The Chandler Tribune (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 24, 1919 Page: 3 of 8
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Thursday, July 24, 1919.
"....... ........
CHANDLER TRIBUNE
’ - :
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Four
Complete Novels!
Four gripping novels, told by great living
story writers—52 practical farm talks by H. J.
Waters, former president of Kansas Agricultural
College—52 helpful visits with the Chaperon”—
52 hearty laughs at the Intellectual Pup—52
weeks of news, pictures, stories cartoons, sugges-
tions from farmers and household hints—these
are among the benefits enjoyed every year by
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friends who are a source of peace and
pleasure and encouragement of Christ
who said, “Father, forgive them for
they know not what they do,” and of
His apostle who wrote to the Corin-
thians, “Charity suffereth long and
is kind, seeketh not her own, is not
easily provoked and thinketh no evil.”
Mothers, be patient. Do not wound
a child; remember it has a tender
heart, and who can bear to see the
quiver of the baby lips, or hear the
sobs of infant sorrow, even after sleep
has shut down the tear washed lids?
“If we knew the baby fingers,
Pressed against the window pane,
Would be cold and stiff tomorrow,
Never trouble us again,
Would the bright eyes of our darling
Catch the frown upon our brow,
Would the print of rosy fingers
Vex us then, as they do now?
“Melancholy cannot hold its own
with perennial good nature. Sun-
shine is contagious. Smiles are epi-
demic. One joyous nature will fill
an auditorium with good cheer. Des-
pondency is a poor debator. It can
bring no argument that sunbeams will
not penetrate.”
the Home lllission Board at Atlanta,
Georgia, the Educational Board at
Birmingham. Alabama, the Old Min-
ister’s Relief Board, at Dallas. Texas, %
the Laymen’s Board, at Knoxville, i
Tennessee, the Woman’s Missionary
Union Board, at Baltimore. Mary-
land, and all the state organizations j
are throwing themselves full length ’ .j.
into the campaign. Three million i £
Baptists are to go in and put it ov- | £
er. It is to be the greatest and most ;
meaningful movement ever inaugur- j J.
ated by Southern Baptists. Its issues | V
to the cause of Christ are incalculable ]
This money will help every phase of j It.
religious life represented by Baptists V
throughout the whole world. It is
expected that every Baptist Church
more than 25 thousand of them, and
every Baptist member, more than 3
million, will put themselves in a great
fashion into this movement.
* l-M' » 'i-H-M-t-Ht
Wanted
Poultry
Eggs
Cream
Get Our Prices Before Selling
c
II]
| L. C. GOODMAN f
Chandler, Okla.
Phone 50. North Manvel Ave
x—i—i—*—i—i—i—i—j—i—i—i—i—
The thief who steals you. peace of
mind is meaner than the one who
steals your property.
Memories of what we learn thru
bitterness and sorrow may not always
be held in regret.
•Home Circle
■ » JCOLVMN
Usually if we postpone a worry for
a day or two it will fail to keep it’s
appointment.
The circle of human duties is only
complete by the union of those of man
and woman.
Those who are much together grow
singularly alike as time goes on.
SOUTHERN BAPTISTS GO
Humi limite Mimtier IN FOR MAMMOTH SI M
At the Southern Baptist Conven-
tion in Atlanta, Georgia, May,
with more than 5,000 Baptists as
sembled, it was unanimously decided
to raise 75 million dollars, for mis-
sions, in home and foreign lands; for
their more than 130 educational in
stitutions; for their many orphanages
and hospitals; for their aged minis-
ters; and for the National Memorial
Church, dedicated to Roger Williams
and Religious Liberty, to be built in
Washington. A Campaign Commis-
sion was appointed, with Dr. George
W. Truett, pastor First Baptist
Church, Dallas, Texas, as Chairman,
and one member from each of the
Southern States. At a meeting in
Atlanta, Georgia, early in June, the
Commission met and made out plans
for raising the 75 million dollars. Dr.
L. R. Scarborough, president of the
Southwestern Baptist Theological
Seminary, Ft. Worth, Texas, was e-
lected General Director, and his head-
it is not, tell him plainly why you can ! that as the children grow older, she J quarters established at Nashville,
not. You will wrong him and wrong 1 must pretend that it is they and not , Tennesssee. Five of the Comm.ssion-
yourself by equivocation of any kind,! she who are managing affairs. ers were appointed as Campaign l-
Never do wrong to make a friend or I 'ectors’. to whom the ,^ta‘ls °f "*
keep one- the man who requires Some of us, as we grow old, become ; gamzation were committeed- Mr. J.
you to do so is dearly purchased, and so oppressed by the care and sorrows , H. Anderson, of Knoxville, Tennessee
at a sacrifice. Deal kindly and firm- ] of mature life that we quite forget a wealthy merchant, was made Chair-
ly with all men and you will find it j the days of our youth The pains and . man. . t .
the best policy which wears the best 1 pleasures of childhood seem so trival | These Campaign Directors have e-
Above all, do not appear to others that we fail to realize that a child s lected the following leaders to coop-
sorrows are as keen and probably ate with General Director Scar
DENTAL PARLORS
ESTABLISHED 12 YEARS
SHAWNEE. OKLA. 106 CAST MAIN ST.
Gold Crowns $5.00 to $6.00
Fillings $1.00 up
Best Set Teeth $9 00
Best Set Teeth, upper and lower
both $18.00
Extracting ^0 cents
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
FRANKNESS
Be frank to the world. Frankness
is the child of honesty and courage.
Say just what you mean to do on ev-
ery occasion and take it for granted
that you mean to do just w-hat is right
If a friend asks you a favor, you ^ have no holiday,
should grant it, if it is reasonable; if , be on tap. The
No individual in the world can do a
mother’s work for her.
THE PROFESSION OF MOTHER-
HOOD
It is a difficult profession—this
profession of motherhood. In the an-
imal kingdom, as the offspring grows
older, the parents withdraw their min-
istrations, but in the human family
the older children grow, the more di-
plomacy and enthusiasm is needed by
the ruling spirit. When the boys be-
gin to get unruly and the girls begin
to get silly—the husband gets less
willing to make an effort and more
ready to sit quietly by the fire in the-
evening—then it is that many a fam-
ily drifts apart. But the mother can
She must always
only difference is
Get the Habit of
Drinking Hot Water
Before Breakfast
Says we can't look or^feel
with the system full
of^ poisons.
right
The state board of affairs will soon
take action on the proposed reloca-
tion of the Oklahoma Industrial
School for Girls. This institution, lo-
cated near the capitol, was the sub-
ject of wide investigation by the Sev-
enth Legislature. Tecumsah has
made an offer of two sites and Ponca
City is also endeavoring to secure the
school.
In the city people are unmolested by
prying and gossiping neighbors. They
do not need to worry for fear their
actions will be noticed and commented
upon, but when a man in the city is
down and out he is friendless, for no
one takes an interest in him. The in-
habitants of small towns, however,
j may gossip and be gossiped about;
they may pry into things which are of
no concern to them; they may tattle
and quarrel, but when one of their
number is in need of help he is sure
of finding it. His neighbors prove to
be the truest friends in the world.
Millions of folks batho Internally,
now Instead of loading their system
with drugs. “What’s an inside bath?,|
'you say. Well, It ts guaranteed to per-
form miracles If you could bollere
these hot water enthusiasts.
There are vast numbers of men and
women who, Immediately upon arlstag
In the morning, drink a glass of real
hot water with a teaspoonful of lime-
stone phosphate In It. Tills Is a very
excellent health measure. It *a : know that all
tended to flush the stomach, liver, kid- 1
A subscriber received a dun through
the postoffice and it made him mad.
He went to see the editor about it, and
the editor showed him a few duns of
his own—one for paper, one for type,
one for fuel and several others.
“Now,” said the editor, “I didn’t
get mad when those came because I
I had to do was to ask
I AM YOUR WORST ENEMY
I am the ruler of retail reverses.
I am the Lord High Potentate of
Failure.
I am the reason for that down-
ward slant on your profit curve.
I am the cause of the silent sick-
ness that stills your cash-register
bell.
I am the origin of dissatisfied cus-
tomers and loss of trade.
I am the uncertainty in the midst
of certain profits.
I am the element of chance that
turns a winning business into a
loosing bamble.
I am the fountain-head whence
springs the majority of your trouble
and worry.
I am the key to the problem why
more than 15,000 retailers fail every
year.
I am the why and wherefor, the
direct and proxmate cause, the germ
and genesis of unsuccessful /nerch-
antdising.
I am the Sticker, the Self-Lounger,
the Left-Over, the nameless child
of an unknown father.
I am the unadvertised product!
Shelly Logan and wife and Miss
Flora Logan came down from Drum-
right Saturday, returning Sunday
taking John Byron home, with them.
neysfand tho'thirty''feetof intestines j several reliable gentlemen like you to
of the previous day's waste, sour bile j t omo an<j help me out, and then I
and Indigestible material left over In w gpttIo all of thom.”
r.nsrtt'ttinawrs’ —•*»• - >■<- A
bacteria which infest the bowels, tho was, ho relented, paid up, and renew-
quick result is poisons and toxins , pf[ for another year,
which are then absorbed into the blood
The only useful occupation which
'■ could be engaged in by some of the
I men with good looks and money is
that of model in the window of a
men’s furnishing store.
causing headache, bilious attacks, foul
breath, bad taste, colds, stomach trou-
ble, kidney misery, sleeplessness, Im-
pure blood and all sorts of ailments.
People who feel good one day and
badly the next, but who simply can
not get feeling right are urged to
obtain a quarter pound of limestone
phosphate at the drug store. This The newspaper man certainly has it
will cost very little but is sufficient! on aj| 0thol. tradesmen or professional
autyec^of "internal ^n I tat lot °U >en when he is the victim of a pick-
Just as soap and hot water act on 1 pocket, because he invariably carries
the sldn, cleansing, sweetening and monoy jn other people’s pockets.
freshening, so limestone phosphate and _
hot water act on the stomach, liver,
There is no more dangerous expert- joy that a new toy gave us, and the Goneral Director; T. B. Ray, of \ .r-
ment than that of undertaking to do palpitating pleasures of a visit to , ginm Survey Director; H. Ck Moore .
one thing to a man’s face and another j town, the ecstatic delight of a day m . of Tennessee, Publicity Director, Ml. ,
to his back. We should live, act and the woods. And we forget too, the , W. J. Neel. W. M. U. Organizer. A ,
speak out of doors, as the phase is, ! depth of anguish that came with each General Orgamcr is yet to be select- j
UU,
kidneys and bowels. It is vastly more
Important to bathe on the inside than
on the outside, because the sldn pores
do not absorb impurities into the
blooi^ while the bowel pores do.
Of every million people, eight hun-
dred are blind, and the other 999,200
can only see others’ faults and not
their own.
| Used 40 Years
CARDUI
J The Woman's Tonic {
J Sold Everywhere J
• ... •
and say and do what we are willing
should be known and read of all men.
disappointment.
If some good entertainment comes
along, ask the girls and boys if they
j wish to go. Don’t make them beg
1 for a holiday.
If anyone needs your sympathy and
support it is the public school teach-
er, no difference whether it is a city i -
school or out in a country district, j What is the good of dwelling upon
the trials of a school teacher are slight or hostilities? Many of them
manifold and severe. The teacher has are fancied. If we have enemies let
to deal with mismanagement of every
home in the district, and in too many
cases has the bad disposition of the
parents as well as the faults of the
scholars to contend with.
I us avoid them and refuse to think of
! them. To consider the wrongs that
j we think another has put upon us fills
us with anger and all uncharitable-
! ness. Let us rather think of our
| 11
I “Sully Says”:—
That a perfect photograph surely means
£ more than having your “picter took”
t
There’s a distinct difference between or-
| dinary photographs and Art Portraits.
| “Compare ours with others.
t
| We make “Portraits of the Better Kind”
f SULLIVAN’S ART STUDIOS
? Accross the Hall from the “Hello” Girls.
I
‘Films ieft Today will be
Delivered Tomorrow.”
| ed‘ |
At a meeting composed of nearly |
200 representatives from every phase
of the denomination’s life and work, j
in Nashville, Tennessee, July 2nd and
3rd, a complete program and organia j
tion for the campaign were effected. !
Each of the Southern States will be j
organized, with the State Secretary J
of Missions as the General Director
for that state. He will be aidfed by a
General Organizer and a Publicity
Man, and an Advisory' Campaign
Committee, made up of the three per-
sons above named, the Campaign
Commissioner from that state, the
editor of the Baptist paper, the Sec-
-> | rotary and Vice-President of the Wo-
£ i men’s Work, and the Chairman of the j
X I Laymen’s organization. It will be
V j the duty of these State Organizers to
i organize the sub-divisions in each
Ij! } state, called Associations or Districts. 1
j] j Each of these Associations or Dis- '
-j- : triets will have an Organizer and a
X 1 Public Director, and these will or
X I ganize the churches, with a General
V Director, preferably the pastor; and
1 an Organizer, some select laymen;
*«* ! and an Organizer representing the j
Women’s Work. All these organiza-
tions are to be aided by volunteer
workers, from among men and wo- j
men.
The name of the campaign is “Bap-
tist 75 Million Campaign.” The time i
for the big drive will be November
30th to December 7th. This will be |
called “Victory Week,” at which time
cash and pledges payable in 5 years
arc to he raised to the amount ot
more than 75 million dollars. All the
general organizations,—The Foreign
Mission Board at Richmond. Virgina.
Next Time—Buy
RED TOP TIRES
I
. fi
%
Big mileage Fabric Tires
built with an extra ply
and a heavy tread—Big
tires with mileage com-
parable to that of Cords.
Time to Re-tire?
iSuy FUk)
THE HANDSOMEST TIRE MADE
White side-wall — Red Tread
A. C. SCHE1BNER
Chandler, Oklahoma
%
riKhu]
.--a'. yy.-.v
.. •- 7
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The Chandler Tribune (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 24, 1919, newspaper, July 24, 1919; Chandler, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc915590/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.