Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 259, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 8, 1962 Page: 4 of 8
eight 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:
/
Thursday. March 1. 1962
MT. PLEASANT. TEXAS
tWMI) Oil.
a
At Hleasant Aailg TEimes
SCIENCE AT
WORK
GIDEON’ ON the (0
Paddy
W hen
at
offie en
, for best results
monotonous
for longer than
Price, spice and everything nice!
I
.1.
। n ■
h
i
■ I V
ChevuHNova
J .
s9
Call
1
i •
• 4
।
A TEXAN TO PUT
fa-- 2
5
TEXAS FIRST
I
TV Schedule
HEAR
I
>
Don Yarborough
—=s
=
Till KNOW
a.
FOR GOVERNOR
e
A
TONIGHT
I
BOB SANDLIN MOTORS
KLTV-TV
I KIDY
CHANNEL 7
3
HIGHWAY 67, EAST
PA 4-3656
(—
Wealb r
By Mort Walker
1 r
Sha
l
Fawk
N
6
k
YA
J
\
4
I
A
\
/
DAILY CROSSWORD
1
1‘ .*
I
tet.
r
Vast
Buz Sawyer
y2
I,
-
hi TV - (HANNEL 7
i
ke
i:
TUI RSDAY
;1
I
Sh
LJ
g
l
2
3
♦
5
6
>O
Mu N
L
Blondie
■ 2
II
n
15
18
17
19
1
"A-*
20
22
24
•ORN •
25
is
1?
• a’.
2222
29
L
- ■
31
$a
53
55
*
p ' i
lb
37
31
•O- tm
",e
auerta
sdn M-ke .
1
22
43
45
46
Barney Google and Snuffy Smith
47
Miler
—
3-8
ITS
1
t
‘
•r I
K
7
. )
1
Weher Widuw
{l.
i
7
. )
ONE, EVERYBODY
• I
‘cue iunit
/ $
11
AN
Rewert
Y nz
Fallout Shelters
Manufactured by
Lone Star Steel Co.
Det form
< ontnually
iinder conditions of stress,
rhedules should not be mote
severe than two hours on and
1wo hours off
I
l
1
crowded streets without ever
colliding
A -
F .
:2
Michigan Whit* Cedar
Stockade Split Picket Fence
Provide* Needed Privacy
6' Height Cedar Post*
$3.00 perfoot -
sleep
And
don't
jobs
-e
Everybody's
Furn. Store
PA 4 3636
sts
40
tut
IN
80
"" Ne-
ta Apru
• AI
2 Poplar tree
3 Territorial
divison
/G R >
4 Hair wave
i shortened)
5 Before
6 Preposition
7 Prok eed at
great speed
8. Greek
letter
9 Defeated
contestant
10 Removed
from office
14 Stain
14 Before
noon
21 Mongrel
22. Samuel’s
teacher
I Bib i
DON T
HEM AN IMW,
. WOMAN
’« • le l
? a, | lav
|M ou Vuleo
14 aq Vwerr
t- M Mint
i Here •
I 36 N}W:
4 tm Pevtte
4 o In Ki
ha
mita"
for
22
22
Lis M
M. r
M
02
,9
126
Tom Mae
1*1
M Recognized
40 Feudal
payment
" for
death
42 Female
sheep
44. Compaas
point
( abr. )
2
30
777
222
«t < hene •
pt Alt
Phen t re
Fitih Ne
I d.bl. 'Yu l
(R
-
/ S0 LONG,
\ J0E. )
3rd Street, Mt. Pleasant, Texas.
MT PLEASANT TIMES PUBLISHING CO-
W. N. FUREY. PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER
WM N FUREY. JR., VICE PRES. AND ASSOC. EDITOR
42
(Eaa qem I
11
I
I
a
Redwood Fencing
Any Style
r
■
■r a
eg’
|
10:30 p m
Chain Link Fencing
4' - 79c; 5' 89c
Installed
Color Weve (Aluminum
Strips
thing less—once you get your hands
on one at your Chevrolet dealer’s!) 4
is
This, naturally, will dismay some of Mr Goldberg's old
friends. They are also dismayed because it appears that
the Labor Department may be
union help m certain jobs. The
PAW-I SEEN
SOMETHIN' IN TH’
MAIt-ORDER
CATALOG I SHORE
WOULD LOVE -
TO GIT md
ACRONS
1 Quebec
peninsula
6 In advance
1 Theater
attendant
12 Descriptive
name
13 Steeples
15 Pant
16 Duration
17 Exclama-
tio of
disgust
19 Hawaiian
bird
20 Single unit
21 Large
waves
23 To project
24 Wing*
25. Grass blade
28 Sightess
29 stylish
30. Good friend
31 English
ruling
famy '
33 Cover
36 Alternative
word
37 Trash
receptacle
34 Gambling
game
39 Speed
- content
41 U.S upper
house
43. Signal
nystem for
location
45 River to
North Sea
44 <’.lowed
47. Wide-
mouthed
jugs
DOWN
1. Zest
.6
N
(A
prohibited from employing
Bureau of Labor Standards.
•ot ...
vm
mmuor
wdueua
-. -ucrclaw a "*mumidananaa
THINKING INSECTS?
9
-y-L
]
w
24R
5,=
23.
3-9
K 9
■
/9 L
N
" ; =-
z
.7
7 $ 1 w, Mt Re*
T a 1 *r Ki es re
•sa HLse?
I 3 * Sing Ahin
7
/p
ITaT-te *h*
7:2 M.' 7am R-p-t
72 Mte’w
. * :29 Va-4 Texa M-prt
jhaw 1~*y stw
*e MV Whew
Sale Phhy" Y-r Meurh
14 0 T Fru- »• Righ
of KiIry
1
1 *-
I”
I
I
!
rH
TE
1
MT. PLEASANT
outside. Stin another: tongh hut gentle one-pince
Mono-Plate rar springs that outdo many a bigxt 1 car
for quiet comfort. Any wonder Chevy II won ( ar । fe
magazine’s 1962 Engineering Excellence award hands
down? The wonder would be if you settled for any-
h' f! xlt-v SY
dEjEm
""44
e ■ ' :3 IM
some 34 mm m
2)
A ‘ a
A 3
■ --an=srae
joii do sleep
least two hours
• • onat Headhnes
I' oedae Re--rt
O hour perods
for instance, is supposed to be an unbiased operation whose
findings are used by labor and management alike If parti-
san unionists operated this bureau, it is easy to see how bias
might slip in, and the House passed a bill to prevent this I
The Senate has acted to prevent union employees from !
inve tigating labor union reports on their welfare funds
Again, this is an area in which conflict of interest would '
be serious.
------—______
as the
matter
"flares"
of space
moon at
an hour
=23
8
BLMJN - LCEJMPGGM
------ oquolei A WisE MAN KNowS
। LONOlE- wH OONT YOU)
EVER MAKE SAROINEf-
OMELETS ? )--——
7* V ■ I
"VWig t
51
~leep
It s hard for anyone tv per-
i rm cnitcal jobs wed when
1/ have been workng on a
our awake schedule
KTAI TV -4 HANMH •
THXARKNA • SHRFVFPORr
NEW YORK
23. James
I
p riod
25 Black
t mr-
ma-
line 4
26 Ancient
Hgypt
> ilrr
27 In
Berlin,
28 stripe
30 En-
closurea
32 Roman
six
33. Rental
■ contract
34. Bury
35 Active
-people
2
*
(Pd Pol Adv. Paid for
by Don Yarborough for
Gove mor Committee.
Charles Caldwell, Chair
man.)
A MR
: v» - like this could have
ne , that's who!
i.w price were exactly
. A . ■■ \ <1 he} tgn
• c! of : Len |< u- new
< for your noney.
j - .1 i- Ju- one
• i i kon! . by I । In r
J i.l, easy Lu pulk
*de** ' 3
\ 7
L wVi**
’! (‘‘The 4;yidhx I tiht
12 12 The Wither ► arm
20 Dateline
113 the Wori l urne
1 0n Paanwere
I 30 Hot F’artv
2 no The Mjilitinire
2 15 FFS New-
• By Fred Losswell
WHATS WRONG WIF)
th PLOW YE GOT ? ‘
V
ane Weather
l( *!• W
m.m tenas
tip ISDAY
l l, >- . > || -na
rir room ard Fho Giant
K-um Fer l’ady
Hei ywrw
lh.‘ J inh‘ •
• । । [/ • . A- -
lllat S ii L Lur .
4 io l’ aar e,- r:
4 If tte-Kriwkley Repwrt
x 6.-2368
- —
iqtzems heh
dhiuegec- h ■■ sL .
H*d>d--cotfa :
"hN- ~ . x „r- '■
Tlu .■‘portu Chery II Nora Convertible and tpri'jWy ^-Duor Hcdan
Martin Marietta
pick out meteor
SSgn.*.‘ :
By Chic Young
NO ONDER)
s-e NE' (• . /
7 en Twtuy NW
4 26 Tlwy in Shrevepert
7 v* NW
* • z Frutny in Tesarkana
H:2 Trewy NW
9 if Ssy When
9:30 ri«y Ymur Hunrh
T"ioThe Prireta Kight
ie:he Comrentrnikon
11 if* Truth or Cunapurne
11 30 Ie Wie Yow
H U Newe
so: North Fifth, longview. Texas
ibineu-es of the Shin
Skin Canrer
I asn 1 72 IN Hours by Appeintmevt
E
#. -
$1,,
5 56 Weather Windw
6:0 New
■ 5:10 H Iy Brtn*ty Rtvpor
Hr KlHarr
*:1 Hatet
♦ >.*• Mw ahetg wtrh - Miteh
la «m Ihaebne News
14-45 pentine Wenther
1:2 igHline Sorta
Uncle Sam, Employer
Now that the Administration has adopted a policy to
permit and even encourage. Federal employees to join unions
and negotiate employment conditions, it has found itself in
some puzzlement
Secretary of Labor Goldberg, for instance, has found
himself going before the American Federation of Govern-
ment Employees and arguing against the union shop As
much of Mr. Goldberg’s previous life was devoted to fur-
thering union shops in industry, there was some gasping as
he adopted arguments usually heard from "Right-to-Work ‘
law advocates. Right-to-work laws in about a score of states
forbid making union membership a condition to getting or
holding a job, and guarantees the right to join to all who so
desire.
In government, Mr Goldberg said, the unions must win
members by their responsible performance, and cannot ex-
pect Uncle Sam to strong-arm employees into joining and
paying dues.
“This is not a handicap, necessarily’’ Mr. Goldberg said.
And he painted ‘in glcwmg terms the happy state of a union
in which all members are voluntarily members, and who
therefore can be expected to take a real interest' in what the
union is up to.
' Very often, he said, “even unions that have won the
union shop frankly admit that people who come into that
group do not always participate in the same knowing way
as people who come in through the method of education and
voluntary, adherence."
12:05 Farm Dat
122 Kay-Tel Callime
i " Jan Murray
I 'M Lmmretta Yomg Thentre
2 Yomns Or Melone
IM Vrem Thme Rosta
A Make Rmm Vw Dmady
a Her- H-Jr—a
sat NEws
4 Fepiv Chstre v
4i Kap tAuemer» Ehw-
8d dumgle Theater
4 :44 Fmry Mr mn
.Lmuluu—i C-J__
ViNnge
Murpcia r». k *
Ienmner wsth
, i ife
impresari for presentations
in Sweden. Norway. Den-
mark . Finland, Iceland, Ger-
many, Belgium, Luxe m-
bourg the Netherlands, Italy,
Argentina and Uruguay
T ’
wlw 73.
a 1M GOih TO NAKE -
■ . SOMETHING BLO~DE
B ~EvEMAKES—-
■ a §-9p %= —
-,4
- •
- Sos
Ever wonder what a mos-
quito thinks as it sink' its
feeding proboscis into your
arm, and you raise your
hand to retaliate?
Well its unlikely that in-
sects have . any individual
consciousness, as we under-
stand it. says Dr. R E Snod-
grass of the Smithsonian in
stitution. They are appar- .
ent'y governed by some sort
of incomprehensible ano un-
conscious instinnct— not like
human or animal instinct
either
The queen or mother ap- '
parently governs insect so-
cteties through some sort of
transmitted instincts, which I
do not leave the subjects of
the colony individual free-
dom. Dr Snodgrass sug- J
gests
Science has yet to define
what this insect instinct is. I
and how it operates, but
many feel that it must exist
It is hard to imagine insects
as mere machines when you
scan their varied activities. ,
Dr Snodgrass adds t would
be like imagining automo-
biles driving themsekes on I
houizht i < ithat
1, ! Ch. v rolet
i i ' . . •••■ .i li
TO M.EI I’. Dhi | 4%•
Mi >t lo\- । an .0! ,, 1 .
e”!v 'ix h :' 1 ni, • '
and the samne go - im s! •
MOON SHARKS
For 10 days each month,
while the earths shadow
shields the moon from the
brilliance of the sun. a tele-
scope with an electronic eye
is watching the moon for •
meteorite collision'
The electronic sys—uith
out the human frailty of be
coming bored and «
fu) at a monotononus i > i
expected by scientists •
। m r l>
fla-t, ' 1;
fragment '
drike the
E. S Farrington, M.D.
w B Met ash. M l).
K
T.
t----—-*t
XII
• ..f n M
Chayefsky’s Gideon is go-
ing on tar tlung travels
in the seven weeks follow
mg arrival of the drama on
Broadway, production right's
were 'obtained bv overseas
Spe the I ■ ir ('hei / 11 at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's
W ho t v I ■
so ’ .1 >1
1 .. .
v n > 1
fom .
je . d,
1. Ar 1. Tex
4z, 4 hasnel if
Raw hwte
No t, 6,6
v.. H •
tley-Brinkley Revort
I Re;-
»t l'p
kSLA TV - CHANNFL 12
SHREVEPORT. LA.
' (s
f ie The Weather
6:46 Deu Vw-nt with the
6 ; 3 Young Pewpien Courert
7 $e The Rtoh ( mminus Shew
KJ Inewwtar (ienvrat
' Kearrirg I»nony Kar
|»» n e ( k N~ws
*h 1w Th* Weniher
Muvtetimne
====emeeedW
■
14. zasme ■’ z0smemnmerasowm e ewm..
ETRsTV - CHANNEL 3
MHO At PORT, LA.
THLRSDAY
3 »• TV' Thre $t-ges
• M Yi hiar
6 ts Ne . 4 ' mr? Westher
6 1 •' K, rt F.vi«
6 i Al - Fveninz Repert
6 (rexi- and Farritt
Mj ThrwesSons
,Marviet r
* Yvez Metan (a Btmgdwa""
,» nq New» sme Weather
I. ‘A Afu Finat Kevrt
it# ko Nr-rt Wrep-Lp
1ias »k- Late Mevw
W Mivm-, N-wa IlMl
Sien ort
W eFRHAV
e a t-t Pan-ru
( ' {
—Ai. 1 - ^GOtlTTHC 000R,C COSILY
horLomFFOL0WD5BUADLI.MROSMIO ;
wGGOTE n ehOr X 01 TRE JIPAWESt noilcE. t
.LW WUT UNTLR w
W°h b AKRT51: 63
88225
"ga6
$2 fr?1***
13a me ""
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here’s how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
to LONGFELLoW
On* totter simply stands for another tn thia sample A la umed
for th* three 1/8. X for the two O*a. etc. Single letters, apos-
trophies, the length and formation of the words are all hinta.
Each day the code totter* are different
A Oryptogram Quotation
AzspDPCJ THTPJW EMHLTMN
..... a ■ - ■ re-
D T M „B V Z Z P D, O C J W B DC NM-
men an Au Fot
claims
M 9/ E.o nrta
Ki -al-
EA 1 - jub me-n
2______
aan
F ’ — f 1 m tma' Mg rwaua
ka . Lzm Ywueg t Metme
_ rmamupaa, '
Eg .
6 2*30 Amra" Notnia
Ma mLm wes Mer
ggkjA Em MarAMverr -*mna
f se Primrew nn TV , Giant
KW scnaenat
WMEM2 25 “ man Bemn
U. Yn 1.1
tan Ha note ’ and
at N.w-tand
T - al ---
emn Cornera
•Matotoe
r
' -n--,
I • -fdv also fmds some
11 mteresting point- abut
• $ The- FHe- of Night
4 'Ml • haunel I » New*
l »«t, f । rrma A 11
Beetle Baiie-
I--
! Knh II "5
- orars-
-Wflw Fant Teda, H-g-t
ttmaarh Far shem
113m Tmurrw, Headisa
U m Ww* rrr
FRIDAY
( -G T . "u
M-rmnu Nei-*t
■ J. me"x J ktr 1 to t.
Miwn,ne bev-rt
‘ M Ntel Ne .
cbr '
u • Sizw oft
FRIDAY
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
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. 42, No. 259, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 8, 1962, newspaper, March 8, 1962; Mount Pleasant, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1483979/m1/4/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.