Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 87, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 24, 1933 Page: 4 of 4
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MT. PLEASANT DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1933.
Clean, Beautiful Hair
and smooth, well-cared for complexion are
really assets these days. You can't afford
to be careless during* these hot Summer
days. Call at our shop—consult our oper-
ators they will be glad to advise you.
Phone 48 for an appointment.
Vaughan Beauty Parlor
Grains Hit New
High For Season
Legislator on Long Horseback Trek
“CENTRAL AIRPORT” BASED
UPON TODAY’S AIR HEROES
Heralded as the “Dawn Patrol” of
1933, Richard Barthelmess’ newest
picture, “Central Airport” comes to
flyer, with his life always in the
hands of fate, is a coward to marry.
Broken and filled with a savage
recklessness when he learns that he
has lost his girl forever, Barthelmess
turns to any flying job that offers
Chicago, 111., June 23.—Reports of
tremendous damage to grain crops
by heat and drouth swept all deliv-
eries of wheat, oats and rye to new
high price levels for the season Fri-
day. Huge buying orders were
poured into the pits after an early
break.
Gains in wheat ranged from 1 5-8c
to 2 3-8c a bushel and the close was
at the day’s highest levels. The De-
cember delivery closed at 85 U4c.
Corn gains ranged only from l-2c
to 1 l-8c a bushel and oats advanced
3-4c to 1 3-8c.
TWO MORE HELD
FOR SLAYING AT
REFORM SCHOOL
Gatesville, Texas, June 23.—Grady
Applegate and Willard Scott, two of
four youths charged with murder in
connection with the ax slaying of W.
J. Leonard, Gatesville reformatory
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the Titus tonight at 11 p. m., also eno rgh danger, whether it’s fighting ; blacksmith) were captured at Morgan
in the Orient, or leading a South Am- I u - .A
Sunday and Monday. The super air-
thriller glorifies the flying heroes of
peace . . . not war . . . and is said to
exceed anything that the talented
star has ever done.
The powerful story deals with the
hazardous lives and the exciting loves
of these hardy navigators of the
stormy air-lines. Richard Barthel-
erican insurrection. He becomes
famous even to the far corners of the
early Friday.
The others, James Anderson and
, Clarence Raines, previously had been
earth as a pilot who laughs at death,j j.racke^ by bloodhounds and captured.
Applegate and Scott were trailed
by bloodhounds into a railroad yard
Representative J. C. Duvall, hard riding Paul Revere o£ his state
horse-racing law, is shown here at Austin, where he had covered 81
miles of his 283-mile horseback trip from San Antonio to Fort Worth.
At left is his friend, 13 year-old Jack Thurman of San Antonio who is
riding with him, and in center his colleague in passing the bill, Rep.
A W. Griffith, who went out to meet him with a bag of oats. Duvall
said he would make the trip if his bill passed, and lie’s keeping his
word
and even goes out of his way to tempt
it.
The ending of this throbbing First
National spectacle is one of the most
spectacular and thrilling scenes ever
mess plays the part of a returned war filmed as it presents a phase of peace
hero who pilots trans-continental pas- time aviators’ work. Barthelmess as
senger planes. He crashes his ship, ^ the pilot rescues the passengers from
with a heavy toll of lives, and is a sinking plane in the storm swept
“grounded.” Discredited in the game Caribbean sea.
he loves and the only one he knows, 1 Wellman, former war aviator who
he goes barn-storming with a trav- directed “Wings,” outdid himself in
eling air circus, and falls in love with “Central Airport” with his unbeliev-
Sally Eilers, a parachute jumper.
Their glamorous love affair and the
many thrilling plane crashes build
“Central Airport” into a mighty dra-
ma. The principals are as reckless
with their loves as they are with their
lives. But Barthelmess believes that a
able sky scenes.
SAYINGS WORTH SAYING AGAIN
JAMES E. WITT
DENTISTRY—X-RAY
Office Over Proctor Drug Store
Res. Phone 119 Office Phone 71
Bascom Perkins
Attorney-at-Law
Office next to Federal Farm Loan
Company, over Kirk’s Barber Shop
SUMMER TIME IS
FAN TIME
Let us put your electric fans in
good condition. You will get bet-
ter service and save on your elec-
tric bill.
McClinton Radio
Shop
Phone 98
| A man doesn’t know his strength
, until he realizes his weakness,
j Wisdom consists largely in know-
! ing when you have said enough,
i Tt isn’t what a man has on him but
I what he has in him that counts.
All must respect those who respect
themselves.
lie that would have the fruit
must climb the tree.
Say not all thou kr.owest but be-
lieve all thou sayest.
A hundred years of wrong do not
make an hour of right.
Reprove thy friend privately; com-
mend him publcily.
By reading, a man antedates his
life and makes himself contemporary
with ages past.
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Sunday School at 9:45 a. m.
Preaching services at 11 a. m. and
8 p. m. Morning subject, “Two
Types of Christians;” evening sub-
ject, “An Effective Prayer.”
A friendly and cordial welcome to
all serivees. Come to church tomor-
row.—Geo. C. Moore, Pastor.
after a bloody handkerchief had been
found by officres on a highway near
Morgan. The handkerchief enabled
the dogs to get on the true scent.
The youths offered no resistance.
They were found dodging about some
boxcars. They +old officers they had
planned to catch a freight train at
the first opportunity.
Sheriff Pearl Benson of Bosque
County said that Scott made a state-
ment about the slaying of Leonard,
who was clubbed to death Wednesday
and whose automobile was stolen.
Scott bore a wound in his left hand,
inflicted by Constable Tom Gillespie
of Meridian on the previous day when
officers intercepted the fugitives. The
handkerchief which led to the final
capture had been used to bind the
hand.
The youths were first taken to the
Bosque County jail and then removed
to Gatesville by the Sheriff of Cory-
ell County.
UNITED STATES LEADERS
ASTONISHED OVER TRADE
Barbecue and Hot
Links
WE BARBECUE DAILY
ON EAST FIRST ST., OR AT
Morgan & Jappears
MARKET
At Ed Jones Grocery
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and the worst is yet to come! yi
Money to Loan
This Association Wants to Make Loans
FOR IMPROVEMENTS
FOR REPAIRS
Does Your Home Need:
A NEW ROOF? AN ADDITIONAL ROOM?
PAINTING? A BATH ROOM?
NOW, before prices advance, is the time to pro-
tect and improve your home.
See what your home needs and get figures from
local dealers and mechanics—bring these figures to
us and if your proposition meets our requirements as
to Security and your ability to make the required
monthly payments, we will be glad to furnish the
money needed.
WE ARE DOING OUR PART BY
LENDING TO PROTECT AND IM-
PROVE MT. PLEASANT HOMES.
WILL YOU DO YOUR PART BY
USING SOME OF THIS MONEY TO
PROTECT OR IMPROVE YOUR
HOME?
It will help you and Mt. Pleasants Too!
MT. PLEASANT
Building & Loan Assn.
Ate.ll 1
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The “Home” Association for Home People. Organized and Operated for the
Benefit of the'Peeple of Mt. Pleasant.
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of wages from the base of the larger
buying power, the concrete evidence
of which is apparent in the con-
stantly widening distributive totals.
Each week consumer demand is being
New York, June 23.—Business in extended to additional items, and as
the past week continued its expan- “^ent needs for footwear and cloth-
sion, wholly unaffected by seasonal Iin^ was '*overed and accumulated bills
influences, said the Dun and Brad- j Pakl- interest becomes more centered
street Review Friday. J furniture, house furnishings, ra-
Expected hesitancy from uncertain-!^08’ ’nus'.cal instruments and even
ties regarding the application of com- j jewelry.
modity processing taxes, the agency j ■--- --------- ■ - ..........
asserted, was not apparent in manu-
facturing schedules which were gen-
erally above those of a week ago. j
“The broadened sweep at which |
trade is now progressing,” continued .
the review, “is eliciting astonishment i
from even the most time-worn veter-
ans of industry, as the sustained J
strength of the upswing has passed
boldly beyond even the most sanguine !
expectations.
“The further widening of employ- j
ment and the continued rising trend
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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/m1/4/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.