The Ennis Weekly Local (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 21, 1966 Page: 1 of 4
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THE ENNIS WEEKLY .
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ENNIS, ELLIS COUNTY, TEXAS, THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1966
CAI
13 Cases Set for
Trial on Wed in
Justice Court
Thirteen cases are scheduled
for trial in the Justice Court of
Judge Paul Grafton Wednesday
at 10 a.m.
They are: a Mexia youth, charg-
ed with speeding 70 MPH on a
motorcycle; a Tulsa, Okla., man
for failure to pass in safety,
causing an accident; an Ennis
man for unsafe speed, causing
an accident, a Mesquite attorney
for speeding 85 mph and failure
to appear; a Dallas youth,
A speeding 80 mph; an Ennis man,
speeding 100 mph; a Dallas
chauffeur, speeding 80 mph; a
Dallas man, speeding 100 mph;
a Dallas man and his wife, drunk
and parked’ on roadway; and a
Dallas woman, speeding 80 mph
at night.
Jurors are: Mrs. J. A. Stout,
Mrs. Vernon Willis, Mrs. Willie
Lucas, Mrs. B. J. Hart.
Mrs. H. H. Powell, Mrs.
H. J. Chew, Lonnie Renfro, John
Stiles, C. B. Bourland, Mark
Slayton, Raymond Waldrop, L.
T. Whitlock.
Nine cases were passed by
Judge Grafton to the August
term of his court, August 17.
Mrs. Bethune
Services to Be
Held Thursday
Funeral Services for Mrs. Em-
ma Bethune, grandmother of
residents of the Ennis area, will
be held at Lamar & Smith Chap-
el Dallas at 2 p.m. Thursday,
the Rev Buel Crouch officiating.
Graveside services will be held
at Elm Branch Cemetery at Bard-
well at 4 p.m.
Mrs. Bethune lived in the Ran-
kin-Byrd
years.
Mrs.
Community many
Bethune died at her
ermite Swindles in
Bruce Brown Is
Appointed Area
IA
Director
Appointment of Bruce Brown,
Bruce Brown Chevrolet-Olds, En-
nis, as Area Director of Texas
Automobile Dealers Association
was announced today by Bob
Herrin of Stephenville, who rep-
resents this area on the TADA
Board of Directors.
Mr. Brown has been advised
that his major responsibility as
an Area Director will be to work
at the grass roots with other offi-
cials of the statewide franchised
new car dealers association to
promote a high standard of in-
tegrity among the car dealers of ।
the state and serve the motoring!
public better by making driving
safer, more convenient and more
economical.
“Automobile dealers were par-
ticularly concerned at this time”,
Brown said, “with highway and
car safety, and stress will be
placed on association programs
in this area with this as the aim.
He said TADA planned to work
with Area Directors to expand
the driver education program
into more Texas schools. Dealers
help sponsor this training by
loaning automobiles to schools.
Mr. Brown will serve as an
Area Director until the next
TADA convention in Houston,
May, 1967. The Association, with
headquarters in Austin, repre-
sents 1,400 franchised dealers of
new automobiles and trucks of
the State.
W. P. Gardner’s
Rites Are Held
Funeral services for Wayne
Park Gardner, 53, of Ferris were
held at Green Funeral Chapel
there. Minister Ted Poindexter
officiated' and burial was in Fer-
ris Memorial Park North.
Mr. Gardner died at his home
following a heart attack a few
hours earlier.
He was born in Lamonte, Mo.
Mr. Gardner had lived in t h e
Ferris community seven years
and was a nemployee of Marilyn
Belts & Bags, Inc., and was a
member of the Church of Christ.
He is survived by his wife,
Mrs. Essie Mae Gardner; two
daughters, Miss Martha Mae
Gardner, Kansas City, Mo. and
Miss Ruth Ann Gardner, War-
saw, Mo.; five sons, Bobby W. of
Gassville, Ark. .Patrick, with the
U. S. Army and Larry P., James
an dGlen, all of Warsaw; a sis-
ter, Mrs. Ruth Baird, Kansas
City, and a brother, James, of
LaMonte.
ENTERS HOSPITAL
Mrs. I. G. Moore accompanied
her mother, Mrs. J. Frank Clarke
to Dallas Monday and Mrs.
Clarke entered the Presbyterian
Hospital for observation and
examination.
(NEA Telephoto)
SEVEN-YEAR-OLD Kathleen Collins points to the sky in Sea-
brook, Tex., to show Nassau Bay Chief of Police Jess Young
where her father is spending some time. Kathleen is the
daughter of Michael Collins, who is flying high in Gemini-10
with fellow astronaut John Young. They’re expected to land
July 21.
limmy Oliver of Ennis Honored
Lone Star Farmer Degree
the state sweetheart climaxed
From the Ennis Chapter, Fu-
ture Farmers of America, Jimmy
Oliver represented his chapter
as delegate to the 38th Annual
State FFA Convention held in
Austin the 13th—15th. The elec-
tion of the state president and
Goo
group
Renner Event
The Ennis Chamber of Com-
merce, which sponsors atten-
dance from this area, has learn-
ed that maturing field crops
and forages and a host of new
cultural practices to improve
farm efficiency will be on dis-
play at Texas Research Founda-
tion’s Field Day and Awards
Barbecue at Renner on Thurs-
day, July 21.
A sizable group from Ennis
plans to attend.
“Many rapidly maturing grain
sorghum hybrids, blooming cot-
ton and lush pastures gives the
Foundation a splashing array of
summer time color,” said Dr. C.
L. Lundell, Director of the
privately-supported institution.
“Visitors can best observe now
the results of various manage-
ment systems being used at Ren-
ner,” Dr. Lundell continued, an-
nouncing final field day plans.
Guided tours of Foundation
facilities, experimental plots
and demonstration fields and
pastures will be held from 1
p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Research
with minimum tillage, herbicides
for weed control and varying
plant population studies in field
crops will be discussed by Foun-
dation scientists. Latest results
obtained from the Renner Farm-
ing System and the Renner Pas-
ture System also will be pre-
sented.
the convention Friday.
Thursday night the conven
tion honored the Lone Star Far-
mers of Texas. There were 49
candidates, including Jimmy Oli-
ver, from this area, who receiv-
ed the degree. The Lone Star
Farmers make up the top 2 per-
cent of the total state’s member-
ship.
To qualify one must be an ac-
tive member in all phases of
FFA work for at least two years,
must have made at least $500
from his supervised farming pro-
gram or other agriculture work
and have it reinvested in the
bank, must be able to lead a
group discussion for at least.40
minutes, and many others. The
gold charm which replaces the
silver chapter farmer pin was
presented to each boy.
Accompanying Jimmy to Aus-
tin was his local advisor and
Ennis High School agriculture
teacher, R. E. Buie.
home, 720 S. Willomet, Tuesday,
July 19, in Dallas. She was a
resident of Dallas for 30 years.
Mrs. Bethune was born in Jack-
son County, Ala., Sept. 21, 1883.
the daughter of the late Arthur
and Jane Pendergrass Reynolds.
Survivors are: 5 daughters:
Mrs. Josephine Rankin, Dallas;
Mrs. C. E. Smith, Richardson;
Mrs. J. V. Baxter, Dallas; Mrs.
Clarice Pitts, Las Vegas, Nevada;
Mrs. J. L. McKernan, Dallas;
1 son, Raymond Bethune, Dallas;
1 sister, Mrs. Pearl Ledbetter,
Paris, Tex.; 1 brother, Arthur
Reynolds, Chillicothe, Tex.; a
number of grandchildren and
great-grandchildren.
She was the grandmother of
Fred W. Rankin, Ennis, and Bill
G. Rankin, F. J. Rankin and
Johnnie L. Rankin of the Ran-
kin Community.
Ennis Beins Probed
The Ennis Police Department
has started to receiving com-
plaints from local citizens and
home owners about being swind-
led out of money by several
white men representing them-
selves as termite control men.
These men, it was explained,
drive around in mostly pickup
tducks and' go from house to
house asking the home owners
to inspect the houses to see if
they have termites or their house
needs leveling .
“The majority of these men
do not work for any reputable
company but are employed only
by themselves,” it was stated.
“Most of the time these men
advise the homeowner that they
must have some money then, to
purchase supplies to do the job
with, and the homeowners are
giving them around $150 and
are told they will be back short-
ly to start on the house and that
is the last time he homeowners
sees them.
“A local lady reported a loss
of $520 to these men and they
have not been seen since. The
Police Department has urged
the citizens of Ennis to please
beware of this type of men, be-
cause they make a living swind-
VOL. 41 NO. 29
-—— . -
Former Ennis
Machinist, J.
Malavear, Dies
Jesus Malavear, 85, retired
machinist, formerly of Ennis
died yesterday at his home,
1037 Woodlawn, Dallas.
Mr. Malavear was a native of
San Luis Potosi, Mexico. He
came to Ennis Sept. 20, 1919,
and worked as a machinist for
the Southern Pacific until re-
tirement August 30, 1952.
He then moved' to Dallas to
reside.
Surviving are his wife, 4
daughters, Miss Concha and
Emelia, who live in Dallas and
Fort Worth respectively; Mrs.
Rosemary Velaquez, Dallas;
Mrs. James Paul Ralston, Kan-
sas City, Mo.; 4 sons,
Frank, Mesquite; John and Joe,
Dallas; Luis, Lancaster, 3 grand-
sons and 6 granddaughters; 5
great-grandsons and one great-
granddaughter.
Rosary will be recited at the
Campbell Funeral Home, West
Davis at Bishop, at 8 p.m. Sun-
day.
Requiem mass will be cele-
brated at the Blessed Sacrement
Church, Sth and’ Marsaillas, Dal-
las ,at 9:30 a.m. Sunday.
Howard Kelsey’s
Services Held
The funeral service for How-
ard Kelsey, 57, who died Thurs-
day morning, was held at 2 p.m.
on Friday in the Keever Chapel
with the Rev. C. Douglas White
and the Rev. Carl Bilderback of-
ficiating. Interment was in Myr-
tle Cemetery with the following
serving as pallbearers: Joe Hix-
on, Bill Jones, Buddie Davis, A.
F. Swindell, Burl Howard, and
Joe Liska.
Mr. Kelsey was born in Byrd,
on July 7, 1909, the son of Mr.
and Mrs. T. J. Kelsey. He was
reared in Ennis and later engag-
ed in farming.
Surviving him are a sister
Mrs. Johnie Evarts of Ennis, a
Principal speaker at the 5 p.m. brother Roscoe Kelsey of Ennis
awards barbecue will be Albert and a niece Mrs. Gentry
Roach of Paris, prominent Tex-
Joe F. Skroh’s
Rites Are Held
The funeral service for Joe
F. Skroh, 82, who died Monday
morning, was held at 10 a.m.
on Tuesday in the Keever Chapel
with the Rev. Lively Brown of-
ficiating. Interment was in the
Crisp Cemetery, with his grand-
sons serving as panfbearers: Roy
Skroh, Jimmy O’Brien, Leo
Wachmann, all of Ennis, Jerry
Linker of Cleveland, Texas,
John Hasty of Commerce and
Tommy Wheeler of Houston.
Mr. Skroh was born December
25, 1883, in Cainsville, Mo., the
son of Joe and Mary Stoklasa
Skroh. He came to Texas with
his parents when about eighteen
months old, settling in Ennis. On
August 27, 1907 he married
Miss Matilda Chrastecky of En-
nis and they made their home in
Ennis where Mr. Skroh was a
butcher. He was with the Ennis
Market for a number of years,
retiring in 1953. He also farmed
at Crisp for several years.
Mr. Skroh was a member of
the First Methodist Church and’
was a charter member of t h e
C. S. P. S. Society which is now
the Czechoslovakian Society of
America.
Surviving him are his wife,
one son, Alfred Skroh, Ennis;
four daughters, Mrs. C. P. Bur-
nett, Waxahachie; Mrs. David R.
Espy, Corpus Christi; Mrs. W.
E. O’Brien, Ennis; Mrs. C. K.
Chandler ,Houston; nine grand-
children; and five great-grand-
children.
(NEA Telephoto) -
FIVE HUNDRED wounded veterans of the Vietnamese war and
other hospitalized servicemen were treated to a “Summer
Showboat” cruise on the Potomac River near Washington July
18 by Defense Secretary and Mrs. McNamara. Sgt. Larry
Whiting, of Gambrills, Md., who lost a leg in Viet Nam, still
managed to turn in a lively version of the twist with Vickie
Rommel of Washington.
Boy Scout Troop No. 205 Goes to
Lake Texoma for Its Summer Camp
Boy Scout Troop 205, sponsor-
ed by Tabernacle Baptist
Church, left for one week of
Summer Camp Sunday.
Troop 205 went to Camp Tex-
Three Are Taken
Into Custody on
Child Desertion
Three child desertation cases
are being handled by the Sher-
iff’s Department. Two Ennis
men, aged 25 and 34, have been
taken into custody here and plac-
ed in the Ellis County Jail in
connection with charges of child
desertation, the arrests being
made by authority of warrants
issued in Waller County. A
young man from Dallas has also
been arrested in Ellis County for
the alleged same offense.
oma this year, where they will
improve their knowledge of
various Scout skills such as Na-
ture Study, Archery, Marksman-
ship, Swimming, Pioneering and
Woodcraft. First Class Scouts at-
tending will also be able to earn
ing people like this.
“If homeowners need this
type of work on their home,
there are several respectable
companies in this area that do
this type of work for homeown-
ers and business places and
guarantee their work.
“The Police Department is
working hard to crack down: on
these men and the local citizens
can help by reporting to the Po-
lice Department any of those
that attempt to swindle them out
of money,” said Sg. Melvin Bak-
er.
Father of Mrs.
Several Cases
Are Handled by
Peace Officers
Peace officers handled a num-
ber of cases in the county over
the week end.
The Sheriff’s Department ar-
ressted four for drunk, one for
disturbing the peace, a 15-year-
old Ferris Negro boy for
burglary and an Ennis white boy
for burglary and theft.
Ennis Police Department
made seven arrests: two for
drunk, one for wreckless driv-
ing, one for failure to control
vehicle, one for failure to yield
right-of-way, one for violating a
stop sign and one for no car op-
erator’s license.
Hatha-
several Merit Badges.
Boy Scouts going were:
Andrews, Randall
Skrivanek Dies
Toby
0. E. Cole of Rt. No. 1, Alto,
Andrews,
Mike Buie, Mike Davis, Bruce
Largent, Steve Nash, Dixon Bain,
Jimmy Cook and Scott Snedden.
Scoutmasters Wilson Andrews
and G. L. Snedden went as adult
leaders for the troop.
The Scouts will return Satur-
day July 23.
as agricultural leader.
A highlight of the evening
event will be presentation of the
1966 Hoblitzelle Awards for the
Advancement of Texas Rural
Life. Frank Moore of Plainview
and Harry Jack Garrett of Har-
lingen, will receive the two
$5,000 cash awards for effective
leadership in improving rural
life in the state.
Probes Destruction
Of Mail Box
The Ellis County Sheriff’s De-
partment is conducting an inves-
tigation, following a complaint
Saturday from G. W. Gorman,
Route 2, Midlothian, that his
mail box had been destroyed.
Members of the Sheriff’s De-
partment, who notified! o c a 1
postal authorities, said Mr. Gor-
man told them the mail box
seeemd to have been blown up
by a charge of dynamite, or per-
haps by fireworks.
wav of Baytown.
Ellis Co. Native
Retires Navy as
Commander
Ellis County Native Command-
er J. H. Smith, SC, USN, was re-
cently presented a DSA Meritor-
ious Service Award and a Cer-
tificate of Retirement from Lt.
Colonel Basil L. Hoyl, USAF, De-
puty Commander, Subsistence
Regional Headquarters, Defense
Personnel Support Center, Fort
Worth, Texas. The presentation
was made on the occasion of his
retirement from the U. S. Navy
on June 30.
FIRE IS FATAL
FOR TEX BOY
BEEVILLE—A 2-year-old boy,
Jimmie Holton, burned to death
when fire swept the Beeville
residence of Mr. and Mrs. Billy
Galle early today.
Critically burned was one-
year-old Kathy Lee Galle.
Several other persons suffered
minor burns.
Lt. Col. Perdue,
Lately in Viet,
Visits Mother
Lt. Col. W. W. Perdue, wife
and their son, Jim, are visiting
here from Kansas City, Mo., in
the home of his mother, Mrs.
R. M. Perdue, 908 N. Sherman
Street.
Lt. Col. Perdue recently re-
turned from a year’s service in
Viet Nam.
Optimist Club Is Addressed by
Visiting Lt.-Gov. M. Barton
INJURED IN FALL
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Goodwin
are in Corsicana where Mrs.
Goodwin was taken Monday by
ambulance to enter Memorial
Hospital for treatment of an in-
jured back received in a fall at
her home, Monday.
The Fort Worth Regional
Headquarters is one of ten such
offices located throughout the
United States with headquarters
in Philadelphia, Pa. Its mission
is the procurement and distri-
bution of perishable subsistence
to the armed forces in a four
state area.
Commander Smith earned the
DSA Award for the exemplary
manner in which he performed
the duties of Chief of the Pur-
chasing Division of the Regional
Headquarters during the period
Sept. 25, 1965 to June 30, 1966.
Commander Smith is a native
of Italy, and is a brother of Mrs.
Warren Itson.
The Ennis Optimist Club was
addressed on “Optimism,” when
Lt.-Gov. Mauris Barton paid the
club an official visit at its week-
ly meeting at the Ennis Com-
munity Center Monday noon.
President Loyd Adams presid-
ed over the meeting. Guests in-
cluded Rep. Bill Satterwhite
with Jack McKay, Bill Riley with
Bob Kain, and Jake Kimbrough
of Sweetwater with Duane Pot-
ter.
Mr. Barton was complimen-
tary of the local area, Zone I, in
which there are eleven clubs. He
recalled that Herman Wright of
Waxahachie once said, “As Zone
I goes, so goes the district.”
In connection with youth
work, he said that, in the dis-
trict, “we want 500 orators (for
the contestants) by next spring.”
He said that in considering
prospects for membership, “be
sure not to forget your own
good friend, who might join.”
Lt. Gov. Barton said there’s
too much disrespect for the law
today and urged, “Let’s, as Opti-
mists, start building respect for
the law.”
He told the clubmen that “I
hope to see as many of you as
can attend, at the district meet-
ing in Mineral Wells next week.”
Optimist Carnival Chairman
Charlie Muirhead said the defi-
nite date for the carnival can not
be set until a definite engage-
ment is made with an owner of
carnival rides. The club held a
directors meeting after the lun-
cheon.
Mrs. Clark’s
Rites Are Held
The funeral service for Mrs.
Birdie L. Clark, widow of the
late E. V. Clark Sr., who died
Wednesday afternoon, was held
at 10 a.m. today in Keever Chap-
el with the Rev. C. Douglas
White, pastor of the Tabernacle
Baptist Church and the Rev. W.
E. Nunn pastor of the First
Baptist Church, officiating. In-
terment was in the Myrtle Cem-
etery with the following serving
as pallbearers: Harley Schoeps,
Willie Forston, Clois Smith,
John Percival, W. J. Pollan, and
the Rev. Jack Clark.
Mrs. Clark was porn January
1, 1894 in Bardwell, the daugh-
ter of Rufus A. and Minnie Hut-
ton Graham. She had lived in
Ennis for the past twenty - two
years.
Surviving her are her mother,
Mrs. Minnie Graham of Ennis;
three sons, V. A. Odom, Dallas;
W. W. Odom and E. V. Clark,
both of Ennis; one stepson,
Richard Clark, Ferris; three
daughters, Mrs. Robert Wood,
Bardwell; Mrs. Jim Collum, Ty-
ler; Mrs. Bob Batson, Little
Rock, Ark.; three step daughters,
Mrs. Troy Murphy, Ennis; Mrs.
Leon Davis, Ackerley; Mrs. C.
B. Sanderson, Grand Prairie; 18
grandchildren; two great-grand-
children; one brother, R. A. Gra-
ham, Ennis; and a niece and
nephew, both of Ennis.
father of Mrs. E. J. Skrivanek,
died this morning in the Ennis
Municipal Hospital.
Mr. Cole was born in Alto on
October 19, 1896, the son of
Ellis and Ida Lammons Cole. He
was reared and educated there,
later attending Sam Houston
College in Huntsville. He was
married to Lois Roselle of Alto
on February 2, 1918 and they
made their home near Alto
where Mr. Cole farmed.
Surviving him are his wife,
two sons Oma M. Cole, of
Troup, and Roger Neal Cole of
New York City; two daughters
Mrs. Annie Doris Rickey of Pasa-
dena and Mrs. E. J. Skrivanek of
Ennis; three sisters Mrs. Coy
Mae Allen, Mrs. Ernest Waller,
both of Alto and Mrs. C. S. Hil-
burn of Pasadena; and nine
grandchildren.
Arrangements are pending
with the J. E. Keever Mortuary.
Jerry Priddy Is
Stationed With
AF at Lackland
Jerry Priddy, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Royce Priddy, has joined
the Air Force and is at Lackland
AFB, San Antonio. Mr. Priddy is
married to the former Miss Shir-
ley Blythe of Grand Prairie. He
was graduated from Ennis High
School at mid-term last year.
Gene Marusak
In AF Training,
Lackland AFB
Gene Marusak, 18, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Marusak, has
joined the Air Force and is in
training at Lackland AFB, San
Antonio.
Mr. Marusak was graduated
from EHS last year.
HOME FROM OHIO
Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Hobbs and
daughter, returned Friday from
Dayton, Ohio, where they visited
their son-in-law and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Gibson and
son, Ronnie, for two weeks.
VISITORS FROM WEST
Mrs. Frances Holasek and Mrs.
Emil Jansky, both of West, are
guests in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. August Gerlich. Mrs. Hol-
Jack Bartlett’s
Last Rites Held
The funeral service for Jack
Bartlett, 54, who died Thursday
morning, was held at 4 p.m. on
Friday in the Keever Chapel
with the Rev. Dean Harrison,
pastor of the Rosemont Christian
Church in Dallas, officiating. In-
terment was in Myrtle Cemetery
with the following serving as
pallbearers: Mark Slayton, Gor-
don Harkins, Dr. Walter McCall,
Cecil Tolleson, Bob Crittenden
of Waxahachie and Gene Cagle
of Fort Worth.
Mr. Bartlett was born in Bard- S
well on December 4, 1911, the 3
son of John W. and Willie Par-
rish Bartlett. He moved with his
parents to Ennis at the age of
nine, attended the public schools
and graduated from the Ennis
High School. Later he attended
Texas Christian University. On
June 25, 1931 he was married to
Miss Doris Mosshart of Ennis
and they have continued to make
their home here. He was a mem-
ber of the First Christian Church
and the Ennis Masonic Lodge
No. 369, and was a farmer and
ginner.
Surviving him are his wife,
two daughters Mrs. Bobby Ray
Jones of Houston and Mrs. R. D.
Batson of Lubbock; one brother
Joseph Bartlett of Ennis; and
one grandchild.
Airman Hopkins
Is Chosen For
Tech Training
Airman Jack Hopkins Jr., son
of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hopkins of
Route 2, Ferris, has been select-
ed for technical training at Low-
ry AFB, Colo., as a NSAF mu-
nitions specialist.
The airman recently complet-
ed basic training at Lackland
AFB. His new school is part of
the Air Training Command
which conducts hundred’s of
specialized courses to provide
technically trained personnel
for the nation’s aero-space force.
Airman Hopkins was grad-
uated from Wilmer Hutchins
asek is a sister of Mrs. Gerlich. High School, Hutchins, in 1965.
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The Ennis Weekly Local (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 21, 1966, newspaper, July 21, 1966; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1632607/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Ennis Public Library.