Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 215, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 10, 1932 Page: 3 of 4
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MT. PLEASANT DAILY TIMES SATUURDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1932.
FRUIT CAKE
Time Is Here!
i ^ We have all the ingredients to make
your fruit cake exquisitely rich and tasty.
We have only the best.
W. T. BOTC
wTmj‘ I 'lAA n'llida'i
QUO LI TV 5EQVICE. is HONEST Ptif'CE$
116 W. SECOND ST. HT. PLEASANT, TEXAS PHONE 336 337
WHAT’S IN A NAME?
In an Ohio town is a colored man
whose last name is Washington.
Washington is blessed with thru;
sons.
When the first son arrived, the fa-
ther named him George Washington.
A second naturally was called Book-
er Washington. The third son, if he
lives, will go through life as Spok-
i ane Washington.
! ---
I
I
UNNATURAL
A boy of eight, having just taken
| a shower bath, entered the garden
; where his aunt was at work and said
j “Oh, I just hate this feeling.”
| “What feeling?”
“This clean feeling.”
NET TOTAL LOSS
AMERICA IS GOING AHEAD
It is a relief to have something be
cestors in America learned was to take
the bitter with the sweet. They en-
■ dured hardships far beyond anything
., .... . . ii , , , jwe of today can imagine, in their de-
sides politics to talk about, now that I . ",
the election is over. We are amonfr'ternnned effort to establ.sh homes for
those who believe that the United: ;h™Se]ye9 and enduring hentances
. ... „ ,. , i for rheiv children m the new land.
States of America will continue Lf _ „
travel along it., predestined comae Sometimes we forget that everyone
regardless of politics and politicians. w,ho 1,ves >“ “« ^Cendant
rr,. , ,, . ,. ... . .; ol an immigrant. We all of us come
They and their activities may impede I
n . ____ of adventurous pioneer stock. Some
or reflect the course of events mo-1 , r
, .. : of us are only a generation or two
mentanly, but in the long run tne! , , ,
, .. - ... ... . • removed from these ancestors who
destiny of this republic is in the ...... .. , , ,
..... , . left their native lands because they
hands of its people, and over these, ,, , , . ..
nearly one hundred and sixty years !+C°uld ™ longer tolerate the com i-
since we established our independencejt30nf u,nder wh3ch they were comPe11-
. . • , . , 1 ed to live, and came to America m
as a free nation, our people have al-: , . . ,
, .. .. , i search of a new freedom. Some of
ways, in emergencies, exhibited a „ ,, ,
us come from older stock that has
sane, underlying common sense which, , , , , .
been developed in America through
“Joe, do you think that the news-
paper will be replaced by the ra- f
dio?” |
“No, you can’t swat flies with
radio.”
REALLY!
The Examiner—But if, as you say,
all rivers run into the sea, why
doesn’t it overflow?
Johnnie (taken back) — Why—er—
’cos it’s full of sponges.
The earth’s southernmost city i*
Puntas Arenas, at the extreme end of
Patagonia on the Straits of Magellan.
I During the winter months it has only
J Uvu liuurs of daylight.
1,000,000,000 Miniatures of Their Portraits Will Aid Fight Against
Tuberculosis
The portraits of little George Volkman, age 3, and his sister Carol,
age 7, adorn the 1932 Christmas Seals which will be sold for a penny
each during the holiday season to finance the work of the 2084 affiliated
tuberculosis associations. The children are shown posing for their fa-
mous artist-father, Edward Volkman, of Weehawken, N. J., designer of
the seal, as he puts the finishing touch to the poster that will advertise
the campaign and which he also designeu.
we believe, is still to be relied upon
One of the things our pioneer an-
WAKE UP YOUR
LIVER BILE—
WITHOUT CALOMEL
And You'll Jump Out of Bed in
the Morning Rarin’ to Go
If you feel sour and sunk and the world
looks punk, don’t swallow a lot of salts,
mineral water, oil, laxative candy or chewing
gum and expect theta te make you suddenly
sweet and buoyant and full of sunshine.
For they can’t do it. They t nly move the
bowels and a mere movement t'oesn’t get at
the cause. The reason for your d iwn-and-out
feeling is your liver. It should pi ur oat two
pounds of liquid bile into your bowels daily.
If this bile is not flowing freely, vour food
4oesn’t digest. It just decays in Un bowels.
Gas bloats up your stomach. You have a
(Stick, bad taste and your breath is foul,
skin often breaks out in blemishes. Yovr head
aches and you feel down and out. Your whole
system is poisoned.
It takes chose good, old CARTER'S
LITTLE LIVER PILLS get these two
pounds of bile flowing freeiy and make you
feel “up and up.’’ They contain wondenul,
harmless, gentle vegetable extracts, amazi.ig
When it comes to making the bile flow free);'.
But don't ask for liver pills. Ask for Carter11
little Liver Pills. Look for the name Carter’!
little Liver Pills ca the red label. Resent r
mbstitute. 26e at ail stonxL ©1931C.M. CV
generations. But whether we are the
j children of recent immigrants or the
. descendants of the earliest Pilgrims,
j we all have in our very blood some-
i thing of the same strain of indepen-
dence and self-reliance, without which
i none of our forbears would have ven-
itured to cross the ocean,
j It is that spirit which has made
, America, and it is that spirit which
: will carry America forward to greate1’
! achievements than we have ever
dreamed of.—Ex.
m "»
I SOLVE THE
FREE WHEELING
This is how the husband and wife
ardent motorists, made known the ar-
rival of a son and heir: “Mr. and
I Mrs. David Dewey announce the ar-
! rival of a new midget model. Speci-
J fications: Weight, 8 pounds; Head-
lamps, blue; Finish, flesh-colored;
| Two lung power, automatic starter;
j vaccum feed system. On display af-
; ter August 4, 1932.”—Knoxville Jour-
1 nal.
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Christinas Problem
CHEAPLY
Send Christmas Cards
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j Be sure and see the Special Sale
j Window at Cleland’s for Monday, De-
' cember 12. 8-3alw
ȴet wQmc
(A
&
5?
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We have on hand a large stock of beautifully
engraved Christmas Cars from which you can make
your selections, and be sure you will get what you
choose.
They can be furnished you at a lower price than
you would expect to pay for cards much inferior to
these elegant art creations which we offer you.
With your name printed on them* they make ex-
cellent Christmas remembrances.
$1.50
m
♦ w
m
Per box of 25, with Envelopes
Better get your choice soon, as they will not
last long.
DAILY TIMES
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at
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at
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Cross, G. W. Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 215, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 10, 1932, newspaper, December 10, 1932; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth785349/m1/3/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.