The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 60, Ed. 1 Monday, March 13, 1944 Page: 4 of 4
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PAGE FOUR
BUY WAR BONDS
Quota $13,500
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Joe Jolesch, Chairman
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Texas Power & Light Co. -- $150 00
Mr., Mrs. Melvin Haskovec - 1.00
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Pfc. DeVille
Cpl. Chamberlin
Pfc. Shue
Cpl. Moise
Cpl. Frazier
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Mr, Mrs. J C'. Tyler
Contribute to the Red Cross!
IES!
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have the new
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MAINTAIN
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lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Mrs. Mary Evelyn McCluney
only $
NOW!
*
*
MRS. SAM ARMSTRONG
!
Y‘
114 S. Dallas Street
“After the last
4.
war companies attempted
(Seal).
i
Fn
to turn their energies as quickly
as possible, and on as large scale as possible,
Good Investment
(
to recapture civilian markets which had been given up for
Wanted!
USED CARS
zoomed upward after the Armistice and
Mr., Mrs. H. R. KKmery ____1.00
reached unheard of levels in 1919.
One agency had billings
1941 Nash Coach, really clean
of 612 millions.”
1941 DeSoto Deluxe Coach
All Kinds of
E ROLL IT ON WITH THE NEW Q0,
Kem-Tone ROLLER-KOATER 00
GORDEN SEEDS
It
R. D. Cahn, Economist.
1939 Chevrolet Coupe
and
Announcing
Farm Planting Seeds
The re-opening of
1933 Chevrolet Sedan
1931 Chevrolet Coach
compete under such conditions by
1933 Dodge Sedan
Regular
preserving their brands and good
205 E, Avenue
W. Brown St.
Employment
will with consistant advertising now
Phone 260
THE ENNIS DAILY NEWS
0
Waxahachie, Texas
213 W. Knox Street
• ■■■ • • • mn • • • •=B
)
YOUR Kme DEALER
Backgher4kck
Naughton
Farms, Inc.
Hemstitching done and
eyelets put into garments
Frankie Davis
Motor Company
BUY MORE U. S. WAR
BONDS AND STAMPS
Mr., Mrs. C- M. Gallagher____1.00
Mr., Mrs. W. M- Adams------1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
Mrs. Tom Wortman
Mrs. Tom Christian
Mrs. Martin Ragola
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
LOO
____$1.00
____1.00
____1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
W. H. Perry
Hazel Patterson
Virginia Horton
RED CROSS
CONTRIBUTIONS
1944 WAR FUND
Button holes, buttons
and buckles covered.
Mrs. A. H. Baker -l__________
Mrs. L. F. Parker ___________
Mrs. M. L. Spier ____________
Mrs. Tom Purcell ____________
Mr., Mrs. Tom Snell __________
Pattons Beauty Shop _______
Mr., Mrs. Dewey. Williams —
Mr., Mrs. Fletcher Wilson____
Mr., Mrs. H. L. Whitacre ___
We will trade and give 15
months terms.
RODGERS’
BEAUTY SHOP
--- 1.00
___ 1.00
___ 1.00
---1.00
___ 1.00
--- 1.00
___ 1.00
1.00
--- 1.00
1.00
____ 1.60
1.00
--- 1.00
1.00
___ 100
1.00
1.00
___ 1.00
___ 1.00
Young
Ladies
To Do
Office
Work
"GIVE 1 TO 10
TO THE
SERVICE MEN"
Mrs. W. R. Burris _
Mrs. A I. Moseley___
J. L. Smith _______
Mrs. Molina _________
1.00
1.00
— - 1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
.___ 1.00
___ 1.00
1.00
1.00
.___ 1.00
-L 100
___ 1.00
--- 1.00
.___ 1.00
1.00
1.00
2— 1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
.___ 1.00
.___ 1.00
__ 1.00
1.00
1.00
--- 1.00
1.00
1.00
___ 1.00
1.00
1.00
____1.00
____1.00
100
____1.00
____1.00
____1.00
100
--- 1.00
____1.00
____1.00
Blood Plasma Helped Save Lives at
Tarawa, Returning Wounded Relate
1940 Mercury Convertible
Coupe.
_> (
40.-
■
.22
1941 Chevrolet eDluxe Coach,
heater.
Sen. Truman
(Continued From Page One)
2h2d*st--
KEEP ON
A. L. THOMAS,
President
Attest: Joe Hawkins, Secretary.
NOTICE OF ELECTION
State of Texas,
County of Ellis,
You can help the service men by not making any
casual Long Distance calls between 7 and 10 at night.
BUCK ALDRIDGE
Feed Store
1939 Plymouth Deluxe Sedan
Heat, Music.
If you were away in camp, you’d know how much
that call means.
..we
PI
I
with WAR BONDS
Men You Know
In Service for
Humanity
-MM
Meg"a 8
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1 493
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"Well, Sarge, I was thinking
about calling the folks when
I get off tonight
62
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llllllllllllll!llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll>
donations.”
And if any further evidence of
Red Cross blood plasma’s life-sav-
ing value is needed, ask Cpl. Wil-
liam Frederick Frazier of Water-
town, Mass., to tell you how
twenty pints of plasma flowed into
his veins.
Cpl. Frazier’s story dates back
to the battle for Guadalcanal,
when a Jap machine-gunner put
bullets through both legs. Badly
wounded, he was driven in a jeep
over eight miles of bumpy road
back to a headquarters dressing
station. As soon as they reached
the station, he was given the first
of his twenty plasma transfusions.
While Navy medicos used peni-
cillin to save his legs, they used
plasma as an aid to save his life,
the plasma from the blood of
twenty donors who gave their
blood in the comfort of a Red
Cross Blood Donor Center.
Plasma and serum albumin have
been called the “foremost life-
savers of this war” by the Sur-
geons General of the Army and
Navy. Every Army and Marine
Corps medical corps unit carries
these life-savers, as does every
Naval and Coast Guard vessel
large enough to include a phar-
macists mate among its crew. To
keep this life-line fully supplied
in 1944, the Red Cross must col-
lect 5,000,000 pints of blood, or
thirty-six pints every minute of
every working day!
,9 8
8338885
Advertisers can avoid the need to
“ • MIRACLE WALL FINISH
998
/ I PER GAL
(uo PASTE
■M FORM
ferred to Parris Island, S.C., for
recruit training preceding officer
candidate class.
Mrs. Fannie Crawford _
Mrs. Eva. Johnson_______
Mrs. Alice Skrivanek _ —
Mrs. Emil Casper _______
Mrs. W. A. Campbell ____.
Mrs. Mabel Rudd _______
Mrs. Ben Bristow_______
Mrs. J. R. Riggs _______
1 Mrs. C. D. Emerson _______
Cash _____________________
Mrs. Bill Cheeck ________
Carl Owens ____------_____
Earshal V- Baker _______
Vallie Patterson ________
R. E. Billups ___________
Tom Riss _______________
Mrs- A. T. Hammond___
Mrs. Raymond Christian
Mrs. Frances Bcre’k_____
Mrs. A. D. Alexander ____
Mrs. Lola Smelley ______
Mrs. W. A. Munn ______
A Three Days’
Cough is Your
Danger Signal
Creomulsion relieves promptly be-
cause it goes right to the seat of the
trouble to help loosen and expel
germ laden phlegm, and aid nature
to soothe and heal raw, tender, in-
flamed bronchial mucous mem-
branes. Tell your druggist to sell you
a bottle of Creomulsion with the un-
derstanding you must like the way it
quickly allays the cough or you are
to have your money back. 6
CREOMULSION
for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
2885 in 8 3 : 8,8
Vsoel
WANTER, CLEAN USED
CARS—ANY MAKE OR
MODEL
J. A. Baker --------------.
Fred Petrash ___________
F. D. Barnett __________
Mrs. F. D. Barnett -----
O- M. Pickle __________
Carrol Boon -----------
George G. Wells _______
Mrs. Sam Davis --------
Mrs. Doyle Powers ----
Mrs. Jack Purcell ------.
Jack Hinton Jr. _______
Mrs. J. W. Mims -------
Mr. Smith -------------
Frank Romanek _______
Charlie Kraja ---------
Alfred Stephens ________--
Charles Monska _________
Mrs. Alois Holy -------
Anton Za’knel ________--
T. H. Skrabanek _________
V. Laznovsky __________
Mrs. C. L. Harper _----
Mrs. J. M. Ensor -------
Mrs. A. D. Redden -----
Mrs. A. W. Johnston __
Mrs. J. C. McCoy ______
Mrs. John Hinton Sr., .
Mrs. Frances Kubla __
Mr., Mrs. Carl Smith --
Mrs. John Rife --------
Miss Frances Vrla ------
Mrs. P. W. Kilpatrick ...
Carolyn Crane ________
Libbie Galetka ________
Mrs- M. Shirley --------
Mrs. Mary Hammer ______
Mrs. Carl Maloney _____
Mrs. Durwood Holt ____
Mr., Mrs. Pat Gorden
Bessie Waldron (col.) __
Willard Miller (col.) _
Mrs. Ida Branon ______
Mrs. Lilia Garrison----
Sophie McKizzie ------
F. K. Spaniel __________
J. H. McCarvell _________
Frank Zakosky --------
R. Joe Krajca --------
1. ONE COAT COVERS most wallpapers, painfed
walls and ceilings, wallboard, basement walls.
2. APPLIES LIKE MAGIC 5. NO"PAINTY"ODOR
3.DRIES IN 1 HOUR 6. WASHES EASILY
4. MIXES WITH WATER 7. LOVELIEST COLORS
N7
That’s when most of them call and there’s a big
rush on many circuits.
the duration. Newspaper advertising lineage
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THOMAS L. BROWN
COMPLETES COURSE
Ruston, La., March 13—Private 1
Thomas L. Brown of Ennis, Tex., ;
has completed the college phases
of his Marine Corps officer train-
ing at Louisiana Polytechnic In-
stitute here, and has been trans-
98 a 282 . 'i
td 1
— —" " •
Wanted! Men and
Women Who Are
Hard of Hearing *
To make this simple, no risk hearing test.
If you are temporarily deafened, bothered
by ringing buzzing head noises due to hard-
ened or coagulated wax (cerumen), try the
Ourine Home Method test that so many say
has enabled them to hear well again. You
• must hear better after making this simple
test or you get your money back at once.
Ask about Ourine Ear Drops today at
Ennis Pharmacy and drug stores
i everywhere.
ERNEST L. SIMMONS
MADE TECH. SERGEANT
Ernest L. Simmons, son of Mrs.
Annie Simmons, 403 E. Milam, En- i
nis Texas, has been promoted to
Technical Sergeant at Love Field,
Texas, headquarters for the Fifth
Ferrying Group, Ferrying Division
of the Air Transport Command.
The announcement was made by
his commanding officer, Lt. Col.
Russell W. Munson.
Prior to entering the service on
December 14, 1942, the sergeant at-
tended high school at Ennis. For
16 years prior, he operated his own
j radio and electrical business, and
is now using his full exeperience
with the ATC.
His wife, Anna Louise, resides
at 403 E. Milam.
ENNIS DAILY NEWS, ENNIS, ELLIS COUNTY, TEXAS MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 13, 1944
ROBERT M. BOHANON
COMPLETES RADIO SCHOOL
U.S- Naval Air Station, Jackson-
ville, Fla., March 13—Robert Mor-
ris Bohanon, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Le Bchanon, 601 South McKin-
ney St., Ennis, Texas, recently
graduated from the Aviation Ra-
dio Schcol here as a Corporal in ■
the U. S. Marine Corps.
Entering the service on June 28,
1943, he received his recruit train-
ing at San Diego, Calif., before ar-
riving at the Naval .'Air Technical
Training Center here.
Bohanon is now a qualified av-
iation radioman and will probably
see service with the Marine Avia-
tion Detachment-
Hartley Paint Co.
201 S. Kaufman Phone 24
1 8 2333
' y
N. C., knows how Red Cross blood
donors are backing up the men in
the front lines.
“It was pretty rough going,”
he recalled when telling how his
outfit went ashore at Bougain-
ville. “The Japs were sinking our
Higgins boats with their 77-mm.
guns, and after going over the
side we had gotten only about
twenty yards toward the beach
when we were hit. I was hit in
the chest but somehow managed
to make the beach. Luckily for
me, one of the doctors arrived
very soon and gave me some
plasma. I felt a lot better!”
Another Bougainville casualty,
Marine Corporal Coral Dwight
Chamberlin of Belle Center, Ohio,
is quite sure that blood plasma
played a major part in saving his
life.
“I was wounded three times in
the second day’s fighting for Bou-
gainville, and was in such a posi-
tion I could not be removed from
my foxhole until about nine hours
after I was wounded—twice in the
right leg and once in the left,” he
related at the East Bay Naval
Hospital.
“I was pretty weak when they
took me to the rear. They gave
me three pints of blood plasma
and it perked me right up. Take
it from me, if the people back here
in our country fully realized the
value of blood plasma, they
wouldn’t hesitate to make their
before medical corpsmen were gsae
able to pick him up and transfer
him to an LST. After preliminary u—098
first aid was administered, the —an 8
Louisiana Marine was taken to his
ship, and there received four blood o -aa
plasma transfusions. .. . gun
Those four transfusions helped P,gam
save his life! ,9
Offshore, Cpl. Norman Sidney c -2-27
Moise of New Orleans, La., was
jockeying his landing craft
through the hazardous waters to
get more ammunition for the em-
battled Marines, who held a fifty-
foot beachhead. A Jap shell ended
their run.
So intent was Cpl. Moise on
saving his men, he didn’t realize
he himself was badly wounded.
He doesn’t remember how many
transfusions of blood plasma were
required to pull him through, but
the corporal now convalescing in
the East Bay Naval Hospital in
San Francisco is thanking the un-
known donors whose blood meant
the difference between a white
cross and a Purple Heart to him.
At Tarawa, Bougainville, the
Marshalls, Guadalcanal, Buna, in
Burma and China and halfway
around the world in North Africa,
Sicily and Italy, blood plasma and
serum albumin from the blood of
volunteer donors enrolled by the
American Red Cross Blood Donor
Service helped save the lives of
countless wounded Marines, sol-
diers and sailors. From the thirty-
five Red Cross Blood Donor Cen-
ters and nearly eight hundred
nearby cities visited by mobile
blood donor units, more than six
million pints of blood have already
gone to the armed forces, and
another five million have been re-
quested by the Army and Navy
for 1944.
Pfc. Eddie Shue, Jr., of Graham,
, aia '
9 A-
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J
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WRITE A
WANT AD
CASH IN ON
STUFF
IN „
THE ATTIC—-
11
Blood plasma helped save the ... O 7
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Miss Katherine Townsend____1.00
Floyd Fluker ________________ 1.00
Mrs. Allie Whitfill __________ 1.00
Mrs. Vallie Hobbs ____________ 1.00
Mrs. Ettie Hobbs ____________ 1-00
Mrs. Burlyn Kelly _ .________ 1.00
Mrs. Louise McCluny ________ 1.00
Mrs. Eva Reeve ______________ 1.00
Mrs. W. H. Hester __________1.00
Mrs. Angeline Sicvacek ______ 1.00
Mrs. Willie Harrison ________ 1.00
Mrs. Nealie Baldridge ________ 1.00
Mrs. Martha Harrison ______100
o am
3ssgaggsg
Thh :
Ennis Independent School District.
All qualified voters of the Ennis
Independent school district take
notice: It is ordered by the board
of trustees of the Ennis Indepen-
dent School District, Ellis County,
Texas, that
An election be held at the offiice
of the Banner Company, 206 W.
Knox street in the city of Ennis
within said "district, on Saturday
first day of April 1944, for the pur-
pose of electing two trustees to
the board of said district.
R- J. Barnier shall act as judge.
A copy of this order is this day
posted, in conformity to law, at
1 one place within said district.
In testimony whereof, we A. L.
i Thomas, president, and Joe Haw-
| kins, secretary of the board of
trustees of the Ennis Independent
School District, do set our hand
and cause the seal of said district
to be affixed this 'the seventh day
of March, 1944.
b.254
tion to make certain the United
States at least equals other coun-
in ouput of that material.
The committee observed that in
1933, German magnesium was a-
bout 33,000,000 pounds, while A-
merican output, entirely by Dow
Chemical, was only 7,000,000 lbs-
“The committee was concerned,”
Wallgren said in a separate state-
ment, “to find that Germany with
about half the population of the
United States had produced nearly
six times as much magnesium in
1939 as the Dow Chemical Co., A-
merica’s only produced,
“The committee believes that
whenever any corporation obtains
a monopoly in the United States in
the production of any basic com-
modity, that company should be
called upon to expain why a small
er foreign nation produced several
times more than we did and de-
veloped new and improved meth-
ods of fabrication faster than we
did.
“Dow chemical’s explanation was
not very satisfactory, and I do not
believe that we should permit any
such monopoly to be established
or continued in the future,” Wall-
gren said.
The committee said the below-
schedule production of magnesium
in 1943 “indicates the extent to
which this country failed in at-
taining its production objective due
to difficulties in completing facilit-
ies on schedule and the problems
encountered in surmounting the
difficulties involved in adapting
new techniques of manufactures.”
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of home-front donors is adminis-
tered to a wounded Marine at
Tarawa. _ a .
-------------------------------------------------------------------- .. ;
T was “D” day at Tarawa, andqaqa-
Pfc. Harold A. DeVille of Ope- gs ' “ 9
lousas, La., was in the first wave 1.gadig
of Marines fighting their way 3 *398980090*
shoreward toward the tiny Pacific % ,s
atoll. ep.m
He made the beach all right, but anaif
ten minutes later a Jap machine-
gunner cut him down. He lay on . ' easm2
the beach with the battle raging -3288
around him for about an hour - 1.228 988882
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SOUTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE CO.
HSKCHOHES
BLASTJTHE ENEMY 1
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Nowlin, C. A. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 60, Ed. 1 Monday, March 13, 1944, newspaper, March 13, 1944; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1475839/m1/4/?q=PYOTE: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Ennis Public Library.