Timpson Daily Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 35, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 17, 1945 Page: 2 of 4
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E. H. HEBERT
AGENT
Pan American Life Ins. Go.
NEW O&LEANS, LA.
Complete Insurance Protection
Are you interested in a life income at age 55, 60,
or 65? It ean be paid for oot of your monthly
budget.
’vfy'--;: y"vfT*"
mam mb
T. i. MOLLOY - - Editor
S. WINFREY - Business Mgr.
Nnteieu as second class mat-
ter April 17, 1906, at the post-
office at Timpson, Texas, un-
der the Act of March 8, 1879.
Published daily except
Thursday and Sunday, in
Timpson, Shelby county, Tex-
REICH PLANS MOST—
(Continued from Page 1)
Subscription Rates
One year, $5.00; six months,
$2.50; three months, $1.26;
one month, 53c.
« * 9 «..* I
A Thought
For'Today
Of. whom we have
many things to say, and
hard to be uttered, see-
ing ye are dull of hear-
ing. ... Hebrews 6:11
*••••»***•*
Big Food Production
Colleger Station.—D u r i n g
1944, the 130 enrolled mem-
bers of the six Foard County
boys' 4-H. clubs produced the
equivalent of one year's food
budget for 188 fighting men,
says County Agricultural
Agent D. F. Eaton, Sr. The
production in rinded enough
beef for 44; pork for 89; eggs
for 30; chickens for 20; and
vegetables for 40. Fran field
crops and gardens SO hoys
earned a net profit of $2,204,
and the 59 sp ine demonstra-
tors obtained a total net in-
come of $1,100 from the 86
animals they fed out and mar-
keted. Mr. Eaton says that
many of the latter group kept
their brood sots, and a major
of Urn boys helped with home
gardens.
Fred Waring, Oxxie Nelson,
Kay Kyser and Ted Weems,
popular orchestra
were Boy Scouts.
a future Germany.
“Our salvation lies in arms,”
Goebbels said.- “Let us force
them and use them in the last
battle which will decide every-
thing. This, today, is our great
chance.”
Since Tuesday, when a Ger-
man foreign office spokesman
asserted that the Big Three
conference had freed
many to conduct a war by all
suitable means, German pro-
pagandists have been exhort-
ing their people to' a ruthless
battle.
This.was the theme of Goeb-
bel's dispatch: He said
Germans prefer to use desper-
ate means rather than mort-
gage the lives of German chil-
dren, and that unrelenting
warfare would keep the Ger-
mans from losing the war.
“A nation which is deter-
mined to use ail means, even
the most daring ones, in
fense of its life cannot be real-
ly defeated,” Goebbels w
quoted as saying.
SUDDEN END OF
JAP WAR SEEN
ifniimifiiniiinmmrifmrmminiHniifn
Get Your
Tomato
NOW
Bussoy’s Drug Store
New York, Feb. 11. (UP)—
The war with Japan will end
“suddenly and dramatically”
before Japanese industry
been destroyed, Robert Bel-
laire, manager of the
United Press Bureau in Tokyo,
predicted today.
The primary responsibility
of the United Nations, at the
peace table for many years af-
ter, will be to prevent a still
aggressive Japan from using
that industry to re-arm, Bel-
laire told a radio audience
(Blue) during the metropoli-
tan opera’3 victory rally. '
Bellaire, a prisoner of the
leaders, Japanese for six months after
‘ Pearl Harbor, based his pre-
diction of a quick 'Japanese
military collapse on the prog-
ress of the Pacific war.
production almost double its
1941 capacity, he said, “Ja-
pan's fighting forces have been
unable to prevent our moving
5,000 miles across the Pacific,
back into the Philippines, and
to the very doorstep of China.”
“And we’ve been able to do
all this with only a fraction of
our present total military
strength. What, then, must
happen when we mount our
final great offensive against
Japan? Before we have de-
stroyed even half of their in-
dustrial machine behind them,
their armies will weaken and
crumble under the overyhelm-
ing pressure of our attack.”
Phone 16
Sin!U!HH!Ilt!flIIIIIIUIIUliiRiIi!!iliIRfl)
Welcome FFA
Shep’s Eat # AI
WELCOME
Future Farmers
of America
Keep that bird
in the hand !
R wont bo worth two in the bush if
you cash it in—that War Bond, we
mean.
It won’t buy your boy, or your neigh-
bor's boy, enough extra amimmin
maybe toeavehij Kie... if you cash it in.
It won’t help bring that final vic*ory
nearer... if you cash it in.
It won’t pay you $4 for every $3 you
invested ... if you cash it in. ,
So, please—besides buying all the extra
Bonds you can scrape the pennies to-
gether far-bold onto the War Bonds
you’ve already bought!
Vet—hold so for dear fife! Keep that
bird in the hand!
WAR BONDS ft Have and to HtM
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Molloy, T. J. Timpson Daily Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 35, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 17, 1945, newspaper, February 17, 1945; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth765427/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1&rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Timpson Public Library.