The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 204, Ed. 1 Friday, August 27, 1943 Page: 2 of 6
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FACE TWO
Movie Flashes
C. A, Nowlin------Editor and Mgr.
—SUBSCRIPTION RATES-
By Carrier in City
which the lads become involved. A
PLAZA
LAST TIMES TODAY
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WIN YOUR RACE
0
RADIO
For Business Supremacy
By Advertising
clared to be one of the season’s
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most furious cinema events.
Jokn
PLAZA
-FRIDAY-
SATURDAY ONLY
news
Barries ......MBS
not want to be tied down with details, wanted to devote
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—SATURDAY—
TECHNICOLOR
Also
Fall in
PLUS SHORTS and NEWS
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THE OLD JUDGE SAYS
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For Sale
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By Ernie Bushmiller
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NEWS OF OUR
MENaWOMEN
1941 2-Door
Chevrolet
man
work
Swiss
Ger-
LAIRD GREGAR • JUNE HAVOC
WARS BOND • GEORGE BARBIER
senses on this angle,
correspondents in the
A SUBSCRIPTION TO
The Home Newspaper
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HILTON BRACKIN SENT
TO AUSTRALIA ZONE
Hilton Brackin, who has been
in the Hawaian Islands, has been
transferred to Australia, according
to a message received here by rela-
tives.
AUNT FRITZ I SAYS SHE HASN'T
HAP ANY MAIL FOR A WEEK-
I WONDER WHAT'S WRONG? J
MRS
. .MRS
One Year ____
Six Months
Three Months
One Mcnth __
7:00 Cal Tinney,
7:15 They're the
THE PRESENT
That Lasts A Year
.ET
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_____$6.00
____3.00
____1.50
____ 50c
HMM-:-MAYBE
SOMEBODY IS
STEALIN IT
OUTTA D’MAIL
, BOX ’ ----
ing transferred to Camp Barkeley
and had only been there several
weeks'; n - o • • i;
Stu.
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Crooke Revealed
The original story, by
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remember.
Light.
STEAL JUDGES’ GAVELS
NEWBURYPORT, Mass. (UP)—
Despite the presence of court offi-
cers, thieves stole two official gav-
els from the courthouse.
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6:00 Fulton Lewis, Jr.....
6:15 The Johnson Family .
6:30 Halls of Montezuma .
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OAKIE
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"Quite a stack of newspapers I left you
yesterday, Judge. Aren’t goin’ in the news-
paper business, are you?”
"No, I just enjoy reading different
papers so my nephew George sends them
to me whenever he takes a business trip.
I got a big kick out of some he sent me
from several counties where they still have
prohibition. Particularly from some head-
lines that read ‘ Drunk Driving Arrests Rise*.
Cog
1340 On Your Dial
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CAPTAIN R. A. McCALL
TRANSFERRED TO AIR CORPS
Captain and Mrs. R. A. McCall,
who ’have been at Camp Barkeley,
' near Abilene, left there Wednes-
day for Randolph Field where Can-
tain McCall has ' been transferred
to the Air Corps. Captain: McCall
will attend a school of - instruction
pg
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there ar more than 900 members.
Boyce .Penrod,, son of ‘the late
Rev. Penrod, is treasurer of. the
church. " -
Rev. Penrod was for many years
pastor of the Tabernacle Baptist
church in Ennis.
"k- &.* >
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‘Bootleggers must post Ceiling Prices'.
‘Federal Agents seize‘Trick‘ Liquor Truck’.
Doesn’t that go to prove, Joe, that prohibi-
tion does not prohibit? ‛ .. t --
" I watched conditions pretty carefully
during our 13 years of prohibition in this
countrz. The only thing I could see we got
out of it was bootleg, liquor instead of legal
liquor... plus the worst crime and corrup-
tion this country has ever known.”
: ' .—Advertisement .
KnocksC
$
A96s
/”
——Eg/v
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By Mail in Ellis County
One Year ____________________$3.00
Six Months __________________2.00
Three Months _______________1.00
One Month __________________ 50c
" Ate WASHINGTON
s _ Tm Reg U s Pat O«.
Brenda Weisberg authored the
screen play for “Keep ’Em Slug-
ging.” The cameraman was ' Wil-
liam Sickner and the picture was
directed by Christy Cabanne un-
der the associate producership of
Ben Pivar. - ;
—Plus-
“THIS IS AMERICA*’
MV
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» IN UNIFORM
IK
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\
5:00 Praver .................
5:01 I Hear America Singing
5:15 Today’s Ton Tunes ...
5:30 “Hawaii Calls” .......
BOYCE PENROD, FORMER
ENNISITE MADE CAPTAIN
Boyce Penrod, Jr.,. is now a cap-
Tain in, the Army in North Africa.
Word’ of his promotion has been,
received.. by. his parents," Mr. and
Mrs. Boyce Penrod.
Captain Penrod, a native of Gon-
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All Communications of Business
and items of news should be ad-
dressed to the company and not
individuals.
’ AE 11
his time to trade treaties and major policy.
Mrs. Hull’s Role
But the two men got pulled apart, partly by the Presi-
; dent himself, partly by Mrs. Hull, partly by the sycophan-
i tic career diplomats who played up to Hull’s pride and
I poured in oison against Welles.
! Roosevelt’s tutelage.
Faced with the Hull ultimatum, however, the President
went on his Great Lakes cruise, with Jimmy Byrnes and
Harry Hopkins, to think it over. When he got back he
cast his choice with the conservation wing of the party.
He accepted Welles’ resignation.
To get the full significance of this decision, it is nec-
essary to go back and understand the relationship between
Welles and Hull.
Actually, no two men appeared to be more ideally suit-
Ennis Daily News
Published Every Day Except Sun-
day, by The United Publishing- Co.,
which also publishes the Ennis
Weekly Lccal and The Palmer
Rustler.
Entered as Second-Class Matter
at the Post Office at Ennis, Texas,
Under the Act of March 3. 1879.
(By United Press)
Soviet bombers fan out over east-
ern and central Germany, ranging
as far west as Berlin, where they
set large fires.
Soviet forces smash a German
spearhead and repulse all attacks
on the approaches to Stalingrad
northwest of Moscow.
American Flying Fortresses strike
at the docks of Rotterdam; RAF
raids Abeville and shipping off
Dieppe in daylight.
every night now.
Next to that was Hitler-
if you grow weary of work
remember God’s first com-
mand to man.
---V--
“Ba (d)-dog-lio” the new
ruler of Italy, may be some
improvement over “Mad-dog
Mussolini,”
wJ
8,238/0
9-.nn Sunehine Horn. Hillsboro.. BF
CONSITENT
ADvERTISING
WILLREMOV
YOURWORRIE
I I ■■Ill i .. . .. L HIIIII
Aug. 31—All old-type B and
C gasoline ration coupons ex-
pire and must be adjusted with
local boards.
Aug. 31—Second tire inspec-
tion for C gasoline book holders
due.
Aug. 31—Red Stamps T, U, V
and W expire.
Sept. 20—Blue Stamps R, S
and T (forty-eight points) ex-
pire.
Sept. 21—No. 7 basic A gaso-
line ration coupons, good for
three gallons each, expire.
Oct. 30—Stamp 14, Book 1,
valid for five pounds of sugar
until midnight.
Oct. 31—Stamp 18, Book 1, for
one pair shoes, expires.
Oct. 31—Dead line for validity
of Stamps 15-16 for canning su-
gar.
Oct. 31—Second tire inspec-
tion for A gasoline book holders
due.
norant they were.
The fact about it is they
.. . finally have come to their
4
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--V--
Uncle Sam will have a
man’s size ico getting back
to normal. What we need is
a square deal for all, rather
than a new deal for the fa-
vored groups, and may be so
the voters will give it to us,
come November, 1944.
merry-go-round
By DREW PEARSON
When you hear a
complain at the hard
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ENNIS DAILY NEWS, ENNIS, ELLIS COUNTY, TEXAS FRIDAY EVENING, AUG. 27, 1943
The Corsicana Livestock and
Agricultural Show presents it’s
Food For Freedom Exposition Sep-
tember 14-18 inclusive, featuring
Texas Largest Dairy Show, South’s
Largest Swine Show, Outstanding
Club Work, Amateur Hour, and
Texas Championship Rodeo.
2:30 Shadv Vallev Folke .....
2:45 Shadv Vallev Folks ...
..3-0 Willie Farmer's Orch.
3:15 Des. of Race. Anueduct
3:3n Brazilian Parande ....
4:00 Jamboree Probram ....
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vice in November of .1941 he was
with the Texas Company.
He has been in. North Africa
since April and is commanding of-
ficer of an anti-aircraft battalion.
—Gonzales Inquirer.
Captain Penrod is. a grandson of
the late Rev. W. K. Penrod, for-
merly of Ennis. His grandmother,
Mrs. W. K. Penrod. resides in Gon-
zales
Relatives of the late Rev. W. K.
Penrod, who was pastor of the
First Baptist church of Gonzales
for 15 years from September, 1911,
have received news items from the
e 3
he is forced to do because of
war time conditions impos-
ed upon him, remind him of
the sage who said: “Hard
work never kills, it is the in-
terval between.”
---V--
Clean Up Those
Everyday Clothes
... For satisfactory work and unex-
celled service, send your clothing
to Grant’s Tailor Shop for clean-
ing and pressing. Your clothing will
be returned to you in perfect con-
dition, looking like new. Remem-
ber, in Ennis, it’s Grant’s.
rit’E
iMh.
1 zales,. received . his, early schooling
T , - - - Edward here. He, is a graduate of GHS,
Handler and Robert Gordon- deals class of ’35 and. A, and M. Cor-
with a hi-jacking enterprise in lege, 1940. Before. .entering1 the ser-
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READ the ADS s
When you miss the fifth annual
Corsicana Livestock and Agricul-
tural Show you still miss the Great-
est Show of it’s type. The people,
have spent “not one minute awayVg.
from their war joJs to prepare a "g
special exhibition, but exhibiing
to the world what Central East
Texas actually produced and pre-
Served to help win the war."
at Randolph Field for six weeks ----
Captain McCall was located at
ed for diplomatic teamwork. Hull, now over seventy, not
land’s idea that Europe was in good health, away from the State Department six
invasion proof. They really - months last year, needed a young vigorous undersecretary,
believed that' which of । He always stated that he was not an administrator, did
course, shows just how ig-
(*( DEADEND KE
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Daily Bible Thought
No one ever had much
success fighting against God
and his moral laws. Such
upstarts are laughable and
always have been:
The kings of the earth
set themselves, and the rul-
ers take council together,
against the Lord and against
his anointed.—Ps. 2:2. ,
--V--
Tingling, melodramatic action,
the kind origniated by the famous
Dead End Kids and Little Tough
Guys, is said to dominate- their
newest Universal picture, “Keep
’Em Slugging,” coming Saturday
to the Plaza Theatre.
The popular movie kids, includ-
ing Hun.tz Hall, Bobby Jordan, Ga-
briel Dell and Norman Abott, have
leading roles in the exciting film,
which features Evelyn Ankers, Don
Porter and Elyse Knox. Others in
the cast are Samuel S. Hinds,
Shemp Howard and Frank Albert-
son. 1
Copr. 1943 by United Feature yndicateInc..
Tm Res. JU. S. Pat. Of-All rights reserved
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FAE
PAYNE »
We have some of the many
things you want and ned. Come in
and see blackboards for the school
children, stand-and-step ( ladder
combinations, assortment of Hos-
tess serving trays and mirrored
serving trays, new seat covers for
some cars 37-42, new pocket
knives. MAIN TIRE CO.
HOW THE NAZIS
KIDDED THEMSELVES
It was really rather ridic-
ulous, how the Nazis kidded
themselves. 1
Of course, the gres’ost ab-
surdity was Goerin boast
that Berlin never would be
bombed. Especially when you
consider the fact that it’s
being bombed—and hard—
great metropolitan department
i store is the back ground for much
of the thrilling entertainment. As
employees of this institution, the
boys have brand new opportunities
to reveal their resourcefulness in
coping with the criminals.
Miss Ankers and Don Porter
have romantic roles. Shemp How-
ard, one of Universal’s leading
comedians, supplies many laugha-
ble scenes and the villian of the
film is portrayed by Fran Albert-
sen. Highlight of the story, a free-
for-all fight in a warehouse, is de-
U. S. Navy announces Japanese
withdrawal in a communique that
reports “no further action” for
more than 24 hours in the large-
scale battle involving a heavier
Japanese naval force northeast of
the Solomons.
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WASHINGTON, August 27—The President has just
made a major decision, similar to the Wallace-Jones show-
down, by which he is ousting one of his most loyal sup-
porters. This time it is Undersecretary of State Sumner
Welles.
For exactly ten years Welles has been the President’s
chief adviser and administrator on the diplomatic front.
He initiated Roosevelt’s successful Good Neighbor policy,
took the rap on a lot of things he didn’t initiate, and, like
Henry Wallace, never made a move without knowing the
President thoroughly approved.
But like Wallace, Welles is now being ousted. As with
Wallace also, Welles’ case involves a showdown with the
conservative, or southern wing, of the Democratic Party.
Where the President picked between Jesse Jones and Wal-
lace in regard to Economic Warfare, he has now chosen be-
tween Cordell Hull and Sumner Welles.
Hull Demanded Showdown
Inside story is that Secretary Hull, spurred on by Mrs.
Hull, called for a showndown with the President, declaring
that either his Undersecretary of State must resign or he,
Hull, would get out.
The President has known Welles since the latter was a
boy in knee breeches. Welles and Mrs. Roosevelt had the
same godmother. Welles was a pageboy at the Roosevelt
wedding. Later, when Roosevelt was Assistant Secretary
of the Navy, he got Welles his first appointment to the
diplomatic service. Welles had virtually grown up under
/ (- Z 7
’s Daily Inquirer. of Gonzales giving
an account' of the 96th anniversary
of the ' church/ 1 U 5
There were ten charter members
of the church and at this time E8
cA99e0s
Act
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WRITE A
WANT AD
CASH IN ON
STUFF
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THE ATTIC =
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Conference of Alcoholic Beverage tndunWes.Jnr.. \
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EVENING
6:00 Amer. Eagle Club, Ldn...MBS
6:30 It's Dance Time ...........ET
7:00 “The Fleet’s In” ........MRS
7:30 Upton Close, news ........MRS
7:45 Ruby Norman’s Orch. ..MBS
8:00 Chicago Theater of Air..MBS
9:00 John B. Hughes, news ...MRS
9:15 Bandwagon ...............MBS
9:45 Tommy Tucker’s Orch ..MBS
10:00 Juneteenth Celebration ..REMO
11:00 U. P. News ................Stu.
11:05 Sign Off
Key:—
Stu.—Studio; MBS—Mutual Broad-
casting System; ET—Electrical Trans-
criptions; RE—Remote.
War Ration Books ;
,d
The' President knew, a very busy man, found it diffi-
I cult to listen to Secretary Hull’s rambling, indecisive diplo-
; matic presentations; so got in the habit of calling Welles
to the White House. Welles could summarize a situation
in France, Germany or the Argentine in five minutes and
recommend action. So Welles and the President, always
his own secretary of state, grew closer and closer in hand-
ling foreign policy.
This was one of the things which especially griped
Mrs. Hull. And had it not been for the resentment which
she and the career cliaue voured into the old gentleman’s
gullible ears, it is doubtful if the State Department feud
would have developed.
One series of incidents which particularly rankled was
over the Good Neighbor policy. Welles had been in the
State Department under Charles Evans Hughes, and Welles
reallv developed the first seeds of the Good Neighbor poli-
cy. For it was Welles who engineered, the withdrawal of
American Marines from the Dominican Republic and Nic-
aragua, and who first laid down the policy that American
troons should not land on Latin American soil.
Good Neighbor Welles
N Later while Roosevelt was still Governor of New York.
Welles sold him on the Good Neighbor policy and helped
write the Democratic platform adopted at the Chica con-
vention.
It was Secretary Hull, however, who attended the first
Pan American conference in 1933 at Montevideo to carry
out the Good Neighbor planks, at which time he argued
privately that the United States must reserve the right to
land troops on Latin American soil if necessary.
Hull even approached the Chilean and Argentine del-
egates and thought he had their support for the American
position of intervention. But when they surprised him by
speaking publicly against intervention, he finally came a-
round to the original Welles policy of no U.S. troops in
Latin America.
Since then, Latin American diplomats usually have
come to see Welles, not Hull, when they wanted to get
things done—another fact which has disrupted relations.
More acid was poured in the wound during the State
Department row over European refugees. The President
appointed a committee of distinguished citizens including
the Catholic Archbishop of New Orleans to select German,
Czech and Austrian refugees, many of them Jewish, for ad-
mission to this country.
Refugees Blocked
The committee was set up under the supervision of
Sumner Welles, and it selected 651 professors, churchmen,
and ex-government officials to get U.S. passport visas.
Months passed and nothing happened. Finally it was dis-
covered that the clique in the State Department which
takes orders from Hull had blocked the visas.
Meanwhile Mr. Hull had authorized the admission of
500 Bata shoe workers from German-occupied Czechoslo-
vakia despite the fact that the Bata firm was on the Bri-
tish blacklist. (Later the firm was placed on the Aemri-
can blacklist and the shoe workers who had alerady enter-
ed the country were expelled.)
This and many other problems where Welles was doing
a job at the personal direction of the President, and usu-
ally batting for a more liberal policy, have snarled State
Department relations intermittently for years.
So now, in the same way that Hull demanded the res-
ignation of Raymond Moley as Assistant Secretary of State
and of George Peek as economic adviser, he had now de-
manded the exit of the most important and liberal pillar
in the State Department—Sumner Welles.
— guv
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—EM4 /
2 Em-
MORNING
6:90 Sian On: Rise and Shine...
7-nn ii. p Nea/s
7*15 n*orninn Variety Show.....
7:55 up News ................
8:00 Ennis on the Air .........
8:15 Waxahachie on the Air •••
8:3 Eni+h & Fruth. Crond p. .
O’OA Foniv A1+~p Service
a«on Rainhona HAVcA ...........।
0*45 Prlei Clemons Rangers..’
1n*nn Pillv Penaid news .......I
Wg
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2 $3
4 K
Outside of County by Mail, Rates
Same as for City.
man capital say that Berlin
admits with “remarkable
realism that the forces of
Great Britain and the Unit-
ed States in the Mediterran-
ean are entirely sufficient to
permit the Allies to launch a
strategic offensive against
both the Italian mainland
and the Balkans.”
Hitler’s face is going to be
very red before long. Since
he has always been just a
jump or two ahead of a
screaming fit, he doubtless
already has a bad case of
the invasion jitters, along
with his stooges. The Que-
bec conference wasn’t a
. meeting to make things easy
for him. It is altogether pos-
sible that his death warrant
was read inthat conference.
And this time, it is quite
likely that Germany will fare
as Black Jack Pershing
wanted to fare in the other
war—get the cleaning out it
deserved.
That will make it easier to
*isc..
KEEPING WN
You’ve got to keep on growing;
One inch won’t make you very tall;
You’ve got to keep on walking;
One step won’t, take you very far;
You’ve got to keep on talking;
One . word won’t tell folks who
you are, • • h
You’ve got to keep them going,
. One little “ad” won’t do it all, I
10“15 Hts nf the Dav ........
10:30 “Tomorrow tVor Ch
11:00 Service Hne Darts
11:15 Hill’billv Roundun Time
AFTERNOON
19.nn Luncheon With Lopez
12:15 11. P. Mews ............
12:30 Hennv lenome’s OrcH ...
1 rOO I ani McIntire's Orch.
1-20 Mutual Coos Calline ...
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WAR IN EUROPE?
A YEAR AGO
AUG. 27, 1942
7:30 The Cisco Kid ........
8:00 U. P. News ...........
8:15 It’s Dance Time ......
8:30 Double or Nothing ..
9:00 John B. Hughes, news
9:15 Jimmy Joy’s Orch.....
9:30 Hits of the Day ......
10:00 U. P. News ........
10:15 Ray Morton’s Orch.
10:30 Music Without Words
11:00 U. P. News ...........
11:05 Sign Off
4
59
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Nowlin, C. A. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 204, Ed. 1 Friday, August 27, 1943, newspaper, August 27, 1943; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1475677/m1/2/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.