Timpson Daily Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 20, Ed. 1 Monday, January 28, 1935 Page: 4 of 4
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SMASHING LOW PRICES
on all Winter Merchandise
| New Spring Merchandi
1 1 ' HUB
| New Prints, New Silks, New Wash Goods, New Crepes,
| New Suits, New Swagger Suits in brown, tan and gray
New Silk Dresses, New Wash Dresses
—-all New and Good Merchandise
50 New Wash Dresses.
. 79<*, 98<S $1.00
50 New Silk Dresses, price range . $1.97, $2.47, $2.97
12 yards of that good Brown Domestic........98c
Tape*—new colors—good values..............
GARDEN SEED
SWEET FEED...
FLOUR, MEAL,
SPECIALS
COFFEE, CHOPS,
OATS, HAY
GROCERIES, FEED AND FLOUR AT ROCK-BOTTOM PRICES!
BLANKENSHIP
.g STAR BRAND SHOES
H ARE BETTER
llliillinfllllllllillllil!lllllSljllllUillili9!iM!llllliilllltiliilllllil[!illlllll!lllllIllllllllj Butterick Patterns and Publications i[iniii!!D!l!iininil[B!l!«il
Typewriter Ribbon,
Remington, Woodstock, Un-
derwood, Remington portable,
Underwood portable. Oliver
S/16 for model 9 aad 11 and
7/16 for model 5 and 1, Corona
fonr, L. C. Smith. RoyaL
Timpson Printing Co.
|
us&d
We will trade for your car as part payment
on one of these used cars, balance arranged on
terms: j§
1934 Ford V-8 De Luxe Tudor,
only 11,000 miles.............$625.00 !
1934 Ford V-8 Standard Tudor,
only 2000 miles............. . .$575.00
1933 Ford V-8 Tudor, good buy for. $475.00
1933 Ford V-8 Coupe.............$485.00
1932 Ford V-8 Tudor. .. .SOLD.. .$350.00
1932 Ford 4-cylinder Tudor,
Repossession ....... ...$215.00
1932 Ford Coupe.....SOLD.....$275.00
1932 Chevrolet Coach. ............$375.00
1932 Chevrolet Coupe...........$375.00
1931 Ford Tudor.....SOLD.....$265.00
1930 Ford Coupe ..:........... $175.00
1931 Dodge Runabout. .. SOLD... $ 125.00
1929 Chevrolet Coach...........$125.00
1929 Chevrolet Coach... SOLD... $ 90.00
1929 Chevrolet Fordor.. .SOLD. . .$200.00
1928 Ford Sport Coupe. .SOLD. . . $ 75.00
1928 Ford Light Truck. .SOLD.. .$ 35.00
1931 Ford Half-Ton Truck........$275.00
1932 Ford 157-inch wheelbase Truck $250.00
Timpson Motor Co.
ONE STOP SERVICE
Ford Products Goodyear Tirea
Humble Oil Products
Cantor Timpson Logansport
FIESi PORK SHOULD
BE THOROUGHLY GOOXEO
SAYS HEALTH OFFICER
Austin, Tex., Jan. 28.—Now
that the winter season is here
and pork and pork . products
are more freely used, warning
against insufficient cooking of
these is given by Dr. John W.
Brown, State Health Officer.
Trichinosis is caused by a para-
site in the muscles of pigs.
This parasite may occur in
large numbers in infested
meat.
The disease is rather exten-
sively distributed among bogs,
and all pork should be regard-
ed with suspicion unless treat-
ed to kill the larvae. Freshly
killed pork is more dangerous
than meat that has been kept
in cold storage for some time
because parasites tend to die
out during prolonged storage
at low temperatures. Other
processes of preserving meat
also tend to kill the trichinella
larvae. No method of meat
inspection will invariably dis-
cover the presence of this par-
asite. Thus safeguard against
the disease must necessarily
be taken by consumers of the
Infested pork. Thorough cook-
ing may be counted upon to
kill the parasite.
Trichinosis results from eat-
ing uncooked pork, usually in
the form of sausage, that con-
tains the larvae. There is of-
ten danger, of not maintaining
sufficient temperature to
thoroughly cook the meat.
Outer portions of the meat
may appear well cooked while
the inner part is quite rare and
will retain the living parasites.
Especially is this true if the
piece of pork is quite thick.
Cases of trichinosis have occur-
red from eating just such inner
portions of undercooke dpork.
Pork with the slightest red
tinge may contain the living
parasites. Pork should be
cooked until all color disap-
pears through the piece of
meat, this is the only safe-
guard against trichinosis.
Ribbons for
typewriters.
all makes of
The Time*.
Hope, of Modem “Monte
Cristo*" Have Read Chance
Of Realization
With gold at a premium and
the world’s attention drawn
as never before to fantastic
guests for buried treasure,
the fictional adventures of
Edmond Dantes who found
fabulous wealth on a deserted
island in Alexandre Dumas’
immortal romance, “The Count
of Monte Cristo,” seem less
strange and mythical than
ever before.
In fact, events of the pact
few months have hinted at
treasure troves rivaling the
Croesus-like find of Dantes
who, in the novel, as in Harry
M. Goetz and Edward Small’s
million dollar Reliance filmiza-
tion, released through United
Artists, which brings Robert
Donat and Elissa Land! to the
Palace Theater last time to-
day, finds his way to the de-
serted Island of Monte Cristo
and there unearths great piles
of gold coin, barf of unpolish-
ed gold and chests of dimonds,
pearls and rubies.
Dumas is said to have gotten
the idea for the treasure epi-
sode while cruising past an
uninhabited isle in the Medi-
terranean Sea. There is a.
legend, however, that some-
one really did find such a
treasure on such an island
and became, like Dantes, one
of the most powerful men In
Europe and the founder of a
still flourishing family of
wealth.
However this may be,
Dantes’ fortune may have a
possible present-day counter-
part in the twenty-five tons of
ancient Peruvian gold Ingots
(worth about 850,000,0001 re-
ported located in the Tuamotu
Archipelago, a Freneh pos-
session in the South Pacific.
News dispatches report that
France U prepared to enforce
its rights of salvage and
claims half the trove, however,
so the modern Dantes will
have to be content with about
$25,000,000.
Another rich field for poten-
tial Monte Cristo*, and per-
haps the one which has attract-
ed the largest number of ad-
ventures in recent years, is
Cocos Island, in the Pacific
Ocean, off the coast of Pana-
ma. Hardly a mouth passes
that does not see an expendi-
tion sail out of San Francisco
Bay or Los Angeles harbor to
seek the millions ji gold and
jewels believed to be buried
there. Thus far the Cocos ex-
peditions have found more
adventure than gold, but they
are still trying, and recently a
London group started financ-
ing a 8375,000 enterprise to
seek buried treasure there.
Man Walks Into
Hospital With
Fractured Skull
Dallas, Texas, Jan. 28.—
(UP)—4. T. Winet of Burle-
son walked into a hospital
here and said he had received
a ‘Tick on the head.”
Physicians investigated,
found he was suffering from
an acute fracture of the skull
and said his condition was
critical.
This Candidate Is
Glad That Only
Small Vote Polled
San Angelo, Tex., Jan. 28.—
(UP)—District Clerk C. V.
Barnett is glad he received
only a few votes when he was
elected to office. If he had re-
ceived 8,000 votes the salary
of the office would have gone
into a new fee bracket. In that
event he would have received
$2 less for each case tried In
two district courts.
MwtKtfHWMUsuw ate
Senate Cafe
“Where People Go to Eat"
Emmett Shepherd, Mgr.
Phone 34
Timpson. Texas
TEXAS CCC
- CAMPS LEAD
Austin, Texas, Jan. 28.—
(UP)—Ten. OCC camps led
others of the nation with 2,670
Red Cross first aid certificated
issued last year. Meal Guy,
state recruit'ng officer, an-
nounced.
Massachusetts with 2,632
and Connect.:at with 1,789
were second and third.
LIFE INSURANCE
provides protection, helps
build comfortable estates,
and costs very little In
comparison with the bene--
fit* it will brmg.
Let me tell you about the
many features of reliable,
old line Life Insurance.
J.C. BLACK
AGENT
MOllflY OFFERS 11
A CLEW SERVICE
That Coats Him Several Thaos
More Burn Ordinary Cleaning
YET COSTS YOU NO MORE
Think what it means . . . your
things will be returned to you
spotlessly dean, odorless and
unfaded. Every job you sub-
mit to Malloy’s comes oat per-
fectly sanitary and with the
very best workmanship.
The perfection, the satisfac-
tion of Sanitary cleaning costs
you no more!
PHONE 132
5. R. HOLLO!
THE CLEANER
**•
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Molloy, T. J. Timpson Daily Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 20, Ed. 1 Monday, January 28, 1935, newspaper, January 28, 1935; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth767474/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Timpson Public Library.