The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 292, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 8, 1956 Page: 2 of 4
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I—THE ENNIS DAILY NEWS—Saturday,
1955 Ford 2 Door
1953 Ford 2 Door Sodon
1953 Chevrolet Club Coupo
1950 Chevrolet Flootlino Sodon % j
1947 Morcury Club Coupo
SODDERS CHEVROLET CO.
200 Kant Ennui Avenue
pboMmam
I The Washington Merry • Go«Round |
|i .■ — nm muon mi. n I
better
WANTED
2 and 3 Bedroom Dwellings
Also
Good Farms for Sale
JOE C. McCRARY
Insurance • Real Estate
Rhone TK5-3171
“Young baking OiidomM
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4 Pounds Prowl"
Bake, BroU or Barbecue
Martinez CMdtm Rondl
Phone TR5-31R6
GRAND
EAST TIMES TODAY
1 add Mayo
IIiiihMistress
JSooOHire • <••»' • wvff *•
jp.M—• q»HLNRV BlANfcL**'
TECHNICOLOR-^
* »«i o» jj' ' f
i ». t.M
ALSO
Chapter 10
Return of Frank and
Jessy James
Plus Shorts
SUNDAY
Village Drive-In
um mm thmi
Pony Express
C harlton Heaton
Rhonda Fleming
AiSO v
The Steel Jungle
Perry Lopez * Beverly Garland
Closed
SUNDAY k MONDAY
Buffalo Bill
loel McCrea - Maureen O'Hara
Irm
WASHINGTON. D C. The) blocks
nger administration trend toward
typing up with the Afro-Asian
Unit and letting Western allies
if accessary. go d own the drain,
baa caused serious debate not
aaly in inner administration cn
Cits but in diplomatic circles
Opposition inside Eisenhow-
ay's official family has come
from Secretary of the Treasury
Humphrey and General A!
Qruenther. now head of the Red
Crc^| * rt u \jl > M I ill.M'M *H1VIS
era.
Gruenther. as military leader
Of NATO, has always been a
Stanch supporter of Western Eu-
rope— has differed drastically
though privately, with John Eos
tar Dulles over erratic moves by
the Secretary of State which
weakened the Atlantic alliance
Secretary Humphrey has aim
interposed some quiet but firm
advice that to up*-et the economy
of England and France would
mean unemployment in the
United States
There have also been some
unpleasant memories of what
hrought the Hoover depression
in 1931- namely. the collapse of
European economy, fir>t in the
Credit Anstalt in Vienna then
in the capitals of Western Eu
rope, until it swept acro-s tlit-
Atlantic to send stocks era-dung
in Wall Street.
No one in administration nr
ties w’ants to risk any repeat
performance. That's one reason
why there will be no argument
about waiving the S70.000.000
iattrest on Britain - po-war
loan.
shook more hands than lie walked because it had no
any candidate in History. rubber. It saved cans and tooth
When he took hjs litian-hairod i paste tubes because it had no
wife Nancy and their four chil-Jtin It frantically started cochina
dron for a holiday in Georgia— and sisal plantations in Central
therefore, most people expected J America because it had no
him to relax Mrs Kefauver and quinine or hemp,
tin* children, however, k new
“How are we going to keep
daddy busy”’’ the children ask-
ed their mother. “He won’t be
able ici so sun on an island.”
'i oung David solved the prob-
He got his father up every
Never was the economic deb-
acle of the United States so
great, l^atin-American diplomats
recall, all because the United
States had turned to Asia and
Africa ior uie cheap tropical
products raised by the cheap
labor and an imperialist colonial
system.
They also point out that dis-
morning at 5 to go hunting.
They were vacationing on the
island owned bv Dick Reynolds! u » " A/ . . . .
of H.-ynoKIs Aluminum, off the | stances betwt'°" Afr,ta and As,a
Coast of Georgia. It abounds in i
game* so the two Kefauvers mal-!
es shot wild turkeys while the!
rest of the family slept. Oncel
they taught two raccoons, put!
one of them, a baby, in the Sen-!
ator's coat by tying th(* sleeves I
together Finally they let it go. j
The* restless Senator got back1
to Washington this week, imme-l
finitely flew hack to Tennessee!
started another round of j
speeches.
are just as long today as they
were in 1941-45. In fact, t h e
route is even more difficult, as
indicated by the closing of the
Suez Canal and the huge Rus-
sian submarine* fleet.
dis-
Three SWC Teams
Win Cage Games
Friday Night
By UNITED PRESS
All three Southwest Confer-
ence basketball teams that saw
action Friday night turned up
with victories, but the most
impressive was a slim 04-63 de-
cision by Texas over Oregon
State.
Baylor romped to a 71 -61
verdict over Texas A&l at Waco
anfl the Texas Aggies clipped
Trinity 81 55 at College Station
while the Longhorns were open-
ing their Pacific Northwest tour
at Corvallis. Oregon.
Texas moves on to Eugene for
a tilt with Oregon tonight in one
of the four games on tap The
others have Rice playing Auburn
at Auburn. TCU hosting Tulsa
at Fort Worth and defending
champion SMU entertaining
Minnesota at Dallas.
Texas had to come from be-
hind to beat Oregon after trail-
, I ing 35-30 at halftime, but Ken
w e' * Cleveland put Texas ahead to
stay at 54-53 with 5'* minutes
left.
town
Some diplomats are even
agreeable enough to ask
ther administration leaders
have forgotten why Russia is
building such a huge submarine!
fleet and why Bulganin and i
( OOM vi n imniK ivnn»v , Khru;sJch^v J,®ok such pains to with Baylor by virtue* of sinking | Both teams bore down in the
c.oun MIGIIBORs WORRY visit the Middle East personally , . . tA , ...
Nmerican diplomats, ac- and invite every Asiatic-African 1 ° IM s os
Schoolboy Powers Advance
In Playoff Gaines Friday
By UNITED PRESS Kay's rugged Iexans ran up a
Corpus Christ! Ray in Class 127-7 first quarter lead against
AAAA. defending champion, Alice and coasted in from there
Stamford. Terrell. Brady a n d! for a 33-13 decision as its big
Sinton in Class AA. Stinnett, line stifled the Coyotes running
Eastland, Humble and Hondo in: game Ray threw but one pass
Class A had semi-final berths in as Backs Art McCallum scored
the state schoolboy playoffs sew- j twice, Bobby Myers, l) E. Till-
ed up today and by nightfall, man and James I arks once each
seven other clubs were to join. on running pla>s.
them. I Stamford's burly Bulldogs
Mightv Abilene, the two-times ! h»i.H to no first down
Class AAAA champion. Wichita1 an(j only io yards rushing in
Falls, and Baytown were the fav- j the first half and nine more
orites in this afternoon’s top di-| yards in the second as the
vision quarterfinals, w bile Lit-1 champs won 39-6 for their 30th
tleficld. Cleburne, Nederland I straight victory Mike McClellan
and San Antonio Edison held' raced 45 and 51 yards for two
the same roles in AAA. ! Stamford touchdowns — Nicki
Abilene plays at Fort Worth Johnson scored twice and pas-
Paschal. Wichita Falls at High- sed for another in the rout,
land Park, Baytown entertained; Terrell’s terrific Tigers earn-
Houston Lamar. Littlefield meet | eC| |he semifinals spot opposite
Graham at Snyder, Cleburne was Stamford with a devasting of-
as Garland, Nederland hosts i fensive show that buried Gilmer
Bryan and Edison plays at Robs- 55.(3_ Halfbacks Bill Flowers
Lion
Continued From Page One
Texas A&I stayed in tlu* game another
Latin
custotued to being the tail on I
the North American kite and
sometimes a hit bitter about it--!
•'*re scrutinizing the administra-'
lion's lean toward the Afro-;
\sian axis with concern
leader to any
Moscow.
importance to
If you look down the list
of commodities which Latin
America sells to the U S A. you
in the j final stanza and St Mark’s pulled
first half, but the Bears were'to within one point of the Lions,
hotter from the court and ; 40-39. with less than two minutes
wound up with a 36-30 halftime 1 remaining
margin and gradually stretched! With partisans of both teams
it. Larry Barnes led Baylor with on their feet and with the roar
20 points but A&I’s Walker 0f their voices bouncing off the
Africa and Asia have been the can readly understand why thci^ant^ers‘ ^ free j four walls, Boby Wilhoite calmly
top competitors of South Ameri- j diplomats are concerned. Chief sH°ts. was high with 31. Soph (<lipped a lay-up that proved the
ca for years They have been! competitor of Latin - American j Forward Jack Schwake led the ] margin of difference
the chief disrupters of the good-' coffeee is African and Asiatic an ‘ ‘*SVI V!( ?ory •l<| I"1*' Ronnie Speelman was the high
KEFAUVERS ENERGY
Regardless of the outcome of
the recent election both Re
publican and Democrats prob-
ably agree that the hardest cam-
paigner on either ticket w .1 s
Senator Estes Kefauver Thou, h
Nixon also campaigned tireless
ly, he did not have to face ad-
vance primary elections Ke-
fauver, on the other hand, be-
gan campaigning last Januan.
and kept going through the
snows of Minnesota and the heat
of California until the ver\ e nd
He probably walked more city
neighbor policy, already badly! coffee. Cocoa, the lifeblood of
tarnished So if the United! Ecuador, now gets stiff com-pe-
now lines up solidly with't>tion from Africa. On the price
Stall
A*-ia and Africa, Latin-American
diplomats see the good neighbor
policy pretty much coming to
an end
They point out that John Fos-
ter Dulles, Vice President Nix-
on. and 1 .V Ambassador Henry
Cabot Lodge seem to forget in
advising
inn 1,
of cocoa frequently depends
revolution in Ecuador. Bolivian
presidents come and go, depend-
ing on the price of tin. Brazil’s
manganese has to compete with
Indian manganese.
That’s why the new Dulles-
scored 23 points before fouling ! point man for
out in the final period The Ag
gies led 48-36 at halftime and at
one time widened the gap 35
points in the second half
Ennis with 12
Forreston
Finals Tonight
FORRESTON Tex -The
Cc-
an Anterican-Afro-As- with Asia and Africa is
alliance what happened aft- in(T
r Pearl Harbor After Decern-' K
TONIGHT
SATURDAY
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4:15 Jungle Jim
4:30
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Eye on
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Questions
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Cartoon Hour
Theater 11
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News; Kash
Jalopy Derby
Dude Ranchers
Western Theater
Teen Club
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in One!
103 E. Avenue
Phone TR5-3M4
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PLAZA
PHONE TR5-2562
SATOfcDxr OXLT
not go- erne oojs n team nave tea me
win us many friends; wa>' in,° thc championship fin-
among our so-called “good,’’ but!a,s of the Forreston Invitation-
sometime forgotten "neigh- j Tournament,
bors.” Action tonight will start at
1 5:30 p m. with the girls consola-
(. EMEN'T SHORTAGE (ion finals. The boys consolation
The United States faces t h e
will be at 6:40 p m . the girls
Pit VV LI IAM3
C(lt EEN MAY
J .1 TAVIS
”ssoT4S
c/t u turn 111 .’mui | , ' . -
next vear a-, a result of the huge k°>s f|na^ a* 9 p in
program In Thursday fiames.
of the'^'r*s ^cat Feirrs. 60-8.
highway construction
according to a survey
The highway program
take 20,500.000 barrels of ce-
ment in '57 and will increase to
36.500.000 by 1960.
j w’hipped Ferris, 48-22. also in a
(consolation game Cedar Hill
will, girls took a semi-final win from
Midlothian. 46-37 while Waxa-
hachie’s B's defeated Milford
44-39.
points but
the
game’s
leading
scorer was
Bob
Pickins
of
St
Mark’s, who
had
15
ENNIS
Name
fg
ft
pf
tp
Spellman, c
5
9
3
12
Glaspy, c
0
0
0
0
Connell, f
2
3
2
7
Mynatt. f
2
1
3
5
Wilhoite. g
3
0
■>
6
McClendon.
f 0
0
0
0
Horne, g
2
2
1
6
Blackwood
f 0
0
0
0
Tewes. g
1
2
1
2
Walker, g
1
0
4
2
16
10
17
42
SI
MARK’S
Name
fg
ft
l'f
tp
Thornton g
3
0
H
Williams, g
•>
4
2
8
Pickens, c
5
5
2
15
Fox worth f
1
3
3
5
Childers, f
1
0
1
2
McFarland.
f 1
2
1
4
13
14
12
40
Ennis
9
5 18
10
42
St. Marks
8
9 14
9-
-40
| scored three touchdowns, one
ion a 47-yard pass interception
runback and the other five were
! scattered among as many backs
i Jimmy Keller converted seven
I times.
Brady crushed Giddings 33-0.
piling up all its points in the
first half with Tommy Dutton
I and Fletcher Fields leading ih**
ground attack with 220 yards
between them
Deer Park marked up its 42nd
game without defeat, hut that
! wasn’t enough against Sinton as
those two clubs played to a bit-
ter 13-13 tie it Sinton Pene
trat 10ns and first downs were
even and Sinton got tlu* edge on
! total yardage to knock out the
1955 Class A champs
Stinnett’s terrific speed off-
set Merkel’s weight advantage
as the Rattlers moved closer to
their second straight state finals
berth with .1 26-0 blanking 0 f
the state’s, highest-scoring team
Halfbacks Dale Keadlo and
Ralph Hicks each scored twice
for the Rattlers, whose defense
kept Merkel outside the 20-vard
line all night
Jimmy Martin was the b i g
gun 111 Eastland’s surprising 34-
14 victory over Linden at Den-
ton Marlin scored twice and
gained 159 yards as Eastland
ran up a 27 0 lead and coasted
home
Big John Steagall raced for
four touchdowns and gained 229
yards on 31 carries as Humble
smothered Mart 32-7 at Hunts-
ville
Hondo won its expected spot
m tin -.enn-’finals opposite
Humble by handing Halletts-
ville a 21-6 setback.
Also
\ C'ii “M'-C-» >."*i
^ 7? Frank* IAINE /
£ \ Lucy MARLOW /
rLl!8 SHORTS
SUNDAY & MONDAY
j By 1960, the Small Business
I Committee warns, the cement
; ‘demand estimates will indicate
! shortage of between 24,000.000
and 51,000.000 barrels.”
The Small Business C 0 m-
1 nuttee blasts the office of Dt>-
1 tense Mobilization for not en-
I couraging construction of more
1 cement plants. The ODM, it re-
j ports, approved 33 applications
for new cement plants but de-
nied 51. The SBC also criticized
the big cement producers for
discouraging expansion
i (COPYRIGHT, 1956 — BY THE
, BELL SYNDICATE, INC.j
|t£
about
-to
EXPLODE
Waxahachie
Wins Number 4
Tekskvt
R?cfC
TECHNICOLOR*-'
Plus Shorts
| The high-stepping VYaxaha- i
chie Indians glided to their!
i fourth straight win of the sea-'
! son Thursday night. !
i The Braves blasted Krum. 73
| 41 to gain the semi-final round:
! in tin* Grand Prairie basketball!
tournament. Next action in the i
meet for Waxahachie was set for
12 45 p m Saturday.
Phil Reynolds scored 24 points
John Hoggard 23 and Mark Woi-
j lard 15 to account for most of
{the Indian scoring.
| Will Marshall was high for
I Krum with 12.
THE ENNIS DAILY NEWS
IN SIXTY-FIFTH YEAR
Published daily exc ept Sunday by thc United Publishing Cn, Inc.,
which also publishes The Ennis Weekly Local and the Palmer
Rust ler.
Entered at the post office in Ennis. Texas, as second class mail
matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879.
Charles E. Gentry....................................................................Manager
Daniel W. Bus................................................................................Editor
Elizabeth Parsons ....................................................Associate Editor
Rose Barkley Society Editor • Classified Advertising Manager
Ail communications of business and items of news should be ad-
dressed to the company, not to individuals.
Anv erroneous reflection upon thc character, standing, or repu-
tation of any person, firm or corporation, which may appear in the
columns of this paper, will be gladly and duly corrected upon be-
wig brought to the publisher’s attention.
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Bus, Daniel W. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 65, No. 292, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 8, 1956, newspaper, December 8, 1956; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth786151/m1/2/: accessed May 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Ennis Public Library.