Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 220, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 17, 1932 Page: 4 of 4
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MT. PLEASANT DAILY TIMES SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1032.
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Fo// ca/i get expert work at a resonable
price.
Before getting’ your Permanent, be sure
you come in and talk with us. We have a
Special Starns Process Spiral or Croquig-
nole at the most reasonable price of $145.
For a limited time only.
MT. PLEASANT BEAUTY SHOP
MRS. MUMPOWER, Prop.
Holiday Crowd ‘Crash’
Gate, See Film Made
Vacationists Line Ranks of Lake to
View Outdoor Action for “Hot
Saturday”
f Wants Reduction
Moure Lynn, Texas state audi-
tor, has announced that it will he
necessary to reduce state expenses
sharply during the next three
years, or increase revenues, or do
both to make up a prospective de-
ficit in the state’s general fund o.
nearly $3,000,000, He lias just
filed a report on the general fund
with Governor Sterling.
one of them what they were waiting
■ for. The answer appeared as the
back door of a well known evelncivo
i club opened and two colored servants
came forth lifting a huge garbage
pail between them.
, Like vultures, the men and women
about me fought to get into that car,.
i They were not poor-looking. Many
of them wore overcoats and slightly
i shabby furs. Some of the men even
j had white collars and appeared shav-
1 en. I looked at their shoes, and
; there, and there only, could one teli
! the desperateness of their situations
j All day long they trudged the streets
j answering ads and looking for jobs,
j They wanted to work. They were
I ashamed to have to stand in line and
i beg food. A realization that once
I upon a time, when God was in His
i heaven and all was right with the
world, clubs had served the better
J cuts, the rarer dishes, had brought
i them of one accord to the back doors
I of the places some of them may have
! once belonged to.—Cornelius Vahder-
i bilt Jr., in Liberty.
WEALTH LOOKING ON!
Out in Chicago a few weeks ago I
saw a crowd of perhaps fifty standing
in the middle of a block. 1 asked
— 1 --T—"■
FRIENDLY COMPETITORS
Want Ads
WANTED—Reliable men, age 25
to 50, to supply established demand
for Rawleigh Products in Titus Coun-
ty, also City of Mt. Pleasant. Othei
good localities available. Company
furnishes everything but the car.
Good profits for hustlers. Write the
W. T. Rawleigh Company, Memphis,
Tenn. 12-12-5.»
See GEORGE CLARK
for AUTO REPAIR WORK
Trained Mechanics and good equip- J everybody.—Ex.
ment—Low Prices. | -
At O’Tyson’s Garage—Phone 432
The business community of 25 years
ago was the scene of bitter competi-
tion. If a business man heard that
: a rival had failed, he was glad of it.
I Half the time he would not speak to
; his competitors on the street.
I Today, it is the characteristic of a
| progressive community, that its bu-
siness people realize that they all
1 stand together or fall together. If
• one business concern fails, its com-
petitors are not helped. While they
seem to divide up much of the failec
concern’s trade, much of it will go
to other communities, and money
taken away from their home town
| And when one business concern runs
a good store, it attracts trade from
I other places, which helps all busi-
ness in the town. Such visitors will
j patronize many other stores in due
i time. When the business concerns
! pull together, they pull in trade for
Vacationists at Lake Arrowhead,
Southern California mountain resort,
had free seats at the filming and lat-
er the screeoning of “Hot Saturday,”
story of a girl who walked home from
a Saturday night date, but woke up
Sunday morning to find she might
have spared herself the trouble.
The film comes lo the Titus Theatre
tonight at 11 o’clock and Sunday,
Monday, with a cast headed by Cary
Grant. Nancy Carroll and Randolph
Scott.
A majority of the action of the
picture was filmed on the lake and
sets constructed on its shores. The
stringent “No Visitors” rule which
prevails at studios in Hollywood was
■broken when vacationists promised
to be good and make no noises. They
were permitted to watch the filming
of most outdoor sequences.
Each evening, when the “rushes”—
the footage taken during the day, wa .
screened in the local movie house, the
customers were permitted to remain
behind after showing of the regurar-
ly scheduled feature to see how
action photographed during
course of the day had turned out on
film.
Miss Carroll, in the role of a pop-
ular young lady who has to exert a
good deal of effort keeping the local
Don Juans at a distance.
One Saturday night she has parti-
cular trouble with a too umorous
swain, and walks home. He, flam-
ing at being repulsed, connives with
a number of girls jealous of Nancy’s
popularit yto spread the store lhat
she spent the night at the nearby
summer home of Grant, a millionaire
playboy.
The story costs Nancy her job, and
almost costs her her home. Hysteri-
cal, she rushes to Scott, a childhood
sweetheart, to accept his offer of
marriage. But he, too, ultimately
hears the story, and believes it. He
calls the wedding off. Nancy, des
perate, rushes to Grant, determined
that the rumor shall become fact.
The climax that follows is startling
YOUR LAST AND FINAL NOTICE
For several months now, you have had an opportunity to pay
your Mt. Pleasant school taxes and to save interest, penalty and court
costs.
You have been furnished with the statutory notice of your de-
linquent taxes.
Your school board has reduced expenses 20 per cent.
Not a two cent stamp has the school board charged up to you;
no letter hears, no telephone calls.
Your school board has gone to the end of their rope. We have
repeatedly appealed to you to pay your school taxes in every way
we knew how.
On January 2nd, 1933, counsel for the school board has been
authorized to file suit on all delinquent taxes unless paid by De-
cember 31st, 1932.
Many have paid, and you should. These suits are our las
weapon that can be used to keep the schools open.
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PLEASANT SCHOOL BOARD
i
Champion in 1885
the Beginner-Primary-Junior Depart-1 Ultra-violet ray photography is
ments Sunday mornijig. For that j said to record chemically obliterated
reason all classes will assemble for writing,
j the lesson promptly at 9:45 a. tn.
Following the class sessions the en-
th. I tire school will assemble in the audi-
Uia folium where the children will give
their program of song, recitation and
pagentry. Mrs. W. H. Bickham is in
charge of the program.
11:00 a. m. Morning worship.
Sermon theme: “Good Tidings of
Great Joy.”
6:00 p. m. Epworth League devo-
tional led by Woodrow Meier. A
special attention will be given to the
songs which the young people will \
use in their caroling for the week, j
7:00 p. m. Evening worship. !
Sermon theme: “Pure and Unde-
filed Religion.” I
Junior Kroweldeen Club
The Junior Kroweldeen Club met
Friday, December 16th, at the home
of Mrs. Seb F. Caldwell with Mrs. T. j
B. Caldwell Jr., as hostess. Roll call j
was answered with facts concerning .
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Dr. W. A. Taylor
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
Modern X-Ray Equipment
Office over Swint Bros. Drug Store
and
Sunday School at 9:45.
Preaching services at 11 a
7 p. m.
Young Peoples Societies at 6 p. m.
The public is invited to all ser-
vices.—Geo. C. Moore, Pastor.
McCLINTON RADIO
We sellR.C.A. and Vic
tor Radios Repair and
Service all Makes Teat
Tubes Free. Used Ra-
dios at a Bargain.
WAITING FOR THE JURY
Jean—Does your boy friend write
convincing letters ?
Joan—I don’t know. The case
hasn’t gone to court yet.
l\
Christmas Foods
That make that
Christmas Meal an
Outstanding Event
They are here in
Abundance
Choicest Fruits, Nuts, Vegetables. All the
holiday specialties and many new ones.
Save time for Holiday Shopping by phon-
ing your food orders to us.
W.T. BLACK
" STAPLE. » FANCY GROCERIES "
Quourv 5E.au/CB is HONEST IPQ ICES
116 W.SECONO ST. HT. PLEQ5QNT, TEVOS )PHONE 336 33 7
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in its boldness.
TENNISON MEMORIAL
METHODIST CHURCH
Ervin Jackson, Pastor
Japan. Mrs. Seb Caldwell gave a j
I most splendid review of the book, “A
Daughter of the Samurai,” by Estei j
Sugimoto. This book gave many of i
the legends and customs of the aris- j
tocratic Japanese. The hostess serv i
ed delicious refreshments.—Reporter, j
A special program will be given by
.Joe Austin returned Friday from
two weeks’ visit in Dallas.
Veteran wheelmen held a reunion
in Pennsylvania and John A. Wells
of Bryn Athen was tljerc with the
wheel on whirh he won the world’s
hill-climbing championship in 1885.
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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
J _
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Cross, G. W. Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 220, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 17, 1932, newspaper, December 17, 1932; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth784719/m1/4/: accessed April 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.