The Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, May 22, 1942 Page: 2 of 4
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THE CARROLLTON CHRONICLE, CARROLLTON, TEXAS FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1942
Mrs. Jacque Breedlove has accepted
R clerical position with North American
Aviation at Grand Prairie.
Miss Margie Bonhan of Dallas vis-
ited Sunday with Miss Katherine Mad-
dox.
Mr. and Mrs. Elous McLester and
■on of Farmers Branch visited here
Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hill.
Miss Connie Gammon and Mrs. Doug-
las Gammon and little son visited with
Mr. and Mrs. Jess Gammon Sunday.
FOR HER
BOXED STATIONERY
BOXED HANDKERCHIEFS
UNDERWEAR:
SLIPS, STEPINS, PANTIES
AND BRASSIERES
PURSES—HOSIERY:
HEAD HANDKERCHIEFS AND
VARIOUS OTHER USEFUL
AND APPRECIATIVE GUTS
Misses Bobbie and Bettie Jo Hill
spent last weekend in Dallas visiting
in the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. A.
Mackey.
Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Adkins had as
their visitors from Tuesday until Thurs-
day of this week, Mr. and Mrs. W. N.
Adkins and daughter, Miss Yvonne and
Mrs. Zelrna Whitney and little daughter,
Cora Eugene of Eliasville, Texas.
Roy Sublett Jr. and Jerry Chambers
of De Ridder, La., spent from Monday
until Wednesday here with relatives.
FOR HIM
SHORT TOP AND REGULAR
LENGTH SOCKS
HANDKERCHIEFS
BILL FOLDS
NECKWEAR
UNDERWEAR
BELTS I
RAZORS
POCKET KNIVES
AND MANY OTHER ITEMS’C v
TO SELECT FROM
Mrs. H. T. Whitlock, who recently
underwent an operation in a Dallas hos-
pital is improving nicely.
Mrs. Frank Good spent the first of the
week in a Dallas hospital. She is able
to be home at present.
W. C. McAdams, father of Mrs. F. H.
McMurray and Mrs. C. D. Scott, a sister,
of Point, Texas, and Mr. and . Mi*#
F. P. Scott of Lone Oak were Sunday
guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs.
F. H. McMurray.
J. M. Shelton of Baird, Texas, is
here for a two weeks visit* with his
daughter, Mrs. J. H. Anderson and fam-
ily.
Plaza Theatre
AIR-CONDITIONED
A Good Show EVERY Night
THURSDAY and FRIDAY
“RIDE ’EM COWBOY”
BUD ABBOTT LOU COSTELLO
SATURDAY
“DOWN MEXICO WAY”
GENE AUTRY
SUNDAY MATINEE, MONDAY
“JOHNNY EAGER”
ROBERT TAYLOR LANA TURNER
TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY
“SOUTH OF TAHITI”
BRIAN DONLEVY
SOG3088G8SOC
Mr. and Mrs. E P. Berry hill and
son, Eugene, and Mrs. Evelyn Orten
of Dallas visited in Bonham Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Berryphill.
Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Kelley
Tuesday were Mrs. George Kelley, his
mother; Ensign and Mrs. Woodie L.
Kelley, a brother and sister-in-law; and
Mrs. W. L. Guthrie, all of Commerce.
Enscign Kelley was enroute to Chicago
for training at Northwestern University
there. He has recently been commission-
ed ensign in the United States Naval
Reserve.
Mrs. Jake Nyfeler of Dallas spent
last weekend here with Mr. and Mrs.
John Nyfeler.
Miss Lois Thompson of Dallas was
visiting in Carrollton Monday with her
aunt, Mrs. W. H. Perry.
THE CHRONICLE
J. EDWIN HARVEY
Editor & Publisher
Published At Carrollton, Texas
Every Friday
Member of North and East Texas and
Dallas County Press Associations
Entered at the poatofflce at Car-
rollton, Texas, as second-class matter
mder the Act of Congress, March 8,
"79.
Mr. and Mrs. F. I. Sorrells of Dal-
las were visiting here Sunday afternoon
with Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Jackson
and also attended evening services at
the First Baptist church.
BEE USFOR YOUR GRADUATION GIFTS AND GRADUATION CARDS
—NHW GOODS—
We are getting in new items every few days. We invite you
to visit os for your Variety Store needs.
Sewell’s Variety Store
CARROLLTON
TEXAS
C.IcHujAatu&dUmA-
SAaducdet o$ 1942
You are to be highly commended on having attained
your precent educational goal.
We know that you are eager to put your theories to a
practical test. In this undertaking we wish you success.
A & P FOOD STORE II
SAaduation
Natural Gas in the Gulf South today was
planned and provided for years ago. Fortu-
nately this farsighted planning has made
possible this efficient fuel for war produc-
tion now.
It’s a big undertaking to locate, produce
and deliver a bontinuous dependable supply
of Natural Gas for more than three hundred
cities and towns and to industries in the
Gulf South. It takes careful planning in
advance to anticipate the needs of the
future. It takes, too, the fine skill and
knowledge of engineers, draftsmen, sur-
veyors, prospecting and drilling crews and
many other workers. All of these men work
YEARS AHEAD of today’s needs.
This has been made possible by seasoned
management—men with vision—men with
the ability to measure tomorrow’s require-
ments today. Because of this preparedness
your Natural Gas Service is not only
DEPENDABLE today, but is efficiently
serving industry with a minimum use of
critical materials—materials vitally needed
for production of guns, battleships, and
other implements of war.
k W /EROLL UP YOUR SLEEVES
Barrel AMERICA'S FAST-GROWING INDUSTRIAL AREA
FOR BOTH WAR AND PEACETIME PRODUCTION
BUY U. S. SAYINGS BONDS AND STAMPS . . . HELP WIN THE WAR!
UNITED GAS P/PE LINE COMPANY
0rS AND ASSOCIATED COMPANIES _
DEPENDABLE NATURAL GAS SERVICE POESNT JUST HAPPEN
IMPROVED
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL!
CUNDAY I
Ochool Lesson
Lesson for May 24
THURSDAY: THE LAST DAY
WITH THE DISCIPLES
LESSON TEXT—Luke 22:14-30.
GOLDEN TEXT—This do in remembrance
of me.—Luke 22:19.
The last day! How quickly it:
comes, and how fleeting yet mean-
ingful its moments.
We do not know what our Lord
did on Wednesday of Passion Week.
In all probability He remained in
Bethany to rest in fellowship with
His friends. 6urely He needed that
day of quiet, for that which had gone
before, difficult and strenuous as it
had been, was as nothing to that
which lay before Him.
Late on Thursday He and His dis-
ciples came to the upper room
where Peter and John had already
made preparation for the observ-
ance of the Passover (Luke 22:8).
This feast had (since that great and
awful night of Israel’s redemption
out of Egypt's bondage) pointed for-
ward to the Christ and to His cross
as the fulfillment of the type of re-
demption by the shedding of blood.
But now the hour had come for Him
to give Himself in that death, and so
He set aside the Passover (because
it has been fulfilled) to establish the
great Christian feast of remem-
brance—the Lord’s table, which now
shows forth His death till He come.
I. The Final Passover (w. 14-18).
Our Lord looked forward with in-
tense desire to the Passover which
He now observed with His disciples,
for it was the last celebration of
that feast recognized by God. All
that it had foreshadowed of deliv-
erance and hope was fulfilled in Him
who now sat at the table. He had
moved forward with resolute pur-
pose to this day when His mission
on earth was to be accomplished,
and He was to become the Chris-
tian’s Passover lamb (I Cor. 5:7).
The fact that He had looked for-
ward to it with desire does not mini-
mize the deep darkness of either
Gethsemane or Calvary. Remem-
ber that, when in the garden He
faced that hour and thought of the
possibility of the cup being taken
from Him, He said to the Father,
“Not what I will, but what thou
wilt.” Praying concerning the same
matter (in John 12:27), He said,j
“Now is my soul troubled; and what:
shall I say? Father, save me from!
this hour: but for this cause came I!
unto this hour.”
□. The First Communion (w. 19,!
20).
Taking the unleavened bread andi
the unfermented wine of the Pass-,
over which had just been observed,
Jesus established a new feast, the:
Christian feast of remembrance,:
which we call communion or the
Lord’s table.
His words are significant, “For as,
often as ye eat this bread, and drink
this cup, ye do show the Lord’s
death till he come” (I Cor. 11:26).
At the Lord’s table His followers
find spiritual strength in recalling
His death for them, but they also
find joy as they remember that He
is to come again. They thus testify,
to the world that they believe and
cherish these truths. 1
This feast is rightly called "com-
munion,” for down through the ages
and until He does come the saints of
God have at His table sweet com-
munion with Him and with one an-
other. Let us not neglect itl i
Our Lord also spoke of the cup
as “my blood of the new testa-
ment.” The word “testament”
means covenant. The Lord's table
therefore speaks of our allegiance
to Him, of our loyalty to our Lord,
and our devotion to His service. 1
That is why the Christian Church
speaks of communion as a sacra-
ment, a word from the Latin sacra-
mentum, meaning oath, and essen-
tially an oath of allegiance.
HI. The Folly of the Disciples (w. l
21-30). j
Someone may say, “That point
does not belong with the other two.
Both the Passover and the Lord’s
Supper are for the joyful remem-
brance of deliverance and redemp-
tion.” The objection is well taken ,
except for one thing—we are deal-
ing with human beings as they are,
not as they should be and could be
by the grace of God.
Here in the inner circle of the
twelve there was one traitor. It
seems impossible, but apparently
Judas had maintained such outward
conduct as to turn no suspicion in
his direction, even though all along
he had in his heart the blackest of
treachery against his Lord. A sad
and soul-searching fact is here re-
vealed, that it is possible for one to
make a high profession of faith in
Christ and even so to live as to give
no cause for criticism, and yet to
be unregenerate and in fact the ene-
my of Christ.
What about the strife regarding
position? Shameful as we agree that
it was, it still goes on in the church.
Not even the remembrance of our
Lord’s death and the reminder that
He is coming again is enough to
keep men from wanting to be great-
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Harvey, J. Edwin. The Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, May 22, 1942, newspaper, May 22, 1942; Carrollton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth728524/m1/2/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carrollton Public Library.