The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 242, Ed. 1 Monday, April 7, 1941 Page: 4 of 4
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Monday, april fth. id4i
SOCIETY NOTES
Phone Society News to 800
Girl ReMrvM, Hi-Y
Have Vet per Service
1 The Denison Hi-Y chapter and
the Girl iRleserves held their an-
nual vesper services at & p. ni.
Sunday afternoon at Waples
Menorial Methodist church in ob-
servance of Palm Sunday.
The principal speakers were
Jack Cooke who spoke on "The
First Palm Sunday," Reba Davis
who apoke on "Actions of Chris
iDuring Passion Week"; and
David Dorchester who spok^i on
"What Palm S"unday and Passion
Week Should Mean to Us Today.'
Opening with a processional the
program included the call to wor-
ship by Jesse Boren, president o
the Hi-Y Chaptr; scripture read-
ing by Evelyn Dunbar and the
Litany was read by Jean Edmis-
ton, president of the Girl Re
serves, and Tommy Rae Derri'l
The High School Glee Club
furnished the music and William
Henry Talmage, the music in-
structor of high school, was di-
rector and organist. The selec-
tions included "Fairest Lord Jes-
us," by the Glee Club; "Bless the
Lord" by the Boys' Glee Club
and "Jesus Joy of Man's Desir-
ing" by the mixed chorus. "Now
the Day is Over," was a musical
benediction by the Glee club.
"Taps" was played by Keith
Ryle and Jack Knaur.
Program arrangements were
mode by a committee of the
sponsors of the Girl Reserves in
eluding Miss Clarine Johnson,
Miss Marzell Graft, Miss Fran-
ces Shafer and Miss Mary Fran-
ces Wilson, and J S' Kimble and
J T Krattiger sponsors of the Hi
Y club.
XXI Club Plans
Annual Luncheon
The XXI Club met Saturday
afternoon at the Hotel Denison
Roll call was answered with un
Usual .positions held by business
Women and Mrs. J S Knaur,
member of the XXI C'lub, but
representing the Business Womens
cluib, of which she is also a mem-
ber, reviewed the work of the
Business Women Club, its
functions, and its recreational
program. S'he also mentioned spe
cific programs conducted by th<
organization. Mrs. Knaur then
reviewed' the success of Mrs.
Eleanor Patterson, Washington,
in her career as a publishes
Mrs. William Campbell was also
a speaker on the progra&n.
Mrs F P Mooney, presided ovei
the business s-ession, and plan
iwere made for the annual sprint;
luncheon, to be held April 26 at
Hotel Denison. Mrs C W Gantei
is general chairman of the
luncheon and Mrs W Roy Millet
is program chairman.
Rainbow Assembly
Attends Church In
A Body Sunday
The Denison Rainbow Assemb-
ly attended church services in
body Sunday morning to observe
the 19th anniversary of the
founding of the order. The group
attended' service at the Firsl
Presbyterian church. They wer
headed by Katie Marie Thornton,
worthy advisor; Mrs, A L Ford,
mother advisor; and Mrs. R I
Stover, assistant mother advisor
With the membership of ap-
proximately 85 girls between th<
age of 13 and 20, the organiza-
tion carries oct a character build-
ing program. Membership is mad'
up of daughters of Masons, o>
Eastern Star members or girl?
recommended by members o.
these orders.
Royal Neighbors
Plan To Attend
District Meet
Plans for attending the district
convention at Houston April 16-
17 will he made «>t a special
meeting of the Royal Neighbors of
America Tuesday nipht at 7:30
at the home of Mrs. T W H Flinn,
716 W. Gandy, Miss Genevieve
Sweeney, publicity chairman, an-
nounces. Mrs. Effie Strom, oracle,
will preside.
Delegates namen to attend the
district meeting are Mrs. Strom,
delegate, and Mrs. Flinn, alter-
nate. Other club members will al-
so attend.
■ t:
Party Given By
Rod And Gun Club
The iJenison Rod and Gtr
flub members entertained with r.
party Saturday night at the club
Several guests attended' the par
ty.
Arrangement* n-ere in char;
of thef house ccmimittee of
nrWch J. D. Bond is chairman.
Methodist Union
Will Be Entertained
By Trinity Church
The young people of Trinity
Methodist church will entertain
the Central Sherman Union at
the church Tuesday night at 8:00
o'clock.
Candles representing the only
means of light in the days of
Christ will be used instead of
modern electrical variety. Form-
ing the background will be a
huge window picturing the Lord
in the Garden of Gethsemane. The
program consisting of talks and
special songs will be given by
members of Trinity church. The
c9mmunion will close the program
after which games and other
forms of recreation w^ll be held
in the. basement of the church
and refreshments will be served.
■ ;
Couple Connected
With Show To Be
Married Wednesday
mrnm
♦ 675,000,
MACHINE TOOL INDUSTRY
IS BREAKING ALL RECORDS
PRODUCING EQUIPMENT TO
BUILD DEFENSE WEAPONS
95.697
1938
1939
1940 1941 (Est.)
HAttOHAL AHOCtAHON Of MANUfACTuRIRS
Romance of a couple connect-
ed with the World of Today Show
calne to light in Denison Saturday
when Bernard Black and Miss
Monica Barker obtained' their
marriage license.
Mr. Black is from 'Miaimi,
\rizona and Miss Barker is from
Rochester, Minnesota.
They plan to be married Wed-
nesday, April 9, in Ardmore,
Okla. Rev. John S. Mullen, pas-
tor of the First Christian church
there will read the ceremony.
Revival Continues
At Baptist Church
The revival meeting continues
th:8 week at the First Baptist
church, Dr. J. F. Murrell, pastor.
The evangelist, Rev C S Cadiwal-
lader speaks tonight on ""Enemies
of the Cross."
The Sunday services were well
attended and there were ten addi-
tions to the church ana two pro-
fessions of faith not yet uniting
with the church. The evangelist
.spoke Sunday morning on "Heav-
en" and Sunday night on "A
Conference in the Moonlight,"
basing his Scripture lesson on
the third chapter of John, Jesus
conversation with Nicodemus.
The morning services at 9:30-,
■ire well attended. The music at '
the services are of very high type.
Earl Rogers leads the singing in
an inspiring way.
/In a single airplane engine
there are often 900 different
parts—and counting duplicate
parts, a total of more than 8,000
separate pieces of metal. Yet with
the exception of the rocker arms,
every square inch of every one of
those pieces must be machined—
that is, «haped to size on a ma.
ichine by metal-cutting devices
that are called machine tool.s.
Remembering that defense or-
ders have already been let for
more than 130,000 engines, and
more are to come, you begin to
get some idea of the reason for
today's tremendous machine tool
demand.
Airplane engines, however, are
only one itetn on the defense pro-
gram. On the order are 50,000
planes (most plane builders do
not make their own engines),
300,00.0 machine guns, 1,700,000
rifles, and an endless list of other
armamet' ana munitions equip-
ment—all consisting of metal
parts made on (machine tools.
Fortunately the industry had r
"warm-up" for its stupendous
job. Ordinarily, machine tools are
used' to make vacuum cleaners
frigerators, telephones, plumb-
ing supplies and other peace-tinn
products. (But for several years
before national defense suddenly
became the Amricon problem, the
Ino'usty shipped machine tools to
the same problem there.
The industry, therefore, knew
England and France to help solve
in a general way what would be
needed for defense production
and without waiting for plans,
schedules, orders, or government
funds, set out to fulfill this need.
It takes from four months to tw,
years to build a machine tool and
imost types have to be made to or-
der. They cannot be turned out in
duplicate by the thousands tike
radios and automobiles and ke|
ready for sale as needed.
The expansion of the industry
in "warming-up" for, and then
tackling, its home defense jobs, is
told in these remarkable figures:
Machine tool production which in
the four years of 1931-34 aver-
aged only $30,000,000 was pushe
up in 1939 to $2/10,000,000. Even
the 1929 peak didn't go that
high. Then in 1940, that produc-
tion was more than doubled'—to
$450,000,000. This year it will
ue increased to between $050,-
000,000 and $750,000,000. Prac-
tically all of it is for the defense
program of the United States—
end- for Britain.
This amazing expansion is be-
ing accomplished by (1) building
new plants; (2) installing more
eauiipiment in old plants; (3) let-
ting manufacturers not othei-wi.se
engaged in the defense program
to make parts, important units
and even whole machines; (4)
training and' employing new
men so equipment can be used
night and day, on two and three
shifts; and (5) working overtime.
College music faculty, haa in
nounced.
Presentation of two major
Bach compositions for chorus ano
orchestru under the direction o
Bain, a chamber music program,
and a symphony concert under the
direction of Floyd Graham whicl.
will premiere compositions^ by
two important Texas composer
are highlights of the three da;
festival.
Bach chorales will be sung bv
small choral groups between th
major programs and trumpet
ers' music will herald these larger
musical programs frtfm the rool
of the college administrator
building much as is done on the
Bach Bethlehem Festival at Beth
lehem, Pennslvania, Bain said.
Dr. James Shelby Thomas
Chrysler Man
To Address
Etex Chamber
Engineering
Society Meet
Is Scheduled
Mrs. E G Hosford, route 1.
Good Neighbors To
Be Entertained
By Mrs. Chapman
The Good Neighbors club of the
West End will meet Tuesday af-
ternoon at 2 o'clock at the home
of Mrs. Ray Chapman, 160(5 W.
Walker. Mrs J A Heacker will be
co-hostess,
Mrs J 0 Bush, president, urges
ill members to be present.
Mr and Mrs J E Dorman Jr.,
and children, Joan Carolyn ana
S'ue Marolyn of Greenville were
weekend visitors in the home of
Mr. Dorman's parents, Mr and
Mrs J E Dorman, Route 1.
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Gant are
moving today into new quarters
at G17 E. Heron street. Mr. Gant
is associated with the Lytle com-
pany in the construction work of
the Denison dam. Victor Thill,
also connected with the company
is making his home with the
Gants.
Campus Capers
By JtH.IBNE DORMAN
BRIEFS
Henry Jennings, Jr., was a
isitor in Sherman Sunday.
Sam Turner Jr., 910 W. Main,
was a visitor in Bonham Sun-
Jay.
Mr and Mrs Jack Barnet;
.pent Sunday in Dallas attending
a motorcycle race.
R. L. Braswell, 1326 W. Bono,
s confined to his home with ill-
ness.
Mr. and Mrs. T. Emerson An
derson of Bonham spent Sunday
in the city visiting their parents
Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy M. Anuer-
son and Mrs. Mittie B, Cox.
Ayimar Cater, Denison district
U. S'. engineer safety superinten-
dent will attend the Texas Safe
Conference to be held in Houston
Tuesday and Wednesday. He
plans to leavt Denison tonight.
cies and sense of rhythm ... In
that case, some of Joe Louis' op-
ponents should make great cycl-
ists, they have a fine sense of ped-
aling . . . Two columnists think
John I.. Lewis is the directing i
force behind the labor troubles . . |
. Why doesn't the government do !
something quick about the labor |
Ftoppages in national defense in-
dustries? . . • Add good news: Ja- |
pan's exceedingly quiet stance now I
that the axis have moved in the
Balkans. If Matsuoka opens his
mouth now he may find a British
foot in it . . . Blaine Rideout. for-
mer great NTSTC runner, now on
the Durant ILS faculty, keeps in
trim even now. A great favorite
with the students and faculty,
Lieut. Col. Robert L. Cox, sta-
tioned at Brown wood, spent Sun-
day in the city visiting his family
and mother, Mrc. M. B. Cox.
'Mrs Ralph Senter and daughter
Patricia, of Lonuka, Arkansas,
visited ,'riends in S)eninon Sunday
en route to Greenville to visit
Mrs. Senter's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. A N Julian.
Mr and Mrs Elmer R' Wrinkle
113 W Heron, were in Ardmore,
Okla., Sunday visiting with
friends and' relatives. They wer
accompanied home by their so
Allen. 1
"Mr and Mrs C R Hosford and
*on Glenn have returned to Mt.
Pleasant after vi*itin* haw with
Mr. Ho«ford' parents, *r, and
J)o you boys have your dates
for Senior Class day? If not, you
had better hurry, your best girl
will already have her's.
Opal Butcher seemed to have
had a fine time this weekend.
There was only one disappoint-
ment and that was because some-1
body couldn't get together with
somebody else. Get it, we do.
Everyone seems to be wailing
over the thought of graduating
and having to order his or her in-
vitations. Put they don't make
half as much noise as the ones
who are not graduating and not
getting to order invitations.
At noon today we saw Warren
Reynolds, June Renfro and the
rest of the gang giving the
gab, as usual.
Saw i Ernestine Burks this
morning—she was twirling her
baton, as usual,
Every day Jean Edmiston pas-
ses the fourth period study hall
and peers dreamingly inside? Get
it? We don't either but give us a
break and we'll find out.
Aha! The Newsome boys just
don't care for girls. But A J was
talking to one in the library the
other day. Don't tell us he is go-
ing to ibreak down and give the
girls a chance after never having
anything to do with one?
Who is it that Dick Carroll
makes eyes at in the study hall'.'
Jiilly Wilson must be trying to
beat somebody's tiime—does he
have a chance?
Bobby Cherry has a hard time.
Say —who asked him to go to
the Drum and Bugle shindig?
How did we find out? Oh, we get
•round.
EVERYDAY—
(Continued from page one)
spell college, much less attend it.
A Detroit man filed for divorce,
claiming his wife didn't love him
any more- Just T>eeause she made
him soup of eggshells, soap and
rubber bands, then put a sign on
the garage, 'Garage for rent and
J man for sata." P.S.: he got the
divorce ... A check reveals that
'despite their sense of rhythm, mu-
sicians as a whole are lousy dane-
I er*. Athletes make the best be-
cause of their control over mua-
The Dallas flower show drew
122,400 visitors over a seven-day
period . • . Two young men were
killed last night in a wreck near
Howe, others were hurt ... A Dal-
las pastor claimed from his pulpit
that the Nazis started the IJS la-
bor wars. Yeah, along with the
commies, ad infinitum . • . Don
Budge will marry a Stanford U.
soph sometime in June. He's the
tennis player . . Elmer Layden,
1 ro football head's contract gives |
him wider power over the circuit
than that held by Kenesaw I.an-
dis in baseball ... An OPM of-
fice will be established soon at
Paris. . .And Paris high spring
football started officially today.
Ten lettermen from last year's
champs . . Nan Wynn, the singer,
fold herself sight unseen to movie
scouts. She started her career
with the last lines she said. To
with, "I'm all through, this is the
end".. .Osa Johnson's African jun-
gle shots were used in profusion
for sequences in Road to Zanzibar,
the film of Crosby. Lamour, Hope.
INCREASE-
(Continued from page one)
industries in 1939, compared with
2,') in 1937; K02 wage earners in
1939 compared with 846 in 1937;
wages in 1939 amounted to $617,-
806 compared with $830,263 in
1937; cost of materials, etc., fuel,
purchased electric and energy
tract work, $10,40/1,006, in 1939
compared with $15,850,234 in
1937; value of 1939 products was
$13,486,798 compared with $18,-
880,387; value added by manu-
facture in 1939 was $3,085,792
compared with the 1937 figure of
$3,030,153.
For Grayson county as a whole,
the census lists 63 manufacturing
and printing and publishing indus-
tries for 1939, compared with 48
in 1937; 2,137 wage earners in '39
compared with 2,184 in '37; 1939
wages were compiled as being $1,-
399.725, compared with $1,629,-
530 in 1937; cost of materials,
etc., fuel purchased, electric en-
ergy and contract work in 1939
was found to be $17,675,298, com
pared with $22,587,642 in ^937;
value of 1939 products was $22,-
851,573, compared with 1937 val-
ue of $27,674,333; value added
by manufacture in '39 was $5,-
176,275, compared with $5,086,-
691 in 1937.
Because they account for a> neg-
ligible portion of the national out-
put, plants with annual production
valued at less than $5,000 have
been excluded from census reports
since 19,19.
One of America's foremost ad-
vocates of practical industrial de-
velopment for the South, who
coupled pioneering in that fie' '
with a dist'ngushed career as an
educator, is Dr. James Shelby
Thomas, former president of the
Chrysler Institute of Engineering
at Detroit, who will speak o:i
"Modern Industrie 1 Trends" on
the Monday mornig business ses-
sion of the East Texas Chamber
of Commerce annual convention
at Corsicana, April 20, 21 and
22.
! Dr. Thomas was educated in
| Milligan College, Lynchburg Col-
I lege, University of Chicago, and
! Oxford University in England.
He was the first State Supervisor
of Rural Schools in the nation
in Virginia. Later he was pro-
fessor of Secondary Education ;
University of Alabama. In 1929
he became chief economist for
Commonwealth and Southern
Corporation, and in' this position
he pioneered the work of locating
industry I establishments in the
f?outh. He became president of
CI arks on Co"'ege of Technology,
and later present of Ihe Chrys-
ler Institute r.l Detroit, holding
both posts simultaneously.
"It is a matter of great satis-
faction to me now to see the
interest in industrial development
in the South," said Dr. Thomas.
When I first started advocating
this in educational meetings thi
ty-five years ago, 1 was consider
ed a crank, thpn a prophet. But
have lived to see my dre-vms
come true, and today we ar •
on the threshold of thi.- great de-
velopment."
into account, it was pointed out.
Wages earned by the ,Denison
employee? for 1939 was reported
as being $299,842. No figures
were listed for ,1937. Profits or
losses in this division cannot be
calcaulated, the census said, be-
cause no data are collected for
certain expense items such as in-
terest, rent, depreciation, taxes,
Insurance and advertising. This
also applies to cost of materials,
etc.
Cost of the materials, fuel pur-
fhnoe", elnetric energy and con-
tract work for the 22 industries
in 1939 were listed as being $5,-
225,478 in 1939 with no figures
listed for 1937. The aggregates
include large amounts for duplica-
tion due to use of the products of
some indstries as materials by oth-
ers.
Value of Denison products in
1939 was declared to be $6,121,-
662. no figures listed for ,1937;
value added by manufacture in
1939 was $896,184, less cost of
materials, etc., fuel, purchased
electric energy and contract work.
Sherman reported 25 manufac-
turing and printing and publishing
MARKETS
DENISON MARKETS
Poultry and Efc*
Leghorn fryers, 2% lbs up ...18c
Colored fryers, 2 to 2 'i lbs. ..20c
Hens, 4 lbs. and up 16c
Hens, under 4 pounds 14c
Old roosters 6c
Turkeys, young hens 14c
Turkeys, old toms 9c
Turkeys, old hens 1 lc
Turkeys, No. 2 7 to 9c
Infertile eggs (white) ..., 20c
Mixed eggs (candled) J8c
Guineas, each 26c
Butter, best grades 30c
Cotton
Strict middling 10.75c
Grain
Corn, yellow 50c
Corn, white (red cob) 50c
Wheat, No. 1 75c
Barley, No. 2 35c
Oats, No. 3 (bulk) 28c
Operettas To
Be Chosen By
Texas People
P)AI-LAS, Tex., April 7—Texas
theatre-goers will be given an op-
portunity of selecting the ten
STuibert operettas which will com-
prise the summer season of Opera
Under the Stars, to be presented
nt Fair Park Casino on the State
Fair Grounds, beginning here on
FVidfy, June 20.
A list of thirty-seven of the
most famous of the more than
500 operettas produced by Messrs
Lee and J J Shubert has been
made available and from this liat
i COLLEGE STATION, April 7
] —The Texas Section Society for
the Promotion of Engineering
Education (S' P E E) will hold
its tenth annual meeting at Rice
Institute, April 11-12, according
to the program issued here by
H C DiMinghalm, professor of elec-
trical engineering at Texas A. and
M. College and secretary-treasur-
er of the Texas section.
Outstanding engineers from all
of the engineering schools in
Texas will appear on the program
as speakers or disscussion leaders
during the two-day program. All
hen House, on the campus, with
J H Pound, of Rice Institute,
vice-chairman of the association,
presiding. Dean II B Weiser, of
Rice, will deliver the address of
welcome anil' J W Kidd, Texa"
College of Mines and Metallurgy,
association ehaiirnan, will give the
response. Other spetkers on the
banquet program include: ).) R
Prentice, president, SPEE, Rose
phases of engineering education
will be covered by the speakers
at the meetings to be held on the
Rice campuj.
The annual banquet will h
held in the Lounge IR.oom, Co-
Polytechnic Institute; and H E
Slay maker, British Consul at
Houston.
PqJmcoU
HY don' th* feller
that *ez, "I'm no speech maker,"
let it go at that, instead of talkln'
fer an hour t' prove it. Some speak-
ers can talk longer and say less
than some women I know. Longfel-
low once said, "A man is either a
hammer or an anvil." If he wuz
livin' t'day I bet he would say some
of them luncheon club speakers are
a bellows. Down home last week
Wamp Mitcheltree wuz t' make a
after dinner talk at th' weekly busi-
ness men's luncheon at Mrs. Aber-
nathies Emporium of rest Hotel.
Well he wuz scared stiff and I sez,
"Gwan Wamp give it t' them, tell
'em all you know." He turned t'
me and sez, "I might as well tell
them all we both know, it won't
take any longer." I reckon th*
greatest after dinner speech I've
ever heer'd wuz th' other day a
feller sez, "Walter, I'll take th'
checks fer ever'body." I'm
goin't' th' wagon boys these
shoes are killin' me. B C N
I you on N B C Wednesday
_ _ nite on th' red network.
—Whltey Ford, "Duke of Fadueah."
0
Do You Know
TEXAS
A reader of this newspaper
can get the answer to any ques-
tion of fact about Texas by writ-
ing A. Garland Adair, Curator of
Patriotic Exhibits, Texas Mem-
orial 'Museum, Austin. Texas.
the repertoire of ten op.'ieitr.s
v.-i11 be selected. Among the fam-
ous pieces are Student Prince.
Blossom Time, Rose Marie, Coun-
tess Maritaa, Desert Song, Bitter
Sweet, The Gay Divorce, 'Ihe
Merry Widow and others.
Balloting on the selections will
close on May 10, and the reper-
toire will be made up shortl;
thereafter from the 1nost popular
selections sent in.
"Opera Under the Stars" will
be sponsored by thei State Fair
of Texas and1 will give Texans tin
opportunity to see Broadway pro-
ductions with Broadway stars,
at very popular prices. The Fair
Park bandshell is being rer.iodeleu
into Fair Park Casino and \\i
seat more than 6,000. Top price1
for the Broadway productions
will be one dollar.
Farm Clubs,
Boy Scouts
To Cooperate
-COLLEGE STATION, April 7
—Cooperation between 4-11 boys'
clubs and Boy Scouts was fore-
cast in a memorandum of under-
standing, signed January 6, be-
tween the Extension Service of
Texas A. and' M. College, and
the Boy Scouts of America.
The memorandum provides that
the two programs will be kept
separate and distinct, but each
party to it agreed that "We shall
ask our leaders to faVniliarizc-
themselves with the other's pro-
gram. We will recognize success-
ful achievement in either pro-
gram and give credit to such
achievement when it is in accord
with specifications of our respec-
tive programs, and encourage
each to meet needs in the field of
all boys as our respective pro-
grams ann .methods permit."
Annual Meeting
Of Society Is
Slated April 18
AUSTIN, Tex., April 7—Wal-
ter Prescott Webb, Director of
• he Texas State Historical Associ-
■ ''on. announced recently that the
Forty Fourth Annual Meeting of
th ■ Association will be held in
Austin on April 18 and 19. Head-
quarters will be at the Driskill
Hotel.
Among t'he out.-tanding speak-
ers scheduled for this year's pro-
gram arc Dr. Ralph Lounsbury
of the National Archives at Wash
inpton, D. C.. and Sob S. Wilcox,
preserver of the Laredo Ar hives,
of Laredo, Texas.
The Handbook of Texas, an en-
cyclopedia of Texas history, now
the major project of the State
Historical Association will be the
subject of a round table confer-
ence on Friday morning, April 18.
Ivitations to attend this confer
rnce have been extended to all
patriotic, regional, and historical
socitie- in Texas. Acecptances
have already been received from
most of the societies asked to
confer on the promoting of this
hook, in which will be recorded
the great history of Texas.
Memorable Passage: "A patri-
ot finds moi* difficulty in pro-
tecting his country in times of
peace while the people are slum-
bering in the cradle of harmony
than in defending it in time of
war when they are shocked by
battle's carnage into life and ac-
tion." James Stephen Hogg.
Q When and who issued a proc-
lamation granting full pardon to
all ex-confederates (except cer-
tain leaders) who would take an
unqualified oath of allegiance and
were otherwise qualified to vote
in their respective states?
A. May 21, 1865—Andrew
Johnson
Oddity: Fiohi Emory Peak in
the Big Bend park area of Texas
one may see the siun aa it rises
oiveir the mountains of Chihuahau,
'vlexieo.
Q. Will the Texas Memorial Mu-
seum be open to the public on
S*an Jacinto Day?
A. The Museum is open every
day of the year with the excep
lion of Christmas and New \ ear.
Editorial: "We live in God's
country and we are a big nation
j in population and territory, still
we are too crowded for a fifth
column."—Joachin Besen, Boerne
'iexas.
Historical: Thomas J. Rusk took
the oath of office March 2<5, 1846,
as United States Senator, the first
to .serve from Texas. A few days
th"T' !ifte', General Sam Houston
aoo took the oath; thus Ru«1'
became the Senior Senator and
Houston the Junior Senator.
Advertise in the Denison Press
Oriental
Cream'!
a o u « a u o
Ivm a touck tl utfc.
'action. Kmplurrt
that toft, lender tkla
•f yuuth J
- - ■ - — '
t
Bach Festival
Dates Are Set
i DENTON, Tex., April 7
More than 2/100 musicians and
music lovers ore expected on th •
campus of the North Texas Stat •
Teachers College May 2, 3, 4 for
v hat it believed to be the first
Bach Festival ever uuderhnkn by
en institution of higher learninr
in the Southwest, Dr. Wilfred C.
Bain, director of the Teacher*
1 DON'T DO
THE WASHING
ANY MORE
Wise Women
Send Their Laundry
TO
LAUnDRY CL€ftlT€PCr
Phone 716 For Pickup Service
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Anderson, LeRoy M. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 242, Ed. 1 Monday, April 7, 1941, newspaper, April 7, 1941; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth328202/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.