The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 364, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 9, 1936 Page: 1 of 4
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THE Ennis Da
ENNIS
ENNIS
VOL. XLII No. 364.
FOUR PAGES TODAY.
Gang Arrested In
Italian Troops
ecord Peacetime
Navy Bill Passes
30 Mail Robberies
Senate; to Congress
Father of Karpis
ca
Railroa dSta tion
ONE STATUTE MILE
© 1935 by The National Geographic Society
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JIMMIE JEFFRIES.
Holland,
street, following
4
Ennis Daily News Cooking School
Climaxes Successful Week Today
said the bombing planes had1 dealt Appeals. Een Widener is also sched-
trcops in Western Shansi.
charge May 25 in connection with
other negroes.
| The Weather
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War\
Office
High School band, tonight at 8
p’clock in the Junior School Audi-
Addis Alam ,
Ankober
Awash
Rains Drench
Texas Friday As
Farmers Smile
home
Izora
Ennis got one inch of rain, ac-
cording to C. M. Banner’s report.
The rain, accompanied by lightning
and thunder, set in abotuu 2 o’clock
yesterday afternoon and continued
through 5:30.
It was the first good rain of
May.
Mrs. J. L. Jones
Died Friday;
Funeral Today
Mrs. Ella Kent
Murder Trial
Set for May 20
2
Fa
Rogers Brownbilt Shoe Store.
Simmons Electric Shop.
Minter Womack’s Dairy.
Pearl Cafe.
Dunlap Floral & Nursery.
Blakey-Clark Hardware Co.
Ennis Laundry & Dry Cleaners.
Southland Ice Co., Market.
4"
Mills Baby Dies
Of Pneumonia
Jack Lummus, student in T. M.
C., Terrell, is a week end guest in
the home of his parents.
Ba~ths
ing against the Communists with
the support of the airplanes. The
Red were said to be fleeing into
Northern Shansi Province.
1,485,822 On
WPA Program
School Rolls
Jimmie Jeffries and Other Guest
Entertainers Will Put On Band
Benefit at Junior School Tonite
25
80
90
Ennis Gets
1 Inch Rain
Chinese Fliers
Bomb 1000
Communists
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Airline distances
in miles to
Airport
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Corsicana, Texas, May 9.—Special
venires are being drawn in district
court this week for seven murder
and one rape case set for trial
May 20 and 25, Doyle Pevehouse,
district clerk, announced Thursday
fcllowing the announcement of the
criminal setting of the docket by
Criminal District Attorney John B.
Curington.
May 20 settings includes the case
against Alla Mae Kent, wife of a
former wealthy oil operator, for the
slaying of Curley Hathaway, mu-
sician, in an apartment here last
month.
The May 25 settings includes the
case of Jim Garrison, charged with
the shotgun slaying of Aube Wash-
burn, near Wildcat Ferry, Christ-
ma Day, 1934. Garrison was con-
victed last year and was sentenced
to ten years in the pienitentiary,
but the case later was reversed and
remanded by the Court of Criminal
Chaos Reigns in Abandoned Ethiopian Capital
John Karpavicz
When photographers and reporti
ers attempted to contact J oh?
Karpavicz, father of Alvin Karpis
Public Enemy No. 1 who was cap
tured in New Orleans, he chase9
them off the premises of the Chi
cago apartment where he is cus
todian and threatened them witl
a tire pump.
a, murdler
who arrived
7 * French
1 Legation
Foreign Office 5
torium.
In ' connection with
the radio
Ginger and Lew
Split; To Live
Separately
of his grandmother, Mrs.
Uni ted St a te^/^\
Legation K
1
B
Mills of Palestine,
this morning.
Funeral services
Jimmie Jeffries, master of cere-
monies for the Early Birds of
Radio Station WFAA with other
be held and prizes w U be award-
ed the winners. First prize will be
a book of Centennial tickets valued
at $4, second prize will, be $2 cash
and merchandise prizes will be
awarded the third, fourth and fifth
place winners.
Another feature attraction will
be the “country stere.” This is one
of the outstanding attractions plan-
ned for the band benefit.
These artists are all" furnishing
this entertainment with no charge
for their services and proceeds
from the attraction will be used'
for the band uniform fund:.
will be held
British
^Legation
1
Albert Roy Mills, Jr., age eight
months and eight days, died Fri-
day night at 10 o’clock at the
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naos and confusion reigned in Addis Ababa, capi-
s of Ethiopia, as rioters ran wild throughout the
pty after it had been evacuated by Emperor Haile
iclassie because of the impending downfall of the
ayr One..American_woman. Mrs. A. R. Stadin.
rwan fl
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Partly cloudy, preceded by local
thundershowers in east portion,
cooler in northwest portion Satur-
day; Sunday generally fair.
The fliers dived against the red | the fatal shooting of Alex Gregory
forces repeatedly, dropping a large i in a downtown recreational hall
quantity of explosives into the । here, January, this year.
ranks below. | The other murder trials are
Still Playing .
In Ethiopia Denver, Solving
Miss Roger Haynes' was a visitor
in Dallas this morning, going
from there to Cleburne for the
Centennial singsong rehearsal.
~ To Djibouti
( age Miles
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ENNIS, ELLIS COUNTY TEXAS SATURDAY EVENING, MAY 9, 1936
S' ® S « O
Lightning Here
Shatters Mesquite
Freak lightning about 3 o’clock
during the thunderstorm Friday
afternoon destroyed a mesquite
tree in the yard1 at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Murphree near
the oil mill. The tree was scattered
several hundred feet in various di-
rections and was torn off leaving
only the stump.
r
Following the air attack, military ( against negroes for the slaying of
authorities said infantry was mov-
507 South Main
an illness since
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3"egeles 9 _________________
________| Corneliu. V.n H. Eng.rt
wife of a doctor attached to the Seventh Day Al
last week with pneumonia. •
, He was born Aug. 30, 1935, in
Ennis. Surviving are his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Mills of Sher-
man, and grandmothers, Mrs. Izora
Holland of Ennis, and Mrs. L. N.
“ 5
confronted rescuers. The nearest
approach to the marooned travelers
was four miles from the Raton
side, with continued snow, driven
by a twenty-five-mile wind, com-
plicating resmue work.
The storm, not an unusual spring
occurence in this mountainous re-
gion of Northern New Mexico and
Southern Colorado, covered an area
of ninety miles north to south,
with the snow drifted to as much
as five feet deep through the pass.
Airplane Schedule Disrupted.
Authorities foresaw possibility of
extreme suffering through the
night, with the temperature at the
near freezing point and no imme-
diate danger of a letup in the
snow and wind.
The airplane schedule between
Denver and El Paso was disrupted,
communication lines were down in
many areas and trains were run-
ning hours' late.
C. H. Childlaw, Varney airlines
pilot, who flew from Pueblo, Colo.,
to Albuquerque almost an hour be-
hind schedule, said the blizzard!
over the region was so dense he
could not see the ground. Morley,
Colo., on the north slope of the
steep pass, apparently was isolated.
Denver family.
Delay in Discovery.
“After Segar obtained the keys
he went to St. Paul and recruited
a gang consisting of Walker, Bail-
ey and Edwards,” Morrissey said.
“With the railroad keys and the
mail sack keys they could open
mail sacks, take out the registered
mail and, leaving things as they
found them in the depot, flee.
Sometimes the robbery would not
be discovered for days'.”
Morrissey said through Edwards,
Trower, Kennedy and an under-
world character arrested frequently
by Denver police and once tried for
murder in Wyoming, the bonds
were cashed at the Denver bank
bond department. He said he had
evidence that Kennedy and the
underworld character visited in
Arnold’s apartment.
“Arnold contends that if any
stolen bonds were handled by him
it was without his knowledge or
that of the bank,” he said. “We
are charging him, however, with
being a party of the conspiracy.”
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Mr*. A. R. Stadin l......
ventist mission, was killed by a stray bullet. D
spite the looting ..and rioting Cornelius Van l
Engert, American minister to Ethiopia, held I
post at the legation, reinforced by armed guards.
artists, an amateur contest will
Addis Ababa Quiet.
An Italian detatchment was en !
route by rail Friday night to aid
the southern army under General
Rcdolff Grazianni to complete the
conquest of Southern Ethiopia,
> This expedition left last night
for Diredawa, railway station close
to Harar, to help in the occupa-
tion of the latter city, Ethiopia’s
second largest
Manifestations of acquiescence to
the new regime continued in the
capital as clerical leaders and the |
remnants of Emperor Haile1 Selas-
sie’s civil headquarters: in the
Negus’ former palace ordered the
Bank of Ethiopia to reopen. A rate
of exchange was established at six
lire to one thaler. (The lire is
worth about 8c.)
Foreign legations were notified
that although they were accredited
to a government which no longer
exists they may continue to operate
with their previous privileges,
throuhg a gentleman’s agreement.
Peace in Addis Ababa has been
fully restored and wormen are
busy cleaning the streets and re-
moving wreckage. Natives are sub-
mitting quietly and surrendering
their arms.
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W. C. Hendrix, local engineer,
left today for Abilene where he will
see one of his sisters for the first
time to his memory. His sister is
Mrs. C. G. McClure.
"When Mr. Hendrix was a very
small child, his family was sepa-
rated and two sisters were taken
to Oklahoma, then Indian Terri-
tory, where they lived. with their
uncle, a minister. When this uncle
was killed a year later, the girls
disappeared and the Texas family
had heard no word! of them until
recently.
Not long ago a former Ellis
county man was serving on a jury
at Abilene, and so was Mr. Mc-
Clure. McClure inquired of his
wife’s relatives in Ellis county, and
in this way a correspondence be-
gan. After exchanging a few let-
ters, Mr. Hendrix was convinced
of the identity of his sister and he
is on his way to see her. As far
as he remembers, it will be his
first glance at his sister.
army of Dedjazmatch Nassibu,
surrendered to the talians on the
road from Jijiga to Harar and
many accompanied the victorious
Fascists to the emperors' home.
At Harar the Italians found huge
quantities of arms and ammuni-
tions, food and other supplies.
Dedjazmatch Nassibu, probably
the best general of all the Ethi-
opian commanders, stored away
great quantities of war material
at Harar and Jijiga many months
before the Italians threatened
either position.
Operating from those bases, he
held the Italian Somaliland forces
at bay for nearly seven months
despite the overwhelming super-
iority of Italian arms. Until the
last few days of the campaign
Nassibu's forces were the best fed
and equipped armies under the
Ethiopian, flag. They were still un-
defeated when the Negus Negusti
and Nassibu fled to French Soma-
liland.
Meanwhile the elusive Ras Si-
youm, northern front commander
who harassed Marshal Pietro Bad-
oglio’s troops continuously until the
disastrous battle of Amba Aradam,
surrendered to the Italian com-
mand at Socato.
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Rome, May 9.—Italian troops seiz-
ed control of Southeastern Ethi-
opia Friday with occupation of
the key city of Harar, second larg-
est of the fallen empire and birth-
place of the fugitive Emperor
Haile Selassie.
Simultaneously, Fascist legions
which have been encamped in the
southern lakes region for several
months, started a rapid advance
north toward Addis Albaba, plant-
ing the Italian tricolor in some of
the richest terrain of all Ethi-
opia.
Harar was occupied Thursday by
Gen. Rodolfo Graziani’s hell on
wheels column.
Fascists Stop Rioting.
The Italians stopped rioting which
had broken out among the natives
and reportedly lifted a siege at the
British consulate where foreigners
took refuge when frenzied Ethi-
opians stormed through the city
shooting, burning and pillaging.
The advance from Jijiga, which
was occupied Tuesday, required for-
ty-eight hours due to the torrential
rains'.
Inhabitants at Harar, including
foreigners, joyously welcomed the
Black Shirt soldiers. Notables and
clergymen submitted to the Italian
high command immediately.
Large groups of armed Ethi-
opians, formerly soldiers in the
ial Hotel Selassie^ \ 58
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Bank/of / s v I
Eth iopia%e, TN I
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s"—^Pa ri lament Butiding.
and Menelik Tomb'^=
Little Miss Maxine Zerwer of
Denton is a guest of her grand-
mother, Mrs. R. E. Zerwer.
Mrs. J. L. Jones, age 63, resident
of the Ennis and Ensign commu-
nity for more than fifty years,
died Friday night at 9:10 at her
home near Oak Grove, following an
illness since Christmas.
Mrs. Jones, nee Frances: Cordelia,
Brown, was_born in Ripley, Tippah
County, Mississippi, February 7,
1873. She came to Texas at the
age of five years and has resided
in this community since that time
with the exception of a few years.
She was married near Ensign Dec.
24, 1896, to J. L. Jones, who
with eight children survives; six
sons, Bill Jones, Ennis; Ervin
Jones, Fort Worth; Raymond
Jones, Dallas; Dick Jones, Houston,
and Leo and Cleo Jones of the
home address, and two daughters,
Mrs. Robert Buchanan, Corsicana,
and Miss Thelma Jones of the
home address , A.
Four sisters, Mrs. Dick Crosby,
Fort Worth; Mrs. Etta Crosby,
Wichita Falls; Mrs. Winnie Rich-
ardson. Ensign, and Mrs. Annie
Harcrow, Ennis', and two brothers,
Jim Brown, Palmer, and Zack
Brown, Waxahachie, also survive.
Mrs. Jones united with the Bap-
tist church when she was a small
child and held her membership in
the Antioch Baptist Church at the
time of her death. She has resided
in this community since 1878 with
the exception of eight years when
she lived in Haskell, Texas.
Funeral services will be held this
afternoon a 4 o’clock at the Anti-
och Baptist Church with her pas-
tor, Rev. W. O. Patterson, officiat-
ing.
Interment will be made in Myrtle
Cemetery with J. E. Keever in
charge of arrangements.
■1
■■ I
This afternoon at 5 o’clock a
parade will be staged on the
streets of Ennis at which time the
boys will wear their new uniforms.
They will also entertain with a
a crushing blow to Communist uled to face trial on
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Blizzard Stops
Traffic Over
Raton Pass
Raton, N. M., May 9.—Road
crews of New Mexico and Colorado
cleared the show-covered highway
over Raton Pass early Saturday
and rescued the passengers of two
big busses caught in a spring
blizzard. Others of the 150 maroon-
ed escaped on foot.
Rescue crews late Friday took
temporary relief to the passengers
of a big transcontinental bus, ma-
rooned in a heavy snowstorm near
the summit of scenic Raton Pass,
ten miles north of here.
Food, hot coffee and sufficient
gasoline to heat the bus were taken,
in by the rescuers, who fought
their way through high piled) drifts.
There still was no immediate
prospect of removing the twenty-
five passengers of the bus, or oth-
ers of the more than 150 stranded
along a four mile stretch when the
spring blizzard blew up suddenly
Thursday night.
There was no report of suffering
among those marooned). The tem-
peratutre held about freezing, but
rescue crews pressed efforts to take
them to Raton or near-by Trinidad,
Colo.
Motor transport officials here at
noon reported five busses routed
over the pass were unaccounted for
but later two northbound coaches
were reported to have reached
There Railroads and
Cottonfields Meet”
^■Washington, May 9.—The senate
■Approved Friday a $529,000,000 ap-
EFropriation for the navy next year
-a record peacetime fund.
B The legislation rode to easy and
Buick approval after an unsuccess-
Bui attempt to eliminate funds ana
Eonditional authority for the con-
Bruction of two new battleships, as
Bell as the building of twelve new
estroyers and six submarines. The
■hove was beaten, 40 to 12.
■ Opposition crumpled under this
Eiefeat and the bill was approved
Eand sent to conference with the
house by voice vote. Coincidentally,
■President Roosevelt indicated he
■ will submit the new naval limita-
■ tions treaty to the senate next
■week.
■ To Begin Treaty Hearings.
I Congress completed action Thurs-
I day on the $591,000,000 war depart-
| ment appropriation bill and the
navy measure was due to follow it
| speedily. Presidential approval was
regarded as certain.
The navy bill is the last of-the
regular supply measures to go
through the senate, leaving only
the two billion dollar deficiency
bill carrying the work relief-funds
to be acted on. This was before
the house Friday.
Chairman Key Pittman, democrat,
of Nevada of the senate foreign
relations committee announced
hearings will begin Wednesday on
the new naval treaty. He predicted
an early, favorable report. How-
ever, he reserved a prediction on
ratification at this session which
he said depends considerably on
the legislative situation.
The authority for building the two
new capital ships carried by the
navy bill is conditioned on de-
termination by the president that
similar construction has begun by
any of the other signatory powers
to the naval treaty of 1930.
Senator Elmer Benson, Farm-La-
bor, of Minnesota, offered a reso-
lution proposing appointment of a
civilian commission by the pres-
ident to study and recommend a
policy of national defense. The res-
olution was referred to the mili-
tary committee.
The Minnesota senator also in-
troduca a bill to punish by fine
or imprisonment a newspaper or
incividual disseminating informa-
tion in time of peace which tends
to indite the country to war.
Washington, May 9.—A report
showing that the WPA emergency
education program has more pupils
than the nation’s high schools' and
colleges will graduate this year was
made public Friday by Harry L.
Hopkins. He said the results were
! “gratifying.”
Announcing that at the end, of
March, 1,485.822 persons were en-
rolled under 43,051 teachers, Hop-
kins added:
“There has been no thought, of
course, of supplanting the regular
school facilities, but there has been
a whclesome broadening of the
scope of this work, which has been
eagerly received by admit unem-
ployed and by teachers who were
| without professional opportunity,
as well as by leading educators
throughout the ocuntry who have
come to appreciate the signifi-
cance of adult education.”
The program which is in addi-
tion to the part time jobs provided
students by the $50,000,000 national
youth administration, furnished in-
struction at “emergency colleges”
for 8,122 young men and women
and con espondence courses for 16,-
703.
Other types of instruction were:
General admit education, 744,638;
literacy, 251,476; parent training,
89,669; nursery schools, 55,111;
workers’ education. 53,508.
Hollywood, Cal., May 9.—Ginger
Rogers, movie actress, and Lew
Ayres, her actor-director husband,
will maintain separate residences,
said a studio announcement Friday.
“Ginger Rogers and Lew Ayres
have instructed their attorneys to
draw up articles of separation,”
said the announcement from RKO,
with which Miss Rogers is under
contract.
“The action is' entirely amicable.
In the future the two will main-
tain separate residences, Miss
Rogers will live with her mother,
Mrs. Leia Rogers. No divorce is
contemplated at present.”
Miss Rogers and Ayres were
married! Nov. 14, 1934. The studio
said the announcement was a
joint statement.
Tiayuan Fu, Shansi Province,
China, May 9.—National army fliers'
reported they killed approximately
1,000 Chinese Communists with
bombs Friday afternoon.
Provincial military authorities
Trinidad. Half a dozen trucks and
more than twenty automobiles were
caught in the drifts.
Return for Reinforcements.
A spiral-like highway rising from
Raton to the top of the pass, a
well known scenic spot on the
Transcontinental highway, turned
back New Mexico highway depart-
ment crews who sought to make
their way to the stranded travelers'.
They returned here for reinforce-
ments and snow plows.
On the Trinidad side of the
pass, a steep winding road also
Denver, Colo1., May 9.—Thirty
mail robberies that netted 200,000
in loot in half a dozen North-
western and Midwestern states were
solved Friday, with the arrest of
a Denver banker, an attorney and
nine other persons, Thomas J.
Morrissey, federal district attorney,
said.
A well known Denver politician
and an underworld character fled
Denver and their arrests are ex-
pected soon, Morrissey said.
Oliver P. Arnold, assistant vice
president of the Denver National
Bank, was arrested as he sat at
his desk. Morrissey said Arnold!,
who is charged with being a part
to the conspiracy, denied any part
in the affairs. The attorney, Char-
les Roberts', was taken into custody, . - •
on a Denver street.
The other nine were arrested in
Denver, Denison, Iowa; St. Paul
and Park Rapids, Minn.
Obtained Mail Bag Keys.
Morrissey said the gang was or-
ganized byl Jack Segar of St. Paul.
“Segar in some way obtained in
Denver a set of railroad switch
keys and keys to fit registered mail
bags,” Morrissey said. "With these
keys toe gang looted registered
mail bags in railroad depots at
night and disposed of the loot in
Denver.”
Besides Arnold, Roberts and Se-
gar, others under arrest, Morris-
sey said, are Othello G. McClellan,
36, auto salesman; Ralph A. Clif-
ton, 48, radio Salesman; Harold P.
Kennedy, 29; Elmer F. Trower, 48,
and John M. McBride, 44, all of
Denver.
Winston Walker, 30', was arrested
at Denison, Harold Bailey: at Park
Rapids, Minn., and John Edwards,
25, at St. Paul. Morrissey said Ed-
i wards used an assumed name and
was a member of a respectable
Debra Markos ue
\piredawa 215
Sunday afternoon at 3 o’clock in
Keever’s Chapel with Rev. W. Clyde
ha Hankins, pastor of the Tabernacle
B Baptist church, officiating.
B Interment will be made in Myrtle
E2 Cemetery with J. E. Keever in
B charge of arrangements.
W. C. Hendrix
To See Sister
For First Time
Drenching rains which started in
West Texas Thursday and moved
into the central part of the state
Friday morning swept eastward
across Texas Friday night, gladden-
ing the hearts of farmers and busi-
nessmen.
Government sources estimated
the downpour will be worth mil-
lions of dollars to farmers, with
corresponding benefits to other
lines of business. Cotton fields,
which had been unplanted because
of lack of moisture, may still be
seeded and the precipitation was of
vast benefit to truck crops.
The rain ranged from torrential
dgownpours approaching cloud-
burst proportions to light showers,
with heavy clouds threatening ad-
ditional moisture. Heaviest rain
was in the northern part of Central
Texas'.
Friday’s rain amounted to more
than any previous month of the
year has brought, March having
held the record until Friday. May
had brought only .33 of an inch
until Friday.
All crops will be benefited, said
County Agricutural Agent A. B.
Jolley, of Dallas county. “Just keep
more of it coming,” he said. Par-
ticularly will corn be helped.
Only about one third of the
cotton has been planted and the
rain will help that as well as pro-
vide moisture for future .planting.
Some grain that is hardly high
enough to harvest is' heading out
and belief was expressed that the
rain will make it grow higher to
facilitate cutting. Small grains also
will reap benefit, as will gardens,
pasturage, lawns and flowers.
Waco reported about an inch of
rain. Gatesville had two and a
half inches, Temple and Marlin
each an inch, Mexia .50, Hillsboro
an inch and Meridian 1.50. Previous
rains in Central Texas had missed
Bosque county. Fort Worth had 1-41
inches.
.egation I ---2
03 ■ Menelik
NteezumepRosp,
AN
, _ .edish.
Consulate
thirty minute1 concert prior to the
presentation of the guest artists to-
night. The concert will begin at
7:30 at the auditorium. Presenta-
tion will start promptly at 8
o’clock.
Rain at Midlothian.
Midlothian, Texas, May 9. —The
first big rain of the year fell here
1 Friday and will be of incalculable
value to crops and pastures.
Last session of the Ennis Daily |
News cooking school with Miss
Zella Allen instructing, will be held
this afternoon in the city hall j
aulitorium at 2:30. Salturday"s
class will close the third school held
in Ennis under the supervision of
Miss Allen.
Despite the fact that heavy rains
set in Friday afternoon around 2
o’clock, with the cooking school I
scheduled for 2:30, more than 200 I
ladies of Ennis attended! the clas's. |
Simple but delicious recipes were
given by Miss Allen for more than
two hours of instruction.
The cooking school has caused
considerable comment in Ennis
concerning the art of cookery, and
.expressions of gratitude of the
women of Ennis for this School
, are being heard on every hand.
Co-operating with the News in
this school and giving away much
valuable merchandise were the fol-
lowing merchants:
Community Natural Gas oC-
Kiely Implement Co.
K. C. Baking Powder
Mrs. Tucker’s Shortening
Paris special Flour.
Tabasco Sauce.
Imperial Sugar.
Allen Furniture Co.
Wm. Cameron & Co.
Hesser Drug Co.
Butter-Nut Baking Co.
Brooks Shoe Store.
Waldrum Beauty Parlor.
“Where Railroads an’
Cottonfields Meet”
ws
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The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 364, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 9, 1936, newspaper, May 9, 1936; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1409758/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.