Timpson Weekly Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, October 25, 1935 Page: 2 of 8
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TIMPS ON PHARMACY
nuns
Entered as second class mat-
ter April 17, 1909, at the post-
office at Timpson, Texas, un-
der the Act of March S, 1879.
T. J. MOLLOY......Editor
S. WINFREY - - Business Mjr.
THOUGHTS FOR
TODAY
_ <
The greatest and '
noblest pleasure which '
men can have in this '
world is to discover '
new truths; and the '
next is to shake off old
prejudices.
—Frederick the Great. '
__ 1
' The sum of wisdom
is that the time is never;■1
lost that is devoted to
work.—Emerson.
1
Peace hath her vic-
tories no less renown- '
ed than war.—Milton. '
.. .Sjj
Worry is mental
indigestion.
—Grace E. Hall.
that they cannot trade with
either of the nations at wax ex-
cept at their own risk, the
President, acting under in-
structions from Congress, has
withdrawn the protection of
the United States from Ameri-
can ships carrying American
cargoes to or from the ports of
Italy, even though we are at
peace with Italy and with the
rest of the world.
It is apparently the official
view that American people
are willing to scrap old pre-
cedents rather than run the
risk of becoming involved in
another foreign war.
FREEDOM OF THE SEAS
In 1917 the United States
went to war against Germany
because Germany had inter-
ferred with the right of Amer-
ican ships, when we were not
at war, to go wherever our
shipowners chose to send them.
Three or four times between
1914 and 1917 we were dose
to war with England over the
same issue of the freedom of
the seas. We did actually go
to war with Great Britain in
1812, to assert the right of
our ships to sail the high seas
without interference by any
other nation. The doctrine of
the freedom of the seas be-
came, in the course of a cen-
tury, an inherent part of the
American tradition-
There is a great body of
opinion now in the United
States which holds that we
should not have rone to war in
1917. In wanrng Americans
•Vernon.—An investment of
10 cents, spent in the pur-
chase of carrot seed last win-
ter, has paid large dividends,
according to garden reports of
Sarah Hannon, West Vernon
4-H dub girl from Wilbarger
county. From the 200 feet of
carrots planted with the dime’s
worth of seed, Sarah has
cafined 105 pints of carrots to
be used in the family food
budget during the.coming win-
ter months.
Far. more heroes are born
and die in log cabins than even
come out of them.—Pearl
Buck.
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TO SEE WHAT WAS IKS IDE OF
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SOAP
P & G
OFFERS VALUABLE PRIZES
FOR THE KIDDIES
ASK FOR PARTICULARS
Gordon Weaver
GROCERIES
Phone 9
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Not Now
Wife: "Here's an advertise-
ment of a new kind of shirt
that hasn’t any buttons.”
Hubby: "Huh? I've been
wearing that kind for years.”
—Christian Science Monitor.
• • •
Equal to the Job
Pedro, the lion tamer, was
unable to appear at the circus
one Bight, so bis wife applied
for the job.
"Do you think you can man-
age the animals?’ asked the
circus proprietor.
“Did Pedro manage them
nil right?” she asked.
"Most successfully.”
“Well, that’s all right, then.
I can manage Pedro.”—El
Paso World News.
* V •
Gets Off Easily
“Do you get much time for
motoring?”
“No; they just line me."—
El Paso World News.
* • •
Aha!
“After 'another season,”
said Farmer Comtossel, “I
guess we’ll have a chef for the
summer boarders.”
“What’s a chef?” asked
Mrs. Corntossel.
“A chef is a man with a big
enough vocabulary to give the
soup a different name every
day.”—Washington Evening
Star.
• • *
Sad, Sad Case
Fiat Hobo: “What yer read-
ing in that book that’s worry-
ing yer so?”
Second Hobo: "I’ve just
found a recipe for homemade
ginger ale, and I ain't got no
home.”—Capper’s Weekly.
Judge Sutherland, address-
ing Wesleyan alumni at a
commencement luncheon, told
of. a defeated candidate for
the lieutenant governorship
whose wife consoled him with
the assurance that he would
always be lieutenant governor
at home.—Christian Advocate.
* • *
Invariably
“Aren’t people funny!”
"Yea. If you tell a man that
there are 270,678,984,341 stars
in the universe he’ll believe
you—but if a sign says ’Fresh
Paint,’ that same man has to
make a personal investiga-
tion."—Pathfinder.
• • •
Equalizes
The head clerk in an office
was admonishing one of the
girt typists. "You are the last
to come in the morning,” he
said, “and the first to go at
night.”
“Well,” replied the typist,
“you wouldn’t like me to be
late twice a day, would you?”
—Calendar.
• • •
Fast
“Well, Johnny,” said the
uncle, who hadn’t seen him for
some time, “you are getting to
be quite a big boy now, aren’t
you?”
"Yep,” replied the kid,
“poo says I’m growing like the
public debt.”—Montreal Star.
EVERY CORN-HOG
PRODUCER TO GET
VOTE IN AAA POLL
on the one hand, has a choice
of continuing a production ad-
justment program designed to
hold corn acreage down to a
safe desirable level and pre-
venting as excessive increase in
hog numbers. The alternative
is to release control both on
corn acreage and hog produc-
tion at the risk that daring the
next three years the increase
in hog production from the
1935-36 level will be greater
than for any previous period in
the county's history with con-
sequent disastrous hog prices.
In the years before the AAA
every corn-hog produced
would have had to deal with
this prospect in hb own indi-
vidual way, with no means of
guessing what the industry as
a whole intended to do, and
with no means of bringing
about concerted national ac-
tion to meet the problem. Now
with their production control
association and their voluntary
contract system, farmers as a
whole are in a position to
know what other farmers are
going to do and to cooperate to
keep supplies and livestock
numbers in balance and there-
by prevent the periodic un-
controlled ups and downs in
pork production and prices
which have been one of the
major hazards to the industry
for many years, and which
have been harmful to the con-
sumers of pork as well.
Every eligible corn-hog pro-
ducer in Sheiby county, as
well as each of the 293 con-
tract signers, is entitled to' vote
in the national com-hog refer-
endum Saturday, October 26,
according to T. W. Bounds,
president of the County Corn-
Hog Association.
All fanners have a stake in
the question: Do you favor a
corn-hog adjustment program
to fellow the 1935 program
which expires on November
30, 1935? Therefore, it is im-
portant to get the judgment of
every eligible producer on the
matter, he points out.
- All operators and owners,
or their official representatives
of farms which produced corn
or hogs in 1935 may vote
whether they signed com-hog
contracts in past years or not.
Community committeemen will
determine the eligibility of
voters. Each eligible person i?
entitled only to one vote re-
gardless of the number of
farms he may own or operate,
no matter where located.
The com and hog industry,
Physical Paradoxes
of Sexes Interesting
Dalhart, Tex., Oct. 19. (UP)
—Interesting physical paraV
c^oxes of the sexes have been
noted by Joe Kelly, former
Broadway musical comedy
player and dancer.
Rased on right hand per-
sons the following pecularities
are so often noted that they
approximate a rule: a woman
will kick higher with her left
leg, will always start from a
standstill with her right foot,
will use her right foot to start
up or down stairs, step off a
curb, etc., and under stress of
some crisis will always jump
to the right, if a jump either
direction would have been
equally appropriate. With
right handed men the exact
opposite is true. Another para-
dox Kelly says, is that left-
handed women react in these
matters as right-handed men
and vice versa.
Other physical indications
of a right-handed woman are
that she will swim on her right
side, will use her right arm if
leaning an a table or desk,
will sit on her left hip if sitting
sideways on a desk, will have
her typewriter at her left at
her desk, will use her right
hand to pick up a telephone
Do You
Ever
Wonder
Whether the‘‘Pain”
Remedy You Use
is SAFE?
Ask Your Doctor
and Find Out
Don’t Entrust Your
Own oc Your Family’s
Well - Being to Unknown
Preparations
is SAFE”to use regularly is your
family doctor. Ask firm particularly
about Genuine BAYER ASPIRIN.
He will tell you that before the
discovery of Bayer Aspirin most
“pain remedies were advised
against by physicians as bad for the
stomach and, often, for the heart.
Which is food for thought if you
seek quick, safe relief.
Scientists rate Bayer Aspirin
among the fastest methods yet dis-
covered for the relief of headaches
and the pains of rheumatism, neu-
ritis and neuralgia. And the experi-
ence of millions of users has proved
it safe for the average person to use
regularly. In your own interest re-
member this.
You can get Genuine Bayer
Aspirin at any drug store — simply
by asking for it by its full name,
BAYEK ASPIRIN. Make it a
point to do this — and see that you
yd what you want.
Bayer Aspirin
receiver unless having had to
train herself tc do otherwise
because of taking notes over a
phone, and will pot on her
right glove lint. With right-
handed men the opposite is
£rue, as a rule. Where right-
handed persons behave — ’■ **
handed persons generally do,
Kelly believes as children the
now right-handed persons may
have been strongly tended to-
ward left-handedness.
Conroe.—A portable pantry
was built for Mrs. B. H. Smith
of Montgomery county for
$12.80. The pantiy is built
of 12-inch boards. It Is six feet
high and ax feet long and the
shelves are two feet wide. The
shelves were bniU 10 inches
apart in order to fit tin con-
tainers or quart jars. A wider
space was left at the bottom
for storing larger containers.
A brace was put through the
middle to support the shelves
and to keep them from sway-
ing. There is a full length
screen door on each side of the
brace. "Having doors on each
side makes it more convenient
to get the cans oat,” she said.
The $12.80 was spent to pur-
chase new lumber, screen
wire, nails, dcor fasteners and
point.
Bibber., tor all makes of
typewriters. The Times.
OCTOBER IS
National
DOUGHNUT
Week
A variety hi dawghnnts
Sugar, Glazed Bed Jelly
Doughmeti all thia
TIMPSON BAKERY
Phone 39
WE SERVE YOU THE BEST
OF FOOD
HOME-MADE PASTRIES
FULL LINE OF SANDWICHES
WE SS&X^TOUR
BUSINESS
Senate Cate
S. E. SHEPHERD, Owner
“Where People Go te Eat”
Phone 34
Supplies for School
We have a complete line of school supplies and
shall be glad to furnish your requirements in prepa-
ration for the opening of school next week, and all
during the school term.
Tablets for pen and pencil, pens, pen points, book
covers, note book paper, fountain pens, erasers,
pencils. In fact everything for the student.
We appreciate yonr patronage.
G. C. McDAVID
"THE LEADING DRUGGIST”
DUE TO THE POPULARITY AND BIG DEMAND FOR
THE NEW FORD V-8 CARS, WE HAVE BEEN ABLE
TO TRADE FOR A COMPLETE STOCK OF
Used Cars
at Right Prices
CARS THAT HAVE THOUSANDS OF ECONOMICAL
MILES LEFT IN THEM. BE SURE TO SEE THEM
BEFORE YOU BUY:
1934 FORD TUDOR, new motor__________________________ $465.00
1934 FORD DE LUXE TUDOR, new tires ..... $475.00
1934 FORD COUPE, first class............................. $440.00
1934 FORD HALF-TON TRUCK, bargain..............$425.00
1933 FORD RUNABOUT, new motor. $895.00
1933 CHEVROLET SPECIAL SEDAN, new
paint, trunk and luggage.........................
1932 FORD COUPE, good buy at...........
1931 FORD HALF-TON TRUCK....................
1930 CHEVROLET COACH-----------------------------
1930 FORD COUPE . ............................................
..$395.00
$265.00
1930 CHEVROLET COUPE............
1929 FORD COUPE____________-............
1932 FORD COUPE, repossessed.....
1931 FORD TRUCK, burned ............
.. .. .$186.00
... $85.00
-----$165.00
.... $145.00
............$76.00
.......$135.00
________$65.00
Timpson Motor Co.
ONE STOP SERVICE
; Ford Product* Goodyear Tires
Humble Oil Prod
j Center
Humble Oil Products
Timpson Logan* port
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Molloy, T. J. Timpson Weekly Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, October 25, 1935, newspaper, October 25, 1935; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth765862/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Timpson Public Library.