Mount Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 186, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 15, 1929 Page: 2 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. PTEASANT DAILY LIMES, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15. 192*.
t
6th Annual
BARGAIN RATE OFFER
For Mail Subscriptions
This is another tremendous value. The Dallas Morn-
ing News, daily and Sunday, 865 days, mailed to your
address at a substantial saving
The regular rate is $0.00 a yeai
for only .............*».........................
To those who o not desire the big Sunday edition,
during the campaign we will mail
the daily edition only at unreduced
rate. Regular rate $8 a year, now'
$7.45
Sunday edition,
$5.95
The Dallas Morning News
Supreme in Texas
J. B. ROACH
i
Fill out these blanks and hand your subscription to the local agent
in your city.
The Dallas News, Dallas, Texas.
Herewith my remittance of $.................. to cover cost of subscription
to Dallas Morning News (daily and Sunday) (daily only) for one year.
Name ...................................................................................................................
P. 0.............. ......................................f..................'....................................
K. F. D. or Street..................................................State................................
This rate is good for subscriptions only in the States of Texas, Okla-
homa, Afkansas, Louisiana and New Mexico,
and GOOD ONLY UNTIL DECEMBER 1st, 1929.
According to a Cincinnati expert
the loss sustained in the United States
each year from smoke and its gffects
amount sto $1,870,000,000.
The Spanish government has ap-
pointed a commission to develop pro-
tective measures to stimulate the mo-
tion picture industry in that country.
NO LIMIT TO AMOUNT OF FUR
ONE MAY HAVE ON CLOTH COAT
sr-yf* ■
DIAMONDS!
FOR THE
OCTOBER
BRIDE * * * »
For the tender expression of love,
there has never been a sub*'
stitute for the diamond engage-
ment or wedding ring, and
certainly for such a stone and
such a'* mission, the mountings
should be of the finest craftsman-
ship ir.d the !ai«»i uk ‘jign./
We should be glad to have you
examine our fine selection dur-
ing "October Diamond Days",
from the 3rd to the 12th, and
see the many exclusive pieces
that were created especially for'
us, to be worn exclusively by you.
OCTOBER
DIAMOND
Sv TTi
CLELAND JEWELRY
Mt. Pleasant, Texas
ATTEND THE DALLAS FAIR
■P.
COUNTRY NEGRO
GETS LOST AND •
THEN GETS SICK
Fashion places no limit on
i lie amount nf fur one rnuy’
nave on ibc cloth coat It Is
simply a matter of expendi-
ture. Furthermore there Is no
reason to expect to see one
•lirr play a more important
role than another. So far us
Pur trimmings are concerned
atr Mil-star east is performing.
It Is' impossible to over-
draw the picture of (Ids sea-
jjon s fur trimmed ciotli coat*.
Ira them the extreme of lux-
ury and displny is attained.
This applies not only to fab-
ric ami fur, but tbe manner
of styling lias arrived at a
fviiiH of accomplishment
which makes even (lie most
fiapbisticatiMl style connoisseurs “sit
up and take notice.”
It is evident from the mode in the
picture that not even a most extrav-
agant use of adjectives and phrases
do justice lo that which we are
seeing and which we will he seeing
Ui an increasing degree in coat fash-
ions this season.
Among the legions of furs which are
»« immediate favor, heaver registers
as one of outstanding vogue. Like
alt furs whb h enter into the scheme
ti{. tilings, it is handled in u very de-
istgafn! way. a point aptly demon-
r.lrsPed in the picture. Not only has
urn luxurious collar on this coat
•*se*hl8 in giving full play to im-
MiriMoitiMi hijf ♦»./. jjcJiCi’ositv vrlilc
Cur border also places emphasis on
••refill design To this mutter of hem-
U*ie<5 furred in u novel and conspicu-
ous way, fashion gives much attention.
As If to flaunt the fact of theft
brevity ever so many of the very new
shorter coals outline their hemlines
with massive fur borderings, these
borde/ings featuring diverse and
erratic manipulation.
A point which attracts in regard til
fur collars Is their immensity, also the
fact that they follow no particulai;
silhouette indulging in freedom of
“lines’’ which acknowledges no orbit
trnry rules. 1
As lo sleeve troattfients where fui\
Is concerned all one might say of them
would hut merely touch upon the sub41
ject. The eccentricities of cutTs and'
below’-tlie-elbow effects has brought
Into I lie coat situation so much of now
elt.v that the Held of design in thl4
particular respect is presenting a eon-';
t iuuoiiH program nf style-revealing
events,
JULIA HOTTO.MLEY.
(©, 1929. Woatcrn Now up* per Union.)
It is being reported that a negro
living near Naples, who visited Mt.
Pleasant for the first time Saturday
got lost here and as a result was so
badly scared that he became almost
deathly sick. He had n> ver beer to
any other town but Naples, so it is
said, and last Saturday had started
from his home in Cass County to that
place and was picked up by a passing
motorist, who brought him on to Ml.
Pleasant without letting him off at
Naples. On his arrival here, the ne-
gro, who is a middle aged man, got
lost from the man who brought him
here and got excited over the pros-
pects of not finding him and getting
back home. He stopped at a filling
station and asked someone to get him
h doctor, saying he was bad sick. Af-
ter examination by a physician, it
was thought that he was going to die,
as his heart action became very weak,
but he was later revived and arrange
ments made for him to get back to
his native haunts. This is the first
time that -wo have ever heard of any-
one getting 'lost here.
I GRADE A MILK
; NOVY AVAILIABLE
| Dr. Guy Martin of Austin, repre-
senting the State Department of
Public Health, was in Mt. Pleasant
Tuesday morning, making final in-
spection of the dairies of J. S. Red-
fearn, Ira Redfearn, I. L. Hays and i
J. C. Smith. He brought with him I
the results of the tubercular teats
made last week on the cattle of these
dairy herds, and reported all of them
free of disease, His inspection show-
ed that these dairies complied with ev-
ery requirement for the production of
Grade A milk, and gave authority for
the use of this label on the prciductft
of these dairies.
Daily Times Want Ads Fwr.
War Hero Receives Medal of Honor
i
CENSUS applicants
For the benefit of those who have
been making inquiries 'at various
places as to how to make application
for the position of census enumerator,
we have been requested to refer them
to P«t Gibbons, district supervisor,
whose address is Paris, Texas. ,
A Chilean government commission !
ha3 recommended the establishment of
one or more plants for the distillation
nf pntrnlnnm rrom native Coal.
. )
*■
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Mr. and Mrs. M. Margulia a fid son
returned Tuesday from a visit with
relatives in Texarkana.
Michael Vnlcnlc, formerly private, Company D, One Hundred Seven t
infantry, Twenty-seventh division <Hiru.„ the World war, receiving from ITe.i
dent Hoover the Congressional Medal ot Honor, at the White House. Valent*
received the medal for bravery while iu notion against the Hindenbttrg line
He enlisted at Ogdeiislnirg, N. Y.. hut is nmv a resident nf Long Bench. N. Y
1.
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Cross, G. W. Mount Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 186, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 15, 1929, newspaper, October 15, 1929; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth783443/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.