Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 284, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 14, 1939 Page: 2 of 4
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Tuesday Evening, February 14 1919
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Needs Repairing—
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Russia Recognizes
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Emergence of New
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CLELAND
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FOR BEST OF PHOTOS
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HAVE THEM MADE AT
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Phones
272-J
MANSFIELD TIRES
Phone 222
NOW SHOWING—
Quick, Watson, the Spinach Juice
By Walt Disney
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Copr 1939 by W;Jt Dww Production*
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THIMBLE THEATRE, STARRING POPEYE NGW SHOWING—
Remote Control
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Laughing Around the World
With IRVIN S. COBB
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Praytor’s Studio
5 Blocks West First Street
(Dallas Highway)
MT. PLEASANT, TEXAS
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Optometrist
Consult Us About Your Eyes
Mt. Pleasant. Texas
AGED SADDLE MAKER
MILES CITY, Mom.—Flea iV.
Keltler. 82, is still making
DR. J. E. WITT
DENTIST
New X-Ray Equipment Just
Installed
71—Phones—119
MT. PLEASANT DRUG
Complete Soda Fountain and
Sandwich Service.
Short Orders and Chili
Prescription Specialist
"Cleanliness and Courtesy”—
Our Motto.
"’’one 384 Ta^ Delivery
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Held by Slayer?
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If Your Battery
We Can Do It!
Willard Batteries
(Exclusive Agency)
Mt. Pleasant
Battery Company
DAY 228 — PHONES — NIG*”” 4fi8J
Oft
I OK AS KIDS,
1 I'LL STAV
GROWN! AN'
LOOK AFTER
Sck VA --->
I WOULD LIKE To SA/
THAT I AGREE WITH
*-? MISTER PAPPV v.
’Settler has plied his trade.
Through the hectic days of the
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AU’rr» REPAIRING AND
WRECKER SERVICE
Goolsby Garage
We Never Close
All Work Guaranteed
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enlist in it the service of the nar-
row, egoistic interests of the ex-
ploiting classes.”
No class or group in the U. S.
r oniov such privileges as
the artists and writers.
Passing from the subject of the
intellectual freedom which writ-
ers enjoy under the !
regime, Dubrovsky reluctantly
mentions:
“Not all of the intellectuals, it
Professional Advertisements
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Mae Leslie
Making her bow to society really
Is a come-down for Mae Leslie,
tfor she Is accustomed to flying
.high, being an airline hostess.
Miss Leslie, shown in New York,
was selected by a flock of social-
ite "uncles" who are out to prove
'again that money is not an es-
Jaential to glamor. Miss Leslie
halls from Antler, N. D.
✓W^V--"»ZXZ^ZSZ-\ZN>'w'NZV»ZNi
WHICH LXJtb IHb COUN IKY WAN I?
thanks,
wiMPy
3n easy payment plan, 3 to 5 months to pay. Guaranteed
Anally from 6 to 15 months.
Williams Magnolia Service Station
Washing, Greasing. Batteries, Seat Covers and
Automobile Accessories.
24-hour Service
O\J
New Tonsor Shop
EXPERT BARBER SERVICE
New Equipment, Comfortable
lounging chairs. Tub and show-
er baths.
FRANK J BERNARD, Mgr.
AN' IVAM GO’NER A
DO IT ME OWN WAV
WE'A STARTIN' A
S CHOOL!
AM
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resolutions of respect and
inks will be charged for at
rtising rates.
Subscription Rates
By ail, $2.50 p r year in T.tus and
Adjoining counties: elsewhere, $4.U0
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J. H. BROOKS
RADIO & ELECTRIC SIIOI
Batteries. Tubes and AH Kind of
Electrical Appliances
J. H. BROOKS and F. L. BAKER
Expert Servicing Telephone 425
First Door North Charlie Driggers
Grocery Store.
McClinton Radio
& Electric Shop
New RCA Radios. Norge Stoves and
Refrigerators.
General Repair Service and Complete
Appliance Shop
Phones 490 and 98
ne^eK'
MT. PLEASANT DAILY TIMES
Published daily except Saturday by Times
Review Publishing Company, at 218 West
Whird Street, Mt. Pleasant, Texas.
G. W. CROSS, Editor
HUGH C. CROSS. Assistant Editor
Entered as second class mail matter at
the Post Office at Mt. Pleasant, Texas
Under the act of Congress. March 3, 1879
^NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRE
EENTATIVES- Frost I andis & Kohn.
Mew York, Chicago, Detroit, Atlanta and
DaUas.
Any erroneou
peter, standing
•on or concern
•ohamns of this
vected when L.
the publisher.
Obituaries,
Yards of the
jegular advertii
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Aida Sutler
A paroled prisoner from the Ohio
state penitentiary, John Henry
Howland, 26, is being sought
throughout New England states
for questioning in connection with
the slaying of Maude Home, 60,
of Milton, N. H. Howland’s
cousin, Aida Butler, 15, above, is
missing from her home and is be-
lieved with him.
FROM'A FQDNJTIKJG r
<A'COURSE I BE \
I RIGHT, IF VA
B’COME'A INF1KJK
WHO'LL LOOK AFTER
\ V ALL OF US? 7
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dub reflection upon the char-
,j or reputation of any per-
•n which may appear in the
his paper will be gladly cor-
brought to the attention of
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OR A -RlSSBERSTAW\P//pRES|-DE^.T ?
The Perfidity of the Scot
By IRVIN S. COBB
A MONG golfers this one is at present having a more or less de-
AYank^m’husiast on his return home from the grand tour was
telling his friend of his experience on foreign links.
strengthened still further.”
But nowhere does Dubrovsky
mention literary achievements.
Concluding with a description
of the privileges which this l-18th
of the population enjoy, Dub-
rovsky says:
“The intellectual is accorded a
position of honor in the Soviet
Union. I
"The Soviet Governmi nt and j
the Communist Party teach res-
pect for the Soviet intelligentsia
and exhibit the greatest of solici-
tude for its welfare, as indeed does
the whole people.
“More and more attention is . :
concentrated upon this question. | V
“The Party and its leaders i
point out that a contemptuous at- !
titude toward the intelligentsia ! _
and a haughty under-estimation i “
of its role constitute the most
harmful
spread before the Revolution I
when the intellectuals were in the I
service of landlords and capital-
ists.”
Renew your subscription now. p(,etty well
NOTICE
Let me assist you in securing,
your next permit to drill for oil
in East Texas fields.—Harry W.
Owens, P. O. Box 103, Denton, |
Texas. 8-7d
___ ____________ .... ______ “Say,” he said, ‘‘The Scotch are a mighty tricky race. You know
revival of views wide- whatlmean-liarsslmpKecimen that I
may not have been typical but I’ll say this for Mm; he was a sharp
practitioner. I met him one morning at a club in the LowUnds I was
looking for a partner and he seemed to be alone, too. So I said to him.
‘‘“What do you generally go around in?’
‘Oh.’ he said, ‘about 105 or 106 when I’m on my game. i
“ ‘That’s me, too,’ I said, ‘if I break 110 on any course I m doing
”. I guess we’re pretty well mated. Suppose we play to-;
' ’ sir for a shilling a hole?’ *
“Well, he took me up,’’ continued the American, “and he turned _
I out to be one terrible liar. Why, that Scotch son-of-a-gun made>an
eighty-two and I had to play my head off to take three shillings away
I (ABerican News Feature*, Iae.1
Dr. J. B. Ferrell
Optometrical Specialist in Cerreeting
Errors of Refraction, and all Muscle
Conditions of the Eyes.
Office Over First National Bank
Mt. Pleasant, Texas
Phillips, William- I
son & Smith , f
LAWYERS
508 Blackstone Building
Phone 2868 Tyler, Texas [
VAS?). S
Claude Hutchings
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office In Hutchings Building
917 North Jefferson Ave.
Office 271—PHONES—Res. 26 ’
Mt. Pleasant, Texas
Cinderella, Too
* “ tw.,?
“But.” continues Dubrovsky,
“the rulers of Czarist Russia, on
the other hand, tried in every
■way. to pet, bribe, ard corrupt
the rest of the intelligentsia and), *' 'c
(farms yield bumper crops of un-
onlict in it fhek ccrxrithe v»nf_ r- i
precedented size.
2. “They have built new type17
of machinery, flown over the
North Pole.
3. “Under the guidance of the
Red Army's intelligentsia, the
country defenses have been
DONALD DUCK,
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present years of modern rodeo
; nd motion pictures, when con-
testants and film stars order
dies in Miles City. Since 1«’L>, 1 decorated equipment that costs
when as a lad of 16, he worked hundreds of dollars, Kettler has
as an apprentice in the Jacob j turned out saddles of all des-
Strauss saddle shop in St. Louis, criptions.
FOR SALE—All kinds of second
open range when cowpokes or- j sheets and typewriter paper at
dered $40 saddles, through the i the Times office.
24—RUSSIA RECOGNIZES
MOSCOW—As was inevitable,
a new ruling, privileged class
has emerged from the chaos of
the Bolshevik revolution, but o”-
1y today, 91 years after its birth,
is it recognized
It is officially defined as “the
intelligentsia.”
But it is not the “intelligentsia”
in the American or English sense
of the word.
According to David Dubrovsky
writing in a recent Soviet pub-
lication:
“Counting almost 10,000,000
people in its ranks, the Soviet
intelligensia constitutes a verit-
able army.”
Since the most recent census
lists the population of the U. S. S.
R. at 180.000,000, this “veritable
army” is l-18th of the total num-
ber.
Included in the “intelligentsia,”
according to Dubrovsky, are:
1. Managers of offices, factor-
ies, and collective farms.
2. Bookkeepers and account-
ants.
3. Agricultural experts and
workers in trading enterprises.
4. Teachers and workers in the
sciences and arts.
5. Doctors and engineers.
“In Czarist times the ruling
classes with sadistic savagery per-
secuted any intellectuals who
were truly progressive and de-
voted to the people.” says Dub-
rovsky.
Yet, in those times, great op-
position literature such as that
of Dostoievsky and Gorki emerg-
ed. What opposition literature
has had a chance for growth in
Soviet Russia? . , „ ,
, , countants, collective farmers, and
continues Dubrovsky. | jike ”
Achievements of the intelligent-
sia are described as follows:
1. “They have made collective
»
is true, accepted the revolution
at once. A considerable portion
attempted to go on serving the
old masters, the exploiters of the
people; they organized sabotage
and later engaged in wrecking.”
Dubrovsky does not say what
happened to these “intellectuals.”
Reference to the privileges
which this class has enjoyed from
the beginning of the revolution
is made when Dubrovsky says:
“Even in the early years of the
Revolution., years of hunger and
ruin, the Bolsheviks and the
Soviet power took every care for
the intelligentsia and strove to
give them favorable living and
working conditions.”
“But,” he adds, “naturally, how-
ever, a relentless struggle was
waged against saboteurs and
wreckers.”
Gradual broadening of the term
“Intelligentsia” is colorfully de-
scribed by Dubrovsky:
“Ranks of the intellectuals
have been filled with the flower
of the Soviet people—stakhano-
vies, engineers, workers of trade
enterprises, bookkeepers, ac-
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Cross, G. W. Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 284, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 14, 1939, newspaper, February 14, 1939; Mount Pleasant, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1366083/m1/2/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.