The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 250, Ed. 1 Friday, October 19, 1945 Page: 1 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Ennis Daily News and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Ennis Public Library.
Extracted Text
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THE ENNIS DAILY NEWS
4
BUY VICTORY BONDS
No. 250
ENNIS. ELLIS COUNTY, TEXAS. FRIDAY EVENING, OCT. 19, 1945
IN FIFTY-FOURTH YEAR
$
Cabinet Balks At
, ' 3
a ,
Immediate Action
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Of Allied Demand
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reach a decision.
/
!
announced that “the requirements ing, foreign misiter Shigeru Yoshi-
Todays
Lake Texoma Will Be
ment here and elsewhere
Year-Round Center
Sunday, Oct. 21
Ashburn Hospital
89
a
ther Funk in another prison.
A special cleark of the interna- i
g
the two-week
dispute resulted in
tional tribunal which will try the I
the rounds of the cells in Nuern-
8
at the Convention and bringing out
some
Dr. McFarland’s speech at the pres-
Allen F. Sills
lake filled, more
Nolan D. Anthony
19— pfc. I
McKinney, Tex.. Oct.
\
Nolan D.
after spending over three and one
constantly
through
this । being put into effect.
the Texas Congress
(
I
(Continued on Page Six)
of the
i
6 A
With the announcement of
the l
York,
)
for Tyler where they will make j
technician and X-ray man at the '
• them to go back and forth each ' Bryant Clinic.
TME WEATHER
Citizens National Bank.
Four Additional
. Lt. Edward J. Parma, son of Mr.
I Polio Cases In
and Mrs. I. J. Parma, is home
Houston Area
of
in civic affairs.
BUY BONDS
discount.
a
A
8
border, will become one of Ameri-
ca’s best-known year round recrea-
Byrd Farmer
Died Suddenly
Of Heart Attack
Army Yields
Control of
Big Company
Pay your state and county taxes
in October and save 3 per cent.
U S. Refuses To
Recognize Red’s
Baltic Claims
Member of Lost
Battalion Here
To Visit Parents
Joyce being in the third grade and :
Phil in the first grade.
Forrest Fountain
Has Double Job
At Manila Base
day furlough Joe will report back
to the hospital in North Carolina
and get his discharge.
cd notification of the 24 defend-
ants save for Martin Bormann, for-
gratitving, the records show. From
over the State they came, assembl-
and
were
his firm and discuss with him and
his assistants your tire problems.
plan now
A portion
for the employees. .
Some who have families have lo-
cated in Corsicana and Dallas, but
it will not be convenient for all of
should be every business and civic
club.
War Department
Has Vast Job
Tracing Soldiers
to Tyler for the family.
The children are both in school.
Nuernberg Site for
Trial of German
War Criminals
&
I
f
fate of missing soldiers.
It said five-man teams. includ-
ma will return to California
ter nis leave here.
Lt. Edward Parma
Here On Leave
From Overseas
$
j
tie Cemetery.
Huey Thomas Stringer was born
Highlights Of
Convention Told
At Kiwanis Club
L C. Sigrist
Going to Bryant
Clinic in Tyler
Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Sigrist
f
I
)
-
HOLLYWOOD BATTLE—Macklin Hall, Jr., who played Porky in the “Our Gang” comedies,
gets rough treatment at hands of strikers when he attempted to go through picket lines
at the Warner Bros. studio, Hollywood Despi'e efforts of police to aid him, he went to a
hospital in a serious condition.
1
1
> .
sM8g1
of this community passed away at
1:30 o’clock Friday morning in the
control at midnight last night, and
the transfer took place without in-
Freddie Swafford,
Robert 'Muirhead
Open Tire Store
a war labor board directive
)
0
children Joyce and Phil, and Mrs. 'detailed account of the War De-
Vacation Paradise
- ---------
There is every good reason why i AT I A . 1
Lake Texoma, 140,000 acre -inland Nolan Anthony,
ocean” on the Texas Oklahoma i Now Stationed At
■Holman. Okla.
■
Nazis, Maj. Anthony Neave, made
PT A Celebrating
36th Birthday
The Texas Congress of Parents
and Teachers, fourth in size am-
ong the branches of the national
■
888
jA- 9
af _
, wartz and Mrs. Johnny Allen
nis quota for the month of October
to :the Waco Army Air Field.
the engineers under a
at today’s meeting, but failed to
N-------------------
Washington and thereafter began
her plans for the Texas branch
During the 1909 State Fair of Tex-
as, Mrs. Porter and her co-work-
ers in Dallas called together mo-
From New York to Swan-
, Palmer represented the Ennis Red
Cross Camp and Hospital. Council
' Thursday when they carried En-
will l partent’s efforts to discover the
f
I
I
being in Ennis before going to Ty- ।
ler. This will be the second move j
ernberg prison.
Erich Raed er
Hans Fritzche
H. T. Stringer
Passed Away
Early Friday
Growing
these years,
Berlin. Oct. 19 (UP)—The Uni-
ted States signed the war crimes
I : 39 § 8888
8 i8g888888§
• " ■
4 he flew b-29 planes,
overseas for about
in the
011 Palmer Ladies
returning ~ D 1 ~
from duty at Tinian Island, where ~arry Ked ross
service of the indict-
J. V. Dover, 57, farmer of the
Byrd community, died suddenly of
a heart attack shortly afternoon
today while picking cotton.
The body is in the Keever chap-
el pending arrangements.
Mr. Dover, a native of Alabama,
came to Texas in 1894. Surviving ! thers; teachers
are his wife, the former Viola ; men leaders to
Worthy, and five sons, Billy, Dean,
plain wooden boxes in a funeral
I parlor revealed today the names of
14 American air men executed by
long seizure from April 25, 1944, to
May 9. 1944, when the Department
of Commerce took over operation
of the mail order business.
Chicago, Oct. 19 (UP)— Mont-
written U. S. Sen. Tom Connally,
I D„ Tex., to ask him to help her
and find her missing boy, received a
Asked by a newsman if he were
connected with Mitsui, Yoshida re-
plied: “Unfortunately not.”
Men Working On
Levee Seeking
Places to Live
Shirley Lou Morgan, 8, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Morgan, 904
North Kaufman Street, Ennis, died
at 6 o’clock Thursday afternoon
in Baylor Hospital in Dallas where
she was taken Tuesday for medi-
cal treatment.
The body was shipped to Atoka,
Okla., where funeral services will
be held and interment will be made
there.
Shirley Lou was born October 23,
1936 in Ada, Okla, and moved to
Ennis with her parents in Febru-
ary 1945. She attended the Ennis
Public schools here and was a
member of the Tabernacle Baptist
Church.
Besides her parents she is survi-
ved by a brother, Roscoe and grand
parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Tur-
ner of Atoka, Okla.
Funeral arrangements had not
He has been Quota to Waco
three months, ! ’ ---
Mrs. Jack Moore. Mrs. John Sch-
and civic minded
form the Texas
REACH
EVERYONE!
Our Classified Ads are
inexpensive means of
obtaining things you
need; or, to sell what
you no longer need.
MACARTHUR CALLS FOR END JAP MONOPOLIES
g. - , A0cmn. jc. cj g___UEj_La_M_—H__LLL_g
_ _ .......... -
YOUR
OBLIGATION
to those who have given
their all for Victory
will not be discharged
until you have made
a U.W.F. contribution
Williams. ,
Joe McCrary gave an interesting
, s
claims to the Baltic States and
"certain other territories,” it was
revealed today.
The stipulation was made by U.
S. Supreme Court Justice Robert
H. Jackson, chief American prose-
cutor. in a letter addressed to the
soviet, French and British prose-
cutors and-filed with the secretary ■
of the military trial court.
their supreme leadership in the
quality tire field has been recog-
nized.’’
Mr. Swafford pointed out that
the long-wearing, satisfactory ser-
vice, and safety features of Star
tires have been perfected over
many years of the very best tire
Manila— Pfc. Forrest Roland
Fountain is both mail clerk and
buglar for the 1S2nd Company of
the 5th Replacement Depot, Re-
placement Command, AFWESPAC.
In Manila since June of this year
Pfc. Fountain is entitled to wear
the -Asiatic-Pacific ribbon with a
bronze participation star for the
Luzon campaign and the Philip-
pine Liberation ribbon.
Mrs. Minne A. Fountain, his mo-
ther. resides at 704 Wilken St.,
notified in
fanoh. North Carolina lor a lew stated that a number of rooms
aavs in the hospital Alter a 45 (and apartments would be needed
of Byrd and Mrs. Lige Latham of |lhe Texas Congress has been a
• power for good. So important has
I he movement become that each
H. T. Stringer,1103 N. McKinney
St., retired farmer and resident
tion and vacation paradises. 1 lwith
Armv engineers in charge of big i ..
Denison Dam and the lake it im- j
pounds, are predicting that within ’ ,*
another year Texoma will be draw- a
their home. Mr. Sigrist will be
Robert Muirhead and Freddie
Swafford have announced the op-
ening of their new tire and auto-
mobile aaccessory store for Satur-
day morning, the new firm to be
under the name of Muirhead and
ident’s banquet Monday evening, I known to be alive in Germany.
of 1945 as a significant forerunner
of what will come later.
“When general vacationing is re-
sumed in postwar times, and au-
tomobile travel is easy again, the
facilities at Texoma will be ex-
plored by Americans from coast to
coast,” he predicted.
In its first season since the
| J
indictement only after stipulating .
that she does not recognize Soviet
jection to hard labor from before
sunrise until after sunset describe engineering and designing experi-
during the war, he contended.
Yoshida attempted to draw
parallel with large industries
the United States.
During his service he received
the Air Medal and cluster, the
ETO ribbon with three battle stars.
He was in the service 36 months
and served 14 months overseas. He
was interned in Switzerland for
eight months. He held the rank
of technical sergeant.
Prior to entering the service, he
, was a bookkeeper.
its 36th
and they desire peace in order to _
continue their pursuits.” 1 exas Congress
He argued that some large Ja-
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By RALPH TEATSORTH
United Press Staff Correspondent
Tokyo, Oct. 19 (U.P)—The Japanese cabinet today balk-
ed at immediate action on Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s de-
mand that industrial monopolies be broken up.
The Army officially relinquished ! A Japanese source said the cabinet discussed the de-
[ mand for some time
day.
Anyone having available bed-
rooms or apartments may see Mr.
The trial date was set shortly
after the Allied war cirmes indict-
ment was served on the bulk of
the defendants—a who’s who of
the remainder of the Nazi hierar-
chy—in the Nuernberg prison.
The proceedings cleared the way
for the trial save for the grace
period given Reichmarshal Her-
mann oGering and his cohorts to
arrange for their defense against
the historic indictment.
_______________ in__Four -month-old James A. Smith
Take advantage of the 3 per cent , became the 112th city case and 10-
liscount. Pay your county taxes in year-old Winston J. Lindsey be-
October i came the 83th case in Ukol county.
trusts as Mitsui, Mitsubishi and
Sumitomo—would benefit Japan in
the long run.
He contended it was mainly
through the efforts of these estab-
lihsed monopolies that Japan’s
trade originally was built up to a
point where the nation prospered.
“Tne old Zaibatsu built up their
enterprises in times of peace and
they were the first to rejoice in
the ending of the war,” Yoshida
said.
Only the New Zaiatsu—“so nu-
merous I can’t give their names”
—cooperated with the military
leave after
L I
i,-
—
Congress. The response was most
Rev. Francis put before the Ennis '
club the fact that the club stood I GLI,-, M„g--
a for something besides fun and | NIALI IC j IVIVIEAI
friendship and that Kiwanis Clubs ) me । rNoy r
# were based on the golden rule as yer hrsda
Baylor Hospital
- 5
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The Kiwanis Club of Ennis met
Thursday noon in the banquet
room of the Texas Power & Light
do. vith Owen Gilpin, first vice-
president, presiding.
Mr. Gilpin announced waiters for
next week as student Kiwanian
Freddie Story, George Hedrick, Otis
g Grant and Owen Gilpin.
55 Lt. Cecil Spencer was introduc-
ce das a guest of his father-in-law
Otis Grant. Verner B. Jones was
welcomed as a new member and
Dave Onstead, a former Kiwanian
in another city, was also welcomed.
Dr. A. L. Thomas, program chair-
man, called upon the following who
spoke briefly on thir impressions
of the Ennis Kiwanis Club and
what it meant to them: Dr. E. F.
McDonnell, Bill Schween, A. B.
Roach, Bob Hesser, Dr. R. E. Eris-
man. R F. Williams and Miss June
now has a membership of 198,227
to carry forward the program- of
child welfare and parent educa-
tion. It was a cherished dream of
the late Mrs. Ella Caruthers Port-
er of Dallas to organize in Texas a
branch of the organization first
known as the National Congress of
Mothers. She attended an early
meeting' of this organization in
ior execution crashed. Florence,
whose home address and rank were
not known here, was captured by
the Japanese on Miyako Island.
Written in Japanese and Eng-
lish, the tags on the other 14 box-
es containing the names of those
executed.
The boxes were recovered by an
office of strategic services rescue
team commanded by Lt. Col. Mich-
ael J. Charignon and will be held
here pending burial instructions
from Washington. Next of kin have
from Washington. Nxt of kin have
oeen notified.
I year the governor sets aside the
week including the State birthday
as Texas Congress membershi
week, and the attention of all who
[ are interested in the welfare of
youth is called to the calue of
membership in the organization.
The Ennis Parent Teacher As-
sociation has contributed to the
growth of the state . organization.
In the past three years Ennis has
had an increase of 198 members.
The State’s increase for the past
year is 34,913.
Mr. Sigrist has been connected
with the Municipal Hospital as Houston, Tex., Oct. 19 'UP) near Corsicana in Navarro county
technician and x-ray man here Four more polio cases were added i and had lived in this community
Mrs Sigrist has been very active ’ today to the Houston city-county ail his life. Surviving are his wife
iecor, to bring the total to 198. and several children and grand-
Sigrist's father, A. Wilkie,
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panese industries operated at a
“great loss” during the war. A
number were forced to build ships
and aircraft at a loss, he said.
i congress will celebrate
birthday today, October 19.
Dallas, Tex., Oct. 19 (UP)—The
I vast job of tracing 20,000 American
soldiers listed as “missing in ac-
tion” was described by t he War
Department today for a Dallas mo-
I ther whose son is among them.
i Mrs W. A .Marsh, who had
A memorial service for Allen
Sills, who died in a Japanese pris-
on camp, will be held Sunday, Oc-
i tuber 21st at 4:00 p.m., at the
I First Baptist Church. The service
] will be conducted by the pastor
I Rev S. I. Francis, assisted by Rey.
A. J. Kirkland and Rev. L. S. Bal-
lard. former pastors of the church
of which the deceased was a mem-
leave Ennis in about two weeks, I
Joe MaJavear arrived home last
night after three _ and one-half
ycars as a prisoner of war of Ja-
pan. He was with the Lost Batta-
li9n taken prisoner at Priok, Java
on March 8, 1942. From there he
Ws taken to Batavia where he
stayed until October 11, 1942. On
Getober 15, 1942 he was taken on
a Jap ship to Singapore and was
there until January 9, 1943. From
Singaporc to Burma to work on
ihae railroad until December, 27,
1943. The year 1943 was the dark-
est year for them, the Japanese
were having everything their way
and were very arrogant. After
, Singapore, Joe was sent to Siam in
4 Thailana and then on to Saigon in
i Indo-China in April 1944.
< On September 6, 1945 was liber-
rated and sent to Calcutta for hos-
pitalization. With about 20 other-
prisoners he was flown from Cal-
cutta to Karachia, India then tc
Aberdan, Persia, on t Carlo Egypt.
Here they were taken to see the
Sphinx and pyramids and on a I
sight-seeing tour. From Carlo to
Tripoli to Casa Blanca to New
Foundlana, and then home. They
landed at Mitchell Field, New
hands of his captors, and safer are the popular line of
Following the Japanese capitu- , passenger tires by Star. Rugged,
lation came for Pfc. Anthony on ; sturdy and built to meet post-war-
August 29 th of this year. He was : demands of the truck owners are . .
evacteted from Calcutta, India to the equally well-known Star truck Lee, Joe and Samuel, all
this country by plane. i tires, Mr. Swafford said.
“Quality is again the keyword
--—---—- ------- in tire buying,” he said. “Hence
our pride in the appointment as
talk abou: the •belct Colivention
mn Galveston and mentioned the
features that interested him most.
Rev. Francis, also a delegate to
the Convention, spoke concerning
the friendliness of the entire group .
ing hunters, fishermen and vaca- J g8
tionists from all over America. : g
Maj. A. T. F. Seale, officer in W
charge of army engineers’ sub-dis- W
trict headquarters at Denison, ’
points to the banner first season z“
mg men who could speak the lan- „
. , 0 j talsen Thursday for medical
the area being covered. 1 . v .
। ment
j cident.
Even before soldiers had finished
moving out their equipment, Sew-
ell L. Avery, militant chairman of
the Wards board of directors, re-
iterated the company’s refusal to
yield to union demands for main-
tenance of membership and check-
off, granted during the Army’s oc-
cupation.
A notice posted by the company
the treatment received at the ence Built to serve Texans better
home address. Also two brothers,
Chas, and Willie Dover of Byrd,ed at the old First Methodist
md three sisters, Mrs. Will Thork ( Church and elected Mrs. Porter
of Oklahoma City, Mrs. O. S. Bain president. From that day forward
half years in Jap prison camps. A customers the greatest possible val-
East Texas: Partly cloudy this
afternoon, tonight; cooler tonight
in the northwest and extreme
north this afternoon. Saturday
tair and cooler. Moderate south-
easterly winds on the coast, be-
coming moderate to fresh north-
erly late tonight.
Pay your county taxes in Octo-
ber so you can get the 3 per cent
sites are made to the army engin-
eers at Denison.
Roads about the lake have been
been improved. The public made a
rush for the lake in the summer
months that several phases of a
postwar development plan of the
National Park Service had to be
speeded up.
Hurry-up construction was auth-
orized for at least five commercial
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coubted that dissolution of the old ( the Japanese on Formosa last
Saibatsu—such family industrial ! June after a perfunctory military
I of the more desirable sites are
' earmarked for first choice of war
' veterans. Application for camp
graduate of Corsicana High School,
Anthony rs the son of Mr. and Mrs.
J. Anthony, residents of Ennis.
As a member of the famous Lost
Battalion, the 131st Field Artillery,
Anthony came under Japanese do-
mination in March of 1942. Thus
began forty-two long months of
confinement in camps in Java, Sin-
gapore, Burma, Thailand and
French Indo-China. Subsistence
on a starvation diet, survival in
spite of such diseases as malaria,
beri-ter and dysentery, and sub-
urday afternoon with Harvey Por- l Edwin A. Knize, son of Mr. and
ter officiating. Mr. Porter will be Mrs. Joe Knize. Sr. of Ennis Rt. 1,
. assisted by Ernest Finley, minister I has cleared the separation center
cf the Church of Christ, at Ellington Field, Texas, after ser-
Interment will be made in Myr- | ving with the Army Air Forces.
I
a
in
88: 3328888885888333338 833333333333
-
g granting the disputed provisions
precipitated seizure of 16 yard pro-
| perties Dec. 28, 1944. A similar
ggg -
Municipal Hospital where he was j
„.taken Thursday for medical treat- . Edwin A. Knize
guace or the area being covered. ment • " ,•* -a
mm Srist -» remain in the Gets Discharge
■ - ' or Keever Chapel where funeral serv- !rrom Air Corps
ices wih be held at 4 o’clock Sat- { ---
Star distributors . in Ennis. We
know that Star tires meet all
quality requirements. Star tires
stand the test under all conditions.
They meet the demands of auto-
mobile and truck'owners who will
be satisfied with nothing less than
। the best.”
Mr. Swafford invites you to visit
Houston. Texas.
Pfc. Fountain graduated from
Ennis High School in 1939 and
studied aviation at the Western
Reserve University.
After he secures his release from
the armed services, Pfc. Fountain
plans to return to the Southern
Pacific Railroad where he was em-
ployed’ for 18 months prior to his
induciion.
i Swafford Tire Store and will be lo-
Anthony is back home cated at 215 West Brown St.
“It will be our policy to give our
her.
The public is invited to
j memorial service.
j children, also a half sister and
brother
Mr. Stringer was a member of
'.he Church of Christ.
levee repair work being done East j
of Ennis. Lee R. Wilson, resident i
engineer in charge of the work, ,
“The issue concerns the very | AT e «7 y
toundation of the Japanese Indus- ames O1 lank
trila system and has immediate, far i a • lZa11 1
reaching effects on the people’s Airm di Kliled
livelihood,” the informant said in
explaining the government’s appa- Mv long Hgne
rent reluctance to take immedi- j - •______
ate action. 1 Shanghai. Oct. 19 (UP)—Small,
Eeven before the cabinet meet- i white tags attached to a row of
da told a press conference he
been completed when the body
was shipped and it was not known
here when the funeral will be held.
ering and 18othe r Nazi leaders
were handed the indictment at Nu-
( 4 ' ----
,, A Nuernberg, Oct. 19 (U.P)—The trial of Nazisms foremost
surviving war criminals will open Nov. 20 in this one-time
shrine city of the party which started the second World
War, it was announced officially today.
The four-power Allied military tribunal which will con-
duct the Nuernberg trial announced that the date of its
opening had been set for four weeks and four days from
----------------9 today.
i cations were filed with the en-
ginees for boat permits; countless
I thousands of Texoma fishing li-
I censes were issued, and hundreds
of inquiries were received from
| Texans and Oklahomans desiring
j cottage or camp sites.
These sites will be allocated by
of compulsory maintenance of un- ,
ion membership and checkoff of ;
union dues were terminated when |
properties were returned by the
army, which had imposed these il-
legal requirements.”
No immediate statement was
forthcoming from the mail order,
I warehouse and retail employees un-
lion (CIO), whose members had vo-
iced their intentions of striking if
. the contract demands were not
’ met.
! The company’s refusal to comply
Service For
American occupation zone complet-
Allen Silk
“American Zaibatsu, such as the
munitions industry, prospered
through war orders and I should
think there were not a few who
preferrea prolongation of the war
in order to continue their profits,”
he said.
“As far as the old Zaibatsu of
Japan are concerned, their for-
tunes were made in peace times
a 45 -day
mer Nazi party deputy whose I
whereabouts are unknown.
Reichmarshall Hermann W. Go-
gomery Ward & Co. properties in i
seven cities were back under priv- ।
ate management today, signalling
renewal of a long-standing dispute
between the company and the CIO
j which twice led to government seiz-
l ure.
j in Ennis eight years, having lived to hunt for unmarked graves
1 in Tyler prior to coming here, and j other traces of the lost men.
Wilson who has offices over the
! —
i •
. If:
8 88
1 : • : 388 : 3 3 8
berg piaon ald kppcd copies of 1 , 1. * -
thetzuky anductmen throusn the; _7
Harold Willey, general secretary 1 m - j
of the tribunal, accompanied Ne- j —
ave and passed out copies of an j —
article in the tribunal charter set- ! -- ' a
or the things mentioned ’in ting forth the rights of the defen- j meg-
dants and listing civilian lawyers !
trial.
Inside the boxes were urns con-
Gaining the ashes of the airmen
and records of their execution.
They showed that the men were
killed by a firing squad at Taihoku
i Formosa, June 19 at a time when
Japan was making peace feelers to
the Allies.
A 15tn box contained the ashes
of an American Marine, Joseph
Francis Florence, who was killed
' when the Japanese plane in which
i ne was being brought to Formosa
. ■ ■ -
. .. - J
. . W i
■ ■ .. J
than 1,000 appli- ol,
ue for their dollars and we are
glad to announce our appointment
as local distributors for Star
Tires,” said Freddie Swafford.
“Star tires need no introduction
to Texans,” Mr. Swafford contin-
ued. “For a quarter of a century
:;3 333233:333:333333:333:333222333333333333323 :33838333323: 333323233:3323232333332333323223323322332 33323333:
Grand Admiral
piopagandist | _
Berlin yesterday. Gustav Krupp I O
von Bohlen, head of Krupp, was 1 g9
served in an arm yhospital, and 1 e
former Reichbank president Wal- : O
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Nowlin, R. W. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 250, Ed. 1 Friday, October 19, 1945, newspaper, October 19, 1945; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1485378/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.