Mount Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 154, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 17, 1930 Page: 4 of 4
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BIT. PLEASANT DAILY TIMES WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 17. 1»30.
End of Paris to New York Flight
U:ipt. Diomhmno (Juste (rigid) and Maurice Bellontt stopping from tholr
nlat e Question Mark at Curtiss field, New York, at I lie end of their non-stop
light from Paris.
'Warn; more Business?—Advertise!
Y. W. A.
Want Ads
«J H^tjwX**** *!♦ O *X* *Jm2* *1* ♦!♦ *t»*!*^*»X<
KOR RENT—New 5-room house,
close in, all conveniences. See P. C.
Williams. 17-3 pd
FOR RENT—Desirable bedroom,
modern' convenience, close in.—Mrs.
John Jenkins. 16-2t |
►
Thursday evening, six o’clock, at
the basement of the Baptist Church,
l eader—May belle Fielder.
Prayer—Mrs. Mattie Austin.
Devotional—Miss Dell Hess.
Song.
Jesus Loved the Sea—Inez Brown.
Contrary Winds—Mabel Player.
Strength from the Gale—Bert Marie
Broadway.
Peace be still—Ruth Vandiver.
Song.
Prayer—Mrs. Hays.
f or Rent—Furnished apartment ! Mrs. J. T. MitcheU and Mrs. Net-
over brick garage. All modern con-1 tie Hurley are visiting relatives in
venees. Mrs. 0. C. Lilienstern. 15-6 J Commerce this week.
SCHOOLGIRLS GO SMARTLY CLAD IN
LIGHT WOOL WEAVE AND IN JERSEY
MEMBERS WANTED
FOR LOCAL BAND
Now is the ideal time for you, moth-
er and father, to think seriously
about your son and daughter taking
advantage of this wonderful oppor-
tunity offered them to learn to play
the hand instrument of their desire,
> and to beco'me a member of this won-
derful organization that is just get-
1 ting started.
The hand offers one of the strictest
schools of discipline a boy or girl can
. go through. For self-discipline there
1 is no greater force than music. It
curbs the ego, for the boy or girl who
j wants to be the “Whole Show” has
j little chance in the band.
I The hand teaches a lesson of ser-
■ vice, lor it becomes a leading part
: in many activities, and must be duick
I to respond to the need of music upon
! such occasions.
| Boys and girls in the hand are
i taught teamwork, harmony, pulling
I together as a unit. They enjoy hav-
! ing an active pari in various affairs
land feel a pride in their gccomplish-
| ments. They learn to serve in a co-
1 operative spirit. They go places, see
; things, are* in the “limelight.” all of
: which most surely “fires.” their
youthful ambitions on to doing things
i worthwhile.
Music is an Educational Asset. A
I census taken of some 700 leading
! towns and city schools of the United
j States, shows that music students in
these schools show an average of 2.8
j points higher grades than other stud-
ents in these schools. Educators now
accord musical training, particularly
hand training, a place above mathe-
matics in the development of men-
tal alertness and acuteness. t
From a standpoint of health, the
band offers a most beneficial exer- .
cise, for here in taught sitting erect,
standing erect, marching and proper
I breathing.
j If you do not have that instrument
i see our hand director, Carroll Mun-
den, at once, and let him help you
select a good instrument, one- that
can be bought at a reasonable price
ami paid for by the monthly payment
plan.
—and theWorst is Yet to Come
Get that instrument now, and help
us make our band the best hand' in
the state.
TRAIN WHISTLES LIKE
COP, STOPS, WRECKED
Opelousa, La., Sept. 16. — J. A.
Turner, a dredge boat worker of
Houston, Texas, was painfully injured .
Tuesday when an automobile- he was j
driving and in which was 0. Granger, j
also of Houston, was struck by a 1
southbound Southern Pacific Railroad
train three miles north of Opelousa. i
Granger escaped by leaping from the
machine, which was wrecked, and
thrown into a ditch some 25 feet
away. He escaped injury.
Turner said he slowed up for the
railroad crossing, but mistook the
whistle of the approaching train for
that of a traffic policeman. Turner
and Granger had been t., New Or-
leans on a trip.
When Earl Miscbler, R. F. D. post-
man, placed his hand in a mail box
on his route, near Sandusky, Ohio, it
came in contact with a live snake.
|
£
Youthful, sensible and chic, is
the standard which fashion sets
for schoolgirl frocks ibis season.
:Which is not ni ait difficult to attain
now the new woolens are so n musing-
ly light and comfortable to wear.
Three out standing materials in the
realm of campus and sorority fasti
Ions are wool crop, in rich dark col-
ors. lacy, sheer tweed and jersey. The
jersey frock for street, spectator-
sports wear and for school and col-
lege dresses is tin acknowledged fa-
vorite both in Paris and in American
style centers. The smurf shops in this
country ure showing various types of
jersey, including an interesting new
kind ot limited worsted and soft low-
luxteml duterje cotton. This worsted-
<luretie Jersey is particularly worthy
bf mention sine« the introduction of
.oe dimmed cotton makes it praefj-
•nlh non stretchable and tion-shrink-
iblo, wherefore it may be laundered
with considerable confidence in flint
it is less likely to shrink titan Is wool
stone.
Illustrated to the right is a colleg*
girl's frock which may also he smart-
ly worn as c "radical shopping cos
lurae. The dainty hands of immacu-
late white organdie at the wrists with
a collar to match give it an unmis-
takable air of refinement, which count*
for touch, sine* “ladylike'' dress is
the call of the mode this season.
Olive green Is the color of the Jersey
used for the styling of this dress and
a very popular new shade it. is, too.
The little beret is made of self-same
jersey, for the fad of the moment Is
for hat and frock t*> match.
In the designing of the new fall ami
winter fnid-u on.i.ioo-io pj;u-j uU
the genteel and the refined as mani-
fested in Dm “liitle filings” us Inter-
preted h.v the dressmaker in meticu-
lous detail. For Instance the winsome
wool crepe frock to I lie left In the
i picture lam the look of simplicity, hut
j in (lie final analysis it becomes a sitin-
j irig example of dressmaker art.
1 JULIA BOTTOM LEY, I
<(£). vWotern Nrivtcaiair Onion >
Stretch Your
Dollar
ADVERTISING helps stretch your dollar.
You do not need to shop around all day to
find what you want at the price you can
afford to pay. The advertisements in the
newspapers tell you where you can buy it
at the lowest price. Advertisements save
you time, save money, save physical effort.
They make buying easy and sure.
Advertising enables the woman in the
home to compare values without moving
from her easy chair. She can shop com-
fortably in her own living-room. When she
has decided what and where to buy, it takes
but a little time and effort to complete the
purchases.
Women appreciate the advantages of ad-
vertising. They trust it. They believe in
the goods advertised .... and buy them.
■* ’I*4*4'/*!' •«* %• *«♦ *»* >I*%**X* v
Keep within your budget by
purchasing merchandise you see advertised
in your newspaper
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Cross, G. W. Mount Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 154, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 17, 1930, newspaper, September 17, 1930; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth784069/m1/4/: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.