Winnsboro Weekly News (Winnsboro, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 11, 1923 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
WINNSBORO WEEKLY HEWS JANUARY 11. 1023. _
' BAPTIST HARMONY
OF COURSE DORIS WON OUT s. s. AND B. Y. P. U.
WK«1 Was Thar* for Mother to Say
In tlio Pmo of Ouch an
Argument?
At Quitman Baptist church,
Saturday, Satuid.:y night and
Sunday, January 13th and 14th
Ttwj had be«B chatting ainr# Miter- Saturday
ta( ibe but, but the Woman, who ul ,
«ppo ite th«n on top. heurO nothini 7 .'00 p. .in.. Congregational
Molly «'>«<! until (Jrant'a monument singing.
reached. i 7:20—Special music, by the
without taxing her hen ring in th« Qujtman Ladies Quartette,
ist ti.« Woman i«.rn«i that thej 7:25—-Address, Plans, and
f"r"';r tle Purposes oi this Organization.
vanrity (for univ«*ri.i'y <1j} er« , „
■*nti< u«-(l itjrnln anl a$:iin) who *rer« ~ Aj.^"
nrvlHitln^ the city uf'.er a number ot « *40—Texas Baptists on til*'
yearn | Screen, by Coleman Craig, Dal-
-i don't think th<> pirt* of thi cm- las.—This number is a Sterop-
t«ry hiii *ver «in.i f.>r i..nj tjcan lecture showing our great
■*Hin." remarked ti, ..n* ;a r. e denominational institutions,
laaat
Listen Boys
chief blacksmith
2:35—Written Reports from
all the B. Y. P. Us—alive, dead
^^More ^ic-to be at J W. JotliS* 4 Son.. 1,
,„nnl£r I * >11 do all the plow work. Come (
3^00—Address—The teach- and see me and tell your friends,
ing Service of the church-by to come. We Aid.kinfctf uu
Rev. M. T. Tucker, Instructor repamng. We
in Burleson college. points « ' ' ' voU
3:30—Written reports from of plow 3 that w« tan >ive .
•ill Sunday schools. Good, l>ad 1 ' "a-
and indifferent.
Repwts of committees and
selection of time and piacc for
our next meeting.
I TX'KI) IN 3 COUNTIES
BUT NEVER MOVED
R. L. Smith.
Notice to Hunters
Geo. C. Alexander.
Chairman Program Com.
No hunting albwed on my
premises. Trespassers will be
prosecuted . J. P. Mills.
Mrs. Hamon is Divorced v.'e the undersigned take this
From Second iHusbrind , ^0(| 0f notifying the public
that we will not allow an> uiru
Chicago, Jan. 7.—A son. ft aUJ1ting on our lands.
daughter and a friend of the j. Tom Smith. Bob O'Shields,
«pr<n. E\Hjnv want. ,: to n. ke thi« a Introduction of Entertain- latter gave testimony in Su- L. Martin, Miller Mitchell, J,
uttie than other *ina. nient committees and Benedic- nerior Court this afternoon that ^ • "elch.
Hb told her that the fashion waa for , , . w T ,
hwre^si-tf the length. But Doris wat * * Sunday | resulted in Mrs. Jake Hai.. i nuttters ai'e warned not t(
•borate I IRohrer getting a divorce and trespass up^n any of our land
"Kftnlnda n.e of what Kv.'.vn ? ^ Mj . ^ t
wmn trtlmg u Ji *t I cam* 0 lV. 0 ,
•way. She waa making a aklrt for hei 7Special ^'ng, \> ..Ke
4aufctit«r, r> ri*. Everything except up Baptists, by Quitman H, x.
the eorrvet length ho i hwn decided P. Us.
Sunday
'Evelyn. ,ou know, generally letsj 9:45 S. S.. Our slogan is: ^e returo of" the name "Ha- w!STTuggie, cfen"Tuggle7
■ h.ve ..er w.y iu m.u.n. of dr^s. 100 ^ cent present and on „ „ The witnesses testified |
bat this Uina s|je argued and Dorla time ! ^,on'
borsf Into team. •!!«• fair, mniin.' aha . * m„«,jc j to abuses by William Rohrer.
pleaded. 'Honest Injun, now wlilrh do ,, opetuu iiiu iu. . |
7m. think I ahooid take—tio- i:<!vice of H :00 a. m.—Dr. ?. M. McCon- Mrs. Hamon refused ahmon>
«oe mother or of tw««nty girur" i nell, President of Burleson col- at the behest of her son, wIm
"And what happenedr lege, Greenville, will speak. | told the court that he would
"oh. mother shortened the skirt, of 12:00 - 1:45—Dinner and So- not have her take a cent from
eoorae."—-Exchange.
Hunting on my land is for-
bidden and those djing so will
be treated as trespassers and
prosecuted according to law.
J. T. Hill.
cial hour.—Let's eat, drink and anyone who had mistreated hn'
lie jolly. Laugh and grow fat;
HISTORIC HOME FOR AMERICA? j> Thomas, Master of Cere-
t monies
foaaibility That Dwelling in Which
Mllaa Standlah Waa 8orn May
Bt Brought Here.
as Rhorer did.
Mrs. Hamon inherited $1.-
,400,000 from Jake Hamon,
1:45 p. m.—Devotional—Guy .whom Clara Smith slew in Aid- d'' vy Rmun
Sisk of Emory, Leader. (more, Okla. Clara Hamon was T'
1:55—Address, "Before and anacquitted.
after a Real Training School in,
the Church"—by Miss Lomaj No Worms in a Healthy Child
We forbid any hunting of any
kind on any of our lands.
W. E. Henry, R. E. McCnv-
an, W. L. Dumas, 0. T. Holt,
S. P. Snow. W.
The hero of Lonrfrllow'* poem.
Th« Couriahlp of MIleA Standlah,"
waa a mil lilatorlcnl fhnfrt<"ter. w'10 I Ivelley Mineola ' All children troubled with Worms have an an-
waa horn In Lancashire, England, I o.i'n i^n(r ' u,. SnlnVmr color, which indK«te poor Wood, and n a
|f|ll i ^.1U—DOng, ouipnui role, there U more or le stomach diwirhaaif
nhout l. S|. It U now ««K- c„r:n?s *ri Quartette GROVES TASTELESS chill TOKIC «lwn i*«u erl
tented tl.Mt the house where h- u na , 7 c V„v- lor two or three weeks wiU enrich The bl«" . in
bom should he tranMporte<l to New - :<-"—AdflrPSS, ine DerMCe ^vc the dicestion. and act as a General Stm -itl;-
■MUml ic i, «v™ .i,hu of th€ local church in Fostering
alx months the four rooms of the, the S. S. and B. Y. P. Us, '
Standlnh homo now loonteii in the par-
ish of Htnndlsh, near Wl(tan, Lnn-
enahlrp, Knjrlnnd. will he fit led Into the
borne for aome United Siute* citizen
whofc familjr history jjoea buck to
Majfloufi (Uo . 'Hie Ktiindlsli house
lias been occupied by the Stundlsh
fani!l> since the Norman conquest.
One of the ancestral stately homes of
Snglnnd Is Just now bain# tnken down
and carried across the Atlantic to be
•et up atone by stone somewhere In
the Stutt'8. Now If history belonging
to these ancient buildings could also
be transferred to the United States,
What a heap of renown that enterpris-
ing nation could collect and own?—
Hon (real Family Herald.
Rodent Was the Burglar.
A New \t>ik Chinaman seat un ur-
gent cull to detective headquarter*
complaining that had been stolen
from him. The Chink, who conducts
s rt-ataurnut, told the detectives he
suspe. ted a colored employee, stating
he hid the money in his cellar, but
tld not locate It. A detective sug-
w.-ted a search of the cellar. The
detectives made a careful survey,
without results. As they turned to
abandon their search, one of them
noticed a small bundle of paper move
•cross the cellar fl .or. Springing up-
on the olilect, h .n'aced his foot full
rpoii It. The bundle ceased to move,
hot Its moving force—® husky rat—
Vanished Into a nearby hole. Nine
hundred dollars In bills was In the
bundle, thus accidentally clearing up
what might have been a baffling mys-
tery.
Diplomatic Corps Cared For.
Other Washlngtonlans may shiver
with the cold this winter, owing to the
coal shortage, but the administration
has seen to it that the 400 persons In
the diplomatic corps will not suffer,
owing to a lack of fuel. Many of the
diplomats come from countries where
artificial bent In homes Is almost un-
known and. Indeed, unnecessary, and
worried about their empty coal bins
The State department has given there
precedence over others, thus emphasis-
ing the entente cordlale. It Is only In
recent years that the English and the
Scotch have known the comfort of
steam heat, the sea coal flre, as they
call It, burned In open grates, being
the only method of heating their
homes.—Washington Star.
Something He Can Teach Her.
"I simply couldn't teach my wife to
drive the car. Cave It up and let
somebody else do It."
"Well?"
"Same with bridge She wouldn't
listen to me at all. Hired a tutor for
her"
"Well?"
•Dancing was nnofher art we
learned separately. Always wrangled
when we trlpd the new steps together,
but. at that, there's one thing she's
willing to let me teach her."
**Wbat la that?"
"She Insists that I must teach her
how to blow cigarette smoke through
bar nose."
Martens Raised In Captivity.
The raising of martens In captivity
la now commercially possible as a re-
sult of the discovery of their breeding
season by naturaliats of the biological
•urvsy of the United States Depart-
ment of Agriculture. These vslusble
tur bearers mate late In July and In
Aaguat, and appear to have a gestation
partod of eight months, much longer
than meat animals of the aame group.
It was formerly thought that their
breeding season waa In the fall ev
wU>t«r. the young being born In the
to perf-ct Pl/Nnant to taVe. tto
.. .
Tutt's Pills
Tb® first d<M« Astonifthea the invalid,
ffivinir immediate relief, rrguUling
bowel* and digestive organs, inducing
GOOD DIGESTION
D M. Foe moved this week
to Hamlin. He told the editor;
that he was bom 02 years;
a-, on the place lie is leaving
and that he had never moved—
I,ut had lived in three different
rounties in Texas; first Red
River, then Titus and last
Franklin. His lx>y« ™oye,d
west and he and Mrs. I oe fol-
lowed, hut still own the old
place and will come back if j
they don't like the west.—Mt.
Vernon Herald.
To Cure n Cold In (hie Day
CnM LAXATIVE BROMO 'J"1NINC (TabletO ft
'toi> tlie Louiih and Meuilachc and work*
Cold! E. W. GR'jVE S eUoatwo ou each lw. 30e
Read want ads
£0$
] AMf RKAN TOCACCO £01
unmnTrm'
fltmmwHUmnmm
Read want ads]
Overpowering
Strength
Qfr«nar/A
Th r«i'« «r sntold •atUfactiaa Is tS« coikImi-
n« lupericr ^hriicol power. It kiU« dcubtaad 1
^ l mr i,d. lU«ir elites. siv« life la coarse* aatf
i aenfidruce
Merr knaiwl«dr lha row •t «o«th, mantal I
cal, it Osuul <u the occatton, i>Uc i yau
ii: a -oLr oI ffmlv, protaciad irma
FOKC£, It a iiib t «r rabuildar
tvaVn n.n and woman
la anable* lh.ni to
•at'Juc and ovarridalba
fciHt t v*h!cH itand in thairwa* la
a field wa Mirger development aud
wid"'r'-'utne**. hf k-uilii'.*g up witfe
in lueir oof lea * surplus oi nn ergy
f'CHCL ' o>d bv r •/•'eb . e
«riifvuli everriuhmre. and it
mooJ lot m«n, worn*ra mna
Maket
Sirtnzth
For Sale by R. N. Robertson
SrsHi.,
•Liti.
L.
ItgJKXt
m
'3PS
f m
p.
^ 4
/jLi
Oi
Protect Your I from
the World's Worst Vandals
^pHEIR names are Wear. Warp, and Rot.
They steal, they mar, they bend, they break.
They leave behind them a trail of ugliness and ruin.
Fire does far less damage uian they.
At a hundred places in your home where there are
bare, or poorly painted surfaces, these vandals are
robbing you night and day.
Stop their destructiveness! Shield your property!
Protect your walls, floors and furniture with paint
and varnish products. As long as the paint and
varnish coating is sound, Wear, Warp, and Rot are
powerless.
The cost of painting is trivial compared with the loss
caused by this constant vandalism. And when you
the £« !£ V3rmSh products' buy only the best, as
the better the paint the greater the return.
bv At IM0!",?' are time-tested and Provcn, backed
factoring conce^nX'u! S.
The Rexall Drug Sti
Prevent thi« Destruction by Usinir
SSITSSS v*rnish.
DEV.™™ finish. Z&ZZ Artists;
WINNSBORO,
TEXAS
WINNSBORO,
TEXAS
i|
H
r|
in
-
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 two 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.
Weir, Homer R. Winnsboro Weekly News (Winnsboro, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 11, 1923, newspaper, January 11, 1923; Winnsboro, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth268256/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Mineola Memorial Library.