Timpson Weekly Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, February 17, 1928 Page: 6 of 8
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VALENTINE
NOVELTIES
GREETINGS
of all Kinds
EVERYTHING FOR VALENTINE DAY
Valentine, Cupid’s patron Saint, has es-
tablished headquarters in our store.
Dainty red hearts, gaily colored decorations
and a gorgeous array of favors, gifts and
greeting cards—await your selection.
Come in today and make your selection.
UMPSON PHARMACY
chosen it, but after choosing it
wisely keep your feet firm and
do not vacillate.
MOODY TO
SEND SO TO
COTTON MEETING
WEEKLY TIKES
si second clan
ter April 17. 1909, at the post-
odice at Ttapeoa, Texas, under
the Act of March S, 1879.
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IIIODICEIEITS
The Times is authorized to
announce the following, sub-
ject to the acton of the Demo-
cratic primaries: *
For Congress. Secoad District:
& H. (SPOT) SANDERS
For County Judge:
F. C. POWSLL
A. L. PINKSTON
J. D. BEDDITT
B. H. MUXXERLYN
For County Clerk:
BEN M. ALFORD
VAN J. SMITH
L. J. (LEE) ELLIS
For County Tax Collector:
C. E. SCATES
For County Attorney:
MAURICE SHORT
For District Clerk:
GEO. C. ESTES
F.I.T.IS D. WILBURN
For Sheriff:
. HARRY BURNS.
ED HOLT
For Commissioner, Precinct 4:
ELMER ROSS
Fox.County Treasurer:
"W. IS. BECK
For Representative:
JOHN C. ROGERS
Hi. FBMIIE sms
Endurance
Importance depends on en-
durance. Endurance is the
retention through time of an
achievement of value. Thus
says Whitehead in Science and
the Modern World.
Endurance is the real test of
a man. It is something that
we can all have. If we car. do
nothing else we can hang on
and remain the same.
Sometimes this is mere pig-
headedness and stubbornness,
[.jBut in this world of fluctuating
[values and fluctuating men it is
a pleasure to find something
stable.
One of the strongest pleas
of the church is that it has en-
dured throughout the ages sad
is still going strong.
Whatever has endured for a
length of time must have some
merit to it.
The life of an organism de-
pends upon its ability to adjust
itself to its surroundings. Ufe
is a tragedy for the unfit.
A man is in perfect health
when he can breathe the air,
1 enjoy the sunshine and par-
take of the food that is offered
him, and ois lungs, his stomach
and his other organs are at-
tuned to his environment.
If they become out of tune
or, in other words, he becomes
unfit, nature eliminates him.
Emerson says that the best
test of a book and the finest
critic was time, and advised us,
as a whole, to read no .book
that had rot been printed
twenty years.
Time has dealt harshly with
some popular favorites, while
others have survived.
Some of the popular songs
our ancestors sang are still
popular. .No on; could tell at
the time which they were, but
the passing of the years . has
tested them.
It is perhaps a wise thing not
to build a monument to a man
before he is dead.. Time must
have its opportunity to pass
upon lum.
There is something in mere
endurance, and the man who
is able to stick a thing out to
the bitter end has the advan-
tage over one who is constant-
ly changing.
Do not stick to a thing
simply because you have
Austin, Tex., Feb. 11.—
More than fifty Texans will go
to Jackson, Miss., to attend the
cotton acreage reduction con-
ference there on Feb. 20, tele-
grams received by Governor
Moody today showed. From
outside the State Governor
Moody also received telegrams
showing his call has met with
general response.
John C. Richard, governor of
South Carolina, wired his
operation and the appointment
of a delegation from that state,
including the state commis-
sioner of agriculture, the state
banking commissioner and the
president of the State Bankers’
Association. All other South-
ern governors already had re-
plied.
The governor of Alabama
wired he will attend in per
ton and will be accompanied
by a delegation, including the
president ef the Alabama
Bankers’ Association, the <
misHoncr of agriculture, head
of the farm bureau, warehou
association, cotton seed eras
era and other organizations.
Mississippi, through Gover-
nor Bilbo, wires a message of
welcome to the coming dele-
gstes and announced they
woald be met by 700 Mi
sippians, including the entire
legislature. • "I am sure the
conference will get the desired
results,” Governor Bilbo tele-
graphs. ’’Mississippi will co-
operate in every way.”
A SPLENDID FEELING
That tired, half-sick, dis-
couraged feeling caused by a
torpid liver and constipated
bowels can be gotten rid of
with surprising promptness by
using Herbine. You feel its
beneficial effect with the first
dose as its purifying and regu
lating effect is thorourgh and
complete. It not only drives
out bile and impurities but it
imparts splendid feeling of
exhiliarntion, strength, vim,
and buoyancy of spirits. Price
80c. Sold by F. R. Bussey.
'Where did the car hit
him?” asked the coroner.
‘At the junction of the dor-
sal and cervieal vertebrae,” i
plied the medical witness.
The foreman of the jury
rose from his scat.
“Man and boy I’ve lived in
these parts for fifty years,” he
protested ponderously, “an’ I
never heered o’ the place.”
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NOTICE
Mr. W. H. (Sveiftj) Harmon is now
Mr. M. M. Winn in the
: of this Service
their
mobile will be done right, and no job is
Expert battery service—bring your bat-
tery troubles here.
e §
T®x&<5© Some® Sfcaftkm
Day Phone 212 Night Phone 164
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Mother!
Clean Child's Bowels
“California Fig Syrup" is
Dependable Laxative for
Sick Children
Implements
that will
stand the
test
This Cultivator
You know whatitmeans in cost reduction to
have one implement oeyc^rlsmthatwin tabs
the place of severaL You save practically
the coat of, two implements vhen you buy a
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8
JF Disk Cnlthr.
*-ij J* •• ’•c.'l tferee-fa-oae
meet your requires*
cnoker1 -* w» aoc oa i
1
Let us
show
yon
•Htteft
v it? modi l> 'hovel atd
»?r ag-toot* e thorough In r >v n
■work, regercu which ttyle l*rj «
of f .ajuipuic is need. to Afesi 1
'>uJck,ea3ydo^c€-*thduka, or L. < the
•h vefcoMorifig teeth secured have -• th- -am a* row
f*** nd> t ver» rate
. vereacanij-
When disk fanga are l. * . «.• .-o it*ly reruIai-xL H—rlj
aureon foot lever causes *'~U <i* Ifcvci* rr Hit* the cold-
StOplVOt;When .,pi ny-
ft or shovel cane” *ire lucti, j? ou the JF an the
e is secured through oi - ah1 cvn p-too this type
ie Jr will cul avator.
• to and -nc • ST from th»
R. T. BLAIR
I**nStaettaGd~Q cJUTV -- SERV1
iiiimiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiii
Harry Mother! Erea * fretful,
fev&iafc, bilious or eoaslipsted child
tores the pleasaal taate of “California
Fig Syrup” and it aaver fails to
tie* the stomach aad open tho
MM PERMITS Eflll OF
HISWUMOnilRf
Washington, Feb. 12.—Sec-
retary Hoover Sunday became
an avowed caadidate for the
Republican presidential nomi-
nation and gave formal per-
mission for his Ohio support-
ers to enter his name in the
Ohio primary contest.
In his first campaign state-
ment, which took the form of a
letter to Thad H. Brown,
chairman of the Ohio Hoover-
for-President committee,- the
Secretary declared himself
bound “to carry forward the
principle of the Republican
party and the great objectives
of President ' Cooh'dge’s
policies.” ,
He indicated his intention
to refrain'from personal cam-
paigning in the preconvention
primaries and' to retain his of-
ficial post at the head of the
Commerce Department.
burning garments. The boy,
was burned over his entire!
body, excepting his face.
Shim—“You drive awfully
Funeral services were con--**1*- flea^t you?”
ducted Saturday afternoon at
Ttusey. . The boy’s father at-
tended the services with both
his hands in heavy bandages.
A modern mas recently said
that the modern man la super-
ior to the ancient Greeks.
Him—“WeB. I touched
“Did yon kill any of them?”
A German artist has written
19,062 .words an an ordinary
sire postcard. Isn’t that de-
frauding the trisils?—Omaha
World-Herald.
Livingston Chamber to
Hold Annual Dinner
Livingston. Ten., Feb. 12.—
Capt. J. Lewis Thompson of
Houston will be the principal
speaker at the annual banquet
of the Polk county Chamber of
Commerce Feb. 24. Other out-
of-town speakers will be M. O.
McDowell of Tim peon aad W.
L. West of Lufkin. Vision
are expected from Nacogd
ches, Lufkin, Trinity aad
Beaumont
Badger Tire*
Badger TV
If you think Santa Claus
mistreated you come
down and buy a casing
and you will find he ar-
ranged with me to keep
you happy.....
BILL WALKER'S STATION
(Our Gas Pulls Like a Mustard Plaster)
e * Badger Tires
bowel*. A te*spoonful
rest * sick child tumor
ayatay pre-
’. It doesn’t
cramp or overact. Contains mo nar-
cotics or soothing dross.
Ask yoer druggist for snnin* -Cali-
fornia Fig Syropr which-has directions
for baoiea and children of all ages
printed on bottle. Mother I You must
say “California'7 cr you may get a*
imitation fi$ >^ruo.
Boy Meets Death
Duncan, Ok.. Fah. Iff—
Pete Tucker, 6 years old. was
burned to death Friday after-
noon while helping his father.
J. M. Tucker bun bnmh oa
the Tucker farm at Tassey,
east of Duncan.
It i< thought the child spill-
ed some coal oil on his cloth-
ing which caught from the
brush fire. Hearing cries from
his son, the elder Tucker went
to his aid and used his bare
hands in extinguishing the
START THE YEAR OFF RIGHT
By Using
OLIVER PLOWS
Full and complete line of Oliver Plows, Culti-
vators, Cotton Planters and Plow Goods.
Ask the man who uses Oliver Plows—you’ll
find that he is a successful farmer.
Plenty of Garden and Field Fence
Our Prices Are Right
We’re ready to help you make your farm work
both pleasant and profitable.
W. A. TAYLOR
—k.
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Molloy, T. J. Timpson Weekly Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, February 17, 1928, newspaper, February 17, 1928; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth764649/m1/6/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Timpson Public Library.