Timpson Daily Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 98, Ed. 1 Monday, May 16, 1932 Page: 2 of 4
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FOR THE GRADUATES
Give
COMPACTS-PERFUME GLAZO
SETS—CUTEX SETS—B A T H-
1NG SUITS AND ACCESSORIES—
BRIDGE SETS-DUSTING POW-
DER—CANDY—GIFT GOODS—
FOUNTAIN PENS AND PENCILS
—KODAKS DuBARRY TRAVEL-
UXE SETS—WATCH BRACELETS
TIMPSON PHARMACY
“The Place to Gel What You Want”
THE DULY TIMES
Entered as second claaa nat-
ter April 17, 1909, at the poet-
office at Timpson, Texas, under
the Act of March 5,1879.
T. J. MOLLOY,......Editor
S. WINFREY, - - Business Mgr.
AIIOUICEMEITS
, ———
The following announce-
ments are authorised for the
1932 primaries:
For District Judge, 123rd
Judicial District:
T. O. DAVIS
For Commissioner, Precinct 4:
E. F. (ELMER) ROSS
A. L. (ARCHIE) WHITSON
W. C. (Clarence) CRUMP
J. A. BILLINGSLEY
JAMES A. (Jim) HAILEY
W. H. (Herman) WORSHAM
PERKIN WILSON
’ J. J. THOMAS.
For County Clcrk:
MRS. MAY W. BANKS
For County Judge:
CLARENCE SAMFORD
For County Treasurer t
MARL1E CHILDS.
' For Sheriff:
H. E. (ED) HOLT
MAKCY G. CARROLL
JESSE SAMPLE
For District Clark:
ELLIS D. WILBURN
CARROLL F. CAMPBELL
For Tax Collector:
CLIFTON BRITTAIN
For Taa Assessor
A. J. (Jimmie) PAYNE
For County Chairman:
LON PRICE.
For Representative:
HUGH JONES
SAM P. JOHNSON
For Justice of the Peace, Pre-
cinct No. 7:
J. C. (NEAL) BOGARD
R. W. TODD
For Constable, Precinct No. 7:
ELMER NICHOLS
they
your
“sour
withhold the favor*
might otherwise turn
way, just develop this
grapes” attitude.
Any group is better off with-
out a backbiter.
There is nothing gained in
keeping in touch with the
catty.
Some folk think it very amus-
to others to hear these little
mean stabs and that is because
most people laugh as such
sallies. >
But that laugh is not indi-
cative of respect.—Houston
Chronicle.
Many a man is known by the
icebox he keeps.—Scurry Coun-
ty Times.
“Ad Libbing’ Skill
Made Him Famous
<• I ADIE8 and gentlemen, the noises
Lof New York City!”
A microphone popped out of A sky-
scraper window and a fire truck, a
riveting machine and the Sixth Ave-
nue "L” obliged! with the required
obbligato, aa Norman BrokesahJre
saved the situation. A regularly
scheduled singer had mbsuntxnlndedly
left the premises before singing her
Anal number.
Resourcefulness la aliil his long suit
even though radio baa come a long
way since be used to t ar Into a. siti-
“BUILDING A LIFE"—
(Continued from Page 1)
Backbiter.
It is generally those who
have not succeeded in getting
where they wanted to go who
resort to backbiting.
Thwarted ambition in oae
way or another sours.
Then these men souls seek a
way to tear down and stamp
on the very thing they most
wish and the persons who take
the places they .want.
If they knew how transpar-
ent such tactics are to an ob-
server they would not be so'
free with criticism.
None is exempt from mis-
fortune.
None is always successful in
making a longed-for-goal.
If you want your friends to
dio, collect the artisu, throw a switch
and go on the air with no clear idea
of wha« might happen. This ability
to “ad Ub”—to make up sonethins
_ to meet emergencies—haa
gained for him *one oi the biggest
plums of broadcasting
A varied and colorful early Ufa
waa ideal preparation for his real tife-
'worfc. No microphone can fare a mao
who haa been Janitor of a school
house, lumberjack, song writer. poet,
inspector in a shoe factory, and Y U
C. A worker all befo.-e the xjje Of 23
Although oow only 32, bo has beo-i in
radio for ten years
Norman Crofcenshirc ha* made an
art of a formality -radio annoant ag
As the genial master of ceretncries
for the Cbeste ."field program, sis
nights a week, via the Colombia
Broadcasting System and on the
world’s largeJt sponsored neivr»*rk.
"Broke" now has the most important
announcing job of his carter
•^loaen because his voice sr-ur.di>
the program's iaforiraj keynote his
famojs "How do yo«a do. '3dsr3 and
gentlemen, how DO you DO’’ enkrv
listeners feel thev a-c rijrh: in rh*
•aok* room with lbs performer?. !' h
EU!n^. the Boswell Sister*. ASe* ' — %
cad Nat ghiikret's orchestra. *
he. Those were high moments.
God help you to become what
you dreamed you would be.
Across the fields from
yesterday
There sometimes comes
to me;
A little boy just back
from play,
The boy I used to be.
And yet he smiles so
wistfully,
Once he has crept
within;
1 wonder if he hopes to
see
The man I might have
been.
Enter life with the forward
look. You can honestly ap-
praise the past and still have
the forward look. I hope that
you will be dreamers of tomor-
row. I hope that you will see
wrongB to be righted; reforms
that are needed, and ideals
that need to be championed.
Jesus without a doubt looked
ahead and had the forward
look. Was this not the reason
for this statement: “No man
having put his hand to the
plough and looking back is fit
for the Kingdom of Heaven,”
Enter the future with the
determination never to com-
promise. Many will offer you
this and that as a means to suc-
cess. Many will offer you suc-
cess if you will compromise.
But success will never come
that way. They will show you
roads which will seem to be'
sure roads to success, but suc-
cess will not come so easily as
it will be pictured to you. Suc-
cess will not come to you while
you are waiting for it. More
than likely, it will only come
as l reward for your honest
efforts in trying to achieve.
“The height by great men
gained and kept
Were not attained by sud-
den flight
But they, while their com-
panions slept
Were toiling upward in
the night.”
3. Believe !n Yourself.
By this, I don’t mean to be
ego-centric, self-centered and
bigoted. But this I do mean:
whatever you do believe 5n
your product. Whatever you
do, do it in such a way that you
would be willing for the most
critical to observe it. Be satis-
fied when you haive done only
your best. One should novel1
be satisfied with an article
when he or she feels that a
better one could have beer,
produced. A short time ago I
heard this story. I cannot
vouch for its authenticity but it
does convey a point which I
am trying to give to you.
It is said that a few years
ago a man picked up a paper
in California and it carried an
account of the Galveston
storm. In the account, it told
of the breaking and cracking
of the sea-wall. The man read
it; crumpled the paper; threw
it down and said: “I don’t be-
lieve it.” He took a train and
came to Texas, made hia way
down to the gulf and across to
the Island City. Then he walk-
ed from one end to the sea-wall
to the other end, and satisfied
himself that there was not a
break; not a craek; not a
crevasse in the wall. Then he
said: "l knew it.” He wa3 the
one who had built the wall,
and even though far away
when he read the account of
the storm which said that the
wall was broken, he so be-
lieved in his product that he
would not believe the written
account. He came back and
satisfied himself that his be-
lief in his product was not in
vain.
And you will be turning out
products in years to come. Be
satisfied only when you have
done your best and to which
article you would be willing to
attach your name.
4. Faith in (Sod.
I could not honestly and sin-
cerely preach to you this
baccalaureate sermon without
challening you to take God
with you; Some people think
that God is not needed. And
aome very foolishly think that
they can live without God and
the church and all of its influ-
ence throughout the years.
And some try to mold their
lives with the Bock of Ages,
Jesus, left out But though
many have tried it, many have
also testified to the futility of
it. And in the end they have
realized that they did not have
anything worth-while. You
might get along for a while but
after a while, you will begin to
realize that something very im-
portant is missing. Man has
done wonderful things and
man still is doing worderful
things, but there are some
things that man'eannot make.
When we see a sunset, .
rose, a beautiful flpwer, a hu-
man being we must realize that
those things are beyond the
creative power of man. When
we stand in the presence of
those things, we are standing
in the presence of God.
Mr. Fcsdick has wisely said:
“When faith in God goes,
man the thinker loses his
greatest thought. . . . When
faith in God goes, man the
worker loses his greatest mo-
tive. . .. When faith in God
goes, man the sinner loses his
strongest help. .. , When faith
in God goes, man the sufferer
loses his securest refuge.’
You will be the loser if you
fail to take God with you.
Dare not go out on this journey
without a deep abiding faith
in God the Heavenly Father.
"According to a fable said
lo have come from Denmark, a
spider once slid down a single
fiiliament of web from the
lofty rafters of a barn and es-
tablished himself upon a lower
level. There he spread his
web, caught flies and grew
sleek and prospered. One day,
wandering about, hia premises,
he saw the thread that stretch-
ed up into the unseen above
him. “What is that for?” he
said ar.d snapped it. All hi3
web collapsed. And the fable
tells an interesting truth. Is
there not a comparison there
for us in regard to our spiritual
kingdom. Our heritage roots
back in religion. We can snap
the thread and with the break-
inf, ofJt’ fll1 our kingdom will
fall. Enter the future journey
of life with an undying faith
in God the Father.
This little poem by Edwin
Markman, I give to you in
closing:
“We are blind until we
see
That in the human plan
Nothing is worth the
making If
It does not make the man.
Why build these cities
glorious
If man unbuiided goes?
In vain we build the
work, unless
The builder also grows.”
Surplus Milk
Makes Good
American Cheese
Seymour.—Having made
300 pounds of American j
cheese which she sold for |
$60.00, Mrs. Loo Howe of the
Kashknife Club holds the rec-
ord as cheese-maker in Baylor
county. She now has on hand
148 pounds of cheese curing,
and recently conceived the
idea of making pimento cheese
for whieh she is finding ready
sale.
Cheese making has become
popular in Baylor county, re-
ports Miss Ester Mae Wade,
county home demonstration
agent, since the women have
found that it costs very little
to make, and is a means of
marketing their surplus milk
for which there is practically
no sale.
These Shirts
Lead the Field
When a man bays shirts, he wants to be certain ho is
getting goods that will stand 19 under all sorts a# wear.
So be looks (if he’s really critical) far the* things: full
cut, wide, well sewed teams, carefully tailored colters
and cuffs, and, of course, good material. . ,. You’ll find
all of these end more in these shirts at ool
$1
We invite minute inspection.
NEW
Neckwear
for Summer
Swank
$
1
* *
t:
Many Cheaper
Designs
Seldom hat it been our good fortune to make a pur-
chase of fine silk neckwear at prices as krw as we obtain-
ed on this unusual shipment of new summer foulards aril
crepes ... a line of neckwear which should sell regularly
for $1.50 to $2.00... All new colors.,, all new patterns,
and finely tailored.
Real Values in Men’s Hats—the new straws—
Panamas and Felts Step into « new hat. You can ob-
tain one hero at a very low price.
Men, you can dress up now for a very few dollars.
See our New White Suits—while they test only $7.78.
Keep cooL wenr one of these new suits. '
New Ties, Hosiery, Skirts, Handkerchiefs,
Underwear, Hats, Pajama Suits.
Prices on Groceries and Feed guaranteed.
R. T. BLAIR
Mother (In train): "Tommy,
If you are not a good boy I shall
smack you.”
Tommy: “You slap me and
I’ll tell the conductor my real
age."
Diamond—I thought you
said you took private lessona
trom a bridge expert?
Hardt—Yes, but I never get
dealt to me the hands I have
studied.
BUD V BUB
By ED KRESSY
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Molloy, T. J. Timpson Daily Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 98, Ed. 1 Monday, May 16, 1932, newspaper, May 16, 1932; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth766079/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Timpson Public Library.