Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 28, Ed. 1 Monday, April 25, 1955 Page: 6 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
: 4. .
Mt. Pleasant, Texas, Daily Times, Munday Evening, April 25, 1955
y P A
mN
Theatre
-aF
f
W
4
v
<
Tuesday and Wednesday
Big
Last Time Today
Complete 5 Year Warranty
(International)
communities are scheduled to participate.
On Entire Refrigeration Cycle
5
On The Chrysler Airtemp
???
Open For Business
TIMER
New Location
Fox Iron and
Mrs. Howard Hudson
Aluminum
Announces the Purchase of
Phone 4-5429
ment "without delay.”
10,000 bales were stored. The fire
Call Us Today for Full Particulars.
Argeree's Beauty Parlor
7. Support for the “rights of the | was under control an hour after
Arab people of Palestine” and a
I
? ? ?
Phone 4-4972
The Parisian Shop
? t ?
407 N. Jefferson
SENSATIONAL
TIMER
1
1
%
Philco Refrigerators
Last Times Today
Two Door
TNS
I
444 ^F^f .Fwmttrna»£ir»rf
113 West Third
Dial 4-4541
%la
9€
94
ThuaZent
—
1:"
a
•]
I
l ]
mm.
B
6
Model 1158
A
a ((0(00 MAN
® (OV
GP
Tuesday and Wednesday
52’2
Hit raiponiibillty t you is four-fold:
1.
I
“9
113 W. 3rd SI
Telephone 4-4541
Phone 4-4641
310 N. Jefferson
Mt. Pleasant, Texas
wmmeAknen •••«•••••*•
nnAAAAA•
GREEN FIRE
•
PLEASANT
Drive-In
And Began Operation Of It Thursday
In The Future It Will Be Known As
Yen For Coffee
Results In Fire
[MRs|
LESLIE
Mfg. Co.
1300 West First
alist demands in the French ter- City and Runge kept the blaze
ritories there. France was urged from eating into another section
to bring about a peaceful settle- of the warehouse where another
Mrs. Stonecipher
On Tour For Guild
He must know all about the kinds of insurance and
the cost.
stand taken by the victims of ra-
cial discrimination, especially by
the peoples of African, Indian and
Pakistan origin in South Africa.”
6. Support for the rights of the
North Africans to self-determina-
tion, a reference to the Nation-
%
Lil
t
I
He must have a record in this community of selling
and servicing insurance protection.
Complete Automatic Performance
15.9 Square Feet Shelf Area
70 Lbs. Frozen Foods
Mr. and Mrs. James Baldridge
of Wink, visited Mr. and Mrs.
Russell J. Davis Saturday.
Ils Terrific, The Trade In Allowance
I'm Offering On New 1955
I
1
A
HAL
WALLIS
PRODUCTION
before fleeing.
Checking the pockets, the prin-
ter got a pleasant surprise.
He found his $290.
mi
v
(
-
< e
Hondo
With
John Wayne
Geraldine Page
*"
L 6a
Guaranteed by Good Housekeeping and Underwriters
League.
Refrigerator
Easier 1c See Info
Easier To Reach Info
Air Conditioned
Reirigerafor
1c Keep Your Precious
Foods Fresher
(
Chrysler Airtemp comes both in Air Cooled and Water
Cooled models, and on the Air Cooled Units there is no ma-
chine in the house to make noise.
i
g d
CoStarring
OAi.O
Mrs. Edward Stonecipher, local
piano teacher, is on tour audition-
ing for the National Guild of
Piano Teachers. She will judge
pupils at Winnsboro and Lafayet-
te, Louisiana, and Monticello, Ar-
ansas, returning home May 1.
Chrysler Airtemp now warrants the Compressor, Evap-
orator Cooling Coil, Condenser and the Expansion Valve for a
full five years against failure in operation due to any manu-
facturing defect.
Ike Announces
Plan For Atomic
ShipDemonstration
ALERT FOR 2,400 COMMUNITIES
o ___________________________________________ .. ,
<
Mission Over
With
John Hodiak
Audrey Totter
Safety of Your Investment
Insured up to $10,000.00
MT. PLEASANT BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION
Now Only $342°°
and Old Refrigerator
McCollum TV & Appliance
Last Times Today
M-G-M’s action-hit... in COLOR
..... and CtNEmAS:oPE......'
STEWART GRANGER • GRACE KELLY
v PAUL DOUGLAS ,
I
The Romans were the first to
adopt the metal bed, which they
hashioned out of bronze.
AUBREY ROBERTS
Refrigeration and Airconditioning
I
3. He must be capable of analyzing your needs and rec-
ommending the kinds and amounts of insurance that
will give you the greatest protection at the lowest cost.
4. He must represent only carefully selected Capital Stock
Companies with a perfect record of security, perform-
ance and dependability.
It broke out.
Officials said the watchman, to
make coffee on a small electric
stove, hooked up an extension
cord which had a light bulb on
one end. As he hooked up the
cord, they added, he dropped the
light, which exploded and show-
ered sparks onto nearby cotton. I
The watchman turned in the
alarm.
El Dorado, according to le-
gend, was an imaginary country
in South America, fabled to be
very ric hin gold and precious
r "
Phone 4-3517
NaamQakettle
arWAiKiK
0
“24
a
28
U. S. ARMY Chiet ot Staff Gen Matthew Ridgway (left), USAF
Chief of Staff Gen. Nathan Twining, and Maj. Gen. Edgar C.
Erickson, chief of the National Guard bureau, discuss "Operation
Minuteman," the nationwide test alert of National Guard air
and ground units, at a conference in the Pentagon, Washing-
ton. Guardsmen organized into 5,600 Army and Air units in 2,400
mee ■ l
.p
Sug..
6,-
Sales and Service
8
Marjorie MAIN
Percy KILBRIDE
SHIRLEY BOOTH
ROBERT RYAN
IN
TIMER
owrxxorr-a-umud
5........ e
MARJIE MILLAR - ALEX NICOL 522
A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
IMEATRE
NEW YORK (fl—President Ei-
senhower today unveiled plans to
send a new atomic powered mer-
chant ship around the globe in a
dramatic demonstration of Amer-
ica's determination to win “a just
and lastin gpeace."
The new vessel, the President
said, will travel thousands of
miles without refueling and “will
demonstrate to people every-
where this peace-time use of a-
tomic energy, harnessed for the
improvement of human living.”
Eisenhower disclosed his inten-
tion to ask Congress for funds to
build the new ship in a speech
prepared for delivery at the an-
nual luncheon meeting of the
Associated Press at the Waldorf-
Astoria Hotel. About 1,300 of the
nation’s publishers and editors
were on hand for the start of
Newspaper Week in New York.
The President coupled his sur-
prise announcement of plans for
the atomic-powered ship with a
new plea for congressional enact-
ment of the administration pro-
gram to cut tariffs 15 per cent
over the next three years.
9nueit SAVINGS
Invest your Monthly Savings or Surplus Funds in the
MT. PLEASANT BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION
where their Safety will be Insured and they'll earn a
good return. Dividends paid semi-annually.
Hospital Notes
Memorial Hospital:
Admitted: Earnest Ellison and
Mrs. Sarah Jane Ryno.
Dismissed: Mrs. Edna Brannon,
Mrs. Chester Lambert, Mrs. Mary
Lucille Girly, and Mrs. Lilly
Brown.
Currey Hospital and Clinic:
Admitted: Mrs. Don Hensley,
Lone Star, medical.
Dismissed: Bobby Jack Cros-
son.
Mt. Pleasant Hospital and Clinic:
Admitted: Mrs. William Gilpin,
surgery; Henry E. Wilson, medi-
cal; Mrs. Jimmie Pierce, medical;'
Mrs. Charles Roach, Tyler, medi-
cal; Melva Sue Easley, Talco,
medical; Mrs. Maud Smith, medi-
cal; Wanda Mae Knight, Scrog-
gins, medical, and C. W. Belcher,
Talco medical.
Dismissed: Melva Sue Easley,
Robert Culpepper, Mrs. Jewel
Maxwell, Corbett Huff and Lee
C. Johnson.
? ? ?
TIMER
mWRWUMRRW'-
not mention Israel by name, its
anti-Israeli intent was clear.
The resolution on nuclear
weapons was sweeping. It called
for an end to production, ex-
perimentation and use of nuclear
and thermonuclear weapons and
effective international control to
carry out such a prohibition.
The delegates agreed to leave
the decision whether to hold an-
other conference next year to the
five sponsoring countries—India,
Pakistan, Ceylon, Burma and In-
donesia.
Following up his bid Saturday
for direct talks with the United
States, Chou told the closing ses-
sion:
“China and the United States
should sit down and ease tension
in the Taiwan (Formosa) area.
“This should not in the slight-
est degree, however, affect the
exercise by the Communist Po-
jle’s Republic of China of its sov-
ereign right in the liberation of
Taiwan.”
Thief Forgets To
Pick Own Pockets
DALLAS —A thief stole
$290 from a printer’s coat pocket
at his shop last week. He also
took some work clothes from a
locker room.
The printer looked around the
locker room and found a pair of
soiled trousers. He decided the
thief must have changed clothes 1
Chou
(Continued from page 1)
peace—an oblique reference to
Red China’s demands for a seat
in the world organization. It was
the closest the conference came
to backing Peiping on that score.
2. Economic cooperation among
the Asian-African nations "on the
basis of mutual interest and re-
spect for national sovereignty.”
3. Cultural understanding a-
mong nations through coopera-
tion. This stemmed from the reso-
lutions condemning colonialism
and racialism.
4. Full support for the princi-
ple of self-determination “of peo-
ples and nations so set forth in
the charter of the United Na-
tions.” The conference agreed
on a seven-point blueprint for
coexistence, including opposition
to collective pacts designed “to
serve particular interests of any
big powers.”
57
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED
—Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Richey,
Monticello Road, announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Miss Billie Janet Richey, to
Randall L. Faulk, son of Mr. and
Mrs. O. L. Faulk of Winnsboro.
Miss Richey is a member of
the senior class of the Mt. Pleas-
ant High School, and the pros-
pective bridegroom is a graduate
of the Winnsboro High School,
and attended East Texas State
Teachers College, Commerce.
—EA
sifi
Eleven Killed in
Al genian Clashes
ALGIERS, Algeria (fl—Scatter-
ed weekend clashes between
French security forces and guer-
rilla bands resulted in IT deaths
in troubled Algeria as Moslem
faithful began the observance of
Ramadan, their holy month.
Eight Algerians died in fight-
ing with the French and two
were found bound, their throats
cut by unknown assailants. One
French paratroopers fell in battle-
with guerrillas In northern Al-
geria.
a o o
KENEDY, Tex. (fl — A night
watchman’s yen. for a cup of cof-
fee resulted in a flash fire that
caused $150,000 damage at a cot-
ton warehoure here, authorities
said.
The blaze in the east section of
the Kenedy Compress Co, early
yesterday destroyed or damage
1,800 bales of cotton and damaged
14,000 square feet of warehouse.
Firemen from Kenedy, Karnes
(Continued from page 1)
up would be the first since Jan-
uary of 1954 when Dulles met
with Soviet Foreign Minister
Molotov and British and French
foreign policy chiefs in an un-
successful conference on German
and Austrian problems.
No target date for a meeting
with Russia has been set but June
was mentioned as a possible
meeting time, provided all de-
tailed arrangements can be com-
pleted by then. Officials general-
ly expect the site to be some-
where in Europe.
Jersey can be used to mean a
breed of cattle, a fine wool yarn
or a close fitting woolen shirt.
((nn
E
He is your qualified Local Insurance Agent, and a good man to know.
Like your doctor or lawyer, your Local Agent is a professional man whose success depends
on his ability, experience and personal integrity.
i 5. Support for the “courageous i call for a peaceful settlement
there. Though the resolution did
m stones.
The Local Agents below meet these requirements. That's why you can be sure when you
T. (. Walker & Company Insurance «
AAAAAAAAAAAA--AAAAAA-AA
Awnings
Canvas or Metal
Manufacturers of Venetian
Blinds.
Renovation of Blinds.
Rug Cleaning
For estimates call or write
COOPER BLANKENSHIP
1615 Texas Ave. Phone 32-1841
Texarkana, Texas
----------------;
' TWI^l x -- -- -—----
WArnErCOLon ' srereopMoNI SOUND
diana Lynn-tab Hunter ®
...HIWUORW E RHUKRIMS tWAMEFDoNS"e
C.MM / . muwIIOW WARNER BROS.
Mrs. Stephenson
Hostess Friday To
Oak Grove H-D Club
Mrs. Ralph Stephenson was
hostess Friday to the Oak Grove
Home Demonstration Club
In the absence of the president
and vice president, the opening
exercises were left off the pro-
gram and the meeting was turn-
ed over to Mrs. Gladys Kolander,
who gave a demonstration on
“How to Organize and Plan Your
Sewing.”
Mrs. Kolander and six mem-
bers were served iced tea and
prune cake. The next meeting
was set for May 13, at the home
of Mrs. Dean Shumate.
Custom-made Road Signs and ;
Truck Lettering, Ornamental ;
Iron, Chain Link Fence. No ;
Money Down, 36 Months to ;
Pay.
—
I WARNER BROS
ROBERT
MITCHUM
TERESA
Wright
ammemmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmnnmmmnnnnnmmnmmmememasmnnennnAAAAAAA
888000000000010000099999%0N
Got A
Your. FE
Got A
Your.
Got A
Your. "T
---*000009000
Got A
Your.:E
8860000000040109900000000
a
9882
8.
EAnn*.e0a S
L-
Minuteman L
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 28, Ed. 1 Monday, April 25, 1955, newspaper, April 25, 1955; Mount Pleasant, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1460398/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.