Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 60, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 23, 1933 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Mount Pleasant Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Mount Pleasant Public Library.
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MT. PLEA tNT P^LY TIMES, TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1933.
jr
SUMMER-IZE
your car with
Magnolia1^ service
O OON vacation time will be here. You will want
^ to breeze along Southwestern highways . . .
your motor running smooth as silk.
[Whether you go on a week-end jaunt or a several
[weeks’ vacation, assure a carefree trip by having
your car Summer-ized before you start. Check the
seven important operations included in Magnolia
Summer-ize Service. Notice how thoroughly we
cover the vital points where trouble is most apt to
'develop. New car or old, Magnolia Summer-ize
Service means better performance . . , more eco-
nomical operation.
Drive in where you see the familiar Magnolia Sign
or the new “Red Flying Horse” and get this much-
needed protection.
STEPS TO PREVENT
i HOT WEATHER TROUBLE
Flush and Clean Radiator thor-
oughly, using Socony Radiator
Cleaner.
Drain, Flush und Refill Crank-
case with correct chart grade
of Mobiloi!.
Drain, Clvuu and Refill Trans-
mission with Magnolia Lubri-
cant, Summer Grade.
Check Battery and fill with
Distilled Water, remove cor-
rosion and grease terminals.
Fill
gasoline tank with summer
ilgas orMobilgas Ethyl with
Climatic-Control.
M Fill gas
Mobilga
Climati
Mobiiubricate car thoroughly
with correct grade of summer
lubricants, according to Ckck-
Chart.
7
Drain, Clean and Refill Differ-
ential with Magnolia Lubricant,
Summer Grade.
MAGNOL
PETROLEUM COMPANY
(A SOCONY-V/ r''7 "T " MPA NY)
Titus County, to be holden at tne
C.' Hill and "THE INSIDE STORY” over kadio Sta-
tions KTSA,KTRH, KRLD,KOMA,KLRA and WACO.
B-14-SU
1000cash PRIZES
Join the Magnolia Explorers’ Club. Write your own story,
yr\T yiuri describing the most interesting place you visited during a
'TO ATT HI A7ppc»motor t<>ur through Magnolialand. Any boy or girl 17
I KAlLIJl-AZ,fcKa.yMrj q£ Jgc> or younger, can compete. Get the details
from any Magnolia Station.
STATIONS AND DEALERS IN TEXAS, OKLAHOMA, ARKANSAS,
LOUISIANA AND NEW MEXICO
King of Woodchoppers
^ f';.'
Pred “Pep” Singer of Tuit.vi,
Pn chopped a 18 im*!i log in 1 min-
ute, 55 seconds with a double-bladeJ
ax, breaking all records and winning
the Eastern championship f<»* 'Vc-
second year.
LIVE STOCK MEN, NOTICE
Our saddle stallion will leave Titus
County and go to Franklin County
on May 31, as advertised.—Caldwell
Plantations, Complete Breeding Ser-
vice. ldw
Again we lead the May Parade in offering Fresh Vege
tables. Table budgets are as easily balanced here as your
meals in the wide selection of purest foods.
Phone us yours—336 or 337.
W.T. BLOCK
" STAPLE uFANCY GROCERIES "
[»i»/'i mmm A
Llj'l r/i^;
116 W. SECOND ST. HT. PLEOSQHT, TEHOS PHONE 336 337
—Dallas News.
j The sombre paradox is that pe-
| troleum, Texas’ greatest industry to-
I day, could be made prosperous in spite
! of the economic situation if it were
; not for the selfish human interests
; which ignore a general right ttf eco-
nomic conduct of the production end.
Changes made in Chicago’s remod-
eled Blackstone Hotel include a 3.2
beer bar and a “postage stamp” dance
floor in the grill, as well as a 40 per
cent reduction in the price scales.
Biackslone’s Commentaries on these
changing times.—Arkansas Gazette.
CITATION BY PUBLICATION
The State of Texas
To the Sheriff or any Constable of
- Titus County, Greeting:
*You are hereby commanded to sum- j .....- —
mon Rosa Pearl Stinson, by making ; fore said Court, at its aforesaid next
publication of this Citation once in | regular term, this writ with your le-
in a suit, numbered on the docket of
said Court as No. 3290, wherein D.
0. Stinson is Plaintiff, and Rose Pearl
Stinson is Defendant, said petition
alleging three years ’abandonment.
Herein fail not, and have you be-
S turn thereon, showing how you have
! executed the same.
I Given under my hand and the Seal
of said Court, at office in Mt. Pleas-
ant, this the 12th day of May, A. D.
each week for four successive weeks
previous to the return day hereof,
in some newspaper published in your
County, if there be a newspaper pub-
lished therein, but if not, then in the
nearest County where a newspaper is I 1933.
published, to appear at the next reg-
- » < v T>» « • i i /% ’ r- » n 4 j
uiar term ui true oiamci tuuu ui ,
Court House thereof, in Mt. Pleasant,! -- “
on the 1st Monday in June, A. D. j As the economist sees it, the only
1933, the same being the 5th day of j difference between war and peace is
June, A. D. 1933, then and there to j that a different group of patriots rob
answer a petition filed in said Court \ the public till.—The Milford (Mass.)
on the 12th day of May, A. D. 1933, j Daily News.
A. B. GILPIN, Clerk,
District Court, <>
T. C. Hutchings and T. L. Denman
went to Houston on business Tuesday.
KeeD ud with Hie timeo by sub
scribing for The Daily Times.
You can buy white mice in New
York for four and a half cents each.
There was a time when you had to
pay as much as 31 cents. The city's
health department bought 7,500 mice
the other day for experimental pur-
poses.
Just think how much worse it
might be—suppose you couldn’t turn
off the radio.
Early garden liars are now in hot
competition with poultry and fishing
experts.
Good news travels
fast!
BAD News used to have the reputation for speed.
But such is the demand for the good things of life to-
day that good news travels even faster.
The earriers of many of the good tidings that ev-
ery one is eager to hear are right before you. They are
the advertisements in this paper. They bring good
news about soap and cereals, sedans and cigarettes.
Good news for the housewife. Good news for the bu-
siness man. Good news for every one who believes in
comfort and happiness.
Let an automobile maker in Detroit or an orange
grower in Florida develop a finer product. You will
hear about it—not in a. couple of years, not just “some
time.” The whole new story will be rushed to you on
the wings of the greatest good-news service in the
world—advertising.
Advertisements are filled with the kind of good
words you like to find. They tell you of new prod-
ucts, new improvements in a well-known merchandise,
new values and new ways to increase your well-being.
And always they tell you not only where and how to
purchase goods of assured merit, but also the way to
be certain of obtaining 100 cents’ worth of value for
every dollar you spend. Read them—and get their
news regularly!
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Cross, G. W. Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 60, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 23, 1933, newspaper, May 23, 1933; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth784397/m1/3/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.