The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 276, Ed. 1 Monday, November 20, 1972 Page: 2 of 9
nine pages : ill. ; page 23 x 17 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:
2—THE ENNIS DAILY NEWS-Monday, November 20, 1972
The Ennis Daily News
Aleebee. [ 3972---------
TEXAS I PRESS ASSOCIATION
EDITORIAL
It II Be T ough to Sweep This Under the Rug!
President - Manager........
Charles E. Gentry
'Armistice Day'
Could Come True
Editor.....
.......Floyd W. Casebolt
By DON OAKLEY
Associate Editor.......
......Fay Casebolt
Advertising Manager......
......Joe D. Newman
NEW
MANAGEMENT
STORE HOURS: 8 A.M. - 7 P.M.
HALL’S DRUG
GENE SORENSON
PHARMACIST & OWNER
115 S. Dallas St.
875-3854
: 0
00
U:45
ft :00
00
:15
30
00
8
WFAA A KDFW
ABC 4 CBS
E WBAP
O NBC
KTVT
33 KBFI
39 KDTV
Choice" ’
Bob Hope
Lucille Ball
Green Acres
Dragnet
I Dream of
Jeannie
Truth or
Consequences
Flintstones
Gilligans Island
Reasoner, Smith
News
News8
On the Move
The Rookies
Walter
Cronkite News
Eyewitness
News
Let's Make a
Deal
Gunsmoke
Inside
Area 5
NBC Nightly
News
Area 5
Texas News
This Is Your Life
(To Be Announced)
Rowan & Martin’s
Laugh-In
NFL Monday
Night Football:
Atlanta
Falcons
vs.
Washington
Redskins
News8 On
The Move
Dic k Cavett
Show
Here’s
Lucy
Doris Day
Show
Movie:
"Barefoot In
The Park"
Jane Fonda
The New Bill
Cosby Show
Robert Redford
Eyewitness
News
Movie:
"The Green
Area 5
Texas News
The Tonight
Show
Slime"
Robert Horton
Richard Jaeckel
Sign Off
Father Knows
Best
Sig n Off
Leaveit
to Beaver
I Love
Luc y
Dic k Van Dyke
Wild. Wild West
News
Interview
News
Interview
News
Garland News
Home Economics
People and Money
Deeper
Life
Movies:
"County Fair"
Funz A
Poppin
High Chaparral
The Virginian
Big Valley
Rory Calhoun
Jane Nigh
Gomer Pyle
Petticoat Junction
Movie:
"The Forty Eight
Hour Mile"
Darren McGavin
News at Ten
Movie:
(Continued)
Movie:
"The Great
Sioux Uprising"
Jeff Chandler
Faith Domergue
"High Sierra"
Ida Lupino
Humphrey
Bogart
Hogan’s
Heroes
Ponderosa
Movie::
"King Rat"
Club 33
Movies:
"Twilight In
The Sierras"
"It's A Small
George Segal
Tom Courtenay
Monday
6
World War II began the undoing of Armistice Day.
Until that conflict broke out, it was possible to believe
that the last war had been fought, the last big one, any-
way. That Americans had singled out the World War as
the only one whose termination was observed with a na-
tional holiday testified to the idealism with which they
went into the “war to end wars.”
Then came 1939. To have the World War now denoted
by the numeral I, suggesting it was merely the first in a
series, was the fatal blow to that idealism.
With a lot less naivete, but still with a 1917-style deter-
mination to get in and get it over with. America went to
war again in 1941.
Like a good story, World War II had a beginning, a
middle and a definite end. There were clear winners and
clear losers. There were enemies and there were heroes.
Armistice Day was now Veterans Day, honoring the
veterans of all wars. It was still observed on November
11. But it wasn’t the same any more. And we knew we
hadn’t seen the last war.
In fact, America’s determination not to retreat into
the isolationism of the 1920s and ’30s and to “contain”
the stalking threat of communism guaranteed we would
be embroiled in every international flare-up.
In 1950 came Korea, which was not a good story at all,
and in the next decade Vietnam, a nightmare.
Since the date of November 11 no longer meant any-
thing, Congress decided for reasons of commercial con-
venience to move Veterans Day to the fourth Monday in
October (though a few states hold out for the old date).
So far has the march of events in the 20th century
taken us from November 11, 1918, that the date of what
was once our most patriotic holiday, next to July 4th,
probably went unnoticed this year even by those with
personal memories of the World War.
It is just as well. The World War destroyed much that
was good in Western civilization and only set the stage
for an ever greater conflict.
The madness of its trench warfare, which the entry of
massive American power ended, surpasses even those
later madnesses that became peculiar to Vietnam—body
counts, search-and-destroy, defoliation.
The embittered Vietnam veteran who complained in a
recent magazine article that “we didn’t gain any ground,
we didn’t lose any—there was no point to the killing,
nothing to show for our sacrifices” ought to read about a
war whose progress for three years was measured in
terms of yards won or lost, and the body count was in
the hundreds of thousands.
EDITORAL COMMENT
Spain
Answer to Previous Puzzle
2)
ORK Roberts Electric Service
Specialists in AIR CONDITIONING & REFRIGERATION
212 N. Dallas St.
875-3790
ACROSS 3 Unsorted
1 Spanish chief flour (India)
of state 4----glycerin
7 Bullfight sites 5 Farm animal
AIRIEOLA
MARTEN
INID
13 Fixed share
14 Saint----
Island
6 Donkey
(comb, form)
7 Mohammedan
MP :00
7:5
/ :30
0:45
Q WFAA A
• ABC
KDFW E
CBS 0
WBAP 11
NBC
KTVT
33 KBF1 39 KDTV
man’s name
8 Peruse
9 Feminine
LAMMAS
RETAIL
News 8
Etc.
CBS Morning
News
Today Show
(7:25) Wthr.
Today Show
Slam Bang
Theater
Tuesday
15 Play part
(2 wds.)
16 Prepared, like
a milk shake appellation __________
17 Period of time 10 Meshed fabric 25 Shining
18 Spartan queen 11 Chemical brightly
suffix 26 Goddess of
Im=l=ISiu
24 Fall flower
:30
Movie:
‘I’d Climb The
Captain
Kangaroo
(8:25) News
Today Show
New Zoo Revue
The Funhouse
NOV. 21
(myth.)
19 Mountain
nymph
22 Indonesian of
Mindanao
25 Ventilate
28 Shade tree
29 Peaceful
12 Dejected peace
18 Don Quixote 27 Ranted
de
29 Evil spirit
:30
Highest Mountain"
Susan Hayward,
Rory Calhoun
The Joker's
Wild
The Price
Is Right
Dinah's
Place
Concentration
Fury
Lone
Ranger
Early News
Stock Market
Tone of
The Markets
21 Days of yore
(archaic)
persons (coll.) 22 Ward off
31 City in Spain 23 Earth (Fr.)
31 Turn inside
20 Former coins 30 Eggs
of Spain 32 Saul’s uncle
:00
Gambit
:00
:0C
: 30
:00
:00
Bewitched
Password
Split Second
NewsBat
Noon
Let's Make
a Deal
The Newlywed
Game
Dating
Game
Love of
Life
Where the
Heart Is; News
Search for
Tomorrow
4 News Report
As The
World Turns
Guiding Light
Edge of Night
General
Hospital
One Life
To Live
Love is Many
Splendored Thing
Secret Storm
All My
Children
Movie:
"Boy, Did I Get
Merv Griffin
Show
SHORT RIBS
WHO ARE YOU CALLING
A SLOW-WITTED IDIOT ?
BUGS BUNNY
OKAY, CICERO, YES BED'S
( ALL SET FER. YA - —
— HOP IN!
NANCY®
WOULD YOU
LIKE TO
SPLIT A TEN-
DOLLAR
BILL
WITH
ME ?
- FXAE:
SUsMAIL
Sale of
the Century
Hollywood
Squares
Batman
Jeopardy
Addams
Family
Perry Mason
Who, What or
Where Game
News:
Observer
Tone of
the Markets
News:
Observer
Tone of
the Markets
Noon
News
Three on a
Match
Days of
Our Lives
The Doctors
Another World
Return to
Peyton Place
Somerset
And Y Griffith
Show
SURE
News, Weather
Cartoon Carnival
Afternoon
Movie:
"Man Without
A Star"
Kirk Douglas
Jeanne Crain
Lucille Rivers
Noon
News
Tone of
the Markets
Stock Market
Observer
Tone of
the Markets
Market
Observer
President's Office
Wrap Up
Abbott &
Costello
Popeye
Patty Duke
Show •
Dennis The
Menace
out
34 Even
35 Spanish
region
37 Heavy blows
(coll.)
38 151 (Roman)
39 Three times
(comb, form)
40 Marry
41 Small arms
cartridge
43 Neighborhood
45 False god
49 Spanish
capital
52 Ill-fated
Spanish fleet
54 Narcotic
55 Got as a profit
56 Bank employe
57 Comes in
DOWN
1 Brawl
2 Competition
13
15
17
25
31
34
37
40
49
54
by Frank O’Neal
T RESENT
THAT REMARK,
2
3
4
(Bib.)
36 Pub order
41 Jewish
feastday
5 6 7
42 Curb, restrict
43 Soviet lake
44 Ceremony
46 Copenhagener
47 European
river
48 Young men
49 Witticism
50 Primate
51549 (Roman)
52 Woman’s
secret
53 Operated
A Fine Instance of
Good Neighboring
It will be our pleasure tomorrow to carry in this chronicle a picture of the
staff of the new St. John Key Club. This we are proud to do for several rea-
sons - and we'll mention a couple.
In the first place, a Key Club is a fine thing for a school, because of its
splendid purposes.
Then it is a commendable evidence of good-neighboring on the part of EHS
students and St. John students.
You see, how it came about was that the Ennis Hi group had a splendid re-
cord of achievement with this Kiwanis sponsored youth organization, and the
lads there offered to sponsor the St. John unit, if the boys were interested.
They were pleased to have it, and thus the civic-service type organization
comes into being.
So it is an all-’round fine arrangement.
Congratulations to these groups for taking a valued step which can prove
of much importance in the years ahead.
26
27
14
19 20
21
28
8
29
30
10
11
12
The Ennis Daily News
IN THE EIGHTIETH YEAR
50
51
22
23
20
32
36
43
44
41
45
46 47
48
52
53
THE BORN LOSER
Fc
HE MUST
STI LL BE
IN THE
BATH-
ROOM 1
CIRCUS
DID YA
BRUSH
VER...
FOLLOW
- ME —
by Heimdahl & Stoffel
NEVER
MIND!
ALLEY OOP
WAIT FOR
ME!
II-20
By Ernie Bushmiller
CAPTAIN EASY
I MUST SAY.
THIS WAS A
GREAT IDEA
OF CAPTAIN
EASY.
STRETCHO
THE
RUBBER
MAN
uhldsubalAsobAALlsau
NoV-20-
Tm. Reg. U. S. Pai. Off.—All rights re
0 1972 by United Feature Syndica
Owned and published daily except Saturday
by the United Publishing Company, Inc.,
which also publishes The Weekly Local and
The Palmer Rustler, Dr. Gene Nowlin,
Chairman of the board: Charles E. Gentry,
President and Manager.
Entered at the Post Office in Ennis, Texas
as second class mail matter under the Act of
Congress of March 3, 1872.
Office 213 North Dallas Street, Telephone
875-3801.
All communications of business and items
f news should be addressed to the company-
to individuals. Any erroneous reflection
upon the character, standing or reputation of
any person, firm or corporation which may
appear in the columns of this paper will be
gladly and duly corrected upon being brought
to the publisher’s attention.
SUBSCRIPTION
By
One Year
Six Months
One-Month
Carrier
in.
RATES
City
$18.00
$9.00
$1.50
Special Farm Rates by Mail In Ellis County, 1
year $9.00
One Month $1.00
by Art Sansom
KOFFI
by Y. T. Hamlin
TOKO!
HI, MR.OOP!
HEY, WHERE
YOU BEEN?
OH, HERE,
THERE AN'
AROUND...
OH, NUTHIN ...YOU
...WHY? ) GOIN’ INTO MOO?
YEAH, I GOTTA
SEE GUZ ABOUT
SUMPIN!
GOOD! I'LL
GO WITH YOU!
U.S Pot. Off.
by Crooks & Lawrence
V.INVITIN US TO DINNER:
90 WE COULD-UH- SETTLE
OUR DIFFERENCES. EH.
7 MI55 DALBY :
GLAD YOU’RE
ENJOYING IT. BUT.
TELL ME. PETE,,,WHAT
\ PO YOU SUPPOSE
SURPRISINGLY-- ) YOUR FATHER
YE5, MR.PANZINI’ WOULD BE DOING
----. IF HE WERE
PROBABLY RACKING
HIG BRAIN TO FIGURE
OUT HOW EL DIABOLO
PULLED HIS "RETURN
FROM THE GRAVE" .
STUNT!
RIGHT ON THAT’S
WHY I’M SURE 4
EASY AND I CAN
SOLVE YOUR FATHERS
DISAPPEARANCE!
HERE NOW 2
EA, Ing T.M. Reg.
Cop ie S-
toueVcE
// - 20
fre
vai
boa
dul
An;
Un
des
Th
thi
trii
COC
far
tur
the
1
Agi
dar
ava
tab
in r
tur
Sta
per
tur
Tu<
Wo
Cai
Got
Bel
for
Me
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.
Casebolt, Floyd W. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 276, Ed. 1 Monday, November 20, 1972, newspaper, November 20, 1972; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1695630/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.