Timpson Daily Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 199, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 7, 1942 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Timpson Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Timpson Public Library.
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T. J. MOLLOY.....Editor
a WINFREY - - Business Mgr.
Entered as second class mat-
sr April 17, 1906, at the postr
office at Timpano, Texas, under
the Act of March S, 1879.
Published daily except
Thursday and Sunday, In
Timpson. Shelby county, Tex-
as.
Subscription Rates
One year $5.00; six months,
$2.50; three months, $1.25;
one month, 30c.
MIT nits
A THOUGHT FOR
TODAY
Ten thousand of the
greatest faults in our
neighbors are of less
consequence to us than
one of the smallest in
ourselves.—Whately.
• i
th
THE LAND OF SMILING
PEOPLE
A college professor asked,
Alexander Kerensky, the Rus-
sian, the following! question:
“What is the thing in America
that impressed you most when
you first came here?”
‘That is easy,” was Keren-
sky’s answer. In America the
people smile.”
Americans smile because
they are free. There are no
Gestapo# to fear; no firing
squad to shoot them down if
they want to listen to their
radios. They can worship
God according to the dictates
of their conscience. They can
pot into office the men they
want to govern them.
Americans smile because in
America human personality is
supreme. The aim of democ-
racy is to help the individual to
grow and to give him an op-
portunity to attain happiness
and success. :
Americans smile because
they have hope. The future is
agteam with promise. They can
East Texans who are hunt-
ing squirrels and doves in
many sections of the piney-
woods region were urged to
be on the guard against start-
ing woods fires by W. E.
White, forest fire protection
chief of Texas A. and M. Col-
lege Forest Service.
Simple precautionary meas-
ures that White recommended
includes making sure that
burning matches, cigarettes
and other smoking materials
out before discarding
em, and putting out camp
and warming fires.
1 White said that a nation-
i wide war-time forest fire pre-
j vention program is now under-
' way to stamp out woods, grass
and farm fires and that pri-
vate, state and federal agen-
cies were cooperating in the
effort. Sportsmen have al-
ways been a big help in any
conservation program, he indi-
cated.
“Most hunters,” he said,
“are careful against starting
fires, but a few careless ones
can undo all the good of those
who really attempt to protect
the forests.”
Careless matches aid the
Axis, White concluded. ,
many of those dreams come
true.
Totalitarian countries have
governments that are “of the
state, fay the state and for the
state.” That’s why life is hard
and cruel.
In America we have a gov-
ernment that is "of the peo-
ple, by the people and for the
people.” That’s why we smile.
Today we are fighting to
keep America a land of smil-
ing people.—The Silver Lin-
ing.
A Undent Cargo
On a ship that sailed for
Ireland recently there was a,
cargo of dried and evaporated
milk, cheese, dried eggs, can-
, , . ned and cured pork, lard,
have their families, then- Itar-,^ ^ ^ ^tables.
dens, their homes, their ^n(f ^ great are the advances
dreams ... and they can make 0f science in the preparation
of dehydrated and coneen-
! trated foods that, it is esti-
i mated, the cargo of this one
| ship represented a year’s pro-
duction of 3,800 average
{American farms.—Your Life
i Magazine.
HIND’S HEfi
Mini
regular $t.00 size
SPECIAL 49c PLUS TAX
School Supplies
Pencils, Crayons, Rulers,
Erasers, Pens, Paper, Etc.
Com to our store for school
Supplies.
We Invite Your Patronage
BUSSEY'S BIDE STUPE
PHONE 16
fffi|[!Rfll![fil[Mililltll8iilil!!iii81«« *■
j Come out of it, brother; this
{isn’t a race war; ft isn’t a test
of strength between Latin and
Teuton; it isn’t a quarrel be-
tween Christian and Moham-
median, but is a death grip be-
between Freedom and Slav-
ery ; between Heaven and
Hell.—Houston Post.
The Lord will perfect that
which concerneth me.—Ps.
“I Get It”
Don’t ask me—if I have it—just say—“Send it down"
And you—will surely—get it—if it is in this town—
Cause I—sincerely—want to get—the things—my cus-
tomers need—
And searching for—what I don’t have—is part of—
my grocery creed.
Fresh meats—I do not—keep in stock—but buy the .
out—I do—
And I give them—persona! attention—and guarantee
—the best for you—
So regardless—what your wants may be—in a first-
class pure food line—
You can get—exactly—what yon want—by calling
Number Nine.
Gordon Weaver
iJ3isrte 9 GROCERIES Timpson
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Get in on the drive that starts today.
Get the unused metal out of your cellar,
yourvittic, your garage, your place of
business. Without this scrap the Nation’*
steel mills most shut down, for sB new
steel is 588 scrap, and the mills have not
enough for even 38 days more.
I scrap
already on hand. They point to junk
yards, anto graveyards, and salvage de-
pots that have net been cleaned oat, as
proof that there is no shortage. KiU this
tait before it tills our boys!
In spite of the terrible lack of scrap, here
is why yon may still find full junk yards
and scrap depots -and why they must
he kept that way!
$ Alt scrap mint X sorted. «»r!W*4, »od brobafi
t* Up bp aerap Scaler* before It can ba need.
Tfcafr part* are full beeauae tfee* i
pnpariag pour acnp for th* oNi
ibejr psaaNp can!
aa fact at
WHOSE BOY
WILL DIE BECAUSE
YOU FAILED?
4 Ante pravepaida atrip aasaa, fcecptheaaaMe
pacts aad jook th* nat-twam* out m*jm
to** of acrap ia a typical month EscJt nut
iKTSp wlthm 60 dapa a* many cars as he tope
—that i»«b* law!
-J Scrap callwllaea coeMStasea bar* to atap
•** around bacauae the Cadets can't hoodie them
«n tauaediataty. R<«n tf they caikt, th* mUa
oootd aot store it *1. Ti* local satTta* rfapot
!• a stockpile—whaea p**r scrap is areSAIS
fur taaaaat ase ta soon at it's Beaded. And ft
wttt be seeded !
Remember if these place* become
empty, the mills shut down — end we
lose the war!
So get out your scrap sod help your
neighbors with theirs. It’s the greatest
single contribution yon can make right
now to win the war!
NEWSPAPERS’ UNITED SCRAP METAL DRIVE
tex ta mu mat
THIS SPACE CSRTRIBiTED III TINPS0R TIMES
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Molloy, T. J. Timpson Daily Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 199, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 7, 1942, newspaper, October 7, 1942; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth815202/m1/2/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Timpson Public Library.