Timpson Weekly Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 13, Ed. 1 Friday, March 28, 1952 Page: 2 of 10
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TIMPSON WEEKLY TIMES—Timpson, Tex., March 28, 1962
synniTm
■HS SOW
Baptist Church
Sunday School 9:45 a. m.
Many Young, superintendent.
Worship service 11:00 a. m.
Traimnf Union 6:30 p. m.
Eve mug service 7:30 o’clock.
Midweek prayer service.
Wednesday, at 7:00 p. m.
Christian Church
(Harvey P. Shead, Minister)
10:00 a. m. Bible School.
A. L. Rack, superintendent
11 a. m. Morning worship
7:00 p. m. Evening worship.
Methodist Church
(Elton Elrod, Pastor)
9:45 a. m. Sunday school.
10:50 a. m. Morning wor-
ship.
6:30 p. m. M. Y. F.
7 :S0 p. m. Evening worship.
Caledonia - Concord
Methodist Church
Caledonia — Worship serv-
ices second and fourth Sun-
day, 11:00 a. m.
Concord—Worship services,
Srst and third Sunday, 11 a. m.
Highway Tabernacle
Church
(Located on Timpson - Mt
Enterprise highway between
(Timpson and Caledonia).
- (J. W. Clark, Pastor)
Sundry school, 10 a. m.
Gospel service on Wednes-
day, Saturday and Sunday
nights.
Assembly of God
(Mrs. Pearl Coiling, Pastor)
Sunday School 10:00 a. m.
Morning worahip 11 a. m.
Young People’s Service 7:00
p. m.
Church services .Saturday
sight 7 o’clock.
Timpson Methodist
Circuit
(T. Irving King, Jr., Pastor)
Regular preaching services:
First Sunday—Paxton, both
services.
Second Sunday—S h a d y
Grove, 10 a. m.; New Pros-
pect, 11 a. m.; Stockman 6:30
p. m.
Third Sunday — Tennessee
both services.
Fourth Sunday—same as
second.
Fifth Sundays will be meet-
ing days with all churches
coming together for singing
and preaching, dinner on the
ground and afternoon services.
Sunday school 10 a. m. each
church.
Church of Christ
Bible school 9:45 a. m.
Communion service 11:45
a. m.
Corinth Baptist
Church
(A. B. Croy, Pastor)
The Corinth Baptist church
extends an invitation to all to
attend services each Sunday.
Sunday school 10:00 a. m.
Preaching service 11 a. m.
Baptist Training Course
6:30 p. m.
Preaching service 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday 7:00 p. m. mid-
week service.
Good Hope-Beuna Vista
Baptist Church
(W. H. Magness, Pastor)
Good Hope—Worship serv-
lets first and third Sunday
mornings and evenings.
Beuna Vista—Worship serv-
ices second and fourth Sunday
morning and nights.
Titupcon Missionary
Baptist Church
(Ottie Reed, Pastor)
10 KM) a. m. Sunday school.
Hovel Bowlin, superintendent.
11 *- m. Worship service.
* JO p. m. Evening service.
SCRIPTURE:
I: Act*
idMtUns
_ uii.
DEVOTIONAL HEADING: Luke
JNOCTOR Luke is a man to whom
we are all indebted. Without
him. we in the church would have
lost some of our finest hymns, the
“Magnificat*' and the “Nunc Dimit-
tis;” without him we might never
have heard of the _
story cf that first
Christmas night
when the shepherds
watched and the
angels sang. He was
the only Gospel
writer who remem-
bered to tell us
those matchless pa-
rables, the Lost
Sheep and the Prod-
igal Son, and many
another.
It is only from him that we know
of Jesus* prayer at Calvary,—“Fa-
ther, forgive them; they know not
what they do.” Furthermore, it is
only Luke who conceived and wrote
the book of Acts.
Or. Fortran
Seme Hobbies Are Famous
•pHE interesting thing is that Dr.
* Luke was not a professional writ-
er. He was a professional physician.
All the writing he did was what we
today might even call a hobby;
that is, he got no money for it so
far as we know, he Just wrote be-
cause he loved to write.
Very likely he was a good doctor:
he is called the “beloved physician,”
and we hope that enough people
who loved him also paid their bills
promptly so that he could make his
living. But it was not the doctoring
that endeared him to the church of
Christ.
It was what he did In his spare
time, It was his missionary work
and his writing, It b the Gas pel
of Luke and the book of Acts
that are his main claim to fame.
Luke is not the first man nor the
last to accomplish more by a “side-
line” than by his main job. We re-
member David in the Old Testa-
ment, whose rise to power began
not with his sheep-herding, which
i doubt he did to perfection, but
with his music, which his father may
well have thought a waste of time.
We remember Marcus Aurelius the
emperor not for his military cam-
paigns, which were masterly, but
for the “meditations” he wrote in
snatches of spare time on those
campaigns. We remember the
Apostle Paul not for the churches
he founded (most of which folded)
but for the dozen or so letters he
managed to squeeze into his busy
evenings.
• • •
Other Doctors
T UKE was not the last Christian
** doctor who has found in what,
for some, might be a “side-line” his
finest means of service and best
source of happiness. Dr. Howard
Kelly of Baltimore was a cancer
specialist of no small fame; but he
was even better known as a scien-
tist who not only saw no c nfBct be-
tween science and religion, but who
brought his skill .and his science to
the service of Christ
There was another doctor, a sur-
geon in a midwestem city, not many
years ago, who was ready to re-
tire. He had enough to live on in
comfort, and the life of a success-
ful surgeon in a great city is a wear-
ing one. But instead of retiring, he
went out to China, and in a remote
province he spent his “retiring”
years at his own expense, hardly
knowing a word of Chinese, but
having the time of hia life and ren-
dering himself if possible more
nearly indispensable out there than
he had ever been back in the states.
Again there was the surgeon
Alexis Carrel, who with another
scientist first succeeded In keep-
ing living tissue (a chicken's
heart) alive for years beyond
the time when it “should have”
died,—a surgeon who also be-
lieved In ihe power of prayer
and whose book “Man the Un-
known” is valuable as com-
bining the scientific and the
Christian view of man. '
Or there was Dr. I. J. Archer of
Chicago and North Carolina, who
orerated two sanitariums more
easily than some doctors can run
one office, and yet who found his
life’s deepest satisfactions in the
Sunday school class he taught for
years.
* • •
Life Is More Than
Making a Living
lUf ANY others besides doctors have
* * made the same discovery. What
is a “hobby," after all? It can be
only an elaborate twiddling of the
thumbs, something to “kill time”—
horrible thought! It can be some-
thing done merely to relieve nervous
pressure. It can be something not
really worth doing.
But what Dr. Luke found, count-
less others, including some readers
of these lines, have also found: that
even when we have to spend most
of our time making a living, we can }
dedicate our “spare” time, under 5
God, to making life. *
SIMPLIFYING
CLEANING
CHORES
Oofle.ee Station. — Simplify-
ing the cleaning ta^k should
appeal to all housewives. Flor-
ence Low, home management
'specialist with the Texas Ag-
ricultural Extension Service,
VSj says the best way to do any
[job is to use simple, easy, quick
and safe methods. Take any
one room in the house to start
with, and do a little planning.
Make a list of all the jobs
that need to be done in keep-
ing this room clean. Decide
which should be done daily,
weekly, monthly or seasonally.
Mrs. Low suggests making a
plan for one week. After it
has been followed carefully,
changes may be made if need-
ed.
It has been found that every
task has three parts. First
comes planning the order of
work and collecting tools and
supplies. Next is doing the
task. Here make every' mo-
tion count by working from
right to left, or from left to
right if left handed. Use circu-
lar motions and make both
hands work. When through
cleaning, put the tools, sup-
plies and equipment back in
the proper storage places.
For cleaning a room, Mrs.
Low gives the following order
of procedure. First brush the
dust off the walls with a broom
covered with a cloth bag. Next
dust the shades and curtains;
wash if needed.
After the dusting has been
done, sweep the floor evenly in
one direction. Keep the broom
on the floor to prevent raising
too much dust. A dust pan,
like a broom, needs a long han-
dle to prevent stooping.
Dust
SHELPiY'O URSELF!?
:- - .... ;T • , ^
;$TO DELICIOUS DAIRY; FRESH
;ir -.a i > ? -Vf .Ata, ^
MILK
- s.:.t ■_ . >. -
NO OTHER FOOD INSURES
YOU SUCH TIP-TOP
HEALTH AND ENERGY!
Just try drinking your daily
quota of our vitamin-enriched
milk and see how much better
you feel! You’ll approach life
with more rest . .. have more
energy . . look better . . work
better! No other food gives
you such an abundance of nat-
ural vitamins and minerals;
such added nourishment as
milk. Try it!
BLUE BONNET MILK is de-
livered fresh to your dealer
each day. When you buy raffle
ask for BLUE BONNET.
Pure Milk
& Ice Co.
Nacogdoches, Texas
iuwvwvuwwmwuvwmwvvvvwwwvwvwu* wwwvwvwvwvwwwvwvvwwwwywyv:
matches out of reach of chil-
dren; observing habits of
cleanliness; lifting * covers of
steaming food away from tbe
demonstration and 4-H club body; using pans that do not
tip easily; checking gas and
electric connections on stoves;
replacing worn out equip-
ment; using pot holders that
tion and chairman of the
Women’s Activities' Commit-
woodwork and fumi-'tee, stated in her report that
ture with a dustless dust cloth. 143,000 home demonstration
Make 1 this way: mix 1 table- club women last year worked
spoon kerosene with 1 quart of Jon developing-the safety habit
hot water. Dip squares of
SAFETY IN
THE HOME
College Station. — Home
members were key leaders in
farm and home safety pro-
grams throughout the state
during 1951. _ __
At a recent meeting of the’are thick and‘dry and electric
Texas Farm and Ranch Safety 'equipment ;n <jry areas.
Committee Mrs. R. M. Alma- 4-H club members also made
rode, president of the Texas )thcir contributions to safer
Home Demonstration Associa- rur*i living. The state 4-H club
leaden report that over 10,500
club members in 74 counties
last year participated in the
clean soft cloth into this solu-
tion. Wring out, dry and
store in a covered container. It
in Texas farm and ranch
homes. The women think that
every member of the family
can help make homes safer.
is best to' prepare several lLast year there were over 27.-
cioths at a time and remember 000 accidental deaths in the
they
must be
each washing.
treated after
floor with a dust or a wet mop.
Complete the cleaning of one
room before starting another.
For more information on
work simplification, Mrs. Low
suggests you contact the local
county home demonstration
ngent and ask for C-252,
House Cleaning Made Easier.
homes of the
cited this
as the
L and ai
reason for
The last step is to mop the concerted effort on this phase
Presbyterian Announcements
(Dolphus S. Neel. Pastor)
First Sunday—P 1 e a s a n t
Springs, both services.
Second Sunday—Tennessee,
both services.
Third Sunday — Willow
Springs, both services.
Fourth Sunday—New Pros-
pect, morning service. Pleasant
Springs evening service.
Sunday school 10 a. m. each
Sunday.
Everyone always invited.
»♦**»•*
Auto
Loans
Loans for any useful pur-
pose made quickly and
confidentially, 6 per cent
interest on late model
cars.
PANOLA
Credit Co.
114 W. Panola Phone 770
CARTHAGE, TEXAS
of home making by home dem-
onstration
1952.
Mrs. Almenrode farther
stated that 39,689 club
her.- attended safety meetings
during the year. As a
27,491 removed accident hax-
ards from their homes by re-
pairing stairways; grounding
washing machines; mending
leaky pipes to insure full wa-
ter pressure in case of fire;
putting asbestos shingles on
the house: providing rubber
mats for bath tubs; anchoring
small rugs and repairing and
replacing worn electrical
equipment.
Statistics show that more
accidents occur in the home
than any other place on the
farm and that the most dan-
gerous room in the house is the
kitchen. The committee re-
port showed that 32,984 rural
kitchens were made safer for
family living during the past
year.
Hazards removed included
wiping up spilled grease at
once, keeping every thing in
order; keeping hot liquids and
Smokey Says:
By our own hand—we destroy . .
* or protect!
Texas 4-H Farm and Home
Safety program. Each partici-
pant made an accident and
fire prevention survey of the
home farm and removed
twelve or more hazards. A
grand total of 26.715 4-H
members in the state received
training in safety and fire pre-
vention, say tbe state leaden.
Cocnty Extension agents su-
pervised tbe 4-H programs in
the local clubs and counties.
RELIEF FROM
BACKACHE
Dr. H. L. StockweB
Optometrist
Byes Examined—
Glasses Fitted
Office Honrs;
10-12 a. ns. 2-4 p. m.
20* Mate Sl
MRS. OUJE BUSSEY
Phone 7-J—TIMPSON
CENTER FLORAL SHOP
302 Church Street
Center, Texas
Flowers For all Occasions
Belivery Service
Phone 960 —-
NOTICE TO
G. C- McDavid, Druggist
wwwwwwwvwswwwwwwwwwvwwwvwwv
OUR ANIMAL HEALTH DEPARTMENT
l IS WELL STOCKED WITH
Livestock and
Poultry Remedies
We are able to supply you with the newest
advertised brands of Remedies,
and Vaccines.
G. C. McDavid
“THE LEADING DRUGGIST”
The REXALL Store
wwwwwvwwwawawwvwwvwwwwwwww >
For Modern Tire Recapping and
Vulcanizing Service
SEE j|
Parker Bros. Motor Co.
Goiter, Texas
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Molloy, T. J. Timpson Weekly Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 13, Ed. 1 Friday, March 28, 1952, newspaper, March 28, 1952; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth814887/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Timpson Public Library.