Mount Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 270, Ed. 1 Monday, January 20, 1930 Page: 3 of 4
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MT. PLEASANT DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, JANUARY 20, 1930.
—L one Star
toMempMs^iSt. Loui
i r.r/'i' connections at Memphis
l’ov Chuago, Cincinnati, Louisville, Nash-
ville, Chattanooga, Atlanta, Birming-
ham, Jacksonville.
NORTHBOUND
Morning Lone Star 10:5?)
A. M. to Memphis and
St. Louis.
Evening Lone Star
9:07 I’. M. to
Memphis
COTTON
BELT
COOKING
Former Governor
Freaks Collar Bone f
— . If
j Austin, Texas, Jan. 19.—Formerly
Governor James E. Ferguson fell Sat-
urday night and broke his collar bone, j |j*
If was i\ ppnnlim* oecidenf in Hint the 1 •••
j former Governor fell or slipped from •!•
I his bed and sustained the injury. It j X
• is expected to be entirely healed in i
summer's campaign. ||j»
i The attending doctor said the ex- j
I time for him to participate in
Paris & m,Pleasant Railway Co.
next | £
SOUTHBOUND
To Dallas, Fort Worth,
Houston, San Antonio.
Morning Lone Star G:4U
P. M.
Evening Lone Star 8:40
A. M.
Oil Burning Locomotives.
governor had not been seriously in- ] £
in . 1 lUn f Vi n fin/t Cl.t til,. in 1i.mi1 | ,|.
j jured and that he had set the injury
j with no great inconvenience to his
' patient.
PRACTICES FARMERS CON-
SIDER IMPORTANT
R. W. WORTHAM, Receiver
THE RAILROAD BUILT TO SERVE YOU. ROUTE YOUR
FREIGHT VIA THIS LINE OF PERSONAL TOUCH.....The Schedules
of our connecting lines at Paris enable us to give you good service
to and from all point';. Your patronage wilt ho appreciated.
ROBERT E. WILLIAMS - COMMERCIAL AGENT
ST- LOUIS
SOUTHWESTERN
SOUTHWEST
“THE RAINBOW MAN” The plot goes forward through
HITS THE RIGHT SPOT sunshine and tears and comedy sea-
WITH AUDIENCE A l TITUS soned with episodic drama, until fin-
ally the lovers are joined in a touc-h-
1 he Rainbow Man, a lyric ro- jnp sceno wherein the rainbow of their
manoe, starring Eddie Dowling, with ronmnce comes shining through.
Marion Nixon, Frankie I)arro, Sam The melodies of the produc«on,
i Questionnaires sent to farm read-
; era, unfailingly bring many worth-
. while replies. A recent invitation to
readers of a well known form maga-
i zinc brought in many letters, from
which were selected the following
practices as those which were stress-
ed.
j i. Build up soil by
lizers and crop rotation.
' 2. Reduce hired help by use of
machinery.
3.
4.
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DISCOURAGING SPECULATION
i tory and store operation, and money
__ 1 needed for these purposes should not
One of the lessons that the busi- j bc absorbed by the speculative mad-
ness world should have learned from ; et- Exchange.
1929, was that banks and bankers *---*
using ferti- wore cjiaite right when they tried to i
1 discourage their patrons from specu-
lating. Many of them wore blamed ;
because they disliked to loan money ,
Test cows to weed out boarders. • freely for that purpose, but they felt
A MAUFACTURER
Jimmie: “My dad’s awful smart-'1
Georgia: “What’s he do?”
Jimmie: “Why, he’s a mechaatc
Haul manure direct from barn that productive business is entitled to and makes locomotives.”
'.dE^£E wmu the
Hardy, Lloyd
Hay** and the
porting. A
picture, produced by Sono-Art; di-
rected by Fred Newmeyer—at the
Titus Theatre now.
quality, reminiscent of
Lane” and “Log Cabin of Dreams.
Here is a sound-film romance which
in these*"dizzy* days when jangling thoroughly justifies the “talkies.” It
is one of the best screen entertain-
ments ever hearkened to or beheld.
jazz sec e; to reach into every part
and parcel of life, it is r freshing t<>
to field. i the first use of credit.
5. Have a garden largo enough to! There is something wrong when
supply the needs of family. needed construction projects have to
6. Sow clover or alfalfa with' stop because interest rates on finan- ---
grain crop. icing them are too high, on account of A portable vacuum cleaner, oper-
7. And finally, pay more attention ->o much money being loaned out on ated by an electric motor plugged in-
to the business side of farming. | speculative purchases.
Six of these ai-c self -explanatory,' It ic to bc hoped that this year,
....... .... ..... ......... .... _ ........ , ........ ...... ........ to
Honeymoon uja^jorii it is probable, however, loan them money for speculation and
that these men had in mind, atten- the banks discourage them, that they
will listen to this advice. The busi-
ness world should have all the money
it wants aL moderate rates to finance
Georgia: “That’s nothing; my dad's
a commuter and makes two trains a.
day.”—Boston Transcript.
to a lighting circuit, has been design-
ed for removing dirt from resident
heater flues.
tion to production costs, actual re-
turn per dollar of investment, and
all such factors which have a bearing
on net income.—Ex.
Shanghai,
boom.
China, has a building*
Times Review and Dallas News boU*
improvements, construction and fac- one year for only SI.75
get an eyeful and an earful of enter-
tainment which has for its musical
motive more of drowsy tinkling of
cowbells in the distant meadows than
of raucous fanfare of xylophones in
the immediate vicinity.
“The Rainbow Man” is an all-talk-
ing and singing screen romance,
plentifully supplied with instrumen-
tal music which contains not one note
of “blues” or “vo-deo-do."
But the fact that it defies the great
American jazz tradition is not alone
the reason for recommending “The
Rainbow Man.” It is first of all a
real, human story, simple, but true
and plausible. In the second place it
contains acting of a high calibre, in
the hands of everyone in the cast. >
Eddie Dowling is a small-time min-
strel man who adopts the little boy,1
Frankie Darro, after his father, Geo.
Hayes, is victim of vodvil accident.
Marion Nixon is the daughter of a
small-town hotel proprietor. She
falls in love with Dowling while his 1
troupe is playing her town.
A Tip
Andrew
. . From
Carnegie
'IRE Insurance
doesn’t co\er loss
of rent.
“Rent” Insurance
does. Protect your
income! Low rate.
Rent Insurance as well as Fire.
procurable through the depend-
able Automobile Insurance
Company of Hartford, Conn.
C. L DUNCAN
A (Hi: NT
'Stren&lh, Se-
'mill/, Service”
Phone 50 and 12S
Asked to explain his phenomenal success, Andrew
Carnegie blandly attributed it to his ability to get men
to work for him who knew more than he did.
And that's formula for success. Nobody who is real-
ly successful does all the work himself. Te employs
other people’s minds and efforts.
Do you do the same in the intricate business of run-
ning your home and taking care of your family? You
can, quite easily.
You can employ specialists in diet; you can serve
the master dishes of famous chefs; you can have the
advice of style authorities in selecting your clothes, of
whole electrical laboratories in buying household ap-
pliances, by reading the advertisements.
All the newest knowledge—knowledge of millions
of dollars and years of effort have won—is contained
in the advertisements.
If you will use the advertisements in this newspaper
as Andrew Carnegie used men who knew more than he
did, every dollar you spend will lie spent wisely, eco-
nomically, and will return full measure of satisfac-
tion. That’s the way to be a success in the greatest
business in t heworld—making a home.
11 pays to rea l the advertisements
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Cross, G. W. Mount Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 270, Ed. 1 Monday, January 20, 1930, newspaper, January 20, 1930; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth785082/m1/3/: accessed April 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.