Timpson Daily Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 183, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 13, 1932 Page: 4 of 4
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SEPTEMBER
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OF REAL MERCHANDISE
DOWN ON MERCHANDISE YOU MAY NOT SEE AGAIN
Buy Fall Merchandise
Now....Lowest Prices
in Many Years
FALL STOCK ALL BOUGHT AT TREMENDOUS LOW PRICES
YOU CAN BUY SOMETHING NOW TO WEAR AT BARGAIN PRICES!
With this month we start our fall sales of merchandise that yon need—buy it now
—all the week at saving prices. We can knock the blues off. Cheer op and go for-
ward.
CARLOAD OF FLOUR AND GOOD THINGS TO EAT AT HARDTIME PRICES!
STAR BRAND SHOES
ARE BETTER
J. E. BLANKENSHIP
CURI.EE
CLOTHES
IBntterick Patterns
SEISM FW
STMTKflSTME
MfflTH
College Station.—A return
of $7.4® per acre in the form
«f feed supplied livestock (trac-
ing, as reported oa 19 scatter-
ed East Texas permanent pas-
ture demonstrations for the
first six months of the year,
represents an average of what
farmers in that region may
fairly expect to get by improv-
ing their native pastures by
demonstration methods, says
R. H. Bush, special agent in
the Texas Extension Service at
A. and M. College. Calling at-
tention to the fact that early
fall is the best time to begin
“GREATEST CAR I’VE EVER DRIVEN”
‘AMAZING COMFORT AND BALANCE”
“REMARKABLE GASOLINE MILEAGE”
‘LIKE AN AIRPLANE’
These are just a few of the many
comments about the New Ford
eight.
You‘11 be even more enthusiastic
when you drive it Words can’t
begin to describe the thrill of its
performance.
Fast — Smooth — Marvelously
responsive. You can go places
—quickly, comfortably, eco-
nomically—in the New Ford
Eight.
DRIVE THE
New Ford V-8
LET THE CAR TELL ITS OWN STORY
Timpson Motor Co.
TIMPSON, TEXAS
FORD PRODUCTS GOODYEAR TIRES
We Will Trade For 20 Used Cars, Any Make
pasture improvement, he says
these demonstrations are typi-
cal of more than 1009 in East
Texas supervised by county
agents. Records show that the
newly improved pastures fur-
nished grazing to about four
head of coWs or work stock on
every five acres. The grazing
was estimated at 5 cents per
cow per days, a value based on
a conservative estimate of the
wholesale price of the feed the
grazing replaced.
A fanner in this group who
only mowed the weed* so the
1V S™*** couM gr0J1 iin Field,
found that five acres support- *
ed two cows, giving him a re-
turn per acre of $3.8$ in six
months. The man with the beet
improved pasture had good
grazing for six cows per acre,
making a net return of $54.74
per acre for the six month pe-
riod. The four best pastures
averaged 2 Vs cows per acre
and returned $23.89 for the
Erst half of the year.
“Improving native pastures, .
in East and Central Texas,” .
says Mr. Bush, “should begin
In September and October
with the sowing of grass and
clover mixtures after excess
brush has been cut out. weeds
mowed, and terraces thrown
up where needed to conserve
moisture and prevent erosion.
In East Texas and the Gulf
Coastal area a mixture of
Bermuda grass, dallis grass,
lespedeza, bur and white
ms
oNrnjm
1
I
b
'MAh
That is indeed good news
that the Army and Navy have
agreed to resume competition
in ali branches of sport for the
next three year*. Football
teams representing the two
i institutions will meet on Frank-
Philadeiphia, De-
cember 3. The Ahay-Navy
game is one of the sports spec-
tacles of the year.
• • *
Here is the brief story of a
baseball player who batted ovt
a ball daring a game in Phila-
delphia and it went to Hew
York. Ike Straub, catcher for
the St. Anne’s team, hit a
foul bail in a game with the
Columbia Turners the other
A brakeman. riding atop
a boxcar of a fast freight train,
caught the ball os the fly,
waved it in the sir and then
pocketed it as the train pass-
ed out of sight. The train was
bound for New York.
• ■ ...
And there is a yarn about a
man who baited oat a six-base
hit and yet didn't score. Char-
ley Chatfonle, of the Church
Baseball League, of Union-
ries of 1965 between Phila-
delphia of the Americaa Le
gue and New York of the Na-
tional League, ended h a shut-
out victroy. 0
• 00
Babe Ruth has played fa
nine world series.
» * *
Handball dates back to the
tenth century. It’s of Irish
origin.
• * •
la Jane, 192$, W. R. Selkirk
while fishing oS Hermann*
Cape, Province of ’ South
Africa, caught a shark 1$ fast,
three inches long, weighing 127
pounds. That’s a record fee
sharks.
The first trench silo on u
Walker county fans was dug
in Juhr on the Smitaer farm,
and will be filled with 200 tone
of feed after the three up-
right sBos are folL The coun-
ty agent reposts enough cattle
to use up the ensilage fa all
four silos.
Completed
Buildings--
dutch clover, and annual sweet towT!’ ***•> knocked a ball away
clover and black medic will
furnish a combination that does
well and furnishes grazing al-
most the year around. It the
Black! and and further west
the mixture proving good In,
demonstrations consists of
Bermuda, dallis, rescue and
Italian rye grasses, and sweet
clover, bur clover and black
medic.
oat in far center. - Panting
across borne plate he heard
some one shout: “Hey, you
didn’t touch find.” So Charley
started around again. He fell
into second ahead of the ball
and waa called safe. The' next
batter ended the inning.
A 50 per cent bigger hay
crop of double She usual qual-
ity was made this year by John
Murph, Leca county farmer,
by following a county agent
suggestion to plant 5 pounds of
Korean lespedeza to the acre
in a 15-aere native grass
meadow. He expects another
crop but even without it
the increase cost him
$3.25 per ton for seed
inoculation.
The first world
played in 1884.
series was
In 1904 when the Boston
red Sox won the peasant in
the Americaa League, the)
Sox challenged the New York;
team, winners of the National
League flag. The Giants re-
fused to play on the ground
that the American League was
not a major league.
• * •
Every game of the five-game
No Uncertainty as
to Fined Cotffl
We make a specialty of completed
jobs—residence, school building, garage
or barns—turn-key job. That is, we
will make you price for die job complete
—lumber and other material, construe-
. tion and even the paint job. Why worry
about the uncertainty of your building
costs?
Perhaps it is a brand-new residence
that you have been planning so long—let
us give you an estimate. Or you may
want to remodel your old building; add
a room or make other needed changes—
let us furnish you a price for this work
We Want Yoor Lumbar Business.
Timpson Lmnber Co.
J. ML WILSON, Prep
TOW
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Molloy, T. J. Timpson Daily Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 183, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 13, 1932, newspaper, September 13, 1932; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth767993/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Timpson Public Library.