Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 209, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 15, 1959 Page: 2 of 6
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1
T.
pa
The Local Linage"-by,Clei
lender, Algona, Iowa,
when others have notr"
prncer, Iowa Reporter.
States.
brief but cordial exchange, Miky-
USED CARS
exectly the right thing at the right
PrEB GERMANI
scouter and publisher of The Paris
i
News.
"You kpow U he were to stick realism at Camp Glover, Okla. I
wigwagged by semaphore over-
er Cathedral watchers began to
Mountains The land was donated
tors after remaining here the rest
message was all the more glorious
which will cost $5,800 and the Loun-
BOB SANDLIN
G (Pat) Mayse, Idng-time Paris
Pleasant has pledged $6,500 Tra-
Graham’s
—•
4
REAL €UFFER
4 * A —c.miM.
to soften us up that way.”
only to cement our friendship.
has already been cleared for this
Highway East
MT. PLEASANr
pany and with that the related
£
be a cekiy lHt>. el wis mww epe.
Wov i M-
f
a
a
-
L.
t
:d
T
d hr big load and steep graded
Series
sk;
1
’ Mt
i
" j
7
i
-4
A
ovnrrd from Page T
Series 91 ‘Fleehside-round-the clock defivery tptciotnH
Strht 60 state shows Hi stuff on off the rood
A
F
Chevrolet Task-jorce 59
See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer
acmuma , . o -r--—-
4
\
1
#0 )u
I
Mt. Pleasant, Texas
Highway 67 East
"——L
F
$
.L.r
qF for
No job’s too t
a Chevrolet truck !
cHfvROLrr
Grady Wilson, a Graham asso-
ciata. «a>d the minister would
Graham Due
Rest; Curtail
In Activities
A Urge amphitheater type efia-
pel in the center of the camping
ter of being able to -walk miles,
make one approach after a not hr
You don’t have to haul 30-ton loads
out of a stone quarry before your
—It is nmaaing how one ward can
change completely the meaning of
even a short three word message.
4 As reiterated in a recent issue
of Guideposts, history tells us’ that
the news of Wellington’s battle with
Napoleon reached England by way
of a sailing vessel and was then
gainst the deep mistrust for the
Soviet Union which by nqw is in-
could have lent them to him.”
On U. S trade restrictions "A,
mong things permitted for export
1
of ’ is week for further examin-
tinn -nd Treatment
Wison said the evangeli t was
still planning on the'Australian
project
An air oi accomplishment can
certainly be felt after a visit to
the camp, and just lately another
rtep was completed when electri-
city was turned on for the first
progress for the entire iron ore
area. ..........., ,
- That’s the way I see it
Ohe Waif
J See Jt
- j
not been decided.
Wi*s6h said the Australian pra-
grain probably would be shorten-
the money by March hr" ‘
Belgium produces begonias tn •
about the same quantity that'the
1
nunesze
-rif
around for a while I think he
would get elected senator,” joked
a California busthessman.
or pledged by Parisians.
The building itself is nearing
eompletion. Everything except the
interior work has been completed,
according to Wayne LeCrone, Coun-
cil Executive. ——
Hugo and Idabel, Okla., have
pledged to raise money for the
Ranger's Lodge which is complete
at a cost of $7,800; Sulphur Springs
has pledged the Health Lodge
s
Seen at close quarters over a
period of time, Mikoyan emerges
as a man of enermous vitality and
Mikoyan no more gets qut th
door than be spots him and goe.
right over to gat him on the testa.
AU the cameras want off at once."
The scene had taken place at
Perino’s restaurant on Wilghire
Boulevard in Los Angeles
•gB
—44
east Oklahoma, have accepted the
responsibility of raising money for
VI Ik
2 E%
PA 4-3656
1953-Fard V# Ranch Wagon, radio ’
heater, low mileage, local car, one”
owner, extra clean.
Dr Ciever said Wednesday
night he and Mayo Clinic spe-
Des Moines and editor of the
NFA Linage Getter; "Indusrial-
izing Texas" by C. C. Wine of
Laredo,‘member of the Texas In-
Running Political
on Tour of U. S.
. was followed by a bright and
> sunny day Lone Star Steel has
- expetienced rough spots in the
past, end we likely will encoun-
ter some in the future. With each
passing storm we gain strength.
Each bump along our way ‘serves
32
• ■
Pubalyd Sentence
GMM^nFargefy
A three-year probated sentence
was assessed a 28-year old Ciarks-
villa Negro Wednesday in 76th
District Court for forgery.
Robert Swan, indicted by the
grand jury Jan. 6 pleaded gulty,
to charges of forging a cheek for
gialits had confirmed that Gra-
ham was suffering from a spastic
rive and largest in the camp area, the retina of the left eye, cutting
At the present time Williams re- right of that eye by about 50 per
ports that $13,500 has been donated cent.
ed fliers.
The knives, tested by the Bureau
chose to spread was incomplete:
"o-P-E-R-A-T-I-o-NS ;
•S-H-U-r-D-O-w-N:
The third word that should
have been added by these who
preferred to spread pessimism
would change the message to
job’s considered tough. The rough
ones come in every weight class.
jht there is where a whole
/ " . e
43% ”
I m
-i • : -duh -
m Er-
02-0 --92
F-E-ATED EN-EM-Y." Now the esultafromsthe r1 and easin
, .2 a I Custry s abllily to SnaKe ott a
vpggnoN wMe nV ha rAeA alAcinie * •
year 1%-billion-dollar city slum
elimination program, was intro-
duced in the House today under
Democratic sponsorship.
&
r
—-
WASHINGTON— overnment
scientists have produced, the timst
casting pt molybdenum. a metal-
lic element which has excellent
strength at high temperatures.
to the Council five years ago by
Fred H. Dierks of Dierks Forestry.
Besides having the Ifo acres the
scouts can call their own, they
have access to 3,000 acres of the
mountainous area. __ ,
Only recently the first building
was completed and accepted from
Camp Contractor Leo Owens of
Valliant, Okla. This eras the Ran-
ger's Lodge which houses a year-
round ranger to look after the area.
Permanent buildings started in
July with the pouring of concrete
foundations for all buildings in the
Pat Mayse Administration Center,
, .
ohvsical condition was not ex-
oected until later this week.
___
About everywhere pan look vou’u
find Chevies like that big tandem
dump or that stake and pickup
*• mum out tef rowgh joba -
No matter how tough the jab. Chare’s
A Cheep truck cut ou la ant a
down to size.
V
■
. •
.5
NEW YORK — The stock mar-
ket advanced toward another
historic peak th active tradihig
early this afternoon.
FORT WORTH - "When the
United States reaches the moor,
it will find it littered with vod-
ka bottles.” This is the colorful
way Marjin Cajdin of New York,
expresses his opinion on how far
the Soviet Union is outstripping
the United States in space prp-
gress.
political -campaigning Uke a
to water. He has a gift for
Campaign
ROCHESTER, Minn W - An
eye ailment will force Billy Gra-
ham to take a month's rest and
Den curtail his future activities,
says the evangelist’s personal
physician, Dr. Kenneth Gieser of
warm clasp and said: "And please
do remember to give my very best
wishes to your father and mo
aher—- rN ‘ ,
.At a news conferehceiat the Am-
b asm ri sr Hotel in Los Angeles a
correspondent asked a ticklish
quartinn: "How is it that you have
managed to survive -through tour
L -
den
Ono word changed gloom to joy
unknown as the'news spread:
He . 2 ‘
cemrlete rebort on
ened -for his followers.- €alvary‛s
message spelled out:
"J-E S-U 8 D E F E A T E D!"
As the three dreary days of His
entombment dragged to a close,
the darkness suddenly lifted.
)e.
r 2.
21.
wHa N
. A,
s92h -
g ■.
MISSHENDRIGKSP
Continued from Page 1
Registration, a TP A board
meeting and a banquet will oc-
cupy the newspaper people the
*irt day.
Other program items Jan, 24
include a talk on "Roundup Up
—T 3
4- „wi
l say before that I thought I wag
All these and dozens of other in-
cidents illustrate one fact about
Anastas I. Mikoyan. He takes to
L.
k 4
er at the end of a long day sank
into his chair at she alfice; X
Mickey Mantle could only nave
the legs this guy has gat! Be must
have walked 10 miles today
through all tbose autogalanis. Ano
fits 63 years old .too." , \7
spell out the message: , .ms
“W-E-L-L-I -NG-TO-N O’S , u . .
FE AT-ED- Just then, a fog set-1 We npw see a brightand happy
ik'd over the land and the sama- ending to thisunavgidable dus
phore could nb longer be seen, penman nt operations. The cloud
Thus, tile sad. discouraging news' merely temporary. The oil
ofan incomplete message went out and gas industry is too necessa-
to the people: "WELLINGTON ry, too resourceful to remain idle
’DEFEATED.' I long. Able leaders are meeting
At the Lincoln Electric Qo Mam
in Cleveland Mikoyan stopped t governments of the Soviet Union
chat with a worker who spoke a K A..U.„455
wigwagged oy semarnore over- read:
landto London. Atop the Winchest- “O-P-E-H-A-T-IO-N S-g-U-T-
or Cathedral watchere Hmm t ’ • ■*3-M _
fnKadnsincid-ptdcewhichshas.theued somewhat He added that •
revival crusade, with its start st
wmkM 2es the mWnen. Tetsa I Sad,
urea, worthy j>( developing men of
tomorrow, urerapidty goming to
e . .. 22 _ , .
’ -.e ‘ ” ex s.-r ■' .0 ' "
D.Q-W-N T-E-M-P-O-R-A-R-I-
At Camp Glover, which is br ing
developed as the permanent camp
for the NeTseO Trails Council,
building and construction work in
busings
Paris' project is-the $25,000 Din-____________
ing Lodge which is the most expen- swelling of blood vessels back of
NeTseO Trails Council, which in-
cludes Northeast Texas and South- Chicago.
a picture of a soviet leader as a
warm, friendly, human and hu-
morous type of person. He was
camnaigning against trade re
sirictions. against suspicion of the
Soviet motives. The platform be
was running on was peace and an
end to the cold war. more trade
and more contacts between the
Soviet Union and America, and the
concept of "let’s talk things over
even if we don't think we can
0n‛ ’ -
. _d*2* mem
sleep. It is a question of having
the bounding vigor which makes
these things and the other re-
sponsibilities of .Soviet statsman-
ship a creative opportunity and
net just a chore
TruckFireRnings. Z
Out City Firemen.
in contrast to recent davs, the
Zire department was called on
or assistance but once Wednes-
.Jr
{
to string the wire t
mountains. The Cho
did the work. -5
la Detroit an exhausted report- an extended his hand to give a
time. And now, with big tandems
in the line along with every kind
of model you can name ., . with
- . the latest '59 ideas built into more
And right there Is where a whole might and muscle than ever before
fleet of Task-Force Chevies comes ... yog can bet a Chevy track win e
rolling in. As far back as they go, whistle through any aim Job you're
Chevrolet trucks have always been got Your Chevrolet dealer can zero
long on stamina and short on down- in on the exact model you need.
/wbo desires to understand us bet-
ter. He lacked a few million votes
of becoming president. Perhaps
if we had been approached we
teunnordemtM’ds ampdnzumeiaieig5"2
-w ELLINGTON DE erations, md the outlook for 1859
encordda Shetngyeubisu Dreams at a permanent camppina
Glover Seoul (amp Well
S Ino Developmenf Stage
grained in the American mind.
He was campaigring to establish Wright City. Okla., in the Quaehita
ious, they reported.
STATIEN '
. raettataf from Paxe 1
two men had inquired about gov-
ernmental procedure require-
ments of successful treasure
hunters. ’ , La "
Jones is of the opinion that
other treasurer may be buried in
the Alto area and he is not t-1-
ing anyone the exact locatien--
sot evn his wife, he says.
"Im gong to try to keep, as
much of that as I can," Jones
’old Moore. "I may neet some
note as I have a big family."
WORIBRIEEF
- • ' ’ Ar2
masatm2.c,*
- .
• .V'.
■ ■ qkpbj.
fl
tortetfhemnewspnpor"ntoi Netherlands produces -- Most
Home.’’ by . George Williams, ef them are exported to the United
BOB SANDLIN MOTORS
being in the limelight. And he
doesn’tmind anuphill struggle.
stances caused Lone Star Steel
A Aeronautics, have blades which to ealla temporaryhalt to some
______ , can cut metal or other hard mater- Tal’r^ty off the Mant s operations,
before tough audiences, and get time in the history of the area suchasthe sides ora crash- the gloom-mongers quickly went
by at times withenk a few hours Pitsburg soouters pledged money ed plane. The knife butt is strong
through the tn be used a hem my ।
ptawREA ’ . -C,__ ________ I
T Use our Classifieds for resulis!.
■■•t vrr of THE
BUT MULW A
IUpper $20,7Condition of the probation
was that he make restitution of
day. This was when a truck
motor caught fire at Johnson
Truek Stop. on Highway 67
The fire had teen extingvishet
when th- firemen arrived on the
15 iicene. The damage was not ne-
- . •2- •402--
ttri a etd
______
eCd to tngSe WnO WOUIC Sprcad
711
By THOMAS F. WHITNEY
n • ’NEW Mons i —"That guy!
porterMNrwhs that one itt.
kid with -the whole crowd Thi:
gloom. Remember, the worst
storm_the wprld Jim. miknown
1956—Buick Special 2 door, air condi-
- tioned, dynaflow transmission,
jMio, jheater-^ ygl dean, one
owner car.
1954—Ptypumth 2 door sedan, air con-
di tioned, automatic transmission,
radio, heater, white tires, extra
clean car
1950 Eastg V6 Tudor, nearly new tires,
radio, heater, clean model.
1957-Chevrolet Bel Air 4 door Sedan, I
l Power Pak V8 Engine, Power
__— Glide Transmission, radio, heater,
local car, one owner. We sold new
and have serviced car all it’s life-
extra nice.
1956—Mercury Monterey Hard Top
Coupe, Merco - Matic Transmis- 1
sion. radio, heater, mats and up-
holstery look new, extra clean car..
: ■
Bbomra
rorgy. This is not merely a mat-
in fact in his seven-day five-city . . ......
coast-to-coast tour of America, Mi- going on at ful steam throughout
koyan was waging a real political this winter in preparation for next
campaign. He was running a-! summer’s camping season.
- The Ifo acre tract of land on the
winding Glover Biver is located
approximately 90 miles north of
MOTORS
settle anything ”
The Mikoyan technique includes
humor, frankness, reasonableness,
u warmly human approach and un-
perturbed stolidity to the face of
.open hostility. .
His sense of humor nas made
more impresstan than perhaps any
other single element in his ap-
On Adiai Stevensonici nG I' to the Soviet Union are laxatives, j area has been pledged to be built
---— --- We de. Thankt“you, buttit qis impossible by scooters from Bonham. Land
4g eApn ii« tin 44 wmar s» 1 10a.e 1 jh I n n n — -A c zg-g
..ha
Edp ‘
ac (92
3
The HUrt development program,
headed by Louis Williams, camp
development chairman, will cost in
the neighborhood of 9115,000. At the
present time $42,000 has been do-
nated or pledged to the Council to-
ward the building of the camp.
Several cities in the 12% county
Wjthaquta Licker of an eyelash,
Mikoyan quipped in reply: "Didn’t
------
------■-----
. •n “ITTTITT.]T
eticientlyl The Mount Pha
Dally Time ennebes •e Meunt
Plansant familian dalin shandons
<71 v gi, ' ......
any
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gan2s, 1
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/ Ypur boat dhuy An MM wiu ho
Phen: PA 1-6656
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uxf macidh annud r > ’ *
-MA. rnNN IXAB anuray. Jan. IK 1959
a <• ia 7
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Mt. Pleasant Daily Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 209, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 15, 1959, newspaper, January 15, 1959; Mount Pleasant, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1460789/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.