Mt. Pleasant Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 223, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 13, 1965 Page: 1 of 6
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FIRST with the news
FIRST in reader confidence
5c PER COPY
VOL. NO. 45
scale of rainfall
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ister Eisaku Sato of Ja
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World
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leaf
To Succeed Burch
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Thursday.
cratic party; and other mem
4
lives of the United States and
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For Representative
ustomers
h Dryer .
$2027
LI
U.S. Flag Burned; Estimated 1200
Panamanians Stage Demonstration
295
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69.95
ers in agriculture finished a
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in the chain-
Terrell of Argo
cow torthe ranch.Mr
parents. (Times Stan Poto.)
t Accec,4 pAahap
Bates, asSistant Casder •
CAdv.)
e delightful experience.
chairman.
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a
Cattlemen
Plan Event
51.32 Inches
45.43 inches
43.84 inches
33.46 inches
39.25 inches
be
he
T
JI
lexers
night when the Mt. Pleasant
Lions Club is host to four
others in the area for a Zone
I social event.
It will be at Alps Cafe.
Other clubs to be present in-
clude Talco. Sulphur Springs,
Winnsboro and Pittsburg.
Lions and their wives are to
CARES. is the place for you
Friendly, experienced people
Tomb of the Unknown Sol-
dier and the grave of the late
U.S. Secretary of State John
Poster Dulles, architect of
the Japanese peace treaty.
e
a
WASHINGTON — Two U.S.
Air Force jet fighters were
shot down over Laos today,
the Defense Department an-
nounced.
e Purchased
sotmer.
AN PILGRIMS
HAD
Ill. I— It’s the
st crop of tur-
ory, says Hugh
iversity of Illi-
i poultry science
Sen. Aikin
GetsMoney
Measure
term examinations due this
month.
During the rally in Santa
AUSTIN • — Texas sena-
tors moved quickly through
Sato, LBJ
Hold Final
Session
WASHINGTON u — Pi
dent Johnson and Prime 1
Northeast Texas: Partly
cloudy tclear this afternoon
and Thursday: Cooler tonight.
Low tonight 28 in northwest to
42 in southeast High Thurs-
day 54-62.
reached college.
He thinks reading could be
taught in high school, and
the key to poor student per-
formance is counseling to find
the reason.
He also declared that jun-
ior college graduates make
excellent college records—as
good as those who took their
first two years in a college
As to the local situation
with respect to a junior col-
lege. Moses offered this ad-
vice: ,
"There was never a better
4 Cycle
$184.95
2 ' -
s co. i
tee
- ■
. Te
a successor.
On the Titus County level,
County Judge Cecil Franklin
began preparations to order
the election for the county’s
22 voting precincts.
The county judge reminded
voters they would be required
to hold a new poll tax re-
See RACE, Page 5
02
Electric
E
tic Oven
--
WASHINGTON ( — Presi-
dent Johnson proposed a
sweeping new immigration
law to Congress today. It is
based on an immigrant’s skill
and his family ties in the
United States.
It would do away with the
Briefs |
By The Associated Press
FORT WORTH — City
health director W. V. Brad-
shaw declared a rabies emer-
gency in Fort Worth today
and said in effect that a city-
wide quarantine will begin
3 if
day, laying
spending bill.
=-- Starting A Chain
This 28-month-old registered polled Hereford heifer is the first to be given
in the Silver Sage Ranch-FFA Heifer chain program. In the background Pi-
tured left to right, are Jerry Smith, sponsor of the Gremhand .Charter ofFFAi
Lizabeth Taylor, daughter of Mrs Lois Taylor, owner of Silver Sage Ranch;
and J. W Terrell, freshman ag student a nd a member of the Greenhand Ehapter:
...........3.44 bcM
............LU inches
964 total waa up
3 figure, it was
shy of the 1982
of 43 84 inches.
Mount Pleasant
a steady decline
four years, with
: only year since
ise from the pre
i the hottom
num Space-
per all anap
namel inter-
dee of while
F
CourtNames
4 To Board
The Titus County Commis-
sioners Court made three ap-
pointments Monday to 0M
board of managers of Titus.
County Memorial Hospital.
Frank Cox was re-appointed
to a three-year term on the
board.
Frank Glover was named to
a three-year term to succeed
W F. (Buster) Holcomb. ,
Holcomb then was re-pi
pointed to the board to fill
the one-year unexptrod term
of Julius Wofford. Woltord
resigned because of UI health.
The Court will advertisefee
$
3
700′3
i-
-
FIELD GROWING . . .
- —----
Two From Titus File
hehr th
mvqiu, '
tinue today Some quarters
suspected the studens hoped
continuing unrest would force attend.
Ohio Republican Chair-
man Ray C. Bliss, with
former Sen. Barry Gold-
water’s stamp of approv-
al, will become the GOP
national chairman suc-
ceeding Dean Burch after
a transition period. (AP
Wirephoto.)
Toacning on college fail-
ures. Moses said some stu-
dents fail because they can’t
read. He cited the one-time
case of a student from a rural
Titus County school at Sam
crop of turkey!
at 98.7 million
Arlington National Cemetery
to lay wreaths at President --------gIGL2
John F. Kennedy’s grave, the today called in represe ntaf '
bers of Sato’s party drove to UNTED NATIONS, N. y
— Secretary-General U Thani
the Soviet Union for private
talks on the deadlock over
U.N. peacekeeping assess-
ments.
Lions District
Governor to Visit
District Governor Roger
Burnsed of Marshall will pay
an official visit here Friday
Ana Plaza, National Assembly
member Virgilio Schueverer
condemned the United States
for "imperialism,” praised
Prime Minister Fidel Castro
and predicted that "rivers
of blood" will flow in Pan-
ama. - -
There were frequent chants
of “Revolution . . . revolu-
tion” as other anti-American,
antigovernment and pro-Cas-
tro speeches harangued the
crowd and the U.S. flag’S* as
burned. Three empty coffins
were on display.
After the speeches. t h e
crowd headed for the Legisla-
tive Palace opposite the Ca-
nal Zone boundary. About 100
soldiers lined up to block
them and let loose a tear-gas
barrage.
Odena Brannom, of Saltillo,
had announced also.
The deadline for filing to
midnight Wednesday. •
The post, for District 11 of
Titus, Hopkins, Franklin and
Delta counties, became va-
cant Monday when Joe N.
Chapman resigned. He was
appointed judge of the 8th
Judicial District - by Gov.
John Connally who called a
special election for Feb. 13
in the four counties to name
held their second and final
business meeting at the Whit
House today . A
Sato was introduced to
congressional leaders wh
were just leaving a meetin
with the President. __________I
Secretary of State Dean
Rusk introduced Sato to
House Speaker John W. Mej
Cormack, D-Mass., and
House Majority Leader Cait
Albert, D-Okla.
Earlier Sato, Foreign min-
ister Etsusaburo Shiina; Ta
keo Miki, secretary-general
of the ruling Liberal-Demo
Lt. Gov. Preston Smith also
, had his committee assign-
I ments ready to announce
the upcoming election to
name a new state representa-
tive was mushrooming Wed-
nesday.
The Associated Press re-
ported from its Austin Bureau
that seven had filed with the
secretary of state’s office.
This was at mid-morning.
The list included two from
Titus County, three from Hop-
kins County and two from
Franklin County.
Listed as candidates filing
from Titus were Tom Cald-
well, University of Texas
graduate student, and P. A.
Thomas Jr., employe of Ame-
rican Petrofina Company.
From Hopkins: Tom Green,
Sulphur Springs law student
and radio announcer; J. Kear-
ney Brim, Sulphur Springs
attorney;, and Smith E. Gil-
ley, Cumby attorney.
From Franklin: Ray Ottin-
ger, steel worker; and Neal
Solomon, Mt. Vernon insur-
ance agent.
Max Hightower of Mt.
Pleasant announced Tuesday
JACKSON, Mich. — Donald
Eberly, 14, was moved out
of the intensive care ward of
Jackson’s Mercy Hospital
Tuesday, a 2%-inch sewing
needle lighter and “feeling
just fine.” .
mated 1,200 Panamanians
demonstrated against the
Unifed States Tuesday night
and burned an American flag,
the third in two days. Pana-
manian soldiers again kept
them away from the Canal
Zone with tear gas and shots
fired in the air.
The.,labor-student rally in
downtown Santa Ana Plaza
Kasling is
FNB Official
A new director has been
named at First National
Bank in Mt. Pleasant.
He is Mayo G. Kasling pof
Hughes Springs, who sic-
ceeds his mother, Mrs. R. M.
Kasling. Mrs. Kasling resign-
ed from the board effective
Dec. 31.
Kasling is cashier of First
PANAMA (— esti-the government to close the
schools and suspend end-of-
. Senate Lays Out 1966
-Spending Bill on 2nd D
doy ‘cert
the quota system "incompa-
tible with our basic American
tradition.”
Instead, immigrants would
be selected on a first-come,
first-serve basis, within a sys-
tem of preferences based on
work and cultural skills and
family unity.
The bill is virtually identi-
cal to one proposed in 1963
by President John F. Kenne-
dy. Johnson urged Congress
today to give the revived bill
priority consideration.
He said the proposed law
"both serves the national in-
terest and continues our tra-
ditional ideals.”
“No move could more effec-
tively reaffirm our fundamen-
tal belief that a man is to
be judged — and judged ex-
clusively — on his worth as
a human being,” the Presi-
dent said.
The bill, he said, would
maintain safeguards against
undesirables and excessive
immigration, require all im-
migrants to meet U.S. secur-
ity requirements, and ensure
that no immigrants “could
contribute to unemployment
in the United States.”
Unemployment figured
strongly in one of the first
congressional comments on
the President’s proposals.
Sen. John L. McClellan, D-
Ark., said “I don’t think we
ought to let this country get
flooded with immigrants.
We’ve got enough of an unem-
ployment problem as it is.’
He is a member of the immi-
gration subcomittee of the
Senate Judiciary Committee.
- Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-
Mich., promptly announcea
he would introduce a bill t
carry out Johnson’ recom
mendations and would ask foi
early Judiciary Committee
hearings.
, was th; last scheduled event
I in a four-day observance of
ant-U.$. rioting last January
in which 21 and
four U.S. soldiers were kill-
ed.
There was speculation that
student agitation might con-
OMING, and into WESTERN
CANADA . . . guess it’s a lot
of fun to drive along and
take your house with you. . .
Some folks are comparing
LYNDON JOHNSON to AN-
DREW JACKSON. saying
LBJ has invited all his kin
to the Inauguration . . they
say he has put out a “y’all
come” invitation, with the
result there will be too many
kin to put up in the WHITE
HOUSE, so some of them
will be farmed out to WASH
INGTON hotels . . . well. it’s
his party, and if he wants to
invite his kin. that sounds
just fine.—WNF.
★ * +
15yot want to have a real
party while banking, then the
GUARANTY BOND STATE
BANK, the BANK THAT
J -
. ■ 14 . A <
LBJ Proposes Sweeping
New Immigration Bill
quota system. Johnson called
The Northeast Texas Cat-
tlemen’s Association is mak-
ing plans for a Junior Steer
Show and Sale, County Agent
Gene Neal disclosed Wed-
nesday.
Prior to the event, which
probably will be scheduled in
early June. steers are to be
given youth farming groups
to put on 120-day feeding pro-
grams.
Four head are to be given
Titus 4-H chibs. four for the
Mt. Pleasal FFA Chapter,
and four for the Talco FFA
Chapter.
Donors will be Alex Wad-
dell and C. B. Kaylor of Tal
co. Traylor Russell, Ed Hord.
Tull Florey, Marvin Coffey.
Gene Luna. Connie Short. L
B. Henson, Gene Fleming.
Loyd Green. A. C. Anderson
and Frank Ma.
WEATHEF
-- 21
notoall . . next summer they junior college.
will go to LARAMIE. WY-
40-year-old national-origins
The field of candidates for he would file for the office'
A ninth candidate, Miss
3-66
--------mm
FIRST in circulai
FIRST choice of 4
National Bank, Hughes
Springs.
His father, with the late
A. G. Daniel bought controll-
ing interest in the First Na- ,
tional Bank in Mt. Pleasant
in 1936 Mrs Kasling suc-
ceeded her husband as direc-
tor of the bank at his death.
Officers and directors were
re-elected this week at the
annual shareholders meet-
ing/
Directors are Lon B. Bates.
Charles Black. W. M Drig-
gers. Kasling, F. H. Marshall.
W. L. Means, C. H. Meyer,
Dsn H. Mitchell, B. M. Sand
lin, Jno. B. Stephens Jr., I.
N Williams and Leo Wilson
Officers are I. N. Williams,
chairman of the beard; W. L
Means. president; Dan H
Mitchell, v l c e-president;
Charles Black, vice presi-
dent and tryst officer:, Mrs. ,
Estelle Sweet, vice-president
Rex Amerson, assistant vice-
president; C. R Short, assist-
ant vice-president; Mrs. Mat
tie Lou Sinclair, assistant
KENOSHA, Wis. — A girl
member of the Graff quad-
ruplets, born Monday/ died
early today at Kenosha Me-
morial Hospital.
—TmT
Heid in Poker Palace Shooting
Louis Koullaris, left, 70, is taken into custody
in Gardena, Calif., by a detective after a shooting .
in Gardena where three poker palaces were fired
upon, wounding 22 persons. Police said they-found
a veritable arsenal in Koullaris’ car. (AP Wire-
photo.)
I i m e th a n righ t now f or a
junior college, while you haveTravel ees^y. trryel safely, n. ^.ichl|
mk-bank/srAteH ansommgatasr-wagoprogra ffom ms “
Houston who had to
taught to read when
13 4/
' Kt’
Ahh
4%
when the Senate met.
Smith said introduction of
the appropriations bill was
worked out with House
Speaker Ben Barnes to avoid
delay because of time-con-
suming House organization.
Sen. Dorsey Hardeman of
San Angelo, who was named
chairman of the Finance
Committee by Smith, intro-
duced the 83.5 billion Legis-
lative Budget Board 1966-67
budget proposal.
The spending figure to a-
bout $100 million below Gov
John Connally’s budget
Spending from the state’s
general revenue is projected
at $567.3 million under the
bill, 132 million less than Con-
nally’s budget proposals.
The budget wquld leave .a.
$66 million surplus. However,
it made no mention of teach-
ers’ requests for pay rais-
es, which would add 868 mil-
lion to the two-year budget.
Hardman referred the
spending measure to a five-
man subcommittee headed
by Sen. A. M. Aikin Jr. of
Paris. Hardeman appointed
himself to the subcommittee.
Aikin said the subcommittee
would start work within the
next two weeks
Senators also began con-
sidering- Connally's appoint-
ments, including former
House Speaker Byron Tun-
nell and former Civil Appeals
Court Justice Jim Langdon
to the Railroad Commission;
and Gen. Thomas Bishop as
adjutant general.
Senate committee chairmen
include Grady Hazlewood of
Amarillo, state affairs; Bill
Moore of Bryan, education;
Louis Crump of San Saba, re-
districting:- George Park-
house of Dallas, water; Gal-
leway Calhoun of Tyler, oil;
Martin Dies of Lufkin. elec-
tions; Andy Rogers of Child--
ress, agriculture; Tom Crei-
ghton of Mineral Wells, game
and fish; H J. Blanchard of
Lubbock. Insurance: Abra-
ham Kazen of Laredo, con-
stitutional amendments; and
Jack Hightower, labor.
Mt Aleasant Times
MOUNT PLEASANT, TEXAS. 75455. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13. 1965
Less Failures
In Jr. College,
Speaker Says
Fewer failures occur in
junior colleges than in senior
colleges because there is
more time for teacher super-
vision in the two-year school,
Luther Moses told the Rotary
Club Tuesday.
And more students go to
college where a junior col-
lege exists, than attend if
they are compelled to attend
a senior college in furthering
their education.
As to effect of the junior
college on the senior college,
Moses, who left Sam Hous-
ton State Teachers College
last year, said “no college
was ever hurt by a junior
college."
Whereas senior colleges
fought the junior college 25
years ago. last year all his
department’s practice teach-
It Says
Here...
3 A number of MT. PLEAS-
ANT people have souvenirs of
the inauguration of LYNDON
B. JOHNSON, in the form of
engraved, invitations to the
ceremony . . . thus far we
have been able to establish
that at least 22 other per-
sons have received the covet-
ed invitations ... if you re-
ceived one, and your name is
not in the list here today,
please give us a call . . . we
want the names of each per-
son who received an invita-
tion . . .
At this writing, we have
been advised the souvenirs
have been received by MR.
and MRS DON WYRICK.
MR. and MRS. W. L. MEANS,
DR. and MRS. PALMORE
CURREY, MR and MRS
BASCOM PERKINS, MR. and
MRS. TRAYLOR RUSSELL,
MR and MRS O L CRIG-
LER, MR and MRS.
CHARLES DRIGGERS, MRS
R. F LINDSAY, MRS JOHN
HOLLAND, MR and MRS
CHARLES TUCKER, MR
and MRS C. E. GADDIS,
MR. and MRS RAYMOND
BROWN . .
The PAT BECKS have
bought a lot at the end of
REDBUD LANE and plan a
home there right away . . .
Guess maybe they will inclade
8 workshop for son PAT-
RICK, now age 20 months,
since his recent mechanical
exploit . . from the galaxy
of toys. at his disposal, he
chose his mother’s vacuum
cleaner to amuse himself . .
FRANCES dismantled the
machine and told him to have
fun, or something like that
f.. well, PATRICK did have
fun— he reassembled the
vacuum cleaner and had it
in operation when his mother
checked back with him t.
Prospective neighbors take
note: vacuum cleaner repaire
may be available when PAT-
RICK moves into his parents *
new home . . .
The G. N. ANDERSONS,
who live on the TALCO high-
way. have a new and larger
trailer house ... next week
they will take it to HOUS
TON. where they will haby-
Fit for two weeks with grand
children while their son-in-
law, who is a DR PEPPER
dealer, goes to NASSAU to
enjoy a trip he recently won
as a gift from his company
. . . after HOUSTON the AN
DERSONS will go to MEX
ICO for a visit . . . and that's
b j 4
92
J ‘
' J A ' I W
second-day organization is
the infant 59th. Legislatur to-
out the 1966-67 ’
. J
7’ 4 0
33 8883 926893
NVN
*1-^4 V 486
-e/39
**1 • An— -r-,-w l
K 19.A ■ *3
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Mt. Pleasant Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 223, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 13, 1965, newspaper, January 13, 1965; Mount Pleasant, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1613502/m1/1/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.