The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 212, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 8, 1955 Page: 4 of 8
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.
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THE ENNIS DAILY NEWS
fiSTABMSHEf* 1891
EDITORIALS • COMMENTS • FEATURES
I’age 4
Our Changing World
NEARS <?*»* «*»■*>
OFTM-
^_ THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8. 1955
MAKE SCHOOL DAYS SAFE DAYS
Vol. 64. No. 212
September
wn<\* of Ei
mg
uol for t!
day may
new pro!
mear s back to school for
t is youngster* Many are in
time- and prob'ems of
eim them. They are fac-
nd of major importance
e first
ivenvh
lem* &
iafet v.
* Earn
ie 4,1 or
te nati
lienero
:av i
ear
muc
d Ranch Safety Com-
il hen under 15 killed
ii motor vehicle acci-
very citizen. Life for
up can be made a
youth alike assume
the home is of the
■ oath are great imi-
i from the examples
or habits of their elders. The Safety Com-
mittee believes the youngster who has been
taught safety and good housekeeping will be
able to transfer this knowledge to bicycles
and cars.
Adult drivers are warned to expect the
unexpected where children are concerned.
Safety is often forgotten in the rush to re-
trieve a ball. Drive slowly in areas where j
children play or congregate; be alert to all;
signs, signals, traffic officers and school j
patrols and especially of the
themselves. One slip, says the
might mean the loss of a life . .
peace of mind.
youngsters j
committee, j
. and your,
JOBS FOR THE HANDICAPPED
he made
is goal is
isabled at
>bs. and s
-aided ea
ed disable
committee urges that
labor force of business
up of handicapped work-
reached. the 2.000.000
the present time would
o would the 250.000 who
ch year. Of last year’s
•d. jobs were found for
bo,«'
Hiring the handicapped is good business
too. A Bureau of Labor Statistics study found
that handicapped workers have lower acci-
dent rates, lower absentee rates, five to nine
times less turnover, and a better production
record than others.
Every business, large or small, should
do what it can to help the nation reach that
live per cent goal.
USSR TRIES TO KNIFE ADENAUER
The R
V!
By UNITED
issians hope t
in Kon
At
PRESS
< bury a diplomatic
mailer's back while
he is in Moscow.
The Kremlii
Germans with th
public and pa\e '
They hope tha
West Germany a
tfi&t will turn its hi;
Alliance and accept
■ <r
cnani
e wa:
for his d-
sion the
; Bonn Re-
jwnfall.
wui Dung to power in
•euiral-rrinded coalition
k on the North Atlantic
unification of Germany
THE ENNIS DAILY NEWS
IN M\ n -FH IiTH VL \R
T< lephnnt TK5-3SC1
P ibl > h>’d daily ex-:
Ch
D .
i.
by
213 V Dalla- St
ie Uctfri Publi'h-
The Ennis Weekly
:f. which al'C o; bhrnes
The Palmer R >r.
•he pon office n Ennis, Texas, as second
matter under the Act of Congress of March
las E Gentry
e) W Bus
beth Parsons
Barkley | So
.ety Ed
of by
Ahsoc!
- Classified
Manager
Editor
ate Ei.tcr
Adv Mgr
items
re:
t<
of news
net v :r.d;’.;d-
the character,
firm or corpcr-
column; of tin* paper,
be gladly'end duly corrected upon being• bsr.ught
the publisher's attention.
All communications
should be addressed
uais Any erroneous
standing, or reputation c
a* ion. «ti.ch AkjMPPcar
• ♦ >1
• i n ps* and
np in y
'-cn upon
n> per;'
TERMS OF SIBSCRTPTIOX
By Carrier in City
One Year fin advance) $1150
Que Month si 00 Six Months $6.00
SPECIAL FARM RATES
By Mali in Eli.s County, one year in advance $5 75
11, Mail Outside Cou**ty—Same rates as in City by
Carrier Single Copy 5c.
on terms of compulsory neutrality.
Adenauer is trying to avoid the trap by
saying he will not agree to normal diplo-
matic and trade relations with the Soviet
Union unless Moscow agrees to a firm time-
table for German unity and a schedule for
releasing some 200,000 German captives
still held by the Russians.
Adenauer insists he must have this
without any talk of German neutrality or
abandoning NATO.
And he warns the Germans that he
doesn’t expect the Russians to accept his
terms. The Moscow newspaper “Pravda'’
confirmed Adenauer’s warning. It said today
that r.o conditions can be attached by Bonn
to Russia’s proposal to restore diplomatic
and trade negotiations. Pravda added that
Russia never would consent to see a united
Germany free to join NATO.
The Russians want to make a deal with
the Germans ultimately a: the expense of
the Western allies—but they have no hope of
making one with Adenauer.
So they now wish to knife Adenauer by
making it appear that he is making a mess
of his trip to Moscow . . . That he is spoil-
ing German hopes for unity, German securi-
ty, Ge man trade and the hopes of thou-
sands of German families to get back their
jelatives held captive in Russia.
THE BUS LINE
By DAN BUS
" / <?
The Washington Merry-Go-Round
--------------------- < —By DREW PEARSON - ■ ■ —-------------
EDITOR’S NOTE—While Drew
Pearson is on a brief vacation,
his column is being written b>
members of his staff.
I Canyon. Ku-kendall declared self-
j righteously: “I don't think it is
proper for me to divulge what the
commission is doing in considera-
tion of any particular case. . any
WASHINGTON — Irate Senators; more than a court should divulge
are privately threatening to intro-
duce a resolution to impeach fed-
eral power Chairman Jerome Kuy-
kendall for concealing vital infor-
j mat ion from congress
j They charge that he deliberately
withheld action on controversial
j Hell's Car.von Dam until after con-
I gress had adjourned. Yet the deci-
sion was reached, they claim, while
congress was still in session.
In fact, the Federal Power Com-
missioners made up their minds to
i license Idaho Power Company to
( develop Hell's Canyon the da- be-
fore Kuykendall appeared at a
l House hearing several Senators
; and congressmen had asked to be
notified the moment a decision
was reached. Yet Kuykendall, they
. claim, gave them the run-around
I Asked about FPC action on Hell's
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those things.”
‘ You have been asked by a num-
ber of representatives of the Unit-
ed States Congress to advise them
before any action is taken on this
matter, have you not'*” demanded
Everett MacIntyre, committee coun-
sel
“We got letters from a number
of senators asking us to withhold
decision until congress had an po-
portunit.v to act on the bills per-
taining to Hell s Canyon." admitted
the FPC chief.
"It is your opinion." inquired
MacIntyre, "that that will be done ’
*‘I repeat again. I do not think it
proper for me to discuss action on a
matter that is before the commis-
sion for decision." Kuykendall in-
sisted Yet all the while he knew
the commissioners had already de-
cided to turn America's finest re-
maining dam site over to a private
company.
—Foot in Mouth—
Senators also charge that Kuy-
kendall told the Joint Atomic
Watchdog Committee, a falsehood
last November. He was asked whe-
ther FPC lawyers had played any
role m reviewing the then pro-
posed Dixon-Yates contract.
"No," he denied vigorously "Our
lawyers were not called into this
. . . we did not ask our bureau
of law to get into the legal phases
of it."
Yet the FPC's general counsel,
Willard Gatchell, let it slip in later
testimony that the Dixon-Yates
contract "came before the bureau
of law. . . .
"And it happened to come,” he
auucu, hi «t tunc when > *<>.-> Oi.it
of the city on some business with
the commission.”
The truth was that FPC lawyers
j "In terms of hot war." the book- :
let declares, "the U S is readying
foi a decisr. e air war to be fought
principally with nuclear weapons, i
This type of hot war has been ac-
cepted as the likeliest by both the
| military and higher governmental
! authorities.”
However, the Air Force document
claims, "the current U S. militaiy:
| strategy does not tie us dow n to an ■
‘all-out’ war. We no not have to
trot out a heavyweight boxer if
j the welterweight type can do the
; job and get out without getting
himself killed.
j "Our retaliatory power could be
| i.ted to neutiali/.e the aggressor's
military force. He could be warned !
i to cease aggression or be dost roved-.1
Under the current policy, we are
not. equired to permit neutral coun-j
! tries to supply the aggressor. Pres-1
sure could be placed on anyone j
- who assists the aggressor "
—Small-Business Woes—
Many small businessmen, squccz-
; ed by big business on one side and
tight credit, on the other, are los-
ing their infatuation for the Eisen-
j hover Administration. They have
| flooded the small business agency
with loan applications, but, instead
i ot greenbacks, they have been
handed red tape.
j Of 250.000 loan inquiries, a meas-
ly 1.141 have been approved, of
j which only 395 involved govern-
i men! funds. In other words, less
i than two-tenths of 1 per cent, got
: direct heln from Uncle Sam Even
the few who got loans often had
trouble collecting the money.
, The Civil Aeronautics Board, as
1 another example, has been driving
j the srrpll. nonschedulcd airlines
rut of business. Of hundreds form-
! ed by veterans after World Wbr
II, barelv 40 small lines are left
| These are constantly harassed by
the CAB. which won't let them
fly scheduled routes and at the
same time won't certificate them
; without schcduled-route experience
A few lines have defied the CAB
IT’S GETTING ^jlOUND to that time of year when
collie students fronf-IStfMis are beginning to disperse and
head hack for colleges and universities all over Texas and
elsewhere* “
Hefre’s. a suggestion to parents whose children will he
going away to college soon:
Shvthinp beats a daily newspaper as a source of interest-
ing information from home. It’s .just like a letter six days a
week. *
We witl mall The Hap is Daily News for the next nine
months to college students anywhere in the United States
for only $5.50.
Or. if you would rather just give it a try for three
months, the/charge is only $2.35.
That’s getting the price of each copy down to less than
a postage stamp. A real bargain.
Just send us—or phone in—the name and mailing ad-
dress of the college student you wish to receive The Ennis
Daily News.
Also tell us the period for which the subscription is to
last.
Many things of interest to young people always happen
in Ennis in*.the fall, things you would never get around to
reporting in your letters—so make sure your collegian re-
ceives the hometown newspaper.
♦ * * * *
ENNIS WILL HAVE the opportunity to practice its
traditional hospitality Saturday when 150 to 200 visitors
from all parts of Texas arrive here for the District 1 State
Letter Carriers Convention.
'I?he Knnjs members and their wives have put out a lot
of effort to niake'-this meeting in Ennis a great success.
The city is going to issue official looking little member-
ship cards to the visitors making them honorary citizens.
* * ♦ * *
SUPERINTENDENT J. F. GARDNER was well pleased
with the good start of this school year. A friendly spirit of
Cooperation was much in evidence.
We happened to glance in a few classrooms at Ennis
High School on the first day of classes.
Apparently everything had Ix’en well organized and set
to go as tile teachers were already at the blackboards pre-
senting lectures on the subject matter.
=!i * * * *
: And those 34 YVaxahachie women wlm petitioned for a
ban on women wearing shorts in that city failed to receive
their wish.
Waxahachie’s city council turned thumbs down on the
proposal this week.
SQUIBS
Most women are affectionate only when they want
money. But I guess that is often enough.
* N . k'i * * * v
There are other things in this world besides money. But
the trouble is you can’t get them without it..
* 4t * *
A woman who won’t take you for what you are, will
take you for what you have.
*****
l! you think women can t change men, you haven’t look-
ed aj the divorce records.
£ * * * *
Then there was the girl who worshipped the ground he
walked on until she learned that he didn’t own the property.
FORGOTTEN FACTS
FROM THE FILES OF THE ENNIS DAILY NEWS
Frpin the file* of the Ennis Dally wrist.
News.
I ii Years
C'ipt Josh? C. Skrivanek. son of
M; and Mrs. John Skrivanek of
Teachers at the fit
ncludrd Mrs. Webb
principal: Mrs. Percy Davenport,
Miss Thelma Poe and Miss Glenn
(*: School
Armstrong,
Route rntf-e•• Vienna with Gen- i We»r.
eral Mark V. Clark James Glover was en route to a
Shirley yUCm-child broke her | civil service position m Manila.
REST HOME
Private or Semi-private rooms. 24 hours nursing care.
Excellent food and attention $100 monthly
A. L. RENFRO
Ferris Phones 272 or 392
Lambert McAllister and Howard j by offering cut-rate conch service
UPCO PRINT SHOP
Wahrenbrock had condemned the
Dixon-Yates deal in language Kuy-
kendall peferred should not see
the light of day. So he denied that
his lawyers had examined the con-
tract at all.
—A-Bomb Warning—
A confidential blue booklet.1
meant for air force eyes only, warns
bluntly that atomic weapons may j
be used to stop future 'small wais. ’j
Many officers believe this infor- J
nation should reach the Chinese j
Rfds in case they are planning
trouble in the Far East The chanc- !
es of another outbreak in seething
Southeast Asia, irv fact,, are much
more real than recent rosy head- j
lines would indicate. Some veteran i
war correspondents arc so sure of
a flare-up that they are heading
back t othc Far East.
In, case trouble comes, the Reds i
n ight do well to consider these air
force words: ‘under the former
concept, atomic munitions were to j
be employed against, an atomic!
aggressor who had directly attack- \
ed the U« or one of our allies. It I
could now be possible for the trom- |
endous force in question to be used j
in other than general war as a j
powerful deterrent to lessen ag- I
gessions. Accordingly, an aggressor
could no longer assume that the U-
S. would be willing to permit him
to select the geography and muni-
tions of another contest.”
This message was Intended for
Air Force officers only as a policy
guide. It is contained in the book-
let which sets forth the ATr Force
position in teise, frank: lan^ua^e.
to the public. This has forced the
big airlines to introduce similar
service at slashed prices. Now the
big lines are preparing to cut coach
prices beiow the profit margin,!
bnnkupt the small nonskeds and |
leave the field clear for later price
boosts after the iipu.skcds are out 1
of the way.
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............................ STATE ......... *«0 U.S.Po* OSj
Waxahachie Granite & Marble Co.
AOO ness
CITY
d t
•; ‘*G Waxahachie, Texas
R. O. MONTGOMERY
Dayr ."Phone 1020 Night*
Phone 2456
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Bus, Daniel W. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 212, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 8, 1955, newspaper, September 8, 1955; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth785941/m1/4/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Ennis Public Library.