The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 303, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 19, 1937 Page: 3 of 4
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jywfomTYAY JUNE 19, 1937
THE DENTSON PRBSS
PAGE THAU
i ©
• •
COURTS
FIFTY-NINTH DI3T. COURT
I Settings Made
The following criminal setting
lias been released from the office
of R. C. Slagle .Tr„ criminal dis-
trict attorney:
1 Wednesday—Levi Zachery, two
cases of chicken them and two
.'of burglary; Amos Cannon, chick-
en theft and burglary; Odell Cole-
man, chicken theft and burglary;
James Foster, two cases of chick-
en theft; Raymond Pierce, bur-
glary; James Forester, two cases
of chicken theft; Raymond Pierce,
burglary; Mary Ethel Adams, for-
gery and passing; Lawrence Tuck-
er, forgery and attempt to pass;
Grover C. Thompson, driving
while intoxicated.
I Thursday— Roosevelt B&yd,
burglary with intent to rupo,
Klirk Johnson, burglary at a pri-
vate residence; J. E. C. Skinner,
driving while intoxicated; Harvey
Cody, theft from person; C. B.
Williams, accomplice to burglary.
FIFTEENTH DIST. COURT
R. M. CARTER, JUDGE
New Suits Filed
1 Lucy J. Vaughner vs. Tommie
(Miller and 'Rebecca Miller, dam-
ages, title and possession.
I Dorothy Bookout vs. Collin
Bookout divorce.
Marriage Licenses
1 Arthur Lee Ford and Edith
Christine Graham, Denison.
I H. M. Hawkins and Norma
Thrasher, Durant, Okla.
Automobile Registration*
I Lee Baking company, Sherman,
Dodge truck.
Realty Transfers
Walter Blankenship et ux to J.
B. Darnell, lot 9, Frank S. Ham's
'South Highland adidtion, Sher-
man; $200 and other considera-
tions, Feb. 2*7, 1937.
1 J. L. Inman et ux to Charlie E.
Woods, lot 5, block C, Ed Moore'*
Fairground addition, Sherman;
$12.50 and other consideration*,
May 8, 1937.
1 . M. Williams et al to Rose Mao
Foroman, part of block D. Ed
Moore's Fairground addition,
Shreman1; $1,100 and other con-
siderations, Nov. 24, 1936.
THAT LITTLE GAME
\0\ +
Forgetful
p** T~"
than* !
l AwWAYS UJir4
vjJHEM THERE'S
su-vea in the
pot
put rr
1
\oo hopped
ALL OJ&P.
ME Fot*
taxin© a
diwe out. /taksoavri
HEY, Ho*)
ar.t aleck
pot iah quarter
"back im the
po-r WHERE
1 pot chips
IM FoaTrtAT
AfAOOMT.-
OJHA-r AR.E
^OO KiCKlN*
A&OOT "•
A uu' siuea
put t back^
you'll. lo6e
a few fihsebs
OOIN' that!
seethe
bahker.
. for. jack.
IM THE (VvddlE
Mom
reminds a
"bird that he's
NOT PLACING
FoR FOM. -
he wamtsus
W. M. Isbell et ux by sherfif,
to E. R. Moran, lots 9 to 16, in-
clusive, "Mock 11, original town
plat, Tom Bean; $100, June 2,
1937.
Oil and Gas Assignment
W. H. Krohn to James A. An-
derson, 22 acres in Alfred Berry
survey; $1 and other considera-
tions, June 2, 1937.
' Raymond P. King to V. E. Pow-
ell, 40 acres in William McGill
and I. and G. N. R ,R. company
surveys; $1 and other considera-
tions; April 29, 1937.
HOW WELL DO YOU
KNOW THE
NORTH£AST^ESTgOUTH
?
By Pat Perry
1.—What state leads in t :e
production of carbon black?
i 2.—What day does Denison
celebrate with other cities Sun-
day?
I 3.—What danger confronts
(America from the Lewis group,
according to Rep. J. Parnell
Thomas?
I 4.—What does Governor Alfred
iM. Landon say about former gov-
ernor Bill Murray?
' -5.—Who are the members of
the federal commission to handle
the steel strike situation?
1 6.—What is Dallas to do about
broadcasting of race reports?
7.—What nuisance bothered
Louis Hubbschmann Denisonian,
who lived 62 years ago?
8.—What medal did Grayson
rifles win in a contest fifty
years ago?
1 9.—What pastor's wife hail
charge of the program for pas-
tor's wives at their Thursday
meet?
I TO.—What Denison couple is
announced to wed Sunday? *
Answers to the above queitlons
are to found on the classified par*
of this Issue.
•>riv SAF2LY—Not Reclclesil
"Dog Days" Not
Connected With
Spread, Rabies
NEW YORK, N. Y.—Through
the ages, the hot sultry season in
July and August has been known
as "dog days." The informed
knew that this season took its
name from the Star Sirius, more
commonly known as the Dog Star
which, at that time of the year
rises with the sun. The average
citizen connected the name dog
days, with the supposition that
dogs were more liable to rabiei
during this season than at any
other during the year.
1 Statisticians of a major life in-
surance company say that the lat-
ter supposition !b incorrect. Basing
their conclusion on reports of ra-
bies in animals to the United
States Public Health Service for
the last six years, they point out
that fewer animals go mad during
the summer than at any other
season of the year.
Spring is the season in which
rabies has been found most pre-
valent, a daily average of 12.2
rabid animals being reported over
the six years for that season. Tha
statistcians find that the cold
months of winter run spring a
close second—a daily average of
11.7 rabid animals being reported
for the winter.
1 In summer, which includes the
"dog days," the daily average is
found To fall to 8.2. In other
words, only two animals become
*abid in summer to every three in
the spring and only seven during
the hot summer months to every
10 during the winter.
1 The ^necessity for systematic
100 per cent muzzling of dogs at
all season of the year is the les-
son drawn from this study on
rabies by the statisticians. They
say: "Many instances are on rec-
ord of more or less determined
opposition to the enforcement cf
dog muzzling laws and ordinances
during the cold months. Such re-
sistance doubtless has it founda-
tion in the impression that rabies
is a warm-weather disease in both
animal and human being. Tito
facte, as stated ,show beyond
contradiction that this impression
is a mistaken one so far as the
seasonal incidence of this dread
disease in animals is concerned."
i An analysis of the incident of
rabies among humans shows a
slight difference from that among
animals. More cases among hu-
mans are reported for July and
August than at other seasons, but
the seasonal difference is slight.
In fact, the Public Health Service
records show that for every five
cases in botK July and August
there are four caseB in January,
'May and October. The slightly
larger number of these "dog day"
cases in humana is attributed, in
part, to the fact that the length
of the incubation period in man
usually runs from six weeks to
two months. It is thus to be ex-
pected that the heaviest incident
of animal rabies in the spring
will be followed by the maximum
prevalence of human rabies In
the summer months. The late
spring and the summer are also
the periods of greatest out-of-
doors exposure to dog bites, es-
pecially in the case of children,
with whom incubation is usually
of shorter duration than in adults
and who are more apt to develop
rabies soon after being bitten.
Rabies, the insurance company
statisticians point out is a hope-
lessly incurable diease once it it
is established in a human being.
No method of treatment has yet
been discovered which is of the
slightest avail at this stage. How-
ever, there is a practically sure
safeguard against rabies in th<>
Pasteur prophylactic treatmert
Administered as soon as possible
after a dog bite, whether the ani-
mal be merely suspected of being
mad or Is known to be so, the
treatment gives a practically 100
per cent" protection. Its efficacv
is demonstrated by the fact that in
6,156 eases treated at the Pasteur
Institute in Paris in the 10-year
period 1924 to 1933 only a single
death occurred.
Gone With Wind" Dancer
Renee Villon, exotic dance star at "Road to Rio," midway
musical extravaganza at the Dallas Pan American Exposi-r
tion, has created a sensation with her original "Gone With
the Wind" dance, in which a flimsy chiffon costume is swept
away by the breeze bit by bit. Miss Villon was brought to
"Road to Rio" after three yearg in the Foliea-Berxere In
Paris.
JUNE
the month of brides
See us for engagement rings—
wedding rings—glassware—silver-
, ware. All sorts of wedding gifts
at reasonable prices.
Rockwell's
11 The Leading Jeweler*
ADOLPH" JOHNSON J. G. PUCKETT
Drive SAFELY—Not Recklessly
SNOODLES
1 ' !■ _
i . .r
r\ Yo' sonny
<:/M 1 poNfc TRIED
To -BAKC
By Cy Hungerford
And The Worst Is Yet To Come
'jm
CE-MENT
VmtELS OM
my cake
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an1 he w*
pe cfc-me '
ON
^ BOAD
von't yo kmc. ' ~M xvie Or
V/CAR *5 CM-Ltc Lent- AND DCM
nov) knovj you are supposed to
y gwe up some bap habit z
/«?€ YOU
Gonna QU'-'^L
Spankin' f
"ITS A GREAT LIFE IF YOU DON'T WEAKE N"
By Jack Rabbit
ITS * N
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COP ON OS KID*
by Charles McManiig
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THINGS THAT NEVER HAPPEN
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The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 303, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 19, 1937, newspaper, June 19, 1937; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth327627/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.