Timpson Weekly Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 33, Ed. 1 Friday, August 17, 1951 Page: 2 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 16 x 12 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Fall Season Close By
Buy Now—Use Our Lay-Away Plan
SHOES! SHOES!!
Star Brand, Peters, Poll-Parrots, Weather
Bird—they stand the test
Kiddies Shoes..............$1.98, $2.98
Ladies Shoes..............$1.99 and up
Men’s Shoes... $2.99, $3.99, $4.99 and up
(great values)
New Fall Merchandise coming in, and we will
show a real Fall stock of dependable line of
Dry Goods, Clothing, Hats and Shoes.
and Miss
Virginia
New Curlee Fall Suits—New Fall Hats, and
many other lines New Fall Merchandise ar-
riving.
New Fall Shoes, New Fall Dresses—Under-
wear, Hosiery, etc.
Marcy Lee and Miss Virginia Dresses
wonder values...
$8.99 — $9.99
Buy two today!
Park Lane Dresses—really a dream
$2.99, $3.99, $4.99, $5.99, $6.99, $7.99
Fluffy Ruffles, Children’s Dresses
$1.99, $2.99, $3.99
FOR RENT—Apartment house (two completely furnished apartments, also two. apartments at the hotel. Low down prices.
Fall Colors
and Styles
$8.99
* $9.99
The big deal goes on—offering great values
over the store for quick clearance. Remem-
ber, the price is the thing.
Berkshire Hosiery, Nylon Slips and Gowns—
the big value merchandise.
Come in and see the new arrivals for Fall.
Star Brand and Peter’s Shoes—Curlee Clothes—Hawk and Sledge Work Clothes—Rogers and Mary Barron U nderwear—Berkshire and Mojod Hosier,
i—Marcy Lee and Miss Virginia Dresses—Butterick and McCall Patterns—Stetson, Knox and Davis Hats
Patterns and Publications
TUfPSON WEEKLY TIMES—Tim peon, Texas, Aug. 17, 19*1
THKNEEKL! TIMES
Published every Friday in
'ilmpson Shelby County, Tex.
T. J. MOLhOY.....Editor
& WINFREY - - Business Mgr.
Entered as second class mat-
ter April 17, 1909, at the post-
office at Timpson, Texas, un-
der the act of March 3, 1879.
Subscription Rates
One year, S1.60; six months,
76c; three months, 40c.
U. & Officials Aiding
Back-to-School Movement
tion to the labor and employ-
ment of young citizens, parti-
cularly those under 16.
Despite the national crisis,
they want boys and girls to
continue their education be-
cause prominent figures every-
where contend that good
schooling makes a happier
adult, a better wage earner, a
finer citizen, and, if necessary,
a more efficient soldier,
j T. J. Rauch, supervisor of
!the Wage-Hour and Public
j Contracts Divisions of the U.
■S. Department of Labor here,
points out that Federal laws
prohibiting child labor now
apply in all states to all chil-
dren under 16 years of age em-
ployed on farms producing
crops for interstate commerce
Houston.—With most pub- J (other than their parent’s
lie schools opening next farm) when school is in ses-
month, officials of the U. S. ’ sion.
Department of Labor here al- Local resident children as
ready are turning their atten- well as migratory alien chil-
VUWA'aWMMWAMMMWVnVtWWAWAVAVVW.VM
AUT
Financing
Refinancing and Loans
YOU CAN NOW REDUCE MONTHLY
PAYMENTS ON YOUR AUTOMOBILES.
WE WILL REFINANCE IT FOR 18
MONTHS.
COME IN NOW ... BEFORE SOME TOM,
DICK OR HARRY CHANGES IT BACK
TO 15 MONTHS.
Panola Credit Co.
f 114 W. Panola Si. Phone 770
I Carthage, Texas
MWVWUWVWvMVVAVAfl
[dren are covered by the law,
he said. Neither may be em-
ployed in agriculture during
school hours if they are under
16.
By "school hours" is meant
the hours when school is in
session for the district where
the child under 16 is currently
living, he explained. The law,
amended by Congress in 1949,
gives children in agriculture
its full protection during
school hours if the crop is for
interstate commerce.
Official figures show- that
more than three million teen-
agers held summer jobs this
year. In the past, two-thirds
of those employed in the sum-
mer continued to work full-or-
part-time during the school
year. They didn't go back to
school,
“When the school bell rings
in September this year, we
want as many as possible of
those children to be back in
school and not to be employ-
ed illegally on farms or in fac-
tories,” be said.
Texas Agricultural Experi-
ment Station Circular 129,
“Bcrmudagrass Research in
Texas,” gives the results of
work on fertilizing, renovat-
ing, establishing and grazing
common and Coastal Ber-
muda.
In the manufacture of pa-
per, cellulose is separated
from the other wood material,
and about half of the waste in
this process is lignin.
saaaaaaa—
ssuk-s
Dr. H. L. Stockwell
Optometrist
Eyes Examined—
Glasses Fitted
Office Hours:
10-12 a. m. 2-4 p. m.
306 Maki St '
Nisigdeekis, Twm
GUNNY SACK
SUGGESTED FOR
SUMMER WEAR
Austin, Tex.,—A University
of Texas professor suggested
today sweltering Texans might
cool off if they’d try wearing a
gunny sack. It would be ideal,
he said.
Dr. C. J. Alderson, assistant
professor of physical and
health education,1 explained
that when the temperature
outside is higher than normal
body temperature (98.6 de-
grees), the following combina-
tion will bring relief from the
heat:
A fibrous, loose-woven gar-
ment, plus dry air which is
moving and prespiration.
A gunny sack, Alderson
said, holds moisture and al-
lows for circulation of air,
thus producing the cooling
evaporation process.
A well-tailored sack, he
said, “would make fine cloth-
ing. We just haven’t gotten
accustomed to wearing gunny
sacks.”
Farmers should save, for
planting purposes, all oat and
wheat seed of the recommend-
ed varieties for their section of
the state. The short crop has
materially the supply of plant-
ing seed.
Cotton Picker’s Sacks,
4£ ft. to 12 ft length*;
white duck*. 23tf
Bogard Seed Store.
POSTED—No hunting or tres-
passing on my farms. John A.
Brown. 25-4 p
THE MAGIC FIRST DOSE
Start relief when your back achtf,
1 Madder is irritated and yon **t np
’ often at nights. CIT-ROS balance*
tbe ph. ef the body fluid*, relief
comes quickly, tbe body repairs tbe
irriuted tissues. Pain and soreness
disappear. Get CIT-ROS tLW at
your druggist For sale by
G. C. MeDavid, Druggist
EYES EXAMINED
CLASSES FITTED
EVERY THURSDAY
IN TIMPSON
Upstairs above McLeroy’s
Hardware Store
Dr. Lester G. Warren
Home Office: Center
PHONE 118
To he refreshed
Around the comer
from anywhere
t
I -Lw—if-ou. ft ? • •' , -A i ____*
lOTOXD UNDO AWTHCWTr Of im COCA-COLA COMPANY »Y
Center Coca-Cola Bottling Co, Center, Texas
t_Q i«n. no Booucau
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Molloy, T. J. Timpson Weekly Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 33, Ed. 1 Friday, August 17, 1951, newspaper, August 17, 1951; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth813931/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Timpson Public Library.