The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 125, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 9, 1926 Page: 4 of 4
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IHHLi|l "K! 1 *
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A LUPINO LANE COMEDY-
‘HIS PRIVATE LIFE'
1 the Organ - - * - - - -
10c and 25c
be.it he had; whew' life was an in-
spiration; whose memory is a bene
diction." |
In the midst of a strife mid tempt-
latinii of a commercial age, bear
EMENT
SPRINGS GRADUATES
, (Contimwd from yesterday)
"’ A tucceacfui lift I* not necessari-
ly nieirtitve by wealth or. ” worldly
honors The best definition of *ue-
vto* 1 haw ever Seen i* from the fmn
of a Nebraska woman. In a corn-
'd upon, “What Con
..?" she was awaded
of *250.00 upon the
primarily to make « living,
but to make a life; and he whose
life is to count for most, in time
and eternity, must become servant
of all. ^fw
I
ilr"
•'Stand iike a knight in armor,
When tenant ion assaileth thee;
One wrong step will make life,
Leas fruitful and glorious than It
should be.”
... . within the shadow,
watch above Sis own.”
jJ my public ministry I have met
ifey men who exenfplify the life
faith in God more thoroughly than
..a Sunday school superintendenf in
[| the chiimh of which I wa» formoly
pastor. Some year* ago, all In the
course of-iCfto* months he was 'af-
flicted with appendicitis, necessitat-
ing an deration; one aon lost his
ight .hand in a mill accident, and
nother son—a bright promising boy
f fourteen, was literally torn to
piecing by the sfiafting of the ma-
chinery in the mill where he was j
employed. When I met the father
at the door of his home, after this
series of calamities, like the patri-
arch Job, he took_-nie by the hand
and said, “The Lord gave and the
Lord taketh away; blessed be the
name of the Lord.’* A few weeks
later he led our prayer meeting and
read the 23rd Psalm for the lesson*
Hi* voice wavered when he came to
th« fourth verse, “Yea though l walk
through the valley and shadow of
death, 1 will fear no evil, for Thou
art with me; Thy rod and Thy staff
they comfort me.” Gathering
strength he moved toward the cli-
max, and in triumphant tones ex
claimed, "Surely goodness and mercy
shall follow me all the days of my
life, and I will dwell in the house
of the Lord forever.”
“ ‘Tis easy enough to be pleasant,
When life flows along like a song; [-
But the man worth while, is the man
who will smile, When everything
goes dead wrong.”
The test of the heart Is trouble;
And that always comes with the
years; But the smile that is worth
all the praises of earth, Is the smile
that smiles through tears."
Trials may come to you in life,
but if you can believe that all things
are working together for good, like
Jarey, the father of modern missions
you will attempt great things for
God and expect great things from
God. ,
2. FAITH IN YOUR FELLOW
MAN. Your confidence Will some-
times be mlBpluced and you may be
the victim of cruel deception, but
bear in mind that,
“There is so much of good in the
worst of u»,
And so much bad in the best of us,
That it ill becomes any of us
To say ought ill of the rest of us.”
Instead ol being censorious and
critical, we arc to remember the
admonition of the Apostle Paul,
“Brethern, il a man be overtaken
in a fault, ye which are spiritual,
restore such as one in the spirit of
meekness; considering thyself, lekt
thou also be tempted." We are so
[imperfect ourselves that it is hard
for u* to see the pure gold in our
fellowman. Men looked upon Mat-
thew, the tax gatherer, and called him
a publican; Christ looked upon him
and said, he shall write my first Gos-
pel; Men looked upon the cross and
called it a Instrument of torture;
Christ lay down upon it and glorifi-
ed it forever—and the instrument
of torture became the emblem of a
world conquering Christianity; Men
looked upon a block of marble and
said it is an ungainly rock; Micheal
Angelo looked upon it and saw an
angel, and the block of marble be-
came his great masterpiece. If you
value your earthy, happiness, do not
lose faith in your fellowman.
3. FAITH IN SELF. Some one has
said that you may succeed when all
others have lost faith in you, but
you can never succeed when you
lose faith in yourself. Intelligent
men said that it was absurd to think
of communicating with others at a
distance without the use of wires;
Marconi said it could be done, and
. all hia
friends. One of
him, “Sir, what
_ ... yourself?” ‘I keep
..... was the answer of the king.
Tfhatevet else you may lose in life,
do not lose hope and the sunny
spirit of optimism. ' Ab Tennyson
m»: f * f ’ " * , 5
"In the dull gray days of December,
feel* the day
Before you and scent the harvest
of sunny June”
“There’s life and love amaxing in
this world for one-mid all,
Warm your souls up in the sun-
shine, catch the blossoms as they
lull . ’
From the gray, frost-sprinkled mea-
dows, feel your way to skies of
” blue, '■ •
Then*’* wisdom in all weathers,
and just any kind will do.”
»M« os thou go not like w.—~ ,
quarry slave, scourged to his dun-
geon at night, but sustained and I
soothed by an unfaltering trust; ap-
proach thy grave like one who wraps
the drapery of his couch about him
and lies down to pleasant dreams.
HEAT!
WEDNESDAY and THURSDi
*
CRIMM REVIVAL
■BEGAN SUNDAY |
[_ IN COMMERCE
|
(Commerce Journal)
The Union Revival opened Sun-
day Sight. Rev. J. A. Olds, pastor
of the Methodist church, opening
hostilities against sin with a broad-
side fired at the enemy's breast-
work*. Using a* subject matter
“Jacob's and Esau't' reconciliation”
the preacher delivered a great *er-
mon oft adn's destructiveness and the
, ■ , . .. ... iwace that result* from right rela-
I *WWW «•»» ‘recommend patience tjong ^ God
Evangelist B. B. Crirn, who has
as a very important furnishing, and
a large element in any worthy
achievement. Youth la naturally im-
pulsive and intolerant of delay. Es-
pecially is this tiug, if your school
course has been fraught with a series
of triumphs. The World is going to
be slow to recognise your ability
ami you may be on trial for a long
time. You have only to read the
lives of some of our great men to
underatand why patience should have
a prominent place in life's temple.
Take Demosthenes as an orator—
the difficulties he had to overcome
before the world recognixcd his worth
—hut he totted patiently on, and
after 2,000 year* his oration on "The
piece. At a further illustration, take
some of the poets: I suppose that
neither Keats nor Shelley sold as
many as a hundred copies of any
volume as long as they were living,
and we all remember the long
deferred recognition of Browning and
Tennyson and Thackeray. Re-read
Hawthorne’s “Crest Stone Face,” and
patiently wait as you labor earnestly
and honestly, and recognition will
come to you as it did to Ernest.
The last thing to which 1 would
call call your attention is love. Have
the broad mantle of charity as a
covering for all, and the chief orn-
ament of tho temple where you and
God are to dwell together. Love is
the great harmoniser for all the dis-
cords of human life. It cements hu-
man heart* and link* ua on to th*
Divine. It Afford* a convenient sid-
ing along the rogd that leads from
time to eternity and will prevent
the wreck of human happiness.
“Love makes the heart a home of
good.
Eternal, while the ages roll.
Hate dips a poisoned artow in blood
And writes a wrinkle on the soul
lived •
____success who has
led often and loved
.ned the respect of
and the love of little
is filled hi* niche and
it; wlu> has left
With the foundation and building | out on the broad bosom of the Atian-
eompiete, we will next turn our at-1 tic in the midat of terrible storms,
tention to the furnishings. Here
again we are to use great care, for
with Christ Jesus as a foundation,
and Christian character a* a temple,
v„„„, ...... _____ only the choicest and most enduring
> than tofound it, furnishings will he acceptable. One
' a?»overt poppy, aiof the fiyat things I would recom-
rrscued soul: who J mend is a three fold faith;
appreciation of 1. FAITH IN GOD. There are so
4 many Mysterious providences |o be
met within life; so many things which
can't h«i topaoned out Tn a aatisfacto-
——-s-“S’
1 was greatly comforted by a mes-
sage from the loved one* at home,
4,000 miles away, and 1 knew that
Marconi's faith waa justified. Men
said that heavier than air machines
would never be perfected, but the
Wright Brothers believed in their in-
vention. and you and 1 have seen
them soaring thousands of feet above
the earth, with all the grace of the
birds of heaven, and now the skep-
tics are silenced and aerial naviga-
tion is an assured fact,
Through a combination of faith
and works the seemingly impossible
ha* been accontplished, and the
world has moved out of the tallow
candle era into that.white light of an
electrical age of marvelous progress
Difficulties have always beset the
pathway of human wdwusaemCnl, and
you will constantly need the wings
of an unfaltering faith in God, in
your fellowman, and in yourselves,
to enable you to soar above tto for-
did environment* of doubt and akep-
Van Dyke beautifully says:
“Time is too slow for those who
wait; too swift for those who fear
too long for those who grieve; too
short for those who rejoice ;*,but Jor
those who love, time 1* not.”
Love is unselfish; it is the most
sensitive of human gracea, and when
it has attained unto the dignity of
realy love, it insist* upon giving
It delights to laviBh itself upon the
object of its affections. It will
make you thoughtful and considei
ate of others, and if properly ex
crcised. It will save you many
heartache of regret.
“If I knew that a word of wine,
A word not kind and true.
Might leave it* trace upon a loved
one's face,
I'd never speak harshly, would
you?
If 1 thought that the light of a smile
Would linger the whole day thru
And brighten some heart with
heavier part,
1 wouldn't withhold it, would you?
Love is also divine: An old writer
has said th'at love hud heaven for its
birthplaer, but all of heaven could
not contain It, and one d*y it over-
flowed heaven's banks and rained
down upon this old sinfui earth,
rifting the clouds of human sorrow,
winding its way over the intricate
srd complex pathway of life, bsek
on up to the throne, culminating in
Christ the unspeakable gift of God’s
love to a perishing world.
” ‘Twhs love! 'Twas love!
The love of God for mo;
It brought my. Savior front above,
To die on Calvary.”
been' holding a revival at Marshall,
sent a telegram stating that his par-
ty would not arrive in Commerce un
til Monday, June ?th, for the night
service and Rev. Old* was asked to
preach the initial sermon definitely
opening the revival.
A seating capacity for ope thous-
and has been arranged at the taber-
nacle and the crowd last night al-
most filled the scats. This indicates
that before the first week of the
Crimm meeting has, passed addition-
al seating capacity wiii have to be
made. A comfortable and commodi-
ous loft ha* been built, seated and
covered and most of the seats in
the choir were filled. The singing
lead by A. G. Athridge was good.
Rev. J. A. Roper, pastor of the
Baptist church, made a talk before
the sermon began. He announced
the various committees for the meet
ing, made the other necessary an-
nouncements which included the tel-
egram from Evangelist Crimm, stet-,
ing that his party would arrive In
time for the Monday night service.
Rev. a B. Crim has juet closed a
great meeting at Marshall, his home
town, and will deliver the sermon
here tonight.
The day services will be1) hold in
the Methodist church and the night
services at the open air tabernacle
Visitors from nearly all of the
surrounding communities were seen
in the audience last night.
Rev. J. G. M. Ramsey*, pastor of
the Presbyterian church; Rev. Philip
King, peetor ef the First Christian
church; Rev. Roper and J. R. Dod-
son took part in the prayer service
last night. Mrs. Lawrence Spark-
man sang a solo and Mis* Garvin
played the piano.
The usher* for ths meclmg will
be the regular church ushers for thl
various protestant bodies uniting in
this, great effort for evangelism.
mm
j
, !**
A gurly captain and a mutinous crew—plough in jL
the trackless lanes of the South Seas with a stranf
map to guide them to a pirate cache!
Aboard the vessel. A Girl, a Boy. a Negro Cook $|_
f Chinaman helper. What a crew! 1
And they are cast up on a desert island into the most
laughable and thrilling set of situations ever concocted
in the fertile brain of a Hollywood scenarist.
A JIMMIE ADAMS COMEDY—.
‘WHOA EMMA'
10 CENTS AND 25 CENTS
Young Wife Afraid
to Eat Anything
“1 was afraid to eat because 1 al-
ways had stomach trouble after-
ward*. Sine* taking Adlerika I can
eat and fjeel fine.” (signed) Mrs. A.
Howard. ONE spoonful Adleriku
removes GAS and often bring* sur-
prising relief to the stomach. Stops
that full, bloated feeling. Remove*
Aid waste matter from intestines
which you .vtver thought wa* it?
your <vstom. Excellent for obsti-
nate constipstt n. Askew & Buford,
druggists.
Whitens Min
WOMAN BECOMES
SEATTLE MAYOR
Reliable for Eczema,
Pimples and Blotches
Seattle, Wash.. June H.—Mr*.
Bertha K. Unde*, who in her cam-
paign promised a clean and m< ral
city, became Mayor o’ Seattle
Monday Her firs* official set was
to make Captain W. H. Scaring u. -
lice chief and Searing then L*U*d
a general order re-oi ganixing Ms de-
partment. 4 J.___'ll;-
The Mayor later appeared before
the City Council, of which she was
president until she resigned to be-
come Mayor, and formally ourtinod
her reform program.
The change of administration
from Dr. Edwin J. Brown to Mrs.
Landes was effected whin she ap-
peared in hi* office and he row and
made an address, assuring her of
hia co-operation. She thanked Die
retiring Mayor and then handed
Searipg his commission.
The many people here who have
gotten auch wonderful results from
Black and White OiotiMftt, and
§oap. for pimples, blotches, humps,
“breaking out,’’ ecrema, rath, itch-
ing, etc., arc proving them grati
tude by giving them the most whole
hearted and enthpsiastic word-of-
mouth publicity ever known.
The fact that Black and White
Ointment, and Soap, are already
selling at the phenomenal and un-
heard-of rate of mart than tort mil-
lion packages a veai, prove* louder
than words how topemUbl* they are
to people who hi i never to fort
been ahie to get re lie i from thoiT
skin troubles by using anything
else,
Black and White Ointment, and
Soap, are economically priced in
liberal size package- The &0c sire
Ointment contain- three times as
much a* the" 25c size. All dealers
have both the Ointment and the
Soap. f^I
Weigh 5 Pounds More
In Thirty Days
A life founded upop the rock,
Jesus Christ; character constructed
after the divine pattern, and fur-
nished with faith, hope and patience
alt enveloped, in the beautiful man-
tle of love, human and divine, wiff
be a blessing to two worlds, an^ will
receive the indellible stamp of God's
smiling approval.
Finally, my young friends, as you
stand upon the threshold of life,
faring the future with the buoyant
optimism of youth,,Jatermine to so
live that when your summon? comes
to join the Innumerable caravan
Ask Askew & Buford or any drug
gist for a box of McCoy's Cod Liver
Oil Compottnd Tablets. They cost
hut little, are sugar cuated and as
pleasant to take as candy. j*.
Skinny men «mi women take’ them
to speedily put on plenty of good
health
pose t
thin men _____ __
5 pounds or more in 30 days. As a
matter of fact, your druggist is au-
thorired to return your money if *you
don't take on 5 pounds in 30 days.
One thin women gained 15 pounds
six week*.
Be sure and ask for McCoy’s, the
original and genuine Cod Liver Ol!
Compound Tablet*— 00 taolets--60
Grove’s
Tasteless
GMH Tonic
it snreir a blessioa.”
Hundred* of others toil t|
perieare. , _____
; Take i spoonful of Dei
Tone tonight and*v«» will w
in* great. Sfo mote hiiinoi
pstioa. sluggishness, Iwadj
1 tom
ingur or wur Monu.h,
j say* if you do«$ hnd
‘ Tone acts better than hoy.
j your money is waiting for
cents.
The City National
Foaming "with Cthc action, ro-
mance and the mystery of the old
Spanish Main. Richard Taimadge
in “The Island of Hope.” Buford
Theatre Wednesday and Thursday.
Typewriter Peper far sale at this
Mils* , ‘ ^
The only harmhs
way to blench the *k
white is U> mix tl
jmi'C of two lemoi
■with three otuwe* i
Orchard White, who
any druggist will so
plv for a few Qrtl
Fhaks well in a bottl
and you have a who
quarter-pint of t!
most wonderftd ah
whitrner. softenrr and brautiAer. * .
Mtsasge this sweetly fragrant lean
blearh into the fftf-c neck, arms ai
hand*. It tan not irritate. Fuihi
stage beauties use it to bring that eles
youthful skin and rosy-whiterowplexioi
also as a freckle, sunburn md ti
bleach Von must mix tbit remark*!
lotion yourself. It can not be bong
rosdv to use because it seta lest imn
diately after it is prepared.
Thought Malaria
Still in System
Until Dodson » Liver Tone
Drove Out Quarts of Sour
Bile and Other Poisons
There are entire sections where ever
“Where the Fruit Belt Begins.’
A Body Builder for
Pale* Delicate
Children
one seem* to think they have malar
Other* believe they never fully got t
malarial poison out ol their system*.
Arnold Whiteson Myt: “For year,
took t-ahanel for the ache*, btliodene
headache, constipation and the deati
feeling associated with What we belie*
to tie malaria.
Latt year t heard about Dodson s U*
Too* and bought a bottle for a few cen
Man, man, what a Ood*ehd. In the m91
ing it drove out quarts of btaek, to
bile, I got bark my appetite for fw
braced right up and haven't had a si
j spell since. Whenever I feci a littl* _
ions or the stomach get* sour, on
; of Dodson s Liver Ton* is all *
Large enough to handle big accounts;
too large to appreciate small accol
tWE WANT YOUR BUSINESS
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Bagwell, J. S. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 125, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 9, 1926, newspaper, June 9, 1926; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth826310/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.