Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 187, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 21, 1945 Page: 2 of 4
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HUNTSVILLE
October 14,21 and 28
, DON'T MISS THIS BIG EVENT
WE NOW HAVE
...A LINE OF LEADERS
■ y
8
Bullington
VuI»V
• Smart young things
everywhere know and use
Tussy pieparr.tions . . .
crean.. and lotions., .flat-
tering m ike up. Come in
and see our line ot Tussy
Cosmetiques - famous for
that young, young look!
p——
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31
38
>c>zo
Or
FIBER
I O
I s c
A U Z O I F
O R T S E.
O T D
O R I O
T
A I C
suo
BLLG
—Y C Z U S,
17 Electrified
particle
19 Greek letter
20 Concoct
21 A-tomcat
IO AO
Ycaterilay'o Anawer
39
40
42
44 Extinct bird
<N Zea »
CRYPTOQUOTE—A cryptogram quotation
ISV T K T
22. Eggs
23. Little girl
25. Member of
a Mongoloid
tribe
(Ethnc’l
26. Goddess of
harvests
27 T ny
29 To cut off
Organ of
hearing
33 Units of
power
(Physics)
34 Obnoxious
persoi
35 Body of Kaf-
fir warriors
36 So be it (var.)
ACROSS
1. Medieval
stories
6. Barbed
spears
11. A textile
fabric
12 Boat
(Eskimo)
13 Gaping, as
with wonder
14 Tidal flood
15. Cap
16 Sloths
18 Stitch
19 Pledged
faith
21 Land of
plenty
(Bib )
24 Below
(naut )
28 Covered
with ivy
29 A day's
march
30 Woody
fibers of
the linden
31. Extirpate
32 Washed by
waves
34 Covering of
the brain
37 Portion of a
curved line
38. 2.000 pounds
41. Ant
43. Semblance
45 Pastime
46. Christmas
songs
47. Prongs
48. Secluded
valleys
DOWN
1. Petty
quarrel
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WHO LOVE TOO MUCH hatf n*
THE LIKE extreme—POPE. ’ HATE w
“ .... ---„
Liang
(China)
Eye
Headland
Before
2. Seaweed
3. Largest
island of
Ladr->ne
group
4. Viper
5. Shaved
6. Visitor
7 Wine
receptacle
8 Fruits
(> Price >f
passage
10 Twirt
(colloq.)
CROSSWORD
DAILY
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A
COME MEET ALEXANDER'S )
NEW TEACHER - - - SME i-^
DROPPED IN
FOR A
|W CALL/,
.1 J HOW 1
M SILLY OF
(ALEXANDER
if YOU'LL SEE WHY l-
A ALEXANDER SPENDS
r A HALF-HOUR x
I EVERY MORNING )
7 COMBING HIS r—7
<-> HAIR r—X
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10 20
ETTA KETT_________
' .. [ F
/so OUQ GUESS’—J J
I WAS RIGHT-." THERE |
I ISAGH2LIN MIS i—J
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n
CRAWLING THRU MIS
LOVELFE LIKE THIS."
LETS FORGET/--•---' ,
1
f ANDTMATS WMV ME WONT
Xt] DATE US GHiLS, HES S-7
NEVER FORGOTTEN 1
----- I HER " r~—J
L a « *T~
HER PICTURE IN
THAT OLD CLASS
) BOOK WAS —
KNOCKOUT1
| ’-OOK:|MQ- J
Z f SO TH ATS
WHO HE5n
TOTING A
TOCO I
] FOR/J
fcS*
By PAUL ROBINSON
(Hi.BurcH?)
r MOWS 5__i
' PAMELA- yoL/ ^i
' ’^JGoON.ru
| WHAT DIDj
r1 You SAY
I THAT FOIE*'
irci^ry
In
i
id
i
i
John L. Lewis
But not this wholesale
r
Uaily Times Classified Ads Get Results
X "■
Getting
Acquainted Again
A Golden
Chance
For Lewis
O
; are, don't press him. If he has
been under the terrific strains of
AP Newsfeatures
The months or years cf separa-
tion probably have made changes
in you as well as in your hus-
band. You have had to make
at the Day Care Center; whether
you should move in with your
oarents after all. Working out
these things alone may have giv-
en you new confidence.
Or perhaps it has all been a
little too much for you to handle.
some time before he can get as
excited as you about your hard
times with the butcher’s or the
trouble you had gettin white
shirts for Johnny.
If you stop to think about it,
you may realize why things like
this don’t interest him right now.
The main thing is to be quick
to see how’ he feels about things.
owr
You may be surprised at the
things he will talk about—little
unimportant ep.K’des—about the
men he has been with, the food
j he ate, the trip home. Only a little
at a time will he be able to share
with you some part of what he
has been through.
Some of it he will probably
never share. If you understand
what this means to him, you will
spect his feelings, and not
think that he is purposely shut-
ting you out.
He will want to know about
you and the children, but not all
at once. And the things that have
seemed so important to you may
not strike him the same way. At
may fjrst he may not be too interested
in Johnny's fight with the boy
next door, or the way Susan tears
her books and puts crayon marks
on the wallpaper. It may take
llf
8
* v* « Z
By HELEN ESSARY
Central Press Columnist
e WASHINGTON—We have been mighty busy lately digging out
our half forgotten elegancies. We have been mighty hapf>y as we
dusted off the little refinements that used to decorate life before
Pearl Harbor.
We have been singing gay little pieces of music, of triumphant
music, as we bustled about, planning holidays, buying new clothes,
ordering new upholstery for the library, polishing
stored away and blackened silver, arranging little
dinners and big receptions.
And all the while, as we have been pretending
to ourselves that life was about to be wonderful
again:
Hundreds of thousands of workers have been
striking in many parts of the United States, thus
proving their own restlessness and discontent and
halting the return to normal living.
Heads of government in saved Europe have
been quarreling with each other.
The first meeting of the Big Five—the London
Conference of Foreign Ministers who were meant
to talk so seriously of the peace that is here
again—has ended in failure.
And fear of what Russia will do next has reached such a peak
that the postponment of the visit of Marshall Zhukov to the United
States is regarded as a kind of break away from the Allies by the
Stalin government.
It is indeed a sweet state that we find ourselves in. While the
war was on, we clung to such international friendships as we could
find because we were afraid of Hitler. We and our friends we
thought we had, huddled together. We were exalted by our common
effort to save ourselves. We were like the old rhyme:
"The Devil was sick, the Devil a saint would be.
"The Devil got well, the Devil a saint was he.”
Much of the evil that was momentarily hidden for the duration
has broken out recently like a sudden rash. And here we are going
haywire. Not only abroad. But within our own country. Among
our own people.
Labor seems to many to have gone completely haywire. Certain
demands on capital were in the cards.
striking.
Labor may ride to its own fall unless it slows down its own pres-
ent headlong pace. This is the opinion of Ralph Chaplin, one of
the most dramatic personalities within its own ranks.
Chaplin, who is from Tacoma, Wash., has been in the capital for
a few days’ stop on a crusading tour of the country. He hopes to
spread the doctrine of a new and reasonable concept of the rela-
tionship between labor and capital. Chaplin was an early rebel
against capitalism. As a member of the IWW. Indeed, he so
vigorously protested against the injustices to the working man that
he was locked up for five years in Fort Leavenworth, the federal
penitentiary.
Now Chaplin thinks labor needs to calm down and take stock of
itself before swinging the pendulum too far back. Labor desper-
ately needs a new leader.
"And the man to lead jt?” I asked.
"There is one man in this country who could lead labor out of the
confusion in which it has plunged itself,” said Mr. Chaplin, his
zealot’s eyes glowing. "That man is John L. Lewis. I used to
man. But I
fight Lewis on the west coast when I was a laboring
know that he has the qualities of a leader.
"Lewis has the intelligence, the courage and the
cut of the jaw that inspires.
"What he is thinking now, I do not know. But
I believe he has the greatest opportunity of his
whole life. Most labor leaders have lost touch with
labor. They are not really interested in the working
man. Nor his difficulties. They are simply interested in themselves;
in being leaders.” »
Neither Sidney Hillman, head of the C. I. O., nor William Green,
Federation of Labor president, would be of help to labor in the
mess it has got itself Into, added Chaplin. "But John L. Lewis
could save the situation, if he would.”
»■. __
Don’t rush him. Give him time
to settle down.
If he wants to talk about what
out such problems whether ’le ^as seen and felt and done,
• • ' • i lislen with both ears. If he seems
! of his mind for a time.
You may have grown more timid,'
and begun to depend on yogi-
parents again, as you used to do
when you were a child.
Each of you may have found i
new friends and developed dif- I
ferent ideas of your own. Your
point of view about yourself and
the children and what you want
out of life may have changed
more than you realize. It will be
exciting to discover how your
ideas and those of your husband
fit together. Of course they won't
always agree, but in comparing
them, you may both come to a
newer and more intimate under-
standing.
The changes in you both r-~;-
loom large at first, but under-
neath you are ;joih the same
I people who have known and lov-
ed each other. Gradually the
i-W /
strangeness brought out by your
widely different experiences
will wear off, as you learn to
know each other again.
It is your husband who has
done the big job, of course. It is
up to you to make most of the
compromises in the first few days.
| That is part of your job.
many decisions for yourself, since
you couldn’t talk everything
over by mail. You had to work
cr: ” .4. ..'
you should go back to your old I Hs erl with both ears. If ne
job; how you could arrange for I reluctant to talk, as many men
t:____-a. ___i___i o..'„ arp don’t nrpcc him Tf hoc
Be natural and use your
good judgment and you will find
hat the gap between you will
close over.
The children aren’t the same,
either. Perhaps the baby was
born after your husband went
away. So there is a whole new
person he hasn’t known. And
what a person she is: Already
she can tell you what she wants
I when she wants it in no unmis-
takable terms.
Or your Susan may have been
only a few months old when he
left. She probably spent most of
her time then peacefully lying
in her crib playing with her fin-
gers. Now she is always under
icct and into everything.
Or perhaps it is Junior who has
changed the most. He is serious
now that he goes to school, and
so independent in looking after
himself. And he is apt to get
“fresh” and resentful if anyone
bosses him around. He isn’t the
sweet little boy anymore, al-
though he still has that angelic
look at times. He feels himself
the “man of the house” now.
All these things may make the
first few days a little awkward,
But they will smooth out more
quickly if you understand them
and are sympathetic to the chil-
dren.
Jimmy at school and for Susie
actual combat, just the thought
' of it may be upsetting and pain-
ful for a long time. He may want
I to forget as much as he can and
be glad to push his memories ou
Suggests Lewis Lead
Labor Out of Muddle
B o e, New Por’-V/ar
VVorlo'—Where Is It?
' Compensation
MT. PLEASANT DAILY TIMES
Phone u« your new* rtema.
i’ll
TELEPHONE 220
TEXAS PRISON RODEO
WASHINGTON
One of the best rodeos in Texas, at
t
/j
And make your bus reservations early
for the
rjjT?
ft
i to present two works of art ot
Schaffhausen The gifts are a
landscape by Bartholomew Menn
and a self-portrait by Ferdinand
Hodler.
Published daily -xcept Saturday at 207 W. 3rd 31., Mt. Pleasant, Tex.
G. W. CROSS, Owner and Editor
HUGH C. CROSS, Advertising Manager
Entered as second ciass matter at the Post Office at Mt. Pleasant.
Pexas, under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1«79.
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or repu-
jBtion of any person or concern that may appear in the columnr o
this paper wiil be gladly corrected when brought to the attention of
the publisher.
Obituaries, resolutions cl respect and cards of thanks will be
tharged for at regular advertising rates.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By carrier, 50c per month, $2.50 for 6 months; $5.00 per year.
By mail, $2.50 a year in Titus und adjoining counties: elsewhere
M 00 per year
SirJ
FUN AT Hu
; ■ ________ , X-----
GENEVA. Switzerland, (A9 —
Because the Schaffhausen art
1 museum lost some of its treas- .
ures through bombing, the city |
authorities of Geneva have voted
Ians
,____
a3ES_
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FOX
Excel
TINKI
MRS.
P.
WANTE1
FOR re:
Sa
Charge
Alma (
Agent
Souths
Life In
FOR SALE
two miles w«
67. C. D. Tra
FOR SALE '
Champion. .
Texas.
FOR SALE
Morse wate^
Ion tank. C.
on new Higl
WANTED T(
ished apartn
children. Cal
liams betwee
Phone 700; 1
532-W.
RETURNED
pay high pric
gun that wil
Will take an
office.
FOR RENT
in, prefer me
Daily T
Classifi
Will Sei
204 S
Roy M
WANTED—F
house or a)
K. A. Barn
Pleasant, Tei
Spencer It
Supports.
Ninth Str,
FOR SALE
farm 2 mild
road, buta
electricity,
tools, wagoa
mediate po
Wright, at 1
Centei
Classi!
1« per woi
Cards
FOR SALi
consisting I
and feet ol
lumber, 60l
rugated irl
heavy fencl
ed from I
West Secol
ant, Texas!
FOR SALH
of five rood
ing porch,
plete set o
man gas wJ
to be move
cated at 30
Mt. Pleasan
Takes care
15 to 45
safety.
id
Servi
J. O. Sincla
I
The Mnnnt Pleasant Daily Times Sunday Morning, October 21. 1945
/here1—~|
I HE COMES- )
Al
Sta: tires e
tires have
STj
It’s a grue
stamina ai
soon fall 0
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Cross, G. W. Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 187, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 21, 1945, newspaper, October 21, 1945; Mount Pleasant, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1374175/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.