Cheraw chronicle. (Cheraw, S.C.) 1896-2005, March 30, 1922, Image 5
BAPTISTS RAISE
(30,000,0011 CAS'
ILL GENERAL WORK STRENGT
ENED BY 75 MILLION CAMPAIGN,
IT IS SHOWN.
WHERE THE MONEY GOE
9
lumi That Have Been Approprlat
To Varloua ObjecU Set Forth
By Headquai -era Office At
-r.?n
nifiivius, ? .
ifyjjfi
Or. E. GUI. Baptist Rspreaentatfve
Europe, on Left, and P. V. Pavloff ol
All Russian Baptist Union.
From the beginning or the Bapt
T5 Million Campaign to January, 19
a total of $30,356,319.41 had been pi
In to objects fostered by the Cs
naivn i* < onTionnred by the gene
headquarters office at Nashville,
this amount $28,799,971.16 came
through the payment of regular Cs
paign subscriptions and the remain!
1 .556,348.26 in special contributio
Regular receipts from the vari<
tatea follow: Ala., $1,301,134.76; Ai
$714,683.09; D. of C.. $123,280.01; F
$469,753.53; Ga., $3,000,174.10; 1
$298,576.13; Ky.. $3,187,656.15; I
$807,991.13.; Md? $393,517.46; Mi:
$1,243,846.50; Mo.. $1,190,754.70; N.
$145,229.97; N. C.. $2,211,741.50; Ok
$840,562.65; S. C, $2,633,840.53; Ter
$1,797,483.10; Tex., $5.162.658.S5; \
$3,279,085. More than 250,000 baptis
were reported by Southern Bapl
churches last year.
How Money Was Distributed
Seven general objects of the dent
lnation were embraced in the Cs
palgn program, and from the regu
Campaign contributions those obje
have received the following amour
according to a compilation by the he
Quarters office: Foreign missions, !
434,012.53; home missions. $3,6:
00.67; state missions in the sevent<
states and local work in the Disti
of Columbia^ $4,954,8J3.26; Christ
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education, $7,192,442.79; Baptist ho*
j pitals, $2,004,099.16; orphanages, $2,?
103,787.33; and Relief and Annuity
II ! Board, which ministers to aged dell
I pendent ministers and their families,
|| $799,126.99.
What Money Has Done
These funds represent an advance,
H- ranging from 200 to 300 per cent, in
the contributions of Southern Baptists
to their general missionary, educational
and benevolent work, prior to
q the inauguration of the Campaign, and
have enabled the hoards and other
agencies to greatly extend their served
ices in all departments. In addition
to sending out more than 180 new missionaries
since the Campaign began,
nrovidine many church buildings,
mission residences, schools, theological
seminaries, publishing houses,
hospitals and the like on the older
fields the Foreign Mission Board has
been enabled to open work in the new
fields of .Spain, Jugc-Slavia, Hungary, j
Roumania and Southern Russia in
I Europe and Palestine. Syria and Siberia
in Asia, and Dr. Everett Gill, for <
many years a missionary in Italy, but
more recently a pastor in Kansas City,
has been named special European rep
rebentative to supervise the greatly
pxpanded work on that continent. Dr. i
Gill is giving much of his time to die- J
tributing Baptist relief funds in Russia
and otherwise looking after the Interests
of the denomination there.
Home Work Enlarged
Among the outstanding accomplish- ;
ments of the Home Mission Board are
the aiding of more than 1,000 churches
with loans and gifts for church buildings,
completion of the big tuberculosis
sanatorium at El Paso, enlargement
of the work in Cuba and the
)n Canal Zone, strengthening of the S7
' mountain mission schools and the dot
velopment of all eleven departments
' "" of the work or tne rsoara. ia au s?renteeu
states of the Southern Baptiat
ft Convention the state mission work has
im" been greatly extended, the number of
Baptists hospitals In the South has
^ been Increased from eleven to twentythree,
all of the older eighteen Baptist
orphanages have been aided In mate*
rial ways and two new ones have been !
ns* established, while the number of aged
dependent ministers and their families
has been doubled and the amount of
aid given them Increased 100 per cent.
Collections Are Pushed
J&" While the collections so far repre?8"
sent a big gain over the contributions
* " of Southern Baptists to their work bea"'
fore the Campaign, the sum collected
I"'* is not all that Is due and In all the
a" South an effort Is being made to col
lect an much more as possible by the
18 close of the Convention year, May 1,
that none of the work may suffer.
>m" _
im- ??
lar MO newspaper can succeed withct?
out advertising, therefore we
ltB* solicit the patronage of our readers
a_" for those who by their advertising
help to make this paper possible.
ien ? -. ict
? *
ian $1 .HO a year for The Chronicle
ri?
Fire,
c<
Hund
bargains w
If you
an opporti
We ai
Come earl
S. A
I
Own A Ford
i
It's A Smile A Minute !
"An Investment in Happiness"
Why not make your dreaim come true ,
Buy a Ford spic, span and new
Give baby more fresh air
Keep gray from out your hair
Reach your work on time each day
Have ai'-rc hours in which !o play *
Jtieip ine wiie lorgut ner cure
Save the price on railroad fare
i
I
Dissappointment in cars are almost as frequent
as disappointments in love. Better buy a
Ford and play safe. Let the Ford be your man
Friday. It will work every day, including Sunday.
-0!0Save
Time?Drive A Ford
With prices on all Ford Models lower than J
ever brfore in the history of the Ford Motor Co,, one
had little reason to expect the reduction which
1 T n . \t i?__j L 1 f
occurred m January, out ivir. l oru nas aiways i
believed in giving the public the benefit of even the
slightest saving in manufacturing costs.
Genuine Ford Parts Spells Genuine Satisfaction.
Found at the
' i
Cheraw Motor Sales Co.
Cheraw, S. C.
i"
?
ontinues In Ft
reds of persons have taken ad1
'e are offering.
don't come to our store durii
mity of buying merchandise at
re going to make a clean swe(
y and get a pick of the barg'ai
p
i nriMY
CHERAW, SOUTH CAR'
I
Playhouse Theatre, Bennsetcville' Tues., April 4th J
The Biggest Musical Comedy in the History of Bennettsville
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Mar-v.r.v ':.4 d5^$x^^236SSBW3i*SE?^lfiSZ8M^Bj
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1 W 2
,
2 Carloads of Scenery and Special Electrical Effects 2
Prices: $2.50, $2,00, $1.50, $1.00, Plus Tax. Seat Sale Friday, March 31^1
At Crosland & Tyson's Office. Phone 274
? , ^
TT i tn n
YOU READ the Ojjimg i miv
Other Fellow's Ad js Building Time ;
You are reading this one. T , , . ,
That should convince you Let US Supply yOU With
'* ' that advertising in these ,
f Son- thatpritfitw,u Lumber, Shingles, Lathes and Other
/v rfbTt""tsM Building Materials ;
probably'thereason'SJie is SMALL PROFITS FOR CASH OUR MOTTO
i getting more business than __
!st Cheraw Lumber & Supply Co.
the other fellow a chance ^? F
Cheraw, S. C.
??T?eadrYr A9 King & Maynard
in 1 hese Columns? d
McBee, S. C.
in 1 ii
id dmoice i
*
M
ill Force |
I
1*1
vantage of the wonderful W
V
ig this sale, you will miss $
almost give away prices.
of our entire stock. ?
! '
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w X
OLINA
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