The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 250, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 22, 1958 Page: 2 of 6
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H«M|r M !«r________ - —*—*•. dwrtea K Gentry
miff \vr •. r% trtHf \»« iv fV itr 4 <*i*t Mary Hflfi Ufatry,
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iff ant has tx
«t and Ke* t>
^ tnuo»» and door* cover of
down sitrr and Ifw) coniunfh for
pets cwvr all leafv vegetable* prt-
plastic, rrmwe fish from open
over pond* with plasiic. cover open
r treatment, spnnkie lawns and
th water thoroughly, but prevent
I pets from drinking from puddles
form, wash all garden vegetables
■fore eating keep dairy cattle from
■eated area for a period of 30 days
iidren from playing in treated area
An
American Dental
Association To
Meet in Dallas
A number of dentists from
Texas will join with their cot
leagues from all over the nation
at Dallas Nov 1013 for the
99: h annual session of the
American Dental Association
Hare newused baby fumf
tttre • piano - card tables •
rugs, stoves, hot plates
If we don’t have it. will get it
for you.
B. 0. BROWN FURNITURE
COM? ANT
1218 W. Brown Ennis. Tex.
to have
tan 1 -1 •
Heading the Texas delegation
will be 13 official representa-
tives of the Texas Dental As-
sociation who w ill serve as mem-
bers of the A D A House of
Delegates, policy-making body of
the organization. They are Drs.
Wayne H Speer. Inin A Wor-
hol and Percy A. Wynn of Hous-
ton Dr. James P. Hollers of San
Antonio: Dr. Crawford A. Mc-
ENNIS READY-MIX
and
CONCRETE PIPE COMPANY
We sell Texcrete building blocks,
Holidav Stone. Brick—all colors
S. Highway 75 TR5-2411
LONE STAR AUTOMATIC LAUNDRYl
705 E. Ave. Just post Alamo Shoot
20 large type Maytag Washers with 20c meters
Will hold more clothes than any other washer
4 large dryers with 10c meters will hold
4 to 5 washer loads
For more information colt TR5-3884
Open 7 days a week—24 hours a day
Murray of Ennis; Drs Gustav R
Schmitt and Benjamin Lawrence
of Dallas. Dr. Gus Pinkerton of
Tyier: Dr Charles P. Montier of
V ictoria; Dr. Joseph M Freeman
of El Paso; Dr. John G. Whmery
of Amarillo; Dr. James E Mak-
ins of Lubbock, and Dr. Thomas
R. Williams of Gatesville.
Alternate delegates are: Dr.
Moms S. Minton of McKinney:
Dr. Fred H Graber of Brenhatjj
Dr. Andrew J. Odom of Beau-
mont; Dr. WilLiam L. Glenn Sr.
of Galveston: Dr. James H.
Francks of Brady; Dr. Wofford
B. Hardy of Big Springs: Dr.
Randolph 0. Sandstorm of Odes-
sa: Dr. John C. Wilson of Jacks-
boro; Dr. Willis H. Murphy of
Fort Worth: Dr. Seth B Cox of
Abilene: Dr. George E. Helm of
Waco; Dr. H. Loren Miller of
1 Dallas, and Dr. Charles H. Saun-
ders of Denton.
WaMurr’s Roofing Sorvice
New Roofs Applied
OM Roofs Repaired
Free Estimates
Work Guaranteed
Call TR5-3996
TONIGHT
ON TV
WEDNESDAY
Central Standard TIbm
Channel 8
Channel 4
Channel i
Channel 11
WFAA-TV
KRLD-TV
WBAP-TV
KFJZ-TV
*40 Beat The Clock
Brighter Day
Queen For
I Married Joan
ftlf " "
Secret Storm
A Day
tt tt tt
*:tt Who Do
Edge of
Country Fair
Hour of
3:45 You Trust?
Night
tf ff
Stars
4:M American
4 O’Clock Movie
Family Theater
Hour of
4:15 Bandstand
ft If »»
N ft
Stars
4:39
ft ft »t
ft tt
Early Show
4:45
ff ?» ft
ft It
tt tt
5:09 American
4 O’Clock Movie
Family Theater
Early Show
5:15 Bandstand
Party Time
tt tt
tt tt
5:30 Mickey Mouse
ft ft
Teen Age
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5:41
ft n
Downbeat
Popeye
Televisions
RCA - G.E.
Solos A Sorvict
MAIN TIRE CO.
Hwm TR5-3M4
Two Irons
in One!
I13«
• mu tinea *•*««*«
BARGAINS
G.E. 21 Inch /
$79.95
GJS. n to. Console 9tt.ll
— mi
— 919JB
Refrigerator
Crosley
609 News; Weather
News; Wthr.; Sports
News; Weather
6:15 News
Douglas Edwards
News
6:30 Lawrence Wclk
Harbor Command
Wagon Train
! 6:45
ff ft
ff 99
740 Lawrence Welk
Pursuit:
Wagon Train
7:15
Sal Mineo,
tt 99
7:36 Ode and Harriet
Stu Erwin,
The Price
|lH mm
Carol Lynley
Is Right
m 3:99 Fight:
The Millionaire
Milton Berle
8:15 Ortega vs.
tt tt
ft tt
6:30 Jordan
I’ve Got A
Bat Masterson
6:41 Locker Room
Secret
tt t9
fctt Patti Page
Steel Hour:
This Is Your Life
“Secret in
n rt n n
9:39 Donna Reed
the Family,**
Big Story
9:41 *
Faye Emerson
t» w
1646 Weather, Newt
News; Weather
Texas News
16c If John Daly
Weather; Movie:
Weather; Newt
1649 "Channel 6 Movie:
‘The Spirit of
Sports; Jack
1M9 “Final
Notre Dame**
Paar
11:60 Apyetetment”
Movie
Jack Paar
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»
If I* |
, Uatt •
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apM
Bin Hickok
If ft
Three Stooges
News, Weather
Roy Rogers
N N
Dial 999
Official Detective
N H
Decoy
Command Movie:
“Pride of
the Marines”
n w
Command Movie
»» N
Theater:
“Calling
Dr. Death,"
Lon Chaney
"Hi>, Look’ WE'RE on the Menu'
fy./7kX
FORGOTTEN FACTS
I# Y» ARS \GO
tV* TNg A VIM y. o»4»
op for tho day a iup
>ava— J«# Witty.
IWM> weft* rxjtvirtl
•.might "i isImiiuIko met
of nra*
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m 1 -v
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Mn M
llvde of Conaga Park Calif and
M -*• Ina Wintrrnmd of Garrett
35 YE \RS \GO
CRACKIJNGS By Brian
V.linu I ■!« Tht
(I th»‘W |*lf$
„rtn« IO«l made me
f,, Si O' «u^aa>i peuinf* of e>eat
person* in FHi% County when
demand arise* ha* h*va piacod
0n rt"itHiii til VV o vail *4 uc,
it «.u announced Friday hy T.
«i Cheat ban former mtjuf,
»•! .1 MIUt mmA MhiKilil lllnn
iv ar
1 w.
poped up over gue*t in B
W McCarthy w,
alias for the day.
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The Ennis Daily Newt
In Sixty-Seventh Year
Owtvd and publUhed dally except dlvwhiaU Any erroneous rXbdhu
Sunday by the Cmled PubU.sh.nf upon the ehArurter, • tomb:*
Company Inc. which al*o publish*# reputation of any person, firm
The Rnm* Wffklt Loral and The o*wpnr*tMUi which tuny appear
Palmer Rustler xlrs C A Nowlin, the columns of this paper wilt be
President and Chairman of th* *Vid!y and duly corrected upon ba-
B.'srd Charles E Oentry. Manager* uur brought, to the publisher* at*
Bditor tentlon ___ ,
Entered at the Poet Office in RtWCRTPTION RATBS
Ennis. Texas as aeoond clbss mafl By Carrier In City;
matter under the Act of Congress One Year
&SF&
of March S 1RT9
Office—213 North Dallas Street.
Telephone TR5-SS01.
All Communications of business
and Items of news should be ad-
lrea ed to the cornpam— not to In •
Six Months
One Mor.th WBO
Special Farm Ratea by Mall:
In Ells County. One Year MM
Outside County—Sam* rates a*
City Delivery
The Washington Merry-Go-Round
NASHVILLE. Tenn. Oct. 22 —
Few people realize it when fear
first creeps into the heart of a
nation—and few people today
probably realize that this is hap-
pening in the United States.
When Nazism first began cor-
roding Germany, most people
didn't pay much attention. A
bomb was tossed at a Jewish
synagogue. A swastika appeared
on a Jewish shop. It created lit-
tle attention. Some people even
snickered But gradually the
persecution grew. Protestants
and Catholics at first sat on the
sidelines, unworried about the
prospect that they might be
next.
But they were next—as the
hatred and the terror spread It
spread until neighbors suspect-
ed neighbors — until fathers
feared sons, and until a govern-
ment based on terror and force
reached out to subdue neighbor-
ing nations with terror and
force.
When a bomb went off in
front of the Jewish Community
Center in Nashville last year,
nobody paid much attention. It
didn’t hurt anyone. Several Pro-
testant ministers called up Rab-
bi William Silverman to express
their shock and to ask what they
could do to help.
“Have you preached about
it?’ replied the Rabbi. “Have you
told your people that this is
wrong?”
The ministers said they had
not. And they seemed to hesitate
about doing so.
POCKETBOOK TERROR
More bombings followed la
Miami, Charlotte, N. C., Jack-
sonville. Birmingham. Some
were Jewish temples, some were
Negro churches, Then, on Oc-
tober 4. 1958—one year after
Sputnik, the high school in Clin-
ton, Tennessee, blew up at the
hands of an expert dynamiter. A
lot had happened between Oc-
tober 4, 1957 and October 4,
1958—and much of it, especially
the increase of hatred, tore
holes in America’s proud tradi-
tion of live-and-let-live. of loving
thy neighbor as thyself.
One week later, October 11—
another terrible explosion
wrecked a synagogue in Atlanta.
A few days later, there were ex-
plosions in Peoria. 111., in Bos-
ton against Jehovah’s witnes-
ses, the religious sect of Presi-
dent Eisenhower’s mother; and
a report that a bomb was plant-
ed in beautiful St. Patrick’s
Cathedral, mecca of worship for
New York Catholics.
Taking the same pattern as
that followed in Germany, fear
and teror grew. Police were st*
tioned outside of most syna>
gogues in the South. The chil-
dren of some rabbis had to bn
escorted to school.
Most people, however, still
were not afraid. After all, i t
was only school children and a
minority religious group which
had suffered.
However, fear had begun to
hit a great many other people In
a more cowardly but highly sear
sttlve spot—the pocket book.
When a bif manufacturer in tbe
North was asked to contribute
buiUUnga materials to help gb-
By DREW PEARSON
build the Clinton schoolhouse—
he was sympathetic, but re-
plied that he had to do business
in the South and he might be
boycotted there
When Henry J- Kaiser, whose
pastime is promoting Honolulu
as the playground of the world,
was asked to promote more se-
rious things by contributing a
carload of Kaiser Company ce-
ment—he ducked.
When Mrs James Parker,
head of the P-TA in Chicago—
was asked to arrange coopera-
tion of parent-teachers to help
| the children of Clinton, she was
[ politely and graciously un-
cooperative. She did not want to
get mixed up in a situation
where a Tennessee school had
been destroyed because of hate.
| Fear of how Southern members
of her group would react had
crept in.
BILLY GRAHAM STANDS UP
On the other hand—the AFL
Buildings Trades Union were
not afraid. Hearty cooperation
was offered by the bricklayers,
the plumbers, the plasterers, to
try to get the labor to rebuild
the Clinton schoolhouse free.
Nor was Rev. Billy Graham
afraid. He telegraphed:
“Am shocked and disturbed
over bombing of synagogues,
churches, and schools. This type
of thing is what brought Hitler
to power in Germany. I am de-
lighted you are helping to rally
leaders of all walks of life to
take a strong stand to discour-
age the wave of bombing. Will
do all in my power to assist.
Gladly lend my name on com-
mute for campaign.”
Other Southern leaders were
Governor Jim Coleman of
Mississippi, Governor Luther
Hodges of North Carolina and
Governor Leroy Collins o f
Florida.
“We can’t mingle hate with
disrespect for law,” said Gover-
nor Collins, “without reaping
disorder. Tlhat’s what we are
reaping today.”
“The South does not believe
in using force and terror
against children or against
worshippers of any religion.”
was the emphatic statement of
Governor Coleman.
They—with many other Sou-
thern leaders, did not hesitate to
stand up and be counted in a
drive to mobilize public opinion
against terrorism and help those
who have suffered from bombs
of hate. They included Silliman
Evans, publisher of The Nash-
ville Tenessean; Mayor William!
Hartsfield of Atlanta; Mayor
Ben West. Nashville; Mayor |
Bruce Hoblitzell, Louisville; Ed ,
E. Reid, head of the Alabama
League of Municipalities*; Bar- j
rett Shelton, publisher of The j
Decatur, Alabama Daily; C o n-
gressman Brooks Hays of Arkan-
sas; Congressman Howard Bak-
ler of Tennessee; MacLin Davis,
the Nashville attorney; Dr. Hugh
Morgan of Vanderbilt Univer-
! sity Hospital; Senator John
Sherman Cooper of Kentucky;
Seantor Tom Hennings of Mis-
souri; Senator Estes Kefauver
of Tennessee.
Their hope is that an aroused
public opinion will put an end
to the day when synagogues
have to be guarded by special
j police and children go home
i from school not knowing whe-
I ther their schoolhouse will be
there next morning when they
come back.
(COPYRIGHT, 1958 — BY THE
BELL SYNDICATE, INC.)
Furnished house. N. Preston
—Unfurnished house. N
Preston—Four room unfur-
nished house. S. Laurel—Un-
furnished house. N. Preston
—Nice furnished apartment,
W. Crockett—Nice furnished
apartment. N. Dallas—Newly
decorated duplex. N. Dallas—
Four room unfurnished apart-
ment, 204 N. Sherman—
Beautifully furnished five
room apartment, also three
room unfurnished apartment
—Nice home for sale. W.
Lake—Other property listed.
MRS. P. V. MULKEY
Phone TR5-7477
Butane - Propane
Gas and Appliances
Natural Gas Appliances
114 W. Knox Ennis
Phone TR 5-2629
Night TR5-2997
PLAZA
PHONE TRS-2562
LAST TIMES TODAY
D-O-U-B-l-E F-E-A-T-U-R-E
BARBS
BY HAL COCHRAN
British pourmets are buzzing
about a new delicacy on the Lon*
don market—seasoned bumble-
bees.
« • •
Fall of the year is one time
when sred is planted in new
lawns. Thai's for the birds/
* * •
It takes about 20 years to de-
velop all the bones and muscles
ALSO
in our feet. Corns and callouses
most any given time.
• * «
A hotel in the south has a
practice golf course on its roof.
We hope all the skylights ore
replaced.
Plus Shorts
THURSDAY Sc FRIDAY
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Plus Shorts
without
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Enfoy a good night's sleep and the
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RELINE SPECIAL
For October and November Only
Was$2M#----------Now $18.48
BRUCE BROWN CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBU
200 EAST AVENUE PHONE TR5-2466
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Gentry, Charles E. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 250, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 22, 1958, newspaper, October 22, 1958; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth801601/m1/2/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.