The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 211, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 4, 1945 Page: 3 of 4
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rAGE TEEEB
ENNIS DILY NEWS, ENNIS, ELLIS COUNTY, TEXAS, TUESDAY EVENING, SEPT. 4, 1945
I
HOUSE WIRING
And All Types of Electrical Work.
JOHN A. MURRAY
U. s. ARMY
ENNIS ELECTRICAL CO.
*
Sid Roper
Phone 66
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3:
8 38
LOCAL
Phone 193
707 N. Clay St.
37
BRIEFS
Camp Luzon, Arizona
ure
FOR SALE
February 19, 1945
1
red
Dear Mom:
Thanks for the nice box of stationery you sent me with
e 12
mu
will enjoy getting my letters even more now.
g
a letter to cheer me up after a hard day’s work.
Your loving son,
t
JOHN,
SEE SAMPLES AT
i
„h
UPCO Print Shop
X
WANTED
Phone 44
Cpl. Glen Christopher of Fort
FOR RENT
9mnotant Announcement
Ladies only. 407 S. Main St.
son for the work.
Underwriters at Lloyd’s, London’, world renowned Company, which has
highly interesting.
never failed to pay any loss and whose integrity and financial standing is
unquestioned.
While we have always stood squarely .behind our work and no client has
LOST
even sustained a loss by relying on our Abstracts, this gives us additional
responsibility—in fact it is the equivalent of having a fund of $25,000.00
♦
Lloyd’s of London investigate an Abstract Company very closely before
issuing a policy of this kind and only those companies of the highest
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standing and reputation can secure this insurance.
9
We also write Title Insurance, insuring and guaranteeing the titles to real
DALLAS TITLE & GUARANTY COMPANY, Dallas, the oldest and one of
in our office, vzithout the necessity of having an Abstrict.
sr
We are in a position to furnish any type of title service available in the
larger cities or elsewhere.
♦
W. D. ARDEN
A
4
Paul R. Bird, President
f
Phone J 8-2598
♦
We have recently completed arrangements for and now have in force an
ABSTRACTERS’ LIABILITY POLICY'’ for the sum of $25,000.00, insuring
all Abstracts made by us in the past, at the present time or in the future
Ennis Daily News
Classified Ads
in the bank which can .only be used to pay losses or claims, should such
arise and must be kept intact for this purpose alone.
Entertained For
Mother Monday
WANTED: Western Electric Com-
pany, Inc. wants young men to in-
Chopin—Nocturne
Op. 48, No. 1
Chopin—Nocturne
WANTED: Hogs, top prices paid.
Alexander Meat Market, Ennis.
Texan Makes
Ice For Men
In Pacific Area
Tully Moseley
To Give Concert
Fair Park Casino
OW
E_
FOR RENT: Bed room, 510 West
Brown St.
pa
$
with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schalb
and Mrs. Jeff Rawley.
Returns From Snyder
Miss Vela Bell has returned from
Snyder where she has been visit-
ing in the home of her brother,
Mr. and Mrs. Roland Bell for the
past month.
the homes of the boys,
The boys who are coming home
soon.
Major, Op. 15, No. 2
Chopin—Polonaise in A-Flat Ma-
jor, Op. 53
Revised program.
f
I
4
I
But the moon and the stars sad-
ly look down
On white crosses in foreign loam,
And on windows where gold-stars
tell of the boys
WANTED:, Hogs, top prices paid. '
■ Alexander Meat Market, Ennis.
Corsicana District Fair and Ro-
deo September 18th through 22nd,
1045.
i
HAVE YOU DONE ANYTHING
ABOUT THAT? Then why not do
it now, with . ..
SOUTHWESTERN
LIFE INSURANCE
representing
Royal Typewriter
Company, Inc.
!
4,
25/
g F.Ay
8 M 6**8 5853
I
4
We Pay Cash
for
Used Furniture
Chas. E. Whiteside, Vice Pres, and Sec’y
Insured Abstracts—Title Insurance
ship in its administration shall be
open to all music and civic organ-
Harvey W. Meyer
4430% McKinney Ave.
Dallas, Texas
Fort Worth, Tex., Sept. 4 (UP)—
THe inventive trait of a Texan was
just what the famed 49th fighter
group needed in the Philippines to
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We repair all electrical appliances—
Floor sweepers, fans irons
Have your fans checked now for summer use
Wesley Cook is now working in our Service Department
MW
IIIII
Representing
SOUTHWESTERN LIFE
" INSURANCE CO.
i
6-J
But a prayer goes up from all
hearts tonight,
For we’ve known peace before,
That the moon and the stars will
never look down
Again at our world at war.
Waxahachie Abstract Co.
Remember—Send Your Overseas
[ - Christmas Mail Sept., 15 - Oct. 15
Week End Visitors
Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Hagensick
San Antonio Visitors
Capt. and Mrs. James K. Curry
of San Antonio spent Sunday and
Labor Day here in the home of
Mrs. Curry’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
H. C. Rogers.
Mattrresses Renovated
or let us sell you a new
one made of the very best
cotton and ticking.
CARL SMITH
Mattress Factory
For almost four tragic, heart-
breaking years,
There’s been blood on the moon
and the stars,
As they grieved over a war-torn
world,
Disfigured by battle scars.
in C Minor,
F y
B
cal talent shall be named the Fed- |
j erated Music Fund, and member-
FOR SALE: Bond piano, good con-
dition, cheap. See George A. Kou-
ba, Route 1, Crisp, at Alsdorf.
FOR SALE: Twin size iron bed,
mattress and springs. Call 474-J.
against loss by reason of error or omission. This Policy is written by the
And by the way, Mom, the new stationery you had printed for your-
self is certainly classy. Keep on writing and often, for there is nothing like
WANTED: Because of sale couple
needs house or apartment. Twenty-
one years; in Ennis. Any informa-
tion appreciated by W. F. Onstead.
Phone 882-w.
From some homes tonight there’s
shouting’and joy,
Rising up to the stars and the
moon,
is 1 There’s laughter and singing in
He was discov-
apartment for family moving to
Ennis. Weldon Nowlin at News Of- 1 fight off the relentless heat and
fice, Phene 44. thirst.
Services all makes of type-
writers and adding
machines.
Hardin-Baylor College. Miss Long
is the sister of Mrs. Robert C.
Fling, Ennis, and is a frequent vis-
itor in the 'Fling home.
Infants Wear
All handmade, $1.25 to $8.50 Es- 1
. more blankets, and crocheted sets, i
THE LINEN SHOP
very good job and I can certainly say you made a good choice of a gift.
I just couldn’t wait to get started to writing letters on this nice
stationery. Mary said that she likes it so very much too, for every time she
Tully Moseley, Dallas piano prod-
igy, is to be presented in recital
in Fair Park Casino, Thursday,
Sept. 6 at 8:30 p.m. Young Mose-
ley is winner of the Ezerman Foun-
—
-in '
i ll
■ K «
FOR RENT:
The following poem was written
in celebration of V-J Day by Mrs.
Kenenth Sims:
V-J NIGHT
Tonight the moon and the stars
look down,
Look down on a world at peace,
A world whose prayer has at
last been answered
A prayer for the war to cease.
my PICTURE on it. Everyone that has seen it like it very much
LOST: Will person who picked up
brown zipper purse in Ben Frank-
lin Store Saturday, containing four
No. 4 and two No. 3 ration books,
five canning sugar stamps and
Roebuck checks and other items,
return to Mrs. B. H. Horton, En-
nis Route 27.
TT
II
238888
izations within the city.
The story of Tully’s career
topher assembled all parts, and will go into this fund'' and the re-
a ton of ice per day was the re- maining half will be used by the
suit. He received a letter of com- young pianist to complete his mu-
mendation from his commanding I sical education in the East. This
officer, Lt. Col. Gerald R. John- fund that Tully Moseley will ini-
tiate to promote music and musi-
ber, lined with reclaimed sheet
----- - and musical talent in Dallas. Half
Aided by three other men, Chris- cf the proceeds' from the concert
gets one of my letters she gets my picture. She says she '
estate and the validity of mortgages and liens thereon, through the
wilt
“a—
—0 odn
" WANTED: Unfurnished house or
Tested Flashlight batteries three
for ten cents. Also several style
flashlights. Wadsworth Auto Stores.
the largest title insurance companies in Texas. These Policies are issued
metal and insulated with sawdust,
were used to ’make the cooler box.
and would like to have some like it. The UPCO PRINT SHOP did a
Belton, Sept. 4—Miss Joyce Long,
Sulphur Springs, and Miss Jeanette
Kelley, San Antonio, (left) were,
chosen college beauties by the
summer school students at Mary-
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gun failed to discharge.
FOR SALE: Ten room home on 1
cre ground, two paved streets, gar-
den, chcken house, and yard, gar-
age, servant house, bedroom down
stairs and sleeping porch, living
room, dining room, kitchen, three
upstairs’ bedrooms. kitchenette, 2
baths, upstairs revenue more than
050 monthly. J. A. Smith, Ferris,
Texas.
» N I
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in F-Sharp
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and snapped the trigger, but the returned Monday from Palestine
---;----—-~ ‘ ed junk parts from various GI
Furnishem c? oo gadgets were assembled until they dation Scholarship at the Phila-
• - " ' took the form of a workable com- delphia Conservatory of Music. !
pressor and blower. Scrap lum- j The concert will serve to estab-
then filed two shots, both of them
striking the negro.
State Highway Patrolman Russell
H. Gofford said he had recovered
two knives. One of them was
open and the other unopened.
One of the negroes, V. W. Hall,
was taken to jail with Toliver
while the third man escaped.
201 ‛ E2Ea
-
tit
til his graduation from high school,
when he went to New York. There
Olga Samaroff, head of the piano
department of Philadelphia Con-
servatory, who had heard him play
in Dallas, arranged for him t-try
for a Philadelphia scholarship
which he won.
Listed on the Casino program are
the following compositions:
Beethoven—Sonata No. 21 in C
Major, Op. 53 (Waldstein)
Debussy—Prelude in a Minor
Debussy—Maid With The Flaxen
Hair
Villa-Lobos—Moreninha
Ravel—Pavne
Villa-Lobos—Le Polichinelle
Schubert—Impromptu in B-Flat
Major
Worth, armed with mechanical
wizardry and ingenuity, fashioned
an ice machine that provided men
of his outfit with ice water con-
stantly.
A discarded cooling unit, an a-
bandoned jeep engine and assort-
mhe —
io
ing conditions. No outside work.
Standard work week forty hours,
five days per week. Experience
unnecessary. Excellent opportun-
ity to learn. Apply by letter or in
person to R. B. Overton, District
Superintendent, Room 711 Texas
Bank Building, Dallas 2, Texas.
stall communications equipment. I c
Permanent'positions. Ideal work- MTS. ohn C. LOve
HELP WANTED
WANTED: Insurance agents, at-
tractive proposition for right per-
sons. See Travis Yowell at Bunch
• Funeral Home. Phone 100.
I
t "t ... I *
I —
t W aw
Hr 4 ®
The temperature is torrid but - —
“summer girl” Irene Verner, Na- |
tional Barn Dance songstress looks ®
5
ahead to Christmas. Santa Claus, 3 -osg
alias Arkie, the Arkansas Wood-
chopper. swelters in his Santa suit
as a reminder that Christmas pack- i l
Mrs. John C. Love had a dinner
Monday evening in honor of her
mother, Mrs. Mary Armstrong who
celebrated her 60th birthday.
Those attending were the honoree,
Mrs. Catherine Chisholm of Dal-
las, Miss Lethia Armstrong of Fort
Worth and Mrs. John C. Love and
daughter, Nancy Kay Love.
Hockaday of the Hockkaday School
gave him a scholarship and arrang-
ed for living expenses. Who won’t be coming
home.
This arrangement continued un- 1
Pinson where they spent the week end
FOR SALE: One 3 room house
with one acre of land; two 3 room
houses; one 10 room house with
two apartments and two baths
with all conveniences; one 5 room
house extra nice with 2 acres of
land, all conveniences. These pla-
ces are all close in, also real nice
house, 5 rooms all conveniences in
North Ennis, a good. buy. See T. A.
Vines at Kuchar’s Men’s Store.
J
Poem Written
In Observance
’ Of V-J Night
Tested Flashlight batteries three
for ten cents. Also several style
[lashlights. Wadsworth Auto Stores.
lish a permanent and revolving-
fund to be used to promote music
FOR SALE: Fryers. Mrs. Russell
Hobbs, Phone 271-J.
FOR SALE: Concrete gravel and
sand, wholesale and retail. Imme-
_ diatee delivery. Driveway gravel
and dirt.- L. G. McCarley, tele-
phone 295.
Visited Parents
R. C. Echols of San Antonio ar-
rived Saturday nght for a short
visit with his parents, Mr. and j
Mrs. A. B. Echols. He returned
Sunday.
I Visitors Here
Miss Virgie Armstrong and Geo.
McBride were week end guests in
the home of Mrs. Mary Armstrong
and Mrs’. John C. Love.
20 cer
Zalnk eeeed
• for food . . .
clothing . . . shelter
just the bare necessities of life
—when you are no longer here
to support them?
ered when Frank Renard, noted
piano teacher and coach, heard
him playing in a downtown Dallas
piano store in 1937. He took him j
and for three and a half years |
worked with him. Then Miss Ella I
ages for our men overseas shoald a
be in the mail between Sept. 15 and |
Oct. 15. 8s
• 238,
Negro Killed
.Monday By MP
! At Midland Rodeo
I Midland, Tex., Sept. 4 (UP)—A
I hearing in the death of a negro
| about 40 years of age, Charlie Tol-
iver, who was shot and killed by
u Military Policeman yesterday at
a local rodeo, was scheduled today
before Justice of the Peace B. C.
Girdley.
The negro, from Odessa, was
shot twice in the shoulder after,
it was charged, he had attacked
the M.P. with a small revolver.
A spectator at the rodeo said
Toliver and two other negroes had
crowded into the white section of
che grandstand. They said that
when the trio was asked to go
back to their own section of the
grandstand, one of them flashed a
knife.
It was then that the Military
Police stepped in, and Pfc. John
Pinson knocked Toliver down with
his gun. When Toliver got up, it
was alleged, he drew his revolver
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Nowlin, R. W. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 211, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 4, 1945, newspaper, September 4, 1945; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1485343/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Ennis Public Library.