The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 159, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 6, 1943 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Ennis Daily News and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Ennis Public Library.
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EEGE TWO
War Ration Books
next
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PLAZA
—TUESDAY—
C. A. Nowlin
Editor and Mgr.
TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY
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AS,
By Mail in Ellis County
for
Blue
Plus Shorts
hurt by the inflation spiral
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We Now Have Available
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SOYBEAN MEAL
Priced from
$5.00 to $7.98
AND CAKE
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PLANTERS
HARTLEY PAINT CO
—Phone 24—
COTTON OIL MILL
—Phone 666—
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RESHUFFLING COMING
WITH INFLATION’S SPIRAL
Before we grieve too much
_____$6.00
_____3.00
_____1.50
_____50c
S-W FLOOR
ENAMEL.....
S-W LINOLEUM
_____$3.00
______2.00
_____1.00
______50c
11:05 Sign Off
Key:—
Stu.—Studio;
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Any Excuse You
Can Find For Not
* Upping Your
Bond Buying Will
Please Hitler
ENAMEL .....
R & B UTILITY
PAINT.......
S-W PORCH
PAINT.......
K
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KUCHAR’S
Men’s Store
15 FAST
AND FUNNY
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Here On Furlough
Staff Sergeant and Mrs. Calvin
Gibson of Camp McCall, Hoffman,
N. C., have arrived for a visit with
Seregant Gibson’s parents, Mr. and
Mrs. F. B. Gibson. Seregant Gibson,
who is an a fifteen days furlough,
is co-pilot on a glider.
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Cutside of County by Mail, Rates
Same as for City.
Visitor Here
Miss Mae Dietrich of Dallas spent
the week end here with friends
Dallas Visitor
Mrs. W. P. Brown of Dallas spent
the week end here with Mrs. Sid
Covington.
Holiday Guests From Dallas
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Stovall and
daughters, Mae and Fae, of Dallas,
were weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. V. H. Stovall.
In Waxahachie
Mrs. Erwin Glaspy and sons, Ir-
vin L. and John Keys, are guests
in the home of Mrs. Glaspy’s par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Ruther-
ford in Waxahachie.
14
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Moves
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Hunter, who
have been living at 400 West Tyler
.Street, have moved to 205 South
Clay Street, to an apartment in
the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. C.
Coker.
makes motorists ineligible
gasline or tires.
PROCESSED FOODS —
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WELL, r am—
LIVE ON A REAL
FARM WITH COWS
AND CHICKENS
AND EVERYTHING ,
Five Graves to
Cairo
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We have just received
new shipment of
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Visitors From Sherman
Mrs. W. J. Roberts and son, Billy,
of Sherman were holiday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Johns.
.MBS
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. MBS
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7--—----------
By Ernie Bushmiller
RADIO
NOPE —I CAN
TAKE YOU THERE
IN TWO MINUTES
— COME
Cog
1340 On Your Dial
— SUBSCRIPTION RATES-
* By Carrier in City
J. C. GASTON RECEIVES
COMMISSION 2nd LIEUTENANT
Lieut, and Mrs. J. C. Gaston, who
are visiting relatives in Corsicana,
spent the week end here, guests in
; the home of Mr. and Mrs. Don Es-
। seiman. Lieut. Gaston received his
commission July 1 at the Officers
Training School in Ft. Sill, Okla.
He is here cn a ten days furlough
Holiday Guests
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Germond and
son, George, Jr., and Mrs. H. M.
Johns of Dallas were holiday guests
in the home of Mrs. C. W. McKen-
ney.
BUT YOU
DON'T LOOK
LIKE A
FARM BOY
V
.MBS I
.MBS
.MBS
.MBS
.MBS
. .Stu
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.MBS
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and will return to Ft. Sill
week.
I
() Oke WASHINGTON
T a,Tm Reg u s P. °"
, Merry - GO- round
•mah. ■ By DREW PEARSON
Guests From Beaumont
Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Stovall and
son- George.- and daughter, Doro-
thy, were week end guests of Mr.
and Mrs. V. H. Stovall.
to paint an
average room
K
One gallon ($2.98)idoes an
average room. Covers wall-
paper and most interior sur-
faces. Mixes with water. Dries
in 1 hour. No offensive paint
odor. Washable! Let us dem-
onstrate !
0000900000
---V--
KEEPING ON
You’ve got to keep on growing;
One inch won’t make you very tall;
You’ve got to keep on walking;
One step won’t take you very far;
You’ve got to keep on talking;
One word won’t tell folks who
you are.
You’ve got to keep them going.
One little “ad” won’t do it all,
worst almost every move he has made since 1940. The two men
- - work as a team. Wallace even consulted the President be-
nn)9
Here On Furlough
PfC. Cletus Besse of Indian Gap, ‘
Pa., is spending ten day furlough
with his mother, Mrs. Bessie Besse.
THURSDAY and FRIDAY
Week End Visitor In Dallas
Mrs. Ola Marris spent the week
end in Dallas with Dr. and Mrs.
Cecil Patterson.
Ore Year________
Six Months______
Three Months___
One Month_______
1
Returns to Austin
Miss Erie Nell Roller has resum-
ed her duties with the State Wel-
fare Department in Austin after a
visit here with her mother, Mrs.
Erie Roller. Mrs. Joe Henderson
of Dallas also spent the week end
here with her mother, Mrs. Roller.
Vacationing
Miss Blanche Menard, with the
Keever Funeral Home, is taking
her vacation this week.
fore issuing a statement blasting Martin Dies, and he did-
not have to be a mind-reader to have known how little
FDR loved the Dies Committee.
Capital Chaff
There was a time when you had to come from Harvard
and live east of the Allegheny Mountains to get ahead in
the State Department. But now the State Department has
just appointed as American Minister to Iraq, efficient Loy
Henderson, born in Arkansas, reared in Kansas and son of
StiElW!H-WlU!A.
■ Paints
One Year___________
Six Months_________
Three Months______
One Month_________
Entered as Second-Class Matter
at the Post Office at Ennis, Texas,
Under the Act of March 3, 1879.
PFC. JESS CARRELL
BACK FROM HAWAII,
ENDS FURLOUGH
Pfc. Jess Carrell has returned to
Longview after spending a 10-day
furlough with his mother, Mrs.
Jesse Carrell, in Kaufman and in
Ennis in the home of his aunt, Mrs.
Geo. Sorrels.
Pfc. Carrell recently returned to
the United States from Hawaii,
where he was stationed for several
months doing clerical work in a
war department office. He was sent
back to the states for treatment
{WAR IN EUROPE
: A YEAR AGO
JULY 6, 1942
Ka
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for those who are
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Al Communications of Business
and items of news should be ad-
dressed to the company and not
individuals.
J. M. RICHARDSON, JR.
GETS COMMISSION
Former Aviation Cadet J.
a midwest preacher. He knows what it is to know
0
Richardson of 609 N. Clay Street,
was graduated from Army Air
Forces Advanced Flying School at
Moody Field, Georgia, recently and
commissioned a Second Lieutenant
with the rating of Army Pilot.
Col. H. F. Muenter, Commanding
12:30 “Todd Grant Gets Story.....ET
12:45 Palmer House Orch.......MBS
1:00 Cedric Foster, news ......MBS
1:15 10-2-4 Ranch ...............ET
1:30 Mutuol Goes Calling ......MBS
2:00 Sunshine Hour, H illsboro... RE
2:30 Melody, Inc...............MBS
3:00 Walter Compton, news ....MBS
3:15 “Uncle Sam” ...............ET
3:30 Mutual Presents ..........MBS
4:00 Jamboree Program ........Stu
4:30 “Highway Patrol” ........MBS
4:45 “Superman” ..............MBS
6:00 Prayer ................... MBS
5:01 Phil. Keyne-Gordon, news MBS
5:15 Babe Rhode’s Orch.....MBS
5:30 Overseas News Reports ...MBS
:45 “Songs for Servicemen” ..MBS
EVENING
6:00 Fulton Lewis, Jr.
S' #2
AA
The shoe that is smart for
any occasion. You can de-
pend upon it’s lasting qual-
ity.
and has been a patient at the gov-
ment hospital at Longview but he
hepes to be back on active duty
within a short time.
Jess was (graduated from Kauf-
man high school and received his
degree from East Texas State
Teachers College at Commerce. He
like Hawaii and his assignment
there.
JOE RILEY CROW -
NOW OVERSEAS
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Crow have
received a message that their son,
Joe Riley Crow, has landed safely
overseas. He is with the Marine
Paratroopers. His address is as fol-
lows:
17th Replacement Bn. -
Cr. Fleet Post Office,
San Francisco, Calif.
good workman who stays
with his job day in and day
out isn’t doing so well. He
used to get the cream leav-
ing the skimmed milk for
the drifter. But temporarily
the other fellow gets the
cream.
It’s the same way in the
Army. Many a top official in
civilian life is a buck pri-
vate in the Army with men,
his inferior by far in ordin-
ary life, now his superior of-
ficers. Maybe they are bet-
NEWS OF OUR
«g2 MENaaWOMEN
555)5 IHUHIFORM
that is certainly with us,
says the Gladewater Times-
Tribune, let’s remember that
it’s the way of life.
One man, as we know in
the oilfield, holds on to a
poor sandy land farm for
years, only to sell it a few
days before discovery of oil
makes it worth a fortune.
Bad luck, we say. Yes, but
it’s the way things go. One
griup is up, then another,
right now it’s the transient,
usually irresponsible, drifter
that’s getting a fortune ev-
ery week as his weekly pay
Arrives for Visit
Mr. and Mrs. D. M. McEarchern
of Brownsville and Matamoros have
arrived for a visit with Mrs. Mc-
Eachern’s mother, Mrs. Mattie
Baird. Their son, Marvin, Jr., has
been visiting his grandmother here
for two weeks.
Ennis Daily News
fublished Every Day Except Sun-
day, by The United Publishing Co.,
wich also publishes The Ennis
Weekly Local and The Palmer
Rustler.
BARRIS PAYNE
PROMOTED TO PFC.
According to word received by
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Payne of Ennis,
I their son, Farris, has been promot-
ed to the rank of Private First
Class. He entered the service Aug.
10, 1942 and at the present is sta-
tioned with the Post Medical De-
tachment at Fort Sam Houston,
Texas.
lini with the tacit blessing of our reactionary diplomatic
clique.
Chester Davis for Vice President
It didn’t figure in the main reasons for the White
House firing of Food Czar Chester Davis, but the talk a-
bout Davis’s vice-presidential ambitions didn’t help him
any.
One trovle with Davis seems to be that he’s smitten
with a virulent case of vice-presidentitis. Friends say he is
bitten bad, fancies himself as an independent, mid-west,.
farmers’ candidate for the vice-presidency next year.
Chester is definitely on the outs with the two other
vice-presidential possibilities. He and Vice President Wal-
lace used to be close friends. For years Davis served un-
der Henry when he was Secretary of Agriculture. But af-
WASHINGTON, July 6—Real inside fact about the row
between Jesse Jones and Vice-President Wallace was that
the Vice President cleared his vitriolic statement with his
chief in the White House before hurling it at President’s
Secretary of Commerce.
Actually, the President did not see the press release
which the Vice President prepared for the newspapers. But
he did know all about it. Henry went to see him on Sat-
urday, June 26, and told him in detail how he had labored
patiently with Jones and how month after month, Jesse
had held back and quibbled over details.
The Vice President also told his chief how Jesse had
•been up on Capitol Hill lobbying with Senators to try to
undercut the President’s own order making the Board of
Economic Warfare supreme over Jesse Jones in ordering
strategic materials abroad.
He told how he had exercised all sorts of patience, but
believed the only thing to do was to blast Jesse publicly.
The President listened, gave the Vice President the
green light.
Wallace also sent his statement to the Office of War
Information before giving it to the press. He followed all
the rules meticulously. The Office of War. Information
even sent the statement on to the White House with its
OK, before it was published, though it was sent merely for
White House information. The, President did not read it
in advance.
Note: Wallace has cooperated with the President in
check in some cost-plus in-
dustry. The steady, reliable tor Franco, the man put into office by Hitler ^nd Musso-
U.S.A.—as well as the Near East. Rives Matthews, the
Maryland editor who was indicted for criminal libel be-
cause he exposed a state official for driving to Georgia for
his son’s wedding, has been deluged with so much con-
gratulatory mail he can’t answer it all. He even got ad-
vertisements for his paper ribbing Maryland politicos on
their waste of gasoline. Inside reports from Spam indi-
6:15 The Johnson Family .
6:30 California Melodies
7:00 Cal Tinney, news ...
7:15 They’re the Barries .
7:30 Mutual Presents .....
8:00 U. P. News ..........
8:15 It’s Dance Time ......
8:30 “Soldiers with Wings
9:00 John B. Hughes, news
9:15 Jimmy Joys Orch. ...
9:30 Hits of the Day ......
10:00 U. P. News .........
10:15 Leo Reisman’s Orch.
10;30 Guy Lombardo’s Orch
11:00 U. P. News ..........
\ ——— - 7
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Copr. 1943‘byunited Featuf,,
Tm. Eex U. S. P* OsAitN,
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TH OS. LA WAYNE BROWN
IN MARINE TRAINING
Thomas LaWayne Brown of En-
nis. Route 2, was one of the sev-
enty-eight reservists to leave Com-
merce July 1. He was sent to Poly-
technic Institute, Ruston, La., to
begin his training in the Marines.
While enrolled in the E.T.S.T.C.
he made an outstanding student
in both his academic and campus
activities, having served in various
offices of a number of organiza-
tions.
j -------
Sunday Visitors
Pfc. Woodrow Pittman of Tarrant
Field and Mrs. Pittman spent Sun-
day here, guests in the home of
Mrs. A. M. Wright, who accom-
panied them home for a visit.
ENNIS DAILY NEWS, ENNIS ELLIS COUMTY, TEXKB TUESDAY EVENING, JULY 6, 1948
9
3- $). 9
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The Axis Stops at Nothing.
f Don’t stop your War Bond
j w Pay roll Savings at 10%. Every
। 4$ soldier is a 100 percenter. Fig-
p2d ure it out yourself.
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PROTEIN—plenty of protein—is essential A
hfor maximum production of milk. You A
need more protein .. it’s econom-/
: \jcal to feed more protein.. A
Xprotein saves grain in / .
x dciry rations, y
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MORE PROTEIN
.i. . . . , vi. .
MBS—Mutual Broad-
casting System; ET—Electrical Trans-
J Officer of Moody Field, addressed
.9 (the new officers at the graduating
j ceremonies and bade them farewell
% as they prepared to leave for the
final stages of combat preparation.
Moscow officially admits a Ger-
man offensive from Kursk area to
approximately 120 miles from Vo-
ronezh.
U. S. War Department an-
nounces first battlefield encounter
| between U. S. troops andthose of
Germany in Libyan battle on June
11-12.
Press reports out of China an-
nounce that U. S. Air Force in
China had sunk a Japanese gun-
boat and demolished more than 25
planes.
U. S. Navy reports a July 4 raid
by U. S. submarines in enemy-oc-
cupied western end of the Aleu-
tion islands.
To Fort Worth
Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Alexander'
have gone to Forth Worth for a
visit with their daughter, Miss Ma-
ry Louise Alexander.
EVENING
6:00 Fulton Lewis, Jr........
6:15 The Johnson Family....
6:30 Hits of the Day.........
6:45 Confidentially Yours ..
7:00 “Singin’ Sam” .........
7:15 Duke Ellington's Orch.
7:30 Pass in Review ........
8:00 U. P. News ............
8:15 It's Dance Time........
8:30 “This Is Our Enemy”..
9:00 John B. Hughes, news..
9:15 Jommy Joy’s Orch. ...
9:30 Jimmy Joy’s Orch. ...
9:45 Dick Kuhn’s Orch.......
10:00 U. P. News .........
10:15 George McDuffy’s Orch
10:30 The Sinfonietta .......
11:00 U. P. News ............
12:00 Luncheon Melodies
12:15 U. P. News ......
SALUTE COSTS 25 PLATES
CAMP STONEMAN. Cal. (UP)
—Brig. Gen. Wallace De Witt, M.C..
invaded the sacred precincts of the
camp kitchen when an unidentified
soldier was carrying a stack of 25
plates. When the soldier suddenly
saw the general’s star, his eyes
popped, he dropped the plates, sa-
luted properly, executed a right
face and fled from the building.
All the plates were broken.
--------
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lace’s office.
; Other potential possibility is Jimmy Byrnes, with whom
Davis has rowed constantly.
Although a Democrat, Davis served for a Republican
Administration in Montana when he was Commissioner of
Agriculture and Marketing in 1921-25. Later he served un-
der ardent Republican farm leader Earl Smith in Illinois.
So maybe Chester is ambitious and can run on either
ticket. Anyway a lot of Republicans are for him since he
has been causing so much grief to FDR
Lamont for Lew Douglas
Thomas W. Lamoni, wealthy Morgan partner, received
a call the other day from a Washington official who is a
friend of Lew Dougls, War Shipping Administrator. The
talk turned to a if cent report that Douglas was being pro-
moted for Vice Pres dent on the Republican ticket.
“If you ask me." said Lamont, "I think Lew should be
a candidate not for Vice President, but for President.”
No German Sausage
The d’iplan’s grapevine reports that the German
food suipplv is running low. A new cut has been made in
the meat ration. This,-coming at a time when, the great-
est muscle must be exerted in defense of the Vaterland, is
expected to be a severe blow to German morale.
The basic ration of meat for. normal uses was 490
grams at this time last year. But now the ration has been
cut to 250 grams— which is about half a pound per week,
including fat and bone. An effort is being made to com-
pensate this reduction by the substitution of cheese and
groats, (hulled and crushed oats or wheat.) During the
winter, however, it was reduced to 300 grams. In the
spring the cut was partially restored, when the ration was
moved up to 350 grams recognizing the necessity of more
nourishment with the coming of the season of greater mil-
itary activity.
Merry-Go-Round
Congresswomen Clare Booth Luce made one of her
rare public appearances outside of Congress when she
spoke at Haverford (Penna.) School recently. Her husband,
Harry Luce, is a brother-in-law of Haverford Headmaster
Leslie R. Severinghaus. Coast Guardsman Warren H. Kim-
zey, Pacific hero who has seen men killed under all sorts of
battle conditions, says he would rather be in Pacific action
than fishing long-drowned duck hunters out of the De-
troit River. He is now stationed on the Great Lakes.
00099000000
Sherwin-Williams
SEMI-LUSTRE
Ideal for kitchen and bath-
rerm walls’ and
CClings — also
woodwork.
Amazingly wash- .
able. Beautiful
colors.
000000
Sherwin -WlUMMS
SWP HOUSE PAINT
Your home is y
your biggest and t
best investment..-/:
P r o t e c t it with
America’s favorite. ____ .
while he was a better offi-
cer in civil life. So that’s
that, and what of it? .
The shift of inflation
hurts these with stated in-
comes from property invest-
ments or annuities, from
pensions, salaries or other
non-changable sources. But
maybe they have been enjoy-
ing too many advantages
anyway.
Certainly inflation will
break some, make others
wealthy. The man who owes
debts will be able to pay
them off with cheap money,
those with invested capital
will lose heavily. A man
worth a million dollars, in
stocks and bonds, three
years ago is worth half a
million today in terms of
income that he can keep. In
the first place money is
worth less. In the second
place income taxes recapture
most of that.
We’ll have to adjust our-
selves to the reshuffling that
comes with inflation. Be-
cause, boys it’s here. And
the main reason is failure
of congress to put a ceiling
on farm products. That’s the
base of everything. Raise
th. foundation of a house,
and the whole house' goes
up ,, with it. Simple as that
Congress refused to put a
ceiling on farm prices, and
that broke the "hold-the-
line” order. It was impossi-
ble after that.
=--e------------------------
Daily Bible, Thought
God cannot be bribed nor
bought off. If you do a kind-
ness to fellow men, God will
accept it as evidence of
good faith: I desired mercy
and, not sacrifice. —Hosea
6:8.
Guests Return
Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Carter and
grandson, Carl Robertson, have re-
turned to Killeen after a week end
visit here in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Robertson. Carl is
spending the summer with his
grandparents where he is employed
in the newspaper office of Mr, Car-
ter.
Holiday Visitors
Weekend visitors of, Mr. and Mrs.
J. O. Peacock were, Mrs. Peacock’s |
father, L. W. Thrash of Corsicana, bam
and her sister, Mrs. P.' J. Peters,eed? B
and son, Paul Jo of Dallas. Jimm-, s
and Jerry Peacock returned to Dal- - 13
las to spend a few days. I
ter officers in the Army i ter he became food czar, Davis did not set foot in Wal-
• Presented by Cinema Guild
K, L and M stamps valid through
August 7.
MEATS. FATS, INCULDING
BUTTER, EDIBLE OILS,
CHEESE, CANNED FISH—Red
stamps, war ration book No. 2
are cumulative. Stamp P, June
28 to July 31. Stamp Q becomes
valid July 4.
GASOLINE—A books, coupon
3- expires July 21; B books, ex-
piration date stamped in each
bock; C, T, E and R books ex-
pire ninety days from date of is-
suance.
SUGAR—.Stamp No. 13, good
for five pounds, expires mid-
night Aug. 15; stamps No. 15
and 16 each good for five pounds
of canning sugar through Oct.
31.
COFFEE—Stamp 21 valid July
1 to July 21. Stamp 22 valid
July 22 to Aug. 11.
SHOES—Stamp No. 18, Book
1. valid June 16 through Oct. 31.
TIRE INSPECTION — Dead
line for A books, six months, for
B books four months, and for C
books three months from last in-
spection, for T books, six months
from date of last inspection, or
5,000 miles, whichever falls first.
Failure to meet these deadlines
11:05 Sign Off
—WEDNESDAY-
MORNING
6:30 Sign On; Rise and Shine....ET
7:00 U. P. News ...............Stu.
7:15 Morning Variety Show......ET
7:45 Ennis On the Air ...........RE
8:00 U. P. News ................Stu.
8:05 Waxahachie on the Air..... RE
8:30 Faith & Truth, Grand P...RE
9:00 Family Altar Service ......Stu.
9:30 Cheer Up Gang ...........MBS
10:00 U. P. News ...............Stu.
10:05 Organ Serenade .............ET
10:15 Karl Zomar’s Scrapbook ..MBS
10:30 Yankee House Party ......MBS
11:00 Boake Carter, news .......MBS
11:15 Hill’billy Roundup Time ....ET
11:55 Tuneful Toast ..............ET
AFTERNOON
18 STAMP
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Nowlin, C. A. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 159, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 6, 1943, newspaper, July 6, 1943; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1475632/m1/2/: accessed June 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Ennis Public Library.