Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 291, Ed. 1 Monday, April 7, 1947 Page: 4 of 4
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Mt. Pleasant (Texas) Daily Times Monday Evening, April 7, 1947
Map of Extension Service Districts
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(By Associated Press)
K P J T A
G K I
Q E O W I
R W
N P D H A
H T G S S
MARTIN
Theatre
(/P)._
SUNDAY AND MONDAY
Phone us your news items.
I
ex-
Tuesday and Wednesday
FIELDER- NEUGENT
i
e
Phone 300
RADIO SERVICE
'WEP
TEXAN
Theatre
SUNDAY AND MONDAY
TELEPHONE 1116
and
EAU DE COLOGNE
Tuesday and Wednesday
ONE DAY SERVICE
Notorious
is the only car in its field with all these Big-Car advantages:
with
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NYSEPTOL
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The Extension Service of A. &
M. College has shifted its system
for field supervision of county
agricultural and home demon-
The ancient Incas were the first
men to make a relief map.
Out in the fresh, open air—there is
seldom any evidence of bad breath.
But indoors, in close-up conversa-
tions, it can be very offensive. Try
Paulette Goddard
Fred MacMurray
Macdonald Carey
Cary Grant
Ingrid Bergman
Home Builders
Cite High Cost
01 Slow Labor
All work guaranteed
for 90 days
The Euterpcan Club will meet
Wednesday afternoon at 3:00 o’-
clock at the home of Mrs. O. L.
Colley Sr.
eoudecdojne
iceberj
Cherbourg Is Now
France's Rig Port
Customer,
Borrower
Two Now Head
The Red Cross
Big-Car beauty, comfort and safety
of Body by Fisher
Big-Carriding-smoothness and road-
steadiness of Unitized Knee-Action
money
26. Mist
28. Speak
Southern States
Helping Lorient
Big-Car safety of Positive-Action
Hydraulic Brakes
Big-Car performance and
dependability of a Valve-in-Head
Thrift-Master Engine
Poland Pushes
Textile Program
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Located in part of
Richardson’s B i g
Fond Store Building.
If your Radio is not
giving you good ser-
vice
Free Pick-up
Delivery
Ptt - ■
For Glader-CoolnoM
A true eau de cologne imbued
with an extra froity-coolncss—
asrefreihingaa crystal-sprinkled
mint in a tall glass.
lights
31. A science
(Humor-
ous)
32. Memoranda
33. Pig pen
35 A kind
of apple
38. Exclamation
39.1'o take
dinner
40. Anglo-Saxon
money
Meet John Doe
with
Gray Cooper
Barbarara Stanwyck
Edward Arnold
Suddenly It's
Spring
with
The Stork Club
with
Betty Hutton
Barry Fitzgerald
Irvin-Sandlin Chevrolet Co.
Telephone 300 North Jefferson at Highway 67
Talco Wins
(Cot'nued from Page 1)
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71
WE USE THE LOW COST
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Place and keep your order
with us for a new Chevrolet—
product of America's largest
builder of motor cars. Mean-
while, let us give you skilled
service on your present car
. now and at regular intervals.
CHERBOURG, (TP) -Cherbourg
repidly is regaining her pre-war
bustle and importance.
With Havre now dropped as the
French port for the big passenger
ships. more freight ships also are
putting in here. \
Eight or more large American
ships are almost constantly tied
up and being unloaded at the
deep-water quais in the Meilles
bay. The Americans, using the
port for shipp ng their supplies
to the United States occupation
forces in Europe, restored most of
the other docks destroyed by the
Germans when they left.
But with the number of boats
putting in and witfi the speed-up
in unloading for a quick turn-
around, every available bit of
docking space generally is filled.
WARSAW, Poland, (TP) - Po-
land imported textile raw mate-
rials valued at $52,000,000 in
1946 Imports included 41,300 tons
of cotton, 19,260 tons of wool, 7,-
020 tons of cellulose, 761 tons of
oakum and 269 tons of rags.
The Polish government plans
to double the import of raw ma-
terial. in 1947 and quadruple ex-
ports to cover about 60 per cent
of cos j of imports. Textiles were
exported in 1946 to Russia,
Franci, Switzerland, the United
Kingdom and Norway.
LENTHEIlICp / '
[and REP*!5 1
«s
ou’re a
not a
tirement of Dr. Max Huber, in-
terim president.
They are Ernest Gloor and
Martin Bodmer.
Huber, president of the com-
mittee since 1928, retired alter ne
reached 70.
with J. H. Surovik and Edith
Lois Wilson in charge.
apparatus
(naut.)
19. Tree
20. Breeze
22. Dollar
(Mex.)
6. Person akin 23. Wharves
24. Draw out
117 Slices of
bacon
20 Likely
21 Guido’s
highest note
'22. Pastry
desserts
23. Sacred song
26. A river boat
27. A sum
entered
28. Distress
signal
29 Bitter vetch
30. Shallow
ponds,
connecting
with sea
34. Music note
35. Island (Gulf
of Mex.)
36 Fate
37. Tempest
39 Covered
with soot
41. Fellow
42. Incite
4? Male ferrets
44. Compensates
DOWN
1. Pincerlike
claw
Moreover, in addition to
being the only car that
brings you all these en-
viable features of BIG-
CAR QUALITY AT
LOWEST COST, Chevrolet
also stands out as the
lowest-priced line of cars in
its field!
ACROSS
1. Cut, as
with an ax
5. A political
clique
9. Employ
10. Genuine
11. A high tem-
perature
12. In position
for motion
14 Malt
beverage
15.Insect
16. Father
(child's
term)
Saturday's Cryptoquote:
THOUGH THERE ARE A
SHAW.
DAILY CROSSWORD
2T. Nettle-rash 18. Steering
3. Metallic
rock
4. Through
5. Broken
coats of
grains
to a
Lithuanian 25. Roman
7. Rowing
implement
8. Kind of .
fast sailing 30. Artificial
vessel
11. Distant
13. Girl's
nickname
15. Constella.
lion
—---r-11 -T—1! - 4-
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year, this is a cost of 3.6 cents
a brick, or $324 for the typical
house.
•'It takes 54 more hours of
bricklayer labor to lay the 9,000
bricks as compared with pre-war.
At the current wage levels this
adds $139 to the construction cost
of the house soley through lower
productivity and is the measure
of the reduction in, costs that
might be effected if labor could
be induced to step its product on
up to the pre-war rate.”
The same condition, he says,
is true in varying degrees in
practically all trades in small
house construction field.
“It concerns serous "minded
and earnest un on labor leaders
as much as it concerns build-
ers.” HartM ig continues.
Strong affirmative and aggres-
sive leadership is needed both in
labor and management to jointly
tackle this problem in terms of
ultimate constructon costs and
; final sales prices so that an in-
creasing number of families can,
[ and will, buy homes.
LORIENT, France, (TP)—This
Atlant c port, battered in the war,
is getting post-war help from
England and America.
A campaign to raise $350,000 in
eight" southern states—Flordia,
Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana,
Mississippi, Tennessee, North and
South Carolina—and in Stamford
Conn., to establish welfare ccn
ter in Lorient i*as reported under
way by the American Aid Com-
mittee. Medical apparatus for
school children was to be in-
stalled.
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S»turd»y’i Answer
BULLINGTON
SODA • W E STI NGHOUSE» APPLIANCES • GIFTS
''PNONtS 21$-21fe MT. PLtASANT . TEX.
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Everywhere, you hear it said
_______________ __*
ONLY CHEVROLET GIVES
GENEVA, Switzerland
Two vice presidents are serving
as heads of the International
Committee of the Red Cross for
the current year following re-
s AC
INSTALMENT
P L AN_
Irvin-Sandlin
Chevrolet Company
POISON IVY
A IT. S. GOVERNMENT BUREAU REPORT announces
the discovery of s. new tannic acid treatment for ivy poi-
soning". The treatment has been found excellent; it is
gentle and safe, dries up the blisters in a surprisingly
short time — often within 24 hours. These government
findings are incorporated ■_--v TF'XTn'<7'
in the new product-----I VT y 4 1 RY
At your drugstore, 59c. AV A
i •IVY-DRY is m/f. by IVY CORP.. Mantclair, N. J., noi lusociated with any foiiernmenl orianUalion.
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Of course, we have a fine fire department — well
trained and efficient, plus excellent equipment. Vet
with all its speed, efficiency and experience, it cannot
take the place of fire insurance. The very methods
which it must use to put out a fire are damaging to
your home and its contents. That is why you need
fire insurance both on your home and your furni-
ture. The next question is — have you enough of
it?—for values have increased tremendously. We
will be glad to help you answer this question.
-X’mL'
X
Our advice costs you nothing and places you
under no obligation.
C. L. Duncan Insurance Agency
Tel. 56 113 W. 3rd
The new and even bigger-looking, better-looking Chevrolet for 1947
stration agents from a twelve to
a 14-district basis. The North-
east Texas district wdl have its
headquarters at College Station,
AP Newsfeatures
ROCKVILLE CENTRE, N. Y„
(>P)—‘Low productivity” of labor
i shaving a serious effect on the
coit of small homes, states O J.
Hartwig, secretary of the Long
Island Home Builders Institute,
Inc,
Using a bricklayer as an
ample, Hartwig: says
‘‘Before the war bricklayers
used to lay 800 to 1,000 brick a
day on small house construction.
At a daily wage of $8 this meant
a bricklayer labor cost of 8/10ths'
of a cent per brick, or on a typical
house using 9,000 bricks, a brick-
layer labor cost of $72.
• “Today, the average produc-
tion is 400 to 500 bricks a day.
At daily wages of $18.03, which
includes six paid holidays a
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• DISTRICT HEADQUARTER^ M-X
^SUB-DIST. HEADQUARTERS^—i_J
Jn Jcicle Jlacon
4 oz.—$1.25 8 oz.—$2.25
plus tax
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Pleasant, 24.5 seconds; Dixon,
Talco; Phillips, Gilmer, and
Duhon, Gilmer.
Mile run—Gleason, Pittsburg,
5 minutes, 40,2 seconds; Rust, Mt.
Pleasant; Matthews, Gilmer and
Brown of Daingerfield.
Pole Vault—Pittman, Talco;
Wright, Naples, and Covin, Oil-
men, Drew, Pittsburg, and Brown
of Daingerfield tied for third and
fourth places.
Discus—Jones, Talco, 118 feet,
3 inches; Blalock, Talco; Mc-
Daniel, and Davis of Gilmer,
High jump—Coppedge, Winns-
boro, Dixon, Talco; Bailey, P.tts-
burg, and Welborn, Talco.
Sprint medley relays—Talco, 4
minutes, 7.6 seconds; Pittsburg,
Mt. Pleasant and Naples.
Winners of trophies—Mile re-
lay, Daingerfield; 880-yard re-
lay, Pittsburg; sprint medley, Tal-
co, and 440-relay, Mt. Pleasant.
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BIG-CAR QUALITY
AT LOWEST COST
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for this unhealthy condition. Swished
through the teeth—Nysepfol dis-
lodges decaying food particles; as a
mouth wash, it cleanses and re-
freshes; as a gargle, it aids in pre-
venting simple throat infections that
may develop into serious complica-
tions. Use Nyseptoi every day—two
or three times a day.
■—.....
G K I I G Q
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THERE IS ONLY ONE RELIGION.
HUNDRED VERSIONS OF IT—
CRYPTOQUOTE—A cryptogram quotation
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Cross, G. W. Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 291, Ed. 1 Monday, April 7, 1947, newspaper, April 7, 1947; Mount Pleasant, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1374246/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.