Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 274, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 21, 1933 Page: 3 of 4
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XT- PLEASANT DAILY TIMES JIIESDAY, .FEBRUARY 21, 1933.
LATEST
o ftu Patricia Dow”
->»>>>»— «««^
Tho three-quarter length swagger
coat in the new spring suit costqmes
is making a strong bid for popularity
in the t tyle centers of the country . . .
*The reason is that careful buying this
season causes women to choose a dress
which brings along its own cape or
coat . . . and thus they have a costume
that’s smart, complete . . . and ready
to go.
^ A carefully selected ensemble, as il-
Maple Springs
■O’ Miss Ruth Matthews, Reporter =£
■0> *
The 5th, 6th and 7th grade pupils
put the chapel program on Thursday
meriting. They presented a play in
celebration ot Lincoln’s birthday.
Mrs. II. J. Mason has charge of the
program next week.
The basketball boys played Pad’s
Chapel Tuesday, losing the game by
one point. They played Talco in the
county meet tournament Friday night.
The score was 25-8 in favor of Maple
Springs. They play Stonewall Sat-
urday at. 2 o’clock.
The following students made the
honor roll for the fourth month: 1st
grade—Alice Ruth Buchanan, Kath-
erine Pittman, Wendell Dubose, Win-
fred Pittman, Bill Belcher; 2nd grade
—Louise Buchanan, Mercle Flanagan,
Loyd Graf; 3rd grade—George Ellen
McPeters, Bill Wilson, Dave Belcher,
Cecil Bevills, Linnie Graf, Lorene
i Belcher; 4th grade—Joe Jones, Joe
j Temples, Frebert Belcher, Dorothy
Temples; 5th grade—Rayford Pitt-
j man, George Tanner; 6th grade—Wil-
j lie Randle, Irene Wright; 7th grade—
Mary Belcher, Eldred Belcher; 10th
grade—Woodrow McPeters.
POCKETBOOK RESTORED
BY COURTEOUS FINDER,
BUT WITH $7 MISSING
lustrated above, is inexpensive and
far from being in the luxury class. . .
The model shown is a plaid crepe en-
semble with which no fur is necessary,
but may well be worn if desired.
The coat can be wool lined if wish-
ed or may be of contrasting color in
wool but with dot or plaid motif to
carry through for consistency in de-
sign or for contrast. Either one is
acceptable to fashion.
Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 20.—The
courtesy of the man next to her in
the theatre impressed Miss Marcella
Johnston, 21.
“I think this is yours,” said the
man, handing her pocketbook.
“I found it on the floor.”
“Thanks,” she said sincerely.
Later she said other things. She
| discovered on her way home that $7
was missing.
TOLL BRIDGE KEEPER
ROBBED AND KIDNAPED
FRENCH PROVERBS
Soft words don’t scratch the tongue.
After the acting, wishing is in vain.
The worst wheel creaks most.
It is not enough to run; one must
start in time.
Rust wastes more than use.
It is vain for a man to rise early
who has the repute of lying in bed all
the morning.
He who looks not before finds him-
self behind.
Those who sow injustice reap hate
and vengeance.
He that spends more than he is
worth, spins a rope for his own neck.
He who strives to do does more than
he has the power.
| Texarkana, Feb. 20.—The keeper of
; the toll bridge across Red River at
: Fulton, twenty miles north of here,
j was held up at 3 a. m. Monday by
j three negro bandits who took $32
, from the cash register and then, forc-
| ing the keeper to get in the car with :
them, drove rapidly away, going
j north. They let the keeper out of
j the car after proceeding three miles.
! The night watchman, unobserved by
I the bandits, saw the car driving away
and divining what it all meant tele-
phoned the Sheriff at Hope, fourteen
miles north, and that officer and two
| deputies intercepted the bandits who
abandoned their car and took to the
| woods, followed by a hail of bullets
from the officers’ guns. Five dollars
j of the stolen money was I^ound by
the abandoned car. At last accounts,
the bandits had not been captured.
Keep up with the times ny sub-
scribing for The Daily Times.
, HOW TEXANS VOTED
ON SUBMISSION BILL
Dr. W. A. Taylor
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
Modern X-Ray Equipment
Office over Swint Bros. Drtt* Store
*•<«•* m! ! t. ■ ■ ■
... k- . . ... • • A ^ ‘ >V.
McCLINTON RADIO
We sell R.C.A. and Vic-
tor Radios. Repair and
service all makes, Test
Tubes free.....Used Ra-
dios at a bargain
Washington, Feb. 20.—Of the 179
Democratic members of the House
who today voted favorably upon sub-
mission of repeal of the Eighteenth
Amendment, were the following from
Texas:
Buchanan, Briggs, Cross, Dies,
Johnson, Jones, Kleberg, Lanliam,
Mansfield, Rayburn, Sumners, Thom-
ason and Williams.
*UBSi
RAW TO IMAGINE A
MAT'eu or EC MSLUOH
%ICTIOM WRITERS , EOT
HERE 11 IS IHComE tax
RftTUfcM TlMt AAAIN
“Bud ’nd Dub”
MAW PEOPLE TUOAVREMEMBER
IWATIOW Ot THE ROME.CLIMB
IN THE HOCUET-PUUE FOUtf AUD
VU£LLttt WHAT PEOPLE OtOTMtS
AsE5 DID fON ILLUMINATION.
sJoWbNGT.,E USE OF ]
■fo DIFFUSE THE LI6M7 OF ATALLOWCAUDA J
NvvV\\w //'• /
The sTofiv of the lamp goes back to the i-j p
DAYS BEFORE RECORDED HISTORY. STICKS CAVE U-TL lA~Eq_ Found THAT A LICjMTEi)
Sept alight ano Pile kuotto&ches etc. &ush in a container. filled with xleited
WERE PERHAPSTH£- FIRST "LAMPS’.'. FAT AAADE A GOOD LAMP,
gOMAU LAMPS FOUMD IW CATACOMBS.’
9
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WISDOM O'.f, r jj
C f\
~'IY' *** /J * v
(on LOOK AT The powerful FI
Lights ON out LANDIUG Flf U)
PPOFSSSC2! AV.'ST 2E LATS/ ID !
MOMS ISWG8.ft.iED SiC-K...
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.............
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Democrats voting against were:
Blanton, Patman and Sanders.
There is more than one way out of The best brewer sometimes mak^s
the woods.
bad beer.
Phone your news Items to 15.
Try a Daily Times Want Ad.
Daily Times want ads pay.
WHITE HYACINTHS
. . . . to feed the soul
A great department store, one of the largest in
the country, published a most unusual advertisement.
“Buy something you don’t need,” it read. And there
is a sound and worthy philosophy beneath that seem-
ingly cold and calloused plea ... a philosophy that has
endured for centuries.
“If I had two loaves,” wrote the Persian poet,
Sadi of Shiraz, “I would sell one, and buy white hya-
cinths, to feed my soul.” And throughout all history,
men have sold their loaves to buy white hyacinths.
We would modify the exhortation of the depart-
ment store. Buy something you could do without, but
something you very much want____The antique chair
you’ve been promising yourself. The new carpeting
for the dining room. . . . The electric grandfather *s
clock, or the sterling silver.
Values were never so great, for the amount ex- .
pededp as now. You have only to turn to the adver-
tisements in this newspaper to be convinced. Here is
written a story too important for you to miss. And
very often you will find you may keep both loaves ...
and have your hyacinths as well.
\
i J
turn
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Cross, G. W. Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 274, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 21, 1933, newspaper, February 21, 1933; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth784087/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.