The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 95, Ed. 1 Friday, April 20, 1945 Page: 1 of 6
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THE ENNIS DAILY NEWS
IN FIFTY-FOURTH YEAR
No. 95
ENNIS, ELLIS COUNTY, TEXAS, FRIDAY EVENING, APRIL 20, 1945
BUY WAR BONDS TODAY
SEVENTH SPEEDING TO WARD HITLER'S REDOUBT
R
Race for Munich as
22)-
the
Oaks proposals
H
S
19
88
8*
92
The German High Command, ac-
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enf
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1
s
Other Nazi broadcasts reported
a
tween Muencheberg and Wriezen.
!
3333-
3
M.an2
(United Nations Photo}
Pfc. Herbert Gerlich
forces on the southern coast.
tenses and were within a mile of
The new offensive was launched
you to send me another one.
get one.
Waxahachie,
blew it out and burned the pocket
bus the Russians were checked, but
I went to- look for the rosary a day i
3
Dance at JCC Show
Command’s
On either
4
scored full defensive successes.”
But on the vital Muencheberg-
of ■ Templeberg; '
war camp in Germany.
in September, 1944.
He has been |
88388333333
a 1
His wife resides in Dallas.
Cooper to Remain
War II.
Mrs. Florence Moor
bers of the Interscholastic League
rial gunner’s wings from the Ar-
re-
Funeral Services
sixty local people; played before a
: For Dave Williams
and
Held Friday A. M,
he was !
Also submitted to league
Sgt. Lyons took part in the Munda |
plant in Houston.
accompanied by his
There seems to be no- doubt today, time or mine.”
JR.
i „
; forever.
two years is
died of wounds
in
-vunnucd on Page Two)
Banner Sr.
In High School
Athletic Rules
Lull Broken in
Okinawa Battle;
Yanks Near Naha
Ennis Boy Has
Narrow Escape
With 9th Army
duction into the armed forces Ap-
ril 30 .
When notified of his service call
UNITED
FEATURE
SERVICE
MEMBER
UNITED
PRESS
mem-
com-
Eugene Bratcher, 23, of Waxaha- ,
chie was killed in action in Ger- .
Chicago, April 20 (UP)—Catcher
Walker Cooper of the St. Louis
Cardinals brother combination, said
today that he would play with the
home on leave and First Lt. Jackie
Keplinger of Dallas. also home on
Three other third army infantry
divisions also were moving on the
Czechoslovak border in force along
a 60 mile front north and north-
trained in the operation of .30 and
.50 calibre machine guns, first on
grand ranges and later in the air,
learning by simulated aerial bat-
A two weeks' lull in the battle
for suothern Okinawa was broken
today as American troops battled
within three and a half miles of
Naha in a new offensive and Tokyo
reported a 30 ship U. S. invasion
berg, nine miles from the capital
and the lower wing was at Hang-
Victory Vanities a three act mu-
sical comedy with a cast of over
Interment
Cemetery.
The body.
gress.
Republicans are
(
i gain tonight, is being put on to
■1 raise funds for the Den.
the doomed pocket, however, and the complete occupation
of the city appeared only a matter of hours.
At the same time,. the seventh -----------------------
continued mopping up enemy rem-
-------------- ------------
(Continued on Page Four}
! to defend his “Shrine City" to the death.
Three American divisions already were cutting through
.south of he enitnk Vetschau, 51
Purple Heart
Goes Posthumously
jp Sgt, James Lyons
■
3
.some. I had a B.A.R. on my I c .
,, 2 . 2 pushed, the Germans admitted the
shoulder, and it blew off the stock. . 1 , , JmTi
11 ""1° Russians had advanced. The High
It sure was good it did not get my . Command said the Red Army
leg tor it could have blown it off. reached the area
I got as far as Battalion aid and
assault against Berlin was being
Sgt. Lyons was awarded the In- ■ meet,
fantryman’s Combat Badge. He i points be awarded in order,
was with the 371h Division of the
By ROBERT MUSEL
United Press Staff Correspondent
London, April 20 (UP)— Russian assault forces smashed
into Berlin’s “defense zone proper” within seven miles of
the city today, and Moscow said American and Russian
patrols probably mad made a juncture in the Dresden area.
----------------------- A Nazi military spokesman said
1 i n A • •a1 VlI• VAU-IIUlUNUIE"
bruise on my leg from a German 1 . L „ , . r ,
, , , , ■ , Wriezen sector where the frontal
bazooka and burned my pants )
With Cards Until
Induction April 30
Panama City. Fla—Cpl. Arthur :
L. Turner, Jr., has received his ae- !
amanding officer:
BI ear Mrs. Hurley:
■ Your son’, James.
pgee ! Joe Neely, pastor of the First Pres- I
EKbbbyterian Church officiating.
Bob ehes:
| It’s’gcingtobe
Russian Forces Smash Within? Miles of Word peace
Berlin; Now in City Defense Zone Proper on Dumbarton
I
was made in Myrtle
riv Banner. Jr.. visited Thursday
______ ‘ ! the home of Mr. and Mrs. .
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Connell large
have sold their home on Alexan- : Thurday night at the San Jacinto
der'Street, to Mr. and Mrs. Johnschcol Auditorium. The show will
Wi be presented for the last time, to-
EBSNT8
5
Lt. J. H. Tenerv
I *
i Liberated From
Prisoner Camp
; ■ --
of course, -remains
No honeymoon ever
in the fortifications in front of !
Berlin, said frankly that “the sit- j
cifix was blown far off. as I did________. g, , ,, , . . „ „ ,
account of the battel before Berlin
not find it was heavy with gloom.
Speaking of someone lucky, well, cic c m. e , . a I 2 ,
,5 1, , ‛,1 .side of Frankfurt, it said, the “gal-
I was the other day. I liked to.. ... . .. _ 22
. . . , . , Am, : iantly fighting German divisions
have landed in the hospital day
saying just as nor
with the Ninth Army. He has been ' A- _ * -
made Private First Class. 1 | honope - ponAca,
He graduated from St. John’s ' *1*-5-3 * - •V3--
2 d ; Waxahachie
: Marine Wounded
_____i On Iwo Jima
' ong those out of town here for the
' funeral were Mr. and Mrs. E. W.
। Taylor. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Taylor
and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Taylor of
Waxahachie. Mrs. D. J. Epting of
Beaumont and Miss Helen Krutilek
and Fred Krutilek of Dallas.
Rail bearers were E. Brookshire
Morris Gilley, D. W. Ramsey, Mar-
it said the Rus- 1 A ra p
sans crashed through south of i .cyt $4
Cottsbus, 53 miles from Berlin j •5
and broke into Calau, 48 miles ' ~ " '
g
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■ ty of peace-loving states; all mem-
bers undertalsing to fulfill obliga-
■ blackened ruins of Nuernberg, where some 1,500 Nazi
fanatics were obeying to the letter their Fuehrer’s order
and neither Mr. Truman ' right and against hin when he..
Worth and
the Spree River and were
ed from his chaplain and his com-
bers for consideration and
| the .service, today cabled his uncle,
: Dr. W. C. Tenery, that he had
1333 East Marvin; his grandmoth- building. It is the plans of the
er, Mrs. Patty Bratcher of Waxa- ' Jaycees to put in a snack bar and
hachie; one-half brother, Maree- ’ other entertainment features that
The German High
the Dumbarton
which will form
Zealand and then to the Fiji Is- i feet because of war conditions for
lands. He. also spent- several j 1943-44.
months on Guadalcanal. In 1943.
Burleson of Ft.
later where it happened and this . . 1. ■ ... : e c . 1
1, cue , c tacks on either side of Spremberg. ;
is all I could find. Guess the Cru-
j the basis of discussion for crea-
I tion of a world organization at San .
I Francisco;
1. Purposes—To maintain peace i
l and security; provide collective ■
; measures for preventing or remov- •
j of the University of Texas, the
Was 1 league publication announced here
nts I--.- ...... . -.........- I
90 lions under the charter, settle dis-
Thgdkrrah. 22 putes by peaceful means, refrain !
. Sbagdha . from the threat or use of force in-
eld walled city in the center of
Nuernberg early today to bring the
battle into its final and probably
bloodiest stage.
Giant American field guns blast-
ed a path for the attacking infan-
trymen through the 30 foot thick
.stone walls girdling the Nazi atrengwa captursa.
point, and field dispatches said j
Wherry, R.. Neb., put with Herrv :. Truman la p of the
, U. S. Senate. He told a group of
&
| Mr.-Mrs. Connell
School at Tndall Fio‛d,the larg- : To Move May 1st
"St school of its kind in the Army q. m L m,
Air Forces Training Command. ; “3 -5 •-**
Upon his graduation/the soldier (
is qualified to. take his place as ;
i member of the combat crew of
| Street. Waxahachie. Sgt. Merritt j
i had been serving overseas for I
nearly a year, after taking his i
training at San Diego, Calif., for ,
supreme sacrifice for his country FEIENDS OF BOB BANNER,
) . Before entering the service’ , VISITORS IN ENNIS
"AJames was- employed by Munn
Frothers Grocery. I
Following are two letters receiv- • of war for the past
By United Press
A thumbnail summary of
i fleet attempted to land assault
Mrs. T. J. Hurley recently
Elements of three army divisions
wedged deeper into Japanese de-
west Pacific, first going to New ! Part time coaching has been in efJ
predict of f‛ e relations' between ( Kenneth S
the legislature and executive bran- it:
Final arrangements were cbm- Ae A i q
pleted today by the Junior Cham- I “lVeS —omedy 3on8
3423388
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nice things about him as the.Dem- arn fcrgetting that -it’s still a two we'll meet him head-on.- We'll do
enthusiastic audience
. land in Januar. 1945. It was in ! one.
’tins campaign that lie paid the :
............Eratcher Jaycees Arrange For New
bHi Waxahachie is. . _ {v . ~ n
\ Killed In Action bullding For Lions Den
Germany. Staff Sgt. Miller was
with Patton’s First Army. He was
born and reared in Dallas and
graduated from the Sunset High
School, leaving last October • for
overseas service.
Surviving are his wife, the form-
er Betty Gardner, whom he mar-
ried September 2. 1944 and his pa-
rents. Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Miller
I of Dallas.
cleared virtually all of Nuernberg today and sent two
armored divisions speeding southward toward Munich to
open the battle for Hitler’s Bavarian redoubt.
Only one small pocket of resistance remained in the
98 miles west of Prague.
An estimated 25,000 prisoners
were taken by the third army yes-
terday, but most of them were
wounded Germans captured when
the Americans overran a number
of enemy hospitals.
Elsewhere on the western front:
of Grafenwoehr and only 60 miles
, been liberated from a prisoner-of- 1 from Pilsen
, :: . , . ' Food Store.
wife was . residing for his overseas ।
period in .his father’s and stepmo- ■ The Jaycees musical comedy. .
ther’s home here.- He is the twen- Victory. Vanities which showed at
ty-second boy from Waxahachie to the San Jacinto School Auditorium
pay the supreme sacrifice in World Thursday night, will be shown a- i
Air Forces Flexible Gunner;.
School before entering the service,
and was employed by the Ennis
Tag & Salesbook Company, as ..
shipping clerk.
Senate Republicans this week of-
______-____________________vin Layton, Pete Harris and R. W.
(Continued on Page Four) | Hesser,
t
|| j He had been missing in action
■ since December 31.
88 i Lt. Tenerv stated that he ex-
) pects to be home soon.
12 chapters of
’ consistent with organization. and
1 refrain from assisting the states
against which organization acts.
3. Membership— Open to all
"peace-loving states,” peace-loving
; to be defined.
। 4. Principal organs—General as-
i sembly, security council, interna-
( tional court of justice, secretariat.
। All Members in Assembly
5. General assembly— Composed
of all members, each having one-
vote and meeting once a year. Will
elect the nonpermanent members
of the security council and decide
other important issues by a two-
thirds majority vote. . Will have
charge of the general administra-
j tive policies and the right to dis-
; cuss any question relating to peace
and security. Bur its power in the
latter field would be limited to
' N. O. in Fort Worth.
many April 6. according to a tele- ! ber of Commerce, foi a new and
gram received this morning from 1 larger building for the Lions Den,
the War Department. He was with ' according to Joe Fate, chairman
General Patch's Seventh Army in of the committee in charge of ar- ,
Germany. His wife was visiting in rangements for the youth center.
Fort Worth with her sister when ' The new den will be located in
the message arrived here. His fa- j the building above the A&P Food :
ther is E. F. Bratcher of 1333 East 1 store The building will be com- .
Marvin. Besides his 'wife and fa- ; pletely remedied and work will be-
ther, he is survived by his step- i &in immediately, according to |
mother, Mrs. E. F. Bratcher of ' Thad Barrington, owner of me
k confirmation of the showdown Or-
• - fensive on a broad Berlin front, re-
ported the Russians had broken A-
foul miles south of Muencheberg, . line Bratcher’, home address, anu - -- -U ----- -- t
, several uncles and aunts. ter than ever before. :
Herbert Gerlich is 18 years old J er .southwestOther reports ot ! Bratcher entered a new entrance to the buildin
He was inducted into the service ad V:ances to Hans86 lshergand Stra- | service about six years ago. H, I «1 be put in at the starrwuy
e ! was reared in Waxahachie and a- Fon store
0‛erseas since Feb. 14, 1945, and is
, . miles northeast of Calau. also was I
Have , ,
reached.
to say rosary on my fingers til I,mR . , . ,,1
: . 1 ; . 1 , The Nazi Command claimed that !
it was in mv right hand . c. , . I
. . ... . . . ; , , . pn the Goerlitz-Bautsen Weisse i
pocket and the blast of the bazooka v" .2 .. „ _ ..
' Wasser penetration south of Cott- :
8.. -3233232338888883
28833 . :: 333338588 3
g g
massed Soviet tanks and troops
had penetrated to the area of
I Hangelsberg, seven miles east of
Berlin on the trunk highway to
1 Frankfurt, and had reached the
defenses of the burning capital.
yesterday behind the heaviest
massed artillery fire of the Pacific
war. Carrier planes and big naval
guns offshore also supported the
infantrymen as they advanced with
tanks and flame throwers.
The Japanese fought back sav-
agely from well placed positions
and initial American gains average
ed less than half a mile.
Tokyo said the amphibious forces
attempted to land at Chinen and
Minatokawa on the southern coast
but were driven off. The fleet was
described as comprising 20 trans-
ports two to four battleships, one
cruiser and five destroyers.
Admiral Chester W. Nimitz an-
nounced that the Japanese de-
fenders on nearby le island had
been compressed into a small pock-
et and that American observation
planes already were using the is-
Mrs. Carl Owens went to Dallas
today to be with her neice, Mrs.
Leslie Miller, who received a mes-
sage telling of the death of her
husband. Staff Sgt. Leslie Miller,
21, who was killed April 1 in
First Lt. Jimmie Wells of Dal-
las, an aviator in the two theaters
acknowledged heavy Russian at-
*5888 78888888888: • 3338888
® 888 8: 22322323323388
J
II ?
- I
will make the Den bigger and be- . m' >
daughter. Mrs. Raymond Krutilek,
arrived here late Thursday. Am-
• cross
By BOYD D. LEWIS
United Press War Correspondent
With U. S. First Army in Germany, April 20.
(U.P)—American First Army troops have captured a
secret German foreign office hideout in the Harz
Mountains and seized a great number of Nazi
documents, it was disclosed today.
east of Grafenwoehr, with ele-
ments of the 90th division four I
miles or more inside the Czech i
frontier and closing fast on Asch, '
Paris, April 20 (U.P)—The American Seventh Army
■ “We have done what we pughtto Republican senators who called at
something we , do— pledge our help with non-con-the-white House with pledges of
tanks and infantry we.
; man, however, that we’re going all
to be i the Way with this • man.
lasted ' “We'll be with him whon he’s |
The British second army drove I world champion team until his in-
within four miles of Hamburg’s |
I southern' suburbs and about seven I
('Continued, on Page Four)
they fixed me up. Had mv B.A.R. 1, ■,
. , ‘ . , and Buchholz, three miles farth-
repaired, and got it bac‛ today.”
an AAF bomber..
At the ginnery school.
(Continued Page Four)
land’s airstrip.
Marines on northern Okinawa
cived I be Furpie Heart which
ewaidede posthumously to her . son. today
Fet. James L ons who was killed one proposal is to make Sept. 1
.action Februal II, on Luzon , instead of May 1 the annual date
” ab • for determining age eligibility.
Set -VoS entered the service . The other proposes a return to
Jan. 32. 19 42 He received his ba- requiring full time football and
sic training at Camp Wolters, and 1 basketball coaching in conference
on May 25, he sailed for the Couth a and B and six man football.
-- N"------a-----------------
Washington, April 20 (UP haven't seen before., in your life-
—--ytg
- • i
i i E
i : r
- 1
tu ' i -
isf
troversal matters. That, doesn’t
the Republicans in Congress wrong. Issues will come 1 ”-hea
that President Truman has got- i That,
ten off to a great start with Con- ' seen.
28s: 38858
2 833338888
few
leave from overseas, w-ho were
1 class mates and friends of Bob
tic conditions how to blast .enemy
Dattie on New Georgia Island, and • ment is a proposal to change the ____
1 point distribution in track and I
field meets. The suggestion is [ -
(Continued on Page I wo)
ton. He was reared at Forreston
and moved to Waxahachie with his
parents, about ten years ago. Be-
Austin, Tex., April 20 (UP—
Two changes in high school
athletic rules in Texas soon are
to be submitted by ballot to mem-
(Continued on Pane Four}
i Sgt. Henry E. Merritt, USHCR.
i was wounded in action against the
of D is I 1 ' enemy on Feb. 23. 1945, at Iwo
rOught LalghS, Jima, Volcano Islands, according
■ . ! to a brief report received yesterday
' i Uct1 $hAIAI 8 Ai$+A by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse
L03L NIUV & VAEC w. Merritt of 301 East University
Machinate airfield. The town of
Machinato north of the airfield
move May 1 to a home at 205 W. 1 night, the curtain scheduled to go
Decatur Street which they recent- up promptly at 8:15 p.m.
ly purchased from Mr. and Mrs. As an added featur tonight, th
; rail Zink. ( Madrigale Singers, a group of .
Mr. Burleson was recently 1-20 young ladies, will be present- fore entering the service, he was ( niness of heart trouble, were held
tired as engineer with the T. and ___I_________ . empolyed for seven years in a stec: in Ennis at 10:30 o’clock Friday
the job the minority ought to do."
Republican Whin That will be strictly all right
received while making a
I- If the building can be finished
I in time,, the Den will probably | -
move to the ’ new quarters about ye
; the middle of May. The Jaycess Victory Vanities
। are planning an open house on '
< opening night with members
the Jaycees being waiters.
g, -gg 320S' 10405 8279223 03
p
nvep /
/
! 3
support on Wednesday that he be-
lieved thoroughly in the " two-party
system and recognized the responsi
bilities oi a loyal opposition.
But Mr. Truman’s aim will Uw
to seek areas of agreement—to a-
void situations in which White
House and Congress set entrench-
ed on opposite sides of an issue—
as sometimes happened in the
Roosevelt administration.
I ing threats to peace and for sup- I
i pressing aggression; bring about '
! peaceful settlements of disputes; j
j develop friendly relations among i
| nations and achieve international i
| co-operation in solution of econ- !
: omic, social and other humani- (
tarian problems. |
1 2. Principles— Sovereign equali-
before yesterday. Got a little .
Two Ennis Men
Receive Aerial
Gunner’s Wings
Nuernberg Virtually
Occuppied by Yanks
just before the Cards took the
field against the Chicago Cubs
yesterday. Cooper said, that means
i me, all right. But I’ll stick with
i the team until the last minute.
' The big catcher was placed in
. limited .service classification after
in the latter part of 1913, he was.
in the battle on, Bougainville.’
Army’s 12th and 14th armored di-
visions broke loose on a wide end
run southeast and southwest of
I Nuernberg on the main roads to
Munich,
Late dispatches said both col-
umns were 20 to 25 miles beyond
Nuernberg, with the 12th -armored
division on the southeastern flank
only about 70 miles from Munich
and 30 miles from the Danubian
city of Regensburg.
Doughboys of three American
divisions fought their way across
a 40 foot moat surrounding the
After the Bougainville campaign. : that in all but the state-wide j mn geg I gm p g "ayy | gm
"c"e .. ArTruman Off to Good Start-Clicking With Cong
tie state meet the points would ' - w *e”
6th Army which invaded Luzon'Is- i be 10, eight, five, - three, two and
nt
g—2
: recommendations.
6. Security Council— Composed
i of 11 members; six states to be
; elected by the assembly for two-
' year terms; the Big Five (the
: United States, Great Britain,
Soviet Russia. France and China)
' to have permanent seats. It would
2 geg32
about a year. Prior to that he
was, in construction work at Pearl
The German High Command, ac-
wnewtere" "iesprerd versee I
uation has deteriorated.”
8888 888888888888888888888888:333: j
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888888888883 :38 2: 3333333332 MOVICU
8s - 9 'moving directly against Berlin be-
* •• 3388§ 33
{ l , ....
Ea Their center had reached Straus-
the Yanks were pouring in through
a half-dozen breaches.
With the seventh army battreing
at the western gate to the Nazis'
Bavarian mountain stronghold, Lt.
Gen. George S. Patton's U. S. 3rd
Army broke loose on a new- arm-
ored sweep to cut off the enemy's
last escape roads through Czecho-
slovakia.
Patton's 11th armored division
jumped off from the Bayreuth sec-
tor 40 odd miles northeast of Nu-
ernberg and raced 16 miles south-
east to enter Grafenwoehr, 20 miles
from the Czechoslovak border and
64 miles due west of the great
Skoda arms center of Pilsen.
Another 11th armored' column
advanced six miles eastward to
reach a point 11 miles northeast
Powerful New Air Bomb Scourges Our Enemies
"un 3i
1 closing against Dresden.
It was in that region that, ac-
cording to a Moscow dispatch, out-
riders of Lt. Gen. George S'. Pat- i
ton’s' U. S. Third army and Mar- 1 ONE OF THE NEW 11-TON “VOLCANO" BOMBS, invented and developed by the British, is shown in this
shal Ivan S Konev’s 1st ULraimi_ I picture in an English factory. Above it, for comparison, is a 6-ton “Earthquake", used by the R.A.F. to sink the German
Mr. and Mrs. August Gerlich an army rLaniy av, met ’ battleship “Tirpitz”. The new 11.ton “Volcanos" are ten times as powerful as the German V-2 rocket bombs and in trials
have received a letter from their ' ' D n e me ’ i blasted a granite island off the map. The only plane in the world that can carry them is a special type of the British
son Herbert Gerlich recarding Todays Nazi communique said 4-engined Lancaster bomber. The R.A.F. has caused terrific destruction of vital German targets with these new
" ’ , 41 .000 1101. 0,8 tnat another breach had been torz i bombs and will no doubt also use them on Jap targets,
some of the things that are nap--. -.1
» 1 in the southeastern wing of Berlin’s ---'------ -------------- -------—------------------------—--------—--------
pening to him. Parts of the let- ,, , „ ■ ' » •
, ° e , outer defenses,
ter are as follows:
“This is what is left of the Ros-
ary you gave me several years ago.
Gee, I sure hated it, but it could
have peen my leg; 11 have co Ask
j
ggs 338
- 1.
sm88 0 8
veisberg. seven miles from Berlin.
g:
*89332 ■" '
333888888:33333333333:333332333333:
Moscow dispatches, following up j
the first Soviet High Command I
I
S-Sergeant |
Wg3
Harbor for a year, after serving as i
a marine guard for six months at ' . . , ,
San Jacinto waterfront, near Hous- Funeral services lor Dave Willi- \ his examination last year. He was
1. „ . given a second pre-induction physi- ■
ams, native of Ennis who died , - . „ I.t
, J , , . 1 ! cal six weeks ago and was accept
last week at his home in Santa i , .
* I ea. f -. ■. < 2 > • .13′1
Monica, Calif., following a brief । _ __ -____
। Relative of Ennis
morning in, the Keever . Chapel ! Lady Killed in
1 with Howard White. minister of , A . N
j the Church of Christ and the Rev - Action in Germany
Lt. J. H. Tenery. formerly with
I Waxahachie Sanitarium, and with
i the medical corps since entering
ocrats are. One—Sen. C. Wayland . party system.
Brod’S, R., TIL.—went so far as to . AS Senate
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Nowlin, R. W. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 95, Ed. 1 Friday, April 20, 1945, newspaper, April 20, 1945; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1485234/m1/1/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.