The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 253, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 7, 1926 Page: 2 of 7
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currence* be*
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SATURDAY
"Cecil B.DeMUl?
■ presents u
IN V
ivchean
ySS3i;i||iS
. ,‘i I ^
r?M
, '
f
« /
/
u
l J
football *
grounds at Waco 1
& M.-Baylor against the
iss
im
Frank Fltppin b in Su'
tend, the funeral of J. D.
which will be held today.
' ' -sr
Miss Lyndell Well*, Mi** Bernice
Taylor and Mrs. Aubrey Stephen*
spent Saturday in Greenville.
Mr. and Mr*. Edgar Poor nttcnded
the funeral of J. D. Arthur in Saltillo
today. *
Billie McGill i* in Saltillo to attend
the funeral bf hi* brother-in-law, J.
D. Arthur. '■ ■, % m . p
■ ■■M ——«■*-l---—
Attend die great Dress
Sale this week. Searls
Dress Shop.
Shelton Cate*, who has been- sick
for the past several days, 1* reported
unimproved.
One of the “Let George Do If
comedies, will be the fun maker at
the Mission Monday and Tuesday.
KSgjgfe
Mias Annn^
WinnBboro for a"1
grandparent*. ?
Cotton Palaoe
day, Oct. 30,
Cadet Lieutenant C. M.
Sessum* of the A. A M. College re-
ceived a blow on the head, from the
effects of which he died the next
morning.
In order to understand these oc- "Thou Shalt Not Kill?” a reporter
tS lb. flour tacks at S
price, while they Uet.
Bakery.
'»?'
currences the public should keep In
mind a number of features of col
lege life which, whether desirable or
not, are none the less
facta.
The find: of these ia the heat of
loyalty to their teams and fnstitu
tiona which fires student bpdiwf a«
crucial games approach. Tni ten
sion is such that bodies
eru are like powder maga:
for instant explosion should any in
eident occur to set them off. It la
exactly this fact that makes college
athletic* an education In sportsman-
ship for th« students generally, and
it should be recognised that organ-
ised cheering Has done much to pro-
vide safety outlets W strained emo-
tions and that, largely because of it,
clashes are less frequent than for
merly.
The second ia that the practice
ha* grown usual to occupy the time
between the halve* of the game with
stunts, organised under the direction
of the yell leaders, as demonstra-
tions of spirit, and not infrequently
these stunts have partaken of the
nature of taunting the rival student
body. r i
Burlesque Starts Events.
The events of last Saturday may
then be considered to have begun
with a burlesque, ...aged by Baylor
students, or the calisthenics drill
frequently performed by the A. &
M. cadets at previous football games.
To the Baylor students it was only
mockery of other youhgsters like
maelves. To the A. A M. cadets
the appearance of making
the uniform they wear as a
trim
with
is charged
E. Chipps, leaned
the court roam
and, surrounded by newspaper .n v
and spectators, philosophised on kill-
ing libertines, gambling,, character
reading, the Scriptures, and a varie-
ty Of Subject*.
<‘How do you reconcile the killing
of Chipps with the commandment
Mrs. Sherry Thompson ha* return-
ed to Gainesville after a visit to her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Ashcroft.
Miss Maurine Dry is at home from
Commerce E. T. N. to spend' the
week-end.
- Great value* to
found, in Dresses
Searls Dress Shop.
Mr. and Mrs. I. B. McNatt
little son are spending the day
Dallas.
their military training,
sificance their rivals
Mr.
Mrs. Long
home
days here
Martha Ardis.
The number twenty Super-Hetero-
dyne, five-tube set, equal to any
eight-tube set. Make us prove it.
It’s'cheaper, too. The Radio Shop,
two doer, from Poet Office. Con-
nelly Street. Phone 31S.
CLASSIFIED ADS
CAR TRADE
senger 192JS
I have * five pas-
model Ford. Runs
fine, that 1 want to trade for
Coupe. I have accepted mission
work at Hollis, Okla.,' and must have
a closed car. See at once. A. L.
Eaves. (d29-2tc)
Miss Sybil Van Wey
nicely after undergoing
operation-Saturday.
is resting
a slight
Sulphur Springs B. Y. P. U. and
Sunday school workers of the First
Baptist church will go to Weaver
this afternoon to attend a county-
wide meeting of those two organisa-
tions.
08 lb. flour tack* at 5 cents, half
prica, while they lest. . Whiteway
Bakery.
Mrs. Ralph Waters of Wichita,
Kansas is here visiting her mother,
Mrs. D. A. Robinson.
Clarence and Morris Vanderalice
are spending the day with friends in
Texarkana .
Figure with me be-
ore buying Sasb and
Doors. 1 can save you
noney. W. L. Bryson.
rour doors west of First
State Bank, Main St.
lost—Small diamond set out of
ring. Return to News-Telegram for
reword. dtf
LOST—Cap off of Clarinet, at band
hall Wednesday night. Finder please
return to the Echo office. (dtf)
FOR RKNT-
Phone 132.
-A furnished apartment.
<d!7-tf)
FOR RENT—Furnished apartment
Clone in on Connally afreet. Call
660- . (dll-tf)
FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms,
private entrance, hot and cold water.
For further particulars phone 398 or
Mil at 638 Connally street. (12-tfc)
FOR RENT—3 unfurnished rooms
with all modern conveniences and
garage. Apply at No. 203 Garrison
Ave. d26-5p
FOR ROOM AND MEALS see Mrs,
W. R. Young, 160 Fore St. d28-3
FOR RENT—A four room house on
a paved street. Modern conven-
iences. Garage. Phone 169 or see
Roger Cambron.
<d29-3tp)
Mr*. Carl Morris and Miss Winnie
Byrd have returned from a visit with
relatives in Dallas.
Great values to
found in Dresses
Searls Dress Shop.
Misses Haael Flewharty and Ada
White will return to Dallas after
short visit here with homefolks.
asked him,
“That is not difficult,” the pastor
replied. “The New Testament corn-
significant mandment against killing means kill-
ing with hate. The reason my shootr
Ing of Chipps was not murder i» be-
cause my bullet* were not winged
with hate back of them. The shoot-
ing was only an incident in a long
continuity of event*.. You can see by
the evidence already given in this
case what was the nature of those
events,” „ > 4' '
The pastor revealed the mean* by
which he will pick hi* jury,
“I depend on my own intuition
largely in picking men,” he said.
“That is, I call it intuition. I don’t
know what it is, not being a psychol-
ogist. It’s just something in me that
warns me, I guess.’'
“Did you see anybody bn the ve-
nire you have rejected in that man-
ner?” he was asked.
“Certainly,” he responded prompt-
ly. “I hadn’t been in the court
room five minutes when I had pick-
ed three men whom I would • not
have Jet on the jury under any cir-
cumstances.”
“Did you know them?”
“Not at all. It was the first time
I had ever seen them. One of them
sat with his head bowed forward^
looking up through his eyebrows ill
the time. I wouldn’t pick a man like
that at all.”
Norris then went on to say that
he could pick out a poker player
from a crowd by watching hit eyes
and actions.
“Another sort of man I wouldn’t
let on my jury would be one of a
lecherous disposition,” he continu-
ed. “I could tell them easily. Put a
row of twelve men down anywhere
and I can pick out the libertines in a
moment. If a pretty woman walks
by, the libertines will look at her
legs first, then at the rest of her
body.’’
Asked whom he considered had
"“■ p the first battle of strategy in
-isc, he said:
indy
Baptrelt that you read agaia
DR!Sqp and Mordccai."
CHARfTfyl a reportori-
JOE BOH* of Haman
Assistirthere Ha-
he
paint-
vhich were
young
*XCard*
\»t-
Will have man at City
after 8th to receive and receipt
sanitary bills. Please pay up anU«^ Qf you who know your
oblige. John T. White, Snnitary
Commissioner. (d3l-2tp)
PARDON QUIZ TO BE .
IN NOVEMBER
Austin, Texas, Oct. 30,-
.............
NORRIS TRIAL
JANUARY 1DTH IN
* ,
AUSTIN COURT
Austin, Texas, Nov. 4.—An agree-
ment reached Thursday afternoon
between counsel for the State and
Dayton Moses and Marvin Simpson,
counsel for the defense of the Rev.
J. Frank Norris, in his trial to he
held here during the next term of
court, designated that the trial would
open Jan. to, in the Travis County
District Court. The agreement was
reached after a conference of sev-
eral minutes by the opposing attor-
neys with Sam Sayers and John
Shelton yielding to Moses’ request
for the date. ! ~ •
Until late Thursday, Norris’coun-
sel stated that no local attorneys
had been retained to aid in the fight
to clear him of charges growing out
of the slaying of D. E, Chipps, Fort
Worth lumber man. Several firms
are being mentioned, however, and
a selection will probably be made
before the end of the week.
In accordance with an old custom
in Travis county, the venire list of
600 names will not be given to the
lawyer* until two days before the
trial opens. The list will be complet-
ed by the Hurt and given out Fri-
day at 10 n. m., it was stated by
County^Tlerk Philquist, who was
present. Moses contended that the
list should be available sooner, but
was overruled.
VK ■
:, 'c\
Tf|E
RHFOBI THEATRE
FRIDAY and SATURDAY
INDIGESTION
North Carolina Lady Says Sht
Had As Awful Time With
Indigestion, Jill She Took
Black-Draught.
RIDE ’EM COWBOY! RIDE LIKE FUR
m
An amazing eom-
plication of
lightning speed
incidents! Feud
plots —diabolical
schemes — «
great rodeo
and the discovery!
of an oil well! A|
KNOCKOUT!
HID
ALSO LIGE CONLY, IN—
"THE XING OF THE KITCHEN"
10 CENTS and 25c
Pilot Mountain, N. C.—'“For sever-
al years I suffered with a bad case
of chronic indigestion,” says Mr*.
Sam C. Inman, of this place. “I
had bad spells with my stomach.
At times I had severe pains in my
right aide. My stomach would get
upset and I would have an awful
time. It seemed like everything
I ate disagreed with me. I was in
> disagreed
pretty bad shape.
“Sy husband had been using Theck
'[-Draught •*"-................“*-~
ion. He
Mmcs. Minnie Askew and .1. S.
Bagwell ore in Greenville attending
* district conference of the Baptist
W. M. U.
-Jls 5Wge
A Hal Roach comedy tha
riot—“There Goes the Bride,
sion Friday and Saturday.
TAKE NOTICE
:
ford’s Black-Draught for aomo time
for indigestion. He had spello of it
too, so he suggested that I try
Black-Draught I took some from
hia box, just to see if it would help
me, and I found it was the vety
thing for my trouble. It did me a
great deal of good. My condition
was in
const!)
from t .
was much better.
“We keep Black-Draught in the
all the time, whenever
1
35
f
IpCKE^
I
1 htnioo all the time.
by the House investigating ce#g ofT
tee into the pardon record of L‘-^joa If fa » ■pjnndi.fnudirlnn
Miriam A. Ferguson is not expected am glad to say so.”
ad-
Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Sherwood will
leave today for Wichita Fall* to at-
tend the annual session of the North
Texas Conference of which Mr.
Sherwood b the treasurer. They
will be gone mo*t of the week.
He sold his best horse to save an
unknown girl from a terrible fate
then found she hud deceived him. Sec
how Art Acord breaks loose after
that in “The Ridin’ Rascal” if you
like excitement. New Buford Mon-
day and Tuesday.
to get under way today before
journment is taken until Nov. 8.
It is expected additional witnesses
will be heard in connection with the
probe into the highway department
or text hook commission. The com-
mittee then will adjourn for ten days
to ussimulate testimony already ta-
ken and lay plans for the next ses-
sion.
\OW4M
HAM
Watch Repair Pricaa Cull’
Main Springs put in (was $2.0(1
. Now—____........—j
Watches Cleaned (was $200)
Now : . r.......
Balance Staffs put in (was
Now .......
Balance Jewels put in (was $2.t
Now ____________ ______... ;
Roller Jewel* put in (was $2.0(
Now ... ....._________ 1
Clocks Cleaned and repaired..!
Watch Cyrutals (was 50c) Now
All Watch’ work done uni
strict guarantee.
NC-IJ3
RATHER BE A BOOSTER
I'd rather be a booster,
The smallest one in town,*
Than the biggest knockew
And try to tear it down.
loif by dealers who handle
QUALITY MEATS
R. S. BARRETT
Shop is located in J. K. Lewis' 1
Store, 217 Main Street
Sulphur Springs, Tex.
Our City*.
ing, fishing
reservoir.
We will pros,
lators.
d2tl-2 CIT
Mrs. George Craghead and sons,
John Lloyd and J. B., have returned
from a visit with relatives in Weston
and McKinney.
Prof, and Mrs. Jimmie Amspiger
of Wolfe City are hero for a short,
visit with her parents, Mr. and ^Irs.
Jim Thomas.
Radios, batteries, tubas, aerials,
transformers. Wa call for and de-
liver, Tha Radio Shop, two doors
from Post Office, on Connally Street.
&;
V”.'. !*
WORK AT HOME $8.00 a dosen
making scarfs. Experience unneces-
sary. No canvassing. Particulars
for stamp. Linnit Service, Inc. 191,
Lynn, Mass. <d3l-ltp)
Member* of the Junior Class of the
high school were entertained with a
Hallowe'en party on Saturday even-
ing at the Morris place on College
street.
Hi f®
MAN wanted to distribute our g°°d«
in country or city. Bo independent,
have a business of your own with
steally income from the start We
extend credit to you. We train you
.....no experience needed. McConnon
& Co., Dept. B-421, Winona. Minn.
(d81-ltp)
m RENT--One of the best gro-
cery stands in town, across from
hotel. Edward Bergin. (d31 -tf)
Elton and Mis* Maude Bullock of
Dallas are spending the week-end
here with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Silas Bullock.
FOR RENT—Seven-room house close
in on Connally street. Vacant Dec.
1. Miss Ola Johnson. (d31-3tjO
IK
FOR SALE-Now is a good time to
put out your strawberries. I hav#
amounts,
921
1 8l. Phone 64i.(d31-3tp)
Stewarl-Warner Matched Unit
Radios. The only Matched Unit
Radio, with outside aerial on the
market. Tho Radio Shop, two doors
from Post Office, Connelly Street.
Phene 318,
I'd rather be a booster.
And only boost u mite,
Than he a knocker, knocking.
At everything in sight.
Climbing into a runaway stage
from a galloping horse to save a
pretty girl, b one of the many
stunts Art Acord exhibits in "The
Ridin' Rascal.” New Buford Mon-
day and Tuesday.
I'd rather be a booster,
And wear a pleasant smile
Than be a grouchy knocker
Complaining all the while.
it is on-et handier
I’d rather he a booster,
With purpose good and true,
Than ait around a-knocking—
Now, really, wouldn't you?
—Exchange.
He couldn’t see a helpless girl
forced into a dance hall and *0 "The
Ridin’ Rascal” began a battle that
will give you one wonderful hour of
thrill*. New Buford Monday and
Tuesday.
J. V. DeFonl of Sherman is visit-
ing relatives here. Mrs. DsFord and
little son have been here for the
past week.
See the Console Model, one dial,
matched ufcit Stewert-Worner Radio
with the wonderful new speeker.
Tke Radio Skop, two door. from
Pott Office, Connelly Street. Phone
318.
Buy a Fall Dress at
low price. Searls Dress
ShopiSll
A number of Sulphur Springs Ma-
sons will go to Saltillo this morning
to attend the funeral of J. D. Ar-
thur, who will be buried at 11
o’clock at Old Saltillo, whpre the
Masonic lodge will take part in the
service*. -
Mis* Josephine Wibon went to
Dallas Friday to visit her sister,
Ellen, in S. M.‘ U, and went on to
Wtuo Saturday to see the big game
between S. M. U. and Waco, and to
spend several day* with former
school friends.
BURLESON BOY HURT FRIDAY
Greenville, Texas, Oct. 30,—
Steve Farmer, Burleson College stu-
dent, was seriously injured in an
automobile crash just south of Cad-
do Mills on the Dallas highway, Fri-
day morning when he wa* en route
to Dallas with a party of Burleaon
students, to attend the Rurleson
College S. M. U. Freshman game
which was to have been played that
afternoon.
It is feared that the injuries of
young Farmer are internal and of a
serious nature. At a late hour Friday
night he was still in a semi-conscious
condition.
If an unkind word appe
File the tiling away.
If some novelty in jeers,
File the thing away.
If sonic clever little bit
of sharp and pointed wit,
dairying a sting with it-
File the thing away.
If some hit of gossip coniej
File theh thing away.
Scandalously spicy crumbj
File the thing away.
If suapicton comes to yoil
That you mrighbor isn'tK
Let me tell you what to
File the thing away.
Do this for a little whilej
Then go out and burn t
—John Kerdiek Bangs in
Magazine.
warn
i&g
$120,000 LOSS IN COTTI
J. E. Jennings went to Mount Ver-
non Friday morning to attend the
funeral of hia -sister, Mrs. Lester
French. He remained over Sunday
to attend the funeral in Saltillo of
his brother-in-law, J. D. Arthur, who
died Friday, a short time after at-
tending the funeral of Mrs. French.
Bryan, Texas, Oct. 29.
rence cotton warehouse
2.000 bales of cotton, wi
Friday morning at 3 o’clock
cotton is placed at $120,0'
mated to be 75 per cent,
The 25 per cent uninsured
by farmers holding cotton wi
insurance on It.
The warehouse covered a
square, was built of corrugat-
and belonged to the G. S. fat
tate. The loss on building W
000, with $4,000 insurance.
The firm opened for busir
usual Friday morning at
weigh cotton in the street
the burned lots until sheds
erected.
Corrugated Iron $4.50
per square. W. L. Bry-
son. Four doors west
of First State Bank,
Main Street. <
GOV. SMITH PLANS TO WIN BY
HALF MILLION VOTES
New York, Oct. 30.—Governor
Smith expects to carry greater New
York by half a million. Miils is
counting 400,000 up state, a major-
ity to insure a Republican victory.
Wf. BELIEVE the
advantages of the soft
foil package are so
many, ajnd its econ-
omy so great, that
we have elected to
pack one of our finest
pipe tobaccos in this
bandy form to retail
at ten cents.
VALUE OF FRIENDS
Have you a friend whose 1'
you would not question, who t"
seems to understand, who dr*
expert more of yon than ym)
your capacity to be, who is i*
m
'
,
,V*
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Bagwell, J. S. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 253, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 7, 1926, newspaper, November 7, 1926; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth826326/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.