Timpson Daily Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 129, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 1, 1939 Page: 2 of 2
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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IReal Values
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I
1. Cosmetics !
1 EARLY AMERICAN
* Talc. Powder............................
♦ Soap, 3 bars.............................
% Body Powder ..............................
X Perfume .................................
f Trial size consisting of Talc, Soap, Sachet.......
...$1.00 ?
.. .$i.oo i
____25c |
| ROGER A GELLET
X Talc. Powder and Sachet, $1.50 value for.....
...$1.00 |
| YARD LEY’S
• Lotus Lavender Toilet Water...............
J Body Powder............................
•
. . .$1.00 t
| MAX FACTOR
♦ Pan-Cake make-up, waterproof and sunproof..,
| CARA NOME—Full line
. . $1.50 1
| TIMPSON PHARMACY j
TIMPSON, TEXAS
MILK TIMES
Entered as second class mat-
ter April 17. 1906, at the post-
office at Timpaon, Texas, un-
der the Act of March 8, 1879.
J. J. MOLLOY----Editor
S. WINFREY - Business Mgr.
THOUGHTS FOR *
TODAY
___ •
Build a little fence of *
trust *
Around today;
Fill the space with lov- *
ing work, *
And therein stay; *
Look not through the *
sheltering bars
upon tomorrow *
God will help thee bear *
what comes
Of joy or sorrow.
—Mary Frances Butts. *
COTTON RESEARCH
ON THE MARCH
The union of the Cotton Re-
search Foundation with the
National Cotton Council will
bring applause from all sides.
The move is a symbol of the
unity with which cotton men
are preparing for an attack on
reduced consumption in this
eleventh hour of their sad
plight.
The Cotton Council gains a
topnotch research division,
ably staffed and already rich
in experience and achieve-
ments. The Research Founda-
tion gains a place in an organ-
ization which will represent
its cause throughout the na-
tion and tell the. world of the
new cotton uses that it devel-
ops. Seldom do two organiza-
tions, both alert, dynamic and
successful, pool their resources
in this manner for the com-
mon good.
The Cotton Research Foun-
dation summarizes its pur-
poses thus: "(1) To originate
basic new uses for the cotton
plant, (2) to stop the trend
away from cotton to substi-
tutes." These brief words lay
a finger on one of the nation’s
most desperate needs.
The per eapita consumption
of cotton in this country has
undergone a notable decline
in the past 20 years. Since in-
dustrial uses of cotton increas-
ed tremendously in this peri-
od, the reduced per capita
consumption indicates a still
larger loss of cotton usage in
the home and on the person.
The fall in consumption has
been accompanied by wide-
spread substitution of artificial
and imported fabrics. The
competition from these sources
has been repeatedly spurred
by new scientific discoveries.
■Cotton must save itself with
an aggressive research . pro-
gram of its own. The coordina-
tion of the Cotton Research
foundation with the National
Cotton Council augurs acceler-
ated progress in this direction.
•New York police refuse to
arrest youngsters who annoy
celebrities with demands for
autographs. The cops say
they have never found a cele-
brity who was not pathetically
eager to be annoyed—Brubak-
er in the New Yorker.
Hint to statesmen: Cash can
win support for a bad idea,
but the idea hasn’t a friend
left when the cash plays out.
—Detroit News.
Buy By Brand
Buy your groceries by the brand, get only
Nationally advertised,
Watch the saving that come to you thru
health, you’ll be very much surprised;
For good foods are exactly like good clothes,
they do the job and do it well,
The sorry clothes—will not last you long,
and sorry foods are simply H-
I try to keep in foods what the critics say—
are the purest and the best.
The ones that stand out in the caterers eye,
aside from all the rest.
I am open only six days a week, and deliver
anytime,
Just try my service—give a ring—say central
—Number Nine.
Gordon Weaver
Phone 9 GROCERIES Timpaon jj
By PERCY CROSBY
It Makes All the Difference In the World.
WHAT A WrJfSAM WILL OP
A Mw:-
OAY AFTCft PAY SHf'tC
«0 wlYHOur £Af«c A
KCoCAR MEAL RATX€R
IRAK SAIN AN OVNCe
OF FAT.
ANO WHAT A MAN
WIU. BO FOR A WOMAN-
in order to sive her rue
fine or her life
You have a genuine prob-
lem.
The first step, then, should
be lb write it out, or to formu-
to maturity if they were as
helpless in all relations as they
show themselves to their phy-
sicians.
to a satisfactory performance,
you are laying the foundation
of future failure.
SttHMYRHOOl
LESSON
Ir Charlie E. D—l
Solomon: A Ruler Who
Began Well
Lesson for July 2
1 Kings 3:5-16.
Golden Text: 1 Kings 3:9.
late it verbally with exactness,
so that you ean see just what it
is that is troubling you. If
you simply let the problem
wash around in your mind, it
will seem greater than it will
appear on close examination.
Then find an expert, wheth-
er friend or stranger, but make
every effort to find one whose
views seem to be congenial to
you, since that usually im-
plies similar or congenial men-
tal processes. If you are suc-
cessful in getting an interview,
make that as short and concise
as possible while still covering
all your points. Then follow
the advice you are given until
you see definite results.
If you are tempted to say
“Oh, that won’t work for me,”
then you should suspect your
own motives. Such a rejection
implies that you already had a
course of action in mind, and
were more than half-hoping
that you would be advised to
follow tt. Watching an ex-
ample of the wrong attitude
towards advice and instruction
here may be more illuminating
than any positive example.
If you are in school, or tak-
ing class or private instruction,
it is wise to take every oppor-
tunity to ask well-considered
questions, than to act on the
information; and finally and
very important—to report to
your instructor as to your suc-
cess or failure through follow-
ing his advice. This is of ad-
vantage not only to you, but to
him and his subsequent pupils.
After your period of appren-
ticeship is over, try net to
weaken yourself or bring
about self-doubt to such an
extent that you must have help
on minor points of procedure.
Rvery physician and psychi-
atrist knows that there is a
great class of “sufferers" wfco
return again and egain, ask-
!y they could ever have grown
No one except a charlatan
truly welcomes the appear-
ance of such patients as these.
The persons who is looking for
an excuse to blame his failure
on another or who will not, if
he can help it, grow up and
settle his own difficulties, will
go on asking advice until he
draws his last breath, and
even the astutest consultant
may be forgiven if he some-
times mistakes an infrequent
questioner for one of the
weaker types.
. So talking, complaining,
asking advice, inviting sugges-
tions—all are better abandon-
ed during the period of re-
education.
Ultimately and ideally, of
course, you want to be able to
work under any and all cir-
cumstances. You cannot eve:
be certain that your favorite
confidante or your most stimu-
lating friend will always be in
a position to lend a sympathe-
tic ear at the moment that, you
feel you need it.
If you establish the habit of
going to someone at • certain
point in your work, and lead
yourself to feel, even uncon-
sciously. that this is necessary
ing so many and such trivial {
questions that it seems unlike-
For the third quarter of the
year we shall stndy twelve of
the leaders of Israel, using
topics and Scripture refer-
ences prepared by the ‘Interna-
tiona! Council of Religious
Education. The first of these
leaders is Solomon, whose
memorable reign began so well
but ended bsdly.
At the Banctuary of Gibeon,
Solomon celebrated his acces-
sion to the throne by an im-
pressive religious ceremony.
There, on the following night,
he had a dream in which he
heard the voice of the Lord of-
fering to grant him whatever
he asked.
It is greatly to the credit of
the young king that instead of
seeking riches, or a long life,
or victory in battle, he humbly
mentioned wisdom, or dacre-
tion, as his primary need. And
the Lord, as our lesson text
tells us, was so pleased with
Solomon’s wise choice that He
gave him not only what he
wanted but also the riches an<.
honor for which he had no*
asked.
The story does not make
clear what Is meant by wis-
dom. It is shrewdness, or im-
partial judgment, or states-
manship, or an appreciation of
the blessings of peace and cul-
ture?
Perhaps it is all four of
these qualities. Certainly Solo-
mon’s wisdom covered a wide
field of human interest, as is
indicated by the variety of
emphasis in that grand com-
pendium of good sense, the
Book of Proverbs.
What is life’s best gift? This
is the perennial question of
the ages. Many answer by
stressing health, or wealth, cr
fame, or length of days. And
these are certainly a boon. God
conferred them all upon Solo-
mor
But there is a still greater
blessing, that "understanding
heart” or "attentive mind”
which our hero knew he need-
ed most of all if his reign was
to be a true success. If a man
has genuine wisdom in his soul
the lesser goods of life will fol-
low. “Happy is the man that
finceth wisdom,” we read in
Proverbs, “and the man that
getteth understanding. Length
of days is in her right hand;
in her left hand are riches and
honour.”
El Paso, Tex. (UP)—Per-
mission to build a hog pen
smack dab in the middle of
one of the busiest downtown
sidewalks has been granted by
the city council. The pen,
however, wasn’t a real farm-
size affair, just a dress parade
sty in which a local store exhi-
bited animals as part of its
program to encourage breed-
ing and raising of better hogs
among 4-H club members in
West Texas and New Mexico.
Palace Theatre
TIMPSON
First show 7:46 p. m
Admission 10c-26c
It’s Always Cool at the
New Palace!
LAST TIME TODAY
DOUBLE FEATURE
PROGRAM
Feature No. 1—
Tommy Ryan and
Bob Livingston
In
“Orphans of the Street”
Feature No. 2
The Three Meaquiteers
In
“Red River Range”
Short—“Hot On Ice"
Midnight Show Saturday
Sunday and Monday
CAROLE LOMBARD
JAMES STEWART
In
“MADE FOR EACH
OTHER”
Popeye, The Sailor, in
“Aladdin And His Wonderful
Lamp”
A special, ail is Technicolor,
three times the length of the
usual Popeye cartoon.
THE ME OFFISH
With the sweep of an in-
spired idea, of deft fin-
gers—fashion creates a
, new hair-do. Your hair
styles flow onward _nd
upward ia perfect com-
plement to new dress,
millinery and shoe crea-
tions.
The Powder Puff Beauty
Salon is alert to your
beauty “musts.” Perma-
nent waves, new in style
and flattering to your
beauty, are now avail-
able. The cost is moder-
ate.
Phone for appointment at
your earliest opportunity.
PlMffiFB PUFF
BEIIITT5M
Phone 86—Tumssou
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Molloy, T. J. Timpson Daily Times (Timpson, Tex.), Vol. 38, No. 129, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 1, 1939, newspaper, July 1, 1939; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth814831/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Timpson Public Library.