The Ennis Weekly Local (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 9, 1936 Page: 2 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 24 x 19 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
- THE ENNIS WEEKLY LOCAL
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY THE
UNITED PUBLISHING COMPANY
intered at the Postoffice at Ennis, Texas as second class
mail matter, under Act of Congress March 3, 1897
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
1 ornado Torn South Digs Out
14 Year Old Son Texas Czechs *"
Of Sheriff StopsTo Have Day i
Jail Breakers
Be For Sale and
n the County—
One Year_____
Sis Montis ___
Three Months
.$1.00
._ .50
._ .35
cut of County—
One year ____
Fix Months -
Three months
_____$1.58
____i.on
-— .75
At Centennial Farmers Exchange
- 2 a Ads for this column wall De accepter from tarmers and others ^ cHgageq
7,-Plans ma regularbusiness, tree ct charge. Merchant and those engaged in regalat
regula- rates of four cents per word
publications of the United
- .he Palmer Rustler The
Subscribers of either of these papers
re urged to use this column as ottea as they wish
•-------/ Austin, Texas, April
Mount Vernon, Franklin County, 'have been made for an all day business may as this column by paying the ..guia
Texas, April 7.—A desperate at- meeting of Czechs during the Cen- ! per insertion. All ads appear in all four weekly pub
tempt to break jail by two much- I tennial at Dallas, July 19, accord- | gubdising Company. The Ennis Weckly Local. The
wanted prisoners was thwarted by ing to Captain Method Pazdral of | dwell Herald and The Rice Rustler. S ‘ -
THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 1936
TRUCK ACCIDENT VICTIMS INCREASE
FIVE hundred and seventy three persons were killed :
and 3327 injured in truck accidents on Texas highways'
during 1935, according to figures revealed in a booklet I
now being distributed by the Railway and Express Em- ;
ployes Association of Texas. The report lists in detail a |
total of 2480 accidents on Texas highways in which mo- j
tor trucks were involved, an increase of 46 per cent over 1
1934. j
The number of persons killed in truck accidents in | -
1935 shows an increase of 57 over the previous year, while I :
the number injured shows an increase of 1013 over 1934. ! :
The number of accidents recorded in 1935 shows an in- |
crease of 779 over the prvious year. !
The annual report of truck accidents, officers of the:
association pointed cut, is compiled from information
taken from articles appearing in hundreds of newspa- |
pers published in Texas. It lists four principal causes for | i
accidents, defective equipment, which accounted for the! i
largest number of fatalities on Texas highways, sleeping! -
drivers, intoxicated drivers and shifting loads. The re- !
port also shows that 310 accidents could not be classified "
as newspaper accounts did not fully describe them. In
these instances the newspaper article said that the "ac-
cident occurred when the vehicle went out of control” -
a 14-year-old hoy who held his . West, McLennan county, chairman j
father’s pistol on the pair and forc of the Czech Day celebration. While | .
ed them back in their cells, here Tuesday Pazdral asked Gov. I FOR SALE: Poland China pigs, FOR SALE—I have a good rid-
The boy, Ennis Tittle, Jr., son of James V. Allred to address the also shoats. See 2. F. Dent. Ennis ing planter for sale cheap. Dick
the sheriff, poked the cocked pistol gathering and the governor accept- I Route 4, near .Byrd. Hurley Garrett Texas.
through a door at the prisoners, ed. -—-——-----—---——-_____’ __________
“Many prominent people will be FOR SALE.—One 4-burner Ivanhoe FOR SALE.—Turkey Tom, bronze,
there,” Pazdral said. Among others bargain. Mrs. W. O. Patterson, En- good condition, price $6.00. M D.
oil stove, as good as new, at a Isom. Route 2. Ennis,
nis. Route 4, Ensign, .-___.
who were advancing down a flight
of stairs, and said, “If you come
another step I’ll shoot you."
Cowed, the desperadoes marched
quietly back upstairs and permit-
ted themselves to be locked in by
will be Dr. Zoukop, president of the
senate of Czechoslovakia, who is
making a special voyage to visit
the Centennial; Dr. Vojta Benes,
Jailer Charles Tittle, whom they brother of the president of Czech- i
had overpowered after breaking out j oslovakian Republic, and a number |
of their cells, of church dignitaries not only|
Jailer Knocked Down. j from Czechoslovakia, but from va-
Tittle, brother of the sheriff, rious points throughout the United
and Ennis were alone in the sher- | States.
iff’s home, which is the lower floor
, "We will have an exhibit depict-
101 the jail, Sunday night when ing the history of the Czechoslovak-
they heard a disturbance upstairs, ian people and their contributions
Tittle went to investigate, locking to the progress of Texas. It will be
the lower door behind him. As he in charge of Dr. Joseph Kopecky
reached the top of the stairs the of San Antonio formarle 2A2AT
FOR SALE.—Pola nd
FOR SALE.—Fine Mebane Cotton
Seed. Blocked last year at $1 per
bushel. I will also trade cottonseed
for shoats. They must be nice ones,
Poland China’s preferred. Mike
Nagy, Rice, Texas.
TO TRADE.—I have two cows, one
dry, that I would like to trade for
a good milk cow with young calf.
—Mike Nagy, Rice, Texas.
FOR SALE.—Good milch cow. Joe
Pouzar, Ennis Route 4.
FOR SALE OR TRIADE.—Red
Whiteface bull. Jess Pollan, Rice.
FOR SALE OR TRADE.—Sorghum
seed. Red Top, or will trade for
hogs. Want to sell horse and mare,
or will trade. John T. Mach, Route
3, Ennis.
The report, which lists each accident in detail, giving !
place, date, persons killed or injured, and manner in
which crash occurred, gives some very interesting infor- i
mation on the types of accidents recorded. It shows 904
collisions of a general character, 64 of which occurred on |
bridges. It further lists 47 accidents in which hit-and-run
drivers participated, and 42 instances of careless driving. 1
Explosions on and in trucks accounted for five accidents, : -
while 40 trucks caught fire on highways during the year. ‘
One of the greatest safety hazards, the report shows, j
is caused by trucks being left parked without lights on
highways at night causing rear-end collisions. Many ac- i
cidents also occurred when trucks ran into automobiles 1
left parked at night without lights or flares to afford!
warning. Sideswiping accounted for 103 accidents, while
87 were caused by automobiles or trucks being forced |
from highways by careless drivers.'i
Th S \ sen store front at Green boro, N. C., shows terrific force of
wirh swept five Southern states bringing death to 40 and
Musiag,rgS damage running into millions. Red Cross agencies are
cug for more than 600 injured and thousands made homeless.
Collisions caused 126 deaths and 1763 injuries, negli- |
gence on the part of the driver 24 deaths and 40 injuries, |
sideswiping 52 deaths and 149 injured. Running ” into
parked trucks resulted in 19 deaths and 115 injured,
while 115 were killed and 139 injured when cars and oth-
er automobiles crashed off the highways in order to
avoid head-on collisions - Alexander, whom she last saw
Former Waxahachie Lady And Son 5
Recognized As Dead Be Reunited
San Antonio, Texas, April 3.
—Mrs. Annie Fly, formerly of
Waxahachie and Dallas, Thurs-
day was looking forward to a
reunion with her son, W. 3.
nearly eighteen years ago and
deserters for imprisonment.
Somehow the war department
listed him as missing. Actually,
after the war, he went to South
America, later returning to
New York.
—A - T - reno Lt she S. Anat in th e past four years
people have been killed by trucks on Texas highways
. than live in Ennis, McAllen, San Benito, Terrell or Waxa | , Alexander. 40, an automobile
------00-----■ - dealer in New York City,
THE BAR TAKES A HAND
’p whom a court had recognized as
1 * dead. - -
soon
will receive his bonus for army
service and therein lies the
Writes Veterans’ Bureau.
Meanwhile, Mrs. Fly haa left
Waxahacme and he failed to learn
her whereabouts. When no word
two men knocked him down and
took his' key.
When Tittle yelled for help Ennis
grabbed his father’s pistol and fired
two shots in the air before he took
up his position at the bottom of
the stairs.
"Shoot the first one who makes
a dash for the door," Tittle told the
boy.
“I will,” the lad reassured him.
The prisoners believed him. |
Won’t Identify Prisoners.
Jailer Tittle refused to identify
the prisoners other than to say
of San Antonio, formerly medical
| professor in the State University
at the Galveston branch.”
Ike Youth Goes
With Chisox As
Luggage Helper
Fred White of Ike, brother of
Jess White, Ellis county courthouse
custodian, has signed with the Chi-
cago White Sox; but not as a
player
they live at Louisville, Ky., and are f He was sitting in a car in front
held on Dyer act charges. They ° Howard Trone's place of business
also are wanted at Atlanta, Ga., in Waxahachie Saturday
and New Orleans, La., he said. He . It so happened that a represent-
gave iredit to two negro prisoners, :a ive of a baseball magazine drop-
a negro held for drunkenness and ped in 0 Trone's. He chanced to
a trusty, for helping to spoil the mention that a good boy to help
I escape attempt, ith the luggage and so on” was
“I wasn’t scared," said Ennis needed by the White Sox.
' Mr. Trone thought of Fred. He
called him in. Fred got the job. It
is believed that he will go on to
Chicago with the club and his
employment may be permanent.
He left Dallas Sunday in his new
work.
Monday, “I was going to shoot
them if they came any farthur be-
cause Uncle Charley told me to.”
Sheriff Tittle was investigating
a: disturbance in the southern part
of the county when the attempted,
break occurred.
Prayer And Work
Built School Is
Losing President
This Week
In History
Week of April 5.
SETTING EGGS.—For sale from
my fine Plymouth Rock hens at
50c per setting of 16 after April 1.
If more than two settings are
wanted drop me a card three or
four days before you call for eggs.
Mike Nagy Rice, Texas.
TO TRADE.—Three-inch farm wa-
gon for feed. Owen Marchbanks,
at Coker Feed Store.
Baby Chicks, custom hatching
Carter Chick Hatchery, Ennis, the
Dr. Salburys Poultry Health Serv-
ice Station.
I WILL—Make plain and fancy
quilts, also have a few plain tops
ready to be quilted for sale. I do
crocheting and knitting. If inter-
ested write Mrs. W. L. Hudson,
Waxaahchie, Texas, Route 4.
FOR SALE.—Milk cows, nice ear
corn. Maize heads, Sorghum hay
—J. W. Nekuza, on Telico Road.
FOR SALE.—One grist mill and
one Fairbanks Engine, two large
upright show cases, one large flat
showcase.—Mrs. M. J. Martin. Pal-
mer.
—— ——--—
FOR SALE.—Buick automobile, five
FOR SALE.—A limited amount of
second year Mebane cotton seed
well cared for at gin, $1 per bushel,
Two miles north of Rice, Texas, on
Highway 75, better known as the
S. W. South place. L. W. Brewer.
FOR SALE.—Red Top Cane Seed,
$1.50 per hundred pounds, Chas.
Spaniel, Ennis, Route 4.
FOR SALE.—Cane Seed $1.50 per
100 pounds, and Darso seed. Joe
Lud Spaniel, Ennis, Route 3, Box
92.
BIG Mammoth Jack at W. J.
Keele’s, Palmer, Route 2.
FARM TOOLS FOR SALE.—Culti-
vators, riding and walking, plant-
ers. See John Toth, Ennis Route 1.
LOST.—A pair of lineman’s pliers
and wire cutters on road west of
Palmer.—S. L. Wadley, Palmer.
FOR SALE.—Recleaned Mebane
Cotton seed for planting, George
. Wadley, Palmer, Texas.
WANTED.—Clean white, soft cotton
rags. Will pay 5c pound at our
plant East Knox Street, next to •
railroad station.—Ennis Tag &
Printing Company.
passenger sedan, riding planter and FOR SALE.—Cotton seed, second
riding cultivator.
Also two
milk
THE CHIEF interest of the legal profession has been
to pass laws and then to defend or prosecute those who
break the laws. The profession as a whole has never used
the power it holds to prevent violations, although indi-
vidual jurists have made notamle contributions toward
law enforcement.
— This week the Dallas Bar Association will take an
-unprecedented step in law enforiement. Three attorneys
will be appointed to investigate gambling in that city,
Hollowing reports of wide open gambling that have been
published in Dallas newspapers. Just what the Bar As-
sociation will do will be left to the members, but the
facts will be Presented for their information says the
Denton Record-Chronicle.
story of his discovery by Lis
mother and half-sister, Miss
j 1830.—Law of April 6 was /made
effective, practically . forbidding
further American coloniaztion of
Parkville, Mo., April 7. — Park Texas; sending Mexican soldiers
College—the school that prayer and into Texas; establishing customs
___________hard work built—is losing its famed houses at ports to tax Texas trade
ly dead in probate of the will of i president. i with New Orleans.
Dr. Frederick. W. Hawley wrill 1836.—Santa Anna advanced, ar-
came from Alexander, a probate
court at San Saba, his mother’s
old home, pronounced him official-
Cows See C. W. Toth, at black-
smith shop on Bardwell road.
VAR’S 2-for-f Sale begins Agil
15, and runs for one week.—Ennis
Pharmacy.
year Mcbane. 75c per bushel. Geo.
M. All Oak Grove.
D.A- Frank president of the association, declared,
that the bar association has the same interest in the
matter of law violation that the bankers’ association has
in seeing that the laws of banking are enforced. While
the analogy isn’t quite correct, the spirit behind the
statement is commendable for after all, the lawyers who
are responsible for most of the laws should have a spec-
ial interest in seeing these laws enforced
Nell Fly, also of San Antonio,
who never had abandoned hope
he would be found alive.
LISTED AS MISSING.
—Alexander, only 22 when he last
saw his mother at Waxahachie
in the summer of 1918, now has
a wife and two children, he
told Mrs. Fly in a long distance
telephone call. He will visit her
in July.
In the intelligence service
during the World War, Alex-
ander, who enlisted in Colum-
bus, N. M., made numerous
trips to Europe, returning army
his grandfather, the late Rev. Wil- , .. ... - _______________Ju, we
Saba shift the administrative burden to riving at San Felipe on April 7.
younger shoulders next year but he 1336.—As Santa Anna arrived at |
Mrs. I will continue as honorary president. Thompson’s Ferry on April 11, Sam :
Fly that if her son was alive heFaith and labor” brought sue- Houston began crossing the Brazos |
would apply for a veteran’s bonus cess to the small, religious school, in advance southeast toward New |
— ____________The lle said Monday. “The two go hand Washington, Galveston Bay.
veterans' administration office here in hand." ; 1860.—A democratic convention j
Park is a self-help coeducational was held in Galveston early in /
Mam R. Alexander, San
Christian minister.
Recently it occurred to
and thus might be located.
suggested she write to Washington, -ar is a self-help coeducational was held in Galveston
Doing so, she was informed that school. It has no intercollegiate April by which delegates
while officials could divulge no football. It solicits no students, i
information regarding bonus ap- forced to select carefully to hold of Texas in the national
plicants, a letter to any such appli- its enrollment to the limit, 512. Its tion
cant would be forwarded to the campus is closed to tobacco, intox- meet in Charleston, S. C., on April
applicant’s last address. This was icants, cards. 23.
done, and in due time Mrs. FlyDr- Hawley’s prayer and hard
heard from her son.
were ap-
s pointed to represent the democracy
conven-
on which had been called to
Airliner Crashed into Mountain
9 Passengers, And 2 of Crew Dead
1860.—Colonel Earl Van Dorn or-
work administration of two decades dered to take command in Texas
has seen more than $1,000,000 added and drive out federal troops and
to the college endowment and
a take possession of federal supplies
for the confederacy.—Texas State
Practically all students do fif- College for Women (CIA),
teen hours of manual labor a week.' .____________
dozen buildings erected.
NYAL’S 2-for-1 Sale starts Wed-
nesday and continues one week. All
regular Nyal products included, also
many other remedies at special
prices.—Ennis Pharmacy.
Stockbr the NYAL 2-for-1
Said bateonavedne-
tinning is week. Many other
items alters sale. See our big cir-
cular forges mplete list of prices.-
Ennis Pharmacy.
FOR SALE OR TRADE,—Several
milks cows. Edd Hogg, on Cerf
farm.
Come Try Our Corn Fed
Baby Be
WHOLESALE and RETAIL
If the legal profession generally adopts the attitude
of the Dallas Bar Association, it will take a long step for- persons—nine passengers and two
vard in restoring public confidence in lawyers which has pilots—were killed Tuesday as the
been shaken by the acts Of a very small ' percentage of Transcontinental and Western Air- overdue when Miss Granger stag- ■
the profession - 5 liner Sun Racer crashed into fog-gered into the mountain home
shrouded
Uniontown, Pa., April 8.—Eleven
-000
Chestnut Ridge, seven
THE GLAMOUR OF SIN
miles from here and burned
Only the plane’s hostess',
“This reduces the cash cost of D • rev
their education,” Dr. Hawley ex-rOraccnO I ay
plained, besides giving them practi- j 0 - CE2
cal experience on the college farm,! D DI J
burgh, in the greenhouses, its libraries! may DC I laced
The Sun Racer was four hours laboratories and other departments.
The college is nonsectarian, al-
of though its board is required to
have a Presbyterian majority.
Dr. Hawley, 69, will be succeeded
The Best Beef Money Can Buy
Mrs. R. B. Addis and begged for a
j telephone. Already searching planes •
Back In Measure
We are in position to furnish markets in nearby
towns with the very best meats of all kinds at
REASONABLE PRICES.
Washington, March c.—Author-
who 'were aloft along the liner’s route, Sept. 1, 1937, by Dr. William Lind- itative sources said Sunday night
notwithstanding the dangerous fly- say of Philadelphia. The retiring that the administration will re-
ing conditions. C. A. Williams', T. president will devote his time to double efforts to reenact process-
W. A. manager at Pittsburgh, said poblic relations work for the ing taxes when the new $779,000,000
the searching pilots reported ice school.
o Pittsburgh, struck near the high- forming on plane wings when they 1
and est summit of the Pennsylvania Al-
We invite you to visit our plant and inspect the
fresh and cured meats hanging in our coolers, and
get our prices on whole, half or quarter carcasses.
staggered valiantly to a farmhouse |
telephone to report the disaster, |
and two passengers survived.
The plane, flying from New York
A SIXTEEN-YEAR-OLD Dallas girl arrested with a
number of other youths who had been stealing cars and
strinning them, said she felt sorry for the boys. She also
expressed admiration for the late Bonny Parker
Clyde Barrow. We wonder if she covets the final exper-leghanies, where the ceiling of vis-
ience they had on that lonely road when the final act ibility was absolutely zero,
came?—Bonham. Favorite !
___: { The hostess-nurse, Miss Nellie I ties. Chief Pilot Ferguson had re-
00 H. Granger, gave first aid to the
MUSSOLINI is understood to desire greatly peace on survivors before she made
earth indications one that Ta Tas 13stumbling way to the farmhouse, would not attempt to land at Pitts-
mm + NrT , 4 ne exaCT piece in there to report that only Mrs. Mey- burgh. Then came the crash
mind, too.—Norfolk Ledger-Dispatch.
returned.
The crew of the Sun Racer had
been aware of the flying difficul-
ported by radio at 10:09 a. m. that
her he was flying by instruments and
burgh. Then came the crash.
tax bill reaches the senate.
This was made known as senate
| leaders arranged to start hearings
1 on that side of the Capitol as soon
j as an actual bill is drafted by the
jhouse ways and means committee.
| The committee hopes to complete
! its hearings by Monday night.
er C. Ellenstein, wife of the mayor
of Newark, N. J., and one man
passenger, Charles G. Challinor of
Cleveland, Ohio, survived.
List of Victims,
The dead, identified by the com-
pany’s' passenger list, were:
Arthur R. Evans, Pittsburgh.
Charles H. Smith, New Kensing-
ton, Pa.
D. V. August, Grove City, Pa.
Crawford Kelly, McKeesport, Pa.
Frank Hardiman, Rutherford, N.
- WE don’t blame those happy Communist in Russia, J.
who are working for $8 a month, for pitying those Amer-
ican relief workers who are striking because they are
not paid $60 per month. Can’t these stupid Americans
realize that it is worth the difference in wages to live in
nice Soviet country and have a dictator tell you what to
do?—Denison Herald
------O O-----
NOW we know why they call ’em Baby bonds— be-
cause every babe in the land is going to have to
pay for ’em some day.—Columbus Dispatch
----------000---
help
: JOHN JACOB ASTOR 3rd has given up his job.
was to have learned the steamship game from
ground up, but you can’t do that.—Milwaukee Journal.
---000------------
He
the |
In New York officials of the line
said late Tuesday that reports
from the plane indicated that the
radio beam no longer was func-
tioning accurately.
The company promised an imme-
diate investigation.
Airline officials said Miss Gran-
ger probably escaped because she
rode in the rear of the plane.
------00----
~ WE ARE guilty of doing some bad things in this coun
try. but we should be very careful not to repeal business.
=Pittsburg Gazette.
—on----------
- THE old-timer had a better chance. The thing they
lived in wasn’t worn out by the time they got it paid for.
Detroit Free Press, /
A Mr. Hefferman, New York City.
John O’Neill, Jersey City, N. J.
Stanley J. Bayersdorfer, Steuben
ville, Ohio.
G. B. Darcy, New York City.
Chief Pilot Otto Ferguson, Kansas
City, Mo.
I Co-Pilot H. C. Lewis, Kansas
City, Mo.
| Four of the passengers were ca-
' dets at Valley Forge Military Acad-
emy—August, Evans', Smith and
Kelly. They had started gaily home-
I ward for Easter vacations. Their
mothers waited for them at the Al-
legheny County airport near Pitts-
Lady Badly Burned
Kindling Fire In
Children With
Matches Cause
$4,000 Blaze 1 A high official said the plan was
9 to try to enact the processing tax-
Arp, Texas, April 7.—Fire Mon- es, requested by President Roose-
day partly destroyed a filling sta- velt, but thrown out by the house
tion and garage, a tourist camp, a tax drafters, as straight excise
€rocery store, and a small apart- levies, with the revenue going into
ment house at Wright City, a few to the general treasury fund,
miles east of here. Joe Fulton,! AAA experts have outlined a
chief of the Arp fire department, tentative rate schedule which would
estimated the loss at approximately be applied to a larger number of
$4,000. Local firemen responded to commodities than were affected
the alarm and fought the blaze under the old processing taxes in-
with chemicals. Fulton said the fire validated by the Supreme Court
was believed to have been started and which they estimated would
by children playing with, matches, yield from $221,000,000 to $360,000,-
Virtually none of the loss was cov- 000 annually,
ered by insurance. I --------------
Farm Home Tuesday Sea Serpent Back
■---; Fishermen Claim
Miss Jean Wright
Died at Corsicana
Corsicana, Texas, April 8.—Miss'
Seattle, Wash., April 8.—Old Cad- Jean Wright, 18, died Tuesday
morning following a two weeks’
Harry Twigg, fisherman, said he illness with influenza and pneu-
burns received early Tuesday morn and two others saw the elusive sea monia. The funeral will be held
ing at her rural home east of serpent, known as Caddy, hump- Wednesday afternoon at the First
Denison near Carpenter’s Bluff, ing along through the first narrows Baptist Church with burial in Oak-
While kindling a fire in a stove, Tuesday, , wood Cemetery, the Rev. E. T. Mi-
clothing ignited and before it was “Three of us saw him,” Twigg ler, pastor of the church, sai
extinguished, Mrs. DeFratus was declared. "We were pretty excited, ing. Surviving are her
severely burned over her entire but we could distinguish his horse- and Mrs. D. F. Wright, Suott
body. She was taken to a Denison like head stretched out of the wa- brother, Frank Wright,
hospital for treatment. '.ter (sicana ’
Denison, Texas, April 8.—Mrs.
Ralph DeFratus is in a critical borosaurus is back again,
condition in a local hospital from
and Mrs. D. F. Wright,
ter
Isicana.
Southland Ice Co.
ENNIS, TEXAS
mairnietesnies
252 26
m
It is Our Desire Not Merely to SELL
But to SERVE
Our Desire is Backed up with an
Honest Effort
THINK - TALK — WRITE
Texas Central Cen-
tennial Exposition
DALLAS
“AN EMPIRE ON PARADE" 1936
HSSNTNSSSSENSSMSSCCHSFHqFPSSGRRAARZTA
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Ennis Weekly Local (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 9, 1936, newspaper, April 9, 1936; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1677137/m1/2/: accessed May 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Ennis Public Library.