Timpson Daily Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 22, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 30, 1945 Page: 3 of 4
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LIVESTOCK AND
POULTRY REMEDIES
For maximum produc-
tion keep your livestock
and poultry healthy.
Just received shipment
Cattle Grub Killer.
G. C. McDAVID
“The Leading Druggist”
shall re-unite in eternal fel-
lowship.
“And life is all the sweeter
that she lived,
And all she loved more sacred
for her sake;
And death is all the brighter
that she died,
And heaven is all the happier
that she’s there.”
Raymond Weaver.
Firemen Try Far 16
Hoars to Sere Bay
T. E. Castle Opening
New Grocery and
Market Here
T. E. Castle, recently of’Car-
thage, has leased the two-story
Blair building, comer Bre-
mond and South Second
streets, and is busy arranging
stock preparatory to opening a
new grocery and feed store
here. Formal opening date
will be announced later, Mr.
Castle states. He went to Dal-
las today to select modern
equipment for the store.
He will be assisted in the
operation of the sKore by his
son, T. E. Castle, Jr.
They will make Timpson
their home, and are endeavor-
ing to locate a dwelling for two
families.
Corporal and Mrs. M. D.
Storey have been visiting the
lady's parents. Mr. and Mrs.
B. C. Thornton of this commu-
nity. Corporal Storey is in
service at Ellington Field and
Mrs. Storey is making her
home at nearby Genoa.
Corporal Emery Jones of
China, Texas, is visiting his
wife, who is making her home
with Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Thorn-
ton of this community, while
her husband is in the service.
Japs Claim Sobs
Sink Three Ships
Off West Coast
By United Press
A Tokyo broadcast said to-
day that Japanese submarines
have penetrated to the west
coast of the United States and
sunk three transport ships and
an oil tanker.
American censorship per-
mitted disclosure a fortnight
ago that an American Liberty
ship had been sunk and its sur-
vivors machine gunned by a
Japanese submarine between
Hawaii and the west coast, but
there have been no other re-
cent reports of enemy activity
in the arena. ^7
in Memoriam , are taking their toil of friends
and loved ones. The family
On December 30, 1944, at cin.le drawg closer and closer,
Abilene, Texas, the spirit ofjBmj goon y,e earthly ties that
Mrs. Mae Arnold deeparted! bind ug a]| 8hal1 sever, but we
from this world. She had been know that ^ a world We
ill for several weeks in Hend-
rick’s Memor.al Hospital, and
had moved J> Abilene to be
near her son, James Arnold,
who is located at Camp Barke-
ley, Texas.
Mrs. Arm Id was born in
Timpson, and had lived the
greater part of her life here,
during which time she enjoy-
ed the friendship and love of a
host of friends who remember
her as a loyal and faithful
Christian, whose purpose in
life was to follow out the pre-
cepts of the Golden Rale and
practice in daily life the sim-
ple virtues of kindness, pati-
ence and brotherly love.
As a young woman Mrs. Ar-
nold taught school in the rural
districts of Shelby county, and
it was the privilege of the
writer to drive her to her ap-
pointed place each Sunday and
go after her on Saturdays for
week-end visits to our home in
Timpson. I recall with pleas-
ant memories the kindly and
cheeiful manner in which she
would guide the minds of the
young children under her care,
and remember the simple les-
sons of truth expounded to
bold and build character and
integrity into the lives of the
coming generation. She was
of that friendly and Kindly
disposition that drew unto her
little children who trusted her
and loved her.
And we who knew her best,
all agree that she was one like
unto the one concerning whom
Samuel Rogers penned these
lines:
“Oh! she was good as die was
fair.
None—none on earth above
her!
As pure in thought as angels
are,
To know her wan to love her.'
- - The swiftly speeding years
Dallas, Tex., Jan. 29. (UP)
—After clinging to life for 16
hours, tortured by crushed
lungs, 16 year old Ray Gene
Thompson was dead today.
Following an accident yes-
terday in which Thompson and
James E. Gay, 16, were struck
by an automobile while ridfaig
a bicycle, the youth was taken
to Baylor hospital where City
firemen struggled for 16 hoars
to keep him alive by artificial
respiration.
Because of the nature of his
injuries, young Thompson
could not breathe. With me-
chanical • apparatus, 16 city
firemen working in pain in
two hour shifts, attempted to
sustain life in the body of the
crushed youth. However, his
injuries were too great and he
succumbed.
Ray Gene was the son of
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Thompson
of Reinhart.
nm SPECIAL!
SAVE
with this
you buy a
coupon whoa
25-lb. bog of
ftllsbun^ left
flour
■i&k
s**
* !
PILLSBURY FLOUR MILLS COM PAN Y»MIN NEA POLIS
The finest, most valuable
collection of canes in the world
belong to King Prajadhipok of
Siam.
IHIillllHlIIIIIttUltllFliitlllifflllljlllBIIII
PRIMROSE
BEAUTY
SHOP
Painting and
Paper Hanging
C. E. BYARD
Rt. 4, Box 71
Timpson, Texas
............—oo—oo»»oooolffflHNIIHlMilMII!IMHIII[HIHH
PHONE 107
fifes. T. P. Rutherford, Owner
Get Your
Tomato
NOW
BtOMy’s Drug store
Pboci* X#
Neat Printing Will Add to
The Prestige of Your Business
4,
In conducting a business, nothing adds more to the prestige of the concern than neativ
printed and attractive stationery. This shop is equipped to meet your printing require-
ments—
CIRCULARS, BOOKLETS, LETTER HEADS, ENVELOPES, CARDS, INVOICES,
CHECKS, NOTE HEADS, BILL HEADS, STATEMENTS, ETC.
Ill addition we haVe in stock office supplies, typewrite* ribbons, carbon paper, blank pa
pfera, cardboard, legal blanks and aalesbooks.
• USE PRINTED STATIONERY—ITS CHEAPER AND BETTER
f
TIMPSON PRINTING COMPANY
Ptione 120
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Molloy, T. J. Timpson Daily Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 22, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 30, 1945, newspaper, January 30, 1945; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth764879/m1/3/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Timpson Public Library.