Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 27, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 17, 1962 Page: 2 of 6
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Tuesday. April 17. 196:
MT. PLEASANT. TEXAS.
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38
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Pitchers Gives It to Batters
A witches brew . .
to. discuss it ”
magic
Mysterious ledgerdemain
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is no other explanation
h
General Manager
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EASTER SAVINGS
for VALUE DAY
• gevemment, « -
gvearo cam 1DLE
=e
STRAW HAT WEIK
' S()F"I TERRY
1004; COTTON WASH ‘N WEAR
SPRING PRINTS!
WASH CLOTHS
APRIL 16-22
.1
20 for 1.00
ASS R TED STRIPES
1’
1(O)L 1DME
BED PILLOWS
21
IAR(F if \ 24 SIZE
2.99 each
. MATCHING LID COVERS '
Z
1.66
k
REC. 1’LAR 3.98 EACH
$ )
)
1
2 for 1.00
f )
2 for 49c
ea. 2.99
. . 5 for 1.00
0
4 for 1.00
2’
Ml
/ 1.
te
. 199
See $ Hear
L. ]
Nylons - Panamas - Bangkoks - Bokus
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the program mest contrtbute $1 1
for each $9 received from the #“
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3 for 1.00
SIZES 5 TO 10
Ji
Regular
3.98
r 1 ■
7
4
I
1
The
• 8
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4
100’ COTTON. PLISSE
MEN'S SHORT PAJAMAS . .
201
ILA 4
CNennel 6
Tundpinpn 17
, zdn -adapmm.
Regular
1 911
MEN’S 100G BANLON .
STRETCH.
SOCKS
3 for 2.00
REGULAR 1.00 PAIR BY
EAMOUS MAKER
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Ai
■
BEAUTY MIST"
SEAMLESS
MEN’S SHORT SLEEVE WASH ‘N WEAR
WHITE DRESS SHIRTS
NYLON HOSE
88c pair
3 pairs 2.55
RECLLAR 1 on pair
k
2,)
e
Kv t
K s
Garland - Centredent . Cannes
Slyl , 593 • 7.95 - 11.95
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• A
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• BUTTON-DOWN or SHORT SPREAD COLLARS
• CHOOSE EROM 4 STYLES AND FABRICS
• CUFFED BUTTON TRIMMED, OR VENTED
SLEEVES
2 yds. 1.00
36" WIDE
I
Home Demonstration
Agent's Notebook |
MRS RORBYE BYED NUSS
t
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i.
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y
*X
i T,
SIZE 21 x 4< STRIPED
BATH TOWELS.....
MOULDEI FOAM RUBBER
CUSHION FILLERS.
70 x 90 MULTI-STRIPE 100'.' COTTON
SUMMER BLANKET
LARGF 14 x 15 “QUICK KLEAN"
DISH CLOTHS.....
LARGE ir PLASTIC
PLACE MATS......
M 1! “r
•a
with a furtive look tiehind him horsepower as 28 boilers on al
lest Richards be lurking in the similar ship 20 years ago
WESTERN STRAWS
by Resistol
See the Finest Collection of West
ern Straws Ever Shown I Mt?
Pleosdnt,
5.95 - 6.95 - 10.95 - 12.50
1
.a:
L
BOY’S WASH N WEAR
100" COTTON
SWORT SLEEVE
SPORT SHIRTS
’ 1.59 or 2 for 3.00
SIZES 6-18
Paul Rich
Schools which participate in
I
Eight hollers on the luxury
liner France provide as much
The pitching staff isn't saying
We're not supposed to talk
about it" said Dick Farrell,
It's a beautiful pitch," said creature on the floor He drop
Craft It's sort of a change o‘ ped a bath towel over it and
I pace that does something It's ' pimped up and down as hard as
i swamp beside the Potomac
had to be reclaimed and filled
DEGULAR 3 25 EACH BY FAMOUS MAKER FROM OUR REGULAR
STOCK. SIZES 14 TO 17 __
he could Then he found he’d
kicked the stuffing out of one of
100’ NYLON DEEP PILE
ROYAL MEDALLION"
f ' ,
NO RAT MAN
DES MOINES (P - A bat got
TIME tn change over from your spring felt to a comfortable Resistol
Summer Straw TIME to choose from one of the most complete
selec tions of colorful, interesting good looking straws now in our
stock We have a number of straw hat. styles that will suit you
perfectly and be smart to wear at any hour "around the clock",
Take TIME out now and buy your new RESISTOL STRAW.
But Craft apparently was not
bound by the code of secrecy.
“ You put the ball between
your thumb and the tips of your
fingers off it.
"Then you kind of slip it off
the second joint of your fingers
and the fat part of your thumh."
The slip theory is as good as
any to explain the fine showing
of the castoff-dominated Hous-
ton pitching ptaff. In fact, tnere
potion from outer a-re that has
enabled the Houston Colt pitch-
ers to hold the enemy to just
eight runs and 27 hits in five
, games’
Will, it has been a mystery,
was 1 1,388, making
amounting to $6,609,245
to Texas students last
amounted to 83,595,215
NEW YORK IP — Is it bi ack ; shadows “Paul doesn’t want us
ards a long time deviser
It's called "the slip.” not to
be confused with the twist
loan a masters degree in Rus) ess in order to build the Lincoln i
Loans Admnistration n 1922 He calls ... . „ ,
vear ..... . I Memorial in Washington D (
-ea Rock Springs his legal residen
.*1
457 )
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i ce, although he lives in nearby
Arlington, Va
nemEurA M
Ehkg
f-d-4
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something like a knuckler It
sinks but you can control it
much better and vou can throw
| it much harder ”
How is it thrown’
L"
teu
100'. RAYON ACE-TATE
LADIES
PANTIES
WHITE ONLY
sh. co-chairman, presided overI
the meeting Mrs । H Walsh
organization leader gave a nl
port on the standard 4 11 clul
qualifications. J
Selecting Buttons
if possible, homemakers wi l
sew should plan to choH
button* when they select theu
fabrics. If this is not possible
take a 12-inch square of the
fabric and the pastern ehielopis -
along when shopping for thi
buttons This will provide are
adequate setting to study p
sible buttons and to apply 1he
art principles in making a finE
al choice
11,000 Texas
Students Join
Loan Program '
BY TEX EASLEY
Associated Press Special
Service
WASHINGTON (P- More than
11,000 students tn 67 Texas col-
leges and universities have bor-
rowed funds under the National
Delense Student Loan program
since its inception in early 1959
until last'June 30
A report issued by the Llealth
Education and Welfare Depart
ment shows that 238,092 stud-
ents in 1,410 institutions through
out the nation availed themselv i
es of the loan plan Under it
they are required to begin re
payments one year after com-
Jetion of college work, pay 3 per
cent interest and may take 101
years to settle the debt Their
loans totaled $130 million
Inereased participation by
Texas students in the program
is indicated by the fact that in.
the 1960-1961 school year 7.805
took out loans. The total from
the start in February of 1959
his youngster's stuffed tays
He called a professional ex couPie
terminator to deal with the bat _weddine.
ii-
1
x 36 Rugs
2.99
Leaders Organization Meeting
The leaders who attended the
4 H Leadership workshop at
Lakeview Methodist Assembly
will meet Tuesday, April 24, at
Nevils Chapel Community Cen-
ter at 7:30 p.m with all the
leaders in the county. Refresh-
ments will be served by the okU
er 4-H members.
This meeting is for all sub-
ject matter and organizational
leaders of 4-H clubs and people
who are interested in the 4-H
program.
Leaders attending the work-
shop were Mrs T. H. Walsh
Mrs Douglas Greenery, Mts. W
G Martin. Mrs Lenord Banks
Mrs E H. Dunn and Mrs Hnr
old Smith.
4-H Clubs
The Titus County 44 Council
met Saturday in the council
room at City Hall, Dianne Wal-
SR
I umm
1 ENGAGEMENT TOLD —
; Mi and Mrs Fred Black-
ton State College
_______I I
II
SI
Australian sheep supply one
third of the world's wool
There are more thunder-
storms in the interior of Flori-
da than any other location in the
United States
WITH “ SELF CONFORMING” COMFORT
AROUND THE CAPITAL 1
When debate on the Admint I
strat ion's trade program comes I
up soon, congressmen wanting 3
to water it down may turn to a I
M "The Slip" as Used by Colts'
-"Tn? /ad
(HNIINF .MOULDED LATEX
ard Route 2. announce the
engagement < f their daugh-
ter, Donna. to Donald Car-
rell. son of Mr and Mrs
Robert Carrell Route 2
The bride-elect is a senior
at Mount Pleasant Senior
High School The (ruom-
to-be is a student at Arling-
"1. ‘
<
2 for »5
SAFETY RECORD HONORED-LoAe Star Ster I Com-
pany’s- prrrtucton planmine department icreiv l an
award for working 501,000 mm hours without a disabling
injury 'the department rmplvs mre than 200) in
scheduling all product ion facilities, maintaining inven-
toner and shippini’ finished products Pictured with the
plaqut are Sup wi visor Jim Reynolds and Foreman
Horace Crane Utam- accpted the award fr m Reyn-
olds on behalf of the departments emplovees
I all right that is until today
I when Manager Harry Craft let
the secret out before the Colts
headed for the Polo Grounds to
28 meet the New York Mets in the
v*o . first dash ef- the two new Na-
} _ tional League teams
7" its a new pitch devised by
plan a June
„AA‘
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modest, quiet speaking West
Texan for ammunition
He is O R Strackbein, chair
man of the Nation wide Com-
mittee on I mport -Export Policy
An analysis he prepared on the
trade bill has been placed in
the Congressional Record by
Rep O C Fisher San Angelo
The analysis is so long it is
published’in three separate see
tions and. Fisher said the study
on wages and foreign trade
■ goes below the surface ”
Strackbein, a> former Commer-
ce Department trade commiss
toner in Cuba and Venezuela
and later an economist consult-
ant for unions affiliated with
the American Petfratton of Farr
bor represents various indus-1
lues especially sheep and cat-
1‘- ’
He is a registered lobbvist
and as such, appears before ।
various congressional commit 1
ties usuallv testving on ef-
tuts of import*
,__I ho organization he now rep
rerente-i-his-ewn creafton and
he’s the only executive — aside
from the board of directors
which meets once a voar to dis.
ill’s policies of the 125 commit
tee members They represent 60
industries
Born on a ranch near Freder
ickehurg. Strackbein lived for a
while near Sonora attendedi
Kerrville High School He re
caivd a B A degree from the
I’niversitv of Texas in 1920 anil
l t‘f
-
Sam B Holl, Jr.
Candtakt For *
Congress
las Gongressional
. ’ DNtriet
A
On
I: KTKETV
- P m “aP
, 1,34
into the children’s bedroom at
' the home of interior decorator
Philip Lane.
Lane thought he spotted the1
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Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 27, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 17, 1962, newspaper, April 17, 1962; Mount Pleasant, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1484011/m1/2/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.