Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 67, Ed. 1 Monday, May 20, 1935 Page: 4 of 4
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MT. PLEASANT DAILY TIMER MONDAY, MAY 20. 1935.
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HAVE YOU EVER HAD A FACIAL
That relaxes your nerves, revives your skin
and soothes you to sleep?
Then you have missed a great experience.
Try Vaughan’s Comedo Pack and Facial;
Nothing Like It!
Vaughan’s Beauty Shop
We build up to a standard, not down to a
price.
Phone 48
OHIO DROPS EXPERIMENT IN
RELIEF ADMINISTRATION
Columbus, Ohio, May 20 (I. I. N'.)
Ohio, social welfare laboratory for
the federal relief administration,
has abandoned its project of employ-
ing relief iabor on manufacture of
commodities for needy, families.
Charles C. Stillman, federal relief
administrator, in annouAicinfc- that
Production Unit, Inc., would be dis-
continued, explained that the step
was taken in anticipation of the ex-
pected cut in relief rolls when the
new public works program gets under
way.
Twelve factories manufacturing
clothing and other articles for relief
clients, employing about 1,000 work-
era, are affected by the order.
AT TIE
TTHEATKES
We were disappointed at the au-
dience’s reaction to “The Bride of
Frankenstein” at the Midnight Frol-
ic last Saturday night. And yet, we
don’t know why we should be. It j
was certainly the most encouraging |
audience ever to attend a midnight j
showing of a film locality, for the !
Palace Theatre was opened to accom- 1
modate the overflow from the Mar- j
I tin.
We had, perhaps, allowed our imag- .
ination to carry us to expect some,
audible demonstration of the audience;
feelings, but instead an almost sinis-
ter silence was all that came to us.
There were at times a few laughs |
at the more humorous sequences.
If you go expecting to see the
“bride” of Frankenstein, you too, will •
be disappointed, for she appears only J
for about two minutes near the con- j
elusion of the film. However, that i
two minutes is quite long enough. j
The monster displays an altogether
different nature, and at times almost
humanly intelligent, showing that he
is really an affectionate follow.
“The Bride of Frankenstein,” as a
title is somewhat misleading; but it
services to associate it with the first
been a source of regret among the
numerous officials.
The factories started production
in June. 1934, and were staffed with
workers who had formerly been em-
ployed in the factories taken over,
but which were sold to the county
relief chapters for distribution a
mong relief clients .
Approximately $475,000 was sent i . , . , , , ... . ,, .
. ,, . , , ! Frankenstein picture and that is all j
by the state relief administration to ,, , . , u
r , „ ! that was desired. Incidentally, it
start and operate the factories for ,
^ , „ _ closes tonight at the Martin,
the past two years. Asset, of Pro- „„ „ , New York” openB
.lection Lint., Inc., represented tomorrow with 1
equipment., manufactured articles and T i -p ,, , „ , i u 1 tt pi
' ‘ ... ... A ... Lyle Talbot, Gertrude Michael, Heath-
accounts receivable will offset this
CTAR A GF
kJI A OlVI. VVJCv
for Winter Clotting
Have your Winter Clothing stored
where it is absolutely safe from moths.
Our storage vault is fire and insect
proof, and all articles stored are fully cov-
ered by insurance.
Not a single claim during the fohr
years of its operation.
• ^
Deposit your garments now, get your
receipt, and pay next fall when taken out.
Thrash
Fine Cleaning
e r s
Phone 86
WANTED—25 gallons strawber-
ries and dewberries in exchange for
subscription to Mt. Pleasant, Times
Review and Daily Times. tf
Out for Record
amount, according to Stillman.
The project was one of several in- j
novations which have been initiated
I er Angel and Hugh O’Connor in the
! leading roles.
Miss Angel’s accent, which was
very noticeable in her last picture,
by the Ohio relief administration, has been> we hope corrected by this
two other changes are now on trial, time. An accent, no matter how im-
Furniture, garments, stoves, dish-1 —one, the granting of cash instead portant to the picture, should never
es, beds, raincoats and bedding were of food orders to relief clients, and, • be noticeable to the audience. If
among the articles turned out at the! two, employment of relief labor on Miss Angel’s role in the present of-
production centers operated by the j public improvements. • fering calls for one, we trust she has
Ohio relief administration.
“With the government’s new public
works program about to get under-
way it is to be expected that skill-
ed and unskilled laborers now on re
lief roll will obtain employment and
therefore be removed from
said Stillman.
“The Ohio relief production unit ;
will then have difficulty disposing 1
its products, inasmuch as clothing, |
chairs and other articles manufact- I
ured in these factories may be sold j
only to county relief units for dis- j
tribution to needy,” Stillman said, j
'Considerable opposition was a- j
roused among business men and !
manufacturers when the plan was j
first put into effeect. The Ohio j
Chamber of Commerce protested on !
grounds that the government was j
entering into opposition with private ;
enterprise. The project has been
operated in Ohio with considerable
success and its abandonment has
I improved her technique to the extent
house ’ Hiat we for£et how she says it for
FOR SALE—My business ______
and home on North Jefferson Street, j s^e says.
11 white faced cows, automatic shot-
gun, wardrobe, 4 showcases, quilt One Diop of Blood! How It Solv-
>f box, buffet, and 241 acres of land near ec^ most Diabolical Crime in the
reiief,” . Cason.—R. P. Denman. | History of India. Read about it in
| the American Weekly, the Magazine
Distributed with Next SUN
j CHICAGO HERALD and EXAMT-'
I NER.
McClinton Radio and
Electric Shop
We invite you to see
The New Norge
Call 93
For Prompt Battery Service Call 288
Authorized Sales and Service for
Willard Batteries
Mt. Pleasant Battery Station
Willard Batteries
Earl Porter, Prop.
0
Mrs.
Earl Cabell of Dallas
guest of Miss Bess Darby.
is a
CLELAND
Optometrist
MT PLEASANT. TEX
FIND OUT
IF YOUR
NEED'S
ATTENTION
Louia Meyer
Only active two-time winner of
the Indianapolis 500-mile auto
race, Louis Meyer hopes to set
all-time record in speed classic
Memorial Day. Tommy Milton,
long retired, is other double vic-
tor. _ Meyer won in 1928 and
1933.
ft John Erskinc
John Erskine, above, Columbia
university professor, novelist and
musician, In Been as the successor
to the late Herbert Witherspoon
as director of the Metropolitan
Opera company in New York, a
position to which Witherspoon'
had been appointed in April after
retirement of Gatti-Casazza.
The Longest Month of the Year — by A. B. Chapin
Helen Leovy
Elizabeth Taylor
Even though a woman is listed in the social register, she is entitled
to a paying job. Such was the sentiment expressed at the national
convention of the Junior Leagues of America at San Francisco in
answer to protests against socialites holding jobs. Miss Helen Leovy,
Pittsburgh, left, national treasurer, and Miss Elizabeth Taylor, right,
•f Little Rock, Ark., national president, are shown during a lull
in activities.
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Cross, G. W. Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 67, Ed. 1 Monday, May 20, 1935, newspaper, May 20, 1935; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth799804/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.