The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 140, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 12, 1945 Page: 4 of 4
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PAGE FOUR
G. E. MAZDA
LIGHT GLOBES
—Plus tax—
1
5
==
2957
CLOSED
AH Next Week
June 18-24
lut
AA
4
Please call for your cloth-
ing by Saturday, June 16
DEA DAVIS
y
!
IIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIITIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
Tailor Shop
EXTRA GOOD BUYS
Less Than OPA Ceiling
$1595.00
heater
La.,' Jackson,
outs at Alexandria,
!
$295.00
1934 Chevrolet Coach
4
Many others—No’ trade required—
W. J. Pollan
Phone 1084
301 W. Brown St.
BUY BONDS
Change Now to
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIL
2
CONOCO
)
33 ’ 8
Nth
MOTOR OIL
“Oil Plates Your Engine”
Dealers in
8
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B. F. Goodrich Tires
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SCOTT OIL CO.
IF
A MUST
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383
. ______a
3.
.—-------a-es-=ad2e-s=e———-
4.
Bring 'em Back for Good-Sooner
Alamo Service Station
Phone 107
Wrecker Service
500 E Ave
<
116 East Avenue
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than ever before — $14,000,000,000.00
MARSH
in tribute to the 19,000 employees
The friendly Southern Pacific
C. R. MONTGOMERY, Manager
i
AN INVITATION:
i V
. & 11VNh . 1
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Ci over Farm Stokes
M
^cOFFee
",NIS.
WARLOAN
—Body Work
—Painting
15 watt
25 watt
40 watt
60 watt
Expert Washing and
Lubricating Service
Only Three Bus
Lines Operating
At Shreveport
Night
Phone
586
by the
quickly
Day
Phone
1020
1 QMAzfa LOnGFELLOV
\®MESIDIO
Waxahachie Boy
Made Sergeant With
Hospital Unit
Ennis Sailor
Takes New Ship
Into First Action
15 months terms lo anyone without
red tape.
Southern Pacific War Service Day ceremonies will be held at the Southern Pacific Shops in Ennis at 11:30 A. M.,
Thursday, June 14th. Mothers and fathers, wives and other relatives of Southern Pacific employes serving with
the military forces are especially invited to attend.
armed forces, and in memory of
those who have made the supreme
sacrifice, Southern Pacific War
Service Day will be observed by
this railroad on June 14th.
88,
83
5
The University of Missouri now
has 500 000 volumes in its library
collection. The 500,000th book was
an autographed copy of The Iliad
of Homer, as translated by William
Benjamin Smith and Walter Mil-
er.
__ 10c
__ 10c
__ 10c
__ 10c
, \ 0V
1SS
888333823328
See our display of finished Monements
Can give quick service.
We solicit a phone call, COLLECT, if interested in a
monument or marker for your loved one.
■
es
---Bonds---
Over America
Eisenhower
(Continued From Page One)
Waxahachie Marble
and Granite Co., Inc.
—Waxahachie, Texas—■
1 -. .-r,
" worth of them. Our mighty Armed Forces
J
Proposed Federal Airport
Plan for the State of
TEXAS
-
G. G. Harvard, Distributor
meeemysssammsunsantasnvanaxsssasanmscsenzmmasazaaunes
All of us are hoping, praying for one thing—
the day of complete Victory and final home-
coming. But there’s a long road ahead before
that day—and that road will be plenty tough.
It will take more tanks, more planes, more
rockets, more radar . . . more of everything
to conquer Japan’s mighty island empire.
This means that we must buy more Bonds
home sooner by our purchase of more War
Bonds in the Seventh War Loan Drive.
VysaezdSowe(
P
n 1869 COFFEE IS A DELICIOUS
S ZESTFUL BREAKFAST TREAT!
d START THE DAY OFF WITH
B SPARKLING ENERGY!
All U S. heavy and medium ar-
tillery now is being fired by nitro-
cellulose processed from pulp man-
ufactured in Washington and Lou-
isiana.
Ehauaa
-
hh ‘
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
FRANKIE DAVIS
MOTOR CO.
215 N, Main—Studebaker—Phone 72
wng20Ge avriwi
wmgncpbe.
199 Persons In
Ellis County Get
Monthly Payments
1
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On Rezor
Ultid; P
29
Emil Frachyl, is serving with the J
’infantry.
nKBaaeR)
COFFEE
pass. If it fails any of them we can put it back
in trim.
I 83
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67
“The excellent performance of
his duties and his loyalty to this
organization have won for the sol-
dier this promotion,” said the com-
manding officer of the Detachment
Medical Department, Captain Sam-
uel G. Trask of 1917 Yong St.,
Rockford, Ill.
Sgt. Prachyl who entered the
Army on April 27, 1943, is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Prachyl, of
Waxahachie. His brother, Private
ed otherwise.
“But I konw this, he said, if Hit-
ler is not dead, he is suffering
more than if he were because he is
being hunted for his life and will
be fearful every minute that he
will be caught.”
Hhe praised Marshal Gregory K.
Zhukov, commander of Russian oc-
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British Air Chief Marshal Sir Ar-
thur William Tedder, who was his
deputy commander in the battle of
Germany.
Five minutes earlier, a black li-
mousine carrying Prime Minister
and Mrs. Churchill drove along
Sherman and Brown Phone 104
have given us a magnificent victory in Europe.
The least we can do in return is to help them
finish the rest of the job quickly and come
gaa
ENNIS DAILY NEWS, ENNIS, ELLIS COUNTY, TEXAS, TUESDAY EVENING, JUNE 12, 1945
A new full track snow cruiser
has been developed for use by the
Air Foices in deep snow country
for towing and light cargo haul-
ing. The new Ordnance transport-
vehicle, weighing two and one-half
tons when loaded, has a speed of
20 miles an hour, a erasing range
of 100 miles and has successfully
negotiated snow 50 feet deep.
Shreveport workers was
followed by similar walk-
"my
' *
Q EXISTING AIRPORTS
( EXISTING AIRPORTS IMPAQVED
t PROPOSED AIRPORTS
k Num.r.lt Indicate Class
sand-covered Fleet Street.
The crowd at first thought it
was Eisenhower, but then caught
sight of Churchill smoking his fa-
miliar cigar. There was an audi-
ble sigh.
“It’s only Winne,” one curbside
spectator said. This isn’t his day.”
Eisenhower said he originally had
accepted reports that Adolf Hitler
was dead and was surprised to find
some of his Russian friends believ-
___ This airport map of Texas shows how citizens of this state will participate in the
nationwide airport expension program being sponsored by the Civil Aeronauci
Administration and now under discussion in Congress. W hen completed 1 exas " 3
have 532 airports, far more than any other state in the Union. The entire program
is designed to encourage private flying and the development of commercial air
transportation.
Exclusive of buildings, hangars and special facilities, the cost of the proposed
State program is estimated at 8120,923,000 of which the Federal Government
would pay half and local agencies the remainder. Buildings and equipment will add
an estimated 25% to the total. This map was prepared by Cities Service Company
from official records of the CAA.
When Napoleon took Berlin in
1806, civilians cheered and the
Prussian Army accepted uncondi-
tional surrender.
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
RELIGIOUS LIBERTY
The only statue to religious lib-
erty in the United States stands in
Fairmont Park, Philadelphia, Pa.
Erected in 1876, by the Independ-
ent Order of B’nai B’rith and Is-
raelites of America, it had been
sculptored by Moses Ezekiel, Civil
War veteran. Americans won. that
freedom 100 years before this sta-
tue was erected but are at war to-
day to keep it. Our defenders of
faith must have planes, cannon,
shot and thousands of other items
to win that war. War Bonds help
furnish them. U: S. Treasury Department
ss2
1939 Studebaker Commander
Sedan, overdrive, heater $995.00
1938 Chevrolet Coach —_ $645.00
1938 Ford Coach 1____ $454.00
1939 Chevrolet Panel------$446.11
ance payments. 1,829 of them are 2
retired workers and 3,059 are wo-
men and children of deceased and
or retired men..
Nearest surviving relatives of
workers who die should always
' ma
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Jefferson county, Wash., seat of
the Olympic National forest, led
all counties in the United States
in cash receipts from sale of tim-
ber in national forests. y
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Her guns sent two Japanese
bombers crashing into the sea not
far from Japan, and the carriers
she defended so well are free to
launch their planes.
Yesterday, “business as usual”
was the plan of the day, and out-
wardly the officers and men car-
ried on as if they had no notion of
the imminence of battle. But they
all knew that just over the hori-
zon lay the mainland of Japan.
i Within each officer and men
there was a mounting tension that
made itself known in little things.
A few Bibles appeared, some new.
! some dug-eared and worn; there
I was louder laughter than usual,
more zealous attempts at horse-
play. A quiet checking of battle-
gear, or the studied writing of let-
ters gave evidence of serious
Keep your car in good
repair and it will serve
you for the duration.
See us to keep your car
humming along in good
order. We specialize in—
—Brake Service
5882382
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Aboard a New U. S. Cruiser,
Somewhere in the Pacific—Vern-
on G. Lallant, seaman, second class
whose father, J. W. Lallant, lives
on Route 4, Ennis, Texas helped
take this new ship into battle for
the first time today against the
Japanese.
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> of our railroad serving with the
(08CUU?
contact a representative of the So-
cial Security Board to determine if
survivors insurance is due to some
one. Workers on reaching age 65
should do the same to check on
their retirement insurance rights.
Representatives of the Board are
in Waxahachie and Ennis each
month. All postmasters in the
county have sschedules of these
visits which are made to serve
Ellis county people.
99 ,
Miss., and other points served by
Tri-State. The strike was report-
ed extending over the entire sys-
tem which operates in nie states
from Louisiana to lillinois.
Union officials have denied a re-
port quoting bus company officials
as saying the strikers were de-
manding a more than 30 per cent !
wage increase, declaring that the I
drivers and mechanics asked only
for a wage comparable with that
being paid by other transit firms.
Inter national vice-presiden t Otto
De Bate of the Amalgamated Asso-
ciation of Street Railways and Mo-
tor Coach employes, who is also
president of the local union, term-
ed the walkout unauthorized.
There were no indications that a
date for a conference to settle the
dispute had yet been arranged be-
tween company and union offi-
cials.
F 50 ,o 1OO SHAVES 1
c,eeye
PEED nON
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100 watt--------15c
150 watt —:------20c
200 watt _________ 27c
300 watt--------45c
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HEREFORV WELINGT
—Tune-ups
—Battery Charging
It costs less to correct
minor ailments than it
does after serious trouble
develop.
Stewarts Garage
1
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a
Yqr Car is a War Car Now!
CAN YOUR CAR PASS OUR
WARTIME PHYSICAL EXAM
AFL Union officials to arrange a
new contract. The action taken
N
The 68th General Hospital, Eng-
land-Corporal Raymond Prachyl,
20, of Waxahachie, Texas, non-
commissioned officer in charge of
the linen room here, has been
prmoted to the grade of sergeant.
s
Shreveport; La.,- June 12 (UP)-
Only three bus lines,, to the west
and southwest, were opreating out
of Shreveport today as the strike
of more than 400 tri-state transit
company operators and mechanics
entered its third day with no ap-
parent sign of a settlement.
Bus connections from here to
Alexandria, Baton Rouge, Lake
Charles and intervening points, as
well as other cities to the north,
east and south, were completely
blocked. Only three lines from
Shreveport to Texas points, Dallas,
Beaumont, Houston, Henderson
and Waco, were operating.
The walkout started Sunday
when some 400 local employees
struck against what was called the
“dilatory tactics? of Tri-State offi-
cials in avoidinga, meeting with
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____
maazzsanzrmsaek—-
1941 Dodge Coupe, heat,
music ____________________ $1215.00
1939 Dodge Sedan, radio --$928.00
1939 Dodge Coupe ________ $790.00
1940 La Salle Sedan, radio,
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On June 1 there were 199 persons
in Ellis county who were receiv-
ing monthly Old-Age and Surviv-
ors insurance payments totaling
$32,467.44 a year, syas Ernest L.
Tutt, manager of the Social Secur-
ity Board for this area, 70 of these
persons are retired workers and
129 are women and children of
deceased and or retired men.
The total volume of monthly
payments in the eight-county a-
rea served by the Dallas office, as
of June 1, Tutt said, is at the rate
of $994,591.56 a year. Within the
eight-county area 4,888 persons are
receiving monthly federal insur-
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Miss Chic, an elephant in the
Jacksonville (Fla.) zoo is insured
for $3,000 by Lloyds of London.
I American companies refused the
risk.
cupation forces, as a “grand fel-
low.”
The Russians are very friendly
and I am convinced they want
peace and a chance to develop
themselves just the same as all
the rest of us do,” he said. “They
are fiendly, they like a laugh and
my contacs with Russians are
heart-warming.”
thought. Men asked each other
what difference there was between
a Jap plane and the hundreds of
targets they had so efficiently
knocked from the skies.
Today, shortly after dawn, when
the first Jap “Betty” stole through
a curtain of ack-ack and let losse
its bombs, the men knew there
was a difference.
The next plane did not get
through, it dissolved in the focal
fire of a barrage from the ships of
the task force. A third one, in-
tent on sowing destruction on the
deck of a carrier, broke through,
but it was riddled with flack and
diverted. Other planes came in
to meet the fierce anti-aircraft fire
of this cruiser and other ships of
the force, but they were repelled.
The carriers moved on toward
their goal.
This evening the Captain of this
newly-baptized cruiser spoke from
his station on the bridge to the
men at their battle staions. The
planes of reurning U. S. airmen
speckled the sky as they maneuv-
ered for landings. The Captain’s
words were proud:
“Objective realized . . . losses of
task force light . . . damage to
the enemy severe.
“For this ship, two Jap planes,
one probable. For you of the crew,
well done, shipmates.”
I The Jap is aware that a new
ship has joined Uncle Sam’s first
team.
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Nowlin, R. W. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 140, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 12, 1945, newspaper, June 12, 1945; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1485278/m1/4/?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.