Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 98, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 9, 1925 Page: 4 of 4
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MT. PLEASANT DAILY TIMES THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1925.
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SIGNALS OF
SERVICE
YOU’VE noticed the lines of telephone poles as you
speeded by on trains or in automobiles. These com-
munication lines which stretch along the roads, streets
and alleys are outward signs of the little-seen service
you so greatly depend upon to make your home and bu-
siness what it is today.
Holes alone represent a big investment in your behalf.
Placed end tj end the holes dug for telephone poles
would make a tube reaching to a distant planet.
i
Then there are the cross-arms, the wires, the insulat-
£ ors. Add to these visible signals of telephone service
£ the expensive intricate plant equipment that is back of
y the receiver and the total investment reaches a big
| figure. Yet the cost to the average family for tele-
% phone service is insignificant compared with the value
Y received and the investment involved. ‘
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SOUTHWESTERN BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY
General Civil Service, General Cotton
Classing, or one or more of the manv
other courses, and are now in business
for themselves or holding responsible
positions.
The Tyler Commercial College of-
fers you definite results, results
which, you will feel in a short time.
This is true because immediately up-
on completion of your course, the
Employment Department will endeav-
or to place you in a good position.
“Achieving Success in Business” is
the largo book Lhat will be sent to
you for the asking. This helpful
book tells you all about the Tyler
Commercial College—how others won
success—why men and women enter
their school from all over the world—
of the opportunities open to YOU.
Just fill in and mail the coupon print-
ed below for the large free book.
(We have no branch schools any-
where. We lead; others follow).
j Name........................................................
Address ....................................................
j See Editor of The Times Review for
j Scholarship.
BUSINESS IS THE WAY TO
SUCCESS
It has long been known that the
Biggest Income and the Richest Op-
portunities are lo he found in the
field of business; that young men and
young women often achieve greater
success before they are thirty than
many men achieve in other callings
in a lifetime.
Business is the only calling in
which all humanity must depend to
a greater extent; the only calling in
which every man, woman and child
is a “prospect.” Busyness is the
only calling which, in America alone,
has 110,000,000 “prospects.” Every
man, woman and child must have
food, clothing, a house, and home
furnishings. Business serves every
need and it serves every whim. There
is not another field like it in all the
world.
An investigation by the Govern-
ment shows that a success or a fan
•ure in a persons life is made between
the ages of 40 and 45. You see the
young business person has made, in a
way, a success before he or she reach-
es that age.
Preparing young people to meet
the demand of 110,000,000 people Ty-
ler Commercial College, Tyler, Tex- j Have vou tried that XXX Root
as, has grown to be the largest busi- j Beer raade from the barrel ?—King’*
ness school m America. | Palace. ld-w
Fifty thousand completed either j ____
the Private Secretarial, General Bu- All colors and flavors of cakes,
siness, General Banking, General j True fig and strawberry filling, at
Railroad, General Western Union, , Meier's. it
ALUMINUM WARE SALE
Friday, 9:30 a. m., 59c each.—East-
land’s 5 & 10c Store. It.
1925 CHEVROLET
AUTOMOBILE
Shows Economical Record
on Chicago Trip
Mr. O. L. Crigler, Mt. Pleasant contractor, writes
that his 1925 Chevrolet Touring Car averaged 27 miles
to the gallon of gasoline on his trip from Mt. Pleasant
to Chicago, and that the only oil purchased was when
draining crankcase each 500 miles. Mr. Crigler fur-
ther states that the car has given no trouble whatever,
and his trip has been very pleasant.
TRIANGLE MOTOR CO.
\
CHEVROLET DEALERS MT. PLEASANT, TEX |
Defeat Paris in
First Game (Here
Wednesday
! GORDON HOSIERY SALE
Mt. Pleasant took the first game
from the Paris team in the three-
game series played here Wednesday
afternoon. The game was won in
the third, when Mt. Pleasant made
seven scores. The visitors made a j
rally in the ninth, but could not ov-
ercorne the big lead taken by the i
Cats early in the game. Gallegos
and Clabaugh knocked homers for
the visitors, while Pirtle did the
same for Mt. Pleasant. Pirtle al-
lowed 15 hits, but kept them scat,
tered.
by our special scorer,
$2.00 Hose at
$2.50 Hose at
$1.50 Hose at
$1.00 Hose at
$1.50
$1.75
$1.00
$.70
No Approvals
Box score
Tom Bain.
Paris
AB R H PO A
Sowers, ss, ....
............5
0
2
1
3
Battle, 3b ....
............6
1
2
1
1
Gallegos, If
............5
1
2
3
1
Wycollis, cf ..
............4
1
2
1
0
Clabaugh, rf
............5
1
2
0
0
Stagner, c ....
............5
0
1
5
2
Seine, lb ......
............5
2
0
9
0
Hollis, 2b ......
...........4
1
3
4
2
Haynes, p
2
0
1
0
2
Shaefer, n ..
...........3
0
0
0
0
Totals ......
..........44
7
15
24
11
Mt. P.-Longview
AB
R H
PO A
Irby, of ........
...........4
2
1
1
0
White, 2b ......
............4
1
1
1
4
Polvogt, rf ..
...........5
1
2
2
0
McMahon, lb
..........4
0
3
14
1
Crosby, c ....
...........4
1
2
7
0
Lowrance, If
...........3
1
1
0
0
Moore, 8b ....
...........4
1
2
1
2
Jones, ss ......
...........4
2
2
1
4
Pirtle, p ......
...........4
1
2
0
3
Totals ......
.........36
10
16
27
14
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MRS. O. M. FUQUAY
Standing of the Clubs:
Club—
P
W L
Pet,
Marshall ................
.....16
12 4
.750
Paris .......................
.....15
10 4
.667
Tyler :......................
.....15
8 7
.533
Greenville .............
.....15
7 8
.467
Mt. P.-Longview ...
.....16
6 10
.375
Texarkana .............
.....17
4 13
.235
MARTIN
Tonight
First -Show at 7:30
SOLD OUT
I have sold my place on the Green-
spun corner and have opened up a
complete line of confectioneries and
cold drinks, also all kinds of short
orders, hamburgers and chili at
King’s Palace, next door to Jones
Grocery. All of my soda fountain
drinks from the deep well water from
the Ice Plant. I don’t make drinks
from City water.—Paf King. d-w
Two base hits—Battle, Clabaugh,
Haynes, Moore, Irby, Polvogt, Hollis.
Home runs—Gallegos, Pirtle, Cla
baugh. Innings pitched by Haynes
3 1-3. Hits off Haynes 12. In-
nings pitched by Shaefer \ 2 3. Hi’s
off Shaefer 4. Struck out by Pirtle
7, struck out by Haynes 1, Shaefer 3.
Base or. balls off Pirtle 2, Haynes 1,
Shaefer 1.
Score by innings:
Paris ..........................210 001 012— 7
Mt. P.-Longview 070 300 000—10
Louie Moore, and Misses Alma
Moore and Lola Miller spent Thurs-
day in Texarkana.
You can get drinks made from
deep well water at King’s Palace.
New hooks for our rent library
just received.—'
He Owes His 40 Years
of Constant Good Health
to Beecliam’s Fills
“In 1884 I started taking Beecham’s
Pills two or three at bedtime and
can now cat anything I like without
feeling distressed. I have not liad a
sick day in all the 40 years.
*T have recommended Beecham’s
Pills to my friends and in almost all
casts they have proved satisfactory.
“I was troubled with sleeplessness
andBeechaxn s helped me very much."
F. LOUiS LOEFFLER
Rochester, N. V.
Beecham's Pills bring prompt relic■/ to sufferers
from constibat ~n, biliousness, sick headaches,
and other digestive ailments. Easy to take arid
non-habit-Jorw ing.
FREE SAMPLE—Write today forfree sample
to B. F. Allen Co., 419 Canal St.. New York
But from your druggist in 15 and SOc boxes
for Better Health, Take,
ESeecfoassi9^ Falls
/ n, of it —
ERNST LU KITSCH
(Production
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P” Cpammounl
Qidure
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NEGRI AND LUBITSCH! Star and
director of “Passion” reunited in
their first American-made triumph.
ALSO GOOD COMEDY
I THAT LITTLE GAIWE** Intcr-naVlCartoonCo.,N.Y.-By BTIjnk^
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Cross, G. W. Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 98, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 9, 1925, newspaper, July 9, 1925; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth785316/m1/4/: accessed May 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.