The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 108, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 5, 1945 Page: 1 of 4
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THE ENNIS DAILY NEWS
No. 108
BUY WAR BONDS TODAY
ENNIS, ELLIS COUNTY, TEXAS, SATURDAY EVENING, MAY 5, 1945
1 Enemy Surrender s
203
8
the Armistice of 1918.
the greatest mass capitulation since
There were left of the once all-power
■
B
Nipponese using landing craft at-
Near Tarakan
ing.
I >
U. S. Signal Corps Photo
left, Gen. Omar N. Bradley.
Warren-Massed Choir.
which all the Big Four will spon-
Superfortresses strukc
mit separately.
he enemy suicide
£
forces which evacuated
Foe Fleeing
Lost Reich
He was wounded mor-
Kyushu, southernmost of the home I to the end.
islands and key base for Japanese ; tally- when ‘ a land
Now it’s a walk
“the moment”
Pfc. Frank G. Trojacek has writ- l
Parts of his letter are as ' officers you read about or see in
London, May 5 (UP)—Reliable
braray from 12:30 to 1 p.m. and :
days, and the last two letters I way:.
pital patients arid visitors.
Visitor Here
he
my
guest of her daughter, Mrs. Wei-
Over 4 Billions
hand .
route to her home in Chicago.
one
when a drive was ordered, for the
Methodist Church
! When he went overseas he stopped j
i spending Friday.
guys and we’d have followed him reduction
i anywhere," said Private- First Class I
George F.
Wilson of 5932 Reed’s I
Mr.-Mrs. Frank Story
! the wr budget in line with the
the 1 approaching end of European fight
With Relatives
last
ap-
is reported favorable.
Thursday, May 10
First
with her parents.
BUY BONDS
%,
BUY BONDS
y -
British Troops
Jubilant Over
Nazi Surrender
Program For
Sunday Ushers
In Music Week
triple blow at the Japanese home
• land today, concentrating two of
“Cactus Jack,” as he was known
to collegiate and professional. foot-
ball fans, played a smashing game
Superforts Hit
Jap Homeland
Triple Blow
I Czech sources in London said to-
i day that the Czechoslovak resist-
Waxahachie
Her condition
received were about seven days a-
go. How are you getting along? I
UNITED
FEATURE
SERVICE
ushered in Sunday, May 6, with a
musical program, sponsored by '(he
mander in the west, interviewd in
a chateau where he is held pris-
oner, listed these other factors in
what he said was their order of
' With the United States Seventh
' Army, May 5 —Field Marshal Karl
j Gerd von Rundstedt said Friday
i that airpower was the prime fac-
Sunday Guests
Mr. and Mrs.
MEMBER
UNITED
PRESS
(o Fort Sam Houston.- Texas. From
there he was sent to Camp J. T.
Dallas will spend the week end in
Enni's, guest in the homes of rel-
atives and friends.
Mr. Story will be soloist at the
First Methodist Church at the reg-
ular morning service and will be
presented on the musicale program
at 4 p.m. ushering in National Mu-
sic Week in Ennis to be held at
daughter. Diane of Longview, have
arrived to be with Mrs. Thomas’
brother, Robert Lamb, who is home
on leave from the Pacific.
Japanese Air Attack
Sinks 5 American
Ships Off Okinawa
the city April 25 after three years
possession.
path today for Australian troops
driving toward the heart of Tara-
kan City on Tarakan Island -off
the east coast of Borneo.
Japanese gun emplacements, am-
Rol-rtson, Paul Culp and J.
Scott.
The program is as follows:
Frank Trojacek
Writes Sister
From France
couldn’t fight on. .
over.”
This indeed was
FLASHES
From World Battlefronts
was juou nc acvag 0-4-- -----Y "a
being together for two years with j the orders,
In the north the remaining forc-
es of northwestern Germany, Hol-
sMrs. Max Steiner, who has been
biting relatives in Houston, is a
NAZI TORTURE DEMONSTRATED—General Dwight D. Eisenhower (center) and other
Army chiefs watch grimly as occupants of concentration camp at Gotha, Germany, show
how they were tortured by Nazi sadists. Extreme left, Gen. George S. Patton; second from
Continues III
Miss Pearl Roller continues ser-
iously ill in the Municipal Hospital
Shipbuilding
just like leaving home after ’ to move up and we couldn’t hear : A tIy-1 g
threw pebbles, at j ( yf Wy pse
When we saw them start fly- ! - "A“ •** ‛ -
buddies. Some of the boys | us.
cried when we left our unit, i ing we knew it was time to move 1
I
.....
Last Rites For
Mrs. G. S. Miller
Held Here Friday
I surprisingly good, that the D-day j
‘ invasion surprised the Germans ;
■ both as to time and locality, and
; that the so-called von Rundstedt
macht large forces in Norway and in the Czechoslovak-
Austrian pocket. This fact still prevents official declara-
tion. of V-E Day, for Supreme Allied Headquarters disclosed
several days ago that when it comes, the day will be pro-
claimed by the chiefs of state of the Allied governments
and not by General Eisenhower.
gge 46338
la
888388838882888
g
In Mass Numbers;
Few Pockets Remain
rounce not only the amendments
plane bases.
The three raids coming within a
period of 12 hours, were carried out
----- — - ' lst December was ordered by Ad- (even
don Weekley in the home of Mr: ' ------- ■ ■ ■ - ' - 1 "
ten to his sister. He is serving in ; said Lummus led them “like the '
§9
{ 8 ’5
Von Rundstedt
| Lays Defeat
(To Air Might
j before committing themselves on
i amendments pertaining to revision
j of treaties and regional arrange-
- i States hardly know a war is going
Owen Gilpin will 1 on. I sure would like to get hold
1st Lt. Jack Lummus
ern Germany surrendered unconditionally Friday night in
Pfc. Raymond Honza
With Ninth Army
Now in Germany
and Mrs. John M. Weekley, en-
j Pfc. Raymond John Honza has
; recently sent home a German Hel-
; met. He did not write how and
L
Funeral services for Mrs. G. S.
Miller, native of Grand Rapids,
Mich, and resident of Ennis in her
childhood days, who died in a hos-
pital in Houston Thursday morn-
and Misses Dorothy and Audrey
Patton of Terrell, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Gominge of Fort Worth, Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Redden of Corsicana,
Mrs. ester Pittman of Corsicana,
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. McDuffie of
Dallas, Mrs. B. J. Hyer and Mrs.
B. P. Boudurant of Dallas, J. M.
Sansom, G. G. Trippe, Bruce Cole-
man. D. P. MacKinnon, and Fred
Norton, also of Dallas. Mr. and
Mrs. Amos Choate and Mrs. C. J.
Colp.'also of Corsicana, Mr. and
Mrs. H. T. Brewster of Austin, Miss
Helen McDuffie, Mrs. George Nor-
ton, Miss Peggy Norton, Mrs. Joe
Brahm, Mrs,.Sol Oppenheim, all of
Houston and Doug Redden of Tu»
cumcari. New Mexico.
gomery of the British army are
“No matter where we were or
“Lummus was one of the great- , ,
jest officers I have ever known,”’j Late War
troops, smashing out powerful ten- ; yg. jt i
mile gains in the Nazis’ Czechoslo- i Hsopg qizne
j vakian mountain redoubt, liberat- J
j ed all Slovakia. German forces bit- j
, own stupidity or that of the Ger-
man Governmen.
While these developments came
from the western Allies, Russian
ance movement had begun an
signed by Russia and France and
whether they should be subject to
control of the world organization.
We say yes; the Russians say no.
Secretary of State Edward R.
Stettinius, Jr., called a press con-
ference for 12:30 a.m. CWT. today
at which he. was expected to an-
Guam, May 5
their first
The men who were with him !
10:00 a.m.—IOOF Home.
‛$ Grade Rhythm Band.
Friday, May 11
“He was just like one of the
J- R. Powell, Mrs. Ethel Fisher, ; pendectomy in the
Miss Willie May Rowe and Mrs. . Sanatarium Friday.
: tor in the defeat of Germany.
The former German field com-
Music Week
Calendar
Mrs. Jack Power, Chairman
May 6-13
There , Washington, May 5—The House ! where or when he got it. He has
lines of Representatives voted the firstialso been awarded the Combat In-
: the ' ! fantryman’s Badge. Pfc. Honza is
' first cut in the nation’s mammoth war : with the 9th Army in Germany.
as Marshal Sir Bernard L. Mont-
J gomery called it when he signed
the surrender agreement with the
Germans here on Luneberg Heath
! at 6:30 p.m. last night.
; The formal ceremony was in a
, tent on the Moorland here, a tent
j atop which a British flag flew in
i counteroffensive in the Ardennes
into the Kattegat waters between
Sweden and northern Denmark,
where Mosquio pilots reported a
highly successful raid on a Germ-
'-an convoy.
(Up)—American !
ing, were held at 4 o’clock Friday
afternoon in the Keever Chapel
with Father William H. Fox. pas-
tor of the Episcopal Church of
their guests Sunday Dr. ; of some of them. '
C. C. Clements and son 1 ____
no town were G. S. Miller, of Houston,
Mr. and Mrs. George Patton, of.
Dallas, Mr. and Mrs. John Patton,
Sr.. Mr,.and Mrs. John Patton, Jr.
program featuring music students, i Longview Visitors
-* - i Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Thomas and
So, I am in the infantry now. I where everyone else was running ,
i will take six weeks training. It ; or crouching. When he wanted us j
. uprising. They said fighting was I the cold breeze blowing in from
Te
E"st
so don’t worry about me. I have j down the line giving us tips and I
been just too busy to write,’ as we j encouragement. He used to walk j
nave been moving around, straight upright on the front'
National Music Week will
where she has been since
week for medical care.
. Processional
God of Our Fathers, Geo.
10:00 a.m.—San Jacinto School ! * '
music, program featuring music j Has Appendectomy
students of Mrs. Maud Biard, Mrs. : Mrs. R A Killian had an
EISENHOWER SAYS NAZIS THOROUGHLY BEATEN
____________----.--. .---..--_----_l----- . ---------------------------__.x -----
. They know they are beaten. Any j
; further hesitation is due to their
The supreme Allied commander’s 1 Tn 0°
German forces on the western Path Laid For
front have disintergrated today. I
What is left of two German arm- j AicciA voone
ties surrendered to a single Ameri- > •93 * I
I can division—the 102nd—comman- j
! ded by Major Gen. Frank A. Keat-
j day furlough with his parents and
I relatives.
After his furlough he was sent to
. Ft. George G. Meade, Maryland
j and from there was sent overseas.
To Grandview
Mrs. Billie Rice has gone to
Grandview for a week end visit
am safe and well here in France, ; he was always' moving ' up and
on his
in progress “in certain areas.” | the North Sea.
The miliary barracks and the
important water supply installa-
tions in western Tarakan were
captured by the Australian troops,
who were meeting desperate Japa-
B8gg8: : 333 3858893
k • ",
. . •
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s"m i
228282 88.: 08
0
it deemed them appropriate. The
regional arrangements involve such ; - - — . .
bilateral mutual aid treaties as land, Denmark and the Frisian Is-
He has been overseas since Febru-
ary. .1945.
Pfc. Honza is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. -Frank John Honza of
Ennis. Route 3.
- i Paso and Juare, Mexico.
Nazi Wehr-
e
68
FA ; 1
Mtg
38 7 38888888888888888888"
888a 8 88888888888888888888888888888
■ 1 ^531
It' 1
S a J
University school of nursing and importance: (1) Lack of oil and
college .of dentistry, Mrs. Zora M. gasoline. (2) Ruin of Germany’s
Fielder, dean of the school of nurs- : railway system. (3) Loss of raw-
ing, said Friday. ’materials areas, such as Romania.
Services will be held Monday j (4) Aerial destruction of German ‘ France. ----------
through Friday in the campus li- ' industrial sections. I follows: I the movies." Corporal Herbert J.
The 69 year old Marshal who : I haven’t written in about eight Green of Merkle, Texas, put it this .
how much enemy fire’ there was. '
Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower said Friday night:
“On land and sea and in the air the Germans are
Church. MacDowell Music Club
program. Miss Willie Mae Rowe,
director; Mrs. W. S. White, accom-
panist. Frank Story guest soloist.
Tuesday, May 8
fantry-tank attack which
by separate fleets of the huge bom- I one of the eriemy’s final and most ’
bers from Marianas bases of the stubborn lines of resistance. ।
San Francisco, May 5 (UP) — A
united Big Four front on amend-
ments to the Dumbarton Oaks pro-
posals for a world organization was
delayed for at least 24 hours to-
. day by the Soviet Union, thoroughly whipped.”
The Russians asked for 24 hours All enemy troops in Denmark, Holland and northwest-
j terly resisted Red army advances
] and staged a big tank battle near
the Moravian war-production city
of Olmuetz (Olomouc).
Despite violent German opposi-
tion in which the Russians lotst
and then regained at least one
town. Red army forces battled for
suicide planes which helped to | under him in the thick of one of I
sink five more light U. S. Sui face j the bitterest battles of the cam-
ships at Okinawa. - j paign. At the time, he was well -
Oita and Ta chiari airfields on । in advance of his men, directing
northern Kyushu were hit in the j the tanks.
morning raid by about 25 to 50 j Even after he was wounded.
Superfortresses, while the targets ; Lummus insisted on sending a re-
in the afternoon were Chiran, Is- ; port to his commanding officer,
busuki and Kanoya airfields in the j Major John W. Antonelli of Law-
southern part of the island.
serve next week as Family Week
in cooperation with a national pro-
gram .sponsored by 42 Christian
denominations in America. The
service Sunday night at 8:00 o’-
clock will institute the week’s pro-
gram, the pastor. Rev. Leslie Sey-
mour, preaching a special sermon
for this occasion the subject of
which will be “At Home In God’s
World.” . >
An all-church supper will be en-
joyed Wednesday night by family
groups who will bring their covered
dishes with them. A visiting min-
ister. Rev. Ennis Hill of Dallas,
will bling the message for this
program.
Tire observance will 'come' to a, •
close with the special services on
Mothers Day, May 10.
Benediction— Rev. Leslie Sey-
mour
Postlude
Miss Willie May Rowe, director.
Mrs. W. S. White and Mrs. J. L.
Sparks, accompanists.
Waxahachie officiating.
Mrs. R. H. Bush sang There is
A Blessed Home, with Mrs. John
Lee Sparks, accompanist. jy ALII, Fm:1,
Pall bearers were Douglas Red-j 10 VDserve F amily
den, Harry Domings, W. F. Redden, Week Next Week
J. C. Patton. Jr.. George Patton : .-
A---
IN FIFTY-FOURTH YEAR
. ' George and Mrs. George Bledsoe
• 3 I of Qroesbeck.
Sunday, May 6 j -----——.--
4:00 p.m.— Tabernacle Baptist
lieutenant a Iwa vs was the
man to move out.
Marshal Montgomery’s Head- i
quarters, May 5 (UP)—“The war is
all over, boys,” was the jubilant
Tommy’s reaction as news spread
through the British ranks of the
surrender" of a million Germans in
Holland, Denmark, and northern
Germany.
“When do our V-E Day leave for
Old Blighty star?” the troops wait-
ed to know.
They said they knew surrender
have been brought up as
Fl r
— I
, , wg - 8
" 1
b 4 !
' the major said. “I never knew him j
i not to do more than was required j
i of him. He was that kind of a j
1 man.”
toward Austria's second city, Graz,
While the Red army pressed cam.
paigns to reduce t heeGrmnsa 7A-c
paigns to reduce the Germans’
southern European strongholds,
mop-up operations were continuing
against German forces in north-
ern Europe.
, olf Hitler and would have succeed- i Just when Joe Landsfield came in. j out."
j ed if supplies and reserves could I had te leave. I sure will be glad : Sometimes, Lummus led his men :
quickly j when this war is over. j carrying a bayonet in
i as Gen. George S. Patton moved ! So Roosevelt passed away. I ; and a pistol in the other.
' up from the south, I knew it the same day he died. j was no hesitating
_____ j That’s how fast the news got here. |
Some of the people back in the I
Lt. Jack Lummus, former Nev •
York Giant football star, Was kill- ,
ed during the conquest of this Jap | —
island fortress while leading an m-
broke i
I • I
I 1
J
I
mine exploded i
■ ■ -
BUY BONDS
ant- December 20, 1944. His moth- j tual appropriation turn-back of i
er, Mrs. Laura Lummus, lives at 133.100.000.000 was involved. but ;
108 East Milang Street, Ennis. Tex. ; Cannon said the repeal does not
--- - mean a saving of the sum of the
two amounts. The $3,100,000,000,
On Vacation he explained, is money appropri-
Miss Letha Ann Webb left this j ated toward liquidation of the can-
morning with Mi. and Mrs. O. V.celed contract authorizations.
Campbell of Dallas for a week’s______
vacation at Carlsbad Cavern, El j
li
at 8 p.m. Music will be directed wore his uniform and medals, drew
by Dr. George L. Powers, dean of i nerviously on an unlighted cirgar-
the college of dentistry. The serv- I ette during the interview and spoke
ices, arranged by Miss Nina Mere- in crisp Prussian tones.
Cith, Baylor student Union Secrc- ) He said American Generals and
tary, will be open to students, hos- iField Marshal Bernard L. Mont.
a quick cleanup of Czechoslovakia
while the Germans reported a new
Soviet offensive was in progress in
Austria.
The Nazi high command said So-
viet armor had opened a big drive
west of Vienna toward a junction
with American troops battling for
Linz that would cut off the Aus-
trian redoubt from Czechoslovakia.
The enemy said Red army moun-
tain fighters also were ■ plunging
Manila, May 5 (UP)—Allied
bombers and warships blasted a
—I
! e ” i.-
—- 2-----------------
Iwo Jima (Delayed)—Marine 1st.
.MA-,
h
5
e
nese oposition from mortar and
machine gun fire.
the Tabernacle Baptist Church:
Mr. Story, one of the outstand-
soloists of Texas, formerly lived in
Ennis.
A savage Japanese air and sea attack on United States
ships off Okinawa Friday sank five light American war-
ships and damaged another small surface vessel, for which ।
the Nipponese paid with fifty-four planes shot down and
"fifteen tiny suicide boats destroyed.
American carrier planes struck furiously the same day
at Japanese air units in the Amami Island group north of
Okinawa, downing ninety-six enemy aircraft for a total
og 150 accounted for during the day.
------------------------ The Japanese used their new j
nand ‘Jim Redden. 1 First Methodist Church will ob-
. Among those here from out of
was in the air “after seeing all
those masses of Germans passing
into our lines and surrendering on
all side. We knew’ it was the col-
lape of the Wehrmacht. They
21st bomber command.
Two of the attacks— one this
morning and another this after-
none—were against the airfields on ;
tempted to attack the rear of Am-
MacDowell Music Club of Ennis, j erican lines, but were repulsed at
held at the • Tabernacle Baptist one point and faced annihilation
Church at 4:00 p.m. The guest so- where landings were made.
lotst will be Frank Story of Dallas. I Australian troops invading Tar-
Other music'will be furnished byakan Island off the northeastern
a massed choir and by a quartet ; Borneo coast captured military
composed of M. D. Glaspy, C. R. I barracks from the Japanese de-
w i fenders of Tarakan City and seiz-
; ed the water supply installations,
I Gen. Douglas MacArthur reported
8:15 p.m.—San Jacinto School
Auditorium, Madrigale Singers Re- j
cital. I
; have as
and. Mrs.
lands surrendered to Field Mar-
shal Montgomery.
In the south Allied troops from
General Devers command and from
Italy have joined.
On the Czech border a panzer di- i munition dumps and numerous
i vision gave up unconditionally to ' buildings were destroyed by the
General Bradley’s forces. • ! dual bombardment as the Austral-
Any, further' losses which thelians SWept through the western
Germans may incur on this front part of the city:
sor jointly but those on which the are due to their failure, to instant-
Big- Powers minus Russia will sub- | 1Y duit
■
r
A
sity. i Committee said Friday the actual
Lummus joined the Marine ' saving was only $4,265,000,000.
Corps as an enlisted man in Jan- The bill canceled $4,265,000,000
uary, 1942. He was commissioned ! in authorizations enabling the
a second lieutenant the next year j Maritime Commission to enter into
and was promoted to first lieuten- | contracts for shipbuilding. An ac-
z Road, Mission, Kans.
! To Spend Week End ' er was a better officer.”
I Lummus played end for
Giants in 1940 and '41. He receiv- j ing
„ ’ ed honorable mention for the col- l “ . , I Robinson, -Arkansas, where he took
Mi*, and Mrs. Frank J. Story of legiate All-American team in 1938 ut -hairman Cannon ‘Dem.) of sixteen weeks of basic training,
when he played for Baylor Univer- Missouri of the Appropriations . After his training he spent a 7
‘ Saturday. ■
w f Allied planes supporting the five-
: day-old Tarakan operation ham-
"InvocatiOn_Rev.RObert C. Fling mered Japanese shipping and in-
(a) Come Unto Him (The Mes-stalaltions around the Borneo
siah, Handel; (b) The Lord’s Pray- 1 coast, sinking more than fifteen
er, Albert H. Malotte—Frank Story deep water and river eraft, includ-
The Musical Clock, Slade—Mrs. i ing two 300 ton transports.
John Lee Sparks ■ British and Indian troops com- the attacks on
' Quartet Numbers, Selected- M. : pleted the occupation of Rangoon,
D. Glaspy, C. R. Robertson, Paul j capital of Burma and port city on
Culp and J. W. Scott, the Bay of Bengal, finding no dam-
Praise Ye the Father, Gounod- j age done to harbor installations by
Massed Choir. -apanese
(a) The Lost Chord, A. Sullivan;
(b) The Lord Is My Light, Oley
Speaks- Frank Story.
National Anthem.
Marine Sergeant Tells
Of Death at Iwo Jima of
1st Lieut. Jack Lummus
The White House announced the a few days in England. France,
as more than $7,000,000- ! Belgium and Holland and later
. _____ ______i on „„ ,. . 0. transferred to Germany, where he
’ 000 earlier this week when Presi- , . . ..
CS ....C i ■ - ' ; is now stationed.;, 1′9
"There nev- j dent Truman recommended cuts in l He was inducted intor the Army
on September 7,51944‘and was’ser.
Thornwell Creighton.
Wednesday, May 9
1:00 p.m.—Alamo School, music
Baka bombs, nineteen-foot explo- j
sive glider craft released from '
bombers and controlled by suicide j
pilots. One of these was shot down ।
There was virtually no change in ;
I the ground fighting on southern
: Okinawa, said Fleet Admiral Ches-
j ter' W. Nimitz in a communique
| announcing the surge of Japanese
be I air and sea activity. About 600
A
Rev. Robert Fling
Speaker for Baylor
School of Nursing
The Rev. Robert C. Fling, pastor
i rence. Mass. He died a short
i time later.
More than 19.000 men and wo-
men from Montana are now7 serv-
ing in the U.S. Navy, according to
Lt. Charles- H. Dill, officer in
charge of Montana recruiting.
London, May 5 — The largest
RAF force ever hurled against en-
emy shipping knocked out at least
seventy-four Nazi vessels fleeing'
toward Norway Friday in a blazing
climax to a record week-long mas-
sacre in northern Germany - and
the Baltic Sea.
Rockets, bombs and cannon,
shells spread havoc for the sec-
ond successive day among frantic
Germans - trying to escape from
Baltic ports toward a possible
last-ditch stand in Norway, where
the enemy still was holding out
after surrendering in northwesterrn
Germany, Holland and Denmark.
All through the daylight hours,
ships and land vehicles wer hound
ing by Mosquito bombers, rocket-
firing Beaufighters and Typhoons.
Spitfires and Mustangs as the RAF
! coastal command and the fighter-
j bomber, command joined the Sec-
i ond Tactical Air Force in the
I slaughter.
: Attacks spread over a wide area
of the Baltic near Schlewsig-Hol-
j stein and Denmark, where the wa-
j ters were jammed with craft of all
descriptions loaded with troops
driven into- the sea by Allied ar-
mies. The attacks reached even
! ments. The other members of the
• Big Four—the United States,
I Great Britain and China, agreed
: to submit separate but identical
| recommendations on those issues.
Fifteen minutes before last mid-
night’s deadline, the Big Four a-
greed to make joint recommenda-
tions to the United Nations confer-
ence on all their other amend-
ments.
The treaty revision amendment
was sponsored by Een. Arthur H.
Vandenburg, R., Mich., and would
have authorized the proposed gen-
eral assembly to recommend post-
war revisions of any treaty when
of the Tabernacle Baptist Church, j
Ennis, will speak next week at the
annual campus revival of Baylor
Soviet Union
Delays Parley
For 24 Hours
: _--
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Nowlin, R. W. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 108, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 5, 1945, newspaper, May 5, 1945; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1485246/m1/1/?q=+date%3A1941-1945: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Ennis Public Library.