The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 87, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 10, 1940 Page: 1 of 4
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A
A
FORTY EIGHTH YEAR
FOUR PAGES TODAY
TELEPHONE 44
NO. 87
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WASHINGTON
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By Julian Capers
Dormant Period
On Friday Night
Of Country Club
in Grayson County
Re-Elected President
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MISS EVA SUE MERRITT.
(Continued on page 4)
HUBERT C. ROGERS.
(Continued on page 3,
-
(Continued on page 2)
(Continued on page 4)
British Air Pilot Takes Unusual Pictures of His Success
Census Taker Met No Resistence Here
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Rogers, Fitzgerald
Fisher Officers
Four Students
Give Program
At Lions Club
Nobody’s
Business
Roads, Bridges
Suffer Damages
In Recent Rain
Garrett Girl
Assumes Post
In Grayson Co.
Peggy Garrett, 2,
Dies; Funeral
Held Wednesday
noons and by appointment at other
times.
Heirloom Shop
To Open Here
Brother of A. E. Dunn
Dies in Chicago;
Funeral in Houston
Cotton Planting Calls
Up Facts, Figures
On Acreage Allotment
W. F. Bradley, of the I.O.O.F.
Home, who is in the hospital for
medical care, is improving.
FIRST CITIZEN TELLS ALL—President Roosevelt, nation's No. 1
citizen, gives census information to Census Director William
L. Austin, in White House, Washington. President shows effects
of recent attack of intestinal flu.
Moth Protection.
Let us moth-proof your winter
clothes before putting them away.
—Ennis Laundry and Dry Cleaners.
Phone 99.
Teachers College and has taught
school three years. She has been
a 4-H Club girl and a 4-H Club
sponsor.
The Grayson county commission-
ers court voted several months ago
to provide the county’s portion of
the expense of an additional agent.
The Texas agent service provides
part of the expense.
Words Worth Weighing.
“When a person is down in the
world, an ounce of help is better
than a pound of preaching.”—Ed-
ward George Bulwer.
8es
* friends about old times.
BILLY JO ONSTEAD was speak-
ing of her experiences as'a debater
. . . MRS. FRED STORY was down
town Tuesday afternoon . . . L. G.
SHAW sticks to his pipe as the
best smoke he knows.
ORCHID FOR. THE DAY . . .
ED O’LEARY, who is celebrating
his seventieth birthday today.
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Ennis EchoS
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DIRECT HIT—According to British censor, British Royal Air Force plane discovered this German
U-boat about to submerge in Schilling Roads, with the decks cleared and gun unmanned. Plane
swooped down and dropped four bombs, one of which was direct hit. Result? See inset, where
swirl of foam marks sinking. Pilot jubilantly took photographs.
Mrs. Cora F. Winter continues to
improve. Mrs. Winter has been in
the hospital several weeks with a
broken hip sustained in a fall.
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Merry- GO-
Eugene Templin, who had an
operation, is improving..
C. of C. Directors
THE ENNIS DAILY NEWS
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George W. Dunn of Houston, a
brother of A. E. Dunn of Ennis,
died this morning in the Hines
Hospital in Chicago.
Mr. Dunn left here Tuesday in
response to a message telling of the
critical illness of his brother and
a message received this morning
stated that he died. The body will
be shipped to his home in Houston
for burial.
Mr. Dunn is survived by his wife.
representatives and have a genuine
affection for each other. Garner
calls the mayor "Frijole," and he
would deliver his delegates to him,
whereas he would never deliver
them to Bob Jackson or another
out and out New Yorker.
Rozevelt and Hoover.
FDR is on good terms with many
Will Have Dinner
, Four Ennis high school students
presented the program for the En-
nis Lions Club Wednesday noon at
, their regular weekly luncheon meet-
ing held at the Lakeside Country
Club.
These were Misses Linnie Jo Gil-
ley, June Williams and Morene
Crumley and James Hart. This pro-
gram consisted of a musical selec-
tion and two short talks.
LvMiss Gilley sang two selections
being accompanied by Hart at the
piano, and this was followed by
the ' talks by Miss Williams and
Miss Crumley.
The girls were members of the
Ennis High debate team this year,
and-they discussed the question on
which they had debated, this be-
ing socialized medicine. A.
During the course of. Wednesday
noon’s session, the members pres-
ent also heard of the first rumbl-
ings of Lions Club politics this
year, as two members of the Oak
Cliff Lions Club in Dallas, Jim
Temple and William Jenings Bryan
were present at the meeting t4
boost their candidate, Fred Kelly,
for district governor.
The district convention is to be
j held April 29 and 30 at Denton.
George Ledbetter introduced the
four high school students and the;
program, and Arthur Bailey was
the program chairman for the day.
An invitation to the Ennis Lions
to attend the charter night services
of the newly organized Italy Lions
Club was read by Rev. Dean Har-
rison, president, who also presided
over the meeting.
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AVENUE
AUSTIN, April 10—Governor W.
Lee O’Daniel, announcing his can-
didacy for re-election this week,.
told the voters the governor’s race
this year is going to be a mere
sideshow, and the big excitement
was going to be over the election
of 150 house members and fourteen
senators. .
That is probably as the governor
would like to have it. But political
developments of the week end in-
dicated O’Daniel may be as wrong
about this as he has been about
some other things during the last!
two- years.
In the first place, O’Daniel him-
self made this perdiction improb-
able when he laid the chief issue
o fthe campaign—his transaction
tax, and his spending program
that calls for $60,000,000 of new
taxes to be laid on the backs of
the. people of Texas. His demand
that the people elect a subservient]
legislature that will do the bid-
ding of O'Daniel, as the present
legislature refused to do, reminded
the voters that Huey Long had
that kind of a legislature in Louis-
ana, for ten years, and the people
of the neighboring state have just;
finished the job of ousting the
dictator’s machine, and retsoring
democratic government in the Pel-
ican state.
Ma May Get In.
The probable entrance of Ma
Ferguson into the race furnished '
another crop of rumors. If the Fer-
gusons get in, it is a cinch that
the gubernatorial race will be the .
main show. Jim Ferguson has been .
Special to The News.
AUSTIN, April 10.—Two Ennis-
Ites are among the students listed
on the tentative roll of candi-
dates for the bachelor’s degree in
law to be conferred at the June
3 commencement of the University
of Texas, announced today by Dean
Ira P. Hilderbrand.
These are Thad A. Barrington,
Jr., and Ralph T. Rawlins.
Mr. Barrington, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Thad Barrington, 204 West,
Belknap, completed his require-
ments for the degree at the close
of the first semester, and he has
already set up his law offices in
Enis.
Mr. Rawlins is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. J. E. Rawlins, 709 North
Main.
Miss Eva Sue Merritt of Garrett,
recently assumed her duties as new
assistant county home agent in
charge of Grayson county girls
4-H Club work. She has headquar-
ters in the county seat, Sherman.
Miss Merritt holds a Bachelor of
Science degree from Commerce
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Garrett ,Sr., of Fairfield.
Funeral services were held at 2
o’clock Wednesday afternoon- in
the Keever chapel with the Rev.
A. J. Kirkland, pastor of the First
Baptist Church, officiating.
aPllbearers were Tommie Moore,
K. L. Hamilton, Walter Goodwin
and Wesley Goodwin.
Interment was made in Myrtle
cemetery.
Among those out of town here:
for the funeral were Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Garrett, and Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Garrett, Sr., of Fairfield,
and Mr. and Mrs. Tucker Shelton
and Mr. and Mrs. Argie Raney of
Corsicana.
Hospital News .
Miss Lillian Light was taken in
the Keever ambulance to the hos-
> pital for an appendectomy which
was performed this morning.
Moves.
Mr. and Mrs. Flake Carnes have
moved to their new home just com-
pleted at 404 West Decatur St. Mr.
and Mrs. Carnes have been living
in the Dungan apartment, 207 E,
। Baylor street during the construe,
• ticn of their home.
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Tammany Strategy.
This is extremely significant.
For seven years Tammany bosses
have been ready to give their eye-
teeth to defeat the Little Flower.
He is the last man they want run-
ning New York City. Therefore,
they would be delighted to “pro-
mqte" him—make him vice-presi-
dent of the United States or even
president, provided only that he
be promoted out of New York City.
So LaGuardia can count upon
, the full support of Tammany to
get the vice-presidential nomina-
tion on the democratic ticket at/
Chicago next summer. i
If the democrats should nomi-
nate Hull or anyone else from the
south or west, they would need a
I good strong eastener on the ticket.
I LaGuardia probably is the only
man who could carry the all-im-
portant state of New York against
Tom Dewey.
Note; Not to be lost sight of is
Ennis’ Boy Scouts of America,
Troop 2, came back to life Tues-
day night, as they re-assembled
for the first time after lying
dormant since in November, in the
new Scout house built for them on
Margaret Teresa Dunkerley Memor-
ial Park.
Thirty-six boys were present at
the meeting, which was called by
Scoutmaster Cecil C. Boren,
They made plans to begin at
once again their activity as a troop
and it was decided that they would
meet at 7:30 o’clock each Monday
night from now on.
The major portion of Tuesday
night’s re-assembly meeting was
taken up with discussing tentative
plans for activity durin gthe first
few weeks that will put the park
in good shape. The boys discussed
1 cleaning up the grounds and
straightening out affairs, and they
decided to do these things at once.
Following this, they then will
discuss a permanent plan for the
year, but the first goal set up by
the troop as it came back to life
is to get the new Scout house and;
the Margaret Teresa Dunkerley
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Today’s News carries the an-
nouncement of the opening of
Ruth Carroll Coker’s Heirloom Shop
at 205 South Clay St.
The shop is to- be open on Mon-
day, Wednesday and Friday after-
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Two From Ennis
On Texas’ Roll
Of ’40 Law Grads
Peggy Sue Ganett, 2, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Garrett, Jr.,
died at 3:30 o’clock Tuesday after-
noon at the home, 808 East Brown
[ St., following an illness since: last
Saturday of diphtheria and mem-
braneous croup.
She was born April 12, 1938, in
Ennis. Surviving are her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Garrett, Jr.,
and one brother, Louie Raymond
Garrett, also her grandmother, Mrs.
Annie Harcrow of Ennis, and her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Mr. Colvin stated that all of this
damage was on little bridges over
small creeks, which rapidly left’
their banks.
I
DREW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN
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General discussions concerning
future events to be sponsored by
the Ennis Chamber of Commerce
will be the feature of the regular
monthly dinner meeting of the
chamber’s board of directors Fri-
day night at the Lakeside Country
Club.
Some of the listed topics for dis-
cussion are: The part Ennis will
play in the East Texas Chamber
convention in Marshall April 21
and 22; a good will tour of the
western part of Ellis county to be
staged May 3; amateur and fight
night programs to be sponsored by
the organization through the sum-
mer months; co-operation with the
many school picnics to be held
during May; continuance of sewing
room cooperation, and cooperation
on the part of the chamber with
the Ellis County Fair to be held in
the fact that Jack Garner and La- meeting Tuesday noon at the Mu-
Guardia are old pals, dating from j nicipal Hosiptal with Dr. L. E..
their association in the house of < Clark, president, presiding.
The Physicians and Dentists held
their regular weekly luncheon -
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■ Damage from the rain last week
end to the roads and bridges in
Precinct 2 of Ellis county amounted
to from $4,000 to $6,500 Commis-
sioner Oscar Colvin estimated
Wednesday after a thorough in-
spection of the area.
Mr. Colvin stated that the bridge
I damage was probably from $1,000
to $1,500. However, he pointed out
that the latter was much more dif-
ficult to estimate, accurately than
the iormer.
The extent of the damage can
best be seen in the fact that Wed-
nesday was the first time that all
of the rural carriers have been
. April has suddenly turned to
AMarch again . . . for today was a
typical March day . . . very windy
Aand dusty . . . People could be
seen chasing their hats and other
articles, that the wind had blown
off.
WALTER, SLOCUM is back on
the Avenue again, after his trip to
Detroit . . . LEO1 GARTH was
braving a- windy corner . .. ED-
GAR MARTIN was crossing the
street . . . GORDON HARKINS
passed by the C. of C. office.
ELLOUISE ESSELMAN was rid-
ing around in the company of W.
F. (“Sonny”) HOWARD, —Jr . . .
MRS. TOM McCLAIN was walking
along the street . . . MAURINE
ROBERSON was very unhappy this
morning ... all because of her
cold.
CARLOS FITZGERALD and
CHARLES MOSSHART were seen
on North Dallas . . . ARTHUR
CREECH was looking out his win-
dow7.
Others on the Avenue this morn-
k ing were FRED O’NEAL ,SELMA
PAINS, GUY PARKERSON and
AL RAMSEY . . . GEORGE DAVIS
-was standing in front of the drug-
store . . . DOROTHY McCORD
and ROBERT SPARKMAN are
celebrating their birthdays today.
CECIL BOREN was explaining
some figures to a friend . . EMMA
KATE McELROY was crossing the
street . . . HOOD CHENEY was
sporting a flashy green suit this
morning . . . W. M. MINCEY was
in The News office ... as was
SID ROPER: (doing a little kidding,
as usual).
THAD BARRINGTON, Chevrolet'
dealer, actually went so far as to
congratulate I. G. MOORE, Ford
agent, on the car he drove to the
Lions Club in today . . . Mr. Moore
rode up in a Chevrolet, and Mr.
Barrington was very prompt in
commenting on what a. fine car iti
was.
JACK GIBBONS was an early
visitor to The News office . . .
MR. and MRS. LOUIS ROSEN-
STEIN were out calling on friends
late Tuesday afternoon. . . . JOHN
WASHINGTON, April 10.—You
dont’ hear much about him in the
presidential sweepstakes, but one
man worth keeping your eye on
these days is Mayor Fiorello La-
Guardia.
There have been two significant
developments which may mean
something to the future destiny of
New York’s “Little Flower.”
First, it was no accident hat he
took himself out of the Illinois re-
publican primary LaGuardia didn’t
want to be stamped definitely as a
republican. As a matter of fact,
served to approximately 150 mem-
bers.
Charles Cook was added to- the
finance committee of the club
Tuesday in another election taken.
Other members of the committee
are Messrs. Jolesch, Hawkins and
Rogers.
During the session it was also
agreed that the Lakeside Club
should start a program of increased
activity, and a membership com-
mittee was named • to take charge
of a drive for new members.
William Hartley will act as the
chairman of the drive and serving
on a committee to- assist him are
James Allen, Mr. Rogers, Mr. Fish-
er and Mr. Fitzgerald.
In addition a dance committee
t start making plans for the -ah-
nual junior-senior dance was nam-
ed, and this group is composed of
Mr. Fisher, chairman, Mr. Hartley1
and Mrs. Cosgrove.
able to make their entire routes.
In all, the commissioner said
that fourteen bridges in this pre-
cinct were washed out or damaged.
However, hie pointed out that only
one of these—a bridge over Waxa-
hachie creek, southwest of Reagor
Springs—was lost completely.
The bridge was never found.
Most of the damage to the
bridges was done by the approaches
being washed out.
Cotton planting, time is at
hand—calling to mind of Ellis
countians, just how important
it is that their state secure a
greater share of the United
States’ total cotton acreage al-
lotment, as prescribed by the
government.
The facts and figures of the
case—staring cotton farmers in
the face as they go to plant
are:
Average crop, 1928 to 1932:
(five years preceding U. S.
' crop control) U. S. 14,388,000
bales, 4,401,000 bales. This
meant that Texas’ share of the
total production was 316 per
cent.
Average crop, 1933 tj 1937:
(five years following institution
of crop control) U. S. 12,590,000
bales;! Texas, 3,433,000 bales.
This meant that Texas share of
the total production was 27.3
per cent.
1938 Allotments: U. S. 28,-
285,572 acres; Texas 10,429,865 )
acres. Texas’ share of allot-
ments is 36.9 per cent.
Acreage reduction, 1938 to
1940; U.S. 1,215,399; Texas 512,-
949. Texas’ share of reduction
is 42.2 per cent.
Average annual reduced pro-
duction under crop control,
1933 to 1937: U. S. 1,796,000
bales; Texas, 968,000 bales,
share of reduction was 53.8 per
cent.
Present reduction: U. S. 12.5
per cent; Texas 22 per cent.
Average crop under new AAA:
1938 and 1939: U. S. 11,449,000
bales; Tex. 2,815,000 bales. Tex-
as’ share of production is now
only 24.6 per cent.
Reduction from pre-control 5- -
year period above: U. S. 2,939,-
000 bales; Texas, 1,586,000 bales.
Texas’ share of reduction 53.9
per cent.
Per cent reduction: U. S. 20.4
per cent; Texas 36 per cent.
H. C. Rogers, president; rJ. E.
1 Fisher, vice-president, and- W. C.
I Fitzgerald, secretary, will guide the
activities of the Lakeside Country
Club for the coming year, as the
resutl of the club’s annual election
of ofifcers held Tuesdday night.
Mr. Rogers and Mr. Fitzgerald
were both re-elected to their re-
spective posts, while Mr. Fisher is
the only new officer of the group.
However, five new governors for
the board were named in Tuesday
night’s voting. Thees are G. G.
Dunkerley, Sr., James S. Sander-
son, E. C. Hawkins, Pat Cosgrove
and H. J. McBrierty, and they will
serve three year terms.
Old governors who are stil
serving on the board include: Mr.
Regers, Mr. Fisher, J. E. Keever,
J. R. McCall ,C. S. Cook, Jack
Moore, Bert McKee, Dr. Fred L.
Story, Dr. Crawford A. McMurray
and Joe Jolesch. ,
The election followed the annual
stockholders meeting and dinner, at
which time a Dutch lunch was
i LaGuardia was first elected to
congress as a republican, and later
was defeated by a Tammany dem-
ocrat. But in his mayoralty cam-
paigns he has always received as
much support from Progressive
democrats as from republicans.
Actually LaGuardia is a Roosevelt
New Dealer, and the president has
talked to him about the possibility
of getting on the New Deal 1943
ticket.
S-econd, LaGuardia has made his
peace with Tammany. Or perhaps
it would be more correct to say
th,at Tammany has made peace
with LaGuardia.
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Did you ever Tec that maybe
you are dumb, a, hopeless misfit, a
person with a future, etc.—Don’t
ever do so again, because just re-
member these facts about the fol-
lowing people:
Franklin D. Roosevelt “flunked”
in his final exams at law school
. . . Irvin S. Cobb was “fired” on
the first day of his job as an in-
surance salesman . . . Botticelli,
the Italian painter, was taken out
of school as a boy and apprenticed
to a goldsmith ... At West Poini
Grant stood 156th in a class of
223.
Richard Wagner was considered
a failure by his early piano teach-
er ... . Abraham Lincoln could
hot spell correctly at the time he
^entered the White House . . .
Thomas A. Edison was always out
o fa job.
If your luck and outlook seems
bad, don’t worry, it may be just a
sign that you are another genius.
WEIR was overhead
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If you don’t believe Shakes-
peare was the first football writer
and Henry VI the first grandstand
quarterback, listen to Dr. LeRoy
Arnold of Hamline U., St. Paul,
quote from the bard:
“Down, down.”—Henry IV.
“An exeellent pass.”—Tempest.
“Well placed.”—Henry IV.
‘ A couch, a" touch, I do confess
it.”—Hamlet.
5 cts cop"
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Dr. Sim Driver of Dallas deliver-
ed a lecture on “Treatment of
Fractures.”
Those attending besides Drs.
Clark and Driver were, Drs. Law-
rence Clark, E. F. Baker, John M.
Chapman, C. P. Cook, Fred L.
Story, C. E. Gray, A. L. Thomas,
Miss Helen Liles, L. C. Sigrist, all
of Ennis, and Drs. West and Wat-
son of Waxahachie.
Memorial Park into first class
shape.
The troop also discussed the prob-
lem of registration, as having
been inactive since back in 1939,
neither members or troop are of-
ficially registered, and it was de-
cided to ask allthemembers to
bring their money for registration
at the next meeting.
This was the second meeting
held in the scout house, which has
been built through public subscrip-
tion and donations of Ennis citi-
zens, as a public meeting was held
in it Monday night. The troop,
after its re-assembly- Tuesday, will
now continue to use the house as
its permanent home.
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As for the damage to the roads
themselves, the comimissioner
stated that this was brought about
when quite a bit of dirt and gravel
were washed away.
ENNIS, ELLIS COUNTY, TEXAS WEDNESDAY EVENING, APRIL 10, 1940
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The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 87, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 10, 1940, newspaper, April 10, 1940; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1466068/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Ennis Public Library.