PAGE TWO —Professor Peebles is better after be- ing ill for several weeks with fever. They have sold their home to C. U. Taylor. —Ivan Lothian arrived Monday after- ncon. He will work in the broom shop and will attend school the coming ses- sion. —Mrs. Woodward and Mary spent the week-end In Dalworth visiting rela- tives. —Mary Luccock writes that she and Miss Crump enjoyed Sabbath dinner together in Berrien Springs on the 19th. —Iilder Woodward and Elder Taylor went to Fort Worth Monday after- noon to pray for a sick lady. Elder “Taylor reports that she is much better ond is confident that the Lord will heal her. '—Miss Nadine Harris plans to go to her home in Dalworth to see her sis- ter who will be there from East Texas. Miss Harris will leave Friday after- noon. -—A new DeLaval cream separator has been installed in the home recently. —Tlsie Strickland is planning to take a business course the coming year in Cushing, Okla. She and her brother, Arlie, were here in school year before last. —Harold Fillman returned to Keene Saturday night from his canvassing field. He has rented the building for- merly occupied by Mr. Findley and his “Fixit” shop is being installed. He may also conduct a retail shoe - business and he solicits the patronage of the students. —A number are working in the kitchen canning pears this week. They are Leona and Mrs. Laird, Mabel Niel- son and Vada Huling. —The Hewgley family is enjoying a reunion at the present time. Miss Etta Hewgley is here from San An- tonio, also Mrs. C. N. Norman from San Antonio, Mrs. T. A. Casey from Washington, D. C,, and Miss Lee Hewg.ey who lives here with her fat- ther. .—The Ragsdales left Keene last week and after touring for several months, - they plan to settle in California. — Some of the cotton pickers attended Sabbath School in Keene last Sab- bath. Troy Guffey, Howard Mattison and J. T. Hopps caught a ride to Keene and spent the day here. —Many of the students will remember John Hale and Veda Fortner. We wish to state that they: were married from © MacDonald, this summer and we know it will be of interest to you. —~Elder and Mrs. Wright returned the Oklahoma campmeeting Tuesday evening. — Mrs. Whitfield and_Warren spent a few hours in Keene Tuesday looking for rooms. Mrs. Whitfield plans to spend the winter here with her boys if they can find a suitable location. —Brother Hampton went to Yort Worth and Dallas the first part of the week and while there attended the Broom Manufacturers’ Convention in Dallas. —The following is a list of students and former students who attended the Oklahoma campmeeting, as given by Jvan Lothian. Others may have been there whose names we do not have. Edith Cornish, Ollie Close, Hubert Kenneth Brown, Susie May Alexander, Buford Ward, Albin Conrad, George Matthews, aVughn Mathis, Emmet Hedrick, Claude Hughes, Kristine Klostemeyer, Irene Smith, Lucile Bailey, Alton Hughes, C. E. Grant, Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Fish- er, Mary Heim, Miss Couch, William Fisher, Marshall Tucker, Ruby Dart, Frank Moran, Frank Brewer, Nellie Riddels, Elwood Pugh, Thomas Pills- bury, Frank Hughes, Lois Shafer, Frances Werner, Verna Larson and W. O. Belz. —Thelma Neal sends greetings to, the, readers of the News Letter. She is selling magazines in Houston and reports that on account of the stirke, the work is going rather slow. —Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Fisher will have rooms at the Sipe home this year. —Professor Isaac is now attending the Texico campmeeting and is ex- pected home the first of next week. —Ina Bell Graves is wearing the stripes now. Perfectly honorable, how- ever, as she is in training at the White Memorial Sanitarium at Los Angeles, Cal. She feels that the stu- dents here are fortunate in being able to go to class at 7:45. She has to go to class at 6:30 in the morning, and she says she has been unable to get enough sleep on this account. She “has had her first experience with dead people and says it is rather spooky. She has met the following former stu- dents in California: Harold Leland, Lillian Mynatt und Wilmer Lyon. Eunice Huber has been accepted at the Boulder Sanitarium, She left her home in Lebanon, Kansas, for Boulder SOUTHWESTERN UNION RECORD this week. She states that she would have returned to Keene if crop con- ditions had not been so unfavorable. —T, D. Greer is still at the Y. M. C. A. at Muskogee. He writes that he is desirous of entering. our school this year. —We suppose that Professor Conrad is visiting you Oklahoma students as the last word reecived of him was that he was eating bread, milk and ice cream preparatory to making a tour through Oklahoma. —Nellie Daniels is coming back to school and plans to bring a friend with. her. —Nora Lankford is nursing for a lady whose home is in Dallas. They are syending the summer moriths in Col- otado and Nora states that they took a trip up through the northern part of Colarado, going through Boulder, Denver and up to Estes Park. They will be at Colorado Springs until Sep- tember 10 when she will return to take up school work here. -—A letter from Winona, Casey has been received in which he states that the college there is located in a beau- tiful part of Takoma Park. She lives one mile from school and she sup- poses that every morning will find her digging through the snow. Her thoughts will be with S. W. J. C. and she has been glad to meet Miss Pat- terson there. -—Elder French left Sunday for Ber. rien Springs to visit his son, Thomas, before the latter sails for his mission field the first of September. FIRESIDE CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOL The Only School That Brings A Chris: tian Education To Your Ver; Door Qo We offer courses in Bible, English, History, Languages, Education, Sci- ence, Nursing, Mathematics, Musiz, ang Business. NOW is the best time to enroll Write for a catalog and informa- tion to the Principal, Prof. C. C. Lewis, Takomg Park, Washington, D. C. 37 > > WANTED—First class farmer cap- able of handling about 100 acres on the halves. No one need to apply only first class man and a S. D. A. with reference as to his ability as. a farmer. Apply T. D. Hagamen, Rio Vesta, Texas, Route 1.