The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 245, Ed. 1 Friday, September 23, 1932 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 24 x 19 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
ENNIS DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 23, 1932.
THURSDAY’S RESULTS.
"Devil and the Deep” Talullah
Yon name one business mat sue-
needs without advertising and
we / 1
nly.
a
Effigy
Played
ing productions as “Grand Hotel”,
other
Thursday Night
equally remarkable offerings will.
V । E E
G, SEPTEMBER 22, 1932.
the
ox88 T.
in the third and deciding.
Devers
their artillery
wa
' A "08
Ah2
f
®
48
4 1
% I
EXTRA!
??
GRID ECHOES
©
%
/
■J
and ZW KF his Devil Horse
recently explained the difference be-
The Mexia News
GRAND
tween the wo for:
Harlan
17
GRAND
L
n
SQUIRE EDGEGATE
BY wins RICHARD
The Constable Couldn’t Carry a Tune .
27
¥
-2
\
1
(4
69
I
r
di
Eq
C
-
“7
11’
d
)
c-
b
V
S .
e
kl
$
4
=e
=1
sM
■
(
(tF
©
)
E==
J
8255
ka
I
-g
Vitagraph’s
l hrilling
Western
Special.
ALLS POLITICIANS.
11 play an important part in
and Douglass had
working and did
5
1e
$1.50
_50c
ond.
game
005, 22 "89
with swift action and melodrama,
giving the film a dramatic ending,
making it outstanding.
L3
0
Stage Show
Mickey Mouse
Club 11:15 to-
morrow.
?
K
C
>k
Lockhart & Son
Radio stars from
KMOX, “The
Voice of St.
Louis”
Has America
gone nerts? Here
ON RATES?
or Mail
Three Months.
One Month.—
i •
mauzazearnesnaznnms
LAST TIMES TODAY
I
Ba
Softball.
Grand 5, Serv-U 4.
National League.
Brooklyn 7, New York 2.
St. Louis 8, Cincinnati 5.
Pittsburgh 7, Chicago 0.
Three games scheduled.
BOSS
i 0
v r
2
i
v
5
' American League.
New York 8, Phila. 7.
Washington 4, Boston 2.
Chicago at Detroit, rain.
Only games scheduled.
T 1
j BEGINNING
SATURDAY
hita Falls, who ran third in
Iced he will be a candidate.
Wichita Falls, attorney general
1.1
0
N
/
Fig
A
x g‛
-G "
e- V •se $
will name a hundred that don't
:,ri
k 1"
z
1b
l
2,3) .
HE'S HERE!
The screen’s new
after their stinging defeat by the
Lions last year. Their eleven was
doped to go high but in the game
against Ennis their standing was
practically ruined.
-------------------------------
gu
0N
a
) I (4.
G
-dh
RKO Radio Stars . . . From KMOX “The Voice of
St. Louis.”
I with the Ferguson backing in case
lot to run.
bf Wichita Falls, republican nominee
!e in the race again two years from
threaten slashes in a federal def-
icit that already has climbed to
nearly $400,000,000 since July 1.
August brought $79,940,310 into
the treasury from the new levies
on gasoline, electrical energy, bank
checks, stock transfers and other
% e
,•n
“a .
#4
s of tax in these pertinent sentences.
(
\
)
------oo——-——-
I THE SALES TAX.
will not be downed. The more other
lore do distraught tax sttudents turn
ion of the tax that is so easy to pay
, ■ ^rr- —-----........ ........
AILY NEWS Baseball Results
Tallulah Bankhead, Gary Cooper in
“Devil and the Deep"
With Charlie Laughton. One of the season’s hits!
‛1
revivals, under the new order of
entertainment for the people of
Otis
“GALA” STAGE ATTRACTIONS’
“LOCKHART AND SONS
/ 50 i WONT V
( FORGET it)
8s tax.
^^Pennsylvania launched an experiment
les. The Quaker State expects to realize
EMhually from the new tax, and the people
t in a one per cent advance in the gen-
EMmodity prices.
realizes that. Texas will be looking for some
TN OUR OFFICE
the glamorous star
a dramatic
Gary Cooper gives an excellent
performance in the role of Lieut.
Tsaig, and the supporting cast
is more than adequate.
HOOEY from
SOFT- BALL
omsoemmoee-A=OGta=-
SAND LOTS
By Alvis Vandygriff.
""Strange
Ride I Stranger in Town.”
An IEtclusive Run Policy New
। Innovation at Grand Theater
Today’s hits will be tomorrow’s
With Ruth Hall, Hen-
ry B. Walthall ami
preview tomorrow night pokes fun
at singers and night clubs. It is
a sparkling comedy drama and its
sets include “The Golden Slipper,”
the famous Broadway cafe. Tbs
KN
mEn2
Th/ graduated income tax is a tax on net profits. The
“Slestax is a tax on gross sales. The income tax is paid by
those most able to pay. The sales tax is paid by those
who never know the difference.”
At. present the question is, “Shall Texans pay for gov_
ernment unknowingly via the sales tax route, or protest-
ingly,via the income route?”
- ---------——
AN INTERURBAN TO CLEBURNE.
THE CLEBURNE TIMES REVIEW of Monday contained
be presented exclusively in Ennis
only once, and they will be gone
■up to the standard of service or prom- (
Ive will immediately take suitable action
Lhind”all movements that will go to
It of. Ennis as a city, Ellis as a county,
Id States as a nation.
BETTER' THAN “70,000 WITNESSES.”
g
a: story published as a rumor that the Texas Electric Com-
pany contemplated taking over the tracks of the T. & B.
V., from Cleburne to Hillsboro, over which service was sus-
pended Saturday and operating an interurban line.
e Hillsboro could and doubtless would join whole-heart
edly. iik a movement of this nature, since it would benefit
not only Hillsboro and Cleburne, but Covington, Osceola
Broadcast Company
Asks Change to
New Frequency
WASHINGTON, Sept. 22. (AP).
84
/ A .■<
/ hh
/ \ K
A ),%
( \ K-Ba
I h
l _3
F )4
(K/.
i/ HAPPV-/
JUST CANT HE-P
BREAKING arO
_6• F
orchestra, singers and all are
thrown in a sparkling manner on
the screen. Ann Dvorak and David
Interlude” and
ly the United Publishing Co., West
Ennis Weekly Local, The Bardwell
Palmer Rustler. Entered at the
d class mail matter. Office tele=
qtgex 3
we%
«8SBana * 322228
VN. " V NE
the games. The Alma boys are new to
the game, as they have been play-
produced some outstanding politi-
Wichita Falls man for governor some j
w
eg- <
c .
and the whole country in between. . |
The rumor is in line with the Mirror’s belief of several!
years, that the only way railways could meet the compe- !
tition of busses, private automobiles and trucks was to cut
out long, expensive trains, operated on inconvenient sche- )
doles, by which the road lost money, and substituting for
them, small trains, operated on a schedule attractive to
the public with the expense cut in proportion of the
amount of business transacted.
Railroads cannot be expected to maintain a train serv-
ice which does not pay its cost, nor can a man be expected
to travel on schedules which force him to spend a day
at a destination, when other methods of travel allow him
to go and come at his convenience.—Hillsboro Mirror.
_O__
Henry B. Walthall, who will be
remembered by old time motion
picture fans for his role as “the
Little Colonel” in the “Birth of a
Nation” plays the leader of a
band of vigilantes for the first
time since that picture, in “Ride
Him Cowboy” coming to the Grand
tomorrow. The picture introduces
John Wayne, a new star, said to
be a successor to the late Fred
Thompson. It also introduces Duke
the devil horse.
TAXPAYERS BODY A SWEEPING PROGRAM.
THE MAJOR recommendations of the State Taxpayers’
Association of Texas, as they have been grouped and re-
published-following the latest meeting of the organization
in Waco, present a program for administrative and legisla-
tive reform and reorganization that is so radical as to be
breath-taking. Many of the proposals are so sweeping that
doubts of the ability of the organization to further them
to adoption, are warranted. Yet they are sound enough to
provoke serious consideration by the people of Texas and
to enlist the support of an increasing number.
A reduction of the 135 state departments and bureaus
to twenty-five is favored and that would not be such a
difficult matter— As much has been accomplished in
Virginia, and it could be accomplished in Texas. Reducing
the number of Texas counties from 254 to fifty or less,
and the membership of the House of Representatives to
sixty-two could not be so readily accomplished.
These and other major proposals would call for amend-
ment of the Constitution. One of the many that will make
strong appeal is that which would extend the term of a
governor to four years, increase his salary and deny him a
second term.
। Instead of lobbying with the legislature for these things
the taxpayers’ association might do better to work for a
I nstitutional convention that /would present the oppor-
humnity to make a thorough job of amendment. ;
e
7.4
EGA*
“exclusive” in any of the Grand
n p, + o Theater advertisements in the fu-
story worthy of her talents and it . . ,
. . M,.1n Itture, it will mean you must see
introduces in Charles Laughton ‛
a new character actor who looks that picture now or never; If you
like the first genuine successor or miss an "exclusive’ attraction dur-
T rh ! ing its first showing it will never
°Dhe aS scenes which are | come back to Ennis. Such astound-
aboard a submarine are packed
y/ —
7 .p — 1
1. "
.„y
Today: Tallulah Bankhead and,- , ,
„ X,. . c.11 A, 40 i Manners make their second appear-
Gary Cooper in “Devil and the ’ , . (
y „ i ance together, the first being a
Deep.” •
Tomorrow: John Wayne in
Hirn Cowboy.”
Preview Tomorrow night:
Dvorak in “The Crooner.”
- —cma
First National’s Ace Comedy
Romance with DAVID MAN-
NERS, ANN DVORAK, KEN
MURRAY.
(co5m - TH Cox5TABLE j
SL4U617ERs )
SONG 7HAT Comc5 1
OUT- HE5 ALe— /
AAR5H Sou/D5 ND
-—7 D/SCoRDS
V ,)
ci
miscellaneous sources. This was
an increase of $18,253,843 over
July receipts and of $11,546,170 over
miscellaneous collections in Aug-
ust, 1931.
But treasury officials believe this
yield still is short of returns which
may be expected under the 1932
act. Further increases are fore-
cast in the monthly receipts as
accumulated stocks of taxable mer-
chandise dwindle and payments
are made on retarded excise tax
collections.
(WELL-WH> /H TH
SAm HlLc DONT
>ou GET TH
<Ey Ar’ Yo•
WONT TF©
-----■■■-■ -^ //M
“The Crooner” coming to the
i Two more teams were eliminated
j Thursday night in the croquet
’ tournament being played here on
the S. P courts.
On No. 1 court Daniel and On-
stead of Ennis defeated Everett
and Ruffin of Alma two straight
, 44, is the real low-
2 • down on the ra-
s
—-=5 Figsg y
Es
—670370493((
i Eggega
H4y,
... 1=c&d )
-s3--
JOHN
Wms--"
WANTED.—Clean white rags at
the News Office.
new revenue next January—especially if, as appears ex-
tremely probable, the people approve exemption of home-
steads from the ad valeremn tax. There is some doubt, how-
ever, as to whether (Texas should turn to a graduated in-
come -tax or a sales tax.
' In either ,i case, the people pay the bill. An income tax,
an occupation tax,, a gross receipt tax—eventually every
ole of them is paid by the people. So it isn’t a question ol
who will pay: it is merely a question of whether it shall be
a direct or an indirect tax.
f289B: *g8A8
S ,
2
EXTRA
Football.
Well, folks it looks like it will be
Malakoff here on Sept. 30. Now
“ain’t that fine?
Folks the officials have done
their part, the boys are going to do
their part. Now you do your part
and come out to see the game.
I
AMUEMENTE
bgec ",
ec) )
W 2$
SMegdma.dSShdhe aae aqbbs Y
*3,"
7 WEPPIN' PTHE5
A) Toor Bo V
IN ,
—77
WHOOEY
Yesterday’s Results.
Girls: Team No. 4; team No. 1.
Seniors: Team No.— team No.
Protested game.
Special game: Farrar’s won the
game over Tolar’s team, score 11
to 10.
The Harris County Broadcast
Company of Houston, has applied
to the radio commission for per-
mission to change the frequency
and power of station KXYZ to
1440 kilocycles and 250 watts.
[ concerns we believe to be absolutely i Six Croquet
,o notify us promptly of any failure on , “
“ e8ees=e
• wMuoosE*-
Bankhead's new starring vehice Ennis Amusement
which opened vesterday,, serves company. When you see the word
two outstanding purposes. It gives • y
---- t-
T TOLD NOU TO DELWER.V
THAT BUNDLE—o WHAT'S ,
IT DON' OUT HERE WNHEEE
EVERNFODY SUMBLES ,
OMER IT 0 /
6
2300722099
93222
45 MMe ■ 7989328
$28- Afetee".-ee
“am
6 a
B nn g
uj4 gn4
"ot 2 g
' 2 " /
a
8888888888888 v
HA — —
5owe OQ-
Billion Dollar
Revenue Law
Receipts Gaining
WASHINGTON, Sept. 22. (AP).
—Approaching their maximum
yields, taxes in the billion dollar
revenue law are beginning to
Today’s Game. ।
..Girls: Team No. 2 at No. 5. -----
Girls: Team No. 2 at No. 5.
Seniors: geam No. 5 at No. 4.
Softball: Henry s at Roy’s1.
At a meeting last night of the
softball officials it was decided to
promote a picture at the Grand
Theater next Wednesday night in
order to overcome the indebtedness
of the league. Everyone is urged
to buy a ticket, this being the only
way that the league has to defray
the expenses that are now out-
standing.
Togther with helping out the soft
ball league we can also do our part
to help the highway 75 celebration
which will be held on Tuesday,
Oct. 4. The second day of the fair.
At the meeting last night it was
also decided to- promote an all-star
game to be played on next Tuesday
night. There will be two teams
picked from each league and these
two teams will clash on next Tues-
day night. All other games will be
played as scheduled.
A very enthusiastic group of peo
pie saw the game between Farrar’s
and Tolar’s clubs settled last night
with the victory going to the Far-
rar managed girls. Those girls real
ly fight to win, and they were re-
warded by victory. Remember to
attend the show next Wednesday
night.
i not have much trouble winning-
Tonight will see the last of the
first round games. Richmond
and Shelton of Ennis will play the
Connell brothers combination, on
court No. 1. So far this is the only
contest, although there may be an-
L 4)
babies c,,
--396-
dyegagm
\1
knight of the
saddle and king
of the sage-brush
• .. . . in a rip-
roaring story that
gallops across the
screen . . . with
thundering thrills
slam bangaction
and gripping sus-
c pense!
TimoTH Y - You RE
Too
MUCH HOlCL
AROUND T+
OFFIcE
laid of it. 'other game on the oher court, as
spavers believe that a sales tax may I two more teams may enter. It is
lias’ tax problem. planned to start the second round
is largely proved by the experience of play next eek
| Mississippi. The sales tax was levied
st of organized business. Surely, if not
' that bankrupt state out of the slough i y
Mississippi business has changed its । _TIO
- ME
>
is : ing only a few weeks. Had they
, ’ ’ been a little more experienced the
[ a candidate. result might have been different in
bf Wichita Falls ,Sterling leader view of the ragged playing of Dan-
, is considered a logical candidate. i iel and Onstead.
Wichita Falls, called the Ferguson । On court No. 2 Douglass and De-
vers beat Money and Byars of Car-
reh two out of three- games-. The
first two games were about evenly
played as Money and Byars took
the first contest and lost the sec-
Coming' “Gala” “
preview tomor-
row night 10:45.
IE KNOWN ON APPLICATION j
l -------------------.- i
Lo far copy omissions, typographical j
s that might occur further than to j
sought to their -attention. All adver- :
dio boys who’ve |
given ten million |
women heart- i
trouble and ten I
million men a a
pain in the neck!
forever, after their first showing.
The management of the Grand
j states the “exclusive run” policy
! is assurance of securing the best
entertainment while it’s currently
popular and places Ennis in a
most unique position as one of
Texas’ leading theater situations,
as few theater organizations will
agree to offering their public “ex-
clusive” runs, due to the extra
cost of the policy, which guaran-
tees early showings for Hollywood’s
greatest attractions, to Ennis peo-
ple.
0>2
Well folks, we are going to give
you the dope on the Ennis High
School Lions during the ensuing
football season.
-—E—-
The Lions face a hard schedule
this year with practically a green
team. Coach Conover had but
three lettermen around which to
build his 1932 aggregation, but a
feeling of optimism prevails in the
Lions’ camp.
—E--
Here is the Lions’ schedule for
the season:
Sept. 30, Malakoff at Ennis.
Oct. 7, Athens at Ennis, Fair
Park.
*Oct. 14, Teague at Ennis.
■Oct. 21, Ennis at Itasca.
Oct. 28, Kerens at Ennis.
‘Nov. 4, State Home at Corsi-
cana.
Nov. 11, open.
Nov. 18, open.
•••Nov. 23, Waxahachie at Ennis.
" Conference games.
--E---
Those Malakoff boys should have
blood in their eyes this season,
OR 1
I
"94022
EVE
¥42
va,Fe
a-==Ee :5
:2
Since Malakoff lost only two men
by graduation last year, its hopes
this year are even higher. The
Malakoff line will average about
155 pounds, and their “flying
backfield” gives promise of spec-
tacular play.
---E--
Coaches Conover and Blair have
spent the main part of the first
two weeks training their aspirants
in the fundamentals of good foot-
ball. This preliminary training will
be the foundation of Ennis’ 1932
football team.
" *■
4)
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 245, Ed. 1 Friday, September 23, 1932, newspaper, September 23, 1932; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1518304/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.