The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 8, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 1, 1941 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Grayson County Frontier Village.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
toum
TBI OAN1BOM
TUESDAY, JULY 1. 1941
SOCIETY NOTES
nothing elae to do except I'.e&ll amount will be subject to penalty. | pitive was too busy attempting to
Ted's bike, will be on the inside) "Peanuts marketed in excess o! I elude bis pursuers to return their
looking out . . . No doubt Hitler the farm allotment will be sub- lire, Fritz said
ject to a penalty of 3 cents
Personnel of Youth Caravan To Be Here
intends to win the war if he pof
sibly can, but however, he must
I have his moments when he wishes
he was as sure of victory as Lind-
bergh is . . . Denison and Sherman
carpenters' unions have agreed to
set an initiation fee of 830 for all
new memlbers, so that both unions
can cooperate on the employment
of army basic flying school south
of Pottsboro.
A series of meetings for young
people to be conducted by ;•
"youth caravan" selected from
outstanding workers in the na-
tional council of Methodist youth,
will be held in Denison under
pponsorrhip of the Waples Mem
orinl church. Julv 19-2!?.
Adidt counselor for the cam
van is Mrs. Walter L. Burr of
Denison, seated second from th"
left in the front row. She is a
native Texan, w'fe of a pastor
f.nd presiding elder for 2.2 years
Sinoe the death of her husband
last year at Sherman she has been
with her three children at Don
ton State Teachers college. Shv
was a members of the generil
conference of 1930.
Ofher? to be in the group arc
Front row. seated left lo righ
Miss Edna Elizabebth Parks of
the community rervire comnr's-
•ior, from Gler.son, Tenn. Sh:
if a graduate of Bethel •.•olleg"'
with an A. B, degree, where she
•via jo red' in English. She is a pi-
anist arid has been active in
church work since 1S30; At the
extreme left Miss Lenore Swan-
*on of Hnrcourt, Towa, of the
We'd Frendshio Commission
Bom und reared on a farm in lo-
*v". attended Iowa state teacher.'
r-olleire in fVdar Palis where she
Miecia'izod in kindergarten an'1
nrimirv work and will teach at
A read in. Iowa, next fall. '.-Jhe has
been active in Weslev foundation
bp'ng chairmjin of the Missicri il'e-
n.irtment dnring the past year.
Bnek row, stmdng, left to
right are Earl W. Riddle of St
•Joseph. Mo., recreation chairman
TVon M. Oox, Beaumont, Tex.,
of the worship and evangelism
commission. A minister's son
he hps attended several summer
assemblies, but this is his first
caravan tour.
*i
found," Kingsberry continued,
"unless the excess peanuts are
deliverd to the Secretary of Agri-
culture at the current price ol
peanuts for crushing into oil.'
The excess marketing card spe-
cifies that a certain percentage
of each sale will be subject to
penalty.
denton STUDENT'S
painting 1C (ACCEPTED
by the NWCE, CALIF.
DKfWON, Tex., July 1—"Texas
Fiarm" a water color by Sam In-
gram, outstanding art student
lrom Houston at the North Texas
!£tate Teacher's College, has been
acopted by the National Water
Qolor Exhibition for this sum
mer in the Fine Art" Gallery in
San Diego, California, Dr. Cora
Stafford, head of the art faculty
of NTSTD, has announced.
BRIEFS
Young- people of the First i'ro«-
byterian church are sponsoring
an ice cream social bognning at
7:30 p. m. tonight on church lawn,
proceeds) to be used tward de-
fraying expenses r,f delegates to
the annual young people's sum
mer conference at Waxahachie.
The Tuxis society Hnd the Younir
People's c'ass are in charge
Kenneth J. Mills, manager of
the Denison Frozen Food Lock-
ers, Inc., spent Monday in Par-
is inspecting t.h new T>0 locker
frozen food pls>nt ther'.1 which
had its forma! opening Mond'av.
selling beer at retail in a manner
contrary to law, or in any place or
manner conducive to violation of
the law, or likely to result in any
jeopardy to the peace, morals
health or safety of the general
public."
Liquor Inspector Cecil Hodge
pointed out that the county judge,
when hearing applications for beer
licenses, is not acting as a county
judge, but as a deputy administra-
tor of the liquor control act.
The act also gives the county
judp" the power to consider re-
quests and suggestions by the sher-
iff, district attorney, mayor or
chief of police of any town af-
j fected, in arriving at his decision.
' Another provision gives any citi-
j zen the right to protest the grant-
ing of a retailers beer license, con-
ditioned upon his posting proper
bond.
Establishment of beer taverns
[ upon the county roads leading to
the airport area could be halted
under this act, District Attorney
"Ralph Elliott believes, if it is
shown that they will be conducive
tc. violations of any law, such as
that against drunkenness in a pub-
ic place, sale of beer to minors,
parking on the highway or otlyr
similar statutes.
A large number of residents in
Woodville are considering moving
into the Liggett area, at the ex-
treme edge of the Denison engin-
eer district as lands of 130 own-
ers are in the process of acquisi-
tion by the owners and 40 own-
ers yet to be contacted. Woodville
if you remember, will be com-
pletely inundated by waters of
the Denison dam and reservoir
. Have you heard the one about
the traveling salesman who rapped
on the door of James Plummber,
of Ponca City, Okla.? He was sell-
ing magazines and Plummber hu
vited him in. When he emerged
a short time later he was carrying
a copy of Ponca Profiles for 25c.
Plum ruber's wife is chief promot-
er of the publication and her hus-
band does right wellj too. . , Hunt-
ing stamps went on sale at the
postoffice here officially today . .
. And Congrats to A. G. McRae of
Bonham who has risen from the
ranks of the Texas Power & Light
company to become its district
manager, succeeding Bill Green,
who's deided to give jt up and take
a nice, long vacation due to 111
health.
The navy is now taking married
men, according to information
reaching this desk. But there are
still a few slight hitches to the of-
fer. Men are being accepted only
for naval reserve and then only if
they are either qualified for a
raiting for which the pay is ade-
quate to support their dependents,
of the dependents can be proved
to have a sufficient income of
their own ... The Bachelor club
is in need of a few more recruits.
Too many members are taking the
fatal leap and walk dow i the mid-
dle aisle. The latest member to
leave is Fayette Walker who soon
will marry lovely Rachael Ormsby.
Yep, as per custom, Flayette paid
the forfeit and feted club mem-
bers to a dinner at Hotel Den'son
recently.
Peanut Growers
To Receive Three
Marketing Cards
; three
under
COLLEGE STATION Ju]v i
Peanut farmers will receiy
i kinds of marketing cards
the 1941 Agricultural Conserva-
tion Program, Howard Kingsbery,
state AAA committeeman from
Santa Anna, ha? announced.
Peanut marketing quotas, to h
in effect for the next three years,
were favored by more than 87
tier cent of the grower? voting
several weeks ago
Farmers who plant within their
acreage allotments will receive
"within quota" cards and thos'i
EVERYDAY
(Continued from page one)
HONKY-
(Continned from page onet
to be unitrue, the application shall
be denied. And it shall be suffic-
ient cause for the county judge to 1 "meanest" thief has not been nab-
refuse to grant any license when
he has reason to believe that the
applicant will conduct bu-ines. of
ing day he was notified the sher-
iffs found the bike on the Craw-
crd street road. And while the
bed yet, the officers have their
■suspicions and believe it won't be
long until the culprit who had
tvho overplant, will receive cither
'• "United marketing" card or an
"excess marketing" can! The
"within quota card" indicates that
the actual production of the en-
tire acreage planted to peanuts
'bis year may he market with-
out penalty. The "limited mar-
ketine" card allows penalty-free
marketing up to a fixed amount
and all peanuts sold' above this
Progress Is Seen
In Overcoming
Labor Shortage
Rapid progress in overcoming
threatened' skilled labor shortages
through on-the-job training of
workers in defense plants was
announced today by Sidney Hill-
man, Associate Director General,
Office of Production Manage-
ment, ,on the basis of field reports
compiled yesterday by the Train-
ing Wiithin Industry Section of
the Labor Division of OPM, ol
whiich Channing R. Dooley, oi
ihe1 Socony-Vacuum corporator),
if director and J. Walter Dietz
of Western Electric Company is
associate direction.
To date, 892 companies work-
ing on defense contract have in
••tailed training-within industr.
systems in their plants. These
companies employ an aggregata
of 1,532,000 workers.
Of these, 43 corncerns with
more than 250,000 employees
launched their training program*
the week ending June 2ll.
The above figures refer onh
to those training programs which
the Training Within Industr?
Section of the Labor Divison has
directly helped to install through
Its 22 regional offices. They do
Tjot include companies whi'h ha-'
in-plant training system prior to
the defense emergency or havi
installed them independently
since the defense effort 'began.
"The rapid spread1 of training
within industry :s of utmost sig
nificance to the defense pro
pram,'' said Mr. Hillman. "It en
ables defense plants to expand
to increase the numbr of shifts
End to absorb more and more
semi and unskilled workers fron
the ranks of the unemployed
Further, the plant which trains its
own workers from the ranks of
the unemployed. Further, th°
plant which trains its own work
crs is helping the nation to
uvoid the troublesome problem'
of labor pirating and worker mi-
gration.
"The results show what can be
done when labor and management
cooperate, as they have done ir
everv phase of the Labor Divi-
rion's Training Within Industry
program.
PUBLIC-
(Continued from page onel
Ther car badly wrecked, tho
detectives and W. O. Bnnkston,
used car lot owner whose uuto-
mobile was stolen Sunday, hand-
cuffed and shackled their prison-
er and brought him to Dallas in
the car in which he was fleeing
It was a stolen automobile. Bank-
fton had accompanied the officer.-
in their search.
Gun BattU Two W«ek Aro
Hudson admrtted to Fritz that
he was shout out of a stolen au
tomobile near Fourney two weeks
ngo during a running gun battle
with Stat? Highway patrolmen.
The wounder man was trans
ferred to Pnrkland Hosptial undov
guard, and emergency hospital
attendants said his wounds wer-;
not serious
I!—
Murray Marshall
Ousts High School
Star In Tourney
Denison's annual city tennis
tournament opened here Monday
iifternoon at 3:30 featured by Si
win by Abe Ross, Jr., over Billj
thewning, 6-2, 6-3 Both boys
jihowed good form and are de
dared by M. M. Marshall, to b
•inproiving daily.
Murray Marshall, ceded firs'
and defending champion found the
sidelines and ousted Jack Wil
liams, high school star at 6-2, 6
1. Wililams returned many of
the best shots sent over and has
the appearance of ;> Coming
champion.
Martin Clark, University o1'
Texas sutdent, now employed in
Denison, kept up a dazzling ar
"iv of st>eed and' accuracy in his
first match against Gene Turner
or the Army Engineer Office and
won 6-0, 6-3. Turned was ceded
number two.
Bolbby Cherry lost the first set
•;f his encounter with Ceci
ii'ftnpson, 4-6 but steadied his plav
,n the next two sets and won the
match 4-6, 6-4, 6-3.
Doubles play started at 9:30
Tuesday with fcherry and Ros-
meeting C'hewning and Jack
Hicks.
At 4:30 Lloyd Keel, local high
school coach of girls and Clark
will meet Simpson and' Turner.
M. M. and Murray Marshall
will play the winner of the 9 a
ni. match.
Curtis McKinney and Jack
Moore, former high school star,
will play the wnner of the Kee1
"nd Clark vs. Simpson and
Turner match at 6 p. m.
Sem-finals are planned for
Tuesday also. Finals will be
played Wednesday. Seats are
rvailable for visitors and interest-
ed fans are invited, M. M. Mar-
shall, supervising the tournament,
rtates.
Scanlon, who directed the origi-
nal production and Who has again
directed the current production.
Pierre de iRteeder, musical conduc-
tion and also with the original
production in 1927.
Singing the leads in Countess
Martiza are Marthe Errolle, Doris
Patson and Edward' Roecker. Ben
(Blue famous movie coftnedian will
suppoft Harry Morton in the com-
tdv roles.
Hudson grunted and said:
"City detectives are tough."
Wanted For Jailbreak
Hudson, ex-convict, wurited for
jailbreak at Monahans, under fed-
eral Dyer Act indictment, under
as well as charges in several oth-
er Texas counties, was ranked as
Public Enemy No. 2 by A. P
Kitchin, special agent in charge of
the Dallas FBI office. Charles
Chapman, Arkansas bank robber,
is No. 1 on the FBI list.
Hudson was armed with a ?mal|
bottle of nitroglycerin and a pis-
tol, Inspector Fritz said. The fu-
Summer Care Of
Plants Explained
COLLEGE STATION, July 1—
What some people coll good luck
ers is instead good' management,
!n growing trees, shrubs and flow-
in the opinion of Sadie Hatfield,
rpecialist in landscape gardening
for the A. and M. College Exten-
sion Service.
During the dry warm sulmmei'
months, a period when plants es-
pecialy need intelligent care, thev
often suffer fromi more misman-
Hgemert of moisture than from
«ny other one thing, she says.
Sbrubs and trees set out this year
or last need an ample supply of
moisture unti lthev can establish a
good root system. E."en the native
fnd hardy introduced tilants re
quire about two venrs in getting
well enough established to with-
rtand dr^ weather unaided.
Miss Hatfield quotes R. E.
Dickson, superintendent of th-i
Spur Experiment Station, as say-
ing "An intelligent use of God-
given rain will mean more to the
beautification of Texas than all
other factors combined." In places
where there is scant rainfall, Mis;
Hatfield recommends depressions,
contours, and small dams for di-
verting water to trees, shrubs and
/lowers. These same devices wil!
help hold the water for a few
days after each rain.
Once moisture has soaked into
the soil, mulches may be used
to keep it there. Well-rotted
leaves, rotted straw and hay, and
rotted barnyard fertilizer may
be put on in layers of one or two
inches. All of these materials
when worked into the bed's next
year will help hold water in the
soil as well as when Uf ed on top as
a mulch.
The spe"alist warns against
deep cultivation as it may destroy
roots. However, shallow cultiva-
t'on is good for keeping a loose
top on the soil prvae-nts evapora-
tion from below
try producah an immense variety
and volum* of products which are
needed under the defonsc pro-
gram: It also consumes larg"?
quantities and kinds of materials
equally important In the program
Problems which have arisen, and
which will be considered bv th
advisory committee, include those
of the conservation and substitu-
tion of materia!*, simplified prac-
tice, revision oif Bpfctiifica-
tions, problems of raw materials
supply, allocation of production
capacity, inventory ccntrol and
the like.
ii'
Ass'n. Offers Full
j Support ToOPM
Full support of the national
scnap aluminum campaign on a
non-profit basis was offered to
OPM officials today by repre-
sentatives of scrap metal trad"
association.
Dealer spokesmen stated that
the entire trade wotild cooperate
with campaign officials in ar-
ltmging for the sorting, prepara-
tion, and sale of aluminum con-
tributions without compensation
of any kind, as a voluntary con-
tribution to national defense. La-
bor employed' in actual segratior
and preparation will be pi id for
at regular rates by local commit
(ees.
Representatives of the scrap in-
dustry1 proposed that plans b«
drawn up for a nation-wide cam-
paign to be held at a later date
fori the collection through regu-
lar trade channels of all othe"
types of scrap .in which conser-
vation measures are contemplated.
Represented at the meeting
with OJ"M, which took place thi«
morning, was the National Asso-
ciation of Waste Material Deal-
ers, the Empire Metal Merchant?
Association of New York, the
Philadelphia Met.nl Association
and an unaffiliated group of Ch"
c ago.
ing a tenacious fight with numeri-
cally superior mobile troops of "
enemy checking their advance
intermediate position*."
The Germans have claimed their
'panzer units are thrusting beyond
Minsk but the communique gave
no indication where the checking
'action occurred.
Russia went on an all-out basis
at home as well as on the fighting
front.
Because of the seriousness of
the war situation, a defense coun-
cil headed by Premier Joseph Sta-
lin was announced. It took over
powers of the government and all
Russians were told they must car-
ry out the mandates of the com-
mittee.
Philosophies Of
Music Profs Result
In A Verbal Row
DENTON, Texas, July 1--The
philosophies of Dr. James Mwr-
se'l and' John Erskine which in-
volved them in a verbal row re-
cently that has reverberated in
meetings of music educators are
both unsound theories of muni:
(duration. Dr. Jacob Kwalwasscr,
director of music education, Syr?-
ciiwo Univer«itv. told an aud'enco
at the North Texas State Teach-
ers Col'cge recently.
Kwnlwasser wrQ referring to
r much publicized nreum"nt be
tween Murspll, psv'-ho'opist andj
member nf the mnsjea education
staf of Teachers Collpge Co'ur
hi" TTnviers'tv and John Er=ki|
irpcirVnt of tt p Julliard' Schn
..f ivfiioie >'TSTC mus'f students^
he^rd Wur«ell eyila'n his th ories
in a lecture at the Denton Tea"b-
erc college only a few d?v*- ear-
lier.
WORK-
(Continued From Page One*
Countess Maritza
Returns To Fair
DALLAS, Tex., July 1—Coun-
tess Marit&a returns to the State
Fair of Texas as the fourth bill on
the ten week program of Opera
Under the Stars. It opens Thurs-
cay. Its last opening in Dallas
was in 1927, when it was the
Auditorium attraction at the
State Fair of Texas.
j Included in the cast of the
I 1941 production which will be in
Fair Park Casino are Harry K.
Morton and Zella Russell, both of
whom were here with the Pro-
I duction in 1927. Also is Eddie
Advisory Comm.
For Electrical
Industry Formed
Formation of an electrical in-
dustry advisory committee which
will ;peed cooperation between
industry and Government on de-
fense program problems was an-
nouced today by Donald M. Nel-
son, Director of Purchases, Offi-
lice ol Production Management.
The Committee, which will bj
purely adv.sory, will function un-
der the direction of Donald G.
Clark, Chief of the Equipment
and Supples Branch of the Pur-
chasing Division, and Lewi.; A
Jones, Special Advisor on electri-
cal supplies. It will serve the in-
dustry as it means to contact with
Government throughout the de-
fense program. This will be ono
of a number of industry commit-
tees, wbich will not be directly
attached to OPM commodity sec-
tions.
Mr. Nelson pointed' out that the
electrical manufacturing indus-
RUSSIA—
(Continued from page one)
cow on a key highway.
German reports showed that the
Nazi generals are employing their
highly successful encirclement
technique to cut up the vast Rus
sian armies into vulnerable sec-
tions.
MOSCOW, July 1—Russia has
fallen back to a new battle line in
the Lwow sector of the European-
wide battleground because of a
flanking threat * from Hungary,
but the Red army is stubbornly
| and tenaciously resisting fierce at-
I tacks fromi Minsk to the Arctic
J Ocean, it was reported today.
I It was announced that the Rus-
sian soldieds retreated from Lwow,
in old Poland, in a delaying action
since the entrance of Hungary into
the war opened a possibility of a
move to outflank that former Po-
lish city and the western Ukraine,
lOf German's claim that the
Nazis have occupied Minsk, White
Russian capital twenty miles w'th-
in the old Russian border and some
450 miles west of Moscow, the
Russian communique merely eaid:
"In the direction of Minsk and
Baranowicze, our forces are wag-
railroad circles here, having form-
erly been North Texas district en-
gineer, stationed here, during
1913-17. Transferred to Parsons,
Kansas, he became an engineer of
maintenance of way and later was
made chief of the department.
Transferred to Dallas a short timfc
later, he resigned his railroad po-
sition to become a private con-
tractor.
The three major contractors
are allowed 120 days tq complete
their work. As the number of men
employed and shifts to be worked,
engineers here said they didn't
know, as that was left up to the
contractors.
MARKETS
DENISON MARKETS
Poidtry and E|(i
Leghorn fryers, 2*4 lbs.
Hens, 41bs. and up
Hens, under 4 lbs
Old roosters
Turkeys, yowig hens ..
Turkeys, old hens
Turkeys, young torn* ...
Turkeys, old toms
Turkeys, No. 2
Infertile eggs (white)
Mixed eggs (candled)
Guineas, each
Butter, best grades
Cotton
Strict middling
up
... 13e
. 15c
13«
6c
. 13c
. 1 lc
... 10c
8c
to 9t
23'4 c
22 Ho
. 2nc
30c
12.60c.
THINGS' THAT NEV&R "VPE!
| "THAT LITTLE CAME" intgr«n>t*ic*rtoo«Co.,N.Y.—By B. Link j J The Worst Is Yet To Com^
oh doctor
o ocToa-
Hvnrs!
6<MM£ Ati
MetTrttnc.
A"° Hf 6lEW
H'S HALB
LIKE A
any*xe*
oh look -
There'S
4 DlA/v\ont>!
oh chills
*N£> FCVER
leouj!
why dtonr
fOu 6i*/£ '6M
A HEALTHY
LOOK BEFORE
You SToot)
pat f
HAu> -
AlNT !
WHE(7B ?
17*17
• • • • •
v^ELL I'M A
SONOPA 6UN:
• thought
tHEr WERE
All HEARTS!
</«HAYTA VOU
thimka That*
6oo;>M*/A*V '
fhe crummy
SCALLYWAG
Thought he'd
get AwMY
WITH A Blopf.'
C(l0D6 !
CauoE!
see it
$
MAnaY-
\S
ft
/D
trO HOr,
PKo M 15'Efp
To ce t 1/v
1 Yo
This p<. fr
l-V,
f' v t Pe
FEET HURT?
Get relief from corns, callouses, bunions and other foot
ailments.
SEE DR. MER VINE
At Pott Office Drug Store Thursday
112 «. RUSK AVE. PHONE «3
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Anderson, LeRoy M. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 8, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 1, 1941, newspaper, July 1, 1941; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth328274/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.