The Bowie News (Bowie, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, November 21, 1941 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Montague County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Bowie Public Library.
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1, 1941
s
♦
5,
BOWIE, MONTAGUE COUNTY, TEXAS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21. 1941
VOLUME XX
NUMBER 38
D
*
*
¥
¥
¥
¥
¥
¥
¥
¥
¥
¥
leers
se
Win 11-A Championship for Second Consecutive Year
Hard-Fought Game at Nocona
Neisler Graduates From
south
ed recently from the
kV
their second
t
4
$
is
B
for half
cona. Bowie was in possession at
The well has been kicking off j Dur God, Creator. King Lufkin.
f
been made.
.
*
an
I
T
t
o
i
•4
1
Club Women Attend
District Convention
:ws
IESSITY
pss Is pro-
pg course
ho Nurse's
[s’ newest
le request
vlllan De-
feat pres- .
I the qae?
knierlca’
ng an an-
[usands of
pnt to do
n defense
and attention they deserve. No-
tice the displays, and give praise
where praise is due.
scrap
now,” the
legislation and
concerni
Henry
at 7:30 p.m.
Mason degrees
ses being
e with our
irslng has
the Red .
—FIRST—
First in Montague County
First in Reader Interest
The PREFERRED
Newspaper
packer
will
Private,
Wayne Neisler,
Mrs. W. T ”
I)c iJotoic;
"Your Home Town and County Newspaper"
-4
The Greatest Advertisement erf a
Community Is Its
NEWSPAPER
Wise People Protect Such Assets
--- —V-----■
Bellevue Flier
Believed Lost
Highway: J C. McNatt; chair-
Benson. R L Bur-
V Compere.
A.
groups is directed by
Hale and Mrs. Juanita.
• .w.. •
/I
V'
yid W. H.
JJy is a graduate of Bowie
School, and received his
degree at North Texas State
College. He is a mem-
Jeta Alpha, Rho “
^3
|c side of
11 Cross Is
Ister fich'
In.iss f. .
I of exacu- •
Illtlons. In
Le of Civil-
[■ strength-
Lmittees.to
Ister much
lltnf opera-
Itastrophe.
e lines In-
asures tor
epidemics
to result
Rai activity
base. y
k' ml
MT
Bowie Scalps Indians 6 - 0 In
• i
point of
[laughter -
observe,
L their
[day. is
as been
2 years.
August,
1 Cassies^
nt front
""'Mi
Mrs. B. E. Watson, president.
,—_——&—----
Mrs. Houston Hilburn
children of Sherman were guests
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
C. S. Henderson over the week-
lies will
[registered
|es of fm-"
nil enable
Hses. The
t Nurse's
ace of the
1 serve In
■—■—----o--------
Little Theatre to
Present Plays
The Little Theatre of Bowie
High School, which was organiz-
ed several weeks ago, will make
I
8 1 ■
1! Ml
. * .
..
- ‘ ~ a;*;
Jackrabbits Edge Nocona To Win 11-A Title
¥¥¥¥¥ ¥¥¥¥¥ ¥¥ ** ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ 1 ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ ¥¥¥¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥
Winder No. 1 Blows Self In Monday Night; New Pay Lime Hit
Operators Plan Drillstem Test
Today at Benson No. 1 Riley
♦---------------------
Attempts to run a drill-stem
test at Benson Brothers No. 1 f
Riley, six miles south «f I „
Bowie, failed Thursday after- Air I^tCCndHlCS xzOUlTSe
noon when the packer slip-
ped. Operators wiU circu-
late. go back in the hole this
morning and expect to at-
tempt drill-stem 1
noon today. Electrical survey
showed a favorable section in
the Mississippian lime from
6.777 to'' 6.828 feet and interest
is much higher this week,
since hopes for production have
brightened.
Lieut. Kenneth E. Reddy
* * * * *
B-25 carries a crew of five mnd Alpha Phi Omega.
Lieut. Reddy flew from Aug-
usta to Randolph Field, San An-
tonio, and unable to find an
empty seat to Fort Worth or
Dallas fields, had to come here
by bus, and for once had to
travel like the rest of us earth-
Beta bound mortals.
Soldier-Slayer
Get Death Penalty
Clarence O. Hutcheson. 20.' have" ” t
army deserter and former Mofi- September 23. 24.
- I tague farn\ youth of near No- i ----------- '■ "
| cona, was sentenced Wednesday 1,7, p
and | to die iri~tKe~eIecti‘ic ctratr—at '■, ,,
Huntsville on a charge of mur-- oFFairs
dering Alfred Friesenhahn in -1
robbery attempt, <
body to this county
it north of Nocona.
The verdict was returned in'-----
an hour’s deliberation in
trict Sourt at San Antonio.
Oil men in the North Texas
district are Highly elated over
the prospects for oil produrtibn
from a new pay horizion in this
area, as the result of tests made
at the Continental Oil Co.. No. 1
Winder, seven miles
Bowie and one mile
Stoneburg, this week,
was still making
^Thursday
Drought L.
The well
urday of the week there will be
15,000 people in Fort , Worth for
the Baptist Training Union con-
vention. Registration has been
made for 300 people from Mon- j
tague county. A large number I
will be i
Bowie. .
Several carloads of young peo-
ple will attend the convention
on Friday night.
—:----O
Local Ari Work
To Be Displayed
National Art Week, November
— 22 to 29,
its initial bow to the public next. Bowie in
way. The Art
has offered to display the work
of the, local artists in the busi-
ness houses of the city. Paint-
ings of landscapes and still life,
as well as other forms of art,
original and copy, will be on dis-
play. Patrons of art are urged
to visit the various stores and
see the work of our own artists,
many whom have received spe-
cial attention at .art displays
.heretofore. The paintings o n
. /as part of the decoration
for Morrow’s Coffee Shop draw
much comment and interest from
the many people from out of
town stopping there., It is nat-
ural that this would prove appli-
cable in other instances. It is
to the benefit of the town to
appointment • with the TexM
Highway Commission for somt-
proposed Bowie-J^cksboro high-
way before the commission.
They voted to support anti-
strike legislation and' instructed
that telegrams be sent to the
senators and representatives
urging them to support such
■ --d also legislation
ling defense spending.
y T. Ayres-and Prentice
Evans Were appointed on a —
cial committee to study pro]
price-control legislatioin and
a report as soon as possible.
blieui. Kenneth Reddy, Bombardier
For Uncle Sam Home on Furlough
Second Liept. Kenneth E. Red-
dy. stationed with the 17th Bom-
bardment Group at Pendleton
[ ^Air Base, Pendleton, Oregon,
| Werrived in Bowie Monday night
to spend the Thanksgiving holi-
days visiting his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. J. W. R<-ddy and other
relatives, and friends.
Lieut. Reddy received his com-
mission in the Air Corps on
July 11 following completion
of ten-week- advanced training
at Stockton Field, California
and was assigned to the 17th
Group, for three month* spe-
• clalized training. The 17th is
1 -at present holding extensive
maneuvers hear Augusta. Ga.,
j Lieut. Redding stated this week,
and he is in Texas on leave. He
will return from here to Georgia
and the entire squadron will fly
back to Pendleton shortly after
December 1.
* Reddy entered training ax an
^aviation cadet on November 22
of last year at the Ryan School
of Aeronautics at San Diego,
■* Calif., and is now qualified to
I pilot the medium-sized B-25
L • Bombers. He is now a co-pilot,
he said, but will be made full
pilot as soon as vacancies occur.
I The T" _ :________ ' "
men when bomb bays are load-
|g ed and can carry nine it neces-
T sary
| Redd; '
High
1 BA
■ Teachers I
■ bet of Beta
will be. observed in
a most worthwhile
Club of Bowie
Tuesday Evening at 7:45 p.m.
when two one-act plays will be
presented from the stage of the
High School Auditorium.
The first play is entitled “Just
Folks" and th ecast is composed
of Frances Randall,- Bettye Par-
rish, Roy Scales, Wendall ■ Mc-
Clellah, Mary Kincer, Emma Jon
Ratliff, Frances Graves and Grace
Kryenbual., .
The second play ’ is “Supersti-
tious” and the cast is composed
of Travis Underwood, Lometa display
McAfee and Mrs. Juanita Hill. ' ~
Thg Little Theater is the first
organization of its type in the
local High School, it was said.
They plan to present a number of
cultural--and educational pro-
grams, the cast to be selected „
from students and faculty mem- give the local artists the praftia
bers. The------‘ ‘ ‘------
Miss Helen
Hill Stringer.
every day since and is consider-;
ed one of the most important
strikes in " the area Since the op- ■
enmg • of the Ellenberger.. lime I
pool in the KMA .field. , The new r
pay-off sand is the Viola' lime,
the same horizon that has paid
off so well .at Seminole, Hewitt,;
Fitts and other Oklahoma points. ,
’ Tuesday when opened up the
well flowed 60 barrels of oil in I
two hours. Tuesday night it:
g flowed 96 barrels of oil and 10'
barrels of acid water. Since Wed-
nesday operators have been
swabbing in an effort to clean out
the hole »o the well can make a
normal flow.
Tn addition- to the Viola, the
well had already been assured
production Jn two other forma-
tions. the Caddo at 6,039 to 6,-
140 revealing good oU and gas
shows and a drill-stem test as-
sured production in the Conglo-
merate at 6.152 to 6.262 feet.
V Considerable interest has been
* shown here all week in the new
Stoneburg strike.
■—-V---
Mr. and Mr*. Bill Gray and
children left Tuesday for Fargo.
--N n , after spending six weeks
here. Gray is representative of
a supply firm and his territory
includes North and South Da-
kota, Montana and Wyoming.
The long-awaited Lions Club
minstrel will be presented at the
City. Auditorium on Tuesday
night, December 2, it was an-
nounced Thursday^. The curtain
. -, . u | will go up at 8 p.m. Mrs. Lynn
A large number Qar]jngton is directing the pro-
attendance from , (juctiofi.
Over fifty people, including
I some of Bowie’s best talent, are
in the cast of the three-act mys-
tery minstrel. Many others be-
sides Lions Club members are
taking part in the show. Like
most minstrels, the show is said
to provide plenty of laughs and
at the same time add a touch of
mystery that will be solved in
the final minutes of the produc-
tion. • •
Funds received from the ad-
mission charge will go into the
Club fund to be used for aiding
underprivileged in various ways.
Draft Calls 37 In
Montague County
Montague county must provide
37' men for the Army in Decem-
ber, Frank Mors, chief clerk of
the Montague county Selective
Service Board, stated this week.
On December 2 the board will
sent 15 men to induction centers
and on December 22. they must
provide 22 men. . Thirty men
from this county will be given
physical examinations *ln Mon-
tague today, Moss said.
------<n—1----
Mr. and Mrs. Cedric Harrison
of Seymour were guests of Mr.
apd Mrs. G. A. Quisenberry, Sun-
day.
pro- Had been defeated 6 to 0 to give
isday the Railbits their second con-
krerf'Sccutive 11-A championship. The
game was hard fought from
< [start to finish and the final whia-
Lle left most of the 5000 fans pres-
ent completely limp from ex-
citement.
Pat Wright crashed over from
the 2 yard line for the winning
touchdown in the opening min-
utes Of .the game and after that
the Bunnies were never head-
ed. The Indians failed to eveg
penetrate the 20-yard zone but
a county- p|ay,.(i a fighting brand of foot-
| ball all the way.
Pat Wright Scores
Nocona kicked off to Bowie.
„»,-r closely w>'ight received .ballon Bowie’s
id plac eorders foY ao Xard s,rll1'' i,nd carried it to
north of
east of
The well
good shows
/ and will probably be
drought in soon, it IS believed.
The well was treated with 2,-
000 gallons of acid Sunday in
the formations from 6,508 to 6,610
feet. The crew was swabbing
through tubing Monday night
and were at a depth of 4,000 feet
when the well blew itself in and
shot a solid stream of oil through
fwo-inch opening for half an
h.our before, it was shut in for s
further tests and to avoid fire - Processional—Glorious Things
dagger. Casing pressure was of Thee Are Spoken—Hayden.
560 pounds at the end of the Invocation—Rev. Breitenhirt.
flow. Federation Hymn—To Thee
• . - .... 6 zvv* L’’ i vs rv T iitlrin
Club
Violin—Romance— Weiniawski
Mrs. Bonner.
Chorus—The Heavens Re-
sound Beethoven
Club
Voice—“Total Eclipse” from
“Samson” Handel
How Beautiful Upon the
Mountains ..... :... Harker
Mr. Scarbrough
Scrioture Reading, Psalm
' 150 .... Re.v. A. J, Quinn
Chorus—Seraphic " Song
Rubinstein-Gaines
Soloist—Mr. Scarbrough.
Violinist—Mrs. Bonner.
Organist—Mrs. Collard.
Club
.Organ Mrs. Collat'd
■."Chorus—The Lord’s Prayer
' ?.... Malotte-Deis
Club
Hymn—Now the Day is
Over .....I...... Barnby
, Club and Cgngregation
Benediction:—Rev. James H.
VT cstferopk
Seven-Fold Amen .. Stainer
Club
Miss Inez Rudy, Choral direc-
tor.
first class, Robert
vL'ic-r, son of Mr. and
ci io al- "**"• "• R- Neisler of Vernon,
Wt about : formerly of Bowie,, was graduat-
. . i-u ——_.i.. ajr-me-
chanics course at the U. S. Army
Air Corps technical school at
Chanute Field. Illinois.
Neisler, who lived in Bowie
before his enlistment in the Air
[Corps in July. 1940, is now sta-
I tioned with the 8th Transport
Squadron, Hill Field, Ogden,
Utah. ■ ,i
—5»— ---~Z..
Twilight Musicale
Sunday Afternoon
The MacDbwell Club will pre-
sent a Twilight Musicale on
Sunday afternoon, at 4:30 o’clock
at the First Presbyterian church,
Guest artists Will b<- Mrs. F. R.
Collard, organist, -Mrs. Bernice
Bonner, violinist, E.' A. Scar-
brough, tenor, of Wichita Falls.
A most cordial invitation is ex-
tended to the public to attend.
The following program will be
given: . ,
* •*
Masonic Lodge to Bowie Plays Winner
Have Meetings lof Weatherford
The Bowie lodge. No. 378 A F I <*'OmanC^le Game
& A M. will meet Saturday night j . The Bowie High School Jack-
Mason. d^eeSlRCwarranZu^|rabb^ J.*** ‘he J**
ed yesterday .by C O. Garrett. All i eona Indlans la** mgbt and when
master Masons are invited. | *he battle was over the Indiana
-A special Thanksgiving
gram wjl be given next TB»:
night arid also some tli^rd de
work will be done.
• ■ • ■' —j——Lo, ----
,. I , -
Defense Board
flans Campaign
Th eMontague County Defense
Board met in the. County- Agent's
| office it) Montague. Wednesday
morning and’ outlined r
wire campaign-for the repair-of
farm machinery and the collec- ;
tioin of. scrap *.iron for use in |
defense industries.
Every farmer with machinery '
should ' check it over <'
right now, anu - .... - ------- —. —
parts-before January .1. 'is the[*be 46 Wright then cagftad the
advise given by'--Uie Defen^^fe^^ *° **’•' Nocona 27 yafd line,
board. * After this date ’ farthers, cf-inhere Nocona held and took
can . expect. to 'meet a nurribet 5>y<’r on downs The- Jackrabbits
of dela’ys in' securing smarts for held fast to Jheir’gaina and the
any kind of farm machinery. In *nd>an kicked to thr Bowie 24.
order to avoid this delay later [ After an exchange of fumble*
on fhat mighjg interfere with ! by Wright and by Crain for Nm
harvest conditions, th efarm cona. Bowie was in possession of
machines should be checked over thl. ball on the Nocona 47. Wri-
a"irma^ed n°W' a . ght went ar<>und <-'nd *or seven
Scrap iron is a commodity yards and Wtlliams picked up
w^,edAln „edefer’se lnj4ustnes , four’more on the next play, gte-
l ± lb r nr 7 "T* 7^ 'n« thc J^krabbits a find down
farm there are a number of old . on th(. N(xona 38 Wright pan-
worn out machines that are of ,-d to Brown who received the
J -i:— i\acC J° ^5“ farniey- but ball on the 20 yard line and car-
F •• nesday with 25 -members pres- +yo.uld b eof much value to our; ned it to the 15 Wright picked
„i..k 'rHntry. by supplying the steel up twelve yards to the 3 yard
•q'eP. '.bu Zd scrap.,ir,°un line. Wfe.te gained one and Wri-
Ronrrt■ th?S iron n0W’ theight went over for the touchdown
Hoard., suggests. . - 4frbm the N
hoAh,.ld ^r,b V’cet,1“8>S ^‘" Williams faVl to convert and
e-ai™ ov®^'*h .^coun*y bV Vo« I the first puarter ended with Bo-
cational Agricultural teachers. wic leadlng 8 to 0
County Agents and others, to
assist farmers in this new pro- !--,*n ,b‘‘ second quarter neither
gram. . [team was able To-.seriously threa-
.fan and at the half the score re-
, I tnained 6 to 0. .. .. ..
._-.secund, half the. Indiana
[came back on*the war path and
[ outplayed the Rabbits but lack
the punch to make a*, touchdown.
'[A large number of'long parses
1 were made but to no avail and
Lieut. Selden.T. Miller, of the the last play of the game Swear-
U. S. Army Air Corps, and for ingen was downed op .his own 12
inerly of Bellevue, was reported When he tried to paaai,...-
missing Wednesday from a rou 1 Statistically ' the Indians ouV- v
tine operational flight in the Al- olayed the locals in somt- depart-
buquefque. New Mexico area, ac- 'ments Bowie gained 78 yards v
cording to press dispatches, from scrimmage and Nocona
Lieut. Miller is the son of Mr. 132, but Nocona lost 69 yards
and Mrs. Billy T. Miller of the and Bowie only 22. Bowie had
Vashti co,mmimityt west.nf. Bowie 5 first downs anti Nocona. 7 Ra-
and is a graduate of Bellevue wie completed three passes out
High School. H<- visited Bowidjof four attempts for 37 yards,
friends two weeks ago. ! Nocona attempted eleven, comp-
.Lieut. Miller, i piloting the leted two for 44 ■ yards. Bowie
plane, was accompanied by Staff [lo** yards In two penalties,
Sergt. Howard L. Edwards and ! Nocona-was penalizixi four times
took off from his base at 10:47 tor 40, Bowie fumbled. 4 times,
a.m. Monday and 24 hours later j Nocona 7 Bow'ie punted six times v
whs listed as missing.. /The ship f°r 200 yards an average of 33.3,
had five hours fuel supply. The Nocona punted five times for
ship’ was a light attack bomber. ‘ >4* yards, an average of 28 yards.
Army airmen havf ...been, coikl The Jackrabbits will enter the
tfucttng a search since Tuesday Ciass A Bi - district play off
but Thursday no reports had agalnst tlu. winner J;e 'Com.
been made. tinche - Weatherford game. The
° a . [ fwo 12-A teams will play at Com-
Miss Helen Jane Standifer of anchc ’tonight and the site of the
Fort Worth is visiting her aunt, ' bi-district game will be decid-
Mrs.: Tr-R. Pierce. ed in a few days.
Committee Assignments Made for
Bowie Chamber of Commerce
The assignment of 1941-42, ‘ [ ~~
Chamber of Commerce commit- 1.
tees was announced by'President man,< W E.
O. W. Watson at a meeting of thc : gess and W.
board of directors Mopday night Agriculture:\ H T Ayr*
The following committees were chairman, J A. Brite, A S.
announced: [Elliott, W H Stephens. G. W.
Fair Board: H. T. Ayres Lum [Morgan and Audrey Wheat
Lovette, R. L. Burgess, N. B, [ The directors instructed the
Gary, M. Posey, W. H. Stephens [ highway committee to secure an
and Gordon Cady. | appointment - with the Texas
Publicity: P. S. Stallings, > LI,’ “
chairman. Dr. J. T. Lawson, I time in December and to lay
Mark Campbell and Abe Cline, proposed -Bowie-Jgcksibaro hl
Entertainment: Harve Ratliff, I
chairman, W. B. Alexander, F. O.
Edwards, and Donald Mann.
Industrial: E. W. Daley, chair-
man, T. R. Coffield, T. P. Evans.
Clarence Newsom, ‘
Stephens.
Membership and Finance: M.
Posey, chairman, N. B. Gary,
Harve Ratliff and David Warren.
Trade Extension: W. B. Brice,
chairman, F. O. Edwards, Donald
Mann and Harve Ratliff.
Mp A’
—* J »I I
.--o
' Pictured above is the 1941 squad of the Bowie Higli itfhpol iJackrabbit football team. The jgam,
with four letter-men as a nucelus. started;off slow but showed great improvement a? the season
advanced. Those in the picture are:
Front row, Iqft to right. Head Coach, Pete Mershon, J. C. Gossett, H. L. Swann. Jimmy Williams.
Glen Brown, Alfred Campiche, Herbert Aldredge, Bobby Woodall and Pat Wright.. ...
SeconcUrow, Line Cogch, Dan Rhome, Clyde L. Bell, Elbert Jones, Jim Coyle, L.. M.'Elenburg.
Elmer Mgnaxco. Vermce Ward, Wayne Whitehead and Paul White.* . ' . *
Third row. Assistant Coach Loyd Wood, Raymond Garrett,* manager. Hoarce (Red) BridgewafeV,
Joe Wolfe, "Bert Russell, David Latham, Albert South. J. D. Faulkenberry and Mike Wright.
Top row. J. D. Stine, junior high sOhooLcbach, Jamil Dorrough. manager, Orville Scoggins, Paul
Garrett. Kenneth Shockley, Abel Cline, Jimmy Wiggins and Billy Rhyne..' Jack Dort and L. E. Catlin
were not in the picture. ", • i
Posey to Head
. Miss Inez Rudy attended the; 1942 Fair Ass'n.
First District convention of Mil- . *
sic Federation at Stephenville The Montague County
on Friday and Saturday. -She Association for 1942 was organ-
was chairman of the Junior Di-) ized at a meeting of the board;
vision and chairman of the bal- of directors Tuesday night, and
lot for new officers. Mrs. J. H-[ plans for next year's fair were
Westbrook, Mrs. Harry Karls- discussed. M.' Posey was elect-
berg, Mrs. LaGrande Henderson ed president of’the 1942 Fair,
and Mrs. Mark Campbell attend-1
ed the meeting on Friday, re-1
maining for the Twilight Sacred (
Music program. Mrs. Westbrook„ M Mnnr„ ,prrPtarv
and Mrs, Campbell represented th,. Fair of hQ6*on- ,
the MacDowell elub and sane . ^alF board is made up of t |jaje and - Mrs,
tne Macuoweii ciuo ana sang Chamber- of Commerce com-'etrin,,,.r . xfis's *
two duets, accompanied, by Miss j - _» stringer, .uvuss.
Rudy, at the afternoon session.
------------o-----------
farm there are a number of old
value to the farmer,
b eof much value to
Rotary Hears
Speech Students
The RotaTy Club held, its
weekly luncheon riieeting Wed-
ent. The club was entertained '-<tfntry-. by supplying the steel
by members of the speech de-
partment of Bowie High School
in a. program.arranged by Supt.
W. B. ’ Alexander, . program
chairman. An amusing ten min-
, ute skit was presented, the cast
W. H. Stephens and Mrs. Edd including Glenna. Dean Branson,!
Jones were elected vice-presi- Mar,of, Henning, Una Fa'v Free,
dents, R. L. Burgess, tqpasur.-r Travis Underwood, Billy Heath-
and H. M. Moore, secretary. ington, din-clfed ■ by Miss Helen
The Fair board is made up of Hale and - Mrs, Juanita Hill
, ' Hrniiing also
mittee composed of Stephens, sang -The South American Way,”
Burgess, Posey, H. T. Ayres, Lum accOmpanied b vthe Rotary Club
[Lovette, N. B.'Gary, and Gordon , sweetheart, Mrss Mary Dell
i Cady; the committee appointed £wen
jby the City Federation composed ( The annualUiotary Christmas
{of Mrs. Jones, Mrs. Clavton party was set-for December 17,
Jackson, Mrs. Marvin Willett, committee was urged to I
Mrs. Jake Dorsey, Mrs. L. H. start preparations at once.
Angove, and Mrs. Lum Lovette. i Visiting Rotarians included:
| The dates for the 1942 Fair I Lon Samuels, . Vocational agri-
i tentatively set for cuiture instructor at Arlington,
’,3, 24. 25 and 26. it Supt. W. J. Stone of Nocona,
was announced. During the meet- james Daughtery and Rev. Frank
...g it was voted to become a, B|ackhurn, of Nocona.
{jnember of the Texas Association—-- *■*—~ • IIQ -------
carried in^!T ; Lions Minstrel on
and buried Local Young People L. O * ’
returned in At BTu Convention [December Z
an hour’s deliberation in Dis-1 T}}ursday priday and Saj.
fense attorneys, plan to ask for
a hew trial,
FrieSenhahn, a young cabinet-
maker, was shot to death near
San Ahtoniq, after Hutcheson
had deserted while bn guard
duty. He brought the body - to
Montague county and three days
later it was discovered by two
boys. ',
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Campbell, Mark. The Bowie News (Bowie, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, November 21, 1941, newspaper, November 21, 1941; Bowie, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1363833/m1/1/?q=music: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bowie Public Library.