Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 56, Ed. 1 Monday, May 30, 1960 Page: 4 of 6
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ALE.....J •' • •
LMT. PLEASANT, TEXAS
Monday. May 30. 1960
Time
COMPARE NOTES
ANOTHER INSTALMENT DUE ON OLD, OLD DEBT
DEFENDERS of AMERICA
identified "
The Union established a
T-V SCHEDULE
—: "
WIN!
60
*f
O
By Roy Crane
Bur Sawyer
A
Blondie
1
*
Barney Google and Snuffy Smith
A IT*1D
1 (
av-eren
9
Search Never Ends for
Missing U. S. Soldiers
Dr. Moore
Resumes Hike
Lee Soward, local highway
section foreman, reported the
new bridge over Sulphur-Riv-
er, north of Talco, would not
be opened to traffic until
sometime in September
Show
FOR SAI
furniture,
nany, 104
Has It Been
That Long?
( From Daily Times Files
of Ten Years Ago )
FOR REI
409 N. (
4-3534.
BUT, PAW -
THAR HAIN T NO
EATIN PLACE fl
IN HOOT IN y
HOLLER : 1
FOR SA1
bath, 2 ac
Daingerfie
call A. 1
4 2340
FOR SAL
trailer. F
Jefferson.
of thousands of military dead
honored this Memorial Day
OKAY SENIND us.
TRix?.
THEN A6 SOON AS
HE GETS AHEAP
HE WANTS TO STOP.
PLAVING: 7
FOR SAL
den-kitche
full baths
heat, dout
Sims Scho
stricted a
wich. Phi
nights PA
442 % LOA
ing combi
eating an
knotty pir
baths. Ma
fixtures, I
Central I
large pati
crew.
Of such deeds of danger
and detection is compiled the
story of the Graves Registra-
tion Services that have given
rightful names to 97 per cent
of the 281,982 recovered re-
. mains of the 360,819 Ameri-
cans who died to overseas
combat areas during the see-
ond World War / 1 |
The World War II identifi
cation record bettered that of
the 1917 ISIS conflict by one
half of one per cent. This
I QUIT:
ILL NEVER
PLAY WITH
YOU AGAIN
BEETLE!
DURN MY
HIDE !
THAR SHORE
AINT !
a large turnout
If you hadn’t planned to be present, maybe you’ll change
your mind. After all, where else can you buy a meal for 50
cents and wind up the evening as your own one-man beauty
contest judge?. _______
808 Saadi
with gar
ions. fenc
810 San
den garas
PA 4-3638
FOR REM
West 15th
Mrs J H
9 1960
I INTEREST
AND
PAMMEYT /
TEXA
FREE
lawn MM
of anv 1
America’
Two ho
(lbson a
plus 3% I
One ho
Mathis a
fan. 10.50
Good u
$39.95
Fear Show _
I» “ • • N-= Final
TUESDAY
NOT
Notice
the City <
enf will,
ina to be
in the Co
Hall beef
coive one
of land w
MI Plans
“Cie na
which tor
the Citv 1
further 1
the land
• the wnAot
men hid
-awes fl
bids.
I,M Gos
15 JUAN
AMIRET:
JUAN RAMIREZ! HE WEA BOSS OUT m
CALIFORNIA * LOOMED RENT AT ME! /
- * f
mRGu G.r
50 5
TV U.S. Marshal
Meets Real Thing
GHE CAR PULLS INTO THE SPACI
BESIDE HOMER AND TRI,
WOMER GASPS!
* Kat Smith Show
she The Tran
THERE S NOTH NG
LIKE THE
COMPAN ONSH P
OF A MAN
ANDHS — s An
FAITHFUL ) % ,
00G ,
--,—- PAW!!
HAPPY VO RE GOODER’N
BIRFDAY. MAW!) ARV ANGEL
I’M TAKIN YE OUT A
TO EAT AT ONE OF iAl S2
THEM HIGH-FALOOTINe AS
RESTERUNTS CO
1o so News Weather
19:44 MGM Plaghoum
FOR
6-Room 1
convenier
call or see
or Emory
- Father Knows Rest
8:0 The Danny Thomas
s sn The Ann Southern S
Tuesday night will be the occasion of another annual MS--
event, too.. The Kiwanis Club will sell pancakes from late *
afternoon until early evening. The result will be some of the EVE. Ae-ED WARS
most unusual batter-spreaders of the season, and some of EVEN AF T ER WVAKD
the highest paid waiters in the city, as Kiwanians make
merry while making money for club projects.
The whole evening will be one of enjoyment for people
of all ages. It’s a time for wholesome fun and enjoyment, and
a time which, based on previous years’ experience, will bring
ing graves registered and
marked as soon as military
possible after an action, and
the preservation of all signi-
ficant information in a sealed
bottled to be buried with the
casulty.
An Army chaplain in the
Philippines recommended the
greatest, boon to identifica-
tion, the metal disc Wearing
of the tag became manda-
tory shortly after the United
States entered World War I
The chaplain also insisted
upon assigning to a central
agency the task of receiving,
correlating and preserving
records of death The Quarter)
master Corps became this
agency for the army.
The record of American
deaths in the battle for Ba-
taan was preserved by the
devotion of a chaplain. The
original register of the fal-
len was hidden in the massive
walls of Corregidor fortress
At war’s end, they had dis-
appeared But a chaplain
made a duplicate register and
kept it hidden on his person
throughout more than three
years in a prison camp
There will never be marked
graves for those who fell in
the last hours of fighting on
Corregidor The Japanese vic-
tors refused Gen Jonathan
Wainwright’s request to bury
American and Filipino dead
on “The Rock " Official his-
tory records that "with the
thousands of Japanese corp-
ses littering the field, these
remains were heaped in high
funeral pyres and cremated."
There is no statute of limi-
tations on the search for
names or remains of Ameri-
can’ dead Clues are followed
KTBS-TV - CHANNEL 3
SHREVEPORT, L.A.
MONDAY
5:00 The Three Stooges
4:0 Rin Tin Tin
s 00 Loral News and Wenther
6:10 Reorts Review
6:5 Huntler-Brinkley Report
6:20 Riverbent
7:80 Wells Fargo
8.00 Not For Hire
8 10 A a €Thenter
emhe New Hour of Great Mystery
that crash landed in 1943 The The Spanish-American War re-
two specialists, who vanish- corded a further drop in the
ed in a blinding sandstorm, number of unknowns Of the 385
were finally rescued by a battle deaths and 2,061 fataliti-
WASHINGTON P — Tens Army record state
single remains
see Popeye and His Pak
€ ten Early FAition Now:
6:10 Early Edition Weather
Dateline Sh-evemort
Mir. Pleasant Bailg Times
Published dally except Saturday and Sunday at 207 West 3rd
Street, M. Pleasant, Texas.
MT. PLEASANT TIMES PUBLISHING CO.
W. N. FUREY, PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER
WILLIAM N. FUREY, JR., VICE PRESIDENT
Member of the Associated Press —----—
Member Texas Daily Newspaper Association
Member of North and East Texas Press Association
Entered as second class matter at the Post Office at Mt.
Pleasant, Texas under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1916.
Obituaries, resolutions of respect, and cards of thanks will be
charged for at regular advertising rates.
• Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or repu-
tation of any person or concern that may appear in the columns of
this paper, will be gladly corrected when brought to our attention.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Home Delivery in Mount Pleasant, one month $1.00. .
By RFD Mail in Titus and Adjoining Counties: one year $7 50;
six months *4.80.
By mail elsewhere in the United States and Post Office box
delivery in Mount Pleasant: one year $9 00: six months $6 00.
Other mail subscription rates available upon request. _____
It’s Beauty and Pancake Time Again
Mount Pleasant will be the beauty capital of East Texas
Tuesday night when 23 of the region’s loveliest compete for
the Miss Delwood-Miss Mount Pleasant titles.
They’ll be here from all over this section of the state,
both the contestant and their boosters. And, as always, our
city will be fittingly represented.
This annual event is a sort of summer-opening ceremony
here. Splash Day seems to mean it’s outdoor-enjoyment time,
with a renewed interest. Of course, our people enjoy Dell-
wood Park all year long, and this is exactly as it shoud be.
The park is there for enjoyment of all, and it should be put
to full use.
that "not
could be
helicopter. es from other causes, only, 13.6
On the other side of the per cent were identified.
world, many years after the This second of the nation’s
war had passed over New foreign wars also established
Guina, another Army team the policy of burying military
made its way to a remote dead at government expenses in
jungle valley to match names the place of the family’s choos-
with remains of another plane ing
Army experience in the Phi-
lippine insurrection produced
major aids to identification
Quartermaster Corps officers
succeeded by 1913 in requir-
form blouse (the gun sling is
—a gimmick of the show
“Our men’ carry guns,"
said Marshal Lunney, "but
they don’t have to use them
often. We don’t get much re-
sistance when we have to
pick up a man even on a fugi-
tive warrant."
In his TV series, Bromfield
plays an active crimebus-
ter, investigating wrongdo-
ings, arresting criminals and
fighting it out or shooting it
out as the climax of each
week’s episode.
When we have to pick up
a fugitive on a warrant,
commented Bromfield, "he
escapes, and the rest of the
show is about how. we catch
him again."
“Ours don’t escape," said
Lunney.
In Bonn, Germany, the
three western powers chal-
lenged Russia to clear the
way for unifying Germany by
consenting to completely free.
all-German elections tied in
with guarantees of full indi-
vidual freedoms
TOPEKA, KAN. ( - Fin-
ally admitting that it is im-
possible for her to reach New
York by June 10. Dr. Barbar-
a Moore planned to resume
her coast-to-coast hike today.
She had to go back to the
point 48 miles west o fTopeka
where she quit Sunday night:
The British physician cover
ed only 30 miles Sunday in-
stead of the more than 100
miles her schedule would
have required.
She told a reporter. "You
know I am so determined to
reach New York by June 10.
yet I know common sense tell
me that 1 couldn’t possibly
make it because my time is _
running so short now."
Dr. Moore left San Francis,
co April 13 in an attempt to
break the 77-day cross count-
ry hiking record. To do so the
56-year-old doctor would have
had to reach New yark City
by June 10
The Dorcas Sunday Seheel
Class of the Deilwood Baptist
Church was entertained at
the home of Mrs Ted Cal-
vert. on Peterman Avenue
Mrs. Susan Glenn opejicu the
meeting with a prayer and
Mrs H E Beck gave the de
votional...
would be forever nameless or The Union established a "A
missing were it not for the tional cemetery system before
unending search for Ameri- the send of the Civil War, but
cans lost on farflung. battle- there was no formal require
grounds of the world. ment to meet the desires of next
More than 15 years after the of kin as to where the dead
last World War II combat in would be buried.
North Africa, two men re- in the Civil War, 42 per cebt
cently were lost for a week of the Union dead were burged
in the Libyan Desert They as unknowns." This was saw
were Army specialists seek- the first, amateurish attempts
ing the remains of four crew- to examine teeth and dentistry
men of an American bomber as a means of identification.
1.00 About Faers
1:0 Love that Bob
2:00 Day in Court
2:0 Gale Storm
2:00 Brat the Clock
8:50 Who Do You TTrust
4:00 American Rendistand
5:00 Lit e Rasrals
5:2 Rocky and His Friends
6.00 News and Weather
6:15 John Daly News
6,80 Rungarfoot
7:90 Cererado 9
8.00 The Rifleman
8:0 Red Skelton
9:00 Carry Moore
10:09 Markham
THOUG
HAVE /
FRENC
to the ends of the earth.
After the war in China, ru-
mors filtered through that a
reputedly savage tribe of Lolo
aborigines in the western
mountains was holding Ameri-
can soliders as slaves. Army
investigators penetrated the
‘remote area and made friends
with the Lolos. They found
no slaves but did pick up .
clues that led to the recovery
and identification of the bodi-
es of several victims of an
American plane crash. *
Near the end of the war in
Europe, AP photographer
Beetle Bailey
Sen G. C. Morris of Green
______ville, acting lieutenaltgoy-___
ernor of Texas, spoke to the
local Kiwanis Club at their
luncheon meeting
The local American Legion
Auxiliary was reorganized
with the follow ing selected as
officers to serve for 1950-51:
Mrs Fred Bright Jr., presi-
deni: Mrs. Maurice Smith,
. vice-president; Mrs. Homer
Hamilton, secretary-treasur-
er: Mrs J. O. Wood, sergeant
at arms: Mrs. Gilbert Pool,
chaplain: Mrs. Buddy Davis,
—historian.——-----
By SYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK QP - A two-
fisted, fast-drawing U.S. mar-
shal. television style, met a
real life U.S marshal the oth-
er day. It was mutually edu-
cational.
In full uniform and arma-
ment, John Bromfield, star of
"U S. Marshal,” dropped in
on U. S. Marshal Thomas J.
Lunney, whose territory in-
cludes New York City and
nearby suburban territory.
As it turned out, they had
t to things in common
Eo a wear the same size
hat.
Bromfield’s is a 10-gallon
model: Lunney’s a grey snap-
brim fedora and both have
eief—depulies—named Tom
Bromfield’s deputy is really
Jimmy Griffith, now on the
right side of television’s law
after many years of playing
heavies
Bromfield and Griffith, cur-
rently on an exploitation tour
for their syndicated show,
were you should pardon the
expression - arresting fig-
ures as they climbed out of
their station wagon in front
of Manhattan’s U S. court-
house They were accom-
panied by a press agent, a
photographer and this report-
er They immediately were
the center of a crowd consist-
ing of U. S. employes and
Wall Street personnel on
their lunch hour.
We proceeded to the real
marshal’s office It was a
spactousrichly furnished
room with wall-to-wall carpet
ing and a large, neat desk
Marshal Lunney was an older
gray-haired man, wearing a
conservative well -tailored
sack suit, white shirt and
solid color necktie. He looked
like a business man. Wall
Street model
Bromfield • pushed his big
hat to the back of his head
and the two marshals shook
hands as the photographers
William C. Alien made a pic-
ture of a roomful of. Ameri-
cans in a newly liberated pris-
son camp An American moth-
er imagined she recognized
her son in the picture, even -
though the boy was listed
killed in action The Army
spent two years tracking
down and identifying all men
in the photograph, including
the imagined son He was -
somebody else
KCMCTV — CHANNEL 6
TEXARKANA
MONDAY
s :eo g’itde Rascals
6:16 John Daly News
€: Kate Smith Show
1:0 The Texan
7:80 Father Knows Beat
3:00 Danny Thomas
8:30 Ann Sothern
9:06 Hennesey
9:30 June Allyson
10:00 To Tell the Truth
10:80 News and Weather
10:45 MGM Plawhery
TUESDAY
7:00 Grand Ole Oury
7:45 Nome and Weather
8:00 CBS News
8:10 Televisit
8:15 Captain Kangaroo
9:00 Looney Tunes
9:30 On the Go
10:00 As the World Turns
19:0 December Bride
11:00 Edge of Night
11:0 Way of Life
12:00 Restless Gun
12:10 Farm Dieat “
12:45 News and Wenther
was an achievement con
. sidering the radically dif-
ferent nature of the two wars
One was mostly fought in a
relatively small area of civi- *
lized land, the latter over
oceans, massive mountains
and steaming jungles.
Despite the’ near disaster
and bitter retreats of its
early phases, the Korean war
produced the smallest propor-
tion of unknown dead. 2.9 ner
cent But it also left a ma-
for task for graves registra-
tion teams whenever in the
future North Korea is onen-
ed for a dedicated search for
the unrecovered remains of
8 194 American dead
Thouch nations from the
times of ancient Greece hon-
ored their warrior dead with
state funerals it was not un-
+1 the American Civil War
that anv oovernment formal-
jv aciumed the obligation tn
identify and hnrv in regie,
tered graves all who lost their
lives in a war.
American battle deaths in
the 1M46 4R war with Mexico
totaled 1.733 but only one.
tenth were ever identified
Came 750 of there dead were
siven temnrarv burial on the
road hofween the Gulf Const
and Merion Civ. When their
hones were exhumed for ner-
monent interment at the foot
of a monument in the Mevi-
can capital, the official U. S.
will hire
Purine* %
1*11 ARN
Dover T
Texas
+ arn
Fob RF
mailing 4
PA 4488
Hars WRONO ALL THE WAY
zakoz ( TO19 I WAS
• LEADING HIM.
A playschool for pre-school
drildren was announced by -
- the Mount Pleasant chapter
of Future Homemakers of
America. High scheel girls
enrolled for summer work,
supervised the activities of
the children
clicked off some pictures The huge guns captured at
Marshal Lunney inspected the Japanese Naval Base at
Bromfield’s holster and gun Kure were cut into short lengths
and shook his head wonder- and brought to California for
ingly at the tricky way it is remelting and use as scrap met-
strapped on under his uni- al. ____
By Mort Walker
• MISCF
Strawbert
picked M
Friday. 3
burg. Hiv
ter, phon
Steger Ul
USED F
ate, spr
tables, lai
washing 1
suite. H
chairs, T
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PA 4-5517
FOR SAL
Ticket M.
celia Dr.,
CLASS
First (
Minim
enarge is
Deadli
publication
Ads in
in blackfa
Cards
special re
claf sified
To pla
• HOU
+ HOL
FOR REN
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carport, :
been re-d
5:se Test Pattern
6.00 Conti Classroom
:20 Cherem tar’
Ths Lai News and Weather
1 Duet
9:80 Play Year Hunch
re me The Price is Right
10:20 Concentration
11:00 Truth or Consequences
11:00 n Could Be You teolor)
12:0 Local News and Weather
12 as Looney Tueres
12:50 Love That Bob
1:00 Queen For a Day
1:30 Loretta Young Theater
2.0 Young Dr. Malone
2:6 From There Recta
3.00 Comedy Theater
3:50 Adventure Theater
4:00 American Bandstand
5:00 The Three Stooges
s:50 Rocky and His Pals
6:00 Local News and Weather
0:te Sports Review
6:15 Hentley Brinkley Report
6:80 Laramie
1:50 Startime
8:0 Arthur Murray Party (color)
9.00 M Squad
0:30 The Pioneers _
10 me Local News and Weather
te:15 The Rifleman
10:45 Jack Paar Show _
inlen Five Minute Nea Fin-:
KL.TV - CHANNEL 7
TYLER, TEXAS
MONDAY-
see Broken Arrow
"-t Repeat
9.00 Hennemey
9:30 June Allyson Show
jeon Walter Winchell File
je 30 Final Edition News
10:40 F’nel FAition Weather
10,45 Night Owl Theater
12:00 TV News Final .
TUESDAY
6:15 Test Pattern _
6:0 Ark-La-Tex Farmer
- 6:45 Your Pastor
1: Jones June ion
A: CBS News
8:15 Captain Kangary
10:00 i Love Lucy
0 80 December Bride
11 0 Leave of Lite
11 se Search For Tomorrow
11:45 -Gai ding Light
12:00 Channel 12 News
12 40 Weather
12:15 Passing Parade
02:0 As The World Turns
1 re For Better or Worse
1.80 Hone-Ponty t
2.00 The Millionaire
280 The Verdict is Yours
S me The Brighter Das
8:16 The Secret Storm
sis The Edre of Night
4:00 Cinema’XIT
5 to Huckleberry Hound
8:00 Earl Edition News
6:1 Early Edition Wenther
6:15 Dateline Shreveport
6:480 Four Just Men
1:00 The Dennis • Keefe Show
1:50 The-Many Loves of Dobie Gillis
8:00 Rescue %” —.
8 80 The Red Skeli on Show
9.00 The Gary Moore Show
10.00 Rendezvous
10:80 Final Edition News
10440 Final Eilition Weather
10H45 Night Gel Theater
12:0 TV News Final
By Chic Young
LITTLE ROMANCE
1 ES ALONG AND SHE )
ROPS ME LIKE A 14
MOT POTATO T
12 so Live That R.sb
1-:0 Queen For a Day
i to Loretta Youn- Theater
2:0 Young Dr Malone
7 * From These Rote
: on Comely Plavhmtee
3 we Adventure Thrater
4 on American Raitamt
1 es WAnthef - €— -
4:90 American RomtaRL
: n. mirende, Pure
* National Hesilinr-
: * Rear * r N
Guan Shorts HichliyM-
:‘* Huntley ‘ • -*• "*
Grtn Laramie
T as Startime
A ae Sen Hent
9.0 M-Sqund .
‘she E-onad •
194 Now:
reile Rear R-ror
jets Law of the Plainemen
teres Jack Paar She
vein# Wenther
32.00 Tomerow - H-etinc*
KSLA TV - CHANNEL 12
SHREVEPORT. L.A.
MONDAY
€ * Kate Smith •
1:0 Danny Thomas
1. T-bstone Territo •
$.00 Peter Gunn
size Ann Sothern
9.00 Hour of Great Mystery
10 me News
10:10 Radar Report
10:15 Playhouse
15 Jack Paur Show
10:65 Weather *
Daren Jack Paar Show
ig:c0 Tomorrow’s Headlines
TUESDAY
1:00 Towlay
T:25 Fast Texas Report
$:to Today
#r25 Fad Texas ‘ Report
• us ph-Re-Mi
By Fred Lasswell
THANKY, PAWSTOP JABBERIN’
IT WUZ A > AN WARM DP
PURTY BIRFDAY ) ( TH LEFTOVERS,
PRESENT 1 . WOMAN
ENNYHOW ) .1
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Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 56, Ed. 1 Monday, May 30, 1960, newspaper, May 30, 1960; Mount Pleasant, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1619182/m1/4/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.