. Who they are (vv. 9 11). (1)
Redeemed men (v. 9 Theyare main
ly Gentiles—“of all nations, and
kindreds, and people, and tongues.”
They are those to whom the “gospel
of the kingdom” has been preached
by converted Israelites (Matt. 24:14),
In the first part of chapter seven we
saw God sealing his chosen ones from
Israel. They were sealed with the
seal of God in their foreheads, which
doubtless means the supernatural en
dowment of the Holy Spirit on the
last days (Joel 2:28-32)., While this
was partially fulfilled on the day of
Pentecost, its larger realization is
still future (Acts 2:15-21), This out
pouring is for the equipment of the
Jews for their divinely ordained mis
sion; namely, to preach the gospel of
the kingdom to the whole world.
When God sends forth the 144,000
Jews with the unction of the Holy
Spirit, the Innumerable multitude
from all nations will receive Christ,
the slaln Lamb, for their redemption.
(2) All the angels (v. 11). These
angels indorse this ascription of
praise offered by these redeemed men
by saying “Amen.”
2. Whence came these redeemed?
(vv. 13, 14). They came out of the
great tribulation (v. 14), After the
rapture of the Church (I Thess. 4:13-
18), awful days of suffering and trial
shall come upon the world (11. Thess.
2:7, 8). It is the time §f Borrow
when the anti-Christ shall hold
sway; such days as were not before
nor shall be after, in which if not short
ened no flesh could be saved (Matt.
24:15, 21, 22 cof, Dan. 785 9:26, 27).
3. What they say vv. 10, 12). (1)
Salvation to our God and the Lamb
(v. 10). They ascribe thelr salvation
to God through the sacrifite of the
Lamb, Jesus Christ. (2) “Blessing.”
They acknowledge tMat all blessings
come from him. (3) “Glory.” They
acknowledge him as the glorious one
and the one to whom all glory should
be given. (4) “Wisdom.” He is in
finitely wise and all wisdom comes
from him. (5) “Thanksgiving,” be
cause salvation was provided by him.
(6) “Honor.” Their hearts went out
to him in high esteem. (7) “Power
and might.”” They recognized that all
power inhered in him.
1. The Blessedness of the Worship
ers (vv. 13-17).
1. They are before God's throne
(vv. 9, 15). They “are in heaven and
near the throne of God. Jesus Christ
is now preparing mansions for those
who shall go to heaven (John 14:1-3).
2. Clothed with white robes (vv. 9,
14). Thelr white robes suggest thelr
character. They have been made such
in the blood of the Lamb. The only
way for a sinner to be made ready
for heaven is through the blood of
Christ,
3. They bear palm branches (v. 9).
The significance of the palm is found
in the use that the Jews made of it
at the Feast of Tabernacles, It wag
a time of great joy, because it repre
semted the gathered harvest. The
bearers of the palm branches will ex
perience the blessedness of not only
being in heaven, but of enjoying re
wards for their work on earth,
4. They serve God day and night
(v. 15). Heaven is not a place of
idleness, or altogether of singing
- God’s praises, but a place where real,
vital service Is rendered to God; in
.deed, there are nobler fields of en
deavor awalting us beyond this life,
This life {s but a training school in
- which we are made ready for service
in heaven, b ol it
5. God dwells among them (v. 15).
To get to heaven at all would be truly
blessed, but to be there and have God
to dwell among us will be wonderful.
- 6. Hunger no more nor thirst (v. 16
Here life is one continuous round of
hungering and thirsting. In heaven
~we shall neither hunger nor thirst,
for Jesus Christ, the Lamb, shall feed
us. The straits aud necessities of life
will then be over.
7. Neither shall the sunlight or
heat come upon them (v. 17),
8. God shall wipe away all tears
from thelr eyes (v. 17).
This Day Only,
Enjoy the blessings of the day if
God sends them; and the evils bear
patiently and sweetly; for this day
only is ours; we are dead to yester
day, and not born to tomarrow.—
Jeremy Taylor,
Greatest of All Cunning,
The greatest of all cunning is to
seem blind to the snare; which we
know are laid for us; men are never
so easily decelved as while they are
endeavoring to deceive pthers.—
Rochefoucauld, &
THE MARIETTA JOURNAL
BLOOD TESTS SUGGEST
DUAL ORIGIN OF MAN
That the Asiatic and African peo
ples originated independently of the
Europeans, has, according to the Pop
ular Mechanics Magazine for March,
been suggested by two Swiss serol
ogists, who made extensive blood
tests of the many nationalities which
were brough together in Mesopota
mia during the world war. Examin
ing and classifying the blood ele
ments of the native population, of
Jewish refugees, and of soldiers as
sembled from every corner of the
earth, they were surprised to find
the nationalities dividing, of them
selves, into three distinet classes. . A
first group included the soldiers from
England, France, Italy, Greece, Bul
garia, and Serbia. An intermediate
group contained Arabs, Turks, Rus
sians, and Jews. In the third group
were Negroes, East Indians, and na
tives of Indo-China and Madagascar.
Reason for their suggesting the dual
origin of man is obvious; the inter
mediate group represents, of course,
a fusion of the two archetypes.
Office, Room 10, Anderson Bldg.
6 % Farm and City Long Time Loans 6 %
We buy and sell high-class securities and purchase money notes.
Highest prices paid for Liberty and Victory Bonds. Come in
and see us—we can interest you. o
I'hat quick, sym- B «welt] Because a rare com
pathetic action you ‘u\lsg/flwl bination of strength
get when you call on ‘I“,'MIM' with lightness had to
a Maxwell to pass the , be provided in its
car ahead, to flatten Ne« ws steels.
out a hill, to escape Any metallurgist will
from the crowd in traffic tell youthat theonly answer
has a story. was the very finest of steels.
It’s a story of steels. They newver burden the
Vou can analyse 3 Moxuel ent, 1o e
Maxwell pound for pound .;/zem i ?Wax // JoK &
with any car built and you : ’(z i
will find it quite the equal I'hat’s one of many rea
in fine steels. sons why the friendly drift
: towards Maxwell continues
A Maxwell had to be bo dnerenie dao ho'd
; o increase day by day.
made of fine steels. There
_ _ 400,000 of them on the
- *Because it was built to rgads of the world.
deliver economic trans- Le R
portation. That meant no Soeils the stk voar- 8
superfluous weight. It o 7 bply y
Hiaars [Tobe i ats 60% of those who have set
e i their minds on a Maxwell
But it also meant exces- can succeed in possessing
sive strength. ong this year.
W. G. CLEGG, Dealer
BRUMBY’S GARAGE CHURCH STREET.
| MARIETTA, GEORGIA. . '
=== e
ons H‘x\ifi‘fii‘fl ul;\m-;,ng;gu;nb«z:a:w;,w e (AR fl A
LR e e S f\ fii
il ".?é'-“:;““\‘s%“i‘fl‘!fl”?i"’@‘%}"g‘fim*‘.vu‘:::?f."*i‘-:’l"d‘ti‘d‘%'\‘:J'.%:"‘»'_‘z%ifiuéiflz"i'a.al.’ 2 '*"@"‘f s
s MR Y W\
iao :‘\ul“w“"‘ LY s N )
& A \// AR A A”I ) oY
//.\s»d/\ a\t‘n;‘“.‘i:'."’;‘h‘.‘fr‘. ;l‘n'J\;‘J.Ufi\i‘“kf"‘lmx i i ~\‘\é //’ P> <, ‘_\.3‘l
4 WG o W (B et L" “‘/
'K.\V%"'\;'.v'” / N eRO B X/
WY Jemogsi R, o A & N k).
N S AR )
PICTURE FILM REVEALS -
| MOVEMENT OF THE BLOOD
By fitting a powerful microscope
to a motion-picture camera, a Michi
gan physician has succeeded in throw
ing on-the screen detailed pictures
of the circulation of the blood, as il
lustrated in te March Popular Me
chanics Magazine. The complete
film presents a view of a chicken’s
heart in action, demonstrates the re
action between nerves and heart, de
picts the causes and results of ob
structed flow, and makes clear the
operation of the electrocardiograph
in studying the heart.
t A LOST CHANCE
. If the United States had heeded
‘Thomas Jefferson, we should have
adopted this system of weights and
‘measures based on decimals—so sim
-Iple a system that a child can learn
its main features in 10 minutes. We
know how well it works with money.
It will work equally well with weights
and measures.
Hon. W. G. McAdoo says: “Our
failure to adopt metrics was.a monu
mental mistake.”
“The Rats Around My Place Were
Wise,” Says John Tuthill.
“Tried everythnig to kill them.
Mixed poison with meal, meat, cheese “__
etc. Wouldn't touch it. Tried RAT
SNAP with food. Saves- fussing,
bother. Break a cake of RAT-SNAP
lay it where rats scamper. You will
see no more. Three sizes, 25¢, 50e,
$l.OO. Sold and guaranteed by W.
A. Sams Drug Co. and Norton Hard
ware Co.
i[ FOR SALE
| Farm Land and City Lots. Prices
and Terms to suit purchaser.
B. F. REED CO.
Phone 61 - Smyrna, Ga.
| For Infants and Children
InUse For Over 30 Years
e T
the
Signature of ! e .
PAGE NINE