Timpson Daily Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 107, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 29, 1934 Page: 2 of 4
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Haden & Boucher
Fly Chaser
Kills Horn Flies, Stable Flies, Mosquitoes
slid Gnats. Gives comfort to live stock in
barn and field. Every gallon guaranteed.
PRICE 7» PER GALLON
Bring your container and get it for
J_65C per gallon._
TIMPSON PHARMACY
the tet lift* of winch rent*"
rod «%kh cm tame Fort Great Tenures
IIIOmEIEITS
The limes Is authorized to
announce the following, sub-
ject to the action of the Demo-
cratic primaries:
For Senior, tad District.
WALTER C. HOLLOWAY
Gregg County
E. H. LASSE TER
of Rusk County
JOE HILL
of Rusk County
For District Attorney:
(123rd Judicial District!
WARDLOW LANE
E. B. LEWIS
For District Clerk:
CARROLL CAMPBELL
For County dork:
DON HOOPER
V. L. (VOYDE) HUGHES
B. M. ALFORD
LON PRICE
T. A. (TOM) COOK
MRS. J. L. WALKER
For Tax Collector.Assessor:
G. O. (GUY) WILLS
GEORGE N. BAGWELL
A. J. (JIMMIE) PAYNE
JOHN D. WINDHAM
NONA ROSS
BURKE MORRISON
Far
Skelby County:
C. O. GIBSON
WARD CHANDLER
J. D. McCALLUM
JNO. C. ROGERS
HUGH JONES
THOMAS R. DAY
For Sheriff:
J. B. (JESSE) SAMPLE
For Canty Judge:
CLARENCE SAMFORD
A. L. PINKSTON
ZED BRIDGES
____
ON IE BELLS WILLIS
JEFF E. SAMFORD
REEVES HALEY
HARDY HAIRSTON
CUNT A. CROCKER
W. G. (Watsey) HARRIS
For Conty Treasurer:
MRS. SUSIE BALLARD
W H. CONWAY
. FAIRISH J. HAYES
For Conty
J. W.
EMMETT
N. B. D. (DAVIS! BAILEY
For Comnusiiaaer, Product
No. 4:
J. A. (JOE) BILLINGSLEY
E. C. (PAT) MURPHY
ERNEST BOGARD
For Justice of the Penes Pre-
cinct No. 7:
J. G. BOGARD
Far Constable, Precinct No. 7:
R. B. ALFRED
THE DUTIES
Entered as second data mat-
ter April 17, 1909, at the post-
office at Timpson, Texas, un-
der the Ac tof March 3, 1879.
T. J. MOLLOY,.....Editor
S. WINFREY. * - Business Mgr.
DON’T STAY BURIED!
This story isn’t ours, but
|nevertheless it is a good one:
j A fanner had an old blind
j horse which had outlived his
! usefulness. One day he fell
| into an old welL The fanner
i looked in and saw him stand-
ing deep in the'water. There
; seemed to be no way to get
him oat, as he was quite use-
less, and the well abandoned
! and dangerous, the farmer or-
dered his men to All up the
well and leave the horse buried
in it.
The men began to shovel
dirt into the well. But the
horse was not willing to be
buried. .When the dirt began
to pour in upon him he began
to shake it off and tread it un-
der foot. As the well was fill-
ed up tbe bone came
and nearer to tbe
when the men
surface, and
had finished
USSIMSWISIIMSSSSSISSIS
PALACE
THEATRE
TIMPSON
Show starts promptly 7:45p.a
mty Attorney:
(JOE) ELLINGTON
ETT WILBURN
TODAY
ONLY
May 29th
EDWARD G. ROBISON
Hazard’
She’d No Mechanical Taste
Betty (who has been served
with a wing of chicken)—
Mother, can’t I have another
bitT This is nothing but hinges.
—Toronto Globe.
_with_
GLENDA FARRELL
GENEVIEVE TOBIN
—ALSO—
Comedy and chapter « of
■PERILS OF PAULINE'
DKUCt *BA+!I UN
ALWAYS A RIGHTEOUS MAN
In every wicked reign there was a righteous man of God who
eculd be neither bribed nor intimidated. He stood forth crying
"Thus saith the Lord,” and though the king writhed and fumed
and sought to destroy, the prophet was the victor.
The first of this exalted company was
Nathan, who was court preacher in the reign
of David. When that mighty monarch had
stolen the wife of the brave soldier Uriah and
compounded the crime by sending Uriah into
the front line of the battle, Nathan appeared
at the court and announced that he had come
to tell the king a story. There were two men
in a certain citv. he said, the one rich, having
many flocks «..u herds, and the other so poor
that he possessed only one little ewe lamb. And
the rich man, desiring a banquet, had spared
all of his own big flock and appropriated the
“ poor man’s one lamb.
And David’s anger was greatly kindled against
the man; and he said to Nathan. As the Lord liveth,
the man that hath done this thing shall surely die....
And Nathan said to David, Then art Ike men.
Picture to y-nrself the spectacle. Tbe king on Us golden
throne surrounded by his lords and soldiers; the penniless
preacher,-clothed in rough skins, with no power but Truth, no
protection but the flaming sword of moral courage. "Thaw art
the maw.” The effect was immediate.
And David said onto Nathan, I have sinned against
the Lord, and David fasted, and went in, and lay all
night upon the earth.
After Nathan came Elijah the Tishbite, a hairy man, living
alone in the woods, drinking the water of mountain streams,
and fed by ravens. He it was who stood out against the four
hundred prophets of the religion of Baal which the wicked
Queen Jezebel had imported, and challenged them-to a life
and death contest. They were to build their altar and lay
their sacrifice thereon; he would tay a similar sacrifice on the
altar of the Lord. Whichever god sect down fire from Heaven
was the one who deserved to be worshipped. From morning
until noon the false prophets leaped upon their altar, calling
ont to Baal, while Elijah taunted them.
And it came to pass at noon, that Elijah mocked
them, and said. Cry aloud: for he is a god; either he
la talking, or he is pursuing, or he is in a journey, or
peradventure he sleepeth and must be awaked..
At evening when the four hundred ha i proved their inability
to deliver the goods, Elijah laid upon his own altar, .plaeed the
sacrifice on it, stacked up the wood, and poured water over rt
to make the test harder. Then he prayed.
Then the fire of the Lord fell, and consumed the
burnt sacrifice, and tbe wood, and the stones, and the
dust, and licked op the water that was in the trench.
And when al] the people saw it, they fell on then-
faces: and they said. The Lord, he is the God: the
Lord, be is the God.
their task the hone walked ont
into the pasture.
The very thing which con-
spire to bury the lion-hearted
these days, are used by them
to lift themselves out of diffi-
culties and into the right light.
The very last thing one should
do is to agree to stay dead, and
buried —Sentinel, Fairmount,
Minn.
"It isn’t sanitary,” protested
the traveler, "to have the
house built over the rig-sty
like that.”
“Well, I dunno,” replied the
farmer, "we ain’t lost a pig in
15 years.”—AutomoboHsi.
Queens are
ed by wise me
foolish
Inge.
AWSVEIRS
PROTECTION
EPISODE 6 IE
PURSUED BY SAVAGES
WEDNESDAY ONLY
’ May 30
usiim unr
A ROADSHOTV TirTUSS
FOR ONtT *1 A TEAR I
TUttomdmrdlymr woman
. PLUS 4 yum additional
pnttctitm w «*» imUdio-
Unl eriMiie for tmfytf
•
• The rnxacno aponw-
of the G-E Monitor Top has made it
poesiMe fix General Electric to ptotecr
your investment 3 yens for only »1 a year!
Now, to this matchless mechanism has
bceo added briUiaot new beamy and dis-
tinguished cabinet nyiiag. New lpjd
models ate the finest and most a-mam
refrigemots General Electric ever built
Terms as Low as $7.50 Per Month
Prices Begin at $124.50 Delivered
Call o- Write Us for a Demonstration
Payne & Payne
CENTER, TEXAS
Phone SI
Wonder Values
for the Warm Days
NEW SHIRTS
See our line of E. W.
shirts; look for this brand
when you purchase a
shirt. You will find the
style and quality is at the
beck
51-25. 91.50 and $1.7
And the $1-00 ones are
made by the E. W. Shirt
Mfg. Co-, however, they
do not put their names
upon them.
New line of Mens Spring Hats in Felts, in all
styles and colors . . .
Park Hill brand, special this week.....$3.00
Royal Club brand, our price, .........$&50
in the Tuscan fabric, Kool Krown ventilated,
sand and white colors, worth $1.65—
Special $1.50
Men’s Khaki add White Linen and fancy
dress pants, m gray and brown finish, pretty
patterns, the price is a positive value
$1-96
Men's and Boys' Union and Shorts Under-
wear. A complete line—
25c, 50c, 75e and 85c
NEW DRESSES
umraer suit of a new and
e sheer crepe in navy blue—
»r and curs of tiny checked
waffle doth. One of our many new arrivals.
Regular price $9.75—
Buy a Morning Glory frock and be dressed up
for any occasion—they are in sheer voiles and
Peter-Pan prints, with organdy
Sizes for all 14 to 46. Only $1.89.
trimmings.
DRESS MATERIALS
Cool and breezy materials for hot day*—
Embroidered Eyelet Batiste.
Printed
KAnH Prtated Organdies.
Pastel, Kazy stripes and Checked Pique.
Ami other materials just aa lovely.
HOSIERY
- Iren Clad How are always the best^-the beauty of their
aheernesa and of color is catching tq one’s eye.
A new shipment of Panama hats—get one now at this
price-|60e.
Groceries and feed is offered at special prices
all week. Try us and see.
We have Virginia-Carolina Fertilizer still oh
hand to plant your government land. It will
need it
R. T. BLAIR
MfTO SUES a HR.
■ ed 81,273, compared with 31,
- having
Washington.—Reports from
five States received for the
full month of April show aa
increase in tbe sale of motor
cars of 42 per cent over March,
according to which the esti-
mates of R. L. Polk * Co. for
last month ran upward of 225,-
000, compared with 173,287
turned out in March this year.
Reporta from 1#S leading
cities, constituting 48 per cent
of the country's market, show-
ed an increase during the test
25 days at April of 28 per east
over March. Final March reg-
istration showed an increase of
83 per cent over sales in Feb-
ruary this year and an increase
of 121 per cent over March,
1933. Truck registrations for
tbe first quarter of 1334 tetal-
the pain sf
that are too tight.
ITlWmCIIFE
Fresh Vegetable
day, with* cboio
Tay « Dutch
Brenond Cafe
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Molloy, T. J. Timpson Daily Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 107, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 29, 1934, newspaper, May 29, 1934; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth768695/m1/2/: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Timpson Public Library.