The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 157, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 6, 1954 Page: 2 of 6
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O — ENMS Daily news —
Tuiuluv ,K veiling, July b, l»34
■ r- > -------------
EDITORIAL COMMENT
Lying and Cheating
Ricochet Romance
Somebody’s falling down on the job.
The other days It was announced that
three out of every four school and college
otpdriits, in « irvrni Nc>' Jet'sej JHHji,
"brushed aside lying and cheating as acts
which are not considered delinquent.” The
- word comes from the state’s Seuutor Hubert
- C. Hendrickson. And lie added that substan-
tial tou t ions of the 8,5Uq students {Hilled
could see no delinquency traits in wanton de-
struction of property and in immorality.
Now this thought must be taken into
consideration: Surveys involving students
are subject to some discounting on account
of the frequent tenency of the youths quizzed
to offer unusual replies because of a mis-
taken idea of humor.
Still—even allowing for this—the report
is disturbing.
Isn’t it true that there is too much of
the idea that only results mean anything;
th/it the methods used don’t matter?
Now that, of course, is a ruinous atti-
tude.
Out who’s at the bottom of it?
Shouldn’t the oldsters get busy and
clean their own house.
Consider, for instance, the McCarthy-
Army hearing. Everybody says—and knows
—"somebody lied.” And the whole thing
went into every home where there’s a TV’
set.
What sort of example is being set for
future generations—there, and ih some other
high places? And how, steadfast are folks
generally, o\er the country, in principles of
honesty and fair play? i
Too many people attach little import-1
ance to that precious gem. Integrity. Con-j
sider the results!
(MOOTING It*
(East) BREEZE
to enenaiy bum,
Where RaHiaa4« u4
Cotteu Fields Meet,
k< the tut Broom
Gently Touches
the Brew.
In planning a summer vacation, how
about planning at least a small part of it for
just plain relaxing. Isn't it sort of foolish to
fix it so that it leaves the vacationist ex-
hausted? Or do some people like to start
back to work whipped down?
The circuit rider was asking the hill-1
billy girl if he could speak to her father.
"Nuw, sir,” said the girl, "Daddy’s in
the pen.”
"Well then,” said the minister, "What
about your mother”?
"Mamma’s in the county sanitarium,”
said the girl, "she was seein’ things.” <
"Perhaps I could speak to your brother,”
said the minister.
"Naw,” said the girl, "he's away at
Harvard.”
"Oh," said the minister, brightening, i
"That’s fine, what is he studying?”
“He ain’t studying nothin’,” said the
girl, "they’re studying him."—(Gilcrafter). I
Weigh what the candidates have to say—
in print, in person. That’s paid of the formu-
la for an informed electorate.
Eden Said Red China Sure to Enter U.N.
11:00—»1* News; Tax Quinn, <2(
To Veterans. <3> News; Orch. i*.
Rhythm Caravan.
11:30— < 1 • Tex Quinn. (2) Melody
t3» 4th Army Review, «41 Rhythm
Caravan.
tt:00 11) oc#n-o«r, t2> sign-ott
«3) Sit<n Off, «4* S.gn Off.
I What’s Doin’
I — ,vAIH© *■»
UBTKB AS FOLLOWS i
1 (1)—WFAA-WBAf—5*6.
(*)—WFAA-WBAP-5W.
j <S)-«HLD—1664.
(4)—WER—U1A
, 6:<M>— <l> Man On The Go. <2>
John Vandercook, «3 ► Tenn. Ernie,
I (4) Fulton Lewis.
4:30— (1) News; M. B“aUy, <2>
Silver Eagle, tSt Peter L Hayes, <4>
1 Gabriel Heattcr
I.-00-It Happened To You, *2) J.
Oreg.-on. *3) People Are Punny, *4)
Sport.-,; BlUboarc.
fjBB—<i> Barrie Craig. Investigator. Maq|> San Antonio
<2i jack Gregson, <3» Suspense, U>
* San Antonio, July 0 <UPi .—
Coroner E. H. Calvert says Cliere
1:40—<t> Dragnet, t2) America's j0 Horton. 3. wa, dead belore she
was criminally assuulted in a gravel
pit southwest of here Sunday.
— Motion Pictures —
PLAZA—"Them."
GK *N|i—“Titanic.**
VILLAGE URIVE-IN—“From Here
To Eternity.”
Tot Aged 3 Dead
Before Assaulted
Town Meeting, tl) Johnny Dollar,
(4) Baseball.
4:44—<)> Swayse, N; Crune, <2>
America's Town Meeting, »3* Gov.
Shivers. (4) Baseball
Mol lie, (21
Mr. Keen,
4:44—U) Fibber and
Headline Edition, »J)
(4i Baseball.
4:34—il) Stars From Paris, i2»
Invitation To Music, <3> Sports:
Orch. (41 Baseball
News; E. Queen, <2>
News, (41 State of fixe
I4i44-<i»
Net^s. <3)
Nat'on.
J0:34»-(l) T. Quinn. Nightwatchin*n
*2) Top Tunes. (3) Wrestling, (4)
Mickey Splllane.
I Village Drive-In
V. Bins; 74 PtMMBf W
Sunday - Mondpy - Tuesday
PLAZA
Tuesday - Wednesday
M-G-M's DIFFERENT DRAMA!
IbMESSEE CHAMP
SHELtEY WWTEKS
V-SiStJ „MRYIUI martih
Plus Shofts
•HK
WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND drastic action, but said he could not consult.!
Ilv DKEW I'KARSON ljuirks uf Pipl^y-Thk BritUh!
Washington.—It’s now possible for Sen- couldn't understand why Eisenhower insisted I
ators and diplomats to get a better appraisal "tlfcit they see the movie, "The Student!
of the Churchill-Eisenhower talks. More de- Prince.” They sat through ihe showing in the j,
tails of the tulks are also leaking out. Here !VW®1.' White House, but Were bored stiff.]
BLACKWOOD French Bombers
Roaring South to
-pn-
BRIDGE
are some of the highlights, plus the interpre-
tations of the diplomats:
Recognition of Red China—What teed
off Senator Knovvland into threatening to
f£&ign as Kepublican Senate lfeader was a
(Confidential argument made by British For-
eign Minister Hden that it was inevitable
Red ( hina would enter the United Nations
within a year, therefore it was belter'for the
Allies to move for its admission'soon in order
to get concessions in return . . ..What Eden
referred to was the fact that Rad China had
enough votes to get into the U.N,<. assembly
next September, and there was no. way the
United States or anyone else could stop it.
The United States could veto membership
on the U.N. security • council, though not on
the general assembly ... A similar argu-
ment was made by John Foster Dulles' law
partner, Arthur Dean, in a background talk
with newsmen last winter. Dean, then chief
U.S. envoy for the Korean peace talks, told
newsmen there were signs of friction be-
tween Russia and China, that American rec-
ognition of Red China would help to wean
her away from Moscow . . . Earlier, Vice
President Nixon, while in Formosa, made a
speech assuring Chiang Kai-shek that Red
China would never be recognized. Later he
got a cable from the State Department ad-
vising him not to close this door, that Red
China might be recognized in return for
peace in Korea . . . Nixon later changed his
line, told Prime Minister Nehru and other
Middle East leaders that if China was rea-
sonable she might be admitted to the U.N.
. . . All this made Senator Knowland and
other China-lobby Senators hit the ceiling.
, . . Knowland, w ho has campaigned so pas-
sionately for Chiang Kai-shek that lie’s
sometimes called ‘The Senator from For-
mosa,” really means it when he talks about
resigning as majority leader if Red China is
admitted to the U.N.
Guatemala and British—Secretary
Dulles seemed preoccupied with Guatemala,
during part of the Churchill talks. He kept
coming back to that subject. After various
points on tile agenda had been discussed,
Dulles would come back to Guatemala again.
. . . Communism is getting a foothold in the
Western Hemisphere, Dulles argued. The
question is vital to us, and Great Britain will
have to back us up .... What stuck in his
craw was the fact that the British had ab-
stained from voting when the question of
the Guatemalan revolt came up for discus-
sion at the U.N. security council . . . “What
did you want us to do?” was the essence of
Eden's reply. "Your Ambassador Mr. Lodge
had reminded us only 10 days ago that it
would be a shame if the time ever came
when a little nation couldn’t present its case
before the security council. Since we could
not very well vote against letting Guatemala
present its case, we tried to help you by ab-
staining.”
A-Bomb Talks—One of the most vital
questions discussed was use of the A-bomb.
Churchill made this one of the most import-
ant points of his entire visit. He said that
Britain must be notified und consulted if the
United States intended to drop the atom or
hydrogen bomb . . . Churchill had once told
the House of Commons that he had such an
agreement from the White House, only to
have it denied in Washington—much to his
embarrassment; so he tried hard to get such
an agreement from the President on this
trip. He said he had to have such an assur-
ance, or there was no use talking about unv-
thing else , . . Eisenhower, however, stall-
ed .. . He said he believed in the principle
of consultation, but under the law govern-
ing the Htonybonib hv could not consult. He
agreed to nhtify England in case of such
444 ARP DEFENSIVE PLAY
BRINGS STRATEGY SWITCH
Mr. Meek set Mr. Champion
back on his heels with a beauti-
ful defensive pixy in this hand.
Mr. Champion was groggy but
»IP*. Shaking it off he came
Besides, the air conditioning was turned up t
so high that they almost caught pneumonia.
They still don’t know why thev had to sit
through such an ordeal . . . Winston Chur-
chill resented any attempts to help him be-
cause of his age. At the airport when C-ana- gjNm
dian hoieigu Minister Lester Pearson start- Lack with a brilliant play of hi*
ed to help him upstairs, Winnie pushed him own wrap up three no trump,
aside, went up tlie stairs, then turned round South Dealer
at Pearson und made a face . . . Anthony 'Both sides vulnerable
Eden and John Foster Dulles were sore as! North <Mr. Daiei
blazes at each other over Eden’s critical ' *~u 3
speech in the House of Commons, but patch- M e 4 3
ed up their differences. They were soon call-
ing each other "Anthony" and "Foster" . . .
Ike failed to use FDR’s tactic for getting
some sleep during the Churchill visit. As a
result the prime minister kept him up every
night until 2 a.m. Roosevelt got around tlvese j
later sessions by scheduling early-morning
sessions so that Winnie could get no sleep iu
the morning. He also scheduled afternoon i
sessions. Ordinarily the prime minister sleeps
most of the duy, works most of the night
Nazi Reid Marshal Is
Given Parole Release
Landeberg, Germany, July 6 »UP>.
—Nazi Field Marshal Erhard Milch,
former inspector general of Adolph
Hanoi, July 6 «UP>.—french! Hitler's Luftwaffe,
bombers roared south from Hanoi leaseti on -IJarole
Batter Commies
has
from
West
• Mr. Meek)
4 -q M th AT'
V-Q
4 -J 10 9 2
J 4
4—6 5 3
4k—A K Q 9 6
East
• Mr. Dale)
A-K J
J 10 9 7 5
4-Q 8
A 10 8 7 3
South (Mr. Champion)
A-A 6 4
V—A K 6 2
4—A K 7 4
*—5 2
been re- I
the War
. . . . „ Grimes Prison here,
j today to strike at Communist troops Milch, 62 was Hermann Ooer_ ,
building up for u possible show- Uig’s deputy in the Luftwaffe. He i
down battle lor the Red River delta. I was the only hagh-ranking Jew to i
i B-26’s dropped one-thousand have kept ids post under Hitler a!- 1
pound bombs on rebet columns nvov- | though he fell into disfavor before !
ing north in the wake of the French, Gw end of the war.
forces who were ordered to uban-1 Milch was sentenced to life im- ,
don the southern delta. The bombers prisonment in 1W6 for his part ini
concentrated their strikes on the exploiting slave labor. , |
enemy forces massing at Hungyen, -----
28 miles southeast of Hanoi. LJST OF TABERNACLE
________________ EVENTS IS PRESENTED
! Tfie Tabernacie Baptist Church
! announcement was inadvertently
'omitted from the church page Sat-
urday, thus events there for the
GRAMD
Tuesday & Wednesday
Double Feature
Adult 25c Children 10c
ftfflimMCTiHftTCHtfirnifT
wmmmvmimm
>cautaa»c m
Wednesday - Thursday -
■ :UMH3'Ui:iil7Ul:llk
VICTOR HUGO'S
THE
HUNCHBACK
notrTdame
—ALSO-
E. V. Clark Dies
At Daughter’s Home
“THE SUN
SHINES BRIGHT’
Directed by JOHN FORD
A BWUMLIC MCTUH4
Plus Shorts
below: 1
WEDNESDAY:
j E. V. Clark, resident of Emus for a-m.—WMU meeting at t
many years, died at the home of t'*>urch for business and visitatii
his daughter, Mrs. Forrrest Murphy, The nursery and cliildren's orga
309 East Brown Street around 3:30 meet at the church.
North
2-A
But FDR kept hina awake all day, so he had The Bidding;
to go to bed at night. j South west
Irked Australia—Australia’s Foreign a—NT ah Pajs
Minister Casey left town boiling mad at Mr Meek opened the 7 of spades
Churchill and Eden. Casev felt the British and his partner’s king held the trick,
were giving him the deep-freeze treatment j The luck of »pades was returned and
because he was siding with the U.S.A. ow t!rL,Chw,ip1^1 ducked Ml’ }
l„,j oufi-i otl . . . . . .. . ... * 'Meek overtook with the queen und
Indo-Clu a. They suspected him of plotting I ^ a third round of the suit. The
with Dulles to loice Britain to stop stalling ac** won, u diamond went on from I
about Indo-Ghina . . . Casey got to see dummy and Mr. aui dropped a
Churchill only once—at a White House din-:small heart.
ner to which lie was invited by President Mr. champion saw that he had I
Eisenhower .... Later, Canadian Foreign: llv*‘ ®ure uick* ou^We of clubs with
Minister Pearson, in a move to keep Casev ,0 th** hoard only in clubs,
from exploding, gave a dinner in his honor! i
at the Canadian embassy . lint Casey l,^ Thls woulll slvt hlm ,our|
wasil t fooled, tUld he hu»s now decicjed to put iclub tricks if the suit broke HO worse I
Australia in a Southeast Asia alliance whe- than 4-2.
ther Britain comes in or not. -r fixes this —
No American Troops—Eisenhower in- j But Mr. Meek loused up this plan j
formed Winnie that the United States will verv effectively, on the first club
go along with an Indo-China partition plan ***? ^ W€“‘ rJ*ht uj . tl(ie
even though it gives Hanoi, t% Bad River »•j
delta, and two-thirds of Vietnam to the Cohi- Hr
munists . . . Eisenhower told Churchill he hce, shaking his head sadly,
does not like the truce plan the French are He couldn't duck a *ecnnd club!
negotiating with the Communists, but the; fe»d toward Mr. Abel because he |
only way to stop it would be to send Ameri- oi^ club left in his hand,
can troops to Indo-China. And, said Eisen- Aftcr 3lvillK the situation a lot
hower, this would be suicide because it would uf
bog down the United States in an endless
Asiatic war, leaving Europe wide open to at-
tack . . . Churchill was somewhat startled
by Eisenhower’s views because he thought
the President, acting on advice from Admiral
Radford, would demand that Britain join in
some kind of Indo-China intervention.!^ He followed with the
Cburrhi" has ^ informed M« rabin.t that
the United States had done a complete about- ijea<j.
face and is less interested in fighting in Jndo-' After winning two hearts fur his
China than is Britain—if that is possible. side's third and fourth tricks. Mr.
Abel was left with the 10 and 8 of
o'clock this Afternoon. He had been
ill for more than a year.
East Funeral arrangements are pending
Pass with the Bunch Funeral Home.
7;30 pun.—Prayer meeting.
8:30 p.m.—Choir rehearsal
SATURDAY:
10:30 pjn.—Primary choir rehear-
sal.
CHARLES F. GOLDEN
Savings Plans
Mortgage Cancellation
Hospitalization • Polio
Life Insurance —
Southwest Reserve Life Ins. Co.
7D0VS NE Main Ennis, Texas
Phone 436-J
thought, ne decided dummy's
nine of clubs might be the answer
to his problem. He caslied the king
of clubs just in case Mr Meek had
lalse-carcted with an original hold-
mg of Jack-ten doubleton.
— ABEL GETS LEAD —
Then he cashed the ace and king
clubs. And waiting with open arms
in dummy were the queen and nine.
GET OUR PRICES
BEFORE YOU BUY
KUUW AIK LUKUII lUIMfcK*
OR EVAPORATIVE COOLERS
LET US BID ON YOUR AIR CONDITIONING. WE WILL
ARRANGE TERMS TO SUIT YOUR BUDGET.
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TONIGHT ON
TV
,i Tuesday,
Central Standard Time
Channel 8
Channel 4
Channel 5
WFAA-TV
KRLD-TV
WBAP-TV
4:04 Kiddie Karnival:
1 Martha McDonald .Movie Marquee
j 4:13 Capt. Bop & Guests
Kitchen
Ann Alden
4i34 Frontier Playhouse
1 “
; Bobby Peters
4:45
Party Time
Show
f
ji 5:04 Time loi Magic
Party Time
j 3ee Saw Zjo
j 5:15 John Daly
1 ” " "
5:30 World of Mr. Sweeney
Douglas Edwards
| ” ; Kiddie Hits
5:46 News Caravan
.
Leslie Hackler
, World, Local News
6:40 Evening Edition
News
’Cowboy Thrills
1 6:16 Baseball Hall of Fame
Outdoor Sports
’* ; Weather
j 6:36 Twenty Questions
Juvenile Jury
Superman
1, 6:45
1 »'
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PHONE 412
TELEVISIONS
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— SPECIAL THIS WEEK —
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3ummer
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Playhoiua*
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beauty of the
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| 7:46 "Haven’s End,”
Forest
Of 1954
| 5:46 Howard Lindsay,
Danger
Truth Or
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Consequences
1:36 Governor Allan Sill vers
Wrestling
Mr. and Mrs.
1 5:46 Wrestling
,,
North
5:04 Wrestling
Wrestling
Jim Wright
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Little Theater
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Arthur Murray
0:45
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14:44 Final Edition
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14:34 "Atlantic City."
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Together”
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»
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11:30 Vespers, Sign Off
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Casebolt, Floyd. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 157, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 6, 1954, newspaper, July 6, 1954; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth782552/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.