The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 260, Ed. 1 Friday, November 1, 1946 Page: 4 of 8
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I FOUR
JMER
ENNIS DAILY NEWS, ENNIS, ELLIS COUNTY, TEXAS, FRIDAY EVENING, NOV. 1, 1946
es R. O. Smith and John-
were Dallas visitors
|m. Redford has returned
to her home in Hot Springs, Ark.,
after a visit in the home of her
mother, Mrs. Dovie Schwartz.
Mesdames H. G. Windham and
L. H. Barron were visitors in Dal-
las.
Mr. and Mrs. Delta Brumley and
Wt way to a
MANS «eart
A Bit of the Variety at Keenums
eggs
le only with pure pasteurized milk, fresh
(egg substitutes) and baked to please, every item
Kecnum’s an ally to women interested in topping
>d meal with a good dessert.
'eeiium’s Bakery
Serving Ennis the Best in Bakery Goods
—Phone SO—
children of Dallas spent the wek
end her with relatives.
Mrs. Alice Cooke returned Sun-
day from a five week yisit with
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Richardson
in Deer Park.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Jones of Cle-
burne spent the week end with
Mrs. Letha sawyers.
Mrs. Carrie Patton and Miss
Katherine Schwartz were in Waxa-
hachie Wednesday.
Mesdames L. H. Hughey, G. G.
Howard and J. S. Cude and Jimmy
‘were in Dallas Monday.
Mrs. Layton O’Banion of Beau-
mont has visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Grover Ranton.
Mesdames Houston McClain and
Yancy Barron were Dallas visitors
Wednesday.
Miss Marilyn Harvard was a Dal-
las visitor Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. O. G. Wadley were
visitors in Dallas Monday.
Mrs. Blaine Schwartz and chil-
dren spent the week end with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dillard in
Trumbull.
'Mesdames Elmer Schwartz and
Erwin Elgan were in Ennis Mon-
day.
Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Smith had
as their guests Sunday, Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Freeman and Mary
Lou Wilson of Ennis and Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Ran ton of Seagoville.
Mrs. Rena Lasater. spent Mon-
day in Dallas with Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Vines.
Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Elgan visited
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Elgan and
other relatives in Dallas Sunday .
Mrs. Carl Spence and Linda Ann
were in Ennis Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Cox and Cary
Ml
/
#,
I,!
i. tw***n*«
urge Lima
ranberry
atsup • •
Beans
California
Recleaned
Sauce
Conways V
Whole Berry c;
1 lb.
Cello
oz.
27C
Brooks
14 oz. bottle
APRICOT JAM
Star Brands Pure
pkgs.
finest
No. 2
New pack
MATCHES
CRACKERS
Sunshine Krispy
TOMATOES
Baby Food
790
240
410
160
cans, Gerbers or Heinz __
COFFEE
230
Folgers, Maxwell House
Chase and Sanborn
lb. _____________________
440
MOTHERS OATMEAL
350
China—Plate
China—Plate, cup and saucer
choice, 3 lb. pkg. -----------
DAILY MONEY SAVERS
Chili Powder, lb. cello - - 60c
Whole
Green Beans, No. 2 raider 20c
Glace
Cherries, whole, 8 oz. - - 65c
Chili, Van Camp’s, 15 oz. 27c
Phillip’s
Corn, cr. style, No. 2 can 16c
Houston Club
Ginger Ale.....2 for 25c
Raisins, Sun-Maid, 15 oz. 33c
Kennedy’s
Kraut, No. 21 can - - - - 15c
Rice, Fiesta, 1 lb. pkg. - - 17c
Peerless
Mince Meat, 9 oz. ----- 16c
Leggs
Sausage Season, pkg. - - 17c
Ginger Bread, Mix Duffs 24c
Cigarettes, choice, pkg. 18c
Rye Flour, 2 lbs......25c
... ;
-------* ........... Telephoto)
ACME-NEA ENGINEER RECEIVES AWARD—Recogni-
tion of an outstanding job in wartime picture com-
munications came to Louis A. Thompson, left, chief en-
gineer of Acme New pictures and NEA Service, when he
received the War Department Certificate of Merit from
Col. J. J. Miller. Mr. Thompson designed and perfected
the Acme-NEA Telephoto machines used by the army,
navy and newspapers throughout the United States.
The award, made in Cleveland, Ohio, cited his special
work in building Telephoto equipment to meet specific
military requirements.
would campalgn-to-ole&t -Dr. JHom-
er P. Rainey, deposed university
president, as governor of Texas.
But during the campaign Dobie
was in Minnesota, Rainey support-
fearing his sharp tongue might
harm, rather than aid, the cam-
paign.
Dobie, teller of many a tall Tex-
as tale, is author of such familiar
stories as “A Vaquero of the
Ranch County,” “Coronada’s Chil-
dren,” “Apache Gold and Yaqui
lE'ilver,” also “The Longhorns” and
“Tales of the Mustangs.”
Since his return from Cambridge
and a period during which he in-
structed American GI’s in college
work, Dobie has been appointed by
the State Department to the Uni-
ed Nations Educational and Cul-
tural Organization.
Latest pen work of the bristling
little professor is an article in
the “Texas Ranger,” a university
student publication.
In it Dobie takes on President
Truman, to-wit:
‘Nobody that T have read after
or talked to regards the present
President of the United States as
other than a very mediocre person
in intellectual powers. He was
nominated for vice-president by
the Democratic party because he
is mediocre. The reactionary ele-
ments in the party were afraid of*
ideas ... Henry Wallace was the
last thinker left in the cabinet.”
Relics of Retribution
" V ,;j
5p., ' -V.. •'
■ 1
/ /
1
m j
■ _ r
Still unclaimed in Nuernberg prison’s supply
“s.s rr “M-rsass asagf
of McKinney visited relatives here
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Risinger
and John Max had moved to Aus-
tin.
Mrs. Dona Beck spent the week
end with Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Jones
in Dallas.
Rev. G. C. Bowman is atending
the Methodist Yearly Conference
ir Fort Worth this week.
Mr. and Mrs. M. I. Raney and
Mrs. Nellie Perkins were Sunday
guetsts of Mr. and Mrs. Dee Whitte-
more.
Mrs. Lawrence Green was a
Dallas visitor Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs..Dick Beck, of
Beaumont visited relatives here
Monday.
Mesdames Hubert McBurnett,
Asberry Blocker and Lawrence
Green were in Ennis Monday.
Mrs. Ted Daly was carried to
the Waxahachie Sanitarium Sun-
day in the Barron Bros, ambu-
lance. She was suffering strep
throat.
% ridel the
CAPITOL
^hame
CHILD’S
Colds
tooo
900
UJ
5 800
a.
— 700
j 200
100
Other j —■**' .
(roads,utilities,sewers,etc.^
—i—r—i—\—i—i—r~i i 1 r
A S ON 01J F MAMJ J A
1945
1946
Building activity has more than
doubled in the past year, says
OWMR, crossing the billion-
dollar-per-month line. August,
1946. figures are preliminary.
w
, I "
V i
f j
itliii
LAYING MASH
Burras Five Star
100 lb.
sack
$4.50
for More Eggs
17c
- 39c
Cold Tablets, 4 way - -
St. Joseph
Mineral Oil, pt......
St. Joseph
Milk of Magnesia, 6 oz. 23c
35c size
Vick’s, jar .......................... 29c
:■
i
■
Plenty pi
Parking
Space
KUCERA’S
We Cash
Pay
CHECKS
Mk.ppMV
“Girl Makes Good” is the title of 1
this story. Last year Jane
Peters, above, of Canton, Ohio, ,
won the title of “Miss Ohio ,
State University” and with it a j War Qne
screen test in Hollywood. She j
waited so long there for a de- 1
cision on the test that she be- I
came discouraged and started
home just as the film moguls
decided she’d do. They had to
chase her across the country to
give her a contract. Now she has .
been tapped for the covfeted role
of Catana in the forthcoming /
'■iB&bSk XCapUin .grjpm Castile.” .J
Austin, Tex., Nov. 1, (UP)—
State capitol correspondents have
shied away from the uninhibited
opinions of J. Frank Dobie, white-
haired, cowboy-booted professor of
English at Texas University, and
widely-known Southwest folklorist.
The traditionally-outspoken Do-
bie, who dui’ing the war visited
Cambridge University in England
as professor of American history,
charged in a statement released to
capitol reporters and published by
the “Texas Spectator,” that Tex-
as University is the scene of a
move to “starve out or fire” what
he called “free-minded members
of the faculty.”
But there was one sentence in
the article which reporters steered
clear of. Dobie told why—in his
opinion—Dr. T. S. Painter, succes
sor to Homer P. Rainey, had been
named president of the university.
Correspondents checked with Dr.
Painter and he shook his head
Definitely he would not waive his
right to sue for libel if the sen
tence were printed generally.
,So far, however, the colorful
Texas writer has received no offi
cial reply from either Dr. Painter
or the Board of Regents. And
their silence has the Texas public
wondering whether Dobie will be
fired “without the batting of an
eye” as suggested by Gov. Coke
Stevenson, or will continue to be
ignored.
To date, only one regent—Orville j
Bullington of Wichita Falls—and
| Miss Martha Morris, Fort Worth
newspaper woman, have won word
I battles with Dobie.
Builingten, industrialist and cat-
tleman, called Dobie, native Texas
rancher, a “drug store cowboy” for
wearing his big hat and boots on
the campus. Miss Morris met
Dobie’s denial of her report of an
interview with him: on the race
question by producing her on-the-
spot notes to sustain her story
But “Pancho,” as he is some-
times called, has won most of his
fights, including the one with
city officials of Austin when he
was handed a parking ticket and
refused to pay the fine.
Clamping his pipe between his
teeth, the stocky, ruddy-cheeked
rancher-educator defied them to
make him pay.
The few fights he has lost do
not discourage him. Take for in-
stance the time the university ig-
nored his protests against the
architecture for present new build-
ings. It wasn’t typically Texan,
Dobie complained.
Another highly-publicized Dobie
dispute was with Texas Lt. Gov.
John Lee Smith who denounced
the noted Texas writer for calling
Davy Crockett “ignorant.” Friends
of Dobie say what-he meant was
that Davy was “illiterate.”
But friend and foe alike concede
that Dobie is a sincere man. And
he comes by the big hat and boots
he frequently wears about the
campus quite naturally. He was
born in Refugio county, Texas, in
1888 when ranching—amd not oil
—was a means of living there. He
was a school principal at Alpine,
also in the cattle country, and
ranched after coming back from
field artillery service in World
Most young mothers use this modem
way to relieve miseries of children’s
colds. At bedtime they rub Vicks
VapoRub on throat, chest and back.
Grand relief starts as VapoRub...
PENETRATES to* upper bronchial
tubes with its special medicinal vapors,
STIMULATES chest and back sur-
faces like a warming poultice.
Often by morning most of the
misery of the cold is gone! Remember—
ONLY VAPORUB Gives You this spe-
cial double action. It’s time-nested,
home-proved... the Ipest-known home
remedy for reliev- a a • gm
ing miseries of.gk# | %0 9
children’s colds. ▼ VAPORUB
COFFEE
AT MANGAN’S
Typical of Ennis, the friendly, coffee table
where friends gather for good coffee and to
MEET THEIR FRIENDS
AT
MANGAN'S
He has been professor of English
at Southwestern University, sec-
retary to its president; and is now
full professor of English at Texas
U
A “Dobie for Governor” move-
ment got underway while Dobie
was away at Cambridge, but he
soon waved that aside. Returning
from overseas he announced he
Grapefruit »
Oranges» •
e e 6C
e e e 8C
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
POTATOES, California, Burbank
______lb. 5c
GREEN BEANS, Fancy Louisiana
lb. 14c
TOMATOES, California, Pink
........lb. 14c
CELERY, California, jumbo stalk
each 19c
GRAPES; White Malagar
. v__
2 lbs. for 25c
Dorothy’s
Pie Dough
pkg. 150
Gladiola
FLOUR
25 11). 15
bag mt
Bright and Early
Coffee
_________380
Favorite Brand
Spanish Olives
n°. s
bottle ----
MEAL
5 bag _____ 420
Sun-Maid
Raisins
5A__340
Hunt’s Supreme Quality
Prune Plums
can6--------- 300
Silver Fish
Maine Sea
Herring
can__________ 100
Cloths Pins
dozen ------- 1 fU 0
Ravo
Purex
quart 1
bottle _ - - -
Epsom Salts
5 bag . . 220
Washing Powder
220
RAINS
CASH GROCERY COMPANY
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Nowlin, R. W. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 260, Ed. 1 Friday, November 1, 1946, newspaper, November 1, 1946; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth782296/m1/4/?rotate=270: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.