The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 154, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 28, 1941 Page: 2 of 4
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PAGE TWO
THE ENNIS DAZX NEWS, ENNIS, TEXAS ATURDAY EVENING, JUNE 28, 1941
EDITORIALS ♦ FEATURES
AMUSEMENTS
♦ OPINIONS
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Solving the Swastika Trick
LISTENING TO OTHER EDITORS
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PLUS SHORTS and NEWS
plane strike at Inglewood. The Phil-
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PLUS SHORTS and NEWS I
NANCY
By Ernie Bushmiller
He’s Slightly Upset
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NEWSPAPER
ADVERTISING
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One Year-.
Six Months.
One Year______
Six Months____
Three months.
C. A. Nowlin_____
Lester Jordan____
Emma Jean Sims.
Weldon Nowlin___
THEN ‘OU SHALL HAVE TO
TAKE ME ALSO.. FOR. THE
SENORITA BARNES..IS ./
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DOUBLE
CROSS ,
There are no; late parties in the
home of the chief of staff at Fort
Myer, just across the river. Here is-
a typical Marshall day:
His morning horseback ride is a
daily ritual. You can set your watch
by the fact that at 6:10 a. m., the
General arrives at the stables of
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lective Service Regulations failure
to possess the certificate, or to show
it to authorized persons, constitutes
a violation of the regulations and
is to be considered prima facie evi-
dence of failure to register.
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Outside Ellis County by Mail
Rates Same as for City.
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H-HELp
HELP/
YOUTH
and
BEAUTY!
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32
1
-ate Tuberculosis Sanatorium Observes 29th Anniversary
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’ NOTICE!
NOTARY PUBLIC
Merry Go Round
(Continued From Page 1)
registrants
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HALTED BY ICKES — Japanese tanker Azuma Maru, whose
loading of 252,000 gallons of lubricating oil was halted by
Harold L. Ickes, defense oil coordinator, at Philadelphia. Ship
is shown at dock, waiting to load.
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----------------------------------Assistant Editor
--------------------------------------Society Editor
------------------------------Advertising Manager
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier in City
Tennessee, OPM Director General
I Knudsen remarked, ‘they are turn-
j ing out the stuff in great shape,”
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AT YOUR «
SERVICE ‘
TO.HELP YOU SELL
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with JAMES ELLISON • MILDRED COLES
NiGEL BRUCE • MARGARET HAMILTON
argped for six months before he
would invite Latin American naval
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Do you just sit down and wait for
business to come to ycu? Don’t be a
dead beat, go after the business. Tell
the people of Ennis what you have
to offer them by advertising in the
Ennis Daily News. It gets results. 11
-$
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VOICE THE PANTHER‛REPLIES\
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members of congress, the general
staff, foreign military missions, etc.,
Marshall goes home to Fort Myer !
and yields to Mrs. Marshall’s sug-
gestion: “George, you look tired.
Let’s pack a bite and go down to
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IT W! LL DO NO GOOD TO
SCREAM, MY DEAR
SENORITA BETTY BARNES?
YOU MUSI COME WITH
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But he has great imagination.
When Under Secretary of State
Welles asks him to fly to Latin
America on a goodwill pilgrimage,
he grasps the political implications
and accepts immediately. Admiral
Stark, chief of naval operations,
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SUNDAY and MONDAY
Cost. 154 i 3y Uoa Tes: are Syndtczie. foe.
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All communications of business and items of news should be ad-
ressred to the company and not individuals
Entered as second-class matter at the post ofice atEnnis."Texas
under the Act of March 3, 1879.
strategy of St. Mihiel, first offen-
sive in which the U. S. army acted
as a unit. But he is not yet a
Hannibal, he is so popular on
Capitol Hill that many congress-
men would rank him even higher.
Canoe Enthusiast.
YOU KNOW MY NAME?
...AND YOUR. VOICE-. |
IT SOUNDS STRANGELY
FAMILIAR.^--
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MILDRED COLES-EDWARDNORRIS-RICHARD AINLEY
RUSSEL HICKS • MARJORIE SATESON
lirectedby NOELM. SMITH AWARNER BROS.-Firstiat’IPicturs
Screen Play by Charley Tedford • From a Story by Harry Saube
and nonchalantly pulled out of his
pocket a stick of dynamite. M-cst
cf the reporters, pop-eyed, ner-
vously doused their cigarettes . . .
Since his split with the adminis-
tration, John L. Lewis has been
the virtual dictator of Labor’s Non-
Partisan League. But that did not
kepe the Philadelphia branch from
caustically denouncing Lewis’ at-
tack on President Roosevelt for
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THE ENNIS DAILY NEWS
Published Every Day Excent Sunday, by the United Publishing
Company, which also publishes the Ennis Weekly Local and the
Palmer Rustler.
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—222-
9/ ‘-JAN starring FRPNEHOT
The State Santorium accepts
adults with pulmonary tuberculosis
and children with primary tuber-
culosis for nine months of treat-
ment and training.
EXECUTION’S WAY—These Polish men in smuggled picture
from Palmira, Poland, are blindfolded and walking through
forest glade. They thought they were on way to concentration
\ camp. Instead, they're going to be executed.
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the river.”
So the chief of staff and his lady,
like any bank clerk and his sweetie’
hire a canoe on the Pctomac and
paddle down the river to a quiet
spot for a picnic supper.
Merry Go Round
Telling newsmen about his in-
spection of a new powder plant in
• ■
chiefs of staff the minute it was
suggested.
General Johnson Haygood once
called Marshall the greatest army
officer since George Washington
and Stonewall Jackson. But that
is stretching it. Real fact is that
Marshall has never been tested out
in the command of large masses of
troops under fire.
During the last war he served on
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The new law requires that
Notary’s names be stamped
x or printed below their signa-
ture to all acknowledgements
Place your orders for a rub-
ber stamp today—comply
with the new law.
(S name and address; 10. Place
t employment or business.
After a registrant has answered
e questions and signed his name
1 his registration card, he will be
ven a registration certificate
ned by the registrar. He must
Ive his certificate in his personal
jssession at all times, General
Ige emphasized, as under the Sb-
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ceived treatment at the sanitorium
which is located seventeen miles
northwest of San Angelo in Tom
Green county.
Dr. J. B. McKnight, superinten-
dent and medical director, who
came to the sanatorium in 1914 and
has spervised the growth of the in-
stitution, has announced two new
buildings probably will be added
to the hospital during the biennium
beginning September 1. These
6 3
PROBLEM OF COMPETITION
In recent years Texas has entered its stiffest agricul-
tural competition in its long history . . . and its principal
competitors have been the other states of the cotton-
growing South.
While Texas has been making small progress in the
improvement of its cotton yield per acre, other Southern
states have been making far greater progress.
During the period from 1923. to 1932, Texas averaged
139 pounds of lint cotton per acre, and for the eight years
since that time and including the period under the gov-
ernment’s farm programs, 158 pounds per acre. That rep-
resents a per acre gain of 14 per cent.
But for the same periods, Mississippi has gone from
191 to 274 pounds, or 43 per cent; Arkansas from 188 to
256 pounds, or 36 per cent; South Carolina from 208 to
288 pounds, or 38 per cent. The remarkable record of
North Carolina shows a 439 per cent gain this year alone.
The average gain in lint cotton production over the
cotton belt is 39 per cent, with Texas only 14 per cent!
Many problems face Texas in competing with its sis-
ter cotton-growing states. It is essential that it produce
more cotton on every acre in order to hold down the cost
of producing . . . and the cost of competing.
The land must be improved, the soil conserved and
protected, and every means available and practicable
taken to get better cotton and more of it on every acre
grown to cotton.
It was pointed out recently by Eugene Butler, editor
of Progressive Farmer, that the Texas yield was higher
than the United States average in 1900 . . . but in 1905
when the boll weevil came across the Rio Grande into
Texas, the picture changed abruptly and Texas has been
behind the field since that time.—Temple Telegram.
---o——
EQUAL JUSTICE FOR ALL
A United States Senator must have bluched.
In Mexico City Gabriel Avila Camacho had shot and
killed a prominent young man who had attempted to beat
him about the head with the butt of a Distol.
Gabriel Camacho’s brother Manuel Avila Camacho,
who is president of Mexico.
The dead young man’s father, a wealthy Mexico City
jeweler, was a good friend of the Mexican president. He
asked that the case be closed, that the president’s broth-
er be exonerated.
But President Camacho, desiring "that strict justice
be observed,” ordered his brother imprisoned to wait for
a judge’s decision whether to order trial,'and for what de-
gree of homicide.
President Camacho considered he should give equal
opportunity for justice to all regardless of relationship
Dr situation.
An American senator of whom i his constituents
could expect no less in the “last surviving democracy.”
failed to keep faith.
This Southern Congressman’s son applied for defer-
ment when hi? draft number came up. He claimed oc-
cupational exemption, saying his job as clerk of the sen-
ate committee of which his father was a member was es-
sential.
When selective service officials ordered him to re-
port anyway, he appealed to papa. Papa asked draft
board members to relent, as a personal favor. When
told to submit evidence in writing that his son was es-
senial to the work of the senate committee, he refused,
but had other members of the committee to do so.
The boy was deferred.
A check up revealed four or five other members of
the senator’s family on government payrolls, all doubt-
less ‘‘essential."
Nothing new, just something else to thisk about
while saving democracy in the western hemisphere.
Temple Telegram.
Sanatorium, Texas, June 27.—
kas‛ $2,000,000 State Tuberculosis
hatorium, shown in the above air
w, will observe its twenty-ninth
aniversary on July 4. Since its
fmal opening in 1912, the state-
rintained hospital has grown
fm a small colony of fifty-seven
hs to a 1,000-bed institution with
te’ third largest bed capacity
acng state sanitoria in the United
stes. Approximately 30,000 tuber-
dosis residents of Texas have re-
structures wil ibe a seventy-two bed
patients’ dormitory and a new ad-
ministration building. The new
dormitory which will cost approxi-
mately $120,000, will be the eigh-
teenth building for patients at the
sanatorium.
the general staff and performed a
masterful job of plotting out the I adelphians accused Lewis of
1 suing a ‘rule or ruin” policy.
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the Tenth Cavalry to mount the
horse, “Trail Blazer.’ For fifty min-
utes he rides along the Potomac
on the Virginia side and returns
to bathe and dress by 7:20.
Then, after a twenty-minute
breakfast, it is only a seven minute
drive acres sthe Memorial Bridge
to the munitions building, and he
is at his desk before 8.
No Hannibal, He
There is no dog about Marshall.
The bareness of his office testifies
to that. He does not strut before
visitors with an Oriental fan in
his hand, as did General Douglas
McArthur, one of his predecessors.
He flaunts no bemedalled bosom.
By Hal Forrest
WWHO \( THAT'S WHAT SkEETS
ARE AND I INTEND TO
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These days appropriations for de-
fense come easy, but if any per-
suasion were needed, Marshall
could produce it. In the House Ap-
propriations Committee they re-
gard him as the best chief of staff
in a generation.
Speaking of funds, Marshall him-
self says, “We used to have all the
time and no money; now we have
all the money and no time.”
After a day of talking with
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using troops against the outlaw
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By Mail in Ellis County:
Tiie “Back Panther” is “Treed” !
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Nowlin, C. A. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 154, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 28, 1941, newspaper, June 28, 1941; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1474283/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.