Zavala County Sentinel (Crystal City, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, August 25, 1950 Page: 2 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Borderlands Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Lm la defined, fond and ten-
alao paaaionate devotion, atrong
liking; lava for music or a sweet-
heart, ate.
Low Is a sentiment or a
thought that should ha snoot*
4*1 Hat* la the first antonym,
and this reminds us there is a
■rid* chasm between the two
words. If it could be found out
what people love, it would be
oiay to judge their lives. -Love
covereth all shts.” If somehow
w* could turn this world around
and get people to low instead of
hate, our troubles would be
solved.
We think of the problems of
the home being solved by love
from each member of the family
to the other. Seldom is the third
person called to settle the differ-
ences of the family. Love is there
and somehow the differences dis-
solve and pass away.
In this great world disturbance
that we are now witnessing, if
it out, sw resort to
-----. we try a peaceful
settlement by the neighbors talk
ing the matter over themselves.
If this cannot be done e^fagert
to the courts. We have always
had great confidence In the
courts. They eliminate the extra-
neous things and decisions are
made on the basis of law and evi-
dence. Their decisions are nearly
always right. Law is based on
love and right thinking. We very
well know that we do not think
alike, but the law and the third
person will bring about a good
decision.
We have recently heard this
saying, why didn't we arm soon-
er. Well, we cannot all arm; we
can’t all be soldiers, somebody
will have to remain at home and
do the work of the world. I can
see where a world can become
desperately poor by too heavily
arming.
The time has come when we
cannot settle the world differ-
ences by the use of armies, neith-
er can hate turn the trick, but
maybe love can. When we pray,
•rhood of God and the
hood of man. It fituld bo con-
even now. Wan are like
fights, they do not settle things.
W* fight and w* get whipped tout
we declare in our hearts we will
fight again. We may make out-
side adjustments but inside we
still think as we did.
The golden rule is the best wsy
to settle matters. “Do unto oth-
ers as you would like them to do
unto you." I have often thought
why I am a minister. Well, I
would like to plant In the hearts
of people that little bit of love.
We plant flowers in the church
yard so when children come to
Sunday School, they see the
flowers, they learn to love the
flowers and by so learning to
love the flowers, they learn to
love each other, and by loving
each other they learn to love all
other people, so love takes hold
of them and they are ruled by
love. Let’s think about beautiful
and lovely things and then we
may see more love in others.
— THE BUILDER
each nation could add a little bit do we pray for the enemy? Do |
of love, it might be much differ- we even attempt to see his side
ent. We have tried to think of of the question? Maybe it is not
nations as we do the members of as bad as we think, maybe we
the family and then follow up should think of our own faults
the line and think how differenc- and shortcomings. Maybe we are
es are settled. not as good as we think we are.
When the neighbors fall out, j Paul taught a very sublime
we don t think of getting a gun I doctrine when he taught the fath-
The Next 50 Years
Controlled
Ventilation
Beauty-Lite
Outside Blinds
Have These Outstanding
Features:
Choice of any color.
Two-Tone Colors.
Replaceable Louvers.
Self-Locking Handle.
Split Operators.
L'ndersill Operator
Those of us who have wit-
nessed the changes in the last 50 |
years wonder what will be the
changes in the next 50 years. In
this last 50 years we have seen
the passing of the horse. No one'
at the beginning of the century
saw this We have seen the com-
ing of motor power in automo-
biles. trucks and tractors. We
j have seen the coming of village
and rural electricity. There has
----eg*
A CHINESE PROVERB
4 SAYS or A wealthy
MAN'S RICH FOOD,
|\f THAT * ONE-FOURTH
GOES' TO NOURISH
HIM, THREE-FOURTHS
TO KILL HIM. *
FOOD WAS" MANS' EARL-
IEST quest; which still
CONTINUES. CRUSADERS
AISO SOUGHT SPICES,
WHILE QUEEN ISA -
BELLA EXPECTED CO
LUMBUS TO RETURN,
SPICES FOR HER
JEWELS.
J?
KINS ARTHUR SERV-
ED H/S ROUND TV,OLE
KNIGHTS WITH
'r^tCC-T'-BEER
H/Gi ’LY SEASON CD
au— with <rp/css.
NAPOL EON AND JOSEPH
/NE HELPED PREPARE
FASHIONABLE, mid-
night PALACE SUP-
PERS, QUARRELING
VIOLENTLY OVER
WHOSE OMELETS
WERE BETTER.
ATTENTION, FARMERS
' We are now contracting acreage* of Brua**l
Sprout* and Broccoli.
Brussel Sprouts will net you $100 per too is
field and Broccoli is $90 per ton delivered to plant. W*
have processed labor to harvest said crop.
Contact Lloyd Tumlinson, field man
Tropic Cold Frozen Foods Co,
CARRIZO SPRINGS, TEXAS
Res. Phone 23* office
Business Leader With Great War
%
Record Tells How Hadacol Has
Rebuilt Him Physically
Wos run-down, week, after service in South Pacific
due to deficiencies of Vitamins Bi, Ba, Iron and Niacin
place of war. It may do so. 'not merely the color of their
There will probably be a con- [ skins. There will be better hous-
______i i___wi • . 1 : _ _____________* ■ i
Mr. Donald Hedburg, who re-
sides at 1812 Parker in the fash-
ionable Riverside District of
Wichita, Kansas, has been an up-
land rural electricity There has lnere wm P™bably be a con- sums, mere will be better hous- V V .
!‘ icsss ssrz
the present birth rate will level: tacts between the rich and the
now all time high, ipoor.
F. B. A.
APPROVED
Get your Beauty-Lite Outside
Hlinds Today
On Our Convenient
TIME PAYMENT PLAN
NO Dov/n Payment
3 years to pay
ROY DRY, JR.
"Authorized Dealer’’
For Free Estimate Call
179-W or Write
.108 E. Maverick St.
CRYSTAL CITY, TFXAS
most every country child now has !tbe Present
the opportunity of a high school i o{l from lts — .....- ------ j
education. Junior colleges have The economic life of more peo- j Prohibition of liquor will re- J
come about which have quick- ple wiI1 imProve More people turn, the drain on human life is
ened college life. We have had Iwil1 bave rnore 8o°d3 There will now too much. Industry, and
an increase in crop insect* i be less o{ tbe *reat rich and less j thinking people will abandon the
Church life has increased. Today jof the extremely poor. | licensing of grog shops and we
53.2 of the population belongs to The Church will continue to in-! w*ll all strive to have a sane and
some church. In 1880 only 19 per i crease in numbers and power in sober nation,
cent, in 1920, 39 percent. Church *be years ahead. Protestantism' There will continue an im-
membership according to total1 move closer together, there provement in the spiirtual life
population has about doubled in will be less churches and better j °f people. We will look more to
ones. j the heart and not so much to out-
Somewhere during the next 50, ward aPP«arance. A greater sense
years there will be a movement I rea*'*y will come about,
from the larger cities.
the last 50 years.
Now regarding the next 50 years
no one can make an intelligent
forecast. Right now there is ajavvay ------ .... ..........
prospect that war will envelop More industries and educational |
the world and if it does there j institutions will get further from
— THE BUILDER
-WGD-
REALLY IN PRACTICE
may not be many to tell the story ■tbe d°wn town areas of the large The two women were telling
jin the year 2,000 However, I do cities. ea<* oth<-r about
not believe this will happen. I'
were
each other about weddings. “I
, Village life will continue to im-1 vJent to Jean\wedding the other
base this on the higher intelli- prove. It will not necessarily in-i y and! “ *he and the groom
gcnce of people and their reli- crease in population, but will -’re goJag down tbe a'sle. the
gious foresight. The brotherhood have better business and better
| °f man has t .ncreased during community institutions. The vil- j
these later years. It’s hoped the j lage will offer the highest oppor-
Conference table will take the tunity for the best and
lights went out*’
“Goo’ness!” exclaimed the oth-
|tr femme. “What did they do?’
“They just kept on walking.
the staff of the great Wichita
Eagle newspaper for over four
years.
Mr. Hedburg has an enviable
record of combat with the U. S.
Army In the South Pacific in
World War II. He is very active
in civic affairs. And just as he
was anxious to pitch in and do
a job during the war—he now
wants to help his fellow citizens
who (like he was once), are
physically run-down and weak
due to lack of Vitamins B., B,.
Iron, and Niacin in their systems.
Here is Donald W. Hedburg’s
witnessed statement: “When f
returned from service, I faced
the problem of rebuilding my-
self physically. I was in a gen-
eral run-down condition.
“In my present capacity of
advertising salesman for Kansas’
greatest newspaper, The Wichita
Eagle, it's absolutely necessary
that I have plenty of vitality—
■get up and go.’ I had real cause
to worry. Nothing seemed to re-
build me constitutionally. Then
a fner.:i of none on the naouna.
steff told me about HADACOL
Vitamins B,, B., Iron, and Niacin
—but also helpful amounta of
precious Calcium, Phosphorus and
Manganese — elements so vital
------B —-v-v W1V1IIV1IM OU TIMU
to help maintain good health and
physical fitness.
If you are a victim of neuritis
pains, certain stomach and nerv-
ous disturbances, constipation,
insomnia or a weak, run-down
condition due to such deficien-
cies FAD VOL will star* you
on the road to feeling better
often within a few days. Thou-
wholesome living. It will be the
home of the thinkers, the poets
and writers. More great people
will come from the village and
the country. The great out-of-
mOSt . * * * nain.iift,
,/ Ibis is Jean’s seventh marriage
you know, and she's familiar wit*
every step of the way.”
-WGD-
OF GREAT VALLE
A robust woman who lost her
. -ti'.s ’ i>^C. r,° J,fV f f' f 'sands uoon thousands of record*
<"? °r ™y f,°iUIth botiof grateful men. women and chil-
I ’!;adu } fcf . : ,:c rr,y, 0 ,d dren proved this to be so.
self. I look forward to a day s
work and go home—play with the I Many Doctors Recommend It
children—work in the yard—fish | HADACOL is recommended by
until midnight! Thanks again to many doctors not only to their
HADACOL, energy and vitality patients but to members of their
once again course through every j own families who have such de-
fiber of my body. You bet, I too, *lr"— •---
doors with the hills, mountains j thumb in a trolley accident con-I
and rivers and roadside flowers suited her lawyer,
will be- a continued inspiration. Lawyer: “But why do you |
The social life of people will think your thumb worth $20,-j
am now a missionary for
great new HADACOL.”
this
continue to improve, the now
minority groups will come into
their own. The people will look
more to the worth of people and
000?
Woman: “Because that’s the
thumb I kept my husband un-
der.”
Get That Wonderful HADACOL
Feeling Everyone is Talking
About
HADACOL gives such wonder-
ful results because it not only
supplies * deficient, weak run-
down systems with more than
their daily needs of important
ficiencies. Before giving up hope
--— - — - -W. —— — . — . X. #-> ■ ■ “ up
—you owe it to yourself to at least
give HADACOL a chance to help
you. Why keep dragging .__
self around feeling “half-alive”
your-
------- — — —jy to,1_____
wonderful HADACOL feeling that
Tr
everyone is talking about! Trial
size bottle, only $1.25. Large fam-
ily or hospital size, $3.50. Refuse
substitutes.
Z 19^0 Thm I^Blanc Corporation
I spent 5 minutes and saved *1000"
#1 (eerie, It's tlidrkl
Says Walter Boyd, Los Angeles, Calif.
You can make umpteen trips to your electric ref ng erst or... it has
ths extra (resting capacity necessary to make and hold low tempera-
tures, evsu in the hottest waathar That asms constant low temperature
pen-Idas lots at ten cutoss quickly and cools warm foods in a hurry. Low-cost
b caid that prevents spoilaga of milk and beverages;
id cooked foods fresh; and takes cars of your froeen
foods. The aeedere electric refrigerator is a big bargain buy. You can get an
ai^X cubic foot dutifc for teas than $250 and operate it, on ths average, for
teas daw $ UM gov month or about these cants a day. ftefrigwate the modem.
I.....>-•'
See the madam
olaetrk refriger-
ators your appii-
onee denier bet
on display.
& CENTRAL POWER AND LIGHT COMPANY
Cmm in ... son bow yon could pay $1,000 more and still not pot
all Dodge axtra room... oaso *f handling... fa
>U ran sorely spare 5 minutes —
especially when thst’i all it takes
to see exactly how yon roold pay $1,000
more without getting everything Dodge
gives yoo!
Yes, in jart $ minute* behind the
wheel, yeaH discover roominess that
aars costing much more don't give yoe
. . . driving ease yon’ve never experi-
enced before . . . rsggedneas and de-
pendability to save yea money mile
after mile. These are things that belong
to Dodge . . . and only in Dodge do
yon get them all!
Coma in today, tee bow easy k is to
own the new Dodge ef yam *
DODGE
Aral a 4w WSn marg Max Ma tauarfpnindean/
MS West Zerxi.
Harper Motors
n
r
i
r
jA‘
\
P
if
r
i
' f
■
u ^ &-a a »*.« j o a—oaadBiiifaiiJiiiai?
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View five places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hardy, J. H. Zavala County Sentinel (Crystal City, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, August 25, 1950, newspaper, August 25, 1950; Crystal City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1115503/m1/2/?q=war: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .