Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 25, Ed. 1 Monday, April 28, 1958 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Mount Pleasant Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Mount Pleasant Public Library.
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7
HEASANT TDES
Mondap, j02. 19$8
At. Hleasant Aailg Cimes
CROSSWORD
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BY RALMH NOBET
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TV Schedule
2
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7
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33
5:00
38
37
39
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veport
NEW YORK I—Hewasatypi- back from his stranded flying
Phone us your news items.
a
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4-28
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Me-
By Boy CraM
Buz Sawyer
Mt'S IN TWt DOGMOUSE, SIR. NE COULDNT
EXPAIN M WAS POING N4 UNDERCOVER
J08 FOR ME MAVE. SME TIKS wes WEEN
PUAMIN AROUND WITH THOSE. LADY SKIN-
DIVERS.
61413
8130
J
3—K
12100 Siun Off
E
By Chic Young
Blondie
A
8
-0
1
Prescriptin
By Fred Latewell
Barney Google and Snuffy Smith
L4,
TTT
SMIE
SNiF
GREAT STARS
Fast, Free
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0;
Mafera R
8
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t ‘ vrettore
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7
, srrvici
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Graham Speaks
Af Cow Palace
$9.00
6.00
3.50
1.50
5
f
• CRT'S LEAve
3 HIM HERE J
4.Su
4 H
Am ye*r -
Six montha
Officers Nab
Youthful Killer
tist, the psychiatrist, the sociolo-
gist and the military commander.
It is time you listened to the
voice of Almighty God.”
LETS so ’
Ovua to
BANKSVILLE
TONI©HT,
ETLE .Z
33.
:>
4:14
5:2s
6m-Faht naitim
e is Jame OGwynn Bhow
cim-Name That Tune
700- Adventume
SUM Red Skeltom Show
31. Hair net
34 Affirmative
vote ivar. »
36. Leg joint
NATO Officials Start
Secret Sessions
One year ---
Six months _
Three months
One month —-
930
10100
101230
last of the- Mohicane
Bob Cumings Show
The Culifornianp
The Reni MeCoys
Froken Arrow
JACK FAARShow
Judaism
41 slight taste
42. Roman
money
« Burma
native
11. Old Norse
works
13 Policeman
Z
The Price la Rridht
Rente. Gun
Wells low
1. Dumped
in Boston
Harbor
4 East by
south
tabbr l
5. Exterm-
mating
device
6 Constel-
lat Ion
7 Wander
Thentre teolon)
Duy
4 as Cemet Time
4 lie ■ -Wether
Aew
44.22
23)
18 The
killer
whale
19. Well,
behaved
23. Low, as
in
spirits
24. Happy
26. Native
of
Nias is.
Che
sa
Weather
Hirthday Party
Cartoon Time
Thia In Y our ' School
TBA
I v Spe ials
DAILY
ACROSS
I. Price
5 Girl's nam
9 Goddess oi
growing
vegetation
10. Test
12. Wheaten
flour (Ind.)
13 Desired
strongly
14. Ruthenium
< sym.)
IS Long, round
scarf
16 Pims
17. Offspring
— $7.50
__ <80
t 3.00
— 1.25
Channel 7—Tyler
MONDAY
boxes (Jap.)
22. Graaslike
plants
25 Keep within
limits
27. Nova Scotia
20 Wits
32 Music note
33 Desert
35 Antlered
animal
37 Foxy
38 Withdraw
30 Brownish
undyed silk
41 Starch
IE 11
43 Woody
. perennials
44' Manage
45 Withered
< var. I
46 Church part
DOWN
1. Bring back
2 Skill
Satuvday’e Ans*
40. Proselyte to
in Titus and adjoining
counties:
One year
Six months ---------
Three months
One month ....... ......
Entered as second class matter at the Post Office at Mt Pleasant,
TWras, under the Act of Congress, March 2, 1818._________________
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.
Obituaries, resolutions of respect, and cards of thanks will be
charged for at regular advertising rates.
i
Jimmy's Garage
Auto Air Conditioning
903 8. FLORET
Sales and Service
Garage PA 4-5312 Home PA 45312
20 The Pech
State tbbr.) 15 Exist
21 Set of ______
Delivery
AT
By Ma*
Elsewhere in the United States
and P. O. bases in Mount
U
i
L
ye
Boyle's Column
By HAL BOYLE
1
I
1
NDAY
American Bandatand
Suytroha Saravnn
“ckry Mow Glub
News
Some 300,000 New Jersey resi-
dents commute daily to jobs in
New York City and Philadelphia.
By Mort Walker
»
Suturday’s Cryptoquote: THE ONLY COMFORT or M
LIFE IS THAT I NEVER YET HAD WIFE HERRICK.
tc 1958. Kng Features Syndicate, Ine )
Not,
(ute
a(ZeROANDI
HWeR some
DsrTTH
WI IC movics
8 Exact satis- 27. Skillful
faction for 28 Pigments
9 Isle of ---- 30. Stare
saucer wererecorded.•
They follow:
"The place called th earth is
warm and habitable. At the hour
of landing it was populated.
"The inhabitants range from
large aggressive two-legged crea-
tures who call themselves men to
small aggressive creatures whom
men call insects. The insects have
six legs, and a vocabulary of
AM, I SEE! MAYBE t CANFIKTATUP.
KINGSTON, CALL MRS. SAWVER. NWTE
HER ANO MR. SAWYER TO HAVE OWNER
WITH US TONIGMT AT OUR MOTYL. .
y
2:00 NBC Matinee
1 00 Quen for A
TOPICS
(ontimied from Page I
-A
ZisusN -gpg)-7
---- I KWV-AE
CONGRATULATIONS AGAIN, \ ( ADMML J h-aef *
BOYS, FOR FOULIN6 uPTiE \ GA, / H--F
COMNIESANDTHBIRUINX" | 2, -
9OX8$... BUT WHY SO N3/ . g-a-e
55 TV Batata
I 43 Dow Edwards New
400 New*
60 Wether
6us World of Sporta
6 .»—-Name that Tume
7200 -EAdie Fisher Show
1,00 26 Men
8:30 Kinedom of the Se
V:W- The Californian*
• :M- Top Tunes a New Talent
10 :M Channel 1 Theatre
10:55 -Weather
II :M Jnek Parr Show
12100. Tomarrow • Hradlinee
12:05 Man Ott
to :00 Harbor Command
1. W Final Edition
10 43 Niuhit Owl Theatre
1210 TV N--- Fin
ZDXZBXX’G O H W B C H - ZBNPVHCRXC.
business decline is slowing down,
there is so much evidence of an
unfavorable character, and in-
come tax rate reform is so badly
needed, that there can be no
real justification for delay. Fur-
ther, what we need is action, not
to increase buying power, but to
increase savings and the incentive
tive to invest.
The only argument against
such a program is that we have
been on a capital expenditure
boom and have carried our pro-
ductive capacity to the point
where in almost all our major
industries today there is the
ability to turn out more goods
than can be sold at current prices.
The trouble with that argument
is that the principal reason we
have unused capacity today is
that; as a result of wages having
been increased so much faster
than productivity, costa of pro-
duction have been driven so
high that prices have to be above
what the public wants to pay.
The cure for this situation is
more investment, for the fact is
that, in spite of the enormous
amounts which have been in-
vested in plant and equipment,
we have scarcely made a start on
what can be done through ma-
chinery to bring down costs: By
income tax rate reform. and
holding wages, we can turn the
economy around and get back to
a sustainable upward trend, and
we can do this without inflation.
SAN FRANCISCO •-Twenty-
three thousand people overflow-
ed the Cow Palace Sunday to
hear Billy Graham. opening .his
West Coast crusade, exoriate the
age as one trying tranquilizers
insted of God.
"We are taking tranquilizer
pills to quiet us, sleeping pills to
put us to sleep, henzerdine to
Make us up in the morning and
_ ^>irin-in between,"the North
Carolina evangelist told 18,000
jamming the stock pavilion’s 30,-
1000 .square feet.
“Our generation needs God
more than any generation in his-
tory . . . Psychiatrits are doing
vch a big business that they are
going to each other for help."
Graham said it again outside
the pavilion in a condensed ser-
mon for 5,000 who couldn’t get in.
Another 2,000 cars were turned
away by police at the gates. At
one time, officers said, cars were
lined up three abreast for six
miles trying to get to this West
Coast counterpart of the Madison
Square Garden meetings.
Before he arrived, Graham had
criticized San Francisco—the city
pawned by a gold rush—as sta-
tistically out front of the nation
n drinking but far back in
hurch attendance.
Yesterday, facing an audience
of many races so typical of this
gateway to the Orient, Graham
acclaimed it one of the largest
’ opening day crowds in his evan-
gelistic career.
While 1 2,000- member choir
softly sang "Just As I Am With-
out One Plea," 380- walked for-
ward and filled the area in front
of the rostrum in response to
Graham’s invitation that they
made “a decision for Christ."
"This is only the beginning,"
he said.
"We are picking up where we
left off in Madison Square Gar-
den."
"We are not here to put on a
show or to entertain you,” Gra-
ham said.
"You have been listening to the
voice of the diplomat, the scien-
Channel 3-shrevepi
MONDAY
4 2. C-rtoon Corner
- .0 Supurman
» so Miekey Mum Club
6100 Iaral New • Weather
6:15 NNC Ne*
111C IN FACT, SOME TIMES]11’
> ITS A HANDICAP “v
( FOP THE MAN TO HAVE )
ac A MILLION DOLLARS F
AW, cObOhTT
MB AB YOUMAVE
TO BA THE •
IRL5 OFF
WITH A CLUB
IN THAT
TOWN.'
There will be a tax bill in this
session of Congress, otherwise the
corporation tax drops from 52
per cent to 47 per cent and
various of the war time excise
taxes rates decline. There is not
a chance that this will be per-
mitted. The question is whether
tax action will be limited to
these extensions or include some
other badly needed changes and
rate reforms.
The Administration. or at least
certain important members, have
cooled off substantially on tax
reform in the past two or three
weeks. Members of Congress,
while home for Easter recess,
found less public demand for tax
action than had been anticipated.
This does not mean that there
can not be tax rate reform in
thia session of Congress, but it
does mean that such reform can
no longer be taken for granted.
Cooling off by members of the
Administration results from the
hope and belief that the current
recession is beginning to ’bottom
out,’ plus the insistence that more
time is needed to see results of
action already taken. Evidence of
a ’bottoming out’ is hard to
come by and not too conclusive.
It includes:
I. Unemployment in March in-
creased by only 25,000 and em-
ployment was' up by 325,000. To
the optmists these were en-
ccuraging figures. To the pes-
smists, however, they revealed
further trouble, since March
normally shows not only an in-
crease in employment but also
a decrease in unemployment.
2. Retail sales declined but the
decline was not as large as many
had_feared. Specifically March
antes were only one per cent be-
low Februar§which is a smaller
decline than that from January
to February. Department store
sales for the week ending April
5 were 11 per cent above the
comparable week a year earlier.
3. Personal incomes, on an an-
nual basis, fell $300 million in
March, whih is smaller than the
Beetle Bailey
»:<* 21 Quiz
8:8 Lewrenc Welk’a To» Tunes
And New Talent
• 30 Ad. Of M«Graw
IV 00’ June Wymae Show
IV 3u J-ffermim lirbai
1120 The Jack Paar Show
12100 Mn ofir
ti ESDAY
« so Te-t Fatter
• 3.00
$ 1.00
•34,
mz-B.-:
7 125 Leai New.
1 ao Today
9:00, Douuh-Re-Mi
9:80-, Treanure Hunt
IV 0 The Ptice 1. Riht
IV 80 Truth or <Coneuquence
11 :W i Tie Tae Doask
llta-h Ceule Be Tav
12:00 Lacal New a Westher
12:- Problwma la Alcoholiam Today
1:13 style Shw Preiew
~1 iff Kitty Foyle
XAECBuSsUAmuIVDMEAN"R,PAWN
GOT HISSELF SHOT UP
PURTV BAD LAST
NIGHT, MAW
pDADIFIHAD y(WOMENMARRy)™
( A MILLION DOLLARS, > .FPRLE:y
\C COULD I MARRY ( NOT MONEY )
(ANY GIRL I WANT ? M*m--
$92(05 gL
6%.$
I4» Douu Eiwards New.
4 :00 Newa
610- Wether
6:15 World of Sporta
6i8o The Price is Riwht
7:00 TBA
7:8 Harbor Command
8100-Twenty-One
. 4 -SV IDceember Bride
-aA0e. O’Hehrx JPinshoune
9:20 Red Skeltom
10 M News
10110 Wether '
1116 Cnidain David Griet
it n Lbernce
I* 44 Wenther
11 :00 Jnek Parr Show
12:00- Tomorrow’, Hedline
II ;05 Siun Off
TTFSDAY
4M Te Pattern
4 M Stan On
7 00 Today
t tS Kast Texas Wenther
! 2 - Toflav
7 M East Texns Newe
I 40 Today
s B Baal Tria* Brlefa
4 SV Todey
» 34 Hent Texme Ne
i* Douuh Re Mi
io Trensure Hunt
10:00 The Price 1b Rixht
10;80 Truth Or Consequenene
11200 loove at Uto
11,30 It Could Be You
It Open House
11:11 News, Weather Sporta
If 30 Liberace
1 :00-- Theatre
1:25- Wm—iw
1180 Kitty Foyle
t 100 Matinee Thentre
IH -Queen toe A Day
their own, which this expedition
is not momentarily able to un-
derstand.
“Earth seems to be involved in
a time of struggle.
"They all have their rituals,
the men and the insecta, and they
all seem to have their goals. The
goal between the insects, and the
insects seems to be the Mme: •
extermination. Whether they
have two or six legs, they are
tent on destroying each other.
"There appears no area of
agreement. Some men fight other
men, some insects fight other in*
sects, all men fight all insects,
si, me insects fight all men,
“It is a disparate place. The
contending people argue whether
one man wins against each other.
They all assume that their war
against each other is more impor-
tant than their war against the
insecta. '
"The insects attack all men, al-
so many of their own kind, and
they utilize their mandibles for
food rather than discussion. They
would rather digest than dis-
course.
"The people seem to feel that
if they can just whip each other,
they can then handle the insects.
The insects rarely fight back.
They fasten and feed.
Td' summarize: earth is rough-
ly spheroid, turns on an axis,
stents, which determines its
weather, is available for explora-
tion.
“Political assessment: positive.
It.could be made a nice rest re-
sort by a higher power."
Pharmacy
, . *
ed daily except Saturday and Sunday at 207 West 3rd St
it, Texas.
MT PLEASANT TIMES PUBLISHING CO.
E N FUREY. PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER
Channel 12 -BM
MONDAY
4 "O Cineme XII
‛SR8U8OE"QEAVI8
DEFENDIN' HIS STILUHOUSE
. THAT-A-WAY
T0
m
l n M KaMAHW------
4 00 Comedy Tim*
6:80 Cartoon Corner
1 :00 Mir Lancelot
t SV Me hey Mow Ciub-
6:00 Local News,& Weather
6:15 NBC News
1 to Adventuren of Jim Bowie
7 •• Fddie Fisher Show
NEW YORK (A—The leader of
a Bronx youth gang is accused
of the shotgun slaying of a rival
youth mobster.
Kicking and screaming after he
was seized by detectives at a
Bronx street corner, Ramon Ser-
ra, 20, was hauled to a police sta-
tion, where he was charged last
night with homicide.
Detective cornered Serra, presi-
dent of the Egyptian Crowns, as
he tried to keep a sidewalk ren-
dezvous with his 14-year-old girl
friend.
The girl, Alice Bayron, had led
. to him.
Serra, who wore a star earring
in his left earlobe, gave police
this account of how he killed
Michael Ramos, 17, in a Bronx
candy store Saturday night:
“I asked him, if he was looking
for me and he gave me a bad
look. He looked at me from my
head to my toes and I shot him."
Ramos had roots in three youth
gangs.’ He had testified for the
prosecution during the recent
trial of seven gang members,
charged in the killing of Michael
Farmer, a crippled youth. But
Deputy Police Inspector John V.
Halk said: “There is definitely no
connection between the Ramos
deeth and the Farmer case."
Detectives said the Ramos slay*
ing stemmed from the shotgun
wounding two weeks ago of Car-
los Candelario, 17, of the Bronx.
Candelario, a member of Ser-
ra’s gang, was "gravely wounded
in a 'gang dispute. Henry
Retorico, 15, member of one of
Ramos’ gangs, has been accused
of the shooting.
Detectives said Ramos asked
Serra that there be no retalia-
tion for the shooting.
“I didn’t go for that jazz," Ser-
ra, a handler of a banana com-
pany. was quoted as saying.
Police said he told them: “It
was all a mistake. My finger
tightened on the trigger and it
went off.” :
Asked if he. was sorry, Serra
■mid, "Yeah."
PARIS - Some 270 senior of-
ficers and civilians team through-
out the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization area today began
secret sessions on how the al-
liance can strengthen its forces.
The four-day command post ex-
ercise is the last of eight such
annual operations held by Via-
count Montgomery, the British
deputy supreme Allied command-
er for Europe.
Sources clone to the conference
said it would include discussion
of Supreme Commander Lauris
Norstad’s standing request for
from 28 to 32 Western Europe
“shield”* divisions, as well as
NATO’s plans to bolster the di-
visions with nuclear missiles and
warhead stocks.
I
, r
Your Chamber of Commerce .is
-constanily striving e bFag-ndus-
try to your town. It doesn’t suc-
ceed every time, of course (What
sales organization of your knowl-
edge has a 100 per cent record in
its approaches to prospects?) But
it s “in there trying," as the old
expression has it.
The record of its accomplish-
ments is here to refute critics who
say the organization never does
anything. Admitted, it’s hard
sometimes to see what it's doing,
since a lot of its work (particular-
ly in the pursuit of industrial in-
stallations) has to be done in a
quiet, even secret fashion. The
competition for industry is keen,
as you know, and the Chamber of
Commerce that’s on the trail of
an industry doesn’t care to broad-
cast this fact to some other city
which may not know the industry
in question can -be landed.
Our town—and It’s own town,
just as it is your town—Is in a fin
position to -move forward: If
enough of us arc willing to pitch
in and help, we can continue to
grow. We want n larger, finer,
stronger,, more desirable commu-
nity. The answer lies in work-
coordinated work. The Chamber
of Commerce’s function is to co-
ordinate our efforts. If we put out
no effort, there’s nothing to coor-
dinate, is there?
114 billion drop for the month
before. /
4. Government spending is on
the way up and the increase will
be substantial in terms of dol-
lars. The effects of this have not
yet worked their way into the
business trend and it is felt to
be the better part of wisdom to
give them time. Also there are
two large spending bills on the
President’s desk—a Rivers and
Harbors bill and an increased
Road Expenditure bill. Put all
this on top of a rising trend in
state and local spending and it is
felt that if government spending
will turn the economy around
this should be sufficient.
Whether these facts, and
various other less important ones,
justify holding back on positive
action on the tax front is a mat-
ter for debate. The AFL-CIO,
Senator, Paul Douglas, the Na-
tional Planning Association, and
various others are firmly of the
opinion that the economy still
is on the downgrade and that
there should be 'a tax reduction
limited to increasing the buying
power of those in lower income
brackets.
President Eisenhower, in con-
trast, sees “no need for emer-
gency action now." In this view
he is joined by Secretary of
I abor Mitchell and Secretary of
Treasury Anderson. Members of
Sie Federal Reserve Board of
Governors are inclined ot take
somewhat the same position, but
members of the President’s Coun-
cil of Economic Advisors are a
bit more inclined to look with
favor upon early tax action, on
the ground that the danger of in-
flation is too small, at least at the
moment, to justify much delay
My personal view is that the
Council of Economic Advisers is
most nearly correct in its ap-
praisal. If it will .take the final
step and My that what we need
is income tax rate reform it will
be on completely firm ground.
By this we mean that while there
is some evidence the rate of
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here’s how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
IsLONGFELLoW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
ased for the three L’s. X for the two O’s. etc. Single letters,
apostrophies, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. .Each day the code letters are different.
———AErsptogram Quotatiow ——=
MHRU K JDN NMH UBWBFK FZ
4:14 Dooia"Edwara. New.
ita Robin Hood
7 :00 Burna and Allen *
' 7 :80- Talent Scouta
8:00 Voe er Firestone
8 :ao December Brude
9100- Danny Thomne Show
9:80— L Welk’s Top Tune*
A New Talent
10:00 Bett* White Show
10160- New. 1 . -
10140 —Weather
III :4S Star Performance
11 Lete Show
TUESDAr
Tree Time Keeper.
7 345 - New*
T:M Weather
8:00- Capta- angare
i hltP i •*■•• . ieddd xtbnh‛
1 .3 -Westher
• 200-Garry Moore, Show
• 40 -How Do Yau Kate
to uo- Arthur Godfrey Time
10180— Dotto
11:00 Love of Life
11:10 Movie Menu
ll*'-Farm DLet
12:14 Luce* a Regiona. New*
It 114 New.
12180 A the W.-H Ten
1 w -Beal tne Clock
life W— Paru
—The Mi Payott
2- The Verdict la Youn
1:04 Fun with Music
a:15- Ser ret Stuns
3:30 Eder of NiaL-
4 0• Aarriru Wendntand
4 :80 Cartoon Carava
t :00- Sir Lancelot
8:80 -Mickey Huw1 Club
4:00- New.
4:10 -Wethetman
4:14 Dougias Edwarda New.
4:40 Nam. Thal Tun.
7 300 Sheritt Cochine -------------
T :44> w ineo
l:ou Tu Tell the Thu th
1:44 Red Skelton Show
t» 300 864,000 Qumetiem
4 40 State Treoper
20100 You Bet Yeur tea ' "
10:30 N.w*
10 44 Wether
10 45 Star Performaie
11:14 Late Show
1
I
—E
E,
cal guy from out of town, a fel-
low who wouldn't be noticed
here.
He was small but well devel-
oped. His three ears were within
hearing distance. His eyesrall
four of them- though narrow and
dark, had an air of utter simplic-
ity.
The antennae that protruded
from his forehead were borne
with a boyish air, one tilted as if
eager to bear from a world he
never had heard from. one bent
to feel the world he knew.
His eyes, though green and pro-
truding, seemed ordinary for a
Monday in Manhattan. Those who
noticed he had four arms during
the subway crush tended to ad-
mire them and overlooked his
other head.
Fortunately, his first reports
&L-me
Hdu! 1G uul:-H
042041*11 'UJOteltl
uyeaw 102 41 it'
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(eacurecJedE
020-1 MDG!
B 1a503015
10j/lu reeimi?
cdEEdHH
(2[005 g15
70Aal4 10(3 1
El-d142 GGIF
E(NLH0)E I mi U JE
tiTppr
(when?)
SUBSORIPNON RATES
By Carrier .
__- $12.00 Three months
__$ 6.00 One month -
STOP THAT IFUNNEL V-
BLUBBERIN’, MAW" A
HE GOT IT IN TH’UNE JSS,
______________
any 29
1. so -Fopwe ana Mto Pala
6:00--Eerl Eaition * - ;
6:-15 Mayor Gardner Reporta
6:80 Robin Hood
7 :00 Burn, a Allen
7 :lu Talent Scouta
8:00- Danny Thomes
1 :>u— December unde
9100 Studio On. In Hollywood
4* ao- . Sumpenee Theatre
1030 JPimaf Eartfom
:0:4s -Nicht Owl Theutre
11:44 TV Newa Flaw
TUESDAY
7100—Test Pattera
7:14 Your Pastor
7:30— Ark-La-Tex Farmer
7:43 New. a Wenther with Lew Harri.
7:45 Channel 11 Newa
* 100- Cnvtuin Kangaroo
1:44 CM New.
.43 Channe 11 New
» * Gany Moore
9.30 How Do You Kate
10 200- Arthur Godfrey —
' 10130- Dotto
11:44 Love of Life
11 4v Seareh for Tomorrow
11:45 Gutding Liuht
11:40 Dou Owen New*
11:10 Wether As. Summary
11:14- PTA Syb.
U M A* The Worid Turna
1:00 Beat The Clock
I aao Hou Part
2100- Ms Payokf
210—Te Verdit to Youn
1-44 Mrnehter Dey -
«:14 Seeret Siorm
IN Edge of Night
4-44 Cimema XH
3*0 Sant ■■ Shew
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Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 25, Ed. 1 Monday, April 28, 1958, newspaper, April 28, 1958; Mount Pleasant, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1460724/m1/4/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.