The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 192, Ed. 1 Monday, August 16, 1954 Page: 1 of 4
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Harvey G. Rust
Microfilm Service
Co* Box 8066
Dallas, Texas
& S-ikies
— ENNIS QUOTES —
WATER COMMISSIONER "CAC-
TUS" HINDMAN says:
"There should be quite a few
takers for that lake silt we’re offer-
ing (dug from a pump hole* us U's
fine soil and all free."
THE ENNIS DAILY NEWS
WLiTULK fcOKLi A*T
Fair and hot tonight and Tursday,
with the big heat temperature bath
days around 101. Low tonight near
IN THE 63rd YEAR
NEA TELEPHOTO—FULL LEASED UNITED PRESS WIRE
ENNI8, ELIJS COUNTY, TEXAS
MONDAY EVENING, AUGUST 16, 1954
NO. 192
Ex-Frog Star ;
Suffers From
Road Mishap '
! T-ittit: Aikinaa/—A former
Texas (X.ristian University foot- <
ball star—Mor«un WllUains—re- j
mains In “lair" condition at a Lit-
tle Ruck hospital from injuries suf-'
lered in u highway accident. J
) The 21-year-old athlete was re-
; turning l>ome from the Detroit j
Lions and College All-Stars game j
at Chicago. He was a member of |
, tile All-Stars squad. |
( Williams suffered a skull fracture i
when the car in which he was rid-
I ing overturned on highway 67 near,
Little Rock.
* Williams was co-euptain of the |
j 10r>3 T-C-U team and was voted; is a box score on President Elsen-
thc most valuable lineman
Southwest Conference.
I State Trooper Maurice Oatelv _
-says the player's car overturned oll | The Pi’esldeiit signed tax revision
'u curve. Hh. brother. 17-year-old Providing one and one-
Scottie Williams, was dr iving. J lhll'd million dollar saving to corp-
Tlie younger boy was quoted as Witon? and selected groups of In-
say l*g he had become "tiredi and I dlviduuls.
sleepy" at the wheel.
Polio Emergency Campaign, on
Voluntary Ba?ris, Opens Here
Ike Program i
Of Legislation ;
Is Box-Scored
•• \ I
Washington, Aqg. 16 i UP i.-Here j
In theihower's legislative program:
Taxes
PORTRAIT OF A PRINCESS—Britain’s Princess Anne
posed specjajly for this Fourth Birthday Portrait, by
Marcus Adams. She celebrated her birthday August 15,
and wore a frock of jfreen and white Tana Lawn when
sitting for the portrait. (NEA TelepTiotp)
Ennis Man Chairman
Ot Stock Show Tour
ENNIS
Echoes
By Cawy
“Every human being is in-
tended to have a character of
bis own; to be what no other
is, and to do what no other can
do.”
—(.William Ei|ery CJuuming).
■ Rcbft-t Muir head, Ennis business-?
[ man, will serve as chairman of arj
| aJl-day tour to advertise the Ellis
j County purebred Livestock Asso-
ciation's Show' and Rodeo Monday,
: August 23. The tour will include El*
I Iis County cities and probably Cor*
alcana. Cleburne and Hillsboro.
| Chairman Muirhead urged all El-
I lis Countlans who can make the
I tour on August 23 to do so. He ask-
| ed that horses and trailers be
.brought along to help advertise the
3-day livestock show- and rodeo to
- be hrjd at the association grounds
iin Waxahachle/"
Anti-Subversive
The Senate passed a bill to out-
,law the Cummunlst Party and Im-
jpose fines and Jail terms on active
member's. The House is due to vote
| on its own version.
Parr Attorney
To Run for DA
In 79th Dist.
Rio Grande City, Tex.. Aug. »« ,.UUUDrt<
tUP».—One of George Parr's law-j ' .
vers says today he will run for dis- i on> c
trict attorney of the 79th District as I »0,ui* * «PP‘?ved a compro- !
an "Independent" candidate. |™J“e W» to revise a tonne laws. But -
The lawyer, Gerald Weatherly of Sena|f “fnt lt,.bftck. °. con‘
Rio Grande City, will oppose Sam £fnt* "lth "«tructions to insure
the sharing of patents on aomic
discoveries by private firms.
j Farm '|
i Thj 8enate and House passed
I bills establishing flexible price sup- «
(ports at 82-j to 90 per cent of par-1
:ity. A conference committee stalled £
! on a House proposal to boost dairy i '
j The polio emergency campaign
| opened officially today and. in
1 Enins it will be on a voluntary basis.
Chapter Chairman W. R .Sch-
1 weeti said that is I* hoped the con-
j tributlon from Ennis will reach $1,-
000.
There air two phases of the cam-
1 puign here: Boy Scouts have placed
coin conUners In stares and of-
fices uud coin folders are being
mailed to boxholders, so that all
, may have easy opportunity to give.
No solicitation, other than these
arrangement!), w 11 be conducted.
The unusual emergency comes as
the polio season reaches its height—
1 but with national March of Dimes
fund at least $20,000,000 short of
> 1994 needs.
"Tile slicrUge is serious.” Mr.
Schween said.
• We must have more money to
(jay for a double load—record po-
GILHKKT
Ennis Group to
Hear Head of
BLF&E, Mineola
Union action on the community
and industrial front» to romb&t
adverse economic pressures will be
Ho patient cure and the polio pre- subjected to close study by Central
vcnt.un program with its thrill ng uml EaJjt Texas engine men, Jn-
| trope for the future. Polio takes no eluding a number from Kants,
vacation.
"Patients need help now. The pre-
ventive program must not be> halt-
ed "
Burris of Alice, who vigorously op-
poses Parr. Buria defeated incum-
bent Disttct Attorney Raeburn Nor-
ris in the Democratic primary.
Said Weatlierly: "I think our
Foreign Aid
A $3,000,000,000 authorization is
awaiting President's signature. An
district needs is independent, non- IZZlT" W1 * * confi;reBce
partisan officials. I am tired of the I ’
partisan, mud-slinging mesa things
have gotton into.
SEE WHAT THEY MISSED—Sj?t. Llewellyn Uuldwiu,
of Pittstown, Pa., displays his $1200 reinlistment pay
which bandits missed when they held up the Andrews
Air Force Base, Md., bank, and made off with an esti-
mated $124,038. The absent-minded ‘robbers forgot to
search the customers. Sgt. Charles Pyles, at right, looks
on with admiration at Sgt, Baldwin’s triumphant dis-
play. (NEA Telephoto)
IOOF Pilgrimage to
Home Here Sept. 5
Mrs. T, J. Ford, 98,
Dies, Rites Today
meeting August 19 in Mineola, wtth
headquarters at Beckham Hote,l.
it was announced today.
H. E. Ollbcrt of Cleveland, inter-
national president ot the Bruther-
hood of Locomotive Fireman and
Enghuvncn. will be the principal
speaker at the eleventh meet'ng of
sixteen local lodges of the organ-
ization. The lodges are, clustered
within a 250-mile radius of Mine-
i (olu
Mrs T. J. Ford died at Ennis Mu-. During the day-long rally, which
i nlcipHl Hospital Saturday twenlng, incudes sessions of the BLF<StE
lex, than three weeks before her; Ladles' Society as well u.s union
89th birthday. Blie had betyi a pa- i meetings. Mi Gilbert will make
| Hunt in the hospital sine* breaking I three addresses He w II address a
her hip in a fall two weeks ago. closed meeting of the union mem*
Mrs. Ford made her home with her be.nj and is to be featured speaker
j three da ugh ttys and came to Emits at a banquet of the Brotherhood
four months ago to 8|>end a. yew «nd its guests in the evening,
here with Mrs 8 R Carry . The union leader also has ac-
Mrs. FOrd was born in Fayette, eepted an invitation to address th*
Alabamu, September 2. 1868, and Lions Club. *
I came to Texas with her parents, I His address at the closed meeting
•»•*» •«. »sr.'S5;vru,i »•! Parts of Texas
Persons who will participate in ^ support and Cel1’’
in- ith? ail-day tour are asked no meet suPP°r»' v. , I Housing
As the plea goes out for addi- at the livestock show grounds and I1VW J ““ J*have\ried 1 The President signed a bill easing
tional backing, through an enter- be ready to leave at 8 a,m„ Mr. -'earb wat raice,s nave trie a pHA morlgajp? ttnd cracking
gency measure, for the battle Muirhead stated. Plans for the tour P*'ove Ulatf tne Democratic liom- down on profiteering builders. The
against that dreaded malady, po- were announced at a meeting »f , ™lon ^ n‘|t tq“lva“J‘ “ 0,1 public housing features fall short of
SfeSSC—^ | 1»0 Pan), toroe, b^
president of the National Foundn- A parade on the opening day of: write-in candidate in tlie, general j A extending coverage was
tion for Infantile Paralysis. "This! the livestock and rodeo will be., election against Judge Buni J14**"*’ passed by both Hiuusls. A con-
year confronts us with the groat- (staged at 5 p in. on August 26 at who had won the primary. The offi-, f<renw committee is ironing out
est challenge of any in the, history | Courthouse square, it was an- cial results showed the write-in et- djfferences
of the fight against polio, with noupced. The parade will form at fort was successful .but Aity. Gpn.
commitments for a polio preven- the livestock giounds. John Beu Shcpperri refused to ap-
tion program of staggering size and '
the necessity of providing aid to a 11 ^ dl“loa*d at ‘he. f|
^ meeting of directors that T. C., dlcJ not an Lwue o{ lt Theie is liUle hope for effort* to
Jenkins, who is the approved Judge, Weatherly has represented Parr j U Presldent has signed
record number of polio patients
And he, concludes: "And I know the
American public does not want to
for the State Fh.t of Texas has been |
; named judge of the quarter horse |
• • ......- ---- -------------- o, quarier ^!'^ “» W. -Abmt.Uon
The House passed saven per cent
He M » ,r„up o( ™ »**>! '
eluding: No,rig. gu,d „*endM ti i
Idea ot his candidacy. "I lold OmmiS^r " " ’"-f1" ® "
gentlemen I was and am delighted ,uU £**‘*te “bbatently,
with the idea." he said. ' postal rate increases ° COmpan 0,1 Plans art complete for the annual. and Co'stcunu, which will be con-, John Randolph and Martha Van- i is expected to deal with both long
Weatherly, asked if Parr had! ‘ DeW‘ IOOF Home pilgrimage to Knots ducted Sunday, Sept. 3. : hoose, Yerby when she was five! range objectives oi trfp BLF&E and
tiinSS." ' ■ T*le 8en*‘« approved a temp-1 ^ r T Lei and s. Dupree. Ualjas linker' of T1'c *uh lmm,dHUJ ln Crests arising
know, but I suppose George Farr is ........ ... , II---X T------ n treasurer ^ nr“1' Boahttm nud luU?d Jlved : <»o»n wage negot.ations with U. 8.
! ■‘•W* in Waca and cowush, near Whitney, railroads
Ooi-slSu? IOOF'14*Kerne * ourliiK t ie ^ Aft®r hW ir“M',“4gc Mt CuWash The' banquet address will be an
moniiiri 10°* ” 1 B I Mrs. Ford we.nl wlUi her husband1 extension of those remarks and will
j to Kim bell where he was H partner include views on national and in-
I , A cornel .stone will be laid fqr a bis brother, H. C. Ford, In ternattonal affairs ns they, affect
i new convaksceut wing for the the Merchantile Huddle and Harness , rail workers, it Is ant'eipated.
! IOOF Home for the Aged at Ennis j Company. ! Before, the Lions Club. Mr. Gll-
. during the afternoon. H H. Lum- In 1881, Hbout the time the Tex- bert Is reported planning to dis-
! mus, Ennis, grand representative | «» Central Railroad reached there, cuss efforts to establish better un-
Widely scattered thundershower ac- ■ aiK| g-rfhe (,f the Grand Encamp-j Mr. und Mrs. Ford moved Ui Mor- i derstaruling between management
j tivity is predicted toduy for the nil.nt wm presidl, j gan where tlwy made their homeland labor and extension of coop-
Texas coastal belt, the Panhandle The cumalescent wir.g will con- , until he died In 1926. oration between the two in area*
and west of the Pecos River. But tain twenty-five rooms. Mis. Ford was a. member of the of mutual interest
I elsewhere the Lone Star State is in v. I, Grounds of Longview is
for another sun-drenched day of! grandmaster and Maude Bussard
heat. Some showers fell in South j Cf Houston is president of the
Texas yesterday and during the, Rebeknh Assembly of Texas.
;revive me rresmem nus s.gnea . bHl 28 inch was, ---:-—
(into law bills establishing hospitals ! th® lar8es'f »n'«surable amount
' Traces of moisture were reported. L|o/mnA%I/AI*C Ta
as fnr inland as Austin. San An-1 LldvIlllUWvD lU
tonio and Laredo-—and the coastal'
Thundershower
Scenes Today
Fort Worth, Aug. 16 'UP).
The
Health
Rouse, killed
President’s
drl.es jeopardised in tin. year oi “L‘L°S’!"n“wC ^ i • «“*to) *“»•> ■»» opbow , n^*Ti5SlW Mil «u from Vlctorl. lo the Lo»er Rio .. v T
er-j? - ,x iz m ^ a—-!**-»** sr*vulley h*M>m'ra i N.Y. Tomorrow
roe, tn.s belief. ..Lets di.teiy ^ A mercury epreod m TeW ye,, j
“Love makes the world go
around—with a worried expres-
sion.'’
— (Hudson).
, event wa.s started.
I>t f i J 4 ■
Charles Huff, association secre-
tary, said several Future Farmers
of America entries have been re-
It is necessary to get the signa-, House uasaed a bill to admit tarday was only 15 degree* from 90 j Washington, D.C.. Aug. 15 <UP). I Yerby of Ontario, New York died sentaMvc, orge-nir-r, a
lures of 500 persons who did not',pawai, The senate paa,ed a bill to 01 Murfa- Corpus Christi and Gal-j-President und Mrs. Elsenhower1 June 17 und J. T. Yerby of Bowie the president's office,
iadmit Hawaii and Alaska. The : wrttm to 105 , P’^lo. t Other, wlli n^o New York CUy ^morrow
TTo llic ' -___________I......I
Owen Satterfield got, quite, a Jolt celved for the livestock show.
ths morning. "Wife wrote me her- --
hotel bill at Mexico City is $200 a j
day,” said the Ennis railroad man. [ | | g±rj
•"men l tnougnt hdoui u a mm- (.liflio LLUli
ute—and it looked better, as she no
doubt meant pesos, and there's a
vast difference."
Lions Leaders to
Hold Meet at 8
One day *o«n The New* will
publish an explanation of what
the committee of ninety re-
viewers who made the selection
of non-objectionable — and
cuMed the objectionable—has to
*ay abc-ut what is good and
What is bad literature for the
boys and girl*. It Is quite in-
teresting—and will be valuable
Information. It gives a “yard-
stick."
Guy Henry, president of the En-
i nis Lions Club, has called a meet- Instrumental
Weatherly's name on the general
election ballot.
Weatherly said: "I have all the
qualifications for district attorney.
I am independent uOii-parLUr&n.
I deplore mucUslinglng. I have
practiced In every county of this
district for about twenty years,"
Weatherly was bom In Brunswick.
Ga. He was at one time associated
with the law firm of Arthuj- Oar- J
field Hayes in New York dnd was i
in getting Hayes to j
House Rules Committee
killed Highs yesterday included
chances of cither territory being ad- Texarkana, 102 at Wichita Falls, congressional elections,
mitted by refusing to consider the! Mineral Wells and Fort Worth, 101 White House News Secretary
Senate bill. al Tyler, Sherman and Childress,, James Hagerly said the President;
Seaway and 100 at Dallas. Waco and June
Congress passed and the Presi- t*on-
deni signed legislation authorizing j —temperatures eerly **'•> for the hour's flight to Ne*^ Yorlf
United States participation in the! morning ranged from 65 degrees at \ After landing at Marine Terml
und Mrs. Elsenhower will u»ke He hr,id at Morgan at 3 pm.
at about 8:20 a.m. Washington time! Grandson* who .served as pall
Baptist Church at Morgan The comparatively youthful
SurVivors include two sons, M. D% Brotherhood chief at 48 years of
Ford of Austin and T B. Ford of age. one, of the youngest chief exe-
! Fort Worth: three daughters, Mrs. j cutives hra-.i'ng a major labor ot-
| 8. R. Curry of Ennis, Mrs. C. C j genlzatlon will draw upon exper-
1 Nichols of DeLeon and Mr*. L. E itnee gained during h s steady climb
I Tennlson of Clifton; one brother,! in the labor movement. He wag
! L. M Yerby of Panama City, Fla.; | electr.d president of the enging-
i ten grandchildren, thirteen great men's organization in July, 1953,
; grandchildren u-tid one grc.'it grand- j being elevated iroin the past of
I child. ! vice - pres'dent,
| Mrs. Ford had lost two brothers Before that he had served as k)-
i in the last three months. J. T. c«l lodge officer, legislative repre-
Yerby of Ontario, New York died aentative, organism,-, an assistant in
and member
died August 6. ; or the BLF&E board of director*.
Funeral sorvioj.s were held at Mr. Ollbert shouldered union
Keever Chapel Ht 10 a.m. toduy with learership Jan ns the, business
the Rev. Robert C, Fling officiating slump began adding It* we ght to
Burial and graveside rites were | the severe strain* of technological
displacement of locomotive en-
ginemen resulting from increasing
bearers were Ford Curry and Albert use of diesels Under his leadershiu.
Williams of Ennis, Craig Nichols, the organization developed a 3-
St. Lawrence Seaway project.
Trade
The, Reciprocal Trade Act was
extended one year. The President
ms uuns «j»uo, nas caneu a meei- -——■*- — .......- " temporarily dropped a request for
I luff of the board of director* and com« Lo Texas to represeut Parr in < .7 . / . XjH
« mSh« action ,L
; o’clock tonight, at Ennis High • Feal.
SchcolCaff ter.a ((louse need painting, repair Uig?
Pending projects and several sug- ut U8 help you do th# FHA
, gested new ones will be, discussed at, rale*. termil Member of FDIC.
j the meeting. Mr. Henry said. ENNIS STATE BANK.
Marfa and Dalhart to 83 at Corpus nal LaOunrdla Airport, the Kisen-1 Temple; M/8gt. Murruy Nichols, point program "designed to
Christi.
meet
by
Mrs. F.N. Wilson
Dies Early Today
| howers will motor to 400 Broome I Randolpli Field; B<ryd Brock Milky head-on the challenge ra sed
' Street, headquarters of the board J wwi ChM SKC RalPh N*ehols. Cor- 1 tachnology."
iof elections of New York County | HU« Christi; Pierce Davidson. Rich-! First stop of the program seeks to
I President and Mrs. Eisenhower 1 free! Wallsweer, Hm»U»i; spread existing employment. Prin-
I also will apply for absentee ballot* °l'ra,d Caldwell; and John | clpal approach to this is “to provide
'for the November 5th election. | I>echlol of Midland. Inducement for more men in yard,
Bathing Beauty
Event Featured
Waxa Carnival
TRACTOR OVERTURN IS FATAL TO F=,a! B.0,in9 „f
FORMER RESIDENT OF ENNIS SUN. r°rm" “d
............ Woman Is Probed
Isaac Henry Slovak. 34-year-old
1 truck driver from Richardson, for-
A Iinthincr h#diifv r“vIpw will Tip
of^he' seventh annml | s«nd»*r when hls lr“cto[ overturn-
ed three times at the intersection
(They are registering "centrally," as
j permitted under New York laws.
Mrs. F, N Wilson died at her before the regular registration pe-
homc, 722 West Knox St., at 7.30|ri(>d opens so that they will not
a.m. today after an illness of sev- have to return from Denver to
eral weeks. She was 68 years of age,, register.
Mrs. Wilson was formerly Missi The President ohd Mrs. Elsen-
Carrie Hogge. She was the daugb*) hower will return. Immediately to
iter of the late Mr. and Mrs. T. E ' Washington after registering.
! Hqgri* and was born in .-the Pfcu
Ridge community, Feb. 19/1886 She
Mrs. Wilson was a member of the p«r year thereafter. BUDDIE rail in crushed corn flakes and fry
you con 1
— belt-line, transfer and hustling *er-
"tz; .va, cou.,,. to ^ asHr
quickie with canned M«lr.ion, Serve concerntoT’to' 'the '"sh^rt^ek ? U
o-zer baked or rlted potatoes, or olllv 4 ct.m„ an hour htghw than
mounds 0! Huffy rice. I that for the and seven dl!
worker*. An additional 28 cents on
Ha nan* ( roeigeMey hour u bring asked for the 40-hour
If haW> Tven for bununa 1 K,'0IM•, •* an Incentive toward wrder
a feature
Waxahachite Street Carnival, 7o be , J .........
sponsored by the Waxahachie Opti- ‘ of Abrams Road and Valley View
mist Club * 1 Roacl nnd crushed his head beneath
The carnival will be staged on jthe cab
thiee sloes of the Courthouse Mr. Slovak's death was the sixty- ■ _ ^
square cn Sept. 2, 3 and 4. Proceed-j second Dallas County traffic fatality' j^r
for 1984 being the twenty-eighth j wlfe/ ^’daughto^rPatoy' Jean
outside city limits. 1 gi0Vak and Unda Mae 81ovak. and
O Lee Jr., also of Richardson, j twins. Loyce and Joyce Slovak. aU
saw the acctdent and telephoned,^ Riohardson; hls parents, Mr and
Sheriff’s deputies to help him get Mrs Egnac Slovak; six sisters,
First Methodist Church
active In church affairs.
Survivors Include her
had was t>AVI8 INSURANCE AGENCY.
husband
es will go toward the maintenance
and operation of the $100,000 Waxa-
hachie Youth Center.
All Ellis County girls, age six-
teen through twenty-five, will be
eligible to compete in ^ the
beauty review. Other features
a right angle turn onto Valley
View. The tractor crashed through Shreveport. La.. Aug. 16 <UP>
a three-foot ditch and turned over | p0uce here have launched an lnves-
three times In a field. ! tlgatlon into an incident on a lone-
Funeral services for Mr. Slovak ly road In which a former Texas
Will *be held ut 2 p.ip Tuesday In { «»*n was beaten to death and a wo- ______
Merrs-Mundy-Qultl Chapel, Dallas, man companion critically hurt. The one h0n kem Wilson of Ennis; five;
dead man l. Ernest C. Burns 42 daughte„. Mrs. John P. Boren Jr.,
formerly of Linden, Tex., who had „ _ T . ,.,L n
bewr living In Bossier City, a McClendon and Mrs^D
Shreveport suburb. 1 W. Betts, all of Ennis, Mrs. Otto
The woman. Mxt. Ire«ie Oordon,; Emmons of Albuquerque. N.M . and
87, ho* been hospitalized In Shreve- Miss Martha Wilson of Cleveland,
port with a fractured skull, two Ohio; one sister, Mrs. John Wright tuat Hindman, who
broken arms and * fractured leg.
She told police she and Burns were
driving down * country road when
in butter until gently browneu.
with the Rev. B. E. Oray officiating.
Rurial will be in Restland Memorial
Mr. Slovak Is survived by hls
bathing the tractor off Slovak at 1:10 a.m. {Mrs Hershel Holt Mrs Floyd Oar*! th** upon a car blocking the
and other rides, refreshment stands ! ""^^extricat^Wo- *ftoV^n“nd “is^ Sylvia, SlovMi^al1 ■ Kribed as a "Is^e Negro^to move
1 vak • b0^' ! Of Lancaster, and lour brothers, climbed out. attacked Bums with a
cedar pole and then beat her.
and other rides, refreshment stands
and carnival booths.
The youth center, located on a
10*-acre track, includes a swim-i Sheriff Bill Decker said Slovak | John A. Slovak and Raymond L.
ming pool, a lighted Little League was traveling south an Abrams and {Slovak, both of Snnis; Theodore
baseball field and an activities that Jumpy skid marks indicated j Slovak in the Army in France, and
building. * he had tried to apply his broSgs for 4q$ O. Slovak of Dallas.
benefit* and increase in
Unemployment insurance" are fea-
tures of the second point In the
program and Mr. Gilbert will report
on gains which have been made in
all the*e since he assumed ths
presidency.
The third part of the program
includes "encouragement of expend-
ed service by the railroad*. "D*-
Water Commlnioner O. I. (Cac-i uaed lor drinking purpoaa., panic- h/l"1?™.1. Hi.If,!- ' -I*1. ^
.. Hindman, who rcccnU, .old | nlorl,, and the lake ..ter U uted lruck-“*U-
of Happy and seven grandchildren, that water would be supplied the, on vegetation and for several other „m_u 5
Funeral services will be held at public from the lakes here as long purposes. wUh nil
the First Methodist Church at 51 as there is any. said Urday: The commissioner said that where flh.«in . .
p.m. Tuesday with Dr. Roy A. -where we re pumping from j a hole for lake pumping had been, for th2 ee^
Langston officiating ‘Lake Clark, the water's seven feet dug, near the lake pump station. 1 Mr Olbe r ui\ri the »• ih k
Burial under the direction of the deep I don't think we’re going to i there Is 1.000 yards of fine tree dirt ' “ 0 em°b"
WATER CQMMR. CACTUS HINDMAN
THINKS LAKE SUPPLY SUFFICIENT
J. E. Keever Mortuary will be in j run out of water—but this pumping
Myrtle Cemetery. u very expensive. We now are
Ponca « dteV haa. «S ^
that Burn’s car was at the scene {|>nt terms. Member of FDIC. Ample water Is available from
that “anyone who will send for
may have."
it’
for several hour* before the murder ENNIS STATE BANK.
the deep wells lure (water >hat is for them, shouldn't lt?H
are "firm believers In the strength
ot the freeolabor union movement
, u . , . . In the United States as a front-line
Well give It and load it to defense against all forms of die-
ST 5“ ^T.» Ut°rsh‘P at home and abroad. “Hf
(Continued On Page 4)
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Casebolt, Floyd. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 192, Ed. 1 Monday, August 16, 1954, newspaper, August 16, 1954; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth782638/m1/1/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.