The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 74, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 18, 1940 Page: 2 of 4
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THE DENISON PRESS
WED., SEPT. 18th, 1940
THE DENISON PRESS
Kstaibllshsd la IBM
Telephone No. 100
Office of Publication 807 W. Main
LeWOY M. ANDERSON Editor
LeROY M. ANDERSON Jr Mechanical Sup't
LOUIS V. ANDERSON City Editor
J. O. HOLLIS Business-Advertising Manager
Issued Daily Except Sunday
National advertising representative Inland News-
paper Representatives, Inc., Wrifley Building,'* Chi
•ago, 111.
Dedicated to clean and responsive govermuen j
individual and civic integrity: to Individual anr
civic commercial progress.
BOX NUMBERS, Care Denison Pr«u ll! be & i
advertisers desiring blind addresses.
" S UBS CRIPTI ON RATES
One Week ...— _____ _______ 111
Ooe Month lie
Three Months (in advance) ..._ BOr
Six Months (in advance) $1.76
One Year (in advance) $8.60
CHARGE ACCOUNTS are acceptable from persons
having telephone listed in their own name and up-
on agreeing to remit when bill «i>. presented. 10
per cent will be added on unpaid private accounts
ifter 30 days from date of firat insertion.
CLOSING HOUR: Copy received by 0 a.
be published the same day.
m. wil.
ra.
CANCELLATIONS must be received by 10 a
in order to avoid publication in current issue.
ERRORS: The Deniaon Press will not be r«
sponsible for more than one incorrect insertion.
OUT OF TOWN ORDERS for classified ads ar
strictly payable in advance.
Any erroneoua statement reflecting upon the
character or reputation of any peraona will b«
gladly corrected if brought to the attention of the
publishers. The Denison Press assumes no respon-
sibility for errorr in advertising in ertioni beyonc
he price of the advertisement.
The Harvest Of Blackness
Awaiting Naziism
The strategy of terror with which the
Nazis operated to bring atbaut tihe crushing
of the nations of Europe up to the point
of England seems destined to fail miserable
in the latter ease for the reason they ara
attacking a democracy uliut has proifted by
the weakness of the fallen countries a t
well as to have learned the tactics of the
Nazis war machine.
Key reasons for the downfall of the
nations which have come under domina-
tion of the Nazis are given as insufficient
preparation, complacence and treachery in
their own country.
To begin with the greatest tool in the
■hand of a Democracy in combatting a foe is
in the faiot that the 'people will be kept in
formed as to the exact truth of things. A
Democracy which is told lie after lie
will soon be open to all kinds of treachery
from within For that reason a free
people want the truth. They will fight
more courageously and with more intelli-
gence and determination if tjhey are dealt
with fairly. A Democracy' does not fear
the truth about 'any situation, and
this becomes the hardest thing for a dic-
tator to ^Understand At the same time
it is the worst foe of a dictatorship, since
given tjhe truth, a free people, knowing
their worth and appreciating they are
trusted, will fight the jharder in the face
of dangers which would discourage a peo
pie in bondage >umder dictatorship.
Dictatorships, thrive only as they keep
the i>eople misinformed as to truth. They
have fooled their ^pepole into the present
false security and can only hope that the
truth will be kept back.
But the day is fast dawning when the
truith will break through the lines of cen-
sorship and even Germany will learn they
have been led astray and tftie subtle Nazi-i
scheme exposed. A fate far worse thar;
any the Natzishave visited on others awaits
them when the house they have builded
begins to crumble and fall on them.
T|he confusion, fear, disunity and ter-
ror which the Nazis have scattered among
other ^people will soon come home to roost.
It is still true that those who live by such
devices will die by t^hem and the very seed
which have been sown to disrupt other
countries will bring a harvest ten fold
worse in the land of the pepole who weht|
forth to bring about such a harvest oj
blackness.
men and bachelors, and couples
without any children, here is your
chance to do a good turn. . .A
woman from Greenville came up
the other day to make a purchase
at a local jewelry store for a
friend who was to marry in the
town of black land and white
people She asked us where a
certain jewelry store was. She
was standing within fifty feet of
it and the store was shown her,
whereupon she remarket! that she
had asked three other persons and
none of them could tell her. Mor-
al—advertise more, you jewelry-
men, as there is always a new
crop of people coming on who
don't know who and what you are.
However, we told the lady from
Greenvile that the incident showed
her just how fast people were
coming to (Denison. . . .But we
need to know our towh. Now
George Moulton is supposed to
know most peolpe and places here,
but a stranger was asking in his
presence two others this week
where he could find the city mis-
sion. Not one of them knew and:
they were less than a block from|
the place. Right now could you I
tell anyone, if yj>u had to, how
to get to the Smith Wood Pre-
serving company, or the Abe
Ross Truck Line headquarters? . . I
^Occasionally some one rings Tn or
| stops us on the street and reports
they have not received their paper
for several days. We ask our
subscribers in a daily footnote on
front page to pelase let us know
the very day they dc not get the
paper by 5 o'clock in the after-
noon. Thfct is the chief way we
have of knowing the paper is not
getting to you and we appreciate
your cooperating with us in let-
ting us know. . , .Maud Xretsinger
local reporter for the Sherman
(Democrat, a good scout if there
ever was one. She gives us splen-
did cooperation and we try to re-
turn in kind.
CtrPtUCF
ThisFastWtt/
-or Money Bach
Pitching
Fur quick relief from itching of eczema, pimples,
thleie' foot, icahies. rashes and "other ex-
ternally caused skin troubles, use world-famous.
:ooling, antiseptic, liquid D.D. D. Prescription,
".reaseless, stainless. Soothes irritation and
quickly stops intense itching: 35c trial bottle-
proves it, or your money back. Ask your
Jruggist today for D. D. D. PRESCRIPTION,
Sherman Abstract Company, Inc.
"Dependable Abstract Service"
J. E. MEADOR DDS
110 N. BURNETT
First Door North Security Uljy
T. |D. Green, Manager
108 N. Crockett St.
jPhone 369 _
Sherman, Texas (J
RATE
Watch Your
Kidneys/
Help Them Cleanae the Blood
Id of Harmful Body Waste %
Your kldnsya art constantly
.. (Tfc - -T-r. .
vast* matter from ths blood s
kldnsya sometimes lag In their work—
not act as Nature Intended—fall to t
5&2SSSI
thair work-—
mora Impurities that, If retained, m jr
polios the fyfttem and upsat tha whol*
May machinery.
Symptoms may ba nagging backaeha,
paralatant haadacna, attacks of diaalnaaa*
gattlng «p nights, swelling, puffin—
undar tha eyes—a faailng of narroua
anxtaty and loss of pap and itra>n.
Otfear signs of kidnay or bladder di*
ardar ara ■omatlmaa burning, scanty av
1 Time lc per word
8 Times 2c per word
6 Times, 3c per word
Minimum charge in foi 12 words
'For consecutive insertions)
Contract rates will be given
upon application- Legal rate* at
one cent per word per insertion.
W|ANiTED
Y^UNG LADY wants place to
work for room and board while
attending school. J.W.Adam-
son, phone 370. 72-3t
Rheumatic Happy;
Relieves Pain Quick
tee frequent urination.
There should ba no A
treatment la wlsar than n
Dean's Pills, Dean's have bean via _
naw friends for toon than forty year*.
They hare ■ nation-wide raputatfoa.
Am recommended by gratafol people tae
country erer. Ait four moi/ktor/ *>
Thar* should ba no doubt that pfoinj
-reatment la wiser than nefli '
Dean's Pi lis. Dean's bars bean
Thousands who suffered from the torturing
pains of rheumatism, sciatica, lumbago, neu-
ralgia nnd neuritis—arc certainly happy over
their discovery of NUKITO. Now tiiey have
found a quick-acting formula which speedily
relieves those exhausting muscular aches and
winning
DOAN SPILLS
.joy of reiki! from pain—so yc _
pence nnd sleep in comfort—be wist? ana try
NUKITO under this ironclad guarantee. If the
very first three doees do not relieve that crurl
pain to your satisfaction—your money will be
refunded. Don't suffer. Ask yourd'Ugjjiat today
for NUKITO on this guarantee. (T.N.CJ
5i:
WHAT
OTHER EDS
ARE THINKING
-• •
Interesting Bits
About Our Friends
ffEAKER J^AYBUfSN
The Texas sphere of influence
at Washington widened appreciab-
ly as the course of the last two
weeks' events elevated Repre-
sentative Sam Rayburn to the
speakership of the House and gave
Jesse Jones the position of Sec-
retary of Commerce in addition to
his job as Federal Loan Adminis-
trator. Of court?, the flishing
trip being enjoyed by Vice-Presi-
dent John Garner on his Uvalde
premises has been '{n the debit
side of Texas' prestige at the na-
tional capital, though honest Cs<c-
tus Jack probably realizes that
he would not od much to real in-
fluence in a Wasington run riot
with new deal plans for a third-
term administration. Dallas' own
Hatton Summers heads the pow-
erful judiciary committee. Mar-
vin Jones, who heads the " House
agricultural comittee, retires in
January to become Judge of the
Court of Claims, and it is rumor-
ed that he will receive the next
Supreme Court pla-e vacated. a,e or"e exceptions, notably Jes-
(The Joneses as well as the Tex- *• Jones- but "enority in service
ans seem to be getting along at has usually crashed the gate for
Washington.) t Texas and other Southern prefer-
It is worthy of note that the ex-1 ment at Washington. Until the
pension of Texas influence is due Solid South gets away from the
primarily to the Texas practice of u'ity in office is a good policy, oth-
keeping a good Congressman on '-ui^uoa luuoiSHaiiiuoa '33(0,C X^.ti?d
the job. This practice has been' er things being equal.—©alias
responsible for most of Southeml News
?A Progressive pastor
,A pastor of the _ progressive
type this week is orderfng a num-
ber of six inch blotters 2x6yi in
size. On the enameled side of the
blotter he is having a reproduced
six inches in regulation reproduc-
tion of a rule broke down to
eight inch measurements. The
wording on the face of the rule
challenges the reader to "Make it
a rule to attend" and then fol-
lows the name of the church, to-
gether with the several services
and the hours of meeting. Use of
printers ink and newspaper ad-
vertising is altogether too rare
with the churches, the greatest
business in the country. We ad-
vertise it on a scale many times
that would not do justice to a pea-
nut stand. Wannamaker, the
prince of merchants, and who in-
troduced advertising of merchan-
dise in newspapers on the scale
it belongs, was also a newspaper
advertiser and spent a srreat deal
of his own money to publicize the
Kingdom.
|Parades and Circuses
The time draws near when the
big tops are working their way
through the country, ^ parading
with bands and tassels, women in
tights and elephants with their
single file stunts, bringing with
them the hi-pitch man and the
sideshows. Who does not love a
circus and a parade Let us hope
we will have the big top here
again this year in a show like
Ringling Brothers. And speaking
of parades, we guess no man ever
enjoyed a parade more than May-
or Clarence Scott. It is told of
him that some three years back
when a little traveling circus
pitched their tents down in the
norheast part of the city, they had
no gas to put on the street parade,
influence at the national capitol Hearing of it, Mayor Scott made
where the Tradition of the Solid arrangements for them to get gas
South militates against the casting and tihe parade was given to the
of political plums in this direc- delight of hundreds of children
ition when they are entirely at the along the street. The company
discretion of either RepulHcan or showed and raised enough money
(Democratic administration. There to pay off and leave town in good
order.
Along the News Beat
Ma Batson that good soul whom
you see up and down the streets
with the tambourine and the big
smile for all, says she needs in
the worst way books, pencils, tab-
lets, shoes, little dresses, und
anything else a child attending
school must have. 'All you single
I
I?
miles of color and splendoi were viewed by more than 1,000.000 in Pasadena
nun 1 (1 nn Mn Im f 41... T* . ... .... _ r n ...
ROSE PARADE r |1
Cal., when tlv 50th annual flower parade "of the Tournament"of Roses wis heicT Here is a"ienIVni
view s;io\v;ng iitin a Ba. .jura's float, Taj Mahal,
Canned Foods Often Save
Day for Busy Housewife
!"\0 NOT let your supply of
' canned foods run low. There
re many times when cans are
ife-savers—on the days when you
(ecide to put up the winter drap-
fries, or go in for some strenuous
r ousecleaning, or when you have
i pent the afternoon with your
I ridge club and suddenly notice it
Is nearly six o'clock, too late to
I repare the dinner you originally
Planned.
Several of the dinners In this
week's menus come mostly from
cans, but you needn't apologize if
hubby brings a guest home with
him.
SUNDAY
Breakfast
Baked Apples
Griddle Cakes Maple Syrup
Country Sausage Coffee
Dinner
Roast Prime Ribs of Beef
Roast Browned Potatoes
Cranberry Relish Hot Rolls
Brussels Sprouts, Lemon Butter
Steamed Date Pudding,
Hard Sauce
Coffee
By JUDITH WILSON
MONDAY
Breakfast
Grapes
Ready-to-Serve Cereal
Scrambled Eggs Cocoa
Dinner
Chilled Tomato Juice
"London Broil Mashed Potatoes
Gravy Buttered Peas
Pineapple-Banana Salad
Cup Cakes Coffee
TUESDAY
Breakfast
Orange Juice
Cereal Cooked In Milk
Date-Bran Muffins Coffee
Dinner
•Baked Ham with Honey Glaze
Mashed Sweet Potatoes
•Asparagus au Gratin
Mixed Green Salad
•Peach Bowl Packaged Cookies
WEDNESDAY
Breakfast
Canned Figs
Corned Beef Haul with
Poached Eggs
Toast CoiTee
Dinner
•Spaghetti Milanese
Packaged Bread Sticks
Sliced Tomatoes with Horseradisl
Dressing
•Whole Canned Apricots with
Custard Sauce
THURSDAY
Breakfast
Pineapple Juice
Ready-to-Serve-Cei eal
Hot Biscuits Bacon Preserves
Coffee
Dinner
•Beef-Kidney Pie, with
„ Biscuit Topping
•Scalloped Tomatoes with Leeks
Butterscotch Tarts, Whipped
Cream
Short-Murray
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Phone 113
401 W. WOODARD
.Advertise In The Denison Press
Dr. W. Doak Blassingame
Announces the opening of hla of-
flceu for the general practice of
medicine, surgery and obstetrics, at
321-221 Security BulldliiK.
Office Phone 72T
Itesldeuce l'lioue 780
DO IT NOW!
See Grayson County
Abstract and Real
Estate Company for
ABSTRACTS
Kraft Bldg. Pho. 883
P.SJM^r^"!i Wffl«ca!*88lBB8S8S88g881W8aP
John C. Seale
BUILDING
CONTRACTOR
ICO Per Cent Union Labor
USE OUR
BUDGET PLAN
For Purchase of
• BICYCLES
• HADIOS
• ACCESSORIES
• TIRES
• UtATTERIES
M. K. JONES
IF YOU WANT
THE BEST IN
HOME MADE
ICE CREAM
You will not gt wrong by
placing your orders
—with—
Barker Dairy
AND
and Creamery
115 S. Rusk Phone 1274
FRIDAY
Breakfast
Sliced Oranges
Eggs Pried in Butter
Toasted Biscuits Jam Coffee
Dinner
•Tuna Pish Turnovers
•French Peas
Sauted Mushrooms
•Avocado-Beet Salad
Stuffed Dates Coffee
SATURDAY
Breakfast
Honeydew Melon
Spicy Apple Waffles, with
Maple Syrup Frizzled Ham
Dinner
Cocktails Cheese Chips
Roast Leg of Lamb
Potato Croquettes
Eggplant Creole
Stuffed Cucumber Salad
Banana Turnovers Lemon Sauce
* Recipes will be given in subse-
quent columns. '
;Vpply Deep Red Mai: p
To Match Purplish Styles
HOI) SI
ON SUNDAY MORN. IF HEADACHE} COME,
-OR ANY OTHER DAY.
HOP C-UT OF BED AND EASE YOUR HEAD
T'lE ALKA-SELTZER WAY.
I
HEADACHE
Do You Li* Awake Nights?
JUk ILLIONS do. The worst at
' * it la, you never know when
• sleeplesa night la coming.
Why not be prepared?
OR. MlltS
C(f*rv*M*nt Nervine Tablets
kelp te relieve tense nerves
and permit refreshing sleep.
Stop la at the drug store to-
day arid get a package.
Try Dr. Miles Nervine Tab-
lets for Nervousness, Sleap-
lesansss due to Nervousness,
Mtrvo%u Headache, Nervous
btdUjtrlirm., Ntrwnu Irrtta-
BauD f v cage SM
Large .C's/dkage W
If It Is
WELDING
You Need
Then You Need
George Clark's
WELDING SHOP
DAY PliONE 824
WHEN you wake up in § NIGHT PHONE 1404-J
the morning with a 114 S. Auatin
it to wear"1'ot'KSS
about it. Have your ever tried
a glass of tangy sparkling
Alka-Seltzer?
Alka-Selteer is in complete
solution, ready to go to work
as soon as you swallow it.
The action of Its analgesic (so-
dium acetyl salicylate) is made
more positive by alkaline buffer
salts which protect It and speed
up its action.
Because the analgesic is com.
bined with alkaline buffers In
Alka-Seltzer, millions of people
find it effective In relieving the
distress of Headache, Colds, "Morn-
ing After", Acid Indigestion, Mus-
cuhir Fatigue and Muscular Aches
and Pains.
Your druggist has Alka-Seltzer
in convenient small and economical
large packages or he will be rf
glad to serve you a glass of
Alka-Seltzer at his
fountain. Why
not try it?
TYPEWRITERS AND
ADDING MACHINES
New and Rebuilt—$12.50 up
Office Equipment and Supplies
Every machine fully guaranteed
for one year. Distributors New
Royal and Victor Portable Adding
Machines. We rebuild, repair,
clean and overhaul ALL MAKES.
Work fully guaranteed; over BOO
machines under contract. Type-
writers and adding machines rent-
ed, $2.50 per month and up.
—Easy Terms—
North Texat Typewriter Co.
108 N. Crockett
Phono 369 Sherman
8 11
1 i
Printing
0 ®
Frc
cut
ler
Ua\
Cull
hui
Inn
wit
lint-
toe
J
list!
mil
ent
i .
I AVE YOU changed your make-
I * up yet? Or, have you cluni
is long as possible to your sum
per make-up and your skin that
By JACQUELINE HUNT
turned such a
beautiful bron/.e
during the
summer? If
you want to
c o n t i n ue to
place the em-
phasis on your
warm golden
coloring, then
shopping will
be a problem
for you this
winter — hats,
dresses, acces-
sor ies — all
a definite orange-red; a deep re J
something like the color of a ripii
black cherry; a clear bright true
red with neither gold or bluish
undertones, and the bluh.h red1
that are being emphasized so
much this season.
If your skin has lots of nalura
color, with dark hair and eyes foi
contrast, the deep rich reds wti
flatter you. If you are willing t
experiment, you may also fin-
one of the subth- but rich blue it
shades that you can wear. Us
cheek rouge in the same shade a
your lipstick and apply It wltn i
light hand. Choose a face powui.
I hat has enough bcire atH ro>f •
it to match as nearly as unss.it)'
have gone your own skin tones Nnll oci!*1'
purple, wine in a deep ieil to match voui op
or fuchsia stick or in a soit. rosy nutui
in tone. Ol tone will be loveliest foi ycu Ri; I
course, you can shun these blue- rouge and llosiick shades <inu"
red costume shades and the new be worn oniv hv th" c,''l wh
purplish make-up, but the (act .kin is definitely aoiutu u ><i v
mains you must redecorate your in coloi-ln- ai d <vho h . ■ ;> >
face from time to time. Yoiw kin natural color In h i eh '. *
begins to look drab at this sea.son careful not to get a sh "!' n ' i
in spite of all you can do. II the (oo nufh velbw In it r nw i
purplish shades make you look ms^t sh'de that Is faiilv decu i
freakish, avoid them, of course, color wi'h lust a hint of to <■ e
but do choose some make-up that often rrore flnttrrinp -thfin tlv
is a bit richer and deeper in tone., m^rp i«v nv colors
ymi!ialul 1 V(iUt skin is clear In qunlllv
younger and will give you tonic-' n„u •.
thing of the same psychological reth.r light In coloiing, s
lift that you get from buylmi a <•«" bright red lipstick and ruun
new frock or a new hat are voui' natural shades. Howevei
There Is a wide ranue ol tall you may do a bit of experimenting
make-up colors. Shades in Up-. <n the more subtle blue-reds, es-
stick are becoming lovelier all the pecially if you would like to weai
time, probably because manufac- some of the wine or plum costume
turers are doing all Ihey can to colors. The clear reds are always
MISS HUM
I assure smoothness an6> perma-
nence and becnusc they have made
a mofe careful study of ^kln
jton^s You must study youi own
■skin lonrt>, when choosing a new
color for yourself
To make the correct choice ol
rcime and I'pstlck easier, remem-
ber that tliere are four main
"tone<" in maks-up: rust, which it
beautiful with black and equally
striking with most of the brown
rostume shades. Keep your pow-
der fairly cool—something In the
creamy beige group. Wear any of
the clear red nail polishes, light
or dork as you prefer. Avoid all
purplish-red polish shades unless
you find a purplish red lipstick
that is flattering.
Anythins from a
VISITinG CARD
to a
nEWSPAPER
Get our prices
for Superior Printing
Anderson & Sons Printery
11
Phone 300
607 Main Street
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Anderson, LeRoy M. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 74, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 18, 1940, newspaper, September 18, 1940; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth328036/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.