Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 160, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 19, 1945 Page: 2 of 4
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The Mount Pleasant Daily Times
Wednesday Evening, September 19 1945
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MI. PLEASANT DAILY TIMES
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FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE — Or trade, 1 Braden
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WANTED tEmployment)
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WANTED
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WANT TO RENT
Exclusive
PERSONAL STATIONERY
KELP WANTED
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when he won
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9-19
CRYPTOQUOTE—A cryptogram quotation
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CARA
NOME
Alma (
Agent
Souths
Life In
Boican Hero
Still Holds
Head High
Alfalfa is one of the oldest
forage plants in the world.
In Europe, alfalfa is called lu-
cerne.
FOR SALE — Several used Bu-
tane gas tanks. For prices, etc.,
write Voyd Fuqua, New Boston,
Texas. Box 755. 18-6d-lwp.
Expert
ice for
radios,
ments
ice, cal
Alfalfa was brought from Per-
sia to Greece in 500 B. C.
Before you get Married see us for your Engraved
Wedding Announcements
Seventy species of maple occur
throughout the world.
white
house
wired
trees,
GOD GIVES US LOVE. SOME-
THING TO LOVE HE LENDS US—TENNYSON.
FOR SALE—87-acre farm 5 miles
from Mt. Pleasant on Dainger-
northwest of Mt. Pleasant on road
field highway; 3 houses with good
outbuildings. Woodrow Traylor.
13-12d-2wp.
38. Early inhabi-
tant (Gr. Brit.)
39. Malt beverage •
42. Chopping tool
7:00
F
7:35
DDT — The Magic Insecticide
you’ve been waiting for! Buy it
by the gallon or quart at The Mt.
Pleasant Oil Mill. 19-3t-lw
Newlone MAKE-UP CREAM
After-Bath CREME COLOGNE
Coro Nome FACE POWDER
WANTED — Men free to travel
with cars. See V. U. Roberson,
Cozy Tourist Courts, Cabin No.
9. 18-3p
A
10-
SERVICE PRESS
508 Johnson Ave. Phone 217
Mt. Pleasant, Texas
CLOCK AND WATCH REPAIRING
B. A. HARDAWAY
■j| ACROSS FROM POSTOFFICE
MT. PLEASANT. TEXAS
$1 00*
$1.95*
$2.00*
*Plu» Toxet
~7:35
7:50
F
8:20
F
8:50
-<s
&
8:50
.* F
F
9:35
In White and All Pastel Shades
Large Cabinets
■Watermarked Rag Bonds
(with name and address printed)
$2.00 $2.50 $3.00
■
MT. PLEASANT DAILY TIMES
CLASSIFIED COLUMN
pH
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TODAY... AND EVERY DAY...IS YOURS
__.________ FOR SALE — Native gravel for
i, etc. J. F. Cheek, or
other insects. Get it now while! call Sam Smith’s Service Station.
12-26p
~l i
JUSTLETN
show ivro
THE GIRLS/
23
n
£
By PAUL ROBINSON
(CREERf/DONT I
LOSE IE." I WANTA |
PAY FOR MY«
TT-tp PLANE/'
FEEDS FOR YOUR NEEDS—When you
need stock or poultry feed come to see us.
We carry a nice line of available grocer-
ies at all times. See us for poultry and
1 live stock remedies. We do you right.
to Damascus. Mrs. J. W. Green.
13-6d-lwp
BIRDS FOR SALE — Beautiful
voice Hartz Mountain singers, all •
raised this year. Mrs. Phil Black-
veil, 14zb i^orth Jefferson.
4-lmo.
FOR SALE — Coil bedsprings
and all-cotton mattress, used
three months, $20 for both. D. C.
Ragsdale, 203-A Popular Street,
North Mt. Pleasant.
5. Fairy (Mo-
hammedan)
6. A snarl
7. Stuffs
8. Two para-
pets form-
ing an angle
9. Guido’s
highest note
15. Pronoun
16. Help
18. Letter C
21. Stitch bird
22. River (It.)
23. American
author
FOR SALE — Factory-built
house trailer, with stove and ice
box. Wired for electricity. See
Lee Soward at highway barn.
18-3t
DDT — Kills flies, mosquitoes and I driveways,
:* — —......‘ nail Sam S
it lasts at the Mt. Pleasant Oil I Phone 41.
Mill. 19-3t-lw I “
rv r.
WANTED TO RENT — Furnish-
ed and unfurnished houses and
apartments for Refinery em-
ployees. Call personnel depart-
ment of the Talco Asphalt and
Refining Company. Phone 700.
27-dw-tf
CROSSWORDe
4. Wide-awake 25. Pale
26. Coordinat-
ing conj.
27. Author
of "The
Raven”
28. English
university
29. Printing
marks
30. Roman
house gods
31. Lawns
33. Full of reeds
34. Lowest note
(Guido's)
37.Independent
V bRQZ^
A B —
jSNO/j
* --- JLo X[ah-h-h.A
THANKS FOR [ \ HISAUTD-
FLYINGME IN' kUM, J GRAPH,- f
■ HOWS THAT A AT LAST.!')
DAILY
ACROSS
1. Female deer
4. Likely
7. Crawls
10. Meadow
11. Lets again
12. Sea eagle
13. Jewish
month
14. Constella-
tion
17. Masurium
(sym.)
18. Air vesicle !
’ in rock- ‘
weeds 1
19. Coin
(Chin.)
20. Shoots, ,
as from
long range
23. Layer
24. Garden tool
25. Court
27. Hawaiian
food
29. In a dark
manner
32. Farm animal
33. Destruction
35. Rough lava
36. Spent
38. Young salmon
40. Coin (Swed.)
41. Floated
43. Color
44. Remainder
45. Ruler
(Tunis)
46. Coterie
DOWN
1. Antlered
animal
2. Make choice
3. Literary
compositions
Mg
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f. /•’ i- -• -cl/
WANTED — Salesman for an
aggressive Oklahoma flour and
feed mill, prefer experienced
FOR SALE — Vanity lamps, man, not over 35; territory now
52.82, with bulb. Anderson Furn- being worked. Good connection
iture Company. 17-3t for right man. Write Box 31-L,
care Daily Times. 14-6t.
Ml
rar
FOR PAY?
—
RID your herds and stocks pens
of disease-carrying flies and in-
sects. Use our DDT cattle spray.
Mt. Pleasant Oil Mill. 19-3t-lw
FOR SALE—5-room house, large
glassed-in sleeping porch, store
building and three lots. See W.
L. Conner, 419 West Twelfth
Street. 19-3p
( JUST TAKE YOUR '
> TIME, ELMER, L <
(HAVEN'T ANYTHING
(ELSE TO PO, BUT
< WAIT ON YOU ■<_
, 3300 I3HE1H
anima aaaaia
taaBrasi Hmaasa
area *niii on
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isasswa luasss
BMP5 SHB
HMOn BEllWWan
raan wmua na
ran HHii (BHB
nacinra aoauM
Mtiaaa HasaB
aaara hbbb
COME FOR
SUPPER-"
COME ON,
HURRY UP.'
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dRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN"
9-19
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Published daily except Saturday at 207 AV. 3rd St., Mt. Pleasant, Tex.
G. W. CROSS, Owner and Editor
HUGH C. CROSS, Advertising Manager (In Naval Service)
Entered as second cuss matter at the Post Office at Mt. Pleasant,
Texas, under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879.
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or repu-
tation of any person or concern that niay appear in the columns of
Hus paper will be gladly corrected when brought to the attention of
Hie publisher.
Obituaries, resolutions of respect and cards of thanks will be
qbarged for at regular advertising rates.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By carrier, 50c per month, $2.50 for 6 month?; $5.00 per year.
By mail, $2.50 a year in Titus and adjoining counties; elsewhere
H.00 per year.________________
WASHINGTON Hepwi
___________________-!
Copt 1915, K».^’ Features Synd.’istt Inc , World rights rt~cn<
HE'S NO DUMB BUNNY/
HE KNOWS IF YOU KEEP L
THE CHECK, t DON'T GET
ANY MOOLA."-AND IFL r
CASH 117-YOU'RE OUT I
1 HIS AUTOGRAPH.'/
............
«/ —-^3
4mMr tar . V«*M ngtei rnrrwrl
$51.22
’e Com-
17-3t i
--------------------------1
FOR SALE — Modern 5-room !
house, either completely furn-
ished with electric refrigeration,
etc. or unfurnished. Cpl. Jimmy
Musgrove, 405 West Seventh
Street. 13-tf.
By HELEN ESSARV
Central Press Columnist
• WASHINGTON—Whenever I meet or hear about a Hero. I won-
der If being the wife of a Hero isn’t harder than being the Hero.
In order to be a successful wife of a Hero, a woman must see the
Fine Fellow as the Greatest Man alive. She must sit at his feet and
at the same time ’’protect” him as if he were an Infant and not yet
out of swaddling clothes. She must remember only his most ad-
mirable qualities and his more magnificent moments. And while the
multitudes cheer her husband’s triumphs, she must forget those
.. occasions upon which he happened to leave the
r ignition switch on and thus ran the family auto-
' mobile battery down for three days in a row: or
when he loses his temper when matches fail to
light These—plus a thousand little eccentricities.
In addition to other qualifications for the role
of a Hero's wife, the Happy Little Woman must
wear just the right clothes when on view in pub-
lic. She must have the right kind of profile for
the cameras. Manage to keep fresh the "welcome
home” orchids, presented by some reception com-
mittee, despite torrid heat or drizzle. And, worst
of all, manage to look pretty for the picture page
and its larger-than-life-size shot bearing some
such caption s«- ’’Greeted hy Wife With Loving
Kiss.”
LOST — Saturday, pair of rim-
less glasses with gold temples,
perhaps about Business part of
FOR SALE — Studio couches in town. Finder please leave at
tapestry and velour, $51.22 to Driggers Grocery. 18-3p
$68.50. Anderson Furnitur,
pany.
WANTED—By permanent couple
house or apartment, furnished or
unfurnished. R. A. Barnard, Box
604, Mt. Pleasant, Texas. 17-6p
-I ’ ‘
Si (
had your size ... It will
you to wait for STAR,
better tire.
DANIEL TIRE SHOP
STAR TIRES, TUBES, VULCANIZING
MT. PLEASANT, TEXAS
FOR SALE — 4-room house to
winch, complete with power take-! be moved from my place 3 miles
off and shaft; 1 Easy washing ' “ ”
machine; 1 residence size hot
water beater. B. J. Mayfield,
Talco, Texas. 18-3p
(.OUES ME-
0P10VESME 1
WOTp
MfANTED — Employment at
sheetrocking, painting and roof-
ing, contract or by the hour.
Write or see Jim Witt, Omaha,
Texas. ll-12p.
Rates for Advertising in this column:
1 Time. Per Word------lc
Minimum Charge-------------—’ 25c
Center lines, regardless of number of words, count as one line.
Classified ads set tn all capitals take double rate. Legal ratea
1« per word each inserfion.
Cards of thanks, memorials and poetry, lc per word.
TELEPHONE 15 FOR ADVERTISING SERVICE
FOR SALE — Radios, good used
battery and electric sets. Ander-
son Furniture Company. 17-3t
There’ll Be Plenty Soon!
The factory is again in full
civilian production, but the
demand for Star Tires is so
great that we have not always
' ^he TIRES —TUBES
FOR SALE — Six acres 1.7 miles
I from tbwn, house with 5 rooms
and bathroom; good water, elec-
tricity. W. E. Hobbs. . 18-3p.
FOR SALE — Large 3 room,
painted, newly papered
with bath and fixtures,
for lights. Lots of shade
2 hearing pecan trees, 8
acres of land, good pasture, well
and pond water. 4 miles from
town on new paved highway to
Paris. Priced for quick sale and
quick possession. See H. A. Dun-
can, R. 4. 18-d&w-tf
’■A;
" Ll
Helen Etsary
Mrs. Jonathan Wainwright, Kitty for short, Is a most satisfac-
tory Hero’s Wife. She really was a darling at her husband’s press
meetings. She’s very pretty. She did wear the right clothes—
though I could have wished tor a hat smaller than her black straw
sailor. It drooped and hid her attractive face. Her black and blue
silk frock was smartly cut. Her pearl earrings were good. And her
orchid hadn’t as much as one brown spot on its violet leaves. She
looked completely a lady and yet not too aloof for cheerful com-
panionship.
When Mrs. Wainwright took her place at the right of her hus-
band and faced several hundred curious reporters, taking notes vio-
lently, she was modest and composed. When her husband spoke
affectionately of her, her manner was charming.
‘‘My first great happiness on arriving home was seeing my be-
loved wife from whom I have been separated for four and a half
years,” said the man who had lived through horror and torture in a
Japanese prison camp. Kitty Wainwright drooped her head. Per-
haps she wore that large hat on purpose. But you could see the
muscles of her neck twist as she gulped down her emotion. Then
ahe reached into her purse. For a handkerchief, probably, to wine
the tears from her eyes. Then thought better of making a d:: ?:v
of emotion. Closed the purse quickly. Swallowed hard and sat with
hands clenched while the hero of Corregidor related a few of his
experiences.
The general talks with both humility and pride of his share in
the war. If he did feel any bitterness over his experience neither
his manner nor tone showed resentment.
The Young Aeneas had an uneventful trek on his way back from
Troy when compared with the World War II ad-
ventures of Jonathan Wainwright. I wonder if the
Young Aeneas got jnmselt a new suit as quickly as
the general ad^ulred that snappy bright uniform he
has been wearing. The general's uniform seems a
trifle large. But then the general is more Ilian a
trifle thin now. Thinner by many pounds thr.n he was
the nickname "Skinny.” The last one of his four stars drops down
over the edge of his narrow shoulders. But his voice is strong and
he holds his head high.
I KNOW WHAT
YOU'RE THINK-
ING''ANDTHE
' -Y
^63,
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Cross, G. W. Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 160, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 19, 1945, newspaper, September 19, 1945; Mount Pleasant, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1374149/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.