The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 205, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 28, 1943 Page: 2 of 4
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ENNIS DAILY NEWS, ENNIS, ELLIS COUNTY, YEXAS
PAGE TWO
SATURDAY EVENING, AUG. 28, 1943
2
THE
LING WALL
f
RADIO
9
4
YOU ARE
INVITED TO
4
TUNE IN
—SATURDAY—
C. A. Nowlin_____Editor and Mgr.
isan*
—SUBSCRIPTION RATES—
PLAZA
SUNDAY and MONDAY
4:30 Navy Bulletin Board ......MBSI
By Mail in Ellis County
Ldn
@
Con- ! Russian Problems
GRAND
Agriculture
THEATRE
SUNDAY and MONDAY
IN
Hillsboro... RE
2:30 Rev. Curtis, Grand Prairie.. RE
“Your News and
1
PLUS SHORTS and NEWS
PLUS SHORTS and NEWS
Marvin
4
JOB PRINTING
♦
10:15 Karl Zomar’s Seranhook. .. . MBR
t
11:15 Hil’billv Roundup Time ....FT
ET
2:30 Shady Valiev Folks
MRS
3;00 Walter Comrton, News ....MRS
3:15 “Uncle Sam
ET
3:30 “Nobody’s Children .......MBS
Broad-
I
WE PRINT THEM ALL!
Opportunity
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Ennis News
Phone 44
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Daily Bible Thought
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Vi
By Ernie Bushmiller
NANCY
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air field.
and personnel.
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BADGE OF MERIT
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N.E.
3:30 Young People’s Ch. of Air MBS
4:00 Waxahachie on the Air ....RE
Mutual Station”
1340 on Your Dial
The regular Sunday morning
Radio Message as presented
by the Pentacostal Church
REV B. K. POWELL, Pastor.
THE ENNIS DAILY NEWS
STUDIO, RADIO STATION
ER---OKAYY---
YOU WAIT
RIGHT HERE
1:30 Jams of Rhythm
2:00 Sunshine Hour,
X AM
NOT!
Bonds. Payroll Savings is
the best means of doing your
_____$3.00
_____2.00
_____1.00
_____ 50c
AN INSPIRATION
AWAITS YOU!
One Year ____
Six Months
Three Months
One Month
GO ON-
YOU'RE
AFRAID
TO MILK
A COW!
Put every dollar above the
necessities of life into War
State
missioner
—Dodgers
—Announcements
—Social Stationery
—Shipping Tags
—Labels
N
D
,MBS
..Stu.
—Form Letters
—Scratch Pads
—Bill Heads
—Letterheads
—Noteheads
— Envelopes
—Statements
—Placards
Outside of County by Mail, Rates
Same as for City.
NRS
MRS
. Don’t stom now! Buy more
and more War Bonds’
CONSI$TENT
ADVERTISING
WILLREMOVE
YOURWORRI
MBS
. .ET
MBS
MBS
MBS
MBS
4:00 Jamboree Program
4:30 “Highway Patrol”
4:45 “Superman” .....
5:00 Prayer ............
WELL- LEVS SEE yOU
BRING ME A GLASS
OF MILK RIGHT
FROM A COW!
casting System; ET—Electrical Trans-
criptions; RE—Remote.
.Stu
.RE
Stu.
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I
J. E. MCDONALD
SPEAKS OUT AGAIN
62
8:15 Waxahachie on the Air ..
8:30 Faith. Trii+h Proaram GP
9:nn Familv Altor Service .....
0:30 Cheer Un Gang...........
.Stu.
.MBS
MBS
MRS
FDR dayd:
Curtail spending.
Put your savings
into war bonds every
payday.
. .ET
MBS
—Card of Thanks
—Prescription Blanks
—Invoices
—Index Cards
.MRS
. ...S+n.
MBS
MBS
. .ET
MBS
—Morning—•
8:00 to 8:15 A.M
. .ET
.Stu.
. .RE
..RE
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. .ET
.Stu.
. .ET
MBS
.MBS
.MBS
.MBS
.MBS
.MBS
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..ET
.MBS
.MBS
.MBS
..ET
...Stu
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. der of 1943.
Mr. McDonald points
I
I
A single air force, combining both Army and Navy,
would do away with this duplication both of equipment
Stu.
. ET
.ET
.ET
.ET
2 WHY
• WAIL
ABOUT
BUSINE$$3
WHEN
Rita Hayworth
Fred Astair
(/IA
$ 9 •
TOMORROW
(Sunday)
You Were Never
Lovelier
—Booklets
—Blotters
—Checks
—Receipts
—Warrants
—Post Cards
—Gin Forms
—Sale Circulars
—Notes
—Deeds
—Mortgages
—Tickets
—Folders
—Programs
—Ruled Forms
—Blank Forms
—Business Cards
—Calling Cards
S+u.
.RE
. RE
.RE
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Clyde Robertson
Representing
State Reserve Life
Insurance Co.
Fort Worth
Every Policy Registered
h.
1
1
I
Log
1340 On Your Dia!
; s
BADGE OF HONOR
They mean 7zie done
your share or more in the
LABOR MANAGEMENT
WARBONDDRIVE
Check up on your supply of Printing and order what
you need now. Don’t wait till you’re entirely out of
printing to order. We take time to do good printing.
Below are some items you may need:
THE PRESENT
That Lasts A Year
—e—
A SUBSCRIPTION TO
The Home Newspaper
K -bailu,
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MBS
.Stu
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. .ET
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—K«8
2:00 Sunshine Hour. Hillsboro.. . RE
did you
REALLY
GET THIS
RIGHT FROM
A COW?
Knocks
$
® • 4
SM28 Nk 8888A
1 ER
2:45 Alvino Rey’s Orch.
3:00 Lutheran Hour ...
EVENING
6:00 Love, Faith, Hope .........Stu.
6:30 Stars-Stripes in Britain...MRS
Ru*8
y 26 0 28
V e) -
=s
11:05 Sign Off .............
Key:—
Stu.—Studio; MBS—Mutual
5:00 Prayer .................
5:01 I Hear America Singing
5:15 Today’s Top Tunes ...
5:30 “Hawaii Calls” .......
10:20 Yankee House Partv
11:00 Rnake Carter, news.
3:30 Brazilian Parande
4:00 Jamboree Probram
4:30 Northside Miss. Band .
5:00 Waxahachie on the Air
5:45 “Voice With a Smile”..
(Ar ue Dest means ox uuug yuux i
eff best in helping your sons and
friends on the fighting fronts. Fig-
ure it put yourself.
T
8
s
7:00 American Forum of Air..
7:45 Between the Headlines .
8:00 Today’s Ton Tunes .....
8:15 Tabernacle Rant. Ch.....
9:00 Old-Fashioned Revival ..
10: Church of God in Christ
11:00 II. P. News .............
11:05 Sign Off ...............
All Communications of Business
and items of news should be ad-
dressed to the company and not
individuals.
—
3^
Aulak,.
But most important over-all problem is Russian sus-
, ut picion that Britain is still playing old-fashion power poli-
..Entered as Second-Class Matter
at the Post Office at Ennis, Texas,
Under the Act of March 3, 1879.
Aug. 31—All old-type B and
C gasoline ration coupons ex-
pire and must be adjusted with
local boards.
Aug. 31—Second tire inspec-
tion. for C gasoline book holders
due.
Aug. 31—Red Stamps T, U, V
and W expire.
Sept. 20—Blue Stamps R, S
and T (forty-eight points) ex-
pire.
Sept. 21—No. 7 basic A gaso-
line ration coupons, good for
three gallons each, expire.
Oct. 30—Stamp 14, Book 1,
valid for five pounds of sugar •
until midnight.
Oct. 31—Stamp 18, Book 1, for
one pair shoes, expires.
Oct. 31—Dead line for validity
of Stamps 15-16 for canning su-
gar.
Oct. 31—Second tire inspec-
tion for A gasoline book holders
due.
EVENING
6:00 Amer. Eagle Club,
6:30 It’s Dance Time .
7:00 “The Fleet’s In”
7:30 Upton Close, news
5:01 Phil. Keyne-Gordon, news MRS
5:15 Babe Rhode’s Orch.....MRS
5:30 Overseas News Reports ..MBS
5:45 “Songs for Servicemen” ..MBS
....S+u
. .. .MRS
. .. .MRS
.....ET
. .. .MRS
6
‘4
Ennis Daily News
Published Every Day Except Sun-
day, by The United Publishing Co.,
which also publishes the Ennis
Weekly Local and The Palmer
Rustler.
Here are the chief problems which will have to be
threshed out with Stalin by whoever goes to Russia:
1.—A 2nd Front. This, was publicly pledged at Casa-
blanca, and the Russians blame Churchill because the
pledge has not been kept. They think Roosevelt wanted
the 2nd front, but Churchill insisted that it be undertaken
largely by American troops.
2.—The large number of British troops in Palestine,
Mesopotamia and the Near East. The Russians think this
is to block them from getting a warm water route through
the Gulf of Persia. They say that if the British can spare
these troops for the Near East, why can’t they spare them
for a 2nd Front?
3—The British have occupied Teheran, the capital of
Iran, illegally, say the Russians. The Russians meanwhile
have occupied two northern provinces of Iran.
4.—The Russians suspect that the British want to keep
WIN YOUR RACE
For Business Supremacy
By Advertising
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4)4=5
9
8 $93
—Evening—
8:30 to 9:00 P.M.
The regular Sunday evening
services of the Tabernacle
Baptist Church, direct from
the church auditorium.
REV. HUGH R. BUMPAS,
Pastor
7:45 Ruby Norman’s Orch.
8:00 Chicago Theater of Air
10:00 U.P.
10:15 Ray
10:30 Mon.
11:00 U. P.
WEWSEWE KAND
to War Food Administratoz
War Ration Books : I WAR IN EUROPE
" A YEAR AGO
AUG. 28, 1942
Copr. 1943 by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
Tm.Reg.U.8. Pat.om—Auruhts reserved AVG-28
News ............
Morton’s Orch.
Night Dance Time
N ews .............
9:00 John B. Hughes, news ...MBS
9:15 Bandwagon ...............MBS
9;45_ Tommy Tucker’s Orch ..MBS
10:00 Juneteenth Celebration ..REMO
11:00 U. P. News ................Stu.
11:05 Sign Off
-SUNDAY-
MORNING
The stcry of a destroyer, the
H.M.S. Torrin which went down,
in the Battle of Crete, Noel Cow-
ard’s “In Which We Serve,” which
is due for its local premiere on
Sunday at the Plaza Theatre
through United Artists release,
shows* in dramatic manner how the
men who sail in this ship are
bound to her in love and sacrifice,
yet live their own lives apart in
the warm circle of their families.
From the launching of the Tor-
rin, until its last moments when it
lies sadly on its side in the war-
filled Mediterranean, it is the ship
in which they serve steadfastly
and gallantly, and for whose glory
many of them lose their lives un-
der the bombs of the enemy.
Yet behind this life of mem-
bers of the Royal Navy, who keep
the ship’s guns blazing until the
waters of the sea flow over them,
is their own life as husband or
lover or father. As the Torrin sinks
at Crete and the survivors cling to
a rubber float awaiting rescue, the
camera returns us to scenes in the
lives of some of them—of Captain
Kinross played by Noel Coward, of
his Chief Petty Officer, Walter
Hardy, and of Ordinary Seaman
Shorty Blake. We see the Kinrosses
drinking their favorite cocktail, the
Kinross Special, both to the Torrin
and to their own devotion and
happiness. We see with what high
purpose and resolve the ship was
commissioned.
We see the Hardy’s around the
table at Christmas, laughing and
singing and making sDeeches, and
Shorty and Mrs. Blake on their
honeymoon enjoying the brief mo-
ments of joy before he goes back
to the sea and the war. We see the
Kinross family, with young Lavi-
nia and Bobby, enjoying a picnic
and drinking in the quiet and
beauty of the English country-side
—while planes fly ominously over-
head.
And later, we see pombs fall
through the roof of the Hardy
home and kill Mrs. Hardy, who re-
fused to move on to shelter in the
country because she couldn’t leave
her husband’s garden—or his home.
Through all these episodes of
home life, the thread of the war
is subtly woven—women and chil-
dren living not only bereft of fath-
er and husband, but living in anx-
iety and on the brink of sorrow
or horror to come.
10:0 11, p. Naw/s ...
10:05 Praan Serenade
7:00 Sign On—Rise and Shine.
7:30 U. P. News ..............
8:00 Ennis on the Air ........
8:15 Waxahachie on the Air ..
8:15 Gospel Singer ...........
8:30 Faith, Truth Program GP
9:00 Family Altar Service ....
9:30 Jungle Jim ..............
9:45 Walter Compton, news....
)
rml
ill
a
—
Movie Flashes
- I II I ■! I I • UI' ■ ■ W i 2
tics as she did 100 years back. Whereas she once played
Germany off against France, it is now suspected that she
wants to play Russia off against the United States. This
may or may not be true, but it will be one of the toughest
things to erase from the Russian mind.
Note: Chief report that worries diplomatic circles is
that Germany has given Stalin a promise of the old.Russian
I boundaries before 1914. This is far more than the Allies
have talked about giving her—and Stalin knows it.
Capital Chaff
George Bakhmeteff, last Czarist Ambassador to Wash-
ington, once was asked what relation he was to Kerensky’s
Ambassador Boris Bakhmeteff. “The same relation,” was
the reply, “that George Washington was to Booker T.”
When Elmer Davis received' a cable in Morocco that FDR
had spanked OWI’s broadcast about the “moronic little
king” of Italy, Davis sent back- this "telegram: “Maybe
broadcast was a mistake but I still think the House of Sa-
voy is a second class hotel,” Brazilian patriotism and an-
ti-Argentine feeling are so strong in Rio De Janerio that
when Foreign Minister Aranha was running one of his
own Argentine thoroughbreds against a Brazilian horse,
Aranha began rooting for the Brazilian. He said he could
not bear to have anything Argentine win—even though he
owned it. Tom Johnson of the Army Jeeps will pioneer
the new Pan American highway through Central America.
With a jeep he expects to get through it several months
before the road is scheduled for completion.
Priority of Danger
Behind the closed doors of the OCD in Washington,
olans for the civilian defense of the country are being re-
vised. The new plans take into account the decreasing
likelihood of attack, and the growing public indifference
to black-outs and bomb shelters.
War chiefs insist the danger of attack has not passed,
but they admit there is no point in whipping up the pub-
lic to a frenzy of fear, especially in the safer areas.
They have now-divided the country roughly into three
^ones, with the following “priority of danger”—1. Pacific
Coast, 2. Atlantic Coast, 3. interior areas.
The coastal areas are 200 miles deep, so that every-
thing 200 miles inland is “interior” and relatively safe. The
Pacific coast is regarded as more dangerous than the At-
lantic, because the Japs are both uncontrolled and unpre-
dictable. . .
When the revision is finally ironed out, public an-
nouncements will be made, and there will be a general re-
laxation of defense activities. But OCD will insist that the
minimum measures of protection shall be ready for the si-
ren.
Decision to relax the program was difficult for OCD,
since it meant a scaling down of personnel, and a loss of
jobs throughout the organization.
Air Force Duplication
Advocates of a single air force point to the manpower
saving that might be accomplished, right under the noses
of the Chiefs of Staff, if Army Air Forces and Naval Avia-
tion were combined.
On the edge of Washington, spearated only by the Po-
tomac River, are the Army’s Bowling Field and the Navy’s
air base at Anacostia. Both fields are equipped with many
of the same facilities, and those facilities are manned by
forces which duplicate each other.
Each field has its' own radio tower and radio staff;
each has its spearate communication staff, its own metoro-
logical bureau and staff, its own medical staff, its own
supply depot—and a dozen other services required at a big
If everyone had that atti-
tude that it would make a
wonderful neighborhood, a
wonderful town, a wonderful
world:
Thou shalt love thy neigh-
bor as thyself.— -Matt. 22:39.
--MONDAY—
MORNING
f:on Sinn On—Rise and Shine
7:nn u. P. News ............
7-15 Mornine Variety Show..
7:55 UP News .............
8:00 Ennis on the Air ......
ROAD \k
SIDE 1
WASHINGTON, August 28—Insiders who have talked
with both Secretary Hull and his ex-Undersecretary, Sum-
ner Welles, report that aside from jealousy of the old for
the young, their basic difference gets down to Soviet Rus-
' sia and future plans for peace.
Hull long has been anti-Russian. Welles has long ar-
gued that we must work with Russia—even though we
don’t agree with her ideology—if we are to win the peace.
Hull climaxed his anti-Russian attitude by placing in
charge of his peace-planning group, Leo Pasvolsky, a bit-
ter anti-Soviet.
You don’t hear much about Pasvolsky around Wash-
ington, but he happens to be one of Mr. Hull’s closest ad-
visers. Born in Russia, Pasvolsky was the last secretary to
Kerensky’s Ambassador Boris Bakhmeteff. Pasvolsky for-
merly edited the Russian Review in New York, later a
daily Russian paper called Russkoye Slovo, which was anti-
Soviet, and after various research studies, became adviser
to Mr. Hull.
When Pasvolsky’s plans for a new world bogged down,
Welles diplomatically maneuvered so that the President ap-
pointed a larger peace planning group, including Johns
Hopkins Professor Isaiah Bowmen.
x But the basic difference between Hull and Welles in
dealing with Russia has continued. And that is why it
may be futile for Welles to undertake a mission to Moscow
with Foreign Minister Eden. For any plan he works out
I with the Russians would almost certainly meet with vigor-
I ous opposition from Hull the minute Welles got home.
J E. McDor:al,
TTT
EVENING
6:00 Fulton Lewis, Jr. ..
6:15 The Johnson Family
6;30 Mystery Hall ......
7:00 Cal Tinney, news .
7:15 They’re the Barries
7:30 Bulldog Drummond
8:00 U. P. News ........
8:15 It’s Dance Time ....
8:30 Mediation Board ...
Raymond Clapper, news
9:15 Dean Austin Pardue
9:30 Hits of the Day ....
11:55 Tuneful Toast ......
AFTERNOON
1^:00 Lunchenn Melodies .
12:15 U. P. News ........
1230 Lum ’n Abner ......
12:45 “Two Keyboards” .
1:00 Cedric Foster, news
1:15 10-2-4 Ranch .......
1:30 Mutual Goes Callinn
Now’ trie Commissioner has them fighting arother winter so the Red Army will be bled
spoken hi n nd again. This white and will not worry the Allies in the post-war polic-
time it was to advocate the I ing of Europe or in fixing its boundaries. The Russians
removal of meat irom the remember all too well the Cliveden Set’s proposal to ma-
rationed list for the remaj-neuver Stalin and Hitler into bleeding each other.
n CThe WASHINGTON
2- MERRY-GO-ROUND
h’amdh By DREW PEARSON
10:00 Sunday Morning Var. Show ET
11:00 5th Ave. Ch. of Christ.......RE
11:30 Memorial Bapt. Ch..........RE
AFTERNOON
12:00 “Soldiers of the Press”......ET
"5*
5
*6
drouth h; i f’esed a serious
feed situation n the Soutn-
we t and tat the rangoi
which are , w becoming
dried- up, are carrying three
milion more attle than ev-
er before.
Anyone who has . followed
the stock markets during the
past few months must see
that disaster is facing stock
men unless something is
done to stop the downward
trend of the market. Thous-
ands of cattle are betog forc-
ed upon the marker because
of the grass and feed si •t-
age. The situation is a ser-
ious. one.
The' News believes if Mr.
McDonald’s sugsection is
taken, or if he is given a
free—hand to work out the
problem he can solve it to
the satisfaction of all con-
cerned.
Pp,$ 3)
j— j- j— j- j— j— j— j— j— j— j— j— j— j— j~ j— j— ji— j— j- j— j— j— j— j— --------- -------------------
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIV
12:15 U. P. News.......
12:30 Meet the Band ...
12:45 Front Page Drama
1:00 Your Hit Revue .
Ellis countian, has, upon a
number of occasions, taken
issue with the natio 1 gov-
ernment in its ad. ioistra-
tion of the agricultural poli-
cy. While 21s pronounc-
ments have not always been
popular with a majority of
the peopie they have in a
majority of instances proven
to be correct 1 me has prov-
en more than once that 3
ideas for aiding agricultore
and those engaged in it
would have proven the mnst
sensible and effective.
--V--
WHAT ARE YOU
WORRYING ABOUT?
Are you afraid that food
shortages, rationing, possible
wartime epidemics are going
to endanger your health.
Forget it! The British ‛n 19-
42 had the second lowest
death rat, in all history, the
highest birth rate in a de-
cade. In other words, the
less fd, the less mortality
and the more babies. Hys-
teria. insanity and alcohol-
ism did not increase in 1 s -
vily bombed areas. In this
country health reports show
that the death rates for in-
fluenza and pneumonia have
declined from 202 per 100,000
population in 1900 to 70 ta-
day; bronchitis, from 45 per
100,000 to 3.— Gladewater
'Cimes-Tribune.
AFTERNOON
12:00 Luncheon With Lopez/ ..MBS
12:15 U. P. News ...............Stu.
12:30 Henry Jerome’s Orch ......MBS
1:00 Lani McIntire’s Orch.....MBS
1:30 Mutual Goes Calling ......MBS
2:00 Sunshine Hour, Hillsboro... RE
2:30 Shady Valley Folks ........MBS
2:45 Shady Valley Folks ......MBS
..3:00 Willie Farmer’s Orch. ..MBS
3:15 Des. of Race, Aqueduct ...MBS
cn.c that the
By Carrier in City
One Year --------------------$6.00
Six Months __________________3.00
Three Months _______________1.50
One Month _____________,----- 50c
(-
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T—mi
Noel Coward in /
(By United Press)
British bombers — about 600—
dump tons of high explosives and
incediaries on the Baltic port of
Gydnia in Poland; 30 of the raid-
ers failed to return.
Russians hold Nazis at virtual
standstill in Stalingrad and the
Caucasus.
■ U. S. Navy spokesman reveals
there has been “no reports” of new
clashes for more than two days in
Solomons area.
Chinese overrun Chuhsien and
Lishui, air bases in Chekiang.
British aircraft bomb an Italian
cruiser northwest of Crete.
“ m 7
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Nowlin, C. A. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 205, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 28, 1943, newspaper, August 28, 1943; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1475678/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Ennis Public Library.