The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 77, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 30, 1924 Page: 8 of 8
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AUaUSTA EVANS
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BIBLE THOUGHT AND PRAYER
Rolen for right living: Let all
bitterness and wrath and anger and
clamour and evil speaking be put
away from you, with all malice: and
be ye kind one to another, tender-
hearted, forgiving nne another, even
as God for Christ’s sake hath for-
given you. Ephesians 4:31-32.
Prayer: Fill our hearts, oh, Lord,
with Thy love wherever thou hast
loved ,us, and then we will think no
evil.
EPISCOPAL GUILD
The ladies of St. Phillips Episco-
pal guild meet with Mrs. Howard
Hicks Monday at 3 o’clock .
CHRISTIAN LADIES’ AID
The Ladies’ Aid society of the
Christian church will meet at the
church at 3 o’clock Monday after-
noon.
BAPTIST AUXILIARY
The Baptist Woman’s Auxiliary
will meet in regular monthly busi-
ness session Monday afternoon at
3 o’clock at the church. Mrs. C. O.
James will conduct the devotional.
PRESBYTERIAN LADIES TO
MEET
The Presbyterian ladies will meet
Monday afternoon at 3 o'clock at
the church, to perfect plans for the
Pure Food show.
MASS MEETING OF B. Y. P. U’s.
A general mass meeting of all B.
Y. P. U’s. will be held this after-
noon at 5 o’clock. Miss Adams of the
Fort Worth Seminary will address
the meeting.
opening the theater to the class, and
for the publicity given.
We extend all a cordial welcome
and assure you a good time. Be
present.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
J. Howard Williams. Pastor.
Go to church today.
Our services are as follows:
9:45. Sunday school. There’s a
claRs for you.
11. First service of revival. Ev-
ery man in his place.
fi:30. The young people’s hour,
the four B. Y. P. U’s. meet.
7:30. Evening worship. Evangel-
istic singing. Sermon by pastor.
GO TO CHURCH TODAY.
Song No. 14, “It Pays to Serve
Jesus.”
Special.
Sermon by* pastor, on subject,
"Branded."
Song No. 64, “Love Lifted Me.”
Postlude.
Regular services at night, with
sermon by pastor. Subject, “His
Name was Jesus.”
The Mann Sisters of Brashear
will sing at the revival each night
duting the week, beginning Monday
night.
Mv 0. NORWOOD
FOR DISTRICT JUDGE
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
BIG CHIEF B. Y. P. U,
Subject; The Consecrated Cob-
bler—William Carey.
Introduction—Leader.
1. Birth and Boyhood. 2, Con-
version—Ada Hughes!.
3. The Voting Preacher—Willie
H. Buchanan...
4. The W6rld Vision—Grace Al-
exander.
5. The Great Sermon—Sulie
Kyle.
G. Beginning in Bamboo Lund—
Bettie Hughes.
7. Translating—Jewel Buc-
hanan.
8. The Era of Progress—Mary
Coffey.
9. Summary of Carey’s Work—
Mrs. C. 0. James.
METHODIST CHURCH
M. L. Hamilton, Pastor.
Dr. C. C. Selecman of Dallas will
preach at the morning hour.
The pastor will preach at night.
Come worship with us.
FIRST PREBYTERIAN CHURCH
J. N. Ivey, Pastor.
No preaching at morning or even-
ing hour.
Sunday school at 9:45. J. Boggs,
superintendent.
YOUNG PEOPLE’S MISSIONARY
SOCIETY
The Young People’s Missionary
society will meet in the home of
Mrs. Ellis Gafford, on Gilmer street,
Tuesday afternoon at 8 o’clock.
MEN’S BIBLE CLASS
The Men's Bible class of the First
Christian church will meet at 9:46
a. m. at- the Mission treatre, with
John Hurley as teacher. You are
•cordially Invited to be present, if
not a member of some other Sunday
school class.
WOMAN’S MISSIONARY SOCIETY
The Woman’s Missionary society
of the Methodist church will meet
Monday afternoon, March 31, at the
church at 3 o’clock.
Special program for the fifth
Monday. Boxes to be opened by
babies enrolled.
Mrs. McKee urges all mothers
with babies under six yearn of age
to come and join, if not already a
member.
Christian Stewardship—Mesdamea
Claude McCorkle and Harry Proctor.
Social Service—Mmes. J. J. John-
son, Earl Stirling and W. W. Young.
Mrs. Johnson, our district secre-
tary, requests the officers of the
society to meet with her in the base-
ment of the church at Z~ o’clock to
attend to some special work.
ENDEAVOR PROGRAM
Our First Missionaries to
9: 35-38.
11: 13—
10: 32-
2-2.4-
SENIOR CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR
Senior Endeavor program, 6:30
p. m.
Subject: What Missions
■1 Done for Social Welfare.
Leader, Gerald Brogoitti.
Have
Power in Social Welfare—Mr*. V.
F. Shelton,
Social Welfare Is Empty Without
Jesus—Mr. Wash Chapman.
Opportunities for Service—Miss
Edna Wester.
DR. BASSETT TO PREACH IN
BAPTIST REVIVAL
.’ Dr. Bassett, well known pastor
here eight years ago, his present
church one of the largest in Texas,
his Sunday school third largest in
Texas, with more than 2,000 pres-
ent each Sunday, will preach during
the meeting.
WILLIAMS BIBLE CLASS
mm
The Williams Bible class meets
• Sunday morning at the Buford thea-
ter at 9:45 sharp, in a song service
and lecture on the lesson by the
teacher.
The class takes this opportunity
to express its thanks and apprecia-
tion to Mr. Lilly for his courtesy in
JUNIOR
Topic:
Japan.
Song.
Prayer. .
Song.
Scripture Lesson, Matt.
Martyrs in Japan, Heb.
Charles Bridges.
Suffering for Faith, Hcb
35—Beatrice Gamhlin.
Heroic Teachers, II. Tim.
26—Josephine Nelson.
Story of Akijanu San-
Boatright.
What Our Christians Are
for Japan—Ellen Pate.
Reading-—Johnnie White.
It Isn’t the Church, It's You
ien McLnud.
Reading—Ray Moss.
Leader, Ray Moss.
Business.
Benediction.
... .. ...—'?—*
Remember, Juniors, the time of
meeting has been changed to 5
o’clock.
WHAT COUNTS
it isn’t the bad that you did down
here,
When you time of life is through,
That will hurt so much in that other
sphere,
As the good that you didn’t do.
Oh, the times you slipped and the'
times you fell,
Won’t count when your race is
run;
But it’s going to hurt when you’re
forced to tell
The good you could have done.
—Exchange.
of law at Greenville, where he en-
joys the confidence of the people,
who have entrusted him with their
business. It has been his policy to
do his duty, as he sees it, and trusts
to the people to find out whether
or not he has been conscientious and
honest in the discharge of his duty.
With the energy, ability and ex-
perience he possesses he will make a
vigorous prosecutor, if elected to
the office he is seeking.
MANY DEAD FROM
STORM FRIDAY NIGHT
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
NEARING THE UNSEEN SHORE
At last I am nearing the unseen
shore
Which is wrapped in a golden
haze.
Where the years of earth are known
no more,
And the days are heavenly days:
I can scent the flowers of the near-
ing land,
And the shallowing waters tell:
I shall soon look out on the shining
strand,
And shall hear the harbor bell.
mile* northeast of the city, were
crushed to death when the wall of
the house, in which they were seek-
ing shelter, fell on them. The Col-
lins baby was found dead in wreck-
age of another house. Dix was kill-
ed by flying timber.
At times the sea has been rough and
wild,
And the town has roared in the
dark,
But the morning sun arose and
smiled
On my quivering, laboring bark;
But whether the sea were rough, oi
calm,
Whether cloud or clear sky,
How could I fesr? no danger could
harm
With my Pilot standing by!
Sometimes I think I can see the
shore,
Where the loved ones gather and
wait.
Wondering, question o’er and o'er,
Why is his coming so late?
But soon I shall step on the shining
strand.
Beyond the fret and foam;
And the loved ones then will clasp
my hand,
With their Welcome! Welcome
home!
—Exchange.
-Helen
Doing
SULPHUR LOSES
TO GREENVILLE
-Al-
Last Sunday was the second day
of the contest between the Sunday
Schools of the First Baptist Church
of Sulphur Springs and the First
Baptist Church of Greenville. Green-
vile again won by a margin of 109.
The attendance of the Greenville
Sunday School was 543 against 434
for Sulphur Springs.
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
J. E. Evans, Pastor.
The Men’s Bible class will meet
at the Mission theater at 9:45, with
John Hurley as teacher.
Regular Sunday school at church
at same hour, with S. W. Bass as
superintendent. i
Members of the Bible class will
march in a body—150 strong—to
the church from the Mission thea-
ter at the close of the Sunday
school, where the members of the
class will have charge of the music,
the occasion being a Men’s Day pro-
gram, as follows:
Song No. 66, “Standing On the
Promises.”
Invocation.
Song No. 130, “Stepping In the
Light.” >
Song No. 263, "Just as I Am.”
Offertory.
DR. BASSETT IS
COMING MONDAY
MORGAN
Dr. Wallace Basse.!! former pas-
Sulphur Springs vflll bp here on
tor of the First Baptist Church of
Monday night to do the preaching
for a two weks revival at the First
Baptist Church that begins today.
Dr. Bassett is a great preacher and
is deservedly popular with a host of
church people and others here who
will be glad to know of his coming,
be dgal i-Par tm esh ch hmh hmffl
MANN SISTERS AT
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
i
PHONE
The Mann Sisters of Brashear
have been engaged by the First
iCh i.'tian Church to sing during the
Revival that begins there today.
They will be unable to be there un
til Monday night, but will sing each
night thereafter during the meting.
The Mann Sisters are two of Hop-
kins County’s most popular singers
hnd will sing to night at 9o'clock
over the Dallas New* Radio in Dal-
las being the third time they have
sung over that radio atatlon.,
Now York, March 29.—While
radio broadcasting and receiving,
as it is known today, is a develop-
ment of the wireless telegraphy and
telephony system originated by Wil-
liam Marconi and othera, it is not
generally known that wires, thou-
sands of miles of them, play a vital
part in the new science.
Illustration of the preparation
necessary to wide broadcasting of
program was furnished by the Lin-
coln Day speech of President
Coolidge in New York, when
WEAK, local station of the Amer-
ican Telephone A Telegraph Co-
gent the president’s words to mil-
lions of ears throughout the coun-
try.
First, a special wire was installed
into the Waldorf-Astoria, where the
president spoke. A special send-
ing set was placed in the hotel base
ment, attached to the microphone
before which the president was to
speak. A man with a chest tele
phone sat within a few feet of th*
president, watching his every move-
ment and reporting each to the man
at the basement set who, through
deft manipulation of necessary
mechanisms, sent the words evenly
through the special wire to WEAF’s
studios in lower Broadway.
There another group of experts
took the president’s words and drain-
ed them simultaneously into wires
which carried thorn to WEAF’s
broadcasting plant a mile away, for
local radio consumption, and into
copper strands that carried them to
Washington, D. C., and Providence,
R. L, where other stations sent them
into the air on ether waves that car-
ried the address into homes for
hundreds of gnlles about. Thus
did the president's speech reach New
York’s metropolitan area, a large
part of the south almost as soon
the words were spoken.
On another occasion WEAK,
through the use of telephone wires,
broadcast simultaneously from sta-
tions in New York, j Schenectady,
Pittsburg and Chieago a convention
program.
Wire transmission of program*
for radio broadcasting, while not
the least, is one of the main prob-
lems of getting metropolitan pro-
grams within range of the smaller
receiving sets hundreds and thou-
sands of miles away. There is the
problem of properly regulating tonal
volume of the spoken and written
words and the music before it is
directed into the telephone wires. A
specially trained crew of men on
duty in the plant department ad-
joining the studios, in which the
programs are sent through the
microphones, control, through mul-
titudinous instuments, the tonal
qualities of the matter broadcast.
NOTICE
The Sulphur Springs Base Ball
association has decided to sell the
concession rights, > consisting of the
bottle right, cream cones and cigars,
for this season. Anyone wishing
to submit a bid, see Shade Gafford,
president, or W. J. Harris, secre-
tary. d30-Stp
'•CUAMir TIME IS HIKE."
MISSION THEATRE
MONDAY and TUESDAY
CWl Ilia m*T<pC presents
JOHN G1LBE1
•v
* SX ELMO
BROADCASTING IS
IMPOSSIBLE WTTHOUT
MANY MILES OF WIRE
“St. Elmo” deals with a happy, prosperous man \
loses his faith in humanity—particularly the femaW
the species—through his misguided love for a faith
woman. His character is changed to an embitteredj
tolerant, hard hearted mortal, only to have his
reborn through the very medium by which it was
troyed—a woman.
AND
Buddy Messingei
“A Young Tenderfoot
ad 35c
BUFORD THEATRE
' ■ ^MHSSSSHE *S===B=aT'"““
MONDAY and TUESDAY
CAglLAtMHU
“The Wild
Party”
WHAT WOULD YOU DO WITH A LADY
AT MIDNIGHT?
you awoke to find a beautiful girl in your
Jnight, and you got the drop on her—would vou
her to jail?—or fall in love? j
Leslie Adams got on the trail of a big news-1
If yc
midn
paper story and found herself caught in the [
wildest patty that ever tore the roof off
house.
She fled for safety,
See Gladys Walton in this thrilling,
story. Oceans of excitement and a
and then-
suspenseful
surprising roti
AND A ROACH COMEDY
“Love’s Detour’
10c and 25c
Attend church today of your own
choice—but go. It i» Go-to-Churek
D»y in Sulphur Spring*.
Attend church today of
choica-MAut #o.-.*Ma"'l
Day in Sulphur Sprin
wMm'si
ism
imM
r--
sat
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Bagwell, J. S. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 77, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 30, 1924, newspaper, March 30, 1924; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth825745/m1/8/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.