The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 269, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 12, 1964 Page: 1 of 8
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Glle Ennis Aailu Neug
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IN THE SEVENTY-FOURTH YEAR
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LEASED WIRE
ENNIS, TEXAS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1964
NO. 269
EIGHT PAGES—FIVE CENTS
NNIS
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CHOES
By CASEY
mn.
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Shower Here and
Freeze, W. Tex
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4-H Award Night Held
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report for Saturday?)
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Forecast."
December 31st, mails to defraud and conspiracy
The state's case is based on an
Mr. and
his father’s killer.
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although we
right to veto their use.
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A revival meeting will begin week with services at their regu-
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tii Peisevel guest.
are therefore sending you a refund check for the amount of
$20.” Zajklik is shown with the check and an order blank.
LONDON — Qualified infor-
mants reported in London toay
The occasion will be the 1964
Ellis County 4-H Club’s “Awards
Santa Day Plans of
Yule Season Related
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IN CASE Of
FIRE PHONE
to defraud.
Estes also is under an 8 year
will?”
And he added:
“We are admonished to pray
Snow fell in New Mexico and
Northern Colorado, but eluded
areas of Colorado that need it
most.
There is a chance of rain in
centra sections of the nation—
another hard hit region.
A snow of one to three inches
covered parts of Maine, another
area badly in need of moisture.
I
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Revival Meeting Is to Begin
Sun. at Anthony Drive Baptist
Rep. Satterwhite Speaker---
65 to Be Cited When
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(NEA Telephoto)
SOCIALISTS DISPLEASED—The American submarine Sea Dragon is scheduled to dock in
southern port of Saesbo, Japan, Nov. 12 in the face of demonstrations protesting the visit.
Japanese student and socialists groups clashed with police in Tokyo as they marched on the
Parliament to show their displeasure over the atomic sub’s arrival in Japan. About 2,500
demonstrators marched in Sasebo. y }
everything else. So we enter in-
to temptation, which frequently
leads to sin. And we ‘lay out on
the Lord,’ staying away from
services.
“Too many do not persist in
the things God commanded us
to do. And they don’t come to
church because they don’t want
and clouds out of the state.
Fair weather should prevail as ;
the weekend approaches.
That invading cool front sent:
the temperature down to 31 de- ■
grees at Dalhart in the north-
azov.
NEED FOR A REVIVAL —
Baylor Revival
Expressions by
Members There
(A Series)
“The main reason I think Bay-
lor Baptist Church needs a revi-
val is that our church needs a
more spiritual togetherness with
Then on Saturday following
the Santa Day, there will be a
free show, gift of Manager Lee-
roy Mitchell of the Plaza Thea-
ter, at 10 a.m.
And these are only that week-
end’s events in a colorful series
throughout the Yuletide.
President C. O. (Skip) Onstead
presided over the meeting and
so often, are too busy,
pastor of Baylor Baptist, who
pointed out that Mr. Cherry is
an Oklahoma petroleum engine-
er whose service as a lay-preach-
er became so much in demand,
that he now holds successful
meetings at various points about
the nation.
Mr. Massey sang two heartily
(NEA Telephoto)
WRONG ADDRESS—Anton Zajklik of Cicero, Ill., who sent
Nikita Khrushchev a CARE package, waits word from the
Russian Embassy in Washington about Khrushchev’s present
address. Zajklik, a refugee from Czechoslovakia, sent the
package addressed to Khrushchev at International Headquart-
ers, Moscow, but the package came back with the message,
“We regret to inform you that Russian authorities did not
let the parcel through because of an incorrect address. We
e -
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that President Johnson
British Prime Minister Harld
“For our revival services we
RELEASED FROM HOSPITAL
Mrs. F. W. Baggs and son
were released from the hospi-
tal Wednesday and are at the
Ennis received a light shower
and a drop to 58 in temperature
The 4-H’ers who will be hon-
ored at this annual event, are
representatives of ten different
school and community 4-H Clubs
from throughout Ellis County.
The awards which they will re-
ceive indicate outstanding indi-
vidual achievements in 25 dif-
ferent 4-H project areas.
Principal speaker for the even-
ingly consistent Christian life.
“We excel in the things in
which we are persistent,” he re-
minded.
“Incidentally, how much time
do you spend with the Word of
2 Meetings of
Wilson and LBJ
In Prospect
T
s e
this coming Sunday, Nov. 15, at
Anthony Drive Baptist Church,
located one block south of the
Municipal Hospital here. The
evangelist will be the Rev. Deri
Lee, pastor of the Harmony Bap-
tist Church of Grand Prairie.
Services are scheduled for 10
a.m. and 7:30 p.m. through the
Newt Lee on
1944.
Santa Day plans in the series
of events that have been charted,
as the Yuletide promotion of the
Trade Development Committee
of the Chamber of Commerce
were announced today.
As previously announced, the
date will be Friday afternoon,
Dec. 4.
Featured will be the Santa
Parade, an annual gala for com-
munity and area. The parade will’
form at the Community Center
and start its merry trek through
the business section at 4 p.m.,
under the direction of Parade
Chairman Bill Cockrell.
Ol’ Santa will ride on one of
the bright new red Ennis fire
trucks in a parade that will con-
tain a number of colorful sec-
tions. The parade will halt on
Main Street and jolly old Kris
Kringle will meet and greet the
children and favor them with
candy and chewing gum.
That night—as well as the
night before—there will be the
downtown performance of the
“hot band,” Beatle-type, Mr.
Cockrell also being chairman of
this feature.
More than 65 4-H Club awards ,
winners, together with their
families and approximately 100
special guests, are to gather in
the Banquet Room of the First
Methodist Church in Waxahachie
at 7 p.m. Saturday,November 14.
have time for
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few showers in eastern portions Patak, Sharon Sheliga, Doris
of Texas. Slovak, Linda Whitfill, Rita Whit-
Invading cooler and drier air I taker, and Emma Deane Young-
is expected to push the showers j blood.
need to invite teenagers. I think
they; always get a blessing out of
a revival. When I was a teen-
ager seems like there was a
closeness with God that you
didn’t have any other time.
“I think our church needs a
revival because it seems like it’s
easier to get people to come to a
revival than any other time. We
need to pray that people will
truly be saved and not just
there to fill a pew. Because if
we do. they’ll feel like they’re
just there to be counted for us
and for God.
ing will be State Representative
W. T. (Bill) Satterwhite of Ennis.
Other items on the program
include presentation of Gold
Star Awards to two outstanding
County 4-H'ers by County Home
Demonstration Agent Claudia K.
McDonald. Art Baker of May-
pearl will present the two 1964
Danforth “I Dare You” awards,
while County Agent Uel Stock-
ard will assist County 4-H Coun-
cil Chairman Nancy Roebuck in
the presentation of the annual
“Friend of 4-H” award to a wor-
thy friend of all Ellis County
club members.
Gene Coffey, a Sophomore at
Arlington State College, and a
former national 4-H winner from
Red Oak. will preside over the
event as Master of Ceremonies.
Kenneth Edwards, Midlothian
4-H’er, will recognize guests.
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which after extensive improve-
ments presently is in the grand
• opening stage, issued a challenge
to an old friend—and got taken
up—somewhat to his amazement.
This is how it was.
“Hey, Dan,” said the Rev.
Eugene Robertson, pastor of
Rider Methodist Church, “how
about a waffle, ‘on the house’?”
“I’ll furnish it—if you'll eat
it, on the house!” agreed Dan.
“Whaddya mean?” demanded
Rev. Gene.
So to make a long and excit-
ing story short, Gene accepted
the dare and will eat a waffle
(with melted butter and yummy
syrup) from a table set on top
of the Town House at 9 a.m.
Saturday and served by Dan “in 1
person.” (What’s the weather J
“Citizens of Tomorrow” was
a skit about modern teen-agers
and the responsibilities they
to face. The characters consist-
ed of a chorus, a modern teen-
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he need of a good education.
It depicted the various activities
of modern youth, yet it express-
d the serious inner self of the
teen-ager that most grown-ups
don’t know about. To show
adults that the teen-agers do
have responsibilities was best
expressed when the group said
this about grown-ups: ‘They are
the subject of our concern.’ ” -
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church offers. Every time they
miss a service they miss a great
blessing. Because every sermon
that is preached comes from the
heart of a great man. Until our
own people have felt revived and
drawn closer to God we cannot
have a revival at all. I think it
is good to have prayer meetings
in .the homes if everyone really
prays from his heart. We have
to pray before we think of going
out to visit for our revival. If
we don’t our visit will be in
vain. We need to have much
prayer before we ask a preacher
or singer to come and conduct
our revival. Be sure they have
answered God’s will. Pray that
everything that will be done,
will be only to glorify God and
not self.
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the guest speaker was introduc- —but,
ed by the Rev. Carl Bilderback,
Wilson, scheduled to meet in
Washington early in Decembr,
plan a second meeting early in
the new year.
According to the informants,
the two leaders arranged for
their first informal meeting to
be held December seventh and
eighth partly to avert the dang-
ers of a vacuum in advance of
the mid-December NATO MMis-
terial Council Meeting in Paris.
They are said to have agreed
it would not be possible to com-
plete detailed negotiations about
major political, strategic and
economic problems of the west
in the course of a two-day visit.
Therefore, they are considering
a second reunion in Washington,
probably in the first half of Jan.
uary.
Informants said the Washing-
ton talks in December would be
dominated by two main themes:
The future organization of the
Atlantic Alliance, with special
emphasis on nuclear policies in-
cluding the project for a mixed-
manned force.
The economic difficulties fac-
ing nations of the nonCommunist
world. Wilson is preparing to
bring along sweeping proposals
for credits to needy nations.
The informants said Wilson is
likely to tell Johnson he would
be ready to turn over all Bri-
tain’s nuclear resources to
NATO, although retaining the
age group; several teen-agers in
west part of the Texas Pan , classes; and a narrator, an old. ‘
handle—one degree under the | er person
The theme of this play was
o, ’ e
0.
“The most important reason
we need a revival is to invite un-
saved people to hear God’s Word
preached.” — Mrs. Franklin
Dobbs.
(
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(NEA Telephoto)
OPPOSING McDONALD—United Steelworkers secretary-treasurer, I. W. Abel, right, who is
opposing David J. McDonald for president of tha Steelworkers Union, talks to a newsman fol-
lowing a USW executive board meeting in Pittsburgh, Pa. The board met to discuss re-
opening the steel-labor contract. At left is Walter J. Burke of Milwaukee, director of USW
District 32.
,ja
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last night, while as low as freez-
ing weather was registered in
Northwest Texas. The pump
station here recorded only .01
inch by 7 a.m. The day in Ennis
started off sunshiny and cool.
A dense fog pressed down
early today on a large area of
New York, New Jersey and Con-
necticut. It snarled transporta-
tion—by land, sea and air—in
the New York City area. Two
Long Island trains collided head-
on. and nine persons suffered
slight injuries. The fog also was
blamed for a fatal traffic acci-
dent in New Jersey. Flights at
all three of New York City’s ma-
jor airports were halted.
The fog, however, is a tem-
porary problem—unlike the pro-
longed dry spell that has caused
millions of dollars of crop dam-
age from the Rockies to New
England.
Damage,to winter wheat crops
has been especially severe. In
Illinnis alone the preduetion of
major CFops -—'corn, soybeans,
oats and wheat—is 95 million
bushels below average. Hun-
dreds of fires have burned over
thousands of acres of timber-
land. Water supplies have
dwindled to a trickle.
There have been slight breaks
in some sections. In the far west,
which has not experienced the
drought, blizzard conditions grip-
ped sections of the high Sierras.
Warnings of high winds were
posted for much of the Califor-
nia coast.
need to invite people that we do
not attend hurch at' all. We
Ennis Business
Forms Has New
Carbon Machine
Ennis Business Forms. Inc.,
has installed a new carbon pro-
cessor with a hot-spot unit (pat-
tern carbon) on it and can now
furnish onetime carbon w i t h
any pattern. Pattern carbon is
now available from EBF for all
continuous forms and snap-a-
part unit sets, and no additional
delivery time is required on or-
ders manufactured in the Texas
factory.
SEWA ' 8
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* Evangelistic Team Gives Program
For Ennis Lions’ Weekly Session
>:****
TODAY’S CHUCKLES
The bank robber shoved a
note across to the teller which
read: “Put the money in a bag,
sucker, and don’t make a move.”
The teller pushed back anoth-
er note: “Straighten your tie,
stupid, they’re taking your pic-
ture.”
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98
"Good Neighbors",
• Study Proposed
US-Mexico Pact
FORT WORTH—Delegates to
the Good Neighbor Council as-
sembly meeting in Fort Worth,
considered this morning a pro-
posed treaty between Mexico
and the United States.
The treaty would permit ex-
change of information in times
of natural or man-made disast-
er.
The treaty would be modeled
after a similar one ratified by
this country and Canada in 1963.
The council formally opened
its three-day assembly in Fort
Worth with a dinner last night.
Dan Tucker, headman (if his
wife, Dorothy, will admit it!) of one another. Our own members
Dan’s Town House Restaurant,' need to attend every service our
Secret,” a sacred number, and
“Mariah.” a classical selection,
with piano accompaniment by
Mrs. Ella Fern Sparks.
Evangelist Cherry, in his
message, emphasized the im-
St. John Srs.
Host Council’s
Assembly
This morning, the senior class
of St. John High presented a
skit to the faculty and student
body, entitled “Citizens of To-
morrow”, a program for Ameri-
can Education Week.
The entire senior class par-
ticipated in making the play the
success that it was. The senior
class includes: James Barto,
David Blazek, Jill Bohanon,
Richard Brittain, Mary Ann
Galetka, Gregory Harrison, Tem-
ple Holt, Charles Holubar. Rosa
Lee Janousek, Lorraine Lands-
feld, Linda Langer, David Mach,
Mary Ann Mach, Fred Martinez.
Joe McNally, Linda Nash, Linda
Billie Sol Plans
Tourist Mecca
Of Ghost Town
LL PASO. (AP).—Billie Sol
Estes will enter a venture to
make a tourist attraction out of
a New Mexico ghost town.
Paul Slone — who became a
ville’s warm 74 degrees. That’s a
43-degree span.
It should be a little cooler in
Centra and East Texas tonight.
The overnight temperature
lows—Dalhart 31, Amarillo and
Alpine 40. Odessa, Midland,
Lubbock 41, Presido, Wichita
Falls, Abilene 45, San Angelo,
47, Fort Worth Greater South-
west International Airport 54,
Ennis, Dallas 58, Dei Rio 60,
Beaumont 63, Houston, Laredo
65, Waco 66, Victoria and Aus-
tin 69 Galveston 72, Corpus
Christi 74, and Brownsville 74.
—
meeting at the Community* God? If we do not know the
Center. Word, how do we know God’s
received numbers. “It Is No to hear the truth. But remember,
CROSS COUNTRY AT
AUSTIN MONDAY
AUSTIN—Texas, Texas A &
M and Arkansas are rated as the
to contenders, for the Southwest
Conference cross Country Cham-
pionship meet Monday in Austin.
Texas is the defending team
champion and has back Richard
Romo, who finished third as a
sophomore in last year’s meet.
Other distance men returning
for the Longhorns are Chuck
Frawley and Mike Hennen.
Texas Christian is the only
conference team which will not
be represented in the meet.
The three-mile race is set for
the Town Lake Course in Austin.
WEATHER
Fair through Friday. Cooler
tonight. High both after-
noons in the mid 70’s; I o w
tonight around 50. Winds
westerly ten to twenty mil-
es per hour becoming light
and variable tonight and
southerly ten to fifteen
mikes pei houi oh i rinay.
18-year, 100,000-mile search by ; sentence after being convicted
the victim's son. 51-year-old Wei- on a state charge of inducing a
by Lee. He had vowed to find farmer to sign a mortgage on a , home of her parents
non-existent fertilizer tank. , Mrs. W. G. Hodge.
Widespread rains that had
predicted for the state didn’t
materialize. There are only a
cused of driving a hit-and-run term assessed in federal court,
car which killed 64-year-old He was convicted of using the
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THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“To the generous mind the
heaviest debt is that of grati-
tude when it is not in our power
to repay it.”—(Ben Franklin.)
$ *±*±** $
Christmas will truly be a big
* time in the home of Evangelist
and Mrs. Fred Cherry, for they
are the parents of twelve chil-
dren. eleven of them living. Mr.
Cherry, a widely-known and
much in demand lay-preacher,
is here from Oklahoma and,
with Olen Massey of Grand
Prairie as singer, is holding the
current revival for Baylor Bap-
tist Church.
you are preparing for another
world—either heaven or hell.”
Guests at the meeting includ-
ed Ralph Miller of Dallas, with
Buddie Davis: and Winston Web-
ster. Rep. Bill Saiterwhiie’s
freezing mark. The overnight
lows ranged up to Browns-
lar time on Sunday. The evange-
list will be present for the Mon-
day morning service, the 16th.
The music will be under the
direction of E. McCaig, and a
nursery will be provided for the
evening services.
The public is cordially invited
to attend the revival, which will
conclude Sunday, Nov. 22.
‛ Fred Cherry, lay-preacher, and
Singer Olen Massey, the evange-
listic team who are holding the
present revival at Baylor Bap-
tist Church, yesterday gave the
program for the Ennis Lions,
partner of Estes- several months
ago in an El Paso import firm—
said the opening of the town of
Madrid will be one of many en-
terprises he and Estes are plan-
ning. Madrid is located between
Albuquerque and Santa Fe.
Estes- is currently living in
Abilene while awaiting the out-
come of his appeal to the U. S.
Supreme Court of his 15-year
REQUEST MISTRIAL
IN MURDER CASE
CELINA, Tennessee — The
State has requested a mistrial
in the second degree murder
trial of Grover Jones in Celina.
Tennessee. The request has been
made because two character wit-
nesses are related to members
of the jury.
Judge John Mitchell has taken
the request under consideration.
The mistrial request climaxed
the four-day trial of the 55-year-
old Indianapolis Handyman ac-
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Casebolt, Floyd W. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 269, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 12, 1964, newspaper, November 12, 1964; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1586497/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.