The Olney Enterprise (Olney, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, September 20, 1935 Page: 3 of 10
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H. H. HUNTER, Minister.
-o--:-
:hristian science serrvices
“Matter” is the subject of the
esson-sermon which will be read in
ill Churches of Christ, Scientist, on
Sunjtoej. September 22.
Tl/ej^lden text is: “Blow ye the
;rumpet in Zion, and sound an
xlarm in my holy mountain: let all
fhe inhabitants of the land tremble:
for the d^g of the Lord cometh, for
jfc is nigh at hand.” Joel 2:1.
| Among the citations which com-
prise the lesson-sermon is the fol-
Henry Keen.
Wherever Better-Dressed Women
Gather You’ll Find
Pra5fe©§§ sunidl Stoimyfer®®
* <s®ate ftSas winter
■
Friday, Sepember
193$.
THE OLNEY ENTERPRISE
PAGE THREE
This Sunday in Ac
mrmu
Bette Davis’ Home
METHODIST LEAGUE
MEMBERS ENJOY PICNIC ; jj TT/h'* 1?
The intermediate and senior classes I Ml US rr Hite F enCO
of the Methodist League enjoyed a} '-
picnic Tusday evning at the Amer-! Bette Davis, First National star,
ican Legion Park. Mrs. Gerald Groves j lives in the only house on Franklin
and Mrs. T. H. Bui’ton were spon- j Avenue in Hollywood with a low
sors for the party. I white fence around it.
[lowing from the Bible: “Ye shall
hear of wars and rumors of wars:
see that ye be not troubled: for all
these things must come to pass, but
the end is not yet.” Matt. 24:6.
The lesson-sermon includes also
the following passage from the
Christian Science textbook, “Science
and Health with Key to the Scrip-
tures” by Mary Baker Eddy: “This
material world is even now becom-
ing the arena for conflicting forces.
. . . These disturbances will con-
tinue until the end of error, when
all discord will be swallowed up in
spiritual Truth.” page 96.
-o-
METHODIST JUNIOR
CHOIR ORGANIZED
From a group of eighteen young
people Miss Fannie Noah assisted in
organizing a Junior Methodist Choir
At The Cumberland
Presbyterian Church
The revival meeting is now in
progress a the Cumberland Preby-
terian Church. Services are held
twice daily: Morning service at 10:00
o'clock and evening service at 7:45
o’clock. Rev. R. Q. Dyess of Lub-
bock, Texas is directing the music.
Each evening at 7:15 the Rev. Mr.
Dyess conducts young peoples meet-
ings. There seems to be much in-
terest manifested in these services
for the young people. An invitation
is extended to the young people of
the town to avail themselves of the
bene&l f^Iof these services. At each
eveing service Brother Dyess brings
a spiral message in song. The
rendertng of these special numbers
is greatly enjoyed by the audience. , ...
* ^ l aT,j at the church last Friday night. Miss
Brother Dyess has a good voice ana, . , ,. , ,,
, . . ,. , . , i Ruth Davis was chosen as director,
certainly smgs the gospel into the1 ,. , ,
, ■. , and will conduct practice hour each
hearts of those who hear him. _ . „ i on I
^ ., ... , ... „ , Sunday afternoon from 1:30 until
Fnday mght of tfa» .n’“ 12 :S0, assisted by Miss Noah as
flower night. Those who attend; other oflicers eIected were:
the service on Friday night are re- 1
, _ , , . ,, „ .r,.‘Miss Gwondolyn Wood, president;
quested to bring flowers for the ’ .
. . ■ . . , „„„ ! Mary Eleanor Clement, vice presi-
service: A flower service is a beau-i • ,
... , , , ,, - - i dent; Beverley Hollis, secretary and
tiful one and should prove inspira- , ’ J
, , ,, „ 4. a ___i Martha Burton, treasurer.
| tional to all those present. A cor- r ’
At the close of the meeting ice
| Cream furnished by the Senior Choir
; was served.
A picnic supper was served the
following: Helen Corley, Helen
Pyeatt, Martha Burton, Frances
Myers, Fleta Egan, Annie Ruth,
Maxine, Adelle and Bessie* Lee Wag-
goner, Mrs. Gerald Groves, Anita
Doyle, Maxine Ribble, June Ragle,
J. B. Lasater, Leon Wright, John
Henry McCarver and Mrs. Claud
Morrison of Ft. Worth.
WOMEN’S COUNCIL MEETS
The Women’s Council of the First
Christian Church met at the church
Monday afternoon at 3:00 o’clock.
This being their regular work day,
each division met separately, taking
up their own work projects.
Assembling together before dis-
missing, Mrs. Henry Groves, benevo
lent chairman, brought before the
“The Girl From 10th Avenue” at
the Olney Wednesday and Thursday
with matinee Wednesday, is based
on the powerful and successful stage
play by Hubert Henry Davis and
is the story of a spunky shop girl
who rescues a brilliant society man
from ruin.
There is an all star cast which
includes, beside Miss Davis, Ian
Hunter, Colin Clive, Alison Skip-
worth, John Eldredge, Phillip Reed,
Katherine Alexander and Helen
Jerome Eddy. Alfred E. Green
drected the picture from the screen
play by Charles Kenyon.
*-o-
Heart Disease
Austin, Sept. 16.—“Heart disease
ranks first in the list of killers to-
grodp the urgent need of collecting day, During the past thirty years
food and clothing to be sent to the
Juliette Fowler Home at Dallas this
week.
Seventeen were present.
dial welcome is extended to all.
lesson-sermon
all Churches of
; All young people of the Methodist
: Church are urged to join this choir,
! which will take part each Sunday in
on i the services of the church.
“Blow ye the
sound an
■ all
Arden Kirkpatrick, who joined
the navy last sunfnqer, came Satur-
day for a two w;^eks visit with his
parents, Mr. and j $lrs. A. J. Kirk-
patrick. Upon Arden’s return to
California he hopes to be on the
U. S. S. Astoria with his brother,
Hospital News
Walter Price of Archer City who
was injured in a car wreck is m
the hospital for medical care.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Shirley
Saturday, September 14th a ten
pound girl. Mrs. Shirley and baby
are doing nicely in the hospital.
Mrs. C. F. Rushing undewent a
major operation the 16th.
Lloyd Ogborn had a tonsellect-
omy Tuesday.
Was Hell Bent
For Heaven
it has been steadily increasing. Few
people ever, associate impairment of
this vital organ with diseased mouth
conditions. Yet in a very real man-
ner the health of the heart and its
consequent ability to do its work
properly can be definitely affected
by an unhealthy mouth,” states Dr.
John W. Brown, State Health Offi-
cer.
“While, of course, there are many
other couses for heart impairment
than diseased teeth, gums or tonsils,
there certainly is every good reason
to establish and maintain daily and
periodical prophylactic measures so
far as the mputh and teeth are con-
cerned. Not to do so merely adding
another menace to the heart already
beset with disease potentialities that
seem to be a part of present-day
life.
“If the individual will assume his
He had spentseven years in college 5 responsibility by consuming nourish-
and returned home with as many ling diet, keeping his mouth clean
degrees as a thermometer. (through daily brushing, and have a
As he turned a corner his car (regular inspection, undoubtedly a
swerved, turned a double somersault, j fair proportion of heart disease, not
went kersplash, kerplop kerboom, J to mention many minor ailments,
They picked him up and brought could be eliminated that have their
Modern Father
To His Daughter
(Clipped and sent in by a reader;
author and publisher unknown):
My Dear Daughter: You ask me
if I think your husband should stay
on in his present position at an
“adjusted” salary, but you you
forget to tell me what he would do
if he didn’t. You and he couldn’t
very well come here just now Your
brother, Sheridan’s salary has been
“reconsidered,” so he moved
his old room and brought his
wife.
Your sister, Eloise, telegraphed
next day that Wilfred had just been
offered a new contract that was an
insult, so your mother is airing out
her room. Wilfred never could
endure insults. Your sister, you will
recall, has been a private secretary.
She wrote last week that if any-
body thinks she is going to drop
the level of a common typist, th
are mistaken, so we expect her any
day.
What with these and the younger
children, I imagine that as long as
Rupert’s salary is merely being “ad-
justed” he had better stay. An
adjustment is nothing like a reduc-
tion. It is hard for me to keep up
with the new language of big busi-
ness, but as I understand it, an
“adjustment” is the equivalent of a
raise. Of course, Rupert wouldn’t
know that; he has been working only
since 1928; he should ask an old
timer to explain. what a raise is.
My own business is coming along
fine. It was sold on the courthouse
steps last Friday but there were no
bidders, so the sheriff let me keep
it. That makes the best month
since the upturn.
Your affectionate Father.—Ex.
Miss Lorice Horany who has been
in Archer City with her mother, Mrs.
Sam Horany, for several weeks, has
returned to Olney and has resumed
her duties as clerk in the Horany
Dry Goods Store.
Mr.
visited
Mr. an
him in.
The embalmer did a good job, he
looked so natural. The procession
was long. Mourning relatives and
friends filled all the pews. The
coffin lid was banked with flowers.
The sun streaming through the
stained glass windows fell slanting
on the beautiful floral display. The
pipe organ pealed forth that, grand
| old anthem, “We Are Coming Home.”
;The choir sang soft and sweet and
jlow.
j The minister’s prayer was elo-
1 quent and full of pathos. His eulogy
I over the deceased was a masterpiece.
iHe concluded by saying: “God had
! called him home.” At the inquest
the traffic cop testified “he was
going sixty miles an hour.” An-
other witness said he had a grin
on his face that extended from ear
to ear and he “lowed he was making
seventy.’*
If heaven was his home he ex-
changed his sport model for a pair
of wings.
If he was hell bent for heaven,
he sure was in a hurry to get there.
•May he rest in peace. There were
origin in
tions.”
diseased mouth condi-
357,000 Air Passengers
In Six Months Time
Today, when airlines carry 3,000
passengers, 14,000 lbs. of express
and close to 40,000 lbs of mail over
distances of 165,000 miles every
twenty-four hours with clock-work
precision, it seems strange that only
a single decade has passed since
commercial flying in America came
into its own.
In these days, airliners carry
more mail and roll up more mileage
in one month than they did in a
year back in that archaic pre-Lind-
bergh era. This despite the depres-
sion and the raw deal handed the
entire aeronautical industry by the
the New Deal.
During the first six months of
1935, air transport flying on rigid
time-table schedules through all
kinds of weather, day and night,
carried 357,000 passengers over dis-
tances ranging from short hops over
nw in —• - ** Lances ranging ouviv ^»—
pieces left of his car.—E. I.; gan Francisco Bay to long journeys
j Lazarus, Mt. Pleasant, Texas, in Dal-(to far away lands in South America.
las News.
School Room Answers
t They’re here in all their splendor. Rich woolens beau-
tifully trimmed in fine furs—Tailored styles that fit
| marvelously. Sizes to fit yoju regardless of your figure—
|style$4^iat instantly proclaim them to be leaders. Come
today and select yours. > Prices are really most mod-
erate. We’ll take pleasure in showing you through!
“A1 Smith is a famous scientist.”
“The vacuum is nothing shut up
j in a box.’’
“There are two parts to a sen-
tence, the subject and the predica-
ment.”
“To kill a butterfly, pinch its
borax.”
“The heart is an infernal.”
“The teeth are grind organs.”
“Nicotine is such a deadly poison
that a drop of it on the tail of a
dog would kill a man.”
“Geometry teaches us how to
bisect angels.”
“Gravitation is that if there were
none we would fly away.”
“Georgia was founded by people
who had been executed.”
“The purpose of the skeleton—to
hitch meat onto.’*
“Weapons of Indians—bow, ar-
row, tomahawk and warhoop.”
“Etc. is a sign used to make be-
lieve you know more than you do.”
“The equator is a menagerie lion
running around the center of the
earth.”
In addition, these planes carried
more than 2,000,000 lbs. of express
and almost 7,000,000 lbs of mail.
This impressive volume of pas-
sengers, mail and express was flown
over a total distance of almost 30,-
000,000 miles.
In the course of these flights air-
plane engines consumed a small
ocean of fuel—14,000,000 gallons of
gasoline and about 500,000 gallons
of oil.—Ex.
Man (getting a shave): “Barber,
will you please give me a glass of
water?”
Barber: “What’s the matter, a
little hair in your throat?”
: “No, I want to see if my
be good
Since 1931, Brazil has destroyed
35,121,000 bags of coffee—to keep
the surplus low.
Silva Knit ____^
Colors: black. rose, gold, gisgft?
18
Clint Burris
Protect with Paint!
Inside and outside, the protection of your
home, your garage or your business property
is largely dependent on good paint. We handle
American Paint of the finest quality, yet the
prices are surprisingly low. Let us make an
estimate of the cost of materials for your paint
*obs. You’ll find us most reasonable.
We carry a complete line of Paint, Wall
Paper and Glass. See us before you
buy. We appreciate your patronage.
B &L Paint & Paper Co.
Snappy Stuff
Bandits held up a nudist camp
near Gava, Spain, robbed the camp-
ers and burned their clothes they
had in lockers to prevent pursuit.
William J. Russell, postal em-
ployee of Athens, Ga., estimates that
he has ridden a bicycle 100,000
miles during 40 years of service.
By the will of Dr. Frank H. Cof-
fin, a dentist of Haverhill, Mass,
the debts of 94 former patients were
cancelled.
Leonard Reynolds, a 14-year-old
Illinois boy, was found working in
Chicago after running away from
home 15 times.
Marion Darnell of Atlanta has
sued a Chicago packing company for
8,000, alleging he broke a tooth on
& wire in a hot dog made by the
company.
-o-
Summer is a
Adding Years
of Health and Beauty
When our mothers and grandmothers were forty, they
were usually worn and prematurely old. The years lay
heavily on face and figure.
More often than not, a
large family of children
used up every ounce of en-
ergy, and seldom did you
find a mother who was
anything hut a “home
body.” Women in those
days were more than mid-
dle-aged at thirty-five and
forty.
During these last two dec-
ades health education,
proper diet, scientific care
before, during and after
child-birth, more sensible
and balanced living, have
done wonders for the av-
erage woman, in adding
years of health and beauty
to her life.
Women at thirty-five now
are at their best—they re-
tain their youth, beauty,
interest in life and sports,
and are far more compan-
ionable mothers, wives and
friends.
A regular yearly physical examination and a little co-
operation in following the Doctor’s advice, will add
more happy, healthy years to the life of every modern
woman—also true of the modern man.
No. 16 of a series of articles sponsored by:
MILLER DRUG COMPANY
PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS PHONE
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Warren, Len C. The Olney Enterprise (Olney, Tex.), Vol. 25, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, September 20, 1935, newspaper, September 20, 1935; Olney, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1148512/m1/3/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Olney Community Library.