The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 64, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 4, 1937 Page: 2 of 4
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1 Hi; DLuNISON PftiLSS
Saturday, SJSFT. 4
THE DENISON PRESS J the payroll, he is penalized and is forced
BatablUhed In 19S0
Telephone No. 100
Uiutl DftUy Except Sunday
UntireJ as Sloond Class Matter June 23, 1936.
at the post office at Denison, Tsxaa under the
act of March H, 1879.
Dedicated to clean and reaponslve government;
to Individual and civic Integrity; to Individual and
civic commercial progress.
to make his business take up the added
burden which means kiting prices or see-
ing the cut throat competitor take it away
from him.
The only other alternative is that of
drawing a little on the reserve. If we un-
derstand the situation, there is very little
reserve left in most of the concerns of the
country. What they will do after that,
is something that is bothering them.
Industry is getting tired. Its heads
are losing faith in the administration to
help them work it out. As a man will give
BUBSIUFTION RATES
One Week 10c
One Month 35c
'Chree Months (In advance) #0c j .. . , . , ,, .... ... .
au Months (in advance) n.75 ll11 he hath to save hls llfe, even so will he
One Year (in advance) s.5i> make a desperate fight to save his busi-
box numbers, care Denison Press win be given, ness from bankruptcy and a political poli-
advertlsera desiring blind addressea.
LOOK ON THIS PAGE FOR YOUR DAILY WANTS
CHAJiGIJ ACCOUNTS are acceptable from persons
having telephone listed In their own name and upon
agreeing to rem}t when bill 1« presented. 10 per cant
will be added on unpaid private accounts after 30
days from date of first insertion.
CLOSING HOUR: Copy received by 9 a. m. will be
published the same day.
ERRORS The Denison Press will not be responsible
for more than one Incorrect Insertion.
OUT-OF-TOWN-ORDERS for classified ads
strictly payable In advanoe.
are
Any erroneous statement reflecting upon the
character or reputation of any persons wlU be gladly
corrected If brought to the attention of the publish-
ers. The Denison Dally Press assumes no re-
sponsibility for errors in advertising insertions be-
yond the price of the advertisement.
CANCELLATIONS must be received by 10:00 a. m
tn order to avoid publication In curren issue.
Business In This Country
Is Tax Heavy
We wonder how much money is be
ing spent by those in charge of running country is dangerously approaching a
cy which works against it as he believes
to be the case now, means that the party
will have to change its policies, or busines
will change parties.
Business has entirely too much taxa-
tion to take care of-this fellow and that
fellow. Add to this labor reins which
have been pulled over business in the past
few months, and which, through John
Lewis has had a depressive effect on the
country, and tolerated by the administra- {
tion, and we do not have a bright out-
look for the man who longs to have the
sense of ownership in business.
All any man should want is a job at
fair wages. He seeks no pension from the
government. If he wants to tax himself for
relief for his fellow worker, that is his
business, but for the government to try and
make the head of the firm dish out whole-
sale doles and pensions, is to place a heavv
load that can't be borne. Business in this
the thing, writing those letters to parties'
making out pension reports wrong, and
traveling around to check on things. Bus-
iness is having to bear it.
From the size of the mail this little
concern gets, it must be preponderous
with firms having hundreds of men on their
payroll.
If the expense account of supervising
the pension program runs anything like
it must, this country is paying dearly for
old age pensioning.
There is daily growing rebellion
against it. Men in small businesses are
finding it increasingly discoui'agng to try
and make things go. If they get a man on ,
slump back into another and greater de-
pression.
-00—
The fellow who could not reach across
and draw the window shade and shut off
the view, now has a brother who can't
reach across and turn off his neighbrs loud
radio.
—oo —
Of course, when we took the stand
that children should be permitted to play
on the sidewalks with their skooters,
skates and bikes, we did not intend that
they should take the street and make our
hair stand on ends when we get out for a
little drive with friend wife.
INTERESTING BITS ABOUT
OUR FRIENDS
Speaking of the >ambitions some
fellows Tiave back in their mind—
email ambitions maybe, but ju?t
the same ia kind of hankering to
dp something that is not exact'y
your line—we indicated ours to i>
fellow ag a desire to be able to
skate on ice. Seeing those skaters
were along seemingly so easy, al-
ways started a desire for us to be
able to do it. Not living where
there was much icc until we got
ashamed to be seen falling, that
desire is still ours. Rev. Ben F.
Hearn indicated his ambitions the
other d'ay. What were they? We
would not tell the silly one, all of
us have one—but he did indicate
that he always wanted to b'e a
newspaper man next to what he
was doing. And what was the
rmbition next to that of being a
newspaper man? He would be tn
undertaker. We do not see th
connection, save that about
only way the smell of ink is cured
is for the undertaker to take*
charge of things. Even then, we
wonder if good editors could en-
joy heaven without some of the
grind found around a newspaper
plant.
OTHER EDITOR'S THOUGHTS
BECAUSE THE SYSTEM
WAS WRONG
Officials of the Agricultural
Adjustment Administration seek
to justfy the low loan price of 9
Staple.
First there was the plow-up
campaign, then the acreage re-
duction campaign. And what hap-
pened? In three years' time this
country cut off a potential pro-
Food Fancies
Raspberry Blitz Torte.
well blended. Sift flour once,
measure, add baking powder and
sift again. Add gradually to first
mixture and stir until well blend-
ed. Add lemon extract. Fold in
stiffly beaten egg whites. Pour
cents per pound for cottton by! duction of nine million bales of
faying that they hoped in this' cotton. But the world's surplus
1 was cut during the three-year per-
iod by only two millions bales.
Why? For the good reason that
manner to encourage the free
flow of cotton in trade channels.
'Secretary Wallace says that the
high loan price of 12 centg in
1934 reduced both export and do
n , Two-thirds cup fat, 2 cups, jnto gmaji greased cup cake tins.
une ana one-third cups sifted brown sugar. 3 esrers. 2-3 cud r> i i 1 a. /oca j ' " T ~ **
, . t , , Bake in moderate oven (350 de- tended all alont?
cake flour, one and one-third tea- prune juice, 1 teaspoon vanilla,' Pnii™nVioit\ nVinnt
spoons baking powder, one-half * teaspoon' lemon extract, W! ""l The officials add that the lat-
o,,„ v,,«„ minutes. With a sharp knife slice' 1Z ' ment in fche beginning adoptc t
cup butter or other shortening1, teaspoon almond extract, tea-! 4 _ survey on international cot-
~ . - .""i * ' '"T ~ i off the top of each cup cake as
unbeatL W ^ I SP°0" V/' CUPS C°PPed C°°k- thinly as possible. Hollow out
four P^'wW-f tablespoons milk,led prunes, cup brooken nuts, center nnd fj„ with omnge cream
one ZS T CUP 1.1? CUPS ; 1 teaSI7n SOda' ,/? R*Pla« top carefully.
Sift 1,? sweetened, teaspoon baking powder. | Dusf top of oake with confection.
bakine- nlwl !> TT' *"***• Add **** • ' su*ar- Makes twenty-four,
baking powder and sift together and beat 2 minutes. Add the rest,
three times. Cream butter thor-| of ingredients and pour into 2. ream ■' lns?
oughly, add the one-half cup su- medium-sized loaf pans which1 w"~ lr.c p cap sweetened cou-
gar gradually and cream together have been fitted with waxed t>a-j ' 0T1'0< ' 1 "0 ta espoons
until light and fluffy. Add egg! per*. Bake 40 minutes in a mod- 0ra"*e ju,ce' .^° tablespoons
yolks *ne at a time, beating very' erately slow oven. (The cake1 J™ rind< one eff* wh,tP'
thoroughly after each addition. I may also be baked in one large * 1 ^ ea on*
Add flour, altanwtely with milk, loaf pan in an hour is alloted Bleml sweetened condensed
a small amount at a time, beat- for the baking.) ™ilk' fruit Juices aTld 0l'anSe rind-
ing well. Spread mixture in two Chilled Fruit Juice Stir until mixtu'"e thickens. Fold
greased nine-inch pans. j One cup chilled pineapple in stifj:ly beaten white'
Beat the egg white until foamy juice, 1 cup chilled grapefruit SPread on cold cake. Use as a fill-
throughout. Add sugar, two ta-! juice, 1 cup chilled pear juice, f°r split ladyfingers or sponge
ble spoons at a time; beat after1 green fruit coloring. ca.kes' dusting top of each cake
each addition until sugar is thor-j Delicately color the fruit juices. with confectioners' sugar. Makes
ougly blended. After all sugar is Chill or partially freeze them and enou*h fillin,r for about e,*hteen
added, continue beating until mix- serve in small glasses arranged on 0X1 p cakes>
ture will stand in peaks. Spread ! green leaves or paper doilies. j 1>l«nked Savannah
trs ;rnmixSriop «f,eachi i tw° ,,ups c°nned pa,mon-
slow oven (321; drwrpn v "i One-half cup butter, one-half 0UP evaP°rated milk, 2 tablespoons
h.i z szssrssz}- """■ - • chopp'!d on">"•1 i'y 3 "■
. , . the present parity plan, or some
ton trade—for the August-to- , , ,
T , . such plan, permitting the farm-
June period of 1936-37—showed . . , .
. . ,. , . . erg to produce >a normal crop of
this country supplied about 40 .. . , ...
. j* , , . cotton at the world market price,
percent of world trade, compared ....
with an average of 65 per cent in ; en puy enl a sU H1 y _,lL
the ten years ended in 1933. And i comPen8e lher« for loases- Tlen
why? The reason was because of,there would have been 1,0 such
the foolish assumption that this] competition from Brazil and Ar-
country could dictate the world gentina as we shall now permo-
price of cotton when it was pro- \ nently have.
ducing only a little more than The Agriculture Department
half of the supply—and when has rather tardily confessed its
there were literally millions up- early mistake. But the lack of
on millions of acres of land in t vision ia likely to cost farmers of
other countries admirably suited the jSouth heavfllyi through . the
to the production of' the fleecy years.—Greenville Herald.
then increase heat to moderate
(350 degrees Fahrenheit) for
thirty minutes. Spread the sweet-
ened raspberries between layers
and top with whipped cream and
raspberries. Cut in wedges for
serving.
egg, one-fourth teaspoon salt 1 !lIeSpo°n3 butter' 4 ^spoons
one fourth f , flour. 2 eggs, separated, table-
ZVtl 'i. . ""«• . ,p.. „It, d..h pepper, 2 fbl,.
easpoon nutmeg, one spoons chopped pickle, 1 table-
Brea t of Lamb
Two pounds breast of )amb, %\
cup flour, 1 teaspoon salt, % tea-
spoon paprika, 1 cup diced carrots,
1 cup cooked peas, 1-3 cup diced
celery, 2 tablespoons chopped on-
ions, 4 tablespoons butter or marj
garine, \y2 cups boiling water.
Cut the lamb into 2-inch pieces.
Roll in the flour. Melt the but-
ter in a frying pan. Add and
quickly brown the Iamb. Add the
rest of the ingredients. Cover
and simmer 45 minutes or until
the foods arp very tender when
teeted with a fork. (The combi-
nation may also be baked for one, milk,
hour in a moderate oven in a
cup gifted flour.
spoon chopped parsley and 2 cups
Cieam butter, add sugar and fine bread crumbs
honey, beat until fluffy. Add eeir _• . . • ,
heat thoroughly. Mix in sifted dry ""V ? ,T T
ingredients. Drop bv half ' y 8 in doub,e boi,er-
spoonfuls three inches apart on r^utter. fIour- add to hot
back of greased baking pans or «?,U I 'smooth (10 min.)
— v Stir in beaten yolks, seasonings,
Bake in moderate
A-THOUGHT - A-LINE
American state and federal
jails contain more lhan 100,000
prisoners.
Texas leads all other states of
the union in the number of both
cattle and sheep.
! In 1895 Samuel P. Langluy
built a ^taiam-powered airplane
that few six seconds.
I Coal and coke production in tHe
United* States dropped about 30
per cent from 1920 to 1935.
EXCHANGE
that
• -L.
EXTRA
ROOM for
CASH
The "Rooms to Rent"
and
"Board and Lodging"
col-
umns will bring you
desir-
able people—and rooms ad-
vertised generally rent with-
in 3 days.
THE DENISON PRESS
RATES
1 Tim* Xo per word.
I times, to per word
t timet. So per word.
Minimum charge La for 11 word*
(Tor conaooutlve loiartlom)
Contract rates wll l e *lven upon
application. l/eg&l i-ateu at on*
cent per word lmertlon.
Following The
Air Routes
6 p. m. NBC—Meredith Will-
son's orchestra, KPRC WDAF W
OAI WMAQ WFA'A WHO WKY
KVOO. CBS—Saturday Night
Swing Club, KRLD KOMA KTSA
KTUL WHAS WBBM KSL WWL
(KMOX KTRIH.
i 6:30. NBC—Concert, KPRC
WLW WS'M WREN WOAI WKY
WFAA KVOO. CBS—Weekend
Potpurri, KRLD KTRH KO'MA K
MOX KWKH KGKO WHAS WB
BM KSL WWL.
I 7. NBC—National Barn Dance,
WOAI WLS KPRC WREN WFA
A WLW KVOO. CBS—Prof.
Quiz, KRLD KTRH KOMA KMO
X KTS'A KTUL WHAS WBBM
KSL WWL WBT.
' 7:30. CBS^—Hollywood Show
Case, KTRH KOMA WWL KTUL
KMOX WHAS KGKO WBT KN
OW WBBM KSL. Lovely Lady,
KRLD.
8. OBS—Hit Parade, KRLD
KOMA KTSA WHAS WBBM KT
RH ICMOX KSL WWL. NBC-
Golf Resume, WBAP WDAF KO
'A WMAQ KFI WHO KPRC WK
Y WOAI.
9. CBS—Bunny Berigan's or-
chestra, WWL KWKH KRLD IC
OMA KGKO KMOX KTRH WAC
O WHAS KNOW. NBC—Carina
Molina's orchestra, WOAI KFI K
PRC KOA WDAF WLW WKY.
Orchestra, WBAP.
9:30. CBS^—Russ Morgan's or-
chestra, K/RLD KOMA KTRH K
MOX KTSA. NBC—Emery Deu-
tche's orchestra, KPRC WDAF W
OAI WHO WLW WKY KOA. Or-
chestra, WFAA.
10. CBS—Roger Pryor's or-
chestra, KRLD KWKH KNOW
WHAS KGKO KTRH KOMA.
Sports and News, WFAA.
10:30. NBiC—William Farm-
er's orchestra, KOA WOAI1 KFI
KPRC WHO CBS—Benny Good-
man's orchestra, KOM'A WHAS'
KGKO' KNOW KTSA WBT WAC
0 KWKH. Orchestras, WFAA,
KRLD.
1 fl. CBS—Horace Henderson's
Orchestra, KWKH KOMA KGKO
WBBM~ WACO WHAS KTUL. N
BC—Don Fernanda's orchestra,
WDAF WOAI KFI KPRC WEN
R WHO WKY KOA. Summer Vu
riety, WFAA. Dance Parade con
test, KRLD.
Answer# to
News Quiz Column
• •
report a trend toward the usa
of what fish for stream stocking.
! 1.—She is employed as regUtar
in the University of Mexico.
1 2.—Use of iron lungs.
I 3.—>An address of John Lee
Smith of Thockmorton, past Grand
Chancellor of Texas.
II 4.—Heavy rains.
I 5.—One hundred and Seven-
teen
i 6.—Mrs. Oliver Hayes
7.—San Lorenzo, the main ca-
thedral of Genoa, Italy
' 8.—Iran.
' 9.—The nation plans to eon-
vert the liner Leviathan in to a
floating hotel.
10.—Large trout. ^
f ARM AND CARDEN
j 325 BULBS GIVEN AWAY
' Our largo, illustrated catalogue
j a true Gardening Encyclopedia—
I will soon be ready. To compile
a list of appropriate addresses
genuine gardening friends, we
will send you FREJE a nico as-
sortment of HYACINTHS, TUL-
IPS, DAFFODILS, CROCUS, IR-
IS, ANEMONES, GADIOLI, etc.,
325 bulbs in all, which is suffici
ent for a wonderful display. It
suffices to send us for packing,
carriage, etc., a ONE dollar note
by registered letter, and to men-
tion your name and full address
in block letters. Do not send coin,*
or stamps. Please, mention also
the name of this paper. Dispatch,
carriage paid, all over the world,
without increase in price. KWEE-
KDRY TULPENBURG, Postbus C
397, AMSTERDAM—C., HOL-
LAND, Europe.
• k*
W. F. WEAVER
PLUMBING CO.
PLUMBING SATISFACTION
624 W. Main Phone 271
Drlva Safely—Not CirUitlf
H8W OFTEN CAN YOU
KISS AND MAKE UP?
FEW hutbanda can undtrstand
why a wife should turn from a
ploaaant companion into a stirew
for one whole week in every month.
You can aay "I'm sorry" and
kiss and make up easier before
marriage than after. Be wise. Ifyou
want to hold your husband, you
won't be a three-quarter wife.
For three generations one woman
has told another how to go "smU-
lng through" with Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound. II
helps Nature tone up tbi> system,
thus lessening the discomforts from
ths functional disorders which
women must endure in the tbree
ordeals of Ufe: 1. Turning from
girlhood to womanhood. 2. Pre-
paring for motherhood. 3. Ap-
proaching "middle age."
Don't be a three-quarter wife,
take LYDIA E. PINKHAM'H
VKUETABLE COMPOUND ao4
Oo "Smiling Through."
wwniiiiiw ,1111111,[j, mjnnmiii i
FOR LIFE, FIRE
. WINDSTORM AND HAIL.
AND AUTOMOBILE
INSURANCE
AND AUTO LOANS SEE
J. V. CONATSER
\ Pho. 173 115 S. Burnett J
taa8saaagamg sMs«Mnnnininwiiiii i
AFTER 45
Very often aa you grc «v
older your digetfivetyv-
tem becomes deficient
and your blood can not
get the proper nourish-
ment. You feel littlest
and worn out. Try
a tingle bottle of
famout old Hot-
tetter's. Its stimu-
lating tierbt and
roots quickly help In
revitalizing the diget-
tive glands. At drug
•toret e verywher e.$ 1.50
HDSTETTER'S
Stomachic BITTERS
other countries which could pro-
duce cotton. Now they will bo
westic consumption of cotton wif,'our Permanent competitors. Am-
a resultant accumulation in the or,oa is Pacing l^s than half
hands of the Government. That of the worlt's cotton today-that
i8 an indirect admission that the IS- 5t is supping less than half
system was wrong from the be-'to£ the wor,d demand' And 'lt wi:l
Ring, a thing The Herald has con- never re^ain the ,ost business.
i It would have been much bet-
1 ter had the Agriculture Depart
One coal miner is killed in fie
United States for about every
338,000 tons of coal mined.
The youngest mountains a
the roughest. As time passes,
erosion soften their outlines.
The Carnegie Foundation for
the Advancement of Teaching
had resources of $26,704,272 on
June 30, 1936.
Schools to teach captive birds
how to regain use of their wings
have started in Austria and S'wit<
•erland.
degrees Fahrenheit, C0™h{™"hh
: min.,tp* flaked salmon- Shape 6 cutlets,
cooky sheets.
oven, 350
five to eight minute* or until boI- .. ~ .
den brown. Allow to cool one L ^ f1°nr- s,,fhtly beaten
one-half minutes, remve from pan bread '
with spatula. If desired roll im P °n *rPaR('d p,Bnk or heat
ediately around handle of wood- T' P,attpr- wlth
en spoon. It removed from nan fd P<)t"toeS *" Sh°Wn br0W" ,n
too soon, wafers will break apart ^ <>^n <460 degrees Fahrenheit)
and if too cool, they will not roll, T ^ ^ ul 5^
ed beets. Decorate with hard-
Dainty Cup Cakua I cooked ngg, serves si*.
Two* eggs, separated; two-'
thirds cup sweetened
condensed
three-fourths cup flour,
teaspoons baking powder,
The American Legion was or-
ganized as a caucus of world war
three
greased casserole instead of in the' one-half teaspoon lemon extrnct. veterans iu Paris in March, 1919,
manner described.
Prune Cake
Re pinb!es a fruit oak<>
Heat egg yolks with rotary egg and legion legislative work was
benter; add sweetened condensed, started in Washington the follow-
milk and continue beating until ing September.
'ARE YOU ONLY A-
HREE-QUARTER WIFE?
MEN.bocniue they are men,can
never undnmtand a three-
quarter wife—a wife who 1a all love
and klndneea three weeks tn •
month and a hell cat the rest of
the time.
No matter how your back acftw
—how your nerve# scream—don't
take It out on your huaband.
For three generation)) one woman
has told another how to go "amii-
Ing through" with Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound. It
help* Nature tone up the system,
thus lemenlng the discomforts from
the functional disorders which
women must endure In the three
ordeals of ttn 1. Turning from
girlhood to womanhood. '1 Pre-
paring for motherhood 3. Ap-
proaching "middle age "
Don't be a three-quarter wife,
take LYDIA K PINKHAM'8
VBOETAM-K cOMPorNDaai
tto "Smiling Through,"
We give FREE advertising ser-
vice for those wlrtilng position*
until they secure one. No lob, si>
charge.
Kidneys Must
Clean Out Acids
Th« only wry your body can c1ran out
Aol l* and poisonous wastes from youi
blood la thru 9 million tiny, delicate kid-
ney tubes or Altera, hut bewar* of cheap.
iruNtlr, Irritating Urufa. If functional
Kidney or Bladder dlaordera make yr u
uifTer from Oattlns Up Nlghta, Notvouh-
i «iia# Leg Palna, Rackache, Circles Und<r
rijoa, Dlr.zlneNM, Khsumatlc Fains, Acid-
ity, Burning, Smarting or Itching, don't
take chancea. Get the Docftor'a guaran-
(end preacrlptlon called ■ Cyatex (Hlaa-
Tex). Worka faat, safe and aure. In 48
• ourt It muat brln* new vitality, and li
guaranteed to Ax you up In one week or
BUSINESS COLLEGE
Draughon's (Practical Business College
J, w. Adamson, Proprietor
One month's salary pays for entire course
Denison, Texas.
barber"shops-
TRADE AT
MORRISON'S BARBER SHOP
Wbere you get first class
Sanitary Barber Serylce
Twd Barbers to Serve You
ODA STEWART H. M. MORRISON
60S W. MAIN
BEAUTY PARLOR
ARNOLD'S
BABBER AND BEAUTY SHOP
Improve you looks in comfort
COOL — CLEAN
409 W. Main
Phone 714 for Beauty Appointments
DENNEY'S
beauty shop
629 W. Main
Phone 818
LAUNDRY
IDEAL LAUNDRY
Damp Wash 10 pounds 49a
QuilVp 5 for $1.00
Laundry Work At Sensible Prices
Phone 388 619 Shephertl
OPTOMETRIST
DR. B. R. BUSBY
Optometrist ,, — '' *
Complete Optical Servicu
314% W. Main St. phone 8'J
PLANING MILLS
"CLOTHING
McMANUS
YELLOW FRONT STORE
New and Used Clothing
—We buy all kinds of Used Clothing-
See McManus when you want to
Buy Anything Sell Anything
Trade Anything
204 W. MAIN
mqney back on raturn of empty paokaga,
Cyatax coats only 9o # day at <1r
|nd th" guarantaa pnit*
day at drugglits
ctp ynu
Buy And Save
i 25 to 60 per cent
A complete line of -New and Used Fall
Clothing and Shoes for Men, Women
i and Children
J. C. REECE
Musical Instruments Jewelry
Lupgage Gam
206 W. Main
DENTIST _
Office Hours
8 A. M. to 8 P. M.
DR. P. L. CHASTAIN
Dentist
418 W. Main Denison
SPECIAL FINANCING OFFER
' On Bird Roofing
Have your roof fixed with Bird Roofing,
your house painted and repaired and have
it all included in one bill with payments
'spread over a 6 month to 3 year period.
See us for details.
' DENISON SASH and DOOR CO.
422 W. WOODARD
W
%>.
I
Short-Murray
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Phone 113
506 W. Main 8t.
r i
I
Business and Professional
Directory of Denison
1 -f
RADIO SERVICE
PHONE 93
For EXPERT RADIO SERVICE at Lowest
Prices. All repairs guaranteed 90 Days.
DENISON RADIO SERVICE
411 W. Main
CECIL HARDY
Better Radio Repairing
RCA Tubes Motorola radios
Phone 45
REPAIR SERVICE
Western Auto Associate Store
Radio and Bicycle Service
Oood Penn. Oil Davis DeLuxe Tires
FRFE Crankca-n and Tire Service
801 W. Main
TAXI
264 Taxi
10c per person
113 N. Rusk Phone 264
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The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 64, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 4, 1937, newspaper, September 4, 1937; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth327691/m1/2/: accessed May 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.