Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 94, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 9, 1946 Page: 4 of 4
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The Mount Pleasant (Texas)Tuesday Evening, July t, 1946
RAY SICKNESS IN ANIMALS DEALT ATOMIC PUNCH
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and unsual profission in War-
the social:
CURB
SERVICE
ft S
4:00 p. m. to 11:30 p. m.
FOUNTAIN SERVICE
ALL KINDS
i
Lucky Dog
SANDWICHES
CAFE
TALLEY’S
North Mt. Pleasant
Phone us your news items.
MARTIN
THEATRE
1
TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY
F 0
e
Whistle Stop
with
... —*•»
GEORGE RAFT
AVA GARDNER
•fc
VICTOR McLAGLEN
TOM CONWAY
•T
Bikini to Me'
At The Texan
ty. Hence,
I
with
CORNEL WILDE
ANITA LOUISE
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Bullington’s
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RED RRROUU QURLITV
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The Bandit Of
Sherwood Forest
£aatr&nMie
Fine 1b6ncco
JILL ESMOND
EDGAR BUCHANAN
Age of Woman
Is Only Relative
Cinderella's Slipper
Will Give You A Fit
Wesleyan Service
Guild Meets at the
Church on Monday
younger ’ She was one of my pu-
pils when I taught school.”
Restore the soil—restore it.
(Be A .FRIEND OF THE LAND.
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f
♦
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Berlin Deals Are
Slow in Real Estate
.. . ’— I
feoasaww
and in a Cigarette
it’s the Tobacco that counts15
Pied Piper
Is Reported
In Warsaw
Chiffon, denoting a sheer soft
| fabric, comes from the French
I ‘‘chiffon,” meaning a piece of old
and worthless rag.
iwt^Ee .....
who have
estate.
Vacant lots, like ruins, are not
wanted. One main reason is the
dearth of building materials, but
outside of bricks are as plentiful
as the sands of the sea.
L. W
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s Mg I
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s
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Ir-JI
. -X ' ]
L ?c
\ Ji
tea
‘ Wbodman, spare that trie.”
Small-sized dollar bills have
1 been in circulation as United
States currency since July 10,
1929.
ft
KmImjI
THOUGH 75 PER CENT OF Alt ANIMALS left on the target fleet in Bikini lagoon came through the
atomic bomb blast alive, some are already showing signs of fatal radiation. According to a clinic
of high officers of Operation Crossroads, all but a few of these will die within a two-week period. At
right above, a goat that was aboard the bull’s-eye ship, U. S. S. Nevada, is examined by Lt. Ord. J. D.
Roche, North Andover, Mass., while at the left, Pharmacist's Mate Clarence J. Schacher, Portland,
Ore., gives a guinea porker from the same ship a going-over. (International Soundphoto)
Red Arrow Foot Lotion Eases Distress
54^Yfj”Gets After Infection in a Hurry!
Athlete’* Foot” loses most of its terrors when you get
right after it with RED ARROW FOOT LOTION.
The intolerable itch eases up amazingly within a few
seconds and only a few applications more will end the
trouble entirely if there has been no new infection. It’s
so easy to pick up this distressing malady; why not get
Red Arrow I oot Lotion now and be prepared. Regular
2 03. bottle only 50c.
ONE OF MANY RED ARROW HOUSEHOLD DRUO PRODUCTS
Swint Bros.
m
f
5.
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[plalll in Warsaw. It’s estimated there’s (
“I meant to say, ‘when she was abcub 2>0°0-000 rats in the ruins . .
of this city, and some of them '
| “are as big as rabbits.” They got M9&8
that way feeding fo'r mere than a ,
Automobiles Old
Stuff Up In New
Hampshire ' |
! MANCHESTER, N. H., OP) —
i Detroiters celebrating the auto-
mobile’s golden jubilee year are ,
just Johnny-Conre-Latelies so far
. as this city is concerned
j Two Manchester men built and
idrove a horseless carriage
, around town in 1868, local resi-
s dents claim—a steam powered
j one. Amoskeag Machine Shiop
, Employes James Batchelder and
! William H. Wtritner built the
engine—a steam boiler—in the I
rear of a heavy Democrat wagon. ‘
With chain and sprocket drive 1
cn the rear axle, the contraption
took only 15 minutes to /ire and w'he’re”
I start. After the first two-hours
. trial July 9, 1868, the Manchester
j Union said, “We don’t see exact-
i ly who has use and need for
' carriage cf this sort in New Enft
land.”
THE ONLY ANIMAL aloft at the time
the atomic bomb hits the target at
Bikini will be “Fritzy", pet dachs-
hund of S/Sgt. James Garner of Los
Angeles, a crew member of one of
the blast gauge planes. Rigged in
city, which “has had it,” ever be his own parachute, “Fritzy” is pic-
rebuilt? If so, will it again be- tured with his master before a test
flight. (International Soundphoto)
<
MT. VERNON, Ill., (IP) —Mar- (
Tin Rich, Mt. Vernon banker met >
a feminine voter at a local ele-
tion. •
Said Rich, “Didn’t I know you
when you were young?”
In hurt tones the woman re-
plied, “But, Mr. Rich—I’m not
old yet.”
(Laughter olf bystanders sub-
sided long enough for Rich to'
explain: r
• M
.1
I
wiRl WJ
I V I
Quality of product |
IS ESSENTIAL TO
CONTINUING SUCCESS
t '
Husbands! Wives!
! Want new Pep and Vim?
1'hoiuandfl 01 couple* are weak, worn-out, ex-
hausted solely because body lacks Iron. For new
▼Im, vitality, try Ostrex Tonic Tablets. Contains
Iron you, too. may need* for pep. also supplies
vitamin B|. Low cost I Introductory slas only 36c. I
For sale at all drug stores everywhere.
.Sold at all drug stores every-
’year upon human corpses under
the debris.
veld, chairman of the National
Foot Health Council, the trans-
parent and flexible vinylite shoe
1 will show the correct fit around
ROCKLAND, Mass., (^P) —A the heel, under the arch, over the
modern Cinderella’s glass slipper large toe, and the spaoe over the
has been developed—not to help toes and beyond their end. The
romance but to aid in fitting method is applicable to men and
youngsters properly with every- women also.
day leather shoes.
Devised by Dr. Joseph Lely-
ABOARD FLAGSHIP MT.
McKINLEY, Atomic Bomb Fleet |
(/P)—You dinna find heather nor
I hear the skirl of pipes in the
71“th?ugh“loPurnOUes5!^ar,shalls’ buJ<n the
.bonnie to me.” •
I The tune has the flatness of
native music and the words are
without burr, but the air and
lyric sung by Marshallese child-
ren are instantly recognizable.
I The song, together with such
others as ''You are My Sunshine”
and “Working on the Railroad,”
have been taught the youngsters
by missionaries, along with old
familiar hymns.
Wood engraving by H. McCormick based upon the original oil painting CopytirM i04f..The A». r; • • ,
Kfe "-V* -
F;.
L 4
Kb- - ’ B
who need cash badly or heirs
no use for the real
I
Jvii
;; RgdsfalOilfeJM
d- ’* X‘<Jm
iFoygygMai
w'w
1
c No blode-hondting
hazard .
Cloam imtontly C
— |uit rinzo ■
a Double thick blades V
Iasi 3 limes longer
AP Newsfeatures I
BERLIN—Nobody wants to
buy ruins, inquiry among Berlin
real estate dealers reveals.
This fact somewhat surprised
real estate brokers, who at first
| want to acquire ruins Cheaply,
| tear them down and rear new
structures.
I Investors, however, reasoned
1 differently. First of all they don’t
know what is to be the position
of mortgages on property now
' standing in ruins. Next, there is
the question of whether real es-
tate valuations will undergo a
| change in view of the unprece-
i dented situation created by mass
I destruction of entire city sections
I through bomb and artillery ac-
, tion.
Take downtown Berlin, for in-
stance. Real estate before the
war naturally commanded top
prices. But can the center of the
citv. which “hoc hnzS it *’ Ko 5
rebuilt? If so, will it again be-
come the commercial center or
Will it, as some city planners |
hive it, be turned into a series'‘^ring Back My
of settlement projects? The un----- - - - - - a
certainty is putting a curb on
speculative buying or purchase I
for investment.
On the other hand, anybody
who has a roof over h'is house is
anxious to hold onto hi?
Hence, wuutzess» . , . . . .
would be purchasers of hom/s: „ Brln« baC* my
are registered with real estate
agents, properties are being of-1
fered for sale only by people
I NO W AVAILABLE!
Thr Wesleyan Service Guild -----
held its ;egular meeting at the &p Newsfeatures
Methodist Church Monday even- [ WARSAW, Poland—The news-
ing, with Mrs. Lloyd Adams,' paper Dzienpik Ludowy revealed
president, in charge. Mrs. Clar-^the existence of a modern Pied
enc: Sanders was program chair- |pipt r in what is temed "a peculi-
raan and conducted an intetest- ar . • • —m~'-
ing study on the last of a series saw.”
of discussions pertaining to gaid a 74.y.ear.oid gypsy,1
' Africa I Joseph Bek, who escaped death
Mrs. Lewis Allen gave the de- ’ in a German concentration camp (
votional and Mrs. George Daniels ( becauE.> of his skill in “charm- i
gave an instructive lecture on the (ing- ratJ) walked down Panska I
Belgian Congo region of Africa, st playing a flute with two boys
relating information furnished p<,„.in„ j,.. — ,
her by a missionary with whom. Thg new per added:
she corresponds regularly. . , . . ..
Hostesses during the social! “Several hundred rats to low-
hour were Mrs. James E. Duke.'ed tc a truck with a board lead-
Mrs. in8 t0 ** nearby- The Players
Mrs. Lovice Brown and
Norris Black.
I ing to it nearby. The players
'mounted the truck and after a
[slight hesitation, the rats follow- |
|ed them. When the rats were all (
1 in, the truck was quickly closed
and a special top clamped on it.” i
The journal said Bek earned .
his living by making purses, cig- |
arette cases and similar objects
with the skins of rats, adding,
. “the old man is very mysterious
and does not want to give his I
[address nor details about his art. 1
He only says that rats are easily ■
hynotizfd by music and that one
I must discover the tones that af- )
feet them most."
Bek should have plenty of work
' Ccwi
1
* M
i
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Cross, G. W. Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 94, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 9, 1946, newspaper, July 9, 1946; Mount Pleasant, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1367294/m1/4/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.