The Fairfield Recorder (Fairfield, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, September 9, 1921 Page: 3 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Freestone County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Fairfield Library.
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Pak
Fifteen Texans Go Out As Baptist
Missionaries To All Parts of Globe
NimNnMHillMMHIHIIHNHMINIIINtMliMIUNIHIIHIIIIHNIlHIHHIIIIIIHIMNIIIIIlUINHMHIWIINIINIIIIINHIINIHaMHIII
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..................
Prtnca Albert la acid
iff tnppy red bags,
tidy red tins, hand
nome pound and hall
pound tin humidors
and in the % pound
cryotal glass humi-
dor with sponge
moistener top.
(1) Miss Mina Garrett, Waco, teacher, ot science. i'atoa Coilege. Shanghai, China; (2) MUs Hemic*
Neel, Decatur, ?ducational work. Rio, Brazil;' (3i S. S. Hav.keyo State, (4) Mias Effie Evelene Baker, Bangs, edu-
cational work among girls in Japan; (5) Mrs. Vocie Kin;, Chapman. Houston, educational work in Japan; (6) Mrs.
Carolina Smith Taylor, Lampasas, Bahia, Brazil; (”-.»< er, »tid Mrs. W. A. Hamiett, Austin, representatives ol
Foreign Mission Board in Near East, with headquarter.-' at Jorusaljin; (9) Francis Willard Taylor Bangs Bahia
Brasil; (10) Miss Marjorie Taylor, Belton, educational work. Sao Paulo, Brazil; (11) Miss Minnie Alexander. Loraeta'
secretarial work, Kaifeng College, Kalfeng, China; (12) Miss Lucille Reagan. Big Springs, evangelistic work in Afri
can Mission; (13) Miss Viola Humphreys, Dublin, evangollrtlc work.-Kal.'ing, China; (14) Mrs. Xeta Denham Scott
Seminary Hill, evangelistic work among Hakkas, South China; (15) M!s3 Nora E. Hawkins. Childress, educational
work, Campos, Brazil; (16) Marcus J. Scott, Seminary Hlil, evangelistic work among Hakkas, South China.
From the larger proceeds of the
BaptUt 75 Million Campaign the^For-
missionaries, but * to do much other I the
work, including building or making lets.
work of the native evangel
It Is planned to establish a
/
I
eign Mission Board of the Southern substantial additions to 15 boys’ church, theological seminary and
Baptist Convention has been enabled schools, 17 girls’ schools, 37 mission lege, hospital and orphanage at Jeru
to send out moregthan 160 new mis-! residences, five hospltab and dispen- salem as sobn as practicable and thui
slonarles since that movement was series, four light and power plants for seek to reach other potofs In Pale*
launched. It Is announced, and of that I mission compounds, 26 church build-1 tine ^nd Syria from this center,
number sixty young men and women/lngs, four colleges, seven theological: Minister to 900,000,000 People,
representing fourteen states, have Just seminaries. In addition, assistance has With the enlarged foreign mission
sailed for China, Japan, Africa, Brazil, { been given seven church building loan program of Southern Baptists that de-
Argentina and Chile. In addition toj association:!, six new stations have nomination Is now operating In 16
these. Dr. and Mrs. Everett GUI of' been opened and equipped, land has countries on every side of the globe,
Kansas City will sail September 14 to been bought for the enlargement of f and has In Its employ practically 500
become representatives of the Board several mission compounds, a home for' forelgn missionaries and twice that
in EtA-ope, while Dr. and Mrs. W. A. j orphans In Italy h&s been established.1 number of native workers trained in
Hamiett of Austin, Texas, have Just | and a block of ground bae bren pur-j the mission schools. Through Its
present missionary operations the
Board is seeking to minister to 475,
000,000 yellow people. 4,000,000 brown
people, 200,000,000 black people and
225,000,000 white people, making a
total of 900,000,000 people, or mors
than half the population of the globe.
Numbered among Its workers already
on the field are 21 foreign physicians
and 8 foreign mission nurses who last
year gave 154,070 treatments. There
are now 611 mission ch-urches on the
foreign fields and of this number 184
are self-supporting. The average con-
tributions of these mission churches
last year to denominational causes w»m
|5 per member, the Christians on the
foreign fields responding more liber-
ally as a result of the 75 MllUor Cam-
paign.
The new missionaries sailing at this
time were contributed by the following
states; Alabama two, Arkansas one,
Georgia five, Kentucky six, Louisiana
two, Mississippi four, Missouri four.
North Carolina three. South Carolina
five, Tennessee five, Texas fifteen,
Virginia alx, low* one and Pennsyl-
vania one.
f^IRST thijig you do next
I —go get some majfin’s
papers and some Prince
Albert tobacco and puff away
on a home made cigarette
that will hit on all your
smoke cylinders!
No use sitting-by and say-
ing maybe you’ll cash this
hunch tomorrow. Do it while
the going’s good, for man-o-
man, you can’t figure out
what you’re passing by! Such
flavor, such coolness, such
more-ish-ness—well, the only
way to get the words em-
phatic enough is to go to it
and know yourself!
And, besides Prince
Albert’s delightful flavor,
there’s its freedom from bite
and parch which is cut out by;
our exclusive patented proc-
ess! Certainly—you smoke
P. A. from sun up till you
slip between the sheets with-
out a comeback.
Prince Albert is the tobac-
co that revolutionized pipe
smoking. If you never could
smoke a pipe — forget it!
You can—AND YOU WILE
—if you use Prince Albert
for packing! It’s a smoke
revelation in a jimmy pipe
or a cigarette!
Copyright IS11
by R. J. Reynold*
Tobacco Co.
Wibatoa-Solam,
NX
Prince Albert
the national joy smoke
•ailed for Jerusalem, where they will, chased In the heart of Rome for head-
malntaln headquarters In acting as the I quarters for the work in Italy, a theo-
Near East representatives of the logical seminary, publishing house.
Board. church and mission residence being
The new missionaries to China and provided on this property.
Japan sailed from Seattle. Saturday, Enlarge European Field.
August 27. on the Hawkeye State of j As a result of the. Campaign, South-
the Admiral Line, while those for Bra-: ern Baptist* have been enabled to
til, Argentina, Chile and Africa sailed. greatly enlarge their work In Europe,
from New York on the Aeolus August They have carried on mission work in
-17. They will be engaged chiefly In Italy since 1870, but now they have
evangelistic, educational, medical and opened up new work in Jugo-Slavta,
agricultural work and. will be sta- Hungary and Roumanla, and have made
tlonod at various points In these fields. | a beginning, through the distribution
While a large number of new workers of Bibles, In the Ukraine and Bouthern
have been sent out by the Board since Russia and Siberia. To act as the
the beginning of the Campaign, at European representatives of the Board
least 100 othsr capable young men and j in this enlarged program, Dr. and Mrs.
women could be employed to ad vant- Everett Gil,! of Kansas City were re-
age if they were available, Secretary cently named, they will probably
J. F. Love advises. ; make their headquarters In Swltxer-
, Mission Money Gets Results. land.
Of the more than $25,000,000 that The first work Southern Baptists
has been collected in cash on the 75 have ever done looking to the evangel-
Mllllon Campaign to date, about >5,-1 Izatlon of Mohammedan lands has Just
000,000 has gone to foreign missions.
This has made it possible not only to
strengthen the old work on all fields
and employ a large number of new
been undertaken in Palestine and
Syria, and Dr. and Mrs. W. A; Hamiett
of Austin, Texas, have gone to Jeru-
salem, where they_will superintend
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CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castoria
Always
Bears the
Signature
°f B|H|
.CV'
HI ln
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
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SAMPLE OF HIGH-BROW
EDITORIAL PARAGRAPHS
* CURRENT COMMENT *
* J. H. LOWRY
* In Honey Grove Signal *
* * <^ * * *****
The automobile has put
more people to studying than
any invention of modern times.
Every fellow in the world puts
in much of his time wondering
how some other fellow can af-
ford to own and operate one.
And you won’t deny that you
do it, will you?
Advertising always pays if
the advertiser uses a good me-
dium in which he displays his
ads. The hosiery manufactur-
er who uses a man to dis-
play his wares on, or the corn
cure maker who illustrates his
ads with an undressed man ap-
plying the dope need not ex-
pect any results.
not stand for and tye British
government will not grant
If the government wants a
pointer on the best way to en-
force the Volstead act here it
is. First buy and raise hund-
reds of thousands -of hogs.
Then offer $5 a bushel for ev-
ery bushel of com deljyered at
a railroad station. Feed the
com to the hogs Of course’the
government would lose con-
siderable money, as the meat
wouldn’t sell for as much as
was paid for thte com, but the
loss would be nothing like as
great as the sum paid the en-
forcement officers, and be-
sides the people would get rich
raising corn. It’s a simple
proposition. If the govern-
ment will pay more for com
than the moonshiner can, the
moonshiner will be forced out
of business.
We clip the following from
the editorial page of the
South’s leading daily news pa-
per. This paper actually pays
a man a salary to write this
stuff. Quite a step down from
the able, intelligent, education-
al editorial pages of a few
years back:
“Also our open-door policy
doesn’t apply to mufflers.
“If they can manage to elim-
inate the bockers and abbrevi-
ate the knickers they are sure
to make them popular.
“Russia has had her round of
excitement, but now she craves
a square meal.
. “It is strange that gang of
critics doesn’t consider 17c cot-
ton the Federal Reserve Bank’s
concession to their attitude.
“The wets yet hope to fire
the home brew that shall hic-
chp around the world.
“Perhaps the sentiment for
getting rid of the mailed fist
wBs given fresh impetus from
the threat that it might be
necessary to raise postage to
three cents.
“Most of the expert war
correspondents seem to be
bivouacking on the Bahama
front.”
Children will become more
popular and valuable after the
present year. In making Up in-
come tax reports under the
present law a dependent child
is good for only $200, but next
year the deduction will be
$400 With such a heavy in-
crease in value in sight don’t
trade your children off for
trifles.
The longer we live the
greater is our opposition to
bath tubs. When people
“went in a washing,” in the
good old times the tax rate
was low, every Southern state
had Democratic officers, ap-
pendicitis was never heard of.
Back to the creek, Democracy
and health.
It appears that the efforts
for peace in Ireland have fail-
ed. The British government
offered Ireland, greater pow-
er than the American states
have, but the terms were not
accepted and Ireland will
probably fight on until the
Irish are exterminated. There
are two Irelands—North and
South—and they have no like
for each other. South Ireland
wants control of North Ire-
land which North Ireland will
FOUR HOLSTEIN
COWS GIVEN TO
ORPHAN’S HOME
-•— v
Abilene, Texas, Sept. 3.—
An unique gift to Buckner
Orphan’s Home of Dallas has
just been announced here by
Dr. R. C. Pender of Abilene,
field secretary of the instuti-
tion.
The gift consists of four full-
blood Holstein dairy cows.
They are the gift of C--T.
Beckham, a prominent citizen
of Trent, in this county.
THREE-FOOT SNAKE
IN TELEPHONE BOX
No. 13S2.
IN THE MATTER OF
ESTATE OF N. W. DOYI
ESTATE OF N. M. DOYI
APPLICATION FOR LET-
TERS OF ADMINISTRA-
TION.
The State of Texas, County of
Freestone. To the Sheriff or
any Constable of Freestone
County—Greeting.
You are hereby commanded
to cause to be published a
copy of the following notice,
at least once each week, for
ten days exclusive of the day
of the first publication before
the return day hereof, in a
newspaper of general circula-
tion, which has been continu-
ously and regularly published
fqr a period of not less than
one year next preceding the
date hereof, in the County of
Freestone and State of Texas,
to-wit:
The State of Texas, County
of Freestone. To all persona
interested in the estate of N.
M. Doyle, Deceased, Mrs.
Alice Doyle has filed in the
County Court of Freestone
County, on the 18th day of
August, A. D. 1921, an appli-
cation for Letters of Admin-
istration upon the estate of N.
M Doyle, deceased, which will
be heard and acted on at the
next regular term of said
Court, commencing on the
Third Monday in September,
A. D. 1921. the same being the
j 19th day of September, A. D.
: 1921, at the Court House
thereof, in the city of Fair-
field, at which time and
place all persons interested is
in said estate may appear and
contest such application
should they desire to do so.
Herein fail not, but have
you before said Court, on the
first day of the next term
thereof, this writ with your re-
turn thereon, showing how
you have executed the same.
Attest: Tom Lindley, Clerk
of the County Court of Free-
stone County. „ .v .
Given under my hand and
seal of said Court, at office is
Corsicana, Texas, Sept. 3.—
A three-foot rattlesnake was
found by Mrs. J. B. Scott of
Frost, this county, in the tele-
phone box when she answered
her phone Tuesday. The
snake’s head was protruding
from the box when Mrs. Scott j Fairfield^ this the 18th day of
first discovered it. A man who! August, A. D. 1921.
was fishing in the lake near by; (SEAL) TOM LINDLEY,
was called in and killed the\™er\ of the County Court
I Freestone County, Texas.
126 by L. O. Miller, Deputy.
............ —.............—■
DR H. H. WOOLDRIDGE
reptile.
R. L. Williford. A. B. Gap*
Fairfield T*a**a
WILLIFORD & GEPPERT
Lawyers
Fairfield sad Taagm, Tram*.
DENTIST
All w*rit
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Kirgan, Lee. The Fairfield Recorder (Fairfield, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, September 9, 1921, newspaper, September 9, 1921; Fairfield, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1109184/m1/3/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fairfield Library.