The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 6, 1944 Page: 2 of 4
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ENNIS DAILY NEWS, ENNIS, ELLIS COONTY, TEXAS THURSDAY EVENING, JAN. 6, 1944
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War Casualties
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Copr. 1943 by United Feature Syndlicate, Ine.
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PROTEIN OF PROVED QUALITY
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Your Federal
Income Tax
NEWSPAPER
ADVERTISING
camera case is a blue purse which
she carries slung over her shoul-
ders.
of Cottonseed Cake, Meal and Hulls.
Take a load back with you-every trip!
19,
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- -how to
that has
c use of
FNNIS SCHOOLS
AIDING WAR EFFORT
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Back up your boy. Increase
your War Bond buying to
your family limit!
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#utside of County by Mail, Rates
Fame as for City.
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FEEDING BULLETIN
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Labor, rubber, time and transpor-
tation of all kinds are getting
scarcer. Make every mile of
travel move the maximum load.
Good business and real patriotism
both say-BUY NOW your supplies
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formative and offered much! obviously not the moment to go. He sat like the student at
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Washington, Jan. 6 (UP)— The
I Navy Department announced to-
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All Communications of Business
‘ i nd items of news should be ad-
. c ressed to the company and not
' d-dividuals.
• Entered as Second-Class Matter
t.t the Post Office at Ennis, Texas,
Under the Act of March 3, 1879.
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Telin
. " with JI
B ROBERT
— BENCHLEY \
OH NANCY—MY PARTY HAS
BEEN CALLED OFF BECAUSE
OF THE COAL SHORTAGE--
MY HOUSE ISN'T WARM
--------7 ENOUGH
4
*e-,ORTRA/TOE 4 sCATNlOT.
.RANK W.WINTERLING, ALTHOUGH 54 YEARS
* OLD WAS ACCEPTED FOR ENLISTMENT IN THE
MARINE CORPS....HIS TWO MARINE SONS ,
* CORP. JOSEPHN. AND SGT. FRANK E., GAVE
THEIR LIVES IN BATTLE...ONE AT BATAAN
* AND THE OTHER AT GUADALCANAL.
to spring from within.”
Wallace had struck a theme close to his heart. He
warmed up.
“A man came in here the other day and asked for the
titles of the ten books which had influenced me most. He
! was getting the same thing from a lot of people—the Pres-
MHAPLAINS
SERVING WITH U.S.MARINES
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casualties in the Navy,
Corps and Coast Guard.
The list included:
Texas:
Armstrong, Jarrel M.„ :
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Woods, Cpl. Leonard R.—Mrs.
Doris C- Woods, wife, Teague.
coming general over the na-
t on. It is the business of En-
ris. business men and other
c itizens to see that the peo-
ident, Mrs. Roosevelt, Churchill, Stalin and others. I didn’t
want to do it, because the books that have influenced me
might not be the right books for others. I never liked to
prescribe for others.
“But I did name the Bible and Plato’s Republic. These
two books are full of the idea of the dignity of the human
soul, respect for the individual. They state it over and ov-
if you actually believe that
God intimately knows and
loves you why should you
be filled with fear? God has
wonderful plans for you:
For we have not received
the spirit of bonndage again
to fear, but we have receiv-
ed the spirit of adoption.—
Romans 8:15.
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.This will require a greater
tolerance and a .broaden un-
. c efstanding of peoples of
obher countries.
In discussing the expan-
s'on of the Ennis schools
‘curing recent years, and the
aosorption of rural schools,
he pointed the way for En-
, r is business interests to pro-
ft by this change that is be-
Join the invasion . of Hit-
ler’s Europe through your
fighting dollars. Buy more
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postwar days. Children, he;
said, must be taught “living”
PVT. JOHN EEE,
PEMLLT
-=USMC ———2
IS CREDITED WITH SAVING L 4
TRAPPED MARINE PLATOON FROM
DESTRUCTION.... HE SWAM A 2
CROCODILE INFESTED TROPICAL $
RIVER THROUGH JAPANESE LINES'
TO CARRY MESSAGES TO A
COMMAND POST... .ALTHOUGH
UNDER HEAVY ENEMY FIRE KE
ESCAPED UNHARMED.
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due. Uen we wvL jL/n, I
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niade upon the schools in
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er again. The ancient Hebrews and the Greeks—the Bible
and Plato. Both civilizations were based on the dignity of
i the individual human being.”
The address was no only Terrence Burke had expected to stay only five minutes.
It is regrettable that every
person in Ennis could not
have heard the address of
Supt. J. D. King delivered
before the Ennis Lions Club
Wednesday on the Ennis
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FDR AcufA:
Every worker
should increase the
amount of bonds he
or she is buying.
j FREDDIE SLACK ANB ORCHESTRA
live in a world
grown small be-
this global war.
K
Wallace looked up. “Those are the profiteers,” he
said. “And listen to -this. Amos is putting his finger on
the people who don’t want to renegotiate contracts.
Merry-Go-Round
“ ‘When will the new moon be gone, that we may sell
corn? And the Sabbath, that we may set forth, wheat,
making the ephah small and he shekel great.’ That’s in-
flation—and falsifying the balances by deceit.”
The Vice President looked at his listener, with a twin-
kle behind his silver-rimmed glasses. Then he read an-
other verse.
“ ‘That we may buy the poor for silver, and the needy
for a pair of shoes; yea, and sell the .refuse of the wheat?’ ”
“But even this wasn’t very popular in those days,”
continued the Vice President. “Amos was a social revolu-
tionary, and social revolutionaries are never popular. What’s
—V—
This is the year to be sure
‘ you get a poll tax receipts.
Indications are that a num-
ber of hot political cam-
paigns are coming up, and
pity the man who will not
have a voice in them.
, —V—
We can’t see that it mat-
• ters much who said the
strikes and threatened strike
have prolonged the war. No
’ cne will say that strikes
' have hastened the end.
—V—
The complaints of juvenile
delinquency you hear so
much about, does not come
from homes that are operat-
ed as homes.
_V——L
nu WASHINGTON
T- Ke, U. S. Pat O«.
MERRY-GO-ROUND
By DREW PEARSON ,
.2
.ple from the communities
t at have been absorbed by
te consolidation of their
s hools find the same the
same place in Ennis as their
community center that they
f ormerly had in their own
communities.
' Mr. King, in his entire talk
revealed that he has the vis-
ion and practical business
knowledge to direct the En-
ris schools to fields of still
further progress. He mani-
fests a leadership that would
be wise for us to follow.
—V— .
Now that the railroads are
under Army control should
the brakeman salute the con-
1 ductor?
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-WROBERT RYAN a ELIZABETH
# PATTERSON • MARJORIE GATESON
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Before she took the part, Miss ;
Leslie spent a week on the lot
with Fred Hendrickson, the still
photographer, “He taught me how
to handle a camera and use flash
bulbs,” she says. “I didn’t have
time to learn how to take real pic-
tures.”
Washington, Jan. 6 (UP)—The
War Department made public to-
day the names of 306 United States
soldiers killed: . in action, includ-
ing:
•European. Area
Texas:
Bankhead, Staff Sgt. Ennis M-—
Mrs. Ruby C Bankhead, mother,
Paris.
Battise, Staff Sgt. Howard B —
Andrew J. Battise, father, Living-
ston.
Frettag, Staff Sgt. Alvin H-—
Mrs. Annie M. Frettag, mother,
Thrall.
Holland, 1st. Lt. William M., Jr.
—Murray Holland, father, George
West.
Pitts, 1st Lt. Robert A.—R. H.
Pitts, father, 1734 Marsalis, Dallas.
Thomas, Flight Officer Ted J.
Mrs. Romulus Thomas, mother,
El Paso.
Mediterranean Area
Texas:
Bartow, Tech 5th Gr. Richard
O.—Mrs. Daisey Mae Bartow,
mother, Refugio.
Berry, Staff Sgt. Guy L—Mrs.
Dovie G. Berry, wife, Mount Ver-
non.
Buster, 1st Lt. William G.—Mrs.
Frances M. Buster, wife, 6330 Vel-
asco, Dallas.
Carrillo, Pfc. Tirso F.—Genaro
Carrillo, father, Rock Springs.
Ford, Pfc. Robert E.—Mrs. Ben-
nie M, Fold, mother, Houston.
Foytik, Pfc. Henry—Frank Foy-
tik, Sr., father, 64th and Ave. P,
Galveston.
Gibson, Sgt. Jack B—Mrs. Ab-
bie I. Gibson, mother, Mexia.
Gordon, Pfc. David H.— Mrs.
Clara P. Gordon, mother, Weath-
erford.
Jimerson, Pvt. Virdell P.—Mrs.
Lula Jimerson, mother, Hender-
son.
Lucio, Pvt. Ramon—Mrs. Fran- I
cisca M. Lucio, mother, San Mar-
cos.
Mick, Pvt William E. Jr.—Wil-
liam E. Mick, father, Sinton.
Newland, 2nd Lt. Henry H.—Mrs
Mary C. Newland, mother, 2242 Sul
Ross, Houston. • s
Perez, Pvt. Procopic—Mrs. Ter-
esa Perez, Mother, Donna.
Randall, Pfc. Marvin F. —J. C.
Randall, fother, Wichita Falls.
Reck, Pfc. David N.—Alfred J.
Reck, brorher, Calude.
Silva, Pvt. Manuel S- — Mrs.
Marcella Silva, mother, Venavides.
Thigpen, Pfc,. Kenneth M. •—
Bedford F. Thigpen, father, Gu-
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Evelyn Scarborough, Penwell.
Young, J. Z., Machinist’s mate !
2-C, USNR. Dead, wife, Mrs-
Juanita Cone Young, Gause.
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know whether it is faulty exegsis or not. Maybe it is find-
ing a text to fit your own ideas. Anyhow, here’s a passage
! that most people use to prove that Christ, who was spurn-
! ed and accursed, came to be the foundation stone of the
Christian religion.”
He had found Psalm 118 and he read Verse 22: “‘The
stone which the builders refused is become the headstone
of the corner.’ But I see something else in that verse.” he
continued. “I see a reference to all the rejected peoples—
the minorities all over the world. The rejected people grow
strong. They work harder and hang together and get to be
a dominent people.
“That’s true of the Jews, and it may prove true of the
negroes and even the Japanese-Americans who are being
spat upon today. Generally speaking, it is true of all re-
jected peoples. That’s why there is so much hope for the
minorities. We used to reject and despise the Chinese, but
they may become ‘the headstone of the corner.’
“That’s something we will have to watch in making
the peace,” concluded the Vice President. “It must be a
fair and generous peace, or the vanquished will become
strong by the very fact of being oppressed.”
The young man looked at the clock and realized he
had been with the Vice President of the United States for
half an hour. His head was swimming. Mr. Wallace had
told him he had no advice for young people, but his listen-
er’s head was brimming with new ideas. He rose grateful,
and went away.
“Essential Workers”
War Production Board has discovered a device for pro-
tecting its dollar-a-year men from the draft.
Boards in the District of Columbia are notoriously
hard-boiled about deferment of Government officials, and
the Administration has leaned over backward not to press
for deferments. But dollar-a-year men have learned to a-
void the tough boards of Washington by applying to their
local boards, more likely to be impressed by a statement
that “the applicant’s services are required by the Federal
Government in Washington.”
However, this device may be upset by recent instruc-
tions issued by Selective Service officials for reviewing oc-
cupational deferments. The reviews will be made by ap-
peals boards in the area of the registrant’s place of em-
ployment rather than in his home area. (Copyright, 19944,
by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
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—,L3_ 2 -JN-6
the feet of Gamaliel.
“The only way to develop your full strength is to reach
out for something greater than yourself. That holds for a
runner in a track meet, and it also holds for a politician or
a business man. You have got to reach beyond your grasp,
or you will never explore your full capacities.
“This is in the Bible time and again. There are a lot
of things in the Bible that fit conditions today—even in-
flation!”
Bible On Renegotiation
Here Wallace reached for his Bible and searched
through it for the Book of Amos. "Amos was the oldest of
all the prophets, and a real social revolutionary.”
The Vice President started reading from the eighth
chapter of Amos. “ Hear this, O ye that swallow up the
needy, even to make the poor of the land to fail . . .’ ”
people of Judah, and he had gone up to Israel to do his
preaching. And the Israelites didn’t like it, so they told
him to go home.”
Atlantic Charter
“And over here in the Book of Micah, Chapter 4, there’s
something about reconversion. ‘And they shall beat their
swords into plowshares, and their ! spears into pruning
hooks: Nations shall not lift up a sword against nations,
neither shall they learn war any more.’
“Yes, Micah even has Rural Electrification, Farm Se-
curity, and the Atlantic Charter all wrapped up in Chap-
ter 4. Listen to this: ‘But they shall sit every man under
his vine and under his fig tree; and none shall make them
afraid.’ (That’s freedom from fear). ‘For the mouth of
the Lord) of hosts has spoken it. For all people will walk
every one in the name of his God.’ (freedom of religion).
‘And we will walk in the name of the Lord: our God for
ever and ever.’ ” ( .
Wallace turned back to the Book of Psalms. “I don’t
Ennis Daily News
uhlished Every . Day Except Sun-
1 lay, by The United Publishing Co.,
wvhich also publishes the Ennis
Neekly Local and The Palmer
i Lustier.
68
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As
food for thought. It revealed
the fact that Ennis schools
are in full tune with the na-
tional wartime educational
program, and as one unit of
the nation’s educational sys-
tem, has contributed mater-
ially to the war effort. As
vas pointed out by Mr. King
education of the youth must
cf necessity be, designed to
fit the need of the times and
conditions faced by the
country.
The most interesting part
of his address, and! the most
important, was his views of
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more, he belonged to the wrong kingdom. He was of the
munitiole terer, •‛ve &-eem V
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_______________________19
PERSONAL EXEMPTIONS
The principle of the income tax
is to distribute taxes according' to
the relative ability of different per-
sons to pay. Therefore, every tax-
payer is granted a personal exepm-
tion, which is deducted from his in-
some before computing the tax.
For the regular income tax, the
exemption on 1943 income is $500
for a single person and $1,200 for
married persons living with hus-
band or wife, and for other heads
of families. For the Victory tax
the exemption is $624, regardless
of whether married or single.
$500 exemption for single ap-
plies not only to unmarried men
and women but also to Widows,
widowers, divorcees, and also to
married persons who are separated
by mutual consent. However, mar-
ried couples who are only tempor-
arily apart—as in the case of sol-
diers and their wives—are con-
sidered “living wife.
The $1,200 exemption for married
persons is the total exemption for
a man and wife, regardless of
whether they have separate income
or whether they file separate or
joint returns. The $1,200 exemp-
tion may be taken on the return
of either the husband or the wife,
or divided between them in any
proportion they desire if they file
separate returns on the long Form
1040.
A similar exemption of $1,200 is
granted to otners who qualify un-
der the definition of a “head of
family” for tax purposes—for in-
stance, single persons supporting
aged parents, and widows or wid-
owers supporting minor children.
Different methods- of claiming
these exemptions are provided in
the forms of tax returns—the short
Form 1040A and the long Form
1040.
On the short Form 1040A, you
do not have to figure the amount
of exemption. Instead, you need
only check in one of the boxes (at
the top of the back page) which
expresses your family status (single
married, etc.) on July 1, 1943. Be-
low these boxes is a table of taxes,
divided into three columns. The
form will show you which column
to use according to which family
status box you checked- In his
manner you receive the benefit of
the personal exemption, and your
regular income tax can be found
without any computation.
On the long Form 1040, you must
show not only the amount of the
exemption you claim, but also for
how many months of the year you
were single or married, or other-
wise a “head of family.” On this
form, persons whose status changes
during the year are required to
prorate their exemption according-
ly. For instance, a couple who
were married 'after three-fourths
of the year had gone by would
each be entitled to three-fourts of
a single person’s exemption (9-12
of $500) and together would be
entitled to one-fourth of a mar-
ried couple exemption ( 3-12 of
$1,200). If a married person dies
during the year, his personal ex-
emption is proroated for the peri-
od up to 4 he date of death, and
the suriviving wife or husband is
considered “single” for the rest of
the year, unless she or he re-
marries oy is entitled to the status
of “head of family.”
In the case of $624 victory tax
exemption the amount must be en-
tered on both forms but is not af-
fected by family status or by death.
For any return reporting the in-
come of only one person (either
single or married, and including
joint returns upon which either
the husband 11 wife has no in-
come), the exemption is a flat $624
in all cases. - For any joint return
in which both the - husband and
wife each report more than $624
income, each is entitled to $624
exemption, or a total of $1,248.
For joint returns in which either
the husband or the wife has in-
come which is less than $624, they
should add the amount of the
smaller income and $624 and enter
the total on their return. In this
last instance, suppose a husband
had $1,000' income and his wife
$200; their joint victory tax ex-
emption will be $624, or a total
of $824.
If you are in doubt about the
’correct amount of your personal
exemption, advice may be obtained
readily from the office of the
nearest collector of internal re-
venue.
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Washington, January 6,—Terrence Burke, editor of the
Loyola College newspaper, came to Washington the other
day and got an appointment to see the Vice President. He
asked Mr. Wallace for a statement in the form of advice to
the young men of this generation.
Wallace grinned and shook his head. “I haven’t got
anything to say. I never liked it when the old folks hand-
ed out advice, and I am not going to impose my advice on
others.”
The boy stared, puzzled. He had never found an ad-
ult unwilling to tell the young how to behave. There was
a long pause. It looked as if the interviewer would fold
up on the spot.
Presently Wallace resumed. “The only way for a
young fellow to determine the right course is to search
within himself. Advice imposed on him is no good. It has
It’s a good thing RKO Radio I
had plenty oi flash bulbs on hand
when “The Sky’s the Limit” was
being filmed. In the picture Joan
Leslie plays the part of a photog-
rapher for a picture magazine-
Naturally she has to use a cam-
era, and when you take pictures as
Miss Leslie is supposed to do, you
need flash bulbs—plenty of them.
During the making of the David
Hempstead production, in which
Jean is co-starred with Fred As-
taire, Miss Leslie used up 450
flash bulbs, photographing Astaire,
Robert Benchley, Freddie Slack
and band, taxi drivers, soldiere,
longshoremen, airplanes. And in
between she found time to sing
a solo number “My Shining Hour,”
and dance two routines with As-
taire.
Miss Leslie makes a very attrac-
tive .photographer, probably in the
most attractive photographer in
the country. Most female pho-
tographers wear slacks. Miss Les-
lie doesnr in “The Sky’s the
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TO. HELP YOU SELL- —
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TIME —TIRES —LABOR --
—a—-Ast, ■ 4/
egEsa=gf—-56/
MC- Dead. Mother, Mrs. Margaret
M. Armstrong, 710 Dennis St.,
Houston.
Guthrie, Donald S., Pfc. US-
MCR. Wounded. Mother Mrs.
Katharyne Guthrie, 917 Burnett
St., Fort Worth.
Halvorsen, Bernard B., Pfc. US-
M. Wounded. Mother, Mrs. Jessie
Halvorsen, 7035 Ave. K, Houston.
Hamilton, Seaborn Edwin, boat-
swain’s mate 2-C, USN. Wounded.
Wife, Mrs. Elvie Hamilton, Cush-
ing. Brother, J. W. Hamilton, 906
South Adams, Fort Worth.
Hyde, William F., Jr., Sgt. US-
MC- Wounded. Mother, Mrs. Sy-
bil Hyde, Mabank-
Jay, Elzie C., Pvt. USMCR.
Wounded. Mother, Mrs. Melva
Barkhurst, Lamesa.
Johnson, Ramon F., Pfc. US-
MCR. Wounded. Wife, Mrs. Ra-
mon F. Johnson, Bay City.
Jones, Ray, Pfc., USMC. Wound-
ed. Parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. P.
Jones, Thornton.
Jordan, Elmer O., Sgt., USMC.
Wounded. Mother, Mrs. Emma
Jordan, Arlington.
Klemcke, Robert Lee, Seaman
2-C, USNR. Dead. Parents, Mr.
and Mrs. William Samuel Kle-
mcke, Von Ormy.
Mills, Justin G., 1st Lt., USMCR.
Dead. Mother, Mrs. Mary A.
Mills, 824 Sealy Ave. Galveston.
Payne, Clyde, Belmont, machin-
ist’s mate 1-C, USN. Dead.
Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Croft, Temple,
Scarborough, Burtis Moye, avia-
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Nowlin, C. A. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 6, 1944, newspaper, January 6, 1944; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1475784/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.