The Teague Chronicle (Teague, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 31, 1946 Page: 8 of 8
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11
Thursday, October 31, 1948. *
**
1
HED
Farms Homes
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Classified Section
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FULL LINE BABY CHICK NEEDS
i
GET THEM AT—
OOK’S
Owens, called THE DOINGS “The
FROZEN FRUITS AND VEGETABLES
BREAD, Loaf
10c
BREAD, 1-lb Loaf, (Limit)
DUTCH CLEANSER, 3 cans
25c
PUREX, Half-Gallon Bottles
$3.15
MEAL, 10 pound s&
^ALT, 3 "boxes
-----J—
J
.....10c
w
"7........
48c
PEANUT BUTTER, 2-pound jar
-
25c
2
Everybody. reads The Chronicle.
.. 29c
10c
V
I
CABBAGE, pound
5c
LV
18c
1
I Tl
Phone 93
Phone>
>v><
HE
BAKING
I
I
J
kJ
G4\
„ 4
Lists
Many Bargains
In
Every Week
The Davis Co.
Ar>^
Other Real Estate
In The
You May Find
Exactly
What You Want
Improved
Uniform
International
“te:
But
“TEXO” PIG AND HOG SUPPLEMENT i
Corn wiD put that “Bloom” to your Market Hi
and do it quicker.
You Get Pretty Dinnerware
fVMY TIMi WITH MOTHfR'S OATS
(NtEMIUM PACKAGE)
10 lbs. Reds
----
can
Estat
SI!
THE
IE 58
I •
that L
brush
ns to
luff wi
p,d, v
bractici
[lower
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hit th
Ends u
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Be pat)
[Also
I coolii
kpocia
Bresh
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b snuff]
it one 01
[of any
[get tog
kt alth
[of dip]
11 favoa
k .avei
[e direct
bs the |
r" ’1
<>i e sit
ketl.od J
B dips J
a?
FLOUR, Ponca’s, 50 pounds
|the c
ping
•t me
ld“red
[that
Be w.l
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d'WoJ
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FEED & PRODUCE STOI
PLENTY OF PARKING SPACE
“A Square Deal to One and AU.”
WE DELIVER PHON!
Large, Fresh
?.
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SUNDAY
SCHOOL
■■■ LESSON--
By BAROLD L. LUNDQUIST. D. D.
_f The Moody Bible Institute ol Chicago.
Released by Western Newspaper Union
EARLE McSPADDEN
GROCERY and MARKET
7 i ' Phone 8
GROCERIES-HARDWARE
CELERY
Large Stalk
15c
imba pa
i Velvets......................................
r1 s
•mJ
L
[Ha,
;• ■
^WJWDS
• • • • r .7*
Specials for Friday-Saturday
4 I
THE TEAGUE CHRONICLE
Too Late To Classify
FLOUR
25-lb. Sack ;
$1.64
res
| as i
Mi’ a lie
from
I
LWh
Be to 1
I /t
Ere a
kid s
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pi> > tel
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Ftose
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CORN BEEF HASH, Armour’s, pound
can................................................ ■...........25c
— “ 10c
PLENTY OF FRUIT CAKE MIX
------------------------------------i-----------------------------------------a-------------
IttentioB
r if it is
|jtu but
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tl nocc
but IV,
, •aial
.abit
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faff-dipt
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been
men,
Con-
others,
Nicholas Grocery & Mark
Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Farmersville visited the
Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Em
weekend. ____________x
John D. Gibbs of the Navy is
home on terminal leave, visiting
his mother, Mrs. John Foster. He Mr. and Mrs. Di
will receive his discharge the 20th
</f Dec- _______________________________
Editor’s Chair
(Continued from Page One)
Our Customers are not “Price
scious,” they are “Quality
scions.”
LESSON TEXT—Actl 18:23b-2»: G»l«-
tlan. 8:13-18.
MEMORY SELECTION — But we be-
lieve that through the grace of the Lord
lesue Christ we shall be saved, even
as they.—Acts 18:11:
MATCHES, 6 boxes...............................
—:-------------------------
BAKING POWDER, K. C., 50-oz.
TEXO FEE
“ITS IN THE BAG”
i liberty—and a liberty controlled by
a new factor in his life. ,-We note
Replnring 1 86! 871
lt»! cerii, Iqr.l ,y«m
•:.ov Uncle 5«ra the
price tfi 550
w ■■■. /J
■water--.........-......
1L ,’a- W
Fundamental doctrine must be
sound and true or the church will go
astray. A question had ar-isen at An-
tioch which had’ to be answered au-
thoritatively, and once for all.
The early converts of the church
were naturally from among the
Jews, andj they carried with them
into their new-found faith the tradi-
tions of their religion. Some of them
did not recognize that the salvation
they had in Christ was entirely by
grace, apart from any works of the
law. They not only felt that they
must observe the law, but insisted
that the Gentile believers must also
fulfill the Jewish rite of circumci-
sion. This promptly raised the
question whether Christ alone could
save, or if men were saved by grace
plus works.
To settle this matter, Paul and
Barnaba, went tip to the church at
Jerusalem, and there a great coun-
cil discussed it freely, and came
to a decision which.Jias then tsrfhs7
mitted by letter and a committee.
That decision established an eter-
nal
I. Principle—Believers Are Free
from the Law (Acta 15:23b-29).
The believers at Antioch were to
abstain from those things which
would hinder their spiritual prog-
ress and harm their testimony. That
was important and right, but it
must not be allowed to confuse them
regarding the basis of their salva-
tion. They were not saved by
works, not even though they were
most commendable.
"Leslie Welch, Pryor Hamrick,
Migses Anne Red and Joan Davis
attended the football game in Wa-
co Saturday.
I
■
o uoxeb.....-—.......-.......k...............
RED SPUDS, 10 lbs. 29c
_
LETTUCE ...........
/w
/
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Rosson and
B. F. Nanny visited Mrs. Rosson’s
twin sister in Dallas, Sunday.
J
Ifect our lives after the will of God,
day by day and fhoment by mo-
1 ment. This puts us in the way of
I victory, for as we walk in the Lord's
way wc may cell on him for riot
Mr. and Mrs. Robert'.Tyus te-
tumed to their home in Flagstaff,
Arizona, Saturday, after spending
two weeks here visiting relatives
and friends. They, were accompani-
ed home by Mr, and Mrs. Dv)ain
• You’ll have to seq-Ujem to appreciate how lovely
they are! Ask your grocer, for Mother’s Oats in pre-
mium packages—EACH package contains smart din-
nerware in colorful designs and graceful shapes!
All standard-size! Serve delicious Mother’s Oats
breakfasts regularly!—know that your family is get-
ting the famous energy-and-vitality benefits of whole-
grain oatmeal! Start your set today and watch it grow!
Remember, Mother’s Oats was named America's
best-tasting cereal in a coast-to-coast vote!
Mother’s Oats
(PREMIUM PACKAGE)
r of i Mt. and mO*
•ents, Joe Wertz and Chuck i|
last tended the Mart-Mexia
game last Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill’ (
Houston, visited in the
it..__» ■»*__R 1
weekend, and they att<
football game in Fairfie
-
BEANS, Ranch Styli
Well, as news is scarce, I will
step aside for a better writer.—
Just A Chronicle Booster.
“A Quality Feed
For Every Need’
■
■
' t!O(X)A, Mother’s, pound
they are
They want the best
we are pleased to state “TEX(
Feeds are recognized as one of tl
Best. A trial Will Convince You.
.esson for November 3
WANTED: Paperhanging
Painting. Phone 55W.
Watson.
and
B. T.
15p
Houston, Were visiting in the
homt: of Mrs. Hill’s mother, Mrs.
»ra Mandeville, this weekend,
and attended the Singing conven-
tion. ' j j
. J. -B. Fullen and family have ties,
moved back to .Newton, where the which
world;” and said it had
praised by professional
writers, judges, ‘Bishops,
gressmen.. and many others, I
spoke briefly trying to answer Mr.
Calhoun’s question: “What makes
THE DOINGS click?” I told them
the story about the moron who
found the strayed horse by imag-
ining he was a horse and going
where he thought a horse would
go. I said ‘ I put into THE DO-
INGS the things that amused or
interested me, and that I usually
find they ini erest the average
reader. Then I said, “THE DO-
fNGS is nearly nine years old
and the insurance men tell me 1
am supposed to live nine more
years—or a little more—therefore,
you will have maybe nine or ten
,years it. THE DOINGS will
die when I die; but I want Deats
and Dot to get out one more is-
sue saying, ‘The old man is dead;
we put him away in nice shape—
I and there won’t be any 'more DO-
■feTtbet.
understand, and will not be look-
in’ for any more DOIN’S.’ (On
■second thought, I may ».stick
around fifteen of twenty years).”
y our Hens probably will eat more
Laying Mash than some other brands,
resultant higher production will more than i
set the extra consumption. Hens, like indr
uais, go for sweet, wholesome, nutritious foo
taste Tells!
his sister
from Newton, were driving
through the streets of Luna last
weekend. _r ■
Ruth Webb and children from
Teague were visiting Mrs. Webb’s
mother, Mrs. Cora. Mandeville.
Park Mandeville of Carny was
visiting his brother, Bill Mande-
ville, and attending the convention
at Freestone today, (Sunday.)
Mrs. Ella Gilpin of Teague was
visiting her' father at Luna this
last weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Haney Hill of
7&e<K /he fa
faith, “not of works, lest any man
should boast" (Eph. 2:8, 9). That
principle, which is absolutely foun-
dational in all Christian thinking,
was established then, and is valid
and blessedly true for all time.
Is it not strange, then, that all
through the church’s history there
has been a determined effort on
the part of some in the church to
add something to God’s redeeming
grace as a ground for salvation?
Observe th£ plain rebuke given
to teachers or error in verse 24.
It is no light matter to trouble and
liusleau u.e idiiia ui men oy inject-
ing cur worldly wisdom or our
opinions, when we should be teach-
ing the truth of God’s Word.
Salvation by grace and freedom
High School, quoting fmm Weldon i ,frotn law t[oes «»“>^g the be-
Owens THE DOINGS “The ! llever into a place of license, but df
most unique news-letter in the
cnizl 4+ . hdon I —
that in
U. Practice—Believers Are Bound
by Love (Gal. 5:13-15).
The one who turns to Christ by
faith is indwelt by the Holy Spirit
and finds that, far from failing to
keep the high moral principles of
God's law, he-is given grace to keep
them more perfectly. » This he does,
not in order to be (saved, but be-
cause he is saved.
He comes out of a bondage to
legalism, which he could not bear,
into a new bondagd to the* law of
love, which his new nature in Christ
delights to bear and in which it
finds the fulfillment of its highest
and holiest desires.
Note that this shows itself in the
church and in the world in loving
service to others in the absence of
strife; in a word, in the practice of
the admonition: "Thou shalt love
thy neighbdr as thyself” (v. 14; Lev.
19:18).
No one faces that life responsibil-
V 1 ' - • u ” -...... .
i ... i vi(led j,OI tjjat need, for we note
next that there is
m power— BHteverw Ade LeG by
the Spirit (Gal. 5:16-18).
Being saved does not set us free
from the conflict with sin, for the
old nature declares itself at enmity
with the Spirit We find it often to
be in our hearts to do right and In
the decisive moment wa find the
flesh taking control and we cannot
do the things we would (y. 17).
What is the solution of that prob-
lem? An pll-out attack on sin and
sinful desires? That is commend-
able, but it somehow doesn’t work.
We -need a superior power to work
in and through ufc. • . ,
That’s it! There is a power in us
and ready ta work through *us—the
matchless, victorious power of the
Holy Spirit. He dwells in the heart
of every believer (I Cor. 6:19) and
only awaits our yielding to him that
he may take control of our lives.
| Walking in the Spirit (v. ‘16) Is
I simply giving him the liberty to di-
Les«on *ubjrct» and Scripture texts se-
lected and copyrighted by International
Council ol Religious Education: used by
permfasion.
PAUL CHAMPIONS FREEDOM.
AND BROTHERHOOD
way we may cell on him for hot
only his grace, but also his strength.
Saved by grace to a lite of lib-
erty and power—such is the ines-
timable privilege of .the Christian.
J Are we, are yen, living up to ft?
1 1
FOR SALE: Prewar Gas Range,
5 Burner. May see. at Miss Leia
Weaver’s old home place. 15p
FOR SALE: Four, girl’s bicycles.
Mixup booth at carnival, city
park. , 15p
Mrs. Ella Weaver 'S still on the
sick list, but was able to be up
a while Sunday.
Mrs Bill Sheffield returned Sun-
day from Pratt, Kansas, where
she attended the funeral of her
father, Mr. "E. L. Hoyt. Mr. Hoyt
had been in ill health for some
time.
SPUDS
i 25-oz.
You can depend on “TEXO” Cattle Cu
to carry your Range Stock through the winl
You will get bigger-boned calves and tl
“Mammies” will give more milk. They cost I
than meal or cake Too!
LUNA NEWS
Well, as 1 have been to the big
JEreeston County Singing Conven-
tion at Freestone, Texas, and did
wfe have fine singing—the best
that ,1 have heard for years, and
I saw so many good friends and I
Kinfolks. The weather w*as so |
pretty, the good people just had
•to get out.
Burtis Fullen and
from Newton,
If you want Average Results, use Avei
Products. If you expect to get Above Avei
Production Feed “TEXO” FEEDS. They
Above Average in Quality.
NOTICE: We, the citizens of
Cross Roads Community hereby
notify the public that we will
not allow hogs to run at large
on our premises this winter.
W. H. Goolsby, Mrs. Pearl
Maddox, J. T. Long, J. L. But-
ler, W. F. Thornburg, R. T.
Long. 15p
FOR SALE: Duroc Poland China
Pigs. The Gilbert Allison place
off the Cemetery Road. Mer-
' ' fen C. Molire. /'hone 214W. 15c
of
E.
_r____ ___
Buchanan Dam and in the Hill
Country at Fredricksburg i—I
Kerrville.
Chaplain and Mrs. Horace Hart-
sell and little daughter, Suzanne,
of North Camp Hood, Texas,
visited Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Riley
and other relatives and friends in
Teague last weekend.
Miss Velva Jo Nicholas, a stu-
dent of TSCW, Denton, visited her
_ a-rents, Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Nicho-
las, the past weekend.
Misses Irene Pope^.and Marie
Pope, students of TSCW, Denton,
visited relatives and friends in
Teague last weekend. -
Brownie Homer, a student at
Baylor University, Waco, visited
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. ,T.
Homer, last weekend.
CARROTS
Large Bunch
7gO
LETTUCE
10c
7 TEA
Mjyfwcll House, % U>.
25c
as well as added expense,
_________. _______ we must bear hi restoring
big pine timber grows tall for the the property to its natural state.!
squirrels to play on and where Football games -are great- and [ of i
they can pick up plenty of pine generate c|ean, wholesome com- [ Reie
knots to start the fire. j petitive spirit. But when others al-1 —
“* lovfr it to become an excuie for j
their wanton vandalism, appropri-1 L
ate measures should be takeii to
prevent further recurrence of such
audacities.
Welcome back home to former
citizens who. acquiesced to the
urge of good ol’ Teague water:
Mr. and.Mrs. Sum Ward and Mrs.
Lena Guiff, whose late husband
was a veteran railroad man here
. . . Turned Ankle Dept.: J. C.
McSpadden, walking across the.
street from Dorman’s Store and
James Neale, whose foot was
caught behind the fountain coun-
ter.
» » »
Stanley Mayberry handed in
this one, from the Houston Post.
Read it: A better world is not
likely to evolve from the ruins of
the old if the cynicism and the
defeatist attitude found in at
least one youngster as reported by
Attorney General Tom C. Clark is
representative of modern Ameri-
can Youth. Stopping to visit with
a nujmber of teen agers in Ohio,
on the eve of the juvenile de-
linquency conference, the attorney
general asked one of them
whether he had made any plans
fo- the future. The boy, whom
he pictured in This Week as about
17, athletic, clear eyed—a fine
specimen of young America—left
Clark speechless with his terse re-
ply: “What future?” The inci-
dent gave the former Texan con-
siderable food for reflection. What
future in«I*»<xl, witli all the worry
over tjhe atomic .bomb, and talk of
the inevitability of another great
war! More neighborliness and
sympathetic understanding among
the peoples of earth, he decided,
was the way to the sort of future
American children could look for-
ward to with confidence and with
inspiration.
. » » »
Another of the legion of George
Bernard Shaw stories has it that
he Once missed his umbrella from
the stand at his club. Subsequent- Salvation is by grace, through
ly he. posted a notjlce in tfre hall,
requesting* the nobleman who had
removed his umbrella to replace
it. “Why do you say ‘noble-
man ’ ” asked a friend. “Isn’t
it rather crude sarcasm?”. “N.ot
at all,” answered Shaw. “The
constitution of the club states that
it is composed of ‘noblemen and
gentlemen.’ He couldn’t be a
’ gentleman and remove my um-
brella, could he?”—Montreal Star.
» • •
Philosophy from E. J. Headlee’s
“The Doings” hits upon longevity
this , week when he says: “At the
Kiwapis program, celebrating bla-
~ ticnaL Newspaper Week, ‘A. O.
I Calhoun, club president and long-
time principal of Denton Senior
Mr. and Mrs. Joel Bonner
Fairfield and Mr. and .Mrs. J.
Stringer spent last weekend
and
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Owens, H. Weldon. The Teague Chronicle (Teague, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 31, 1946, newspaper, October 31, 1946; Teague, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1291152/m1/8/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fairfield Library.