Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 65, Ed. 1 Friday, June 10, 1960 Page: 4 of 6
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4—MT. PEASANT, TEXAS
Friday, June 10. 1960
SOONER THAN WE FEARED!
Times
BOB THOMAS: HOLLYWOOD
Met Tennessee
PRICKED BY ROCKY
SUNDAY
By Mart Walker
York
M M
rd
a
DAILY CROSSWORD
By Roy Crane
| Rdur.
9 00 Unt
N
na
bi:40
Blondie
c
Barney Google and Snuffy Smith
* >0
' F
*
Finn
RES O
Notificati
that 4 pul
held at 2 D.
the Count
Pleasant,
for the ourt
posed hunt
ping regull
mentioned
FOR RENT
hirnished h
ed washer
fenced In bi
THEATRE
NOTES
Meat
FOR SALE
furniture Hr
nany, 104 Ea
I WHO IS b
ALEXANDER
TAKING TO %
THE DANCE ■
TONIGHT ? 1
OVRE ASSUNNS THAT MOMER rt
i ALIVE AND THAT We MADE OFF WITH
A NAVY PaYROLIT
JACK
HERRING
In Washington, a Brooklyn
grand jury indicted Harry
Gold, Philadelphia chemist,
and two unidentified persons
on charges of atom spying
the United States.
THEY
WERE
so
CUTE
re Tey
CNTMS
RNER
FOR SALE:
den-kitchen, 1
full baths, w
neat, double
. Sims School
stricted addi
wich. Phone
nights PA 4-3
N COME VOu
A BOY TOT
TONIGHT At
will
IGM
Hearing
is the Life
ch of Christ
aigs Roundup
HOLD ON THAR,
YE LOW-DOWN,
SHIFLESS
SKONK" C
Approximately $4,000 worth
worth—of—fresh—and__cured.
meats and a large transport
truck were stolen in an early
morning robbery of the New-
some Packing Company of
Mount Pleasant
wHERE ARE THE TWO 1
SOLDIERS WHO USUALLY
STANP ON THIS CORNER
AND WHISTLE AT US F
Tire
e Fashions
" Mensce
800 Chur
5:30 ( any
9ros New
8:10 Suer
Iris Phot
1-30 Foot
Gee! I
HOPE THEY
HAVEN’T L
BEEN
SHIPPED
OUT
e Shrevepo
le
D. *,
Farini.
RWE MAS BEEN
MMIT TED
But FOR ALL YOU Now,
THE NAVY TY ROIL IN
BE AT THE BOTTOM OF
82. Avenue
(abbr.)
83. Kind of
muffin
34. Midwestern
state (abbr.)
hmterr*
27. Sacred bull
49. Part of
football
team
40. Egress
41. Search for
42. Gainsay
DOWN
1. A woody
grass
stem
36. Fib
37 Hewing
tool
38 Fastener
40. Mr. Sullivan
19. Im- Pit
perfec-
tion 1
20. A •
vampire ala
22. Frontier
trading -
post E
24 Gull-
like •
bird
25. Color- %
less
26. Ca-
rouses
27. A pair
28. Corded
cotton
fabric
29. Son of Seth
Has It Been
That Long? If Tennessee
Dateli
RwwhiI
KL.TV - CHANNEL 7
TYLER, TEXAS
FRIDAY
2LETMee
ditioner 12.0
sweeps $249
Like new
Emerson air
Good use
freezer $99
TE
no East Tense Report
RRMett, Report
The Big Picture
Air Force Story
Industry on Parade
MGM Encore Theater
TWO-BEDRO
close in, floor
closets and s
down $50 00
‘axes and isi
ACROSS
1. Large
bundle
5. Gang
9. Birdsar
10. Robust
11. Merganser.
12 Pantry
, 2
opening
16. Perform
17. To adapt;
20. Guided —
21. Dirtied
22 Crazes
23. Mayan
Indian
24. Mr. Dewey
25 Hauled
27. To mock
30. Property
(L.)
31. The Bamboo
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here’s how to work it:
AXIDLBAAXR
. is HONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L’s, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, apes-
trophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints,
Each day the code letters are different.
a Croorram Quintton
RDKYCIDQUKRHSBBRVPZFKRO
YV x EPEU S BHVPRHUQCIPI.
Tedtorday’s Cryptoquster WHOSO DOTH ua A GOOD
TURN WE WRITE IT IN DUBT—MORE
(o 1m, Fins Futures Eradicate, Ino)
3 Mr Ayres
4. East by
south
(abbr.I
5. Bracelet
ornament
€ Uncommon
7. Old times
(archaic)
8. Tended, as
a garden
11. American
Indians
12. British
is. Fores
15. Verse
18 French
city
NEW YORK —Two plays
with similar titles, both hav-
ing to do with the Nazi cap-
ture of Warsaw in World War
1I, are being readied for
Broadway premieres in the
fall.
By Chic Young
EN YOU TARE AGON
DONT HAVE O BUT
HIM A CORSAGE - 1
Buz Sawyer.
Alt. Pleasant Bailp Times
Published daily except Saturday and Sunday at 207 West 3rd
Street, Mt. Pleasant, Texas. 1
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 *4.50.
By mail elsewhere in the United States and Post Office box
Delivery in Mount Pleasant: one year $9.00; six months $6.00.
Uther mail subscription rates available upon request.
What Editors are saying in ... 5
Panola Watchman: "This is the season to be on the look-
out for shysters of various sorts. It is that season when out-
of-town roofing experts, painters, termite exterminators and
material salesmen prey on the public. City or county of-
ficials can’t legally stop peddlers, book salesmen and sales-
men of various shades and hues from calling on the public.
Only the public can do this. They can do it by refusing to
talk to people they do not know, or who cannot establish
their local identity.’
Hopkins County Echo: "A noteworthy item in police
news recently concerned arrest of a motorist on a charge
of blocking the street It ranks as distinctive because it mark-
ed a rare instance of official interference with what an-
parently is a long-established Sulphur Springs custom—mid-
street visiting from vehicles parked side by side in blithe
disregard for the demands and hazards of traffic."
TV SCHEDULE
7:30 Test Pattern
8:00 Oral Roberts
8:30 The Living Way
1:00 Movie Matinee
12:00 The News Today
12:15 The On Deck Cirele
n Chicago vs. Boston
2.00 Movie Matinee
309 World Champ, of Golf
00 New Search for Talent
5: Times Present
6,00 Overland Trail
‘ 100 Maverich
#.00 Suminer Mystery Show
#.06 Loretta Young Show
9 she This Man Dawson
##.
FOR SALE
across from A
price $6,000 -
Balance $4 781
ly, 10 year pa
Robertson,1
VA 4 2778, 01
In Austin, officials looked
to Congress for aid and plan-
ned a last-ditch fight to alter
the United States Supreme
Court ruling against the tide
lands case.
on the big issue. Nixon re-
plied that he not only has
talked on them but has been
more precise than Rackefel-
Jer:
The fact is: Neither has
been completely precise at
all. Few seekers of political
office ever are.
Rockefeller. who got out of
the Republican presidential
race last December an d
jumped back in in May, fired
his blast at Nixon on Wednes.
day The Republicans in Con-
gress closed ranks around
Nixon
Then Nixon went to New
Jersey Thursday and at a
news conference said he had
talked on the issues and had
been more precise khan
he wouldn’t have a new farm
program of his own until aft-
er he gets the presidential
nomination.
Labor: Rockefeller is for-
compulsory arbitration, if
necessary, to end big dam-
aging strikes. Nixon is
against compulsory control
ut how he’d cope with such
a problem isn’t clear at all.
Civil Rights Rockefeller
says he is all for racial equal-
ity but vague on how to
achieve it. Nixon is for pro-
tecting civil rights but hasn’t
gone beyond the Eisenhower
program, only part of which
got accepted this year by
Congress
Federal Aid to Education:
Rockefeller is for federal aid
• for school construction and
for scholarships Nixon is for
federal aid to school con-
struetion.
KCMC-TV = CHANNEL. 6
TEXARKANA
FRIDAY
5:00 vae- Re-rals -
5:30 Rip im Tin
- 6:0 News and Weather
6:15 John Daly News
C:30 Rawhide
7:20 Man From Blackhawk
8.00 77 Sunset Strip
€-00 The Detectives
9:20 Whirlyhirds
14,0 G. E. Theater
*0:30 News and Wenther
445 MGM Plovime
SATURDAY
7:00 Looney Tunes
8:00 Captain Kangaroo
9.00 H.rke and Jeekle
9:30 Mighty Manse
10:00, Fury
10:00 Little Rascals
11:00. Sky King
F1 RO Saturday Matinee
1:18 Bowling Stars
1:16 Big League Basehaff
4:A lebiles USA
5,30 Wals Disney Presents
6:30 Perry Mason
7)19 Lwretke Welk n
8130 Have Gun- Will Travel
5:30 G. F Theater
• 00 Sunday News Wire
trie Radar Rep-r
9:15 Mast Texas Film Review
0:30 Handay News Wire
1:55 Tomorrow’s Headlines
2:09 Sign off.
KSLA-TV - CHANNEL 12
SHREVEPORT, L.A.
FRIDAY
Site Popeye and His Pals
$ 89 Early Edition News
% 10 Early Kait inoWenther
“There has to be a new
challenge somewhere along
- the line," he says. "I don’t
think anyone who enjoys liv-
ing can be satisfied with
standing still."
Laine is so hopeful the
Broadway show will be a
success that he reluctantly
sold his Beverly Hills home
Of the show he says
"I guess I’m going. through
the throes of what everyone
goes through who does one of
these things. If it comes off
the way it reads and the new
songs sound the way they
ought to sound, then it ought
to be a bomb.”
FOR SALE:
trailer Roy
Jefferson. Pl
( From Daily Times Files
Of Ten Years Ago )
Two young ladies, riders in
the Ada Round-Up Club’s
mounted quadrille, were hurt
during their evening perform-
lance at the Titus CCounty
Rodeo. Miss Marian Rea. of .
Ada, was admitted to a hos-
pital for treatment. of a frae-
tured left arm and bruises
The other girl, whose name
was not known, was treated
for shock, but was later re-
leased
14 45 Movie Premiere
12:09 TV News Final
12-96 V-spora
SATURDAYS
1 is Test Pattern
7 20 Let’s Explay
8.00 Captain Kangaroo
9:00 Heckle and Jeekle
9:39 Mighty Mouse
10:00 Sky King
1e:5e Fa Habla Kapa nol
1/82 Al endale YWO * Program
1:hs Farm and Home Program
1:1s Window On the World
rEtts Baseball Leadoff
12:25 Basehall Game of the Work,
Preston at New York •
2:88 The 1900 Indianapolis “Sae”
300 The Christophers
1:30 Farmer Alfalfa
4:00 Laurel and Hardy
4:20 Teen Time
S.00 Boston Blackie
5:se Union Pacific
8.00 Man Without • Gan
6:30 Perry Mason
7:80 Wanted Dead or Alive
8.00 Mr Lucky 1
#:30 Have Gun Will Trav-
9 .00 Gunsmoke
9.30 Mickey Spillane’s Mike Hammer
19:09 Pony Express
10:30 Final Edition News
10:40 Fina Edition Weather
10:45 Movie Premiere
12 0 Vespers
SUNDAY
8.00 Herald of Truth
8:30 Hour of Worship -
9:30 Camera Three
10:00 Classroom 12 *
10:30 The Answer
1 1 0 Faith For Today
11:30 The French Touch
12:00 Industry On Parade
12:15 Baseball Leadoff
12:25 ‘Baseball Game of the Work:__
C eveland at New York
5:00 Jungle
*:5 This is the Life
3.45 Songs of Inspiration
4.00 Fare the: Nation
4:30 College Quiz Bowl
5:00 A Letter to Moscow
5:30 Twentieth Century
6:00 Lassie
6:30 Dennis The Menace
7:00 Ed Sullivan Show
8:00 General Electric Theater
8.30 Alfred Hitchcock Presents
9.00 Jack Benny Show
20 WE My Line
53 Finer
16:40 Final Edition Wether
10:50 Night Owi Theater
12.90 Vespers
By JAMES MARLOW
AP News Analyst
WASHINGTON on - Twice
in a row, with no one in sight
likely to take the Republican
nomination away from him,
Vice-President Richard M -
Nixon got jabbed with a red-
hot needle. Both times he
stayed quiet 24 hours.
Both times this happened to
be just long enough to let the
Republican leaders in Con-
gress rush to his defense
against the needlers — as
they did - before he did any
talking.
The first time it was Har-
old Stassen who jabbed him,
just when Nixon seemed to
have the Republican vice-
presidential nomination sew-
ed up in 1956 Now it’s New
York’s Gov. Nelson Rocke-
feller, just when Nixon seems
to have the presidential nom-
ination einched, although
Rockefeller would like to get
it
Rockefeller said it was
about time Nixon started say-
ing precisely where he stands
AND HAVE YOU WITNESSES 1 NO, SIR, MES [
WHO CAN IDENTIFY THIS ! COMPLETELY 1
HENRY SMITH AS THECHANGED M5
FUGITIVE HOMER TREE?IDENTITY.
ston at New York
ress ,Baseball Cards
6 30 CBS Reports
8100 The Rebel
9,00 Tightrope
1:30 Deanin O’Keefe
19/20 MGM Playhouse
KTBS-TV - CHANNEL 3
SHREVEPORT. LA
FRIDAY
5.00. The Three Stoume
Silo Rin Tin Tin
emhe Local News and Weather
0:10 Sports Review
4:18 Huntley-Brinkley Reyer
0:80 Bachelor Father
Tine The Troubleshooters
7:80 Johnny Midniai
8,00 Bourbon Street Best
5,00 March of Medicine
16,00 Loral News and Wenther
1:15 Sportsman’s Corner
10:30 Grantland Rire Sportslighta
10:45 Jack Paar Show
12:00 Five Minutes News Final
12.5 Mian ort
SATURDAY
7.00 Test Pattern
T:20 Looney Tuae
8.00 African Patrol :
8:36 Cirene Boy 47a
9:00 Howdy Donty
9:80 Ruff and Reddy
10:00 Fury
1010Tupe for Toys
1:00 True Story re
$1:30 Featurette Time
12 125 NBC Major League Baseball
Tralmin to be announced
*00 ARC Major League Baseball
4:50 Wrestling From Chicago
6:20 Detective’s Diary
0.00 Local News and Weather
0:10 Sports Review
215 Photo Review
1 1 Man The Challenge
8.00 The Deputy
8:30 The Untouehabales
S:30 Man From Interpol
1.00 77 Sunset Strip
IF:00 Live Wrestling From Ch 3
1r00 Five Minate News Final
1.05 Sign Off
SUNDAY
sissippi .
Ernie: Like you say—silly
questions I gotta go now and
dig some bait
Rockefeller. He challenged
the governor to a “discussion
in depth,” perhaps before
television cameras. Rocke-
feller said Nixon "doesn’t
need me to interrogate him
on television "
Want follows is a run-down
on the position Rockefeller *
. took on the issues in his
Wednesday attack against
Nixon and the vice-presi-
dent’s statements in the past
on those same problems.
National Defense: Rocke-
feller says defense is not good
enough, suggests spending 3’2
billion dollars more right
away. Nixon says defenses
are just fine but this country
must spend whatever it costs
to retain its strengh.
Arms Control: Everybody
seems to be for this, includ-
ing Rockefeller and Nixon.
Farm Problem: Rockefel-
ler is doing something about
them. Nixon says he is, too,
but he has indicated before
Beetle Bailey
*MISCELI
FOR SALE:
20-inch wind
two speed
condition. F
Call PA 4-25
FOR s ALE
board motor
motor $50.
Post, PA 4-36
. SPECIAL -
and pump sh
count Fronti
— PA 4-3602 -
Special Sale,
gift items as
es pictures,
price Dealer
Trading Post
FOR SALE
4000 CFM. $4
TE)
FOR SALE:
board motor
FOR SALE:
Glass Club I
with or with
Slider Real I
€ 30 Fowler Playboys
7:00 Tons Express
7:30 Masquerade Party
8 xm Fights
#:4% Jackpot Bowling
9:00 March of Medicine
19:00 News
19:10 Radar Report
1415 Colt 45
10 45 Ja k Paar Show
1# 250 Weather
11:00 Jack Paar Show
12:00 Tomorrow’s Headline
12:15 Sign Off
SATURDAY
810 Sins on Today’s Headlines
%:PS Americans at Work
8 :S0 Religions Newscast
8:45 Way of Life
9.00. Howdy Doody
9:30 Ruff and Reddy
9:30 Circus Boy
1:99 My True Story
1:80 Inside Sports
- One is "The Wall," a
dramatization by Millard
Lampel of John Hersey’s
novel about Hitler’s mass ex-
termination of Polish Jews.
Later David Selznick will
produce it as a movie
The second is "Behind the
Wall," a play by Alfred Mar-
der who uses the pen name
of Kenneth Green. The cast
consists of one boy and four
girls, ages from 8 to 14
at San Franciaro
5:90 Big Picture
5:s9 Detectives Diary
6:00 News
6:10 Radar Report
6:15 Audio-Visual Want Ads
6:80 Close Up U.S.A
6:30 Hawaiian Eye
7 80 Challenge
%.00 Lone Star Steel Hour
*:30 Bourbon Street Beat
9:30 Man From Interpol
0:00 Lawrence Welk
1:00 Hollywood Movie Parade
2:30 Tomorrow a Headlines
SUNDAY
8:5 Today’s Headlines
1 the Industry on Parade
1:15 Country Style U.S.A
1:29 Cowboy Weaver
at New York
SNUFFY SMIF! WHAT S
YORE UNDER r , TH CHARGE
ARRESTS---
CLASSIFI
First day
Minimum
charge is net;
Deadline 1
publication.
Ads in all
in blackface t
Cards of t
special requer
clar sifted rate
To place
. HOUSE:
•HOUSI
HOUSE FOI
Third, unfu
on outside.
Contact Mr
Miss Jessie
4 3173
FOR BENT
Time. PA 4
Buc kner Re
son
FOR RENT
house vara
Phone PA 4
FOR RENT
t ished.
shady back
reasonable
th of South
43950 or 41
FOR RENT
house carp
shade trees.
:00 Werld Championship Golf
see Country Cousins
30 Time Present
00 7 Sunset Strip
00 Music On ice
HOLLYWOOD P - Singer
Frankie Laine felt he was
standing still while appearing
in the top clubs and top tele-
vision shows.
The result: He’s making
his debut on Broadway in a
musical calledMad Ave-
nue.".
HOLLYWOOD U - Some-
times, when prowling lonely
studio’ streets hunting stars
who aren’t there, you start
believing you hear imagin-
ary interviews.
Such as what might happen
if Tennessee Ernie should
meet up with Tennessee Wil-
lisms:
Ernie: Hi there, little fel-
ler. Why so blue? You look
like you’d been ridden hard
and put away wet
Williams: Please, none of
sir bucolic railleries Don’t
you know that life is a fragile
bird soaring to the sum and
the vision of its own destruc-
tion.
Ernie: 1 don’t see nothin’
to be hard-mouthed about.
Cussin’ at the plow won’t get
the furrows dug.
Williams: You are an ana-
chronism. sowing your homi-
lies in a sterile soil. Nothing
will grow, not even your sen-
flowers of optimism. The era
does not bring fecundity
Ernie: Been havin’ trouble
with your crops, huh?
Williams: Sir, I am not a
farmer. I am a writer.
Ernie: What do you write
—the farm news or the sport-
in’ games?
Williams: I write plays and
scenarios. Have you seen
"Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" or
“Suddenly Last Summer"?
Ernie I missed that first
one and I’m sorry. I like
them animal pictures I saw
that other un. though. T liked
that scene where them tykes
were a-chawin’ on that feller
Sebastian. Reminded me of
when Uncle Chad fell in the
hog-sty at feedin’ time
Williams Obviously you
missed the symbolism. Might
1 ask what you do?
Ernie: I’m a pea picker.
Williams: Ah, well, silly
questions beget silly an-
swers •
Ernie: What did you say
your name was?
Williams Tennessee Wil-
liams
Ernie: You wouldn’t josh
me, would you? Where was
you born?
Williams Columbus, Mis.
ans Sandlin
with saraq
Tone fencer
810 Sandl
Mon aaroce
PA 4-3638
FOR REN
ann N O
43534
* MISt
RORDENS
vice For
products ca
By Fred Lasswell
NARY A CENT!!
THIS ONE’S ON ME!
Nixon Reacts to Needle
Edition Weather
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Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 65, Ed. 1 Friday, June 10, 1960, newspaper, June 10, 1960; Mount Pleasant, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1619193/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.