The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 138, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 9, 1945 Page: 2 of 4
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PAGE TWO
Rice News
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ROUND
#
R. W. Nowlin____Editor and Mgr.
PLAZA
fixPHiD
SUNDAY and MONDAY
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9
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By Mail in Ellis County
CUTWORM
One Year
-___$3.00
or
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CLAIRE
ANNE
CRASSHOPPEP '
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Insect enemies which attack the
While harvest is on, and these or
Victory garden
He
GRAND
columnist
that he ever criticised the
were worth a dime a dozen.
4
SUNDAY and MONDAY
por-
Plus Shorts and News
PLUS SHORTS and NEWS
)
of
WANTED
Bardwell
4
/
TWENTY MEN
-PLUMBING-
GILMORE PLUMBING
na-
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1
be
catalogued for
TAILOR MADE
Whispering Campaign—
Change Now to
as
Texas, Lieut.
Midland
CONOCO
field made a speech before
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MOTOR OIL
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gain
500 E Ave
Wrecker Service
Phone 107
G. G. Harvard, Distributor
7.701
NANCY
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OH-this HEAT is AWFUL-
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Dead Animals
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SUBSCRIPTION RATES
(By Carrier in the City)
I am in need of dwellings
and farms for cash buyers.
air
the
MEXICAN
BEAN BEETLE
All communications of business and
items of news should be addressed
to the company and not individuals.
whom this columnist holds in
highest esteem, the pertinent
Down at Odessa,
Dick McCauley of
TOMATO
WORM
written
denying
presi-
ASPARAGUS
BEETLE
STRIPED
CUCUMBER
BEETLE
i
By DREW
PEARSON
POTATO
BEETLE
J
1
CABBAGE
WORM
V
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C
DICK
POWELL
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POTATO
LEAFHOPPER
-General Plumbing—Contracting
Water Heaters and Septic Tanks
j
tions of his very interesing letter
are published below, together with
a transcript of the Nazi broadcast.
Whitney Kept Name Secret-
Colonel Whitney writes:
meated the U. S. army.
Colonel Whitney later managed
to escape from the German prison
camp, when the box car in which
V
r
r
I
c
t
I
9
dent, and has also set forth the in-
teresting circumstances surround-
ing his capture.
In fairness to Colonel Whitney,
OnCy
104
EACH
One Month ________
Three Months _____
Six Months ____
One Year __________
These Are the Insects That Will Attack Your Victory Garden. Know
Them, So You Can Fight Them Effectively,
Clyde Gilmore
500 W. Milam—Phone 1031-J
We have large selection of patterns
You pick your choice from this selection
We make the Seat Covers
I
A
SEAT COVERS
FOR ALL CARS
_____ 65c
_____$1.95
_____$3.90
-----$7.80
Dealers in
B. F. Goodrich Tires
By Mail Outside County
Game Rates as in City by Carrier
I
“JANIE”
Big Five
(Continued From Fage One)
Harvey W. Meyer
4430% McKinney Ave.
Dallas, Texas
representing
Royal Typewriter
Company, Inc.
Services all makes of type-
writers and adding
machines.
Phone J 8-2598
Expert Washing and
Lubricating Service
BL/STER
BEETLE
FLEA
BEETLE
1
s
s
r
CORN EAR
WORM
friendliness. Ennis will
pleasure with profit.
SQUASH
BUG
Qtul -.
“em”” From the PEN
of the EDITOR
individual member of the security
council can alone prevent consid-
eration and discussion by the coun-
cil of a dispute or situation brought
to its attention.
A RESORT CENTER
Civic Improvement . . .
Post-War Plans . . . Help a
Veteran . . . these aren’t in-
tangible slogans, but ideas
which must be converted to
a working model for the fu-
BURIAL’
INSURANCE
Low Rates
AGES
1 Day to 90 Years
SAFE INSURANCE
without physical
examination
Phone
100
Fill out application
at office
Bunch-Wippern
Burial Assn.
Ennis, Texas
213 N. Main St.
GefSpee-D-Hone at your fiealers today
CURTISS CANDY CO., Okogo, I
PoducerojFinL.Foods
Joe C. McCrary
Insurance—Real Estate, Agt.
104 So. Dallas St. TeL 80
ENNIS, TEXAS
pyrethrum or rotenone spray
dust.
The Mexican bean beetle is
TREVOR-SHIRLEY
/edee.
ySwee
I‘M GOING TO SLEEP OUT IN
» THE YARD
I
You can break any hard habit if
you will drop it hard enough
----L
| To Kill Garden Insects Quickly,
Select the Right Ammunition
was riding was bombed and
British want us to preside over
means they don’t want to do much
about it themselves,” replied Bid-
dle, and he ducked the job. Some
diplomats, watching the diletante
way Justice Bob Jackson has gone
about trying Nazi war criminals,
wish that Biddle had taken the
job instead. 9., ,
-3
_MAKE_
ICECREAM
were stopped. In the course of a
There are red, black and green
the I aphids, but those on vegetables are
usually pale green. They cling to
the under-side of leaves, or on the
growing ends of stems of many
vegetables, multiplying with amaz-
ing rapidity. Use rotenone, py-
rethrum or nicotine dust or spray,
immediately first specimens are de-
tected.
Asparagus beetles are blue-black
' with lemon spots, one-quarter inch
long. Use rotenone dust or Spray
Entered as Second-Class Matter
Bt the Post Office at Ennis, Texas,
under the Act of March 3, 1879.
has since
a letter
ENNIS DAILY NEWS, ENNIS, ELLIS COUNTY, TEXAS, SATURDAY EVENING, JUNE 9, 1945
pass. If it fails any of them we can put it back
in trim.
.A
cgSAer,
w
black sheep of the lady bug fam-
ily. Coppery brown, 8 black spots
on each wing cover; it eats vines
and lays yellow egg clusters on
under side of leaves, which hatch
out into larvae with voracious appe-
tites. Plants must be thoroughly
sprayed or dusted with rotenone or
calcium arsenate but not lead ar-
senate.
Tomato worms are green cater-
pillars with conspicuous yellow
markings, three to four- inches long.
The worm eats tomato leaves but
is easily picked off, or killed by a
rotenone or arsenic spray or dust.
The corn ear worm is a caterpil-
lar two inches long, Striped and
marked green and brown, hatched
from eggs laid on the young silk.
Inject one-quarter teaspoonful of
medical mineral oil in the silk
channel of each ear soon after pol-
ination. ,
Cabbage worms are pale green
caterpillars one and one-quarter
inch long, hatched from eggs
laid by white butterflies, which are
found on cabbage, cauliflower and
other members of the cabbage fam-
ily. Dust with rotenone or calcium
arsenate.
Grasshoppers may attack all gar-
den crops and are best controlled
by using the poison bait.
Alamo Service Station
an arsenic dust or spray after the
weapons, and cannot all be fought harvest.
CHOOSE YOUR SUMMER
SUIT FROM OUR STOCK
We still have a good selection of
summer weight suits in tropicals
and wool worsteds. Finest suits at
reasonable prices at GRANT’S—
116 West Brown.
the Never-
SCOTT OIL CO.
Sherman and Brown Phone 104
is your motor tuned to give maximum
mileage?
Have your wheels been packed since the last
6.000 miles?
Has your oil filter been changed during the
past 8,000 miles?
Is your battery fully charged.
These are 4 or 45 questions your car has to
Never Land of Tomorrow but
must be carried out today in
Ennis,
There is a small lake on
the outskirts of Ennis, which
is fertile ground for new en-
terprises. Ennis Lake is well
stocked with fish and food,
and is located near several
large towns.
The-value of the lake to
Ennis would increase with
the addition of more boats.
A food and drink stand
Where the out-of-town angl-
ers could procure drinks, ice,
sandwich materials, and
other fisherman necessities
would pay for itself in a
fortnight during the fishing
season. Conveniently located
cabins would enable the
fishermen to spend more
than one day in Ennis.
With a minimum of time
and effort put in on these
projects, with the accent on
। Ennis Daily News
Published every day except Sunday,
by The United Publishing Co,
which also publishes the Ennis
Weekly Local and The Palmer
Rustler.
4}?
K*5-,
have different
“Oil Plates Your Engine”
If you desire to sell your
property call me.
with the same methods. It is
necessary, therefore, to identify
what lethal means to use against
them.
The chart which accompanies
this article shows the general char-
acteristics of these enemies and
brief descriptions, with suggestions
for combating them, follow:
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Whiteside.
Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Harris, Mrs.
A. T. Hale and Mrs. A. C. Chap-
man attended the installation ser-
vice of Winnie Chapter No. 160
in Ennis Friday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Lee visited
relatives in Hillsboro Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Holland Jackson
and family of Maypearl wereSun-
day dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
J. W. Gailey.
Mrs. Albert Snipes of Ft. Worth
spent from Friday night until
Sunday - with her mother, Mrs. C.
F. Chapman.
Mrs. J. B. Elder, Miss Nettie
Davis, Miss Carrie Lindsley, J. T.
Sutton and John Sherman attend-
ed funeral services for Mrs. Geo.
Yowell in Ennis Sunday.
Rev. Dawson of Dallas, who
preached at the Methodist Church
Sunday was a dinner guest of Mr.
and Mrs. C. F. Chapman.
Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Pool, Mr.
and Mrs. J. E. Wood and Mrs. Will
Roberts attended singing at Avalon
Sunday.
Yor Car is a War Car Now!
CAN YOUR CAR PASS OUR
WARTIME PHYSICAL EXAM
‘“On Aug. 20, the U. S. First
Aarmy, concentrated at Vernon as
focal point was supposed to ford a
crossing over the Seine. In view
of the disorderly condition in the
German rear, it was expected that
a quick thrust would be possible,
and at least nine German di-
visions would be cut off. Accord-
ing to American calculations, re-
sistance on the German northern
flank would then completely col-
lapse, and the way would be open
through Belgium into Holland.’
“Changed orders—Colonel Whit-
Mr. and Mrs. Lois Puckett and
children, Mrs. Sid Puckett and
Mrs. F. E. Brewer and son Don-
ald were shopping in Corsicana
Monday.
Virginia Parker is visiting Fran-
ces Crockett in Chatfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Cummins
had as guests Sunday, Mr. and
Mrs. Harvey Graves, Dallas; Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Murphy, Chat-
field, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Cum-
mins and sons.
Bobbie Oneal has returned home
from Dallas where she spent a
week with her brother, J .C. Oneal
and family.
ney emphasized that this plan was
cancelled at the last minute on
orders from the highest authority
(meaning President Roosevelt),
and the focal point was shifted to
the. right flank so as to encircle
Paris from the south, In his
opinion, this was a complete mis
take because a delay of at least
ten days Was unavoidable.
. “‘Political reasons—he has the
impression, which was shared bv
many high American officers, that
quite intentionally and for politi
cal reasons, offensive operations
president, which I didn’t, it would
have been only in terms of the
highest admiration for himself and
his leadership.
Nazi Broadcast—
The Nazi broadcats, illustrating
the extent to which the enemy
went to try to confuse American
troops, follows:
“Broadcast by NDB in German
language, by wireless, to Europe on
November 3, 1944, at 6:34 M., EWT,
quoting' HB (International In-
formation Bureau) under Berlin
dateline.
“Berlin—Statements made by
Col. John Hay Whitney, American
banker, after he was taken prisoner
throw an interesting light on the
American penduct of the war in
France. HB has received the fol-
lowing extract from a report on
■ the questioning of this American,
Whitney, a prisoner-of-war, which
took place on August 13.
“Situation in northern France__
the colonel who throughout the
questioning was very reticent, be-
came later very talkative and jolly
in the company of other captured
officers. He played poker with
them and talked, among other
things, about military and political
questions. The discussion then
turned to the situation in north-
ern France. This was the most re-
markable of his utterances:
FROM ONE RAZOR BLADE
by daily conditioning with
Spud-How
4
ture. These ideas can’t
retary; Johnnie Hargus, Treasurer;
Lois Hargus Chaplain; Minnie
Whiteside, Marshall; Vera Bruce,
Organist, Faye Lewis. Adah; Grace
Webster, Ruth; Era Hale, Esther;
Gertrude Manning, Martha; Mabel
Robertson, Electa; Velma Manning,
Warder: B. L. Harris, Sentinel.
Mrs. Ora Chapman was the in-
stalling officer, Mrs. Mary Roberts,
Marshall and Mrs. Mary Pool,
Chaplain; Mrs. Minnie Whiteside,
Organist. Mrs. Velma Manning
was an out-of-town member pre-
sent.
11
vgeamramgaazmusaamdty
"bamsememsmaN 4
tg
power crushed whole
tions?
s n #
At home -Any flavor-Delicious-Smooth
-No ice crystals-No cooking-No re-
whipping —No scorched flavor —Easy-
Inexpensive-20 recipes in each 154 pkg.
Please send this ad for free full-size sam-
pie offer, or buy from your grocer.
LOnDODDERR9
- Brand Homemade Ice Cream
STABILIZER
kGoMDOMDERRY-835H0WARD,SANFRANCISCO3,CALIF.)
TODAY’S SQUIB—You can’t
expect- $1.00 an hour for you- he
working time if you spen ■ ■ wrecked,
your leisure hours like the 7: this
pgawite-
4
Sdr2
4-25
. . - y[) 1
7/T/17rn82rnmn)))/,
Cpl. Leon Robertson arrived
Wednesday from Nebraska to
spend a nine-day leave with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Rob-
ertson.
1st Lt. and Mrs. Joe Ben Bruce
of Ft. Worth arrived Thursday to
visit their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
W. R. Bruce. The group is vaca-
tioning in Galveston this week.
Rev. and Mrs. J. M. McDonald
of Bandera, Texas, visited her mo-
ther, Mrs. A. T. Hale and hus-
band last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Vines of Ard-
more, Okla., and Mrs. T. A. Vines
of Ennis were recent visitors of
Mrs. W. D. Jones and Mrs. S. T.
Collier.
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Sutton visit-
ed( Mr. and Mrs. Jim Thompson
of Corsicana, Monday.
(0NLABD
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Johnson
and daughter, Moreen, Brother
and Mrs. Ramsey Wright of Dallas,
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Roach of Wax-
ahachie and Mr. and Mrs. A. B.
Roach were Sunday dinner guests
of Mrs: J. W. Roach and Ruth.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Wood and
family visited Mrs. Jack Wood
of Dallas Sunday. Betty Ann and
Jack Charles Wood returned home
with them to spend the summer.
Mrs. Jack Slay and son, Jackie,
of Dallas visited her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. A. C. Chapman Sunday.
Mi’, and Mrs. Charles E. Cash
of Dallas and Mrs J. B. Elder
were Sunday dinner guests of
the leaves with small holes. Use
rotenone or nicotine dust or spray.
The potato bug or Colorado
beetle, which may also attack egg-
plant and tomatoes, is red with
black stripes, half inch long. Spray
or dust with rotenone or arsenic.
Potato leafhoppers are pale
green, one-eighth inch long. Also
found on beans, swarming on your
approach to the plants, on which
they cause leaf-curl. Nicotine or
rotenone dust or spray will control.
Cutworms are caterpillars of va-
rious moths which hide by day and
at night cut off young plants at the
soil surface. Protect the plants
with collars of heavy paper or card-
board surrounding the stems, ex-
tending an inch below the soil
surface and two inches above, when
the plants are set out.
Squash bugs are reddish brown
to black, three-quarter inch long.
They lay egg clusters on underside
of leaves, and can be controlled by
. BETTER SHAVES / SAVE MONEY!
EEEEREg
W<MkE
e
THE STUMBLING
BLOCK
In the feverish haste to
progress, civilization goes
through an abundance of
trial and error. Often a great
stumbling block to individual
independence has been gov-
ernment planning for sream-
lined living, on thee theory
that government can stand-
ardize a man’s life and bring
benefits to him by way of
a rigidly controlled economy.
This inevitably leads to gov-
ernment ownership of enter-
prise and property. As a
consequence, the man in
civilian life is reduced to the
status of a dependent on
government, when all through
history mankind has strug-
gled to be free.
A politically planned eco-
nomy for individual living is
the egg that hatches dic-
tators. It is the enemy of
free men. When will it be
realized that the individual
Washington, June 9.—Some time
.ago, this column told how the
Nazis had sent out a propaganda
broadcast to the European war
theatre claiming that Col. John
Hay “Jock” Whitney, husband of
the ex-Mrs. Jimmy Roosevelt and
a close friend of Harry Popkins,
had been critical of President
Roosevelt while in a German
prison camp.
The Nazi radio, as described in
the column, told how Jock Whit-
ney first refused to talk. later
was placed with a German posing
as a British officer, at which time
he loosened up and, accordng to
the Nazis, was critical of the
President. The Nazis used this [
to try to show how politics per- !
cannot reach his highest
destiny under government
domination? Mankind must
preserve free institutions in
order to be free.
Will the stumbling block
always prevail, or will it be
cast aside to make the way
clear for an unfrustrated fu-
ture civilization, fee of peri-
odical “dark ages” such as we
have just been passing thru
when unchecked government
Blister beetles are grey, striped
or black, three-quarter inch long,
prey on potato and tomato plants.
Use rotenone or pyrethrum spray
or dust, or calcium arsenate dust.
The striped cucumber beetle is
one of the worst home garden
pests, yellow body with three black
stripes. It breeds in the blossom
ends of cucumber, squash and
melon vines, eats leaves and
spreads disease. Dust new growth
as it develops with dust composed
of 1 lb. calcium arsenate and 10
pounds of talc or gypsum, repeat-
ing until vines are several feet
long. Young plants should be pro-
tected from their first appearance.
Do not use lime.
Flea beetles are small flea-like
insects which attack cabbage, egg-
plant, potatoes, tomatoes, turnips
and other vegetables, and riddle
4
1 „Soveupe
GOOeyg,
OnRezor
B,°d96 !
Monday, June 11th, to help
set up American Legion
Carnival, South, of Holy
Bros. Machine Shop—8:00
A. M. Inquire for man-
ager United Exposition
Show, on grounds.
--Lozsassgy - ii
sgpeee L
s"e°=EecKA" 1d
_=RN/E a.sa.2E
later discussion, Whitney mention-
ed the name of General Patton
who, if he likes to admit it, knows
very well why the thrust at Ver-
non was not carried out.”
Lincoln-Roosevelt Birthdays—
The question of making Feb. 12,
Lincoln’s birthday, a national
holiday has now been put up to
the senate by North Dakota’s
Senator Langer in a manner dif-
ficult to dodge. Hitherto, south-
ern legislators have opposed any
national holiday for the Civil War
president, but when Senator
VA
U
2.
50 to 100 SHAVES
O.E.S
Bardwell Chapter No. 560, Order
of the Eastern Star met in regu-
lar session Wednesday, May 30 in
the Masonic Hall with Mrs. Mary
Roberts, Worthy Matron and B. L.
Harris Worthy Patron, pro-tern,
presiding.
Under the election of Officers
the following were elected and
appointed with installation, Thurs.
May 31: Mrs. Mattie Harris, Wor-
thy Matron; A. T. Hale, Worthy
Patron; Frankie Wheatley, Asso-
ciate Matron; J. E. Hargus, Asso-
ciate Patron; Mary Pool, Conduc-
tress; Mary Roberts, Associate .
Conductress; Ora Chapman, Sec- .
Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Manning of
Corsicana visited their sons, Rex
Manning and Max Manning and
wife a few days last week.
Mrs. Frank Howard and Miss
Betty Lou Clark of Waxahachie
and Mrs. E. E. Hale of Greeley,
Colo., spent several days in the
Pendell Wheatley home this week
Mrs. H. E. Whiteside, Mrs. Wil
Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Wood
and Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Pool at-
tended church services at Taber-
nacle Baptist Church in Ennis
Sunday night.
Mrs. Q. E. Davis attended gradu-
ation exercises at Getzendaner
Auditorium Tuesday night, at
at which time her grand-daughter
received her diploma.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Wheatley vis-
ited Mrs. S. R. Wheatley Sunday
at the Waxahachie Sanitarium and
also in the H. A. Wheately home.
Free removal of your
dead stock — horses,
cows, mules. Call Buck
Aldridge, Ennis, phone
88; if no answer call
Dallas L. D. 758 collect.
Junor Chamber of Commerce, tell-
ing them a hush-hush story of
Jap balloons floating over the
western United States. He said
newspapers and radio could not
publish the information, but lis-
teners could spread it by word
of mouth . . . The ensuing whisp?
ering campaign had just got under
way when the army and navy in
Washington finally released de-
tils regarding the Jap balloons . . .
It wasn’t McCauley’s fault; he was
under orders. But unfortunately
whispering campaigns usually run
into alarmist exaggeration .
Maguire Industries Inc., which has
been making tommy guns during
the war, has now developed new
radio-telephone equipment to be
tried out on the Reading Railroad
beginnng July 15 . . . New Jersey
congressmen are feeling the re-
sults of a campaign waged by the
Asbury Park, N. J., press for a
speedy trial of the German high
command and all other war
criminals. The folks in Jersey
feel strongly about this, even if
those at the top of the war crimes
commission don’t seem to be in a
hurry. (Justice Jackson says he
may not be able to convict the
Gestapo or SS Elite Corps before
Christmas.)
J. P. DENNY, JR.
Auto Tops 104 W. Crockett St. Seat Covers
By Ernie Bushmiller
it
2
A.
aWITM -g 0
OTTO KRUGER d 2
MIKEMAZURKI ’ 4
MILES MANGER . 2K
DOUGLAS WALTON ? ,
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Froduced-by ADRIAN SCOTT • Directed By EDWARD DMYTRYK /
SCREEN Pur by ;ohh Paxton
K:::0
Downey of California introduced a
bill to make Jan. 30, Roosevelt’s
birthday, a national holiday, Lan-
ger immediately introduced the
Lincoln birthday bill and insisted
that the judiciary committee could
not report one out without the
other. Both bills will probably die
in committee ... Two years ago
Secretary of State Hull asked
Attorney General Biddle to act as
chairman of the Allied War Crimes
Commission, explaining that the
British wanted an American
chairman . . . “Anything the
Copr. 1945 by United Feature Syndicataync.
Tm. U. 5. Fat. Off.—Alt teserved — JUNE- 9
1 Mrs. Fannie Lee Whitener and ■
little daughter Sandra Kay visit-
ed relatives here last week end.
Mrs. Howard Merril and chil-
dren have returned home after a
two week’s visit in Wichita Falls.
March 4th to the effect that I
fed anti-Roosevelt propaganda to
the Nazi machine while I was
their prisoner. You got the wrong-
dope from somewhere and I’ll tell
you why.
“1. Since my one chance of es-
cape depended on the enemy’s not
knowng that I was of any value
to them, I remained anonymous
even to my fellow prisoners. I was
very careful not to talk familiarly
about my ‘name’ in order to avoid
the slightest association with
importance.
“2. Even if I had shot my mouth
off to them, my conversation could
not have been recorded since we
were never in a prepared camp,
but always on the move, and most-
ly always under fire.
"3. The only British-uniformed
soldier I saw was well known to
me.
“4. I escaped without the Ger-
mans having a clue as to my
identity.
“5. If I had talked about the
WASHINGTON
MERRY-(50-
ms and, . \'
-= G6UG H. a ■- •'
*88.. - --
din new
o —2 cume i
HAULING—Phone 1084
Local—Long Distant or Light Local Deliveries
We have plenty of
Gravel Sand or Dirt to Sell
—Remember we buy anything of value—
If you have something to sell—See Us
Brown Street Service Station
301 W. Brown St. Phone 1084 W. J. Pollan
“I have your reference
CMeDAILY
, TOUGH i
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Nowlin, R. W. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 138, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 9, 1945, newspaper, June 9, 1945; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1485276/m1/2/?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.