Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 311, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 10, 1925 Page: 3 of 4
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ii
MT. PLEASANT DAILY TIMES SATURDAY, JAN. 10, 1925.
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'i: At the Churches
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Ey Avihuv Bvisbame
. WTI" •—TTi~—~ rMMHKJMMWBl
WHO WILL BE FIRST?
FLYING BRINGS CHANGE.
REAL ESTATE AND RAILROADS,
i EACE IN SLEEPY HOLLOW.
Tomorrow
*** ****** *Z**************** *•* *♦**♦**♦********** <5m5m5m5
Methodist Church
Judge’s Death
Order Had To
Ba Changed
What rtiilror 4 r«:a.i v/ill 15 ■. t
r> :!!.zo what la.a uy.ng math.
nu>:-.ris ? What railroad man esn
ck-.:iy wii: firs' realize what, r )
flying m-nr-i vnc v.’iH du to the p..
aongcr trafilc of the great raiiroc-....j
on all long- hauls?
The find; capable man, acting on
thorough realization of the hying
machineV future, will establish for
his stockholder:; ana himself such
a fortune as would make those of
the Vanverbilts, IIills and Ilunting-
"fly.s look like financial crumbs.
*
ou think about the flying ma-
chine out west as representing lho
business energy of the whole West-
ern country.
To go there now, you travel
four days on trains admirably
equipped and managed.
In less than twenty years the
trip will be made by flying nia-
chines in six hours and with abso-
lute safety. How many Americans
will devote four railroad days to a
six-hour flying trip? Not many.
The flying machine will upset
theories, habits and values.
Land one hundred miles from a
great city will be reached more
quickly than land in the suburbs
twenty-five miles away is reached
now.
Flying for all long journeys will
displace railroading completely
within the lives of middle-aged
men now living.
V
Services for Sunday:
Preaching at 11 a. in. and 7:15
р. m. Sunday School at 9:45 a.
m.
Subject for the morning hour,
“Is It Lawful for Me to do With
My Own.”
i l object for evening hour,
; “The First Coward.”
We are delighted with the
1 splend-d and growing crowds at
! my service. We give you the
; gl: and and a genuine home
welcome.
Come and be with us Sunday.
—o- -
Presbyterian Church
•Sunday School 9:45.
Morning Worship, 11:0b
o’clock-—Mr. T. W. Lehman.
Junior Endeavor—4. p. m.
intermediate and Senior En-
deavor—6:15 p. m.
The members are requested to
be on time at these services.
Visitors and strangers are al-
ways welcome to this home like
с. h urch.
—The Session.
—o—
First Baptist Church
SPECIAL SUNDAY
6 O’CLOCK
SUPPER
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After Judge Myers returned ! £
to town Thursday afternoon I £
from his trip near Green 11 ill to j •**
condemn a mule to death his or- i
der was'diverted somewhat. The &
mule, which had been gored b> y
a bull, and which Judge Myers i £
ordered to be killed, did not die ' £
by law as it was planned, in-j £
stead, when Sheriff Hess arriv- £
ed at the place to perform th' £
task of killing it, tire mine had £
already died from the effects of &
the goring. j £
While Mr. Hess and Roy ?!
French, the owner of the bull, j;!*
were examining the mule, the j •£
bull was noticed acting pecu-1 .’j*
Parly, and in a few minutes it £
fell over in a fit. Recovering i £
from this it made a mad rush 1 ❖
and tore down some fence in !*!
the pasture. It ran aaginst a £
tree, and gave every evidence of I*
having hydrophobia. Seeing *
Uuu it had gone mad, it become c.{»x^*<“XXK”^.X'W'>*x.{.'>.x»>x»x.^wx.*x«X'*:»>*><x»^Xm>'X»J'
necessary to shoot the bull. A.______________
shotgun loaded with buckshot
was used, but this had no effect I
on the tough hide of the ani-j
mal, so Mr. Hess tried his pistol
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H. 0. TALLEY",
4 t
Prop.
xsjseam
The
Home
of Good Eats
Many railroad men, of course,
realize that a g'-cat change in
transportation is sumi coming.
William Sproule, president of the
Southern Pacific Railroad, said
yesterday that what caused him to
do some hard thinking was the
landing in San Francisco of a man
that had flown from New York in
one single day between suinuse and
dark. If a man can do that ex-
perimentally far the Govammant
now, how long before the thing
will ba done pn.etically by up-to-
date transportation men?
Transportation through the air
on a great commercial scale prob-
ably will be developed flret in this
part of the world, for here the
Heed is greatest.
Beal railroad men as regards
present earnings will not fear the
flying machine, even should they
Aiil to utilise it. That fly in v ma-
chine, taking long-haul passengers
from railroads, will so greatly in-
crease freight carrying as to make
railroad right* of way and termi-
nals more valuable than ever.
That's part of the wisdom of
Divine Justice. No really good
thing ever disappears with an-
cti-.er good thing already existing.
The taxi wiped out the hansom
cab, as gas and electricity wiped
out the tallow candle. But the
hansom and the candle were really
not “good things.”
Watch the flying machine. It
will make changes greater than
the steam engine evci- made, mak-
ing man literally master of ail he
surveys by enabling him to go
anywhere and <>v- ey-viii,,-,, y.'ilkaut
re- of terminals, trussing a con- !
tmeni, in half a day.
Vvsi. imn:T nt of all h the fact I
' ''3 flying machine alone rep- 1
s ua .1 sni ..iy, since all
\ urs v. iii be fought and won or j
ins- nt the ah- fmai now on. Write j
. hu’ vo 1 i: ■ ;;ois and your Con-
ler,iii, urg'ng adequate aerial i
“ " ■ >n>t half as many first- ;j
Li . -'amhiii! s as any other na-
tion . but twice as many.
Samuel fionipeis lies in the
bleer.y Follow < '.n-.. .m..... -t xai<.-
lTv.n’ ^" ^-> far from the gravo '
of -wid/ew Carnegie.
The much talked of “community
of interests • and “equality” be-
tween capital and labor become
real in the graveyard.
UVartL>. the sunshine equal-
lty of capital and of labor, is not
yet reality. Labor is labor, with
worry and uncertainty attached to
it, usually. And capital, with all
its worries, means some leisure
and a systematic share in what !
labor produces..
But conditions are hotter than
Jiey were. It is no longer a crime
for workmen to unite. It was a
crime once. And they no longer
brand with a rod-hot iron any work-
man convicted of leaving his own
parish to seek employment in an-
other. They did that iu England
years ago. ' ' !
Announcements.
Tomorrow, Jan. 11th.
9:45—Let everybody be at
Sunday School and on time. Let
us break all records in attend-
ance during the Fall and Winter.
We can do it if we will all b=-
there.
11 a. m.—Sermon by pastor.
6 p. m.—B. Y. P. U. The B.
Y. P. Upers are just spreading
things on in a big way. 99 pre-
sent last Sunday evening. We
want one hundred and twenty-
five tomorrow evening.
7:15 p. m.—Sermon by pastor.
INVITATION
St. Matthew, chap. 25, para-
graphs 31 to 46, will be our sub-
ject next Sunday morning at K.
of P. Hall.
You will see in this picture the
crowd going to heaven and how
and why it is they are traveling
this direction. You will also
see the crowd going to hell and
how and why it is they are head-
ed to this destination.
You will also observe the rules
that determine whether we shall
be sheep or goats. Give them
a careful examination and find
out how simple and easy it is to,
in the figure used, become eith-
er a sheep or a goat.
These meetings are growing
both in interest and study value.
Come and share them with us.
Baraca Bible Class,
Seb F. Caldwell, Pres.
—o—
Woman’s Missionary Society
Monday, January 12, 1925.
Bible study, Luke ii, iii and iv.
Hymn
Prayer—Mrs. Blades.
Scripture Lesson, Psalms 118-
97, 106.
Simeon-- Mrs. Delafield.
The Bo; hood c-f Jesus—Mrs.
Harry Hays.
Jo in the Baptist—Mrs. Ben
Cha-ouan.
The Baptism of Je us—Mrs.
Wood.
me inree Temptations- Airs.
Tom Bain.
Player—Mrs. Sam Hays.
HAT FRAMES
See our line of Hat Frames,
Flowers and Braid for Spring.
Flowers ....................15c and 2;>
Frames................... 15c and 95 ■
Braid..................10c and 15c yd.
—Eastland’s 5 & 10c S'- e.
Mr. and Mrs. TV th of
Pickton visited relate ; hare
Saturday.
Our entire stock of $7.50 ui
$7.50 Stetson Hats for one w. '.k
only beginning tomorrow nr
$5.00.—Liijenstern & Camak.
THE TALE OF A SHIRT
As most men who have achiev-
oniit. He had to lire several ed success have strange supersti-
the animal
times before
killed.
MRfc. R. B. HUCKEBA
was tions and omens, which they be-
i lieve aided towards their rise,
! it is not strange to hear from
The shirt, it seems was the
one worn by the cowpunchec,
Jim Cruze, when some twenty
years ago he blew into a rehear-
sal bossed by David Belasco and
demanded a job as leading man.
He got the job, despite queer
DIED FRIDAY NIGHT
Hollywood that a “good luck” clothes and a cowboy haircut-
shirt, which James Cruze wore ^“d the shirt stays with him!
rT,* , , , . , i when he got his first acting job, I -
p^-p0^1 now decorates his back for one: Miss Ola Williams of Gilmer
death of Mrs. R. B. Huckeba, ^ whenever he makes a motion is spending the week-end with
Pic‘”S. Though nearly twenty Misses Bessie and Lois Hayes.
miM northeast of town, after years 0,d_ this ahirt took its! __-
The Times Review and Dallas
News one year for $1.75.
0“—“O—Q— O-- O■■■■■' OO (>—0~~—O 1 O
r DAY BY DAY WITH
SOUTHERN POETS —o
causetf\1r7eYthTash uremi? part in the makin* of the
causewi nei aearn was uiemic . nprni «ur*pp<?s “Thp Clnvprpd
poiso^g Deceased was well ^LZ,-’ aXmorI rec^tTy a
. P1. this place, as she made new paramount picture, entitled
“L! Fa \er hf°r Cf man/ 'Buggies of Red Gap,” from the
fSuLiu sp e °! her '?ng ?f; story of Harry Leon Wilson,
! a ??Ihe ras al".ays .cheteF.' which comes to the Martin The-
p an< . htT leat; 13 atre Monday and Tuesday,
mournel by all who knew her. i , " , J
Funerallervices were held Sat-! Somewhat worn and ragged
urday alprnoon at Damascus | and torn 111 sP°Ls, the conven- Sp on I press up that steep slope
*_______ ‘ * | tions were preserved only be-j Behind whose brow that sub
pman left Saturday I cause Cruze wears another shirt' is setting;
to be gone a few days underneath. In other words, I walk with Faith and not with
s. j the shirt had long ago shelved Hope,
------ I its practical qualities and enter- Despairing not, and not for-
Chili you can find ed the ornamental class of four- getting,
s at Pat’s Place. leaf clovers, swastikas, etc. I —Barton Gray.
O O—O—O—O— OO— O "■ O— O ■ o
Ben
for Dalit
on busini
The be
anywheH
JVeb Yea» PromUes Radio Fans - v,
Higher Program Standard With ^
Noted Operatic Stars Broadcastingj
'fsCOTfl
\ /,*>•»
I. m:":—
Alfia, Bori, do
Untinelli, Mat™
u k, I’onsr io, i
1 Scotli—all tin
ViciOt- 'r.illchvr
’J Ini • ' iicrimc'iit. in
vvire'aLo tho t iV..
nuloli arlial.i iu llio
wn.3 irado possible by a eo-opc-rn-j oan toward equality of cultural op-
tivo arrangement between that portunlty with his city brother. 1 ;
company and the American Tel- feel that our company played a
phone and Tolef-naph Company.1 major part in that progress throuee
beco-.ug Tll0 |irst of mo radio recitals cm- the development of the phone :rnpl»
ter the anateU from the studio of W1-3.-VF, ]
:.w York, and was broadcast
simullaneously from eight other
's | -stiuUoa.
"The most remarkable ducation-
1 clevelom!a■’ii ol our time, ?,lr,
H. Johnson, pr sldeni of the
Vidor T 11 lie M e. hiie: Com nm>
said in diin-es.duf! 11' lne-iv. ,au,
“itj the progress of the lurul Amcil-
and the enlisMnent. of th* real nuts-,
bul stars of live world for victor
recording. Now vc tire makl-ti r
'mother eiuitributimi. tee \ -.he *'-•
which no one is Uliely to question.1'
A mom: oil: >• Victor art e fro- »
; whom sole. - -' l!s will I .e live,1 !
! a. 1 -via, G.u-d. n, uu-. i. -
Flonzaley Quartet.
4
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Cross, G. W. Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 311, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 10, 1925, newspaper, January 10, 1925; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth784225/m1/3/: accessed June 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.