Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 246, Ed. 1 Friday, January 20, 1933 Page: 4 of 4
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MT. PLKA8ANT DAILY TIMES FRIDAY, JANUAR Y20, 1933.
__________ "■!■ ■■■■
FOR
Better Permanent
Waving
Mt. Pleasant Beauty
Shop
PHONE 126
Opposite Titus Theatre
FRANK SIMS FOR TAX
ASSESSOR AND COLLECTOR
Adjutant
SCOUT NOTICE
We present today the announcement j
of Frank Rims for the office of City i
Tax Assessor and Collector, subject j
to the City election April 4th. Mr. i
Sims is well known to the people oi
the city, and has all the qualifier*
tions necessary for the fulfillment of
the duties of this office, in a way
that will fully satisfy the voters. Mr.
Sims promises to render the most
efficient service if elected. Your
support and influence will be highly
appreciated.
The Boy Scouts of Troop Two will
met tonight at 6:30 at the Presbyte-
rian Church.—Junior Asst. Scout-
master.
117 k 1
want /\as
FOR RENT—Five room house with
garden and chicken yard. Near East
Ward school. Phone 340-W.—C. S.
Dodson. 17-5t
Henry Hutchins of Fort Worth
(above) is the man selected by
Governor Miriam A. "Ma” Fergu-
son to succeed W. \V.#-‘Bill” Ster-
ling as Adjutant General of Texas.
So Tired and Nervous
She Couldn’t Sleep Well
"I was in a very nervous condi-
tion,” writes Mrs. J. S. Odom, of
Waycross, Ga. “I did not sleep
well at night. I would get up in
the mornings feeling all tired and
worn out. My appetite was poor.
My mother-in-law thought Cardui
would help me. After I began
taking it my appetite increased.
I rested better at night. I kept
taking Cardui until I felt well and
strong. I know it did me a lot of
good. It is splendid for nervous-
ness and other troubles that young
women have.”
Cardui is sold at drug stores here.
»CARDUI
HELPS WOMEN
Dr. W. A. Fletcher of Texarkana
will address a mass meeting Saturday
afternoon at 2 o’clock, at the court
house auditorium. He will speak
upon the present status of prohibition
under the state and national laws and
relationship of prohibition to the pro-
1 posed changes and repeals before leg-
islative bodies. During the last wcel:
petitions in behalf of the prohibition
movement have been circulated) " ~
throughout Titus County. J. A. Page ( ZEST AND THRILLS IN
of the Green Hill community has been j “BRING ’EM BACK ALIVE
temporary chairman of this loca' i -
movement, and with other prohibition- i How would you like to see a hun
ists of the county has arranged for g'i’y man-eating tiger battle to the
the mass meeting Saturday. Every-, death with a twenty-five foot bone-
body interested in the social phases crushing python?
of prohibition is invited to be pres- j How would you like to see this same
ent. There will be an honest effort embattled tiger step into a pool to
to face honestly and fearlessly the slake his thirst and come face to fact
agitation that has been carried on for with with the j'aws of a sixteen-foot
some time against our present prohi- 'crocodile just waiting for tiger meat”
bition laws and to discover the l’ea- j How would you like to see the mean-
sons and motives in the disturbances est of jungle beasts . . . the wily black
that have comes to us in the effort panther . . . tackle the jungle’s most
to destroy liquor and its traffic.— ' ferocious man-eating tiger?
IS YOUR HAIR DRY AND BRITTLE
or otherwise ruined from over-bleaching or
cheap permanents?
You must get it in good condition to wear
the new Spring hats.
You MUST have curls; it MUST look
glossy, like silk, or you are not up to date.
Let expert operators give you one of the
new bobs and a wonderful Arnoil treatment
—it is worth two cheap permanents as far
as looks are concerned.
Vaughan Beauty Parlor
Phone 48 Mrs, Vaughan Prop,
Ervin Jackson,
Church.
Pastor Methodist
How would you like to see what
happens when the crocodile gets him-
self wrapped in the coils of a twenty-
' Mrs. Fred Ferguson and daughter, : ^‘ve ^oot Python?
Freda, of Tyler are visiting the form- 1 ^ovv wou^ y°u
er’s mother, Mrs. Ella Camak and white man in the heart ,of the troP!c
How would you like to see a lone
other relatives this week
Two Women Colonels on Governor’s Staff
jungle entrap this snake with his
bare hands . . . and alive?
These are some of the superior
Rev. C. H. Lang of Kilgore and thrills in the Van Beuren Corpora-
R»v. R. L. Owen of Longview were tion’s feature film, “Bring ’Em Black
guests of Rev. Geo. C. Moore Friday. Alive,” the authentic camera record
mmm—ammmmm^m) of Frank Buck’s famous book of the
. i game name j
There’s no iove interest ... no
built-up drama ... no sobbing sis-
ters or he-man lovers in this release
by Radio Pictures, directed by Clyde '
E. Elliott. But there is such excite- j
ment as no Hollywood brain-child
i could ever give. There’s real heart-
| action, for example, when the hunt '
ed tiger charges right into a native !
village and then into a camouflaged .
trap. There’s the heart-stopping mo-
ment when Frank Buck jockeys the
trapped man-eater into the Home-
made cage at the risk of his life. As
for the other big moments, there arc
combats between age-old jungle ene-
mies that pale into insignificance
anything civilization ever threw int
a prize ring dominated by electric
lights, ballyhoo and the quest for
dollars.
A wide-shouldered, ruddy-faced,
stocky man merely throws off the
garments of the metropolis to trek
six thousand miles by land and sea
in search of a Royal Bengal tiger.
His weapons ... his two hard hands.
His props, a couple of native boys.
His cages are hand-made right down
in the heart of the tiger country. No
nails to hold the bars in place . .
no forged steel bars wedged in ce
ment . . . but rough-hewn pole3 tied
together with thongs made from the
dried bark of native trees. See this
picture at the Titus Theatre tonight
and Saturday.
_______--——,
j mann, Mae Masters, Forrest Steph-
enson, S. F. Caldwell, A. J. Copellar,
P. E. Wallace, Arthur Weddel, C. L.
[Proctor, Geo .Lilienstern, J. M. Badt,
Claud Mason, Earl Lide, Hiram
Brown, Rhea Cromwell and Bascom
Hines.—Reporter.
DRESSMAKING
I will appreciate your work in any
kind of sewing.—Mrs. Annie Wells
519 North Madison. 19-3pJ
Thursday Bridge Club
MRS. LYT J. WOMACK MRS. J. E. KING
Mrs. Miriam A. Ferguson’s personal staff will include two wome,
colonels, Mrs. Womack of Marshall, and Mrs. King of San Antonu
pictured above. These women will wear uniform* just like the me
■ colonels, according to reports from Auetin.
The Thursday Bridge Club was en-
tertained by Mrs. C. O. Lide Thurs-
day with five tables oi bridge. Eatlj
Springs was announced with lovely
bowls of yellow jasmine, interspersed
with violets, carrying out the color
scheme of yellow and violet, which
was also used in tallies, covers and
refreshments. Mrs. Forrest Stephen-
son won high score for club and Mrs.
Arthur Weddel for guests. The hos-
tess served a delicious salad plate to
the following members and guests:
Mines. Valma Wyatt, Bessie Caldwell,
Will Tabb, Chas. Green, Gus Hoff-;
City Announcements
We are authorized to present the
following announcements for offices
of the City^ of Mt. Pleasant, subject
to the election to be held on April
4th:
For Mayor:
EARL M. LIDE
For City Attorney:
HIRAM G. BROWN
For City Secretary:
J. R. HART
MRS. 0. C. LILIENSTERN
For Tax Assessor and Collector:
JOE EMBREY
TROY WHITE
FRANK SIMS
For City Marshal:
GROVER ARD
For Alderman:
J. W. McCLINTOCK
JOHN MERRETT
f
*
And the worst is yet to come—
DO YOU KNOW THE MEANING OF THE
Acme Bond
FOR AUTOMOBILE TIRES?
It isn’t an ordinary guarantee covering only de-
fects in workmanship and material, but a WRITTEN
guarantee against anything that might happen to
your tires, with the exception of mis-alignment of
wheels and running flat.
In other words, the Acme Bond is an insurance
against all road hazards, adjustments being made
any time enough damage is done to the tire to neces-
sitate the use of a boot.
BROADWAY SERVICE STATION
Hugh Cross Roy Merrett
«fi!fi!fi!fi!ia!Jai!l^^
L_i,
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Cross, G. W. Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 246, Ed. 1 Friday, January 20, 1933, newspaper, January 20, 1933; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth784951/m1/4/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.