Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 42, Ed. 1 Monday, May 2, 1938 Page: 2 of 4
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Infant Musical
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We Have Just Received Our New Stock Of
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Candidate
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Cards
Sy GENZ CARR
And Can Supply Them to Candidates in Any
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PRICED REASONABLY
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US.
Patrick &
TIMES REVIEW PUBLISHING CO.
Lilienstern
PHONE 176
First National Bank Bldg.
NOW SHOWING—1 Want to Be Alone
By Walt Disney
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Prodigy Sings 16
Different Songs
Begin in time to finish without
hurry.
tions, including Facial aud
Make-Up
■
h’ Of Man’s Pants. That’s a Sneal
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reflectioi
_ rep
-n which
lia paper
brought
me to give
this free service as a courtesy to
their customers and friends.
“But, of course, I can give only
ten consultations a day—from 9
a. m. to 4:45 p. m. I hope that
every beauetv-interested woman
id your town will be able to get
an appointment for I do want to
see and to help each one of you.”
>n upon thf» char-
putation of any I
may appear in the j
will be gladly cor*
tn the attention of I
______More and more prop-
______erty owners each year
_______are finding it just
good business to place
their insurance with
PAIN DOUBLED
LISBON, Ohio, (IMS> Jeremiah
L. Carroll had a pain in his back.
Three gypsy women told him
they would rub the pain away.
They rubbed and rubbed. One
of them rubbed so cleverly she
managed to wrap her fingers ov-
er Carroll’s pocketbook contain-
ing $21. He still has the pain.
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AGE NO BARRIER
ROCKLAND, Me. (INS) — No
armchair and cosy fireside cor-
ner for John A. Murphy, 80-year-
old sports devotee.
Telling a group of youths at a
a local skating place:
“I used to be quite a feller in
my day,” Murphy proved his
statement by cutting a neat fig-
ure eight on the ice.
PERFECT BRIDGE HAND
PITTSBURGH, Fa., (INS)—That
“once in a million” bridge hand
was dealt here recently io Mrs.
E. D. McLaughlin.
Playing at the home of a friend
Mrs. McLaughlin examined her
hand casually at first, then star-
ed in amazement.
She had drawn a perfect hand
—13 diamonds.
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portant three-fourths of beauty, consultation. Proctor’s Drug have
“That is what I am here for i personally engaged
. . to help the keen modern
women of Mt Pleasant realize
Enjoy Complimentary Consulta- their own ideals of loveliness.
, “For some of you, this may
mean just a matter of the cor-
rect lipstick or rouge needed to
flatter your type. For others it
■ may mean correction of some
| skin imperfection.
bridge j “Whatever beauty help
club need or desire. I want t
as I In the 45-minute consultation
my
and
to
A single day grants what a
■’-—Jr vc*r denies
month
in Tit* —3
‘where, 14.00.
--|
ASHLAND, 0., (INS)—Youngest
of Ashland’s musical prodigies
is Sally Coss, 20 months old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. War-
ren Coss.
Sally sings 16 different songs.
The chubby little lady, as red
haired as her father, doesn’t sing
the words, but she carries the
tunes of 16 songs. She carries
them from beginning to end, too.
There’s a very good reason why
Sally doesn’t sing any words.
There aren’t many words, either
for singing or talking, that she
knows. Her vocabulary doesn’t
extend much beyond “Daddy.”
Before she was a ycai old. Sal-
ly sang the tune of “Little Old
Lady.” It was her favorite lulla-
by. Even before she took up
singing in a big way she showed
signs of musical genius bv keep-
ing time with a spoon while sit-
ting in her high chair.
Sally likes best to sing when
she’s being rocked by her day.
Its then that she gives her best
performances. Tell her the title
of a song in her repertoire and
she will swing right into it. Start
her off on a tune and she fol-
lows it in the key in which it
was started.
One of her accomplishments is
to sing the Lohengrin Wedding
March. Most of the citizenry can
sing this one for a few bars, that
■“Here Comes the Bride” busi-
ness, but little Sally sings it all.
Sally has been taught some of
her songs. Others she has pick-
ed up without instruction, gen-
erally from listening to the radio.
Christmas time, for example, ad-
ded “Jingle Bells,” “Silent Night”
and other numbers to her reper-
toire. Every now and then she
surprises her parents by starr-
ing a number they don’t know
that she knows.
She is expected to outgrow “Bei
Mir Bist Du Schoen.”
Sally has, say musical experts,
the gift of pitch, an excellent
ear for music and an unusual
memory.
She is somewhat too young to
be started on a musical educa-
tion. Iler singing will be en-
couraged until she is old enough 1
—probably at the advanced age 1 ——■—
of five—to be given lessons in DONALD DUCK,
music.
Youngest of four Coss children, j
Sally is the only one who has
shown an unusual aptitude for
music. Other children are Da- i
■vid, 11, Ann, 9, and Dan, 7.
MT. PLEASANT WOMEN
WELCOME MISS JESSIE
HARRELL
G. W. CROSS, Editor
HUGH C. CROSS, Assistant Editor
—-----—--I ft r
Entered as secund claaa mail matter at I w
the J’oat Office at Mt. Pleasant. Texas, i
ander the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879.;
T VT1ONAL ADVERTISING REPRE-1 t
BENtfATIVES—Fruat, Landis & Kohn, >. £
flew York, Chicago, Detroit, Atlanta and ,t
___ _ ______*
Any erroneous reflection upon the char- [
actcr, standing or reputation of any per- j /
Kin or concern which may appear in the j
columns of this paper will be gladly cor-
rected when.....* ’ "
the publishei
Obituaries, resolutions of respect asd [
^rds of thanks will be charged for at'
fjgular advertising rates.
Subscription Kates
By Carrier 40c per
By Mail, 12 50 per, year
adjaiaine counties: elsew
“Your complexion looks mar-
velous! Have you had Miss Jessie
Harrell’s grand facial?"
Passing around the I '*
table, humming through c___
meetings, and even heard
women pass on the street, these I period you can relax under
questions indicate the interest | restful, professional facial
smart women feel in the visit I talk things over ‘woman
of Miss Jessie Harrell, who is in ; woman.’
Mt. Pleasant for this week. | “You will have an opportunity
She comes through the courte- j of trying out, as you’ve often
sy of Proctor’s Drug the Rexall ( wished you could, an assortment
Drug Store, and Langlois, promi-; of makeup tints so that you can
nent authority on beauty and be sure of having the individual-
charm. Miss Harrell is an expert | ized make-up that will minimize
in the art of teaching the latest i imperfections of feature or com-
methods .^f cultivating joveli- I plexion and accent every good
ness right in one’s own home. | point. You will be amazed your-
Miss Harrell is so sincerely j self at the difference this 45
interested in her work that it is, minutes can make in your ap-
a delight to hear her talk about j pearance!
it . She says, “Of course, I be-' “I use Langlois famous Cara
lieve that every woman can be None Beauty Createions exclus-
better looking! Modern beauty is I ively, because I have found them
three-fourths good grooming, and | the purest, finest and most ef-
any woman can give herself the I fective preparations obtainable,
care she needs to attain this im-l “There is no charge for this
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
you
to give^ou.
£
I
Monday Evening, May 2, 1938
The Dalb Time U«e Largest Mt. rieasant circulation of Any Newspaper
PAGE TWO
IT. PLEASANT DAILY TIMES
by
daily except
iew Publishing
..ird Street, Mt. Pleasant,
Saturday
Company,
Tei
Fnbiis ikI
l*im<* Review
US Wptt Thii
A merry heart doth good like
a medicine.
Giles Beys, a printer in Paris,
introduced the letter “J” into
the alphabet in 1550.
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Cross, G. W. Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 42, Ed. 1 Monday, May 2, 1938, newspaper, May 2, 1938; Mount Pleasant, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1358764/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.