Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 27, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 14, 1925 Page: 4 of 9
nine pages : ill. ; page 26 x 20 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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OUT OUR WAY
THEPARSON'S
COLUMN
Contemporary Thought
nuwnro unn nniMm
New Bedford Evening Standard: The new*
columns of the Hartford Courant Inform us that the
luncheon dmba of that city enneoUod' the dteaor at
which Arthur Heoderaoa of the British Labor Party
was to bo the speaker because it decided that he was
“too much of a radical.” Mr. Henderson was also
scheduled to address a Catherine under the auspices
of the T. M. C. A., hut refused taflU this encasement
upon learning that those In charge of It, fodowlng
the action of the clubs, had canceled the affair and
then reconsidered and ordered that It be held as
planned. Evidently the good people of Hartford
were made panicky by the thought that a BrUlnto
Labor leader, Home Secretary in the MacDonald
Cabinet, was to appear In their midst under circum-
that assured him audiences composed of the best peo-
ple of the town.
Hie Hartford clubs gnd the Hartford T. M. C. A
do not care to hear speeches by Mr. Henderson, that
is their privilege, and it woirtd be foolish to quarrel,
with them. But It is not asking too much to ask
that they should, before barring a speaker as a dan-
gerous radical, make sure that he Is oae. Hartford
has been seeing things at night in much the same
way as tbs State Department has been seeing them
in the case of Congress Karolyt. She has been con-
demned as a Bolshevist when, as a matter of fact
she Is nothing of the sort. Henderson comes under
the ban as a dangerous radical when, as a matter
of fact, he is about as dangerous as William Green
of the American Federation of Labor or Charles EMot
president-emeritus of Harvard.
We believe that it is a common American fault
to swallow, hook, line and sinker, suggestions that a
foreigner is a dangerous revolutionary. There may
be a dearer understanding ef shades of political and
economic beliefs aboard than there used to be, but
we are gtiU prone to claesify all persona who in
any way question the existing scheme of things as
Bolshevists. Communist. Socialists. Laborltee— all
Bolshiee-rthat seams to be the idee. We are not
*4 all sorry for Arthur Henderson. We suspect that
making speeches is ao treat for him We are sorry
that the people of a community tike Hartford should
have shown its belief ia the preposterous notion that
Mr. Henderson is dangerous
rNoJvc acre
WORRIED S*cv<t )
I LET WOO COME
OUT HERE "TPilHKbdGr
iT WOULD MAHE
A MALI OF WOO.
Amo mere sou ape
iki 3AO COMPAMW j
v ALREADW * y
r HOMESfi i F WOO U-UET V-
ME HAMS RF*< DOLLARS
]\JL WESiCR QOUcFf WOO “
AG AIM! WEMEGOTTO
\Jt -A A-TVhaT»S*Pim5m
CHARUE AMO I APE
LEAVAM* IW-FOR- VWELL-
WE'RE. UEAvjikicxTbMiftHr?
V c'Mou.i'jt Got- 1
haoe rr!
DVERY child born into the world
is an explorer. He is thrown
into the midst of an unknown
world. He has live sen ms, as
commonly enumerated—the Parson
doea not know how many mors.
Thees senses are ths gateways by
which conceptions of the unknown
are to enter into hto consciousness.
They are also the means whereby
his consciousness Is to seise and
Appropriate knowledge of the un-
known. Bo the first business of a
child is to And experiences. If be be
left to hliUMlf, he -will find them,
but they will often bo uncomfort-
able, and not seldom harmful. Bo
In various ways, this little ex-
plorer's courM la to be guided and
controlled.
see.
Then he has ever so much to dis-
cover about himself and bis own
powers. He must discover to what
ends his limbs are UMful. He must
find out bow be may best employ
them for those ends. If in some
way he does not come by this
knowledge, he will be useless, or
he will waste an enormous amount
of effort.
• • e •
Then every child born Into the
world is a pirate. He does not, and
cannot, think of anything else
than his own needs and desires.
And so he goee forth to plunder. It
takes a life-time—-sometimes even
a lifetime does not suffice—-to learn
that his own best Interest is in-
woven Inextricably with the inter-
ests of others. That the interest of
the individual is best served when
the interest of the group is beat
served, he can by no means com-
prehend. He mast have a vast num-
ber of experiences before be'lays
intelligent hold of that fact.
Tj • • e
Whither does all this tend? Why.
there la a movement afoot to pro-
vide for public play-grounds and
regulated play. The voters of
Brownwood are to be asked Wheth-
er or no they think It would be a
good thing'for those restless, in-
FLASHES OF UFE
' (By the Associated Press)
NEW YORK—Consuslo Vander-
bilt. Catholic, is to marry aa Epis-
copalian as her sister Marios did.
Consuelo's finance, Earl K T.
Smith, la not to change hie reli-
gion. _ V .. . Jgj
NEW YORK—Fuel tor Snag con-
troversy over orange# mad sun:
Prince Alexandra OulaUtne, whose
princess has gone to'Paris, ia turn-
ing his eyes from California to
Florida. Instead of going Into the
movies he is now etauddering rent
estate.
peon 2,481 each Sunday. The combined membership
Of Urn churches Is slightly in excess of 8,000, accord-
ing to careful estimates. The figures show that lees
|haa 'fifty per cent of the church membership of the
Mty to actively interested 1n Sunday school, inasmuch
as hundreds of those who ere regular attendants at
Sunday school are not members of the churches,
t Brownwood churches need to be concerned about
tech a oooditioa—especially in view of the feet that
tee churches include In their membership consider-
hbly lees than one-half the population of the city. To
have only 2,481 persona of a community of between
14,060 and 18,000 engaged in organiaed and systema-
tic Bible atndy to public admission of the failure
of the Christian people here to evangelise their own
i WASHINGTON—A mane meeting
of business men to to he hold Dec-
ember 10 to protest ngnimteJE*
principle of government in
ness. . <
SANTA BARBARA. Califs—Ben
Turpin, screen comedian, has ap-
pendicitis.
.J $n\ 1.'*+*^
II -u
G’uttin
experienced, little savages of thetra 1
to be put in tbe way of getting ex-
prrieprfes worth while in the eosi- '
cat dad safest way, to train their
senses and their limbs to tntelll-
gent action, and tb learn that
team-work to ' always beet. It 1
seems to tbe Parson thal there can !
be but one answer to the question.
He docs not know bow easy or dif- 1
flcult the support of such institu-
tions may be financially; tjiat he
loaves to mors expert financiers
than himself. But he does know
that nothing—nor even good roads
—are of so much Importance an the
direction of the activities of chil-
dren in the proper direction He
will vote for the imendment. And
he will vote for the rosd bonds too.
• • •
A remark was mao# In toe Par-
son's bearing tbe other day, which
be had at first some difficulty in ac-
cepting, but which gave him great
delight It waa said that, though
by fur the greater—Indeed, an aw-
ful—percentage of the prisoners la
the penitentiary are young men,
not u single one has ever been a
Boy Scoot. Tbe Psrson knew that
hto own Scbuts had all done well,
which to ample reward for five
year# of sometimes, it seemed, un-
appreciated effort. Bat to know
that it holds true of ths Scouts un-
iversally is delightful Indeed.
• • •
There is nothing new morally
We make mistakes ia morula and
pay the penalty of mistake. Seme
things, however, are abundantly
clear. Truth is strong and will pre-
vail. The most successful lie is
successful only so long as it can
pass for truth. For nil lies there
comes the inevitable confronting
with the fact. Then the Ue dies.
Hate breeds bate, arouses resist*;
ance and briugs a long train of vlo- »
lence. Injustice provokes revolt
Love begets love and brings ia kind t
measured one’s interest in and benefit from the work
ff tbe church school.
But why should anyone attend Sunday school?
• The Sunday school to the distribution system
through which the light and power of God's lovu sad
God’s me* to carried to the uttermoet ports of the
temmunity. A great electric plant would be worth-
ies* in any community untoss equipped with a com-
plete transmission system, to carry Its slttfrlc en-
ergy-Into the houses and business houses and indus-
trial plants, to provide light and power tor the ser-
vice of the people. God’s grace and God's love to
fivailab’e for every community. In unlimited quanti-
fies and without price; but it cun not benefit, the
CowinriuPv union* there lb some kind of trannmianion
fystem to carry tt Into the j home* and business
}nus sad industries, to brighten lives sad to oner-
v-ce i*-# faith of he p*opUP Every cla*s In the Inn-
day school coca In o homes sod other place# where
ieoplr live and labor. It carries with U a depend-
PARAGRAPHINGS
I JBT8 get on a gait 'n go merrily skatin’, us soon an the Ice tresses
L tight. Thai sluggishness dies ’cause n's good exercise for morn-
in’, for noon or for night. s ; ’
Jos' bundle up well, mud go sailin' peilmell. Cut capers nil over
thff place. The thrill of Us rare, and the tingling fresh air put red,
that you need, ia your face.
A man or a miss, swinging that way or this, on skates that are
sktmmtn’ the ice. to giving real t an quite a wonderful rum and they
soon art convinced that it's nice.
It's nature’s own game aad it limbers your frame, and it keep*
all muscles in taae. Bo get oet your skates, 'cause year lee skat-
la’ dates are gonna ho present right noon.
The next toll to be abolished from our roods to
the death toU.—Columbia Record.
All prayers are answered. Usually the all-wtos
answer to "too."—La Port# (lad.) Argus.
Our Idee of the senith in soft snaps to to be press
agent for Colon*! Mitchell — Chicago Tribune
"You.- said Adam, -are the first girl I ever
fored.” That’s the way it got started.—Peru (Ind.)
LONDON—Labor rnembrn
parliament Plan to abaoat
selves from any function Mm
attends if he cornea to sig
Locarno pact.
MANCHESTER, Uglai
Twelve oollege students urn
arrest after a fight betweoi
from rival institutions ia-
crow bars, tear gas and otter
oos were used.
DAILY HEALTH TALK
Little Editorials
aii«-n eti
He raid.
VIENNA—Floods art
flrsmen break records. T
called out 77 time# in 41
goes from (Jiicage. uetredt. Clew- Ilf AN waa familiar with dlohtherl* though
land aad other ports of places on 1T1 ,on- ,
the other aide of the world It will (<n,e rw mi m jqt0in| In Spain v
tme'TwJIt L .itoetoher maw M “d|P*»te#r1a year,- and medical!^. ,
237 >•£
aaW'—iSKHsrS i
, by the common drinking cup. and taking
i BETTER I he It wsn wfio described this dineuaj Neve
One encouraging thing about wf carefully, and gave it Its pres- happen
££"dtctoi>lifemLtUrttto£!*N<£Sj mo%
every man you meet to always diphtheria until 1882 and 1884. her re
ready to defend ^ia homo city or the diphtheria germ, a mtocro- ln her
town, and on occasion to,do all he discovered and which
caa to make it a better plate, - . 1 to hf the cause of this die- Tbeatr
Too often/ hoWeter. V# full to, «***• A „ , . _ .. It w
buve u good understanding of Just About the nrnt use made of the tj,e chi
what ft takes to make s city a bet- discovery of %be tectllus of «ph- rt-ge
ter place. Because it isn’t simply a theris was thA of dotorminlng by a aainte
matter of getting pore population, bacterlologicaf exam full loo wheth-
more factorise, a new railroad or ! * * 0?™
deeper karbor.
It to something deeper--some-
th tog that depends on the indi* du.il
heart aad conscience of the indivtd-
ual clttoea. It can’t be expressed ia
dollars or steel—few really worth
while things can; but It makes the
difference between u city that to
prop up buildings and save
roomed families. '
p’etin; the delivery of these blessings which are
t^rouxb the Church and Its agesctec: The
Church 4oos not manufacture any blessings, of
coarse, nor doea the electric power plant create en-1
ergy. The church simply converts God’s lov# and I
sruce into joy and cc-jraseous faith for the blessing
of mankind. Just as the electric power plant con-!
verts tbe energy fnr.\ rdl or coal and stenm into
electric^ energy ready to serve the people. The
church can pot serve the community unless It can
carry its message of salvation to tbe people who need
tt: and In this work the help of seaarmed Christians
to needed* The transmission Hues mu^t be dependable i
and able to deliver service; and the older the Chris- I
tian the O.ore impenant ts his service to the charch
through the Sunday school.
Rfhile rot primarily an institution for the benefit
of theichildren, th* Sunday ?rhooi Is one of 'he styet-
est l.lUortgs enjoyed by American childhood In the j
regulir weekly aswmMy for Bible study the child
receives leseons that remain to hie heart throughout
life, dheci inc evil impulses, directing him In good
wor*'s sad elevating hto ideals as long as he lives, i
The Btinday school to s workshop In which Christians
The experience of tbe evanglicul
Baily Washington Letter
LONDON—An orchestra of forty,
taken up 10,000 feet ln a giant
plane, gave u two-bdur radio con-
cert.
\I/ASIiL',GT0N, Nov. 14.—Ton need maps of north-!
Jf f era Africa sad southwestern Asia to understand j
.ully why oiflcia! Washington feels so little disposed
to raut debt concessions to the French while the*
to their present Imperialistic policy in these
tone starts ol the world. v
, If eVen a country monkeyed with a burn saw.
a:» government heads here see it, France to doing
it now in the Riff'aad Syria, and, still mete enfOr-
tunituly, not to her own danger alone, but to others'
danger, too. \
Why help her financially to Increase the risk?
V-lto not, rather, make it as hard aa possible for her
to keep it up? •
Now. 9
Stock Yomr
National Cannert
By your map, you'll see that extreme northwest
Africa, except fer the internationalised sons of Tan-
gier. belongs to Spain. T&to Is the Riff country,
whey# the tribesmen are In arms again* the Spanish I
and French. The fighting slips over Into French
Morocco. . , %
To the eastward are Algeria and Tunis, French
territory. They're quiet now but M’s 0 precarious
quietness. The natives reseat French rule.
To tee eastward again to Tripoli, chronically to
re' ellion against the I Uliana. .
Once more to the eastward is Egypt, on the rag-
ged edge of an uprising against British ssmi-ooutro).
Beyond Egypt. Syria, now at war with France—
a little war but a wicked one.
Dark Dayt Demand Goad Lights
T. CL ELECTRIC CO. fto« 148
are made.
ehorcher baa been thaf a vast majority of those who
are received into church membership on profession
of faith are products of Sunday school training.
Children grow up into useful Christian men and
women if their early years are devoted to system-
atic Bible study in a wall organised Sunday school.
Eminent Jurists contribute their testimony as to
tee value of Sunday school training for young people.
Many a prominent Judge baa. declared that it has
never been hto duty to pronounce sentence upon
any man who had been a regular Sunday school pupil
ffurfag hto youth, without u doubt much of the evil
tent to now so distressing to religions lenders and
sociological experts is due to the failure of u major-
ity of the people to secure adequate religious train-
ing In tbefr youth. Attendance upon Sunday school,
therefore, not only encourages Christian living and
service but to aa important factor ln the nuking of
good cteisens under the civil law.
Caa we not Improve Btownwood's Sunday school
SPECIAL BARGAIN
at a real bomin. Musi Sefl.
ALLEN MOTOR CO.
TOM
I SIMS
SAYS
Hoar 1 the sermon on
HYPOCRITES end HOM-
BUGS by Pastor Wifics at
Howird Peyne Auditorium
Sunday, 7:30 P. M.
This whole stretch of coast to Mpuhammsdaa
and hostile to the Christina powers at boat. Mos-
lem leaders at Damascus are reported trying to raise
a general ‘Jehad.’’ or holy war, at this time.
It isn’t difficult to Imagine—aa outbreak extend-
ing the entire length of the southern Mediterranean
shore. v
Nor would it te likely, if H went so far, to atop
there. Turkey, the Arabian peninsula, Persia, Afg-
hanistan. Bokhara aad on into northern India and
western China—you need your map of Asia now-tore
Mohammedan, too. There’* little chance, given O
great Modem rising, that they wouldn't Join.
Our last criticism of those oue-
pleee bathing suite to they don’t
mane good winter underwear.
The things you think you get! for
nothing cost more than those you
think you gmy tor.
This to the mooth ia which to te.
gin >omr bod habits to swear off
on New Yearn.
This may seem Improbable. It isn’t lmp88*lbU,
at any rate. It's to be borne In salad that fighting’s
going on now to spots. The Rlfftoms have boon at It
for If years; tee Trtpolltaas tor a doses. Aad It
oootlnuee to spread aad the trouble areas to merge.
Much thee* people ear# for the League at Na-
tions! They’re not, like the western world, weary
of war. Fighting*# their religion.
Where would they get their arms? Well, the
RIfftans and Tripolitans have been getting them for
quite a while. Russia might not be averse to helping
them out. It wouldn’t be u modem campaign may-
way, but guerilla work of the worst kind. And on a
hag* seals. The Mohammedan population, tram
Tangier to the Pamir highland—Just north of India
This specially developed serum to
known as "diphtheria antitoxin.” It
acts by countrracjjog the effect* of
the toxin produced by the growth of
tbe germ In the body, or to the
throat, to be moto exact.
The next step wuo the discovery
of the fact that the giving of anti-
toxin to persons who had boon ex-
posed to diphtheria would prevent
their becoming ill at this disease.
This protection does not last more
than a few weeks, eo our scientist*
■till wen*- further, aad gavo us fin-
ally two'very wonderful, two very
useful measures, namely: the
s< hick teat aad taste-antitoxin Im-
TKe otyleo were never better. ' The workmanship
and material* are of the finest. Our window*
•how the artists' finished product in footwear for
women. A wonderful showing at popular prices.
Let ue show you.
fattk and service? And can wo not sue to It that the
youar people of the eky are so trained that their
tospalees of mature years may te good Impulses
rather.thaa evil? Assuredly, there to a field white
tqfdhh,haAe*A ftxbt here in our own Christian com-
nSfSdf schools wad churches; and this community
, gmM’ prosprr a< tt Whets to prosper unless it ug-
■jmfOod'* challenge for service.
Why particularly blame France? Maybe thia
a'ory, which reached byre from Damascus, will show
The tribesmen thereabouts, tt appears, objected
to certain features«L4be an:i..ai*tr§Hop
SHOP WITH US EVERY mY
ball players who are ordered out of a game i
nt of siuggteg or similarly unfair aad un-
ittty tactfeu ought to be barred from further
ttcu te any rune* during th* season. Good
ft ship demands that the gam* be played
CaO for It hy Rune
“ SALLYARR
BREAD”
munixatloc.
The Bchlck test consists of the
Injection of a few drops of a pre-
pared diphtheria toxin Into the skte.
The skin is then observed carefully
to eeo whether U Characteristic rad
spot appears where the Injection to
made. If within two or three days
tol a spot does not appear th*
Franc*, which holds th* League of Nation»’ Syria
mandate. A delegation of chtoftalas called on Gen-
eral Rarratl to prateet. HI* adjutant told them the
general refused to admit them.
"He woa*t bear usT naked the spokesman
•■No ”
"Then,” said (he old Arab, "ho shall hear rifle
to the only thing
@
Z 7
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Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 27, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 14, 1925, newspaper, November 14, 1925; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1140328/m1/4/?q=%22Brownwood+%28Tex.%29+--+Newspapers.%22: accessed June 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.