The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 120, Ed. 1 Monday, May 22, 1944 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Ennis Daily News and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Ennis Public Library.
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1
PAGE TWO
1
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By Mail Outside County
- »
In Moscow, the Presidium of the
United We B-and!
4
Open For Business
i
MR. and MRS. BILL PRESTIDGE
es split into three parts.
of
9
Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Parma, 307 E.
Various Republicans have been talked about or scruti-
normally imported but hadnized by the President, including War Production Board
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7
LAST TIMES TODAY
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PLUS SHORTS and NEWS
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TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY
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GULF
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SENIOR
GASLINE POWERS THS ATTACK . . i DON’T WASTE A DROP!
CALENDAR
PLUS SHORTS and NEWS
Announcements
n
By Ernie Bushmiller
NANCY
4
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(61
IF
TEXAS LAGGING IN
FAT SALVAGING
I THOUGHT you SAID
CHARLOTTE RUSSE
A
SUBSCRIPTFON RATES
(By Carrier in the City)
fruit such as canned berries, cher-
ries, peaches, pineapple, etc. Fresh
stewed fruit may be used. Bake at
400 degrees F for 30 minutes.
NN
661
A Tasty Dessert
Quickly Made
College bred: The flower of
youth added to the dough of
old age.
OH, NANCY- COME
DOWNSTAIRS-
( I HAVE A >
> SURPRISE W
< FOR YOU.....1
( CHARLOTTE )
\ AND RUTH- /
Try the home-cooked lunches at Bill’s Place on
West Brown St., next to Cloverfarm Store. Also
sandwiches and hamburgers.
Happiness is not a station
you "arrive at, but a manner
of traveling.
One Month ---
Three Months
Six Months ____
One Year ______
WISE WORDS
ABOUT BERRIES
For State Senate:
(12th District)
PENN J. JACKSON
THE AMERICAN Petroleum Institute
recommends changing oil regularly. It’s
equally important to use a good motor
oil like Gulfpride, “The World’s Finest
Motor Oil,” or Gulflube, an extra-quality
oil that costs a few cents less.
I
4
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ah ;
3
A. D. Gann
Plumber-Contractor
Phone 5191
For Tax Assessor and Collector—
W. A. (BILL) LYON
E. C. ALLMON
For Sheriff-
JESS CARIKER
HUGH FITZGERALD
For County Commissioner,
Precinct No. 2
E. J. (DICK) KENDALL
\
\
The President first/ got to know Winant when the for-
mer was Governor of New York and the latter was Gover-
nor of New Hampshire. FDR was close to several Republican
Governors at that time, another being Gifford Pinchot of
Pennsylvania.
After he entered the White House, the President ap-
pointed Winant as U. S. representative to the International
___ 65c
_____$1.95
-_-$3.90
-----$7.80
> WAR IN EUROPE
I A YEAR AGO
TODAY
Men You Know
In Service for
Humanity
<
GET AN APPOINTMENT
To help your Gulf Dealer do a
thorough job on your car,
make an appointment. Phone
or speak to him at the station.
Then you should encounter no
delay when you get Gulf’s Pro-
tective Maintenance Plan ...
15 services in all!
■ ■ - —v—
Whether the scar will show
is entirely up to you, said
the doctor to the sweet, young
thing.
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The White House had taken the view that, if Stalin
thought he could reconcile Polish and Russian views, plug
relations between Russian and the Catholic Church, through
’Father Orlemanski, no stone should be placed in his path.
Meanwhile, a Soviet plane was sent to Detroit, and the
■priest got aboard before church officials could make any
partment got word that the Russian, Government was int-
erested in having Father Orlemanski come to Moscow, and
so, as in the case of most such Allied requests, this one
was granted.
The church hierarchy, hearing about the matter, im-
mediately made inquiries aimed to stop the issuance of a
passport but, although the State Department listens sym-
May 19-26
J. F. GARDNER,
Principal High School
Friday, May 19:
1 p.m. o’clock San Jacinto Audi-
torium, Class Day Program. Senior
Day.
Sunday, May 21:
5 p.m. San Jacinto Auditorium,
Vesper Baccalaureate Service. Ser-
mon, Rev. S. T. Francis, pastor,
First Baptist Church.
Monday, May 22:
8:15 pm. The Burl Howard home
Billy Howard, host, 1107 West Lam-
pasas St., Treasure Hunt.
Tuesday, May 23:
8 p.m. Progressive Dinner, First
course, Mrs. C. L. McCaw, 806 N.
Sherman St. Second course, Mrs.
[ Miss Leatherwood says that the
way you wash berries may make
ENNIS MAN GRADUATES
FROM ARMAMENT SCHOOL
Pvt. Eugene C. Parma, son
J. T. DUVALL PROMOTED
TO RANK OF CAPTAIN
Chaplain J- T. Duvall, who re-
cently was transferred from the
United States to England, has re-
ceived a promotion and is now a
Captain according to news received
WAXAHACHIE WOMAN GETS
PURPLE HEART AWARDED
HER HUSBAND IN PACIFIC
Waxahachie, May 22—Mrs. Paul
Maxwell received the Purple Heart
from her husband, Pfc. Paul Max-
well, Saturday. He was wounded
in action several months ago, but
is now able to be back in service.
He is somewhere in the Pacific.
U 5
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SR
Ka 6 1
tor better car cars today •••
"to cwoid "6omofroi^
By Mail in Ellis County
One Year ___________________$3 00
8 p.m. Hayride and picnic.
Thursday, May 25:
8 p.m. Senior Study Hall, Junior-
Senior Banquet.
Friday, May 26:
8 p.m. Graduation execises, San
Jacinto Auditorium.
—PLUS SHORTS & NEWS—
ug
ENNIS DAILY NEWS, ENNIS, ELLIS COUNTY, TEXAS MONDAY EVENING, MAY 22, 1944
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Entered as Second-Class Matter
at the Post Office at Ennis, Texas,
Under the Act of March 3, 1879.
“ A: Nowlin------Editor and Mgr.
All Communications of Business
and items of news should be ad-
dressed to the company and not
individuals.
in a commodity which she
02
Invasion is costly fighting.
Your boy gives 100 per cent
—How about your bond buy-
ing.
g2e57'
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A REPUBLIC MUSICAL COMEDY ,
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MILFORD T-CORPORAL HELD
GERMAN PRISONER OF WAR
Tech 5th Grade Woodrow Kel-
ley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Q.
Kelley, Milford, Texas, is a pris-
oner of the German government,
it was announced today by the
War Department in a list of names
of 421 soldiers who are war pris-
oners of the Nazis.
Home Dem. Agent, gives the rea-
son behind this principle: Vitamin
C is easily destroyed by exposure [
to heat and air . . So, the longer
you keep berries, the less food val-
ue you’ll receive. The same goes
for cooking. Berry shortcake gives
you more Vitamin C than a berry 1
pie. Ripe, raw strawberries are the
richest of all the berries for Vit-
amin C, and they also contain
some Vitamin A.
Incidentally, some scientists ov-
er in North Carolina have discov- J
ered that berries ripened in the ।
sun contain considerably more Vi-
tamin C than those ripened in the
shade. That’s a good tip for gar-
deners to remember.
One generous serving of ripe
strawberries is enough to furnish a
day’s requirements of the vitamin.
On the other hand, berries that
were canned or preserved, or the
unripe or bruised berries contain
much less Vitamin C.
m Saves those hearings
A and piston rings.
a difference. Be sure you wash
berries before you remove the
stems. Removing the hull exposes
the inner tissue and some of the
Vitamin C. can dissolve in the wa:
ter. The same goes for soaking
berries in water. That’s - a breach
of nutritional etiquette. ' .
By DREW PEARSON
R. H. Ridley, 1600 N. Preston St.
Third course, Mrs. J. F. Gardner,
609 W. Avenue.
Wednesday, May 24:
3 p.m. Plaza Theatre, Picture
show party.
P
I
MAY-
822
Governor Coke Stevenson i other efforts to stop him. The route the plane took, via
last week issued an appeal to ! Alaska and Siberia, is one of the most secret of the war,
Texas housewives to save and has been accorded only to a few people, such as
more Used Household Fats. I Wendell Willkie, on special request. U. S. Ambassadors
Texas, was lagging about 34 ! ordinarily have to go the longer way via Europe.
percent in producing its quo- ! GOP Running Mate for FDR
ta of this vital salvage. | Around the White House, it is whispered! that it wasn’t
Almost all our import sour- entirely diplomatic business that brought U. S. Ambassador
ces of fats and oils were cut John Winant back from London. In fact,4 same of FDR’s
off when the Jananese onu- friends hint that the President has Winant in mind as his
pied the Philippines and the running mate on a Republican-Democratic coalition ticket.
T
v
PLAZA
ii, ill
LAST TIMES TODAY
to become an exporting na-
tion. The conversion was a
great one and made possible
almost wholly through the ef-
forts of the American House-
wife. x
The Governor urged every
Texas Housewife to save at
least one tablespoon of fat
a day and help bring Texas
to the top of her production
quota. «
The News joins the Gover-
nor in urging each and every
housewife to back this Fat
Salvage drive to the limit.
Don’t just save one table-
spoon a day but every drop
that is not necessary for your
own cooking needs. Keep a
tin can in your kitchen at
all times. Pour your grease
in it and when full bring, it
to your butcher.
—v—
Chaplain Duvall, who is pastor
of the First Christian Church,
was given leave of absence from
this church.
The following announcements
are authorized by the candidates
whose names are listed below and
are made subject to the action
of the Democratic primaries.
76264/they must love for
i F/M7 • •• . . “3
1 Waco St., Ennis, Texas, has re-
cently been graduated from Ar-
mament School at Buckley Field,
Colo.
Farm products should cost
more today than ever before.
When’ a farmer has to know
the botanical name of the
product he is raising; the
zoological name of the insect
that'eats it; and the chemi-
cal name of what kills the
insect .... somebody’s got
to pay.
cussed directly between the White House and Stalin, and
this apparently was one of them. Anyway, the State De-1 here.
All
—
: <RN. . e, ss
.:................. >
Before this war is over, there may be only two
kinds of people in America ...
1. those who ride to work, 2. those who wolk to work.
If you want to be in the fortunate group who will still be
riding to work in automobiles, join Gulf’s “Anti-Break-
down” Club today. How do you do it? Just come in for
Gulf’s Protective Maintenance Plan!
This plan was conceived by experts in car care. Gulf de-
veloped it because car maintenance is a most important
civilian job. (8 out of 10 war workers use automobiles to get
to work.)
A AAvggg
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222 // 1
Copr. 1944 by United Feature Syndcate, In<
Im. Reg. U. S. Pat. Off—All rights reserve.
GRAND
By Mail Outside County pathetically to church requests, in this case the passport
Same Rates as in City by Cartier was considered out of State Department hands.
your neighbors; let them keep
up with you.
—V—
There are now enough
laws to cover a loti of things
WASHINGTON, May 22—Inside fact about Father Orle-
manski’s now famous trip to, Moscow is that his passport
was expedited by the White House. The State Department
had littlepto say about it.
A good many military and diplomatic matters are dis-
CPL. ALVIN V. BREELAND
IN TRAINING AS RADIO
OPERATOR AND GUNNER
' Peterson Field, Colorado Springs,
Colo., May 27 (Special)—* With
months of specialized training in
Army Air Force Technical schools
completed, Cpl. Alvin V. Breeland,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Breeland
of 102 East Milam, Ennis, Texas,
has recently arrived at Peterson
Field for assignment to the com-
bat crew training school as radio
operator and aerial gunner.
With others manning a Libera-
tor bomber, he will, for several
months, undergo final training be-
fore leaving for one of the theatres
of war. The crew formed here
trained as a unit, putting final
polish to the techniques learned
in technical schools, and more
important still, gaining the close-
knit teamwork so essential in com-
bat.
At Peterson Field the new crew-
men train and fly side by side
with men recently returned from
the fronts—men who have been
seasoned in combat and are well
qualified to pass on their knowl-
edge.
Ennis Daily News
Published Every Day Except Sun-
day, by The United Publishing Co.,
which also publishes the Ennis
Weekly Local and The Palmer
Hustler.
P
P e,
(e 09
Executive Committee International
(the Comintern) in a meeting on
May 15, announces the dissolution
of the Communist International.
Red Army aircraft bags 65 Ger-
man planes in raid on Kursk, be-
tween Kharkov and Orel.
From Pearl Harbor came the
official news that all but five of
the 19 ships sunk or damaged in i
the port on Dec. 7, 194.1, have been
repaired and returned to active
duty.
Italian High Command announ-
ces 100 dead and 102 injured in
Reggio di Calabria and Villa San
Giovanni.
The battle of Attu swings into
its final stage, with Japanese fore- j
— V—
Don’t get sore at your ene-
mies, because they’ll tell you
truths that your friends
would tell everybody but
yourself.
wizard Charles Wilson and Undersecretary of State Ed
Stettinius. But lately, the President is reported veering to
Ambassador Winant, on the ground that Winant, having
spent some time abroad, would be best qualified to handle
foreign policy and mold the peace, if and when FDR him-
self should want to step down after the war is over.
Patton Speech Leak
The Army is still irked over the manner in which Gen-
eral Patton’s London speech—that England and America
■were destined to rule the world—leaked past the censor. It
was supposed' to have been stopped by Col. Jack Lawrence,
press relations aide to General Eisenhower and one of the
ablest public relations men in the business.
Lawrence was a public relations counsel for the* motion
picture before the war, and worked with Wendell Willkie
to smooth-out the abortive Senate investigation in 1941.
Since Pearl Harbor, he has been in England, and one of
his jobs has been to keep the censor’s muzzle on Army
Brass Hats.
However, General Patton got away from him, letting
his speech be published by the British Press Association
before Lawrence had time to clap on the muzzle. All Law-
rence could do was to add the word “Russia’ to Patton s
original declaration that Britain and the United States
were destined to rule the world. This was why Patton s
speech, as reported on day, named Britain and the United
States as the world’s future rulers while, next day, it named
Britain, the United State and, Russia.
The War Department has now! warned Patton that he
is to say absolutely nothing.
Kentucky Democratic Squabble
Despite ODT requests against travel, Senators McCarran
of Nevada and “Happy” Chandler of Kentucky went down
to Louisville for the Derby. When hailed by friends at the
race, Happy remarked that he had: to do something to get
away from the poll-tax fight.” ,,
Also he took the opportunity to look into the squabble
over who is going to be on Kentucky’s Democratic dele-
gation to Chicago. Barkley is considered the logical man
The most trusting are the 10 nead it
most trustworthy. ; So as a compromise, Happy sent word to Barkley
—v— i that he Alben, could head the delegation provided Happy
Don’t try to keep up with could name the chairman of the State Democratic Com-
mittee, the National Committeeman, and the secretary of
the State Committee. Also, Happy wants to bar Lyter
Donaldson, ex-candidate for Governor, from the delegation
because he is too friendly with FDR.
Barkley sent word back that he had never aspired to
set up a political machine in Kentucky, and therefore
didn’t plan to let Chandler do it now.
—v—
A fashion expert claims a
girl can dress in 45 seconds,
Which, should give married
men al laugh.
—v—
It is unfortunate that it
took a world war to make
some Americans eat sensibly.
—v—
Retreating never won a
battle.
And the problem did not Labor Office in Geneva, then brought him back to head
end there. Our Allies also the Social Security Board, later made him U. S. Ambassador
needed huge quanities of i to Great Britain.
these fats and millions of Those around the President find him turning over in
pounds have been shipped j his mind the idea of a prominent, liberal Republican as
to them under lend - lease.! his running mate. Probably this dates from his reading of
The United States not only: the life of Abraham Lincoln, purposely drafted a Democrat, I
had to become self-sustaining Andrew Johnson, to be Vice President.
mediately after you’ve picked
them . . whether they’re wild or
were cultivated in your own gard-
en. Mary Leatherwood, Ass’t. Co.
I
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scribes this as a “surprise dish”
because the batter which is poured
in the bottom rises during the
balking period. She suggests that
homemakers who wish to make
this cobbler frequently prepare
enough mix of the flour, sugar,
and baking powder for six pies.
Then one cup of this ready mix
and one half cup of milk can be
used each time this cobbler is
baked.
Here is the recipe for Hasty
Cobbler:
Hasty Cobbler
1-2 c flour
1-2 c sugar
2 c fruit and juices
1 t baking powder
1-2 milk
Mix the flour, • sugar, baking
powder, and milk. Dot a baking
l .
/ AfrlEERhandapaztediukclsmnhe.ra.
A clean filter b etter mileage
economically. . akes gas burn
B
on which people used to
swear off.
Home Demonstration Agent de- f can eat your berries almost im-
For some time now, scientiests
have been working on berries to
improve their eating qualities- And
too, they’ve come a big way in
improving the shipping quality of
berries.
It’s a lot better, though, if you
—V—•
When you hope you don’t
intrude, you usually do.
—v—
4
Our fighting men are doing their |
best. Do yours—Buy War Bond ;
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A dessert that’s tasty and quick
to mix and bake is “Hasty Cob-
bler.” It can be made with can-
ned berries, pineapple, cherries and
cherry-plums from the pantry
shelf.
Georgia Mae Evans, County,
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LUISE ARTURO
. Rainer • de Cordova'
WILLIAM PAUL ,
Bendix • Lukas z
vith Kalina Paxinou j
Oscar Homolka ” / t
TODAY-' c
Dutch East Indies. This stop-
page presented the nation
with a crucial problem in the
manufacture of explosives,
synthetic rubber. military
- medicines and countless oth- j
er war-time necessities.
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Thrilling drama of
Europe's fearless "un-
derground army" . . .
smashing the Nazis
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Nowlin, C. A. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 120, Ed. 1 Monday, May 22, 1944, newspaper, May 22, 1944; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1475899/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.