Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 237, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 31, 1951 Page: 4 of 4
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Mt. Pleasant, Texas, Daily Times Wednesday Evening, January 31, 1951
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STEREOSCOPIC
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Theatre
Tuesday and Wednesday
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KILLED IN CAR CRASH
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LIDE’S
Beall’s Value Sell-A-Bration
105 East 3rd St,
Phone 363
Night 983-J
SPECIAL
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PURCHASE
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At One Amazingly Low Price
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VALUES TO 98c
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O. B. GOOLSBY MOTORS
U. S. Highway 67
Phone 820-821
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QUALITY MERCHANDISE
Eisenhower Reaches
Washington To Make
Report About Europe
INSTRUCTIVE...
ENTERTAINING
Tiny Narrow Gauge
Trains On Last Trip
For San Juan Express
TEXAN
THEATRE
Political Committee
In UN Vote China
Aggressor In Korea
mediate
forces.
First
Rubber Footwear
For Everybody
PLEASANT
Drive-In
Come As You Are
Relax In Your Car
Best Movies There Are
Bill Elliott
Richard Fiske
Luana Walters
..FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY
Cade Studio and Camera Shop
11
4
FULL COLOR
PICTURES
Alan Ladd
Mona Freeman
Charles Bickford
Due to the icy conditions of the
streets and highways, and the
danger of driving, the Pleasant
Drive-In Theatre will not show
this evening. Tomorrow night’s
showing will also depend upon
the weather conditions.
a
Bought Especially For This
Event Months Ago At A
Much Lower Price Than At
Today’s Market
All First Quality Goods On
Bolt—Not Remnants
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et
Great quantities of amber are
still used in the Orient, where it
is burned in Mohammedan wor-
ship at Mecca.
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Thursday and Friday
Branded
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approving votes.
India's Sig Benegal N. Rau,
who led the fight for its adop-
tion, declared the Asian bloc had
tried to halt what he termed the
march to disaster and its defeat
would cut off all negotiations
inith Red China.
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Tuesday and Wednesday
Right Cross
with
June Allyson
Dick Powell
Ricardo Montalban
Thursday and Friday
Across the Sierras
with
2.
In:
Imi
Tuesday and Wednesday
The Daughter of
Rosie O'Grady
with
June Haver
Gordon McRae
44c yc
* Combed Colored Balloon Cloth
* White Waffle Weave
* Printed Plisse
* Colored Dotted Swiss
* Vat Dyed Suitings
* Fine Combed Batiste
* Bleached Pinwale Pique
Fancy Sanf. Chambrays
* Checked & Striped Dimities
* White Combed Broadcloth
* New Spring Prints
♦ White & Colored Plisse
* High Count Poplins
* Solid Color Percales
* Fine White Oxfords
* White & Colored Organdies
* Bleached Combed Nainsook
^Standard on ROADMASTKK, optional at extra cost on other Series.
^Optional at extra cost—available on most models. (Not prceentlu
available in California or Massachusetts)
Specials, Supers and Roadmasters which set
new standards of all-round satisfaction.
New "white-gkow" instrument markings give
greater clarity at night. New glare-and-heat-reduc-
ing glass! tames the sunbeams in daytime driving.
New power gives the SPECIAL i ecord thrift and
performance. New double-depth Foamtex cushions
give the Rp ADM ASTER restful new luxury. New
fabrics smarten all interiors —and new ports em-
bellish the fenders of all Series.
Yes, there’s plenty new to thrill you in these spank-
ing new Buicks—but don’t overlook the tried-and-
true thrill of Fireball power—and Dynaflow Drive*
— and the unsurpassed smoothness of riding on
coil springs on every wheel. There is still no other
car in the world with these standout features.
Any way you size it up, the smart buy for '51
is Buick. Go see your Buick dealer now, and
find out what gospel truth that is.
/P
I
Standard equipment, accessories and trim illustrated
are subject to change without notice. -
WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM ___ • ' ----
“BEALL’S The RIGHT Way To Thrift”
8
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BIG SPRING, Tex. Jan. 31 (A)
—Mrs. S. F. Allred, 23, was kill-
ed today in the collision of a car
and a parked truck.
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Phone us your news items
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BOUNDING UP CHINESE
WASHINGTON, Jan. 31 (A_
Attorney General McGrath today
announced a roundup of Chinese
aliens in Now York City, includ-
ing a large number it believes to
be active Communists.
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LAKE SUCCESS, Jan. 31. (A)—
The United Nations political com-
mittee labelled Communist China
an aggressor in Korea at an emo-
tion-charged session last night,
but left wide open what new
steps, if any, to take against the
Peiping regime.
Forty-four delegates including
those of Britain, France, Canada,
the Latin-American states and
all of America’s Atlantic pact Al-
lies, shouted “yes” as their names
were called.
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ALAMOSA, Colo., Jan. 31 (A)—
Two ancient and tiny trains chug-
ged out of Alamosa and Durango
this morning for the last trips by
the San Juan Express.
When one arrives here and th.
other at Durango late today reg-
ular passenger service ver a
narrow guage railroad in the
United States will be practically
at an end.
The runs by the funny-looking
old-fashioned stean. locomotiv s,
pulling luxurious miniature ears,
are being abandoned after a long
fight.
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RAYBURN GETS ‘WHITE HOUSE’ GAVELHouse Speaker
Sam Rayburn (D-Tex) (standing left) laughs heartily at the
White House in Washington as President Truman gives him a
gavel fashioned from timber taken from part of the White
House erected in 1817. The ceremony was in honor of Rayburn’s
breaking all time record for tenure on speaker’s chair. Watch-
ing are Sen. Lyndon Johnson (D-Tex) and Miss Lucinda Ray-
urn 01 Bonham, Tex., the .speaker’s sister. (AP Wirephoto)
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'build-up of defense
scheduled a private luncheon
with the President to be follow-
ed by a session with the cabinet.
Tomorrow, he will meet with
Congress.
In the late afternoon, Eisen-
hower had an engagement to
meet with the executive body for
I the military committee of NATO
in the Pentagon.
. . . headed straight for compliments and
comfort in this low-dipping, moc-type shoe
with a notched tongue, anchored by buckle
and strap. In brown elk. Only $3 98
WNACE to face with this 1951 headliner—you know
k‛ that it has a fresh and sparkling beauty such
as you’ve never seen before.
There, sure enough, is a bumper—massive, strong.
There are 25 sturdy, stamped-steel grille bars-
mounted to “give” and come back unharmed.
There, boldly standing guard, are two stout and
stunning “bumper bombs”— and for good measure,
two more husky uprights flank the license plate.
There, in short, is beauty with a duty—to give the
finest front-end protection yet devised.
But that, friends, is only the beginning.
Proudly wearing this “push-bar” forefront,
you find a stellar line-up of
off, Eisenhower had
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Maine Woman Does
Comb Collecting
DOVER-FOXCROFT, Me., (A)
—Mrs. Ida Shrang is combing the
world for combs. Collecting
combs is her hobby and she has
set her goal at 1,000, but caring
for a home and four children
limits the amount of wrld-comb-
ing she can do personally.
Her existing collection of 374
covers virtually every American
period during the Past 200 years
and includes combs from Eng-
land, Italy, France and China.
Materials in the combs range
from bone and tortoise shell to
wood and split bamboo.
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WASHINGTON, Jan. 31, (/Pl-
General Dwight D. Eisephower
flew into Washington today to
report to President Truman and
Congress on his survey of Eur-
ope’s will and ability to oppose
Communist aggression.
The general’s four-engined
plane came into the National Air-
port this morning after a flight
from West Point, N. Y., where
Eisenhower spent last night.
For Eisenhower, the visit here
presents a big selling problem.
He must convince Congress, and
Americans in general, that more
United States troops are needed
to help defend Western Europe.
In his 21-day tour of Europe,
he apparently pretty well con-
vinced the European members of
I the North Atlantic Treaty Organ-
ization. of the urgency of an im-
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The communities in Southwest-
ern Colorado and Northwestern
New Mexico, served by the moun-
tain climbing trains, hav fought
for years to force the Denver &
Rio Grande Western to keep the
i trains running.
The trains, for many years
money losers, finally succumb d
when the Colorado public service
commission agreed to let the rail-
road stop service in this state.
The trains lost $80,000 last year,
the road contended.
For a while at least, one train
a day will run between Chama
and Dulce, where the line dips
into New Mexico. The railroad
later will ask for approval for
abandonment of this 30-mile run.
The railroad fought to keep
the historic 200-mile run in ser-
vice. In 1937, the railroad said it
spent $79,000 renovating the
wooden coaches with their plush
covered seats and brass fixtures.
The road put on a publicity cam-
paign to attract travelers over
the breath-taking mountain trip.
The tourists came, but, the rail-
men lamented, by automobile and
not by the San Juan Express.
No other car
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"I thank God," said,' United
States Delegate Warren R. Aus-
tin turning to embrace Britain’s
Sir Gladwyn Jebb, whose last-
minute support had swung many
wavering countries into line.
India, Burma, Russia, Poland,
Czechoslovakia, White Russia and
the Soviet Ukraine voted “no."
Afghanistan, Egypt, Indonesia,
Pakistan, Sweden, Syria, Yeman
and Yugoslavia abstained. Saudi
Arabia did not take part in the
vote.
Before the American. triumph,
marling the end of the hardest
fight the United States ever has
waged in the United Nations, the
committee trounced paragraph by
paragraph an Arab-Asian call for
a new peace appeal to Peiping.
It never got more than eighteen
DONALD O’CONNOR 1
GALE STORM 1
WALTER BRENNAN 1
, VINCENT PRICE 1
EVE ARDEN 1
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Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 237, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 31, 1951, newspaper, January 31, 1951; Mount Pleasant, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1483349/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.