Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 147, Ed. 1 Monday, September 4, 1933 Page: 2 of 4
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MT. PLEASANT DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1933.
MT. PLEASANT DAILY TIMES
G. W. CROSS, Editor
Oil Production
Control Plans
Given Approval
Entered at the postoffice at Mt. Pleas-
ant, Texas, as second class mail mat-
ter. All obituaries, resolutions of
respect, cards cf thanks, etc., will be
charged for at regular rates.
Famous Italian
Airman Dies in
Airplane Crash
Brooklyn, N. Y., Sept. 3.
Francesco de Pinedo, one of Italy’s
most famous airmen, met a flaming
death shortly after dawn Saturday
when his huge plane crasher and
burned at the start of a take-off for j
Baghdad, Iraq.
A tremendous load of gasoline,
1027 gallons, caused his giant red.
green and purple plane to swerve
from a concrete runway and hit a
fence at Floyd Benett airport. In
a second it was a roaring mass of
flames, and the flier was burned be-
yond recognition.
The start of what the gallant flier
had hoped would be a non-slop rec-
ord flight became a scene of horror. I
Washington, Sept. 3.—Full ap-
proval of Secretary Ickes' decision
tc try production control before at-
tempting to fix prices under the oil
industry’s recovery code was ex-
pressed Sunday by leaders of the fac-
tion within the business favoring
federal price regulation.
Several members of the petroleum
trade’s planning co-ordination com-
mittee, administrative agency with
Ickes in supervising the $12,000,000,-
000 industry in the recovery cam-
paign, described his verdict as “the
wise thing to do.”
| “We must make haste a little bit
j slowly and not make any mistakes,”
General ^Bevera^ agreed, “and we must wait
and see what the various states do
with respect to the federal alloca-
tion of production.” !
The committee members discounted
j reports of sharp wrangling in the
group’s session, and all of them
who could be reached Sunday said
privately they felt the whole indus-
try would give fullest support to
the administration’s program.
Because committee members have
agreed that any statement of their
position should be made public
through Secretary Ickes, they ne-
clined formal comment, but one of
the most outspoken advocates of full
price regulation said: jj
“The secretary’s course was the I
uTZ afrte7dsaw"1reCengu« tn,y ”°rmal an<l ”atOTa,.thta5 todo
the airman.
Attendants rushed to the scene and
tried to pull him out, but the flames
forced them back. Michael Hicks
Beach, a naval machinist, was badly
burned about the face trying to reach
de Pinedo with a fire extinguisher.
The plane burne only a few sec-
onds before it was a mass of metal
wreckage. The body was found ly-
ing beside it and field officials said
that the flier had jumped and at-
tempted to crawl away before the
fire killed him.
Repeal Lead in
Texas Grows as
Votes Counted
The first major step is the allocation
and control of production. The sec-1
ond natural step will be price regu- I
lation if it becomes necessary in the
opinion of the administration.”
Mrs. A. M. Brown and daughter,
Miss Frances,. Mr. and Mrs. J. R.
Lepuenec and son. Joe. and Mrs. Hal-1
lie Suggs of Tyler, Miss Rosa Leg-
uenec of Baton Rouge, La., are the
guests of Mrs. Alma Coker.
Philip Smith and Miss Eleanor Bald- ; j
win of Dallas were married in Tex- ! i
arkana Friday evening and spent ]
Saturday in Mt. Pleasant on their |
way back to Dallas.
Dallas, Texas, Sept. 3.—Latest tab-
ulations by th eTexas election bureau
gave the amendment for repeal of the
18th amendment a majority of 119,-
573 votes and that for legalization
of 3.2 beer a majority of 132,623
votes in last Saturday’s Texas elec-
tion.
With votes accounted for in 246
out of 254 counties in the state, in-
cluding 75 complete, there were 292,-
0-12 for repeal and 172,439 against it.
There were 295,005 votes in favor of
the beer amendment and 162,382
against it. The election bureau esti-
mated that less than 36,000 votes
were outstanding.
The election bureau, an unofficial
organization set up by Texas news-
papers to supply them with early in-
formation as to the trend of certain
elections, had tabulated 464^451 votes
in all.
Misses Alma Moore and Margaret
Harbinson returned to their homes
in Fort Worth Monday, after spend-
ing the week end with relatives.
yrc DO our part
LORECO
“Refined in the South, for
the South”
HUGH C. CROSS
Agent
Mr. and Mrs. Pitser Miller return-
ed to their home in Tyler Monday,
after spending the week end with
relatives.
Miss Gladys Ward returned Mon-1
day to Dallas, after spending the
week end with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. J. A. Ward. I
Miss Leah Hays left Monday for
Megargel, where she will teach again
this year.
Mr. and Mrs. J. A.
children of Commerce
here with relatives.
Stephens and
spent Sunday
Miss Carroll Vaughan and Frank
Yager of Fort Worth were week end
guests of the former’s mother, Mrs.
Jennie Vaughan.
Homer Hays returned to his home
in Tyler Monday, after a visit here
with relatives.
FOR SALE
It is economy to buy something
that will last. I have it. Concrete
lawn tables, benches, bird baths, etc.
Only here for a short while.—W. R.
Hunter, 310 North Jefferson St. 4-3
WAKE OP YOUR
LIVER BILE—
WITHOUT CALOMEL
.9
And You’ll Jump Out of Bed in
(lie Morning Rarin’ to Go
II you feel sour ond mink and th< world
looks punk, don't iwaliow a lot of Haifa,
mineral water, oil, laxative candy or cliev lofr
cum and expect them to make you sudder.iy
•weet and buoyant and full of sunshine.
For they can't do it- They only move the
bowel* and a mere movement doesn't get at
the cause. The reason for your down-and-out
feeling is vour liver. It should pour out two
pounds of liquid bile into your bowels daily,
his bile is not flowing freely, your food
t digest. It just decays in the buv
>!r*&ts up your utomach. i hav
had taBto and your
Rosser Coke of Dallas is visiting
Mi6s Elizabeth Duncan.
Robert Barber of Atlanta, Ga.,
spending the week with relatives.
Try a Daily Times Want Ad.
WHITES
CREAM
^ VERMIFUGE 4
For Expelling Worms
BULLINGTON DRUG STORE
DOROTHY 'lUKivrv
THI5 I‘b ONE
The most
INTERESTING
OooKS I EVER,
lb *T A
PICTURE
BOOK'
no - it'«3 A Book
OF FACTS - NOW
HERE IS SOME-
THING 1 NEVER
KNEW BE FORE-
WHAT
uwels.
ich. i ou have u
oho wwivu —'v. your breath in foul,
ften breaks out in blemishes. Your head
and you feel down and out. Y our whole
” P°thr.r ■ Wt* CARTER’S
Horne* to making the bile flow freely.
get the
Here is Harvey aBiley, escaped
convict and alleged Urschel kid-
naper and Kansas City killer, pic-
tured as he walked up the steps
to the Federal budding in Fort
Worth for his hearing there. He
is handcuffed, and a second pair
secures him to an officer. A ver-
itable army of detectives accom-
panied Bailey and the Shannon
family from Dallas to Fort Worth.
the united stated
HA.S A 1 ARGER
VARIETY OF PobTACE
STAMPS THAN ANY
OTHER nation-
WHAT
Good <S
THAT?
THEY ALL TASTE
— THE SAME"
‘2'he l/eqetable TONIC
HERBINE
CORRECTS CONSTIPATION
BULLINGTON, DRUG STORE
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Cross, G. W. Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 147, Ed. 1 Monday, September 4, 1933, newspaper, September 4, 1933; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth799550/m1/2/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.