The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. [40], No. [268], Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 22, 1933 Page: 4 of 4
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PROUD OF HER
For Chuck Klein
for
A
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5829
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ta '
LONE STAB.
Municipal
Gas Company
GAS SYSTEM
Municipalities League to Meet.
pci prosperous country.
Concentrate
mpletely. From one central
WEDOOUIMH
the
IRY OUE
ax
Sed &he
3
Beautiful Nev Line of
FISK
Guaranteed Tires
(3183236
Offer you more for you money
FISK RUGBY
RABEOS
ON DISPLAY Al
FISK ARFLIGHT
- \.
drug co
0u
4
5
Phone 44 Lor uzormalion about
renting that spare room.
4.50-20
4.50-21
4.75-19
5.00-19
, that
enty
purchasing power. If he is
Qandiser he can sell the
t allow-
Ml who
i pay-
retary
Zovem-
III the newspapers and the !
Ethemselves have taught,
‘more about merchandise
ever knew before. So, has ’
W this created a new op-
/
proper -grade fuel and lubricants,
Mr. Marnan said. These are the
more apparent results of improper
lubrication end do not reveal the
excessive wear and damage to mov-
ing parts that goes on unknown
to the car owner.
-Or the Gas Company for the
new and improved Gas Appli-
ances for house heating, water
heating, cooking and refrig-
eration.
4.50-20
4.50-21
4.75-19
5.00-19
DARING HUNTERS
OF WAXAHACHIE FETCH
HOME BIG GAME.
See Tow
Dealer
-$6.80
-$7.10
$7.65
$8.20
You’ll find that Dafy 0$s want
de get quick resul’s.
tionals.
Two veteran utility infielders—
amber-colored timed Q gasoline.
Does everything but stop
:n
F
Winter Proofing Is
Scientific Way to
Protect Automobiles
NOW IS THE
TIME
Jolson Reconsiders.
Hollywood, Cal., Nov. 21.—Al Jol-
son’s retirement from motion pic-
tures lasted less than twenty-four
hours. As a result of a long dis-
tance talk Monday Jolson accepted
NEW
MARATHON
•MMMNE1EEERREKMMNE
HNm•MSHEMNNS82MM2
MREMHMHZMMHEEEEMM•
mmmnsazn5™HME
WILLIS BROS.
Complete Automobile Service-
Phone 78.
ur adversehg t year new"
that cover your trade terri-
B of equal merchandising
Ad with equal or proper -
Eequal capital?
■ view is that we are run-
4
A !
I
rpmm-m-ma
4
A
A
an optional agreement to be
star in three more pictures.
-
- - "
southpaw pitcher recently purchas-
1 ed from Atlanta, together with a
bundle of cash, estimated at $65,-
000, will be given to the Phillies
by the Cubs for the bawSing star
around whom the Cubs will build
their attack and bid for the Na-
। if one-
2 is paid
933. The
paid on
therwise
paid be-
have the
Bcust of doing business. He
Ser to, and understands the
2 and necessities of his trade
"itory The question of small end
.... h‘ . . • ■ - ■. < H. 6 . ... . - .,
AIL NEWS TTURSDAE EVENING, NOV. 23, 1933
most four years of persistent try-
ing the Chicago Cubs Tuesday n-
! nally obtained Charles (Chuck)
> Klein, 1933 National League bat-
the smaller town
to change your gear grease t o
make winter shifting easy.
I
John Lee Taylor
= Died in Hospital
From Bone Infection
5
Magnolia provides a 7-point serv-
ice which has been popularly desig-
nated “Winter-Proof’ service by
the thousands of motorists who -
have profited by its use in the last J
few years’. This service provides a
complete check-up of those parts
of the car most likely to give
According to statistics compiled
by the U. S. Department of Com-
merce, 30.2 per cent of the mer-
chandising bought at retail by the
people of the United Sates was
bought in towns and hamlets of
10,000 and less. Doesn't this sur-
prise you when you take into con-
sideration the thousands of large
trading centers of 10,000 and over
in the Unjied Sbates? After all,
it’s the masses that are doing the
great majority of our buying.
another 120, and the other two
were a bit smaller. The game came
from a hunting spot near Harper,
west of Fredericksburg. Besides be-
I ing good place to hunt, the place
. picked by the Waxahachie hunts-
men was evidently a good place
to grow whiskers, judging from the
crop displayed by the group when
.. they arrived.
. umo
h..
2gmf2bhn.
gtg>
e is not now nearly so dce Ang Aw JI
pntage with the quantity eU•-UU Aa
[there used to be. The
[now an educated buyer.; hree Plavers
EFFICIENT KITCHEN!,
Chicago, Ill., Nov. 22.—After al-
r happen-
ire, losing
krry what
Lccd its
Bered, so
town is
Sri to and
Mbs tw
Be betn
gvent to
B^d the
Mi same
22 their
good
g88 cities
Hl and
5 cater
@L1.1 of
From the Light:
Former Mayor, E. Burton Prince,
in Waxahachie sanitarium for
treatment of a leg infection, was
reported at the hospital today as
“doing fine.” Mr. Prince was in-
jured when he lost his footing and
fell on a ladder while on one of
his West Texas oil properties. For
a while the injury was thought to
be improving, but a week or ten
days ago a rather severe infection
developed.
ked
iing
l ising j
" more
=:
N
When otner eorts at seling ras
j ira a Want Ad,
• extra experse, at the low-
sible cost, •no to®, you
here your advertising is go-
ere is no doubt about it be-
ed before your customers.
and R. H. Smellage returned from
—ggwm., . a —m,a week’s hunting today with four
CASTELLAW ! deer and a wild turkey gobbler.
One deer weighed 140 pounds,
"k deliveries is now solved. He
I '^Aglose to the seat of our funda-
। ^9 scientific now. Just anybody is not
E7aa merchant any more than just
Mnyone is a doctor or a preacher
SSSMor a lawyer, whereas in former
d ays, anyone that had enough
Emoney to buy a few goods and
SMdoffer them for sale to the public
kkas a merchant. That was usually
only a short time.
8m2so, my thought is the county
ffwn has not passed, but as the
suntry rights its economic wrongs,
||||jjHs the light of a sounder econo-
gd265 day, the smaller town will
Sddfform its sound economic func-
20005 by serving those that it is
2502 equipped to serve in every
820, just as the cities serve and
S8edunin then- will we reach our
mum oi • well-balanced pros-
immaghy, foz it takes prosperous hami-
adedyqosperous towns and prosper-
HOG CHOLERA TO
BE CHECKED.
That considerable hog cholera
already exists in this community
and that more will develop if care
is not exercised about spread of
the disease was announced by au-
thorities today.
It was stated that numerous
instances of hogs, dead from the
malady, having been tossed into
roadside ditches, alleys and the
like had been reported. This, it
was explained, is sure to qive im-
petus to the spread of the dis-
ease.
The hog growing public was
urged to frequently inspect their
swine, and when a hog dies from
cholera, to either burn the dead
animal or call for City Sanitary
Officer H. S .Strickland, to cart
aff the body for disposal.
City authorities declare that ob-
servance of these control methods
is highly important.
I
32 32*3
7 many green fields look- ' ting champion and one of the
Beener ones. The capable greatest lefthanded hitters in base-
K county seat town mer- , ball, from the Philadelphia Na-
, many basic advantages
--------I To safeguard motor vehicles
ou can send yctr d vert is mg against winter trouble and damage
8 to the people without any
And why shouldn’t she be when modern
gas servants free her of many hours in the
kitchen- She prizes her Moore’s Gas Range for
the steps it saves ... for its automatic oven
heat control which makes her cooking care-
free . . . for its insulated oven which ! saves on
gas . . , for its smart design which adds to the
appearance of her kitchen. And there are the
gas refrigerator and automatic water heater
which also contribute to making her kitchen
work lighter and more pleasant.
A tip to husbands: Why not plan to lighten
your wife’s burdens this Christmas with a gift
of one, or all three, of these modern gas ser-
vants?
IL a,
ore.
Dallas, Texas, Nov. 22.-— While
manufacturers of modern motor
vehicles have made much progress
in designing automatic adjustments
to compensate for climatic chang-
es, no method except a complete
change, of lubricants has been
found to protect cars against the;
excessive wear that follows the
use of s mmer grade lubricants
in winter, J. M. Maran, technical
engineer for the Magnolia Petrol-
eum Company, warns automobile
owners.
Hard starting on cold mornings,
difficult steering and heavy gear
shifting are only a few of the
symptoms that indicate the need
to prepare your car for cold weath-
■fl
Waxahashie, Texas, Nov. 22.—Ill
from a bone infection since last
Monday, John Lee Taylor, 13, son
of Mr. and Mrs. O. T. Taylor of
Italy, died in a local hospital
Tuesday. He was a student in the
Lofton Branch school. Funeral
services were held Wednesday af-
5 tempon at the First Baptist
Church in Italy with the Rev. Mr.
Parnell, pastor, conducting. Cousins
will be pallbeorers and flower girls.
Bugal will be at Italy.
ty at as low a price as
le can be profitably sold
. To illustrate that the tional League championship next,
own has not gone, though season. ;
many would-be merchants have I Acting President William M.
. - . ,0. ; Walker of the Cubs announced
passed on and out: i ..5 :
‘ Tuesday the long-sought deal had
at last bean consummated.
M ch-Wanted Star.
Probably no ball club pursued '
any piayt a more insistently than!
citiestomakeupa well bal- erdriving by changing to the
Enterprising merchants and
business men built most of the
towns and cities of this country.
This same type, that is the New
Day, up-to-date, wide awake mer-
chants and business men, can re-
build them and will, fo rthere is
opportunity there and men seek
opportunity and dare the world for
it.
But don’t forget that we are all
trouble in cold weather and a ‘
change to winter grade lubricants ,
recommended by the car makers. .
It also includes thorough inspection
of the radiator and battery, the '
addition of Socony anti-freeze so-
lution where necessary and a tank
full of Mobilgas now adjusted for
quick winter starting.
The value of “Climatic Control,”
that attribute of Mobilgas which
adapts it to conditions of temper-
ature and altitude, is again being I
proven b, the “Under Three Flags” ;
expedition of the Socony-Vacuum i
Corport n which is now in Mex-
ico follov ing a gruelling trip from
the nortermost. highway point in
Canada. The twelve stock cars of
: different makes comprising the
"Three Blags" cavalcade are be-
ing pun shed on every type of
highway to- test the qualities of
Mobilgas. Mobiloil end Mobilgrease
which are used by Magnolia sta-
tions in providing “Winter-Proof”
I service. The makes of cars in the
[test tour represent ninety per cent
of all automobiles in use in the
) United States and they are being
piloted by “average” drivers.
-hes-
\ oe. '
I
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a ' • -
, 820
A LM,..
Austin, Texas, Nov. 21.—The
League of Texas Municipalities will
meet in Austin Tuesday and at-
tend the conference of mayors and
county judges with the new Texas
relief commission and while here
will formulate plans for locating
state headquarters of the league
in Austin after Jan. 1.
"t-*<
News Notes
Of Interest
From Waxa.
WACO MOVIE THEATER
BOX OFFICE IS ROBBED
Waco, Texas, Nov. 22.—Two men
secured a large sum late Tuesday
when they entered the cashier’s
booth of the Orpheum Theater.
The night receipts were unusually
large.
The holdup occurred as Night
Patrolman Z. V. McDonald was
diagonally across the street. Ob-
serving the two- men as they ran
up an alley in which their car was
parked a block west of the theater,
McDonald shot at them. The
bandits fired several times in re-
.turn. All the shots went wild.
45.35
85.55
46.05
86.50
Mark Koenig and Harvey Hendrick
1 —and Theodore Eleinhans, a
the Cubs did Klein, who in six ;
seasons w h the Philies compiled •
the lifeti' -e major league batting i
average o: .359 and won the 1933 |
National League batting crown ‘
wih a mark of .368, or 23 points
closer than his closest rival.
The late William Wrigley, Jr.,
wanted him badly and at one time i
was reported to have offered $150,-
000 in cash for a, straight sale,
only to meet with refusal. Before
and after his death the Cubs per-
sisted and the question in the Cub
camp was “when will we get
Klein?”
Deer have a right to scatter
when they see Waxahachie hunt-
l ers arrive, for they have a way
- of bringing “big game” home. The
most recent example was displayed
this morning when Stewart Moore,
Marvin Rudolph, -Finis Wakeland
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The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. [40], No. [268], Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 22, 1933, newspaper, November 22, 1933; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1518350/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.