Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 87, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 24, 1933 Page: 2 of 4
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JX. rUL .AANT TIME!4
SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1933.
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MT. PLEASANT DAILY TIMES
G. W. CROSS, Editor
LINDBERGH HOME FROM
"Twas Nothing,* Sezze which baby kidnaped
TO BE WELFARE CENTER
Entered at the postoffice at Mt. Pleas-
ant, Texas, as second class mail mat-
ter. All obituaries, resolutions of
respect, cards of thanks, etc., will be
charged for at regular rates.
THE WORK TOO HARD
There comes from Marshall a story
of a youth who returned there from
a reforestation camp because, he is
reported to have said “the work was
too hard.”
While this is regrettable it was not
unexpected by people who keep up
with what is going on in the world.
Always there have been and always
will be people who prefer having
some one making a living for them
rather than make it themselves. That
there should be a few of these among
the thousands that were inducted in-
to the government work is not sur-
prising.
But there should be some place to
put people who hold such ideas, es-
pecially in times like this. Given op-
portunity to work and able to work,
one should not be allowed to be a
burden on his people, should he have
any, or on the public. Beggars
should not be choosers, the old saw
runs, but sad to say they too often
are or try to be.
A Marshall newspaper suggested
maybe this youth wanted a position
as a bank clerk but the probability
is that he does not want any posi-
tion that requires work of any sort
and that anyone employing him would
be getting the worst of the bargain.
—Paris News.
Jersey City, N. J., June 23.— The
Hopewell home of Colonel and Mrs.
Charles A. Lindbergh, from which
their first-born son was kidnaped in
March, 1932, will become a children’s
welfare center. Incorporation papers
for “High Field,” the corporation
which will operate the property, were
filed Friday with County Clerk Gus-
tav Bach. James M. Phelan was list-
ed as statutory agent with the stau-
tory office at Weehawken.
Registere dtrustees are Colonel and
Mrs. Lindbrgh, Dr. Abraham Flexner,
Col. Henry Breckenridge and Owen
R. Lovejoy.
The object of “High Field” is stat-
ed as “to provide for the welfare of
children, including their education,
training, hospitalization, or other al-
lied purposes, without discrimination
in regard to race or creed.”
DEAF, DUMB PRINCE
GIVES UP RIGHTS TO
THRONE OF SPAIN
Texan Is Ambassador
Robert Laverne Myers, aged If.
months, seems bored with all this
publicity stuff. “Pshaw,” thinks
be, "VvTiai’s a little fall?'' Robert
fell out of a second-si M-y apart-
ment window in Kerrville, Texas,
just before this picture was taken.
After dropping 20 feet, he landed
on a pillow he carried with him
for the purpose and wasn’t even
scratched. Smart boy, Robert.
Carries bis own accident insurance.
Leonard Bowden and daughter,
Miss Myrtis of Dallas, arrived Wed-
nesday for a visit with relatives. Mr.
Bowden returned home Friday, while
Mis« Bowden remained for a longer
visit.
Madrid, June 23.—The newspaper
ABC Friday published a letter in
which the Infante Jaime, the deaf
and dumb second son of former King
Alfonso, relinquished his rights to
the throne in the event of the rcsto-
ratoin of the monarchy. The succes-
sion falls to his young brother, Juan.
Jaime personally handed the letter
to his father, the paper said. The
Prince of the Asturias, who had first
claim among Alfonso’s sons, already
has relinquished) his rights by marry-
ing a Cuban commoner this week in
Switzerland.
JUDGE TELLS WHEN MAN
HAS RIGHT TO GET DRUNK
Tacoma, Wash., June 23.—There is
a time when intoxication is justified,
Superior Judge E. D. Hudge announ- 1
ced from the bench Friday. i
“When a wife runs to public dances
all the time a man has a constitu- i
tional right to get sounsed once year,” |
the court declared in dismissing the i
divorce suit brought bv Lydia Unsin
agamal Byiim UnaiJi.
Phone your news to 15.
Try a Daily Times Want Ad.
Dean R. G. Caldwell, professor
of History at Rice Institute, Hous-
ton, and noted political authority,!
left this week for Washington for
his final instructions before leav-
ing to assume the post of Minister
tn Portugal to which he was re-
cently appointed by President
Roosevelt. I
THINKS FLYERS ARE
LOST IN GULF
The new deal is becoming so rosy
that the fellow who not long ago
was asking “Brother, can you spare
a dime?” now has his hand out for a
dollar.—The Omaha Evening World-
Herald.
Mexico City, June 23.—Possibility
that the Spanish aviators, Captain
Mariano Barberan and Lieut Joaquin
Collar, missing on a flight from Ha-
vana, had failen into the Gulf of
Mexico was advanced by investiga-
tors Friday.
The flyers were seen along the
Mexican coast, overland, but it was
believed possible that they veered
eastward over the gulf because of
bad weather. The alternative was
that they landed in jungle, where
they might be lost for weeks, or
crashed into a mountain; they had
food for ten days when they left
Havana Tuesday.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Want Ads
FOR RENT — Denman Court
Apartments—furnished or unfurnish-
ed, at reduced rentals.—Phone 215 or
1. 22-3t
FOR RENT—South side of duplex
apartment. Price reasonable.—Mrs.
Alma Coker. lpd
Sunday School at 9:45 a. m.
: Preaching- by the pastor at 11 a.
m. and 8 p. m. The subject for the
morning hour is, “What To Do With
an Honest Debt,” and evening, “When
A Man Loved,” No. 2.
The B. T. S. meets at 7 p. m.
A most cordial welcome is extend-
ed to all to attend these services.
J. N'. Vandiver, Pastor.
Chickens - Turkeys
STAR - PARASITE - RF,MOYER
GIVEN IN THEIR DRINKING WATER-USING
AS DIRECTED —DESTROYS ALL DISEASE
GERMS AND WORMS IN INCEPTION RIDS
THEM OP ALL BLOOD SUCKING LICE,
MITES, FLEAS AND BLUE BUGS. IM-
PROVES THEIR APPETITE, TONES THEIR
SYSTEM AND KEEPS THEIR HEALTH AND
EGG PRODUCTION GOOD AND SAVES THE
LIVES OF BABY CHICKS-OR WE REFUND
YOUR MONEY. DON’T WAIT AND HAVE
LOSSES. THESE DESTRUCTIVE PESTS AL-
WAYS COME WITH THE SPRING HATCHING
SEASON. NO TROUBLE, AND COST SMALL
AND YOUR MONEY BACK IP NOT SATIA-
FIED.
SWINT BROS., DRUGGISTS
Negroes found recently in remote
parts of the Caucasus are believed
to be descendants of slaves who es-
caped from an ancient galleon wreck-
ed in the Black Sea.
! There are now z,ios> airports and
landing fields in the United States,
703 of which have night lighting
eqripment. Thirty-one of the fields
are private.
Some day it will be up to the voters
of the country to choose between pol-
iticians and professors.—The Toledo
Blade.
The number of quick starts a battery gives
under all conditions Is a definite measure
of its quality. On that basis a Willard is
the most satisfactory battery you can buy.
$g
05 for a 13 plate. 80 Ampere
Hour Battery of genuine
Willard quality.
QUICK STA^TS^
MT PLEASANT BATTERY STATION
EARL M. PORTER, Proprietor
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Cross, G. W. Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 87, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 24, 1933, newspaper, June 24, 1933; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth799602/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.