The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 99, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 22, 1941 Page: 1 of 4
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(
o
weather
DENISON AND VICINITY
Considerable cloudiness, thunder-
showers tonight and Thursday
Denison
PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT
SUNDAY
t'OUR HOME-OWNED
DAILY NEWSPAPER
86c PUR MONTH
REPRESENTATIVE Of THE UNITED PRESS
DENISON, TEXAS WED , OCTOBER 22nd, 1941
WEEKLY FOUNDED 1930—DAILY 1904
VOL. VIII—NO. 99
Two More American Freighters Reported Sunk
Nazis Executes 50
French Hostages As
A Reprisal Measure
VICHY, France, Oct. 22—Fifty
French hostages were executed in
Nantes today by the Nazis in re-
prisal for the assassination of the
district's military commander, and
Joint U. S.
Canada
Defense
FDR Denies Report
Halifax Occupied
liy American Navy
EVERYDAY
DENISON
Bv
PAT l'ERRY
man officer, Lieut. Col. Friedrich
Karl Holtz, was commander.
Most of them were reported in
custody before Holtz was assassi-
W — Hi nated Monday at 8 a. m., oil
C. J. Corcoran, local insurance charges of alleged communism, or
and real estate dialer, is serif iisiy^ suspected of having participated
considering hirinjr a wjn'Hn as, In a series of sabotage attempts
chauffeur and collector. Tony against shipyards, railroads and
Bruno, who served in that capao- ports in -the area.
ily for several years, was drafted j They apparently were executed
into the army. Then John Joseph |'before Gen. Otto von Stuelpnagel,
Redmon accepted the position. German military commander of
Now Redmon has enlisted in the the Paris area, issued a manifesto
the German commander of Paris
announced that another fifty
would be executed if the assassins, j
for whose arrest a $300,000 re-i
ward has been posted, are not! „ _
caught by Thursday night. J. . WASHINGTON, Oct. 22-Pres-
The victims were said to be| "le"t lUl0fVelt "" " ed to a
press conference today that the
American and Canadian navies in
the event of an attack on this
use
Membership Campaign /^Stalin
Planned Du Legion Post\r j
Lonimuuds
chiefly citizens of the province ofi
Brittany, of which the slain Ger-
I hemisphere, probably would
I Atlantic ports jointly.
Asked specifically whether
American navy had taken
Under the direction of Sumner decided by the executive commit-
T. Brown, first vice-commander mittee of the post held Tuesday
of Amreican Legion post 62, a night at the American Legion halt,
membership campaign for the post It is desired that all men who
will be conducted at once, it was are eligible for membership in the
local post shall turn in their names
j and receive the benefits of being
a member of the loc&i body as well
j as to be of service to the organi-
j zation.
It was also decided to ask that
all who have flags in the city that
they be unfurled on next Mon-
——j day, which is Navy day- It is be-
A twelve-weeks course in safetyj lieved that at this particular time
for employees of industries who Navy day in this city will be of
producing materials for defense,1 particular interest and that hun-
J will open tonight at 7 o'clock at dreds of flags will be in evidence
Industrial Safety
Meet Scheduled
To Open Tonite
Red Army
tile |
mand of the Canadian port of t.
(Hotel Denison with Clyde Stevens,'as a token of respect to the day
representative of Mrs. Tucker's' nn(i to the boys from Denison
Shortening company, Sherman, as
Hitler Throws In
Three New Infantry
Divisions, Reported
Twenty-Four Of
Crew Reported
As Beins Sound
WASHINGTON, Oct 22—Word
haa been received here that twen-
ty-four crewmen of the American
freighter Lehigh, torpedoed of I
iLUNLON, Oct. 22—Premier Jo- 'he weit Coast of Africa Sunday,
set' Stalin hao assumed personal «re ate The (milting teamen
command of the defense of Mos-jare in Britieh Weil Africa, it wai
reported
miattsn
Ly the Maritime Csm-
but there
of
navy, so who can blame the insur-j saying that fifty had been ordered
Canadian paper,
nothing to it.
While there is.no prospect
anything being done immediately,'
Mr Roosevelt said that, of course,
the joint Canadian-American de-
anee man?
University of Tex- shot and that
as reports that 2 per cent of the j shot jf the assassins, reported to
co-eds say they go to college to,},,, two youths, are not captured by
find a husband. Seems like a, the Thursday deadline.
queer place to look for the wretch "Cowardly criminals, in the pay
A Denison soldier home on . of Britain and Moscow, shot in the
fifty others will be1 j"'"t use °/ detense fa,CTilities ,in
th event of an attack. He said he
on of
manuevers, tells some mighty in-
teresting tales about the mock]
war. The best one, however, was ~
when word came to his battalion1
to end maneuvers. It was pouring
rain and the boys were standing
ankle-deep in mud- As the order.
was given, one soldier piped up:
"Swell, now let's sing KJod Bless'
America'—and leave out Louis!-1
ana. We know of some Chamber.8! DAfLLAS, Tex., Oct. 22
(Continued on pig*, fou-i
Car Production
To Be Halted In
April Disclosed
'vHo are in the navy.
Halifax, Mr. Roosevelt said he hadi i,,s'^uctor- Members of the executive staff
seen something to that effect in a' C0Urfe ,18;s U>T lU pu.rp°se, of the local Legion post are Har-
was the conserving of manpower in in- 0],i Schmitzer, commander; Sum-
I dustries producing materials essen- ner t. Brown, first vice-command-
tial to national defense through er. p0rby O. Phillips, adjutant; S.
promotion of safety; to pre- v. Earnest, chaplain; Bob Dunn,
pare men for leadership in organ- past commander; Henry Etter, fi-
izing and conducting pCant safety nance officer; Ealph Gelsenhoner,
mi v/iiiuiuuiii-.-Miipriciiu ue- , . ,i f ' _ T,
fense board had been considering' P™*™™ Rml to prewnt the fun- past commander; Paul McBee,
damenta! principles of accident house com mitt em an; George Hag:-
prevention. j ans, district committeeman and)
The class is limited to thirty- pa) Noe, service officer
five persons. There will be two
night each week given over to
study, dates to be set at the meet-
ing tonight.
Carl J. Rutland of Dallas, presi-
dent of the Texas Safety associa-
tion, will preside at the .opening
, , . . * , ..'meeting tonight. C. H. Shumaker,]
land; merely consented that ,t fa memberof gonthern Meth.i TULSA, Okla., Oct. 22-Rep-
would be rather rough east of be- ^ university will also attend. , William Cole, Jr., (D.-Md ) lead-
land and he did not know
bases could be used.
supposed the board had mentioned
Halifax and Toronto and Re knew
they had discussed Chicago.
He avoided a direct reply to a
question as to whether the United
States would take over protection
of the Canadian seaboard if the
Canadian fleet moved east of Ice-
Legislation For
Govt. Oil Control
Proposed By Cole
odist university wit
t'LvJl■ Eleven To wins
Inundated As Kas.
cow and has established his head-
quarters in an armored plane at
the front, British press dispatches
repoted today.
It was asserted that Stalin was
now personally the commander of
the Russian forces on the entire
central front.
The dispatch said Stalin has
gone to the front his familiar
blue blouse and steel grey britches
the same uniform he wore when
he fought the Czarists in the Rus-
sian civil war.
It was added that the Russian
government, under Foreign Com-
mander Alolotov had now been in-
stalled at Kuibyshevo, 540 miles
southwest of Moscow.
The dispatch reported that the
Germans were using on the Mos-
i cow front as many as 25,000
) tanks, 2,000,000 highly mechaniz-
i ed troops and about three-fourths
j of the strength of the German air-
force.
Hitler, it was asserted, had
thrown in three new infantry di-l
visions within the last few days.
It was indicated the Russians
U. S. Passenger
Liner Sinks As
Result Of Crash
NEW YORK, Oct
former American passenger liner
San Juan, flying the Panamanian
flag in the Red Sea service, sank
after a blackout collision in the
Gulf of Suez, July 30 .marine cir-
cles reported today.
They said the 3,512-ton vessel,
Washington, Oct 22—Two
more American freighters have
been sunk in the Atlantic ocean
arid thirty-two of their crewmen
'are mi . ing, it was officially an-
nounced today.
Presdent Roosevelt, grave and
grim at the news, told his press
| conference that the Hog Island
freighter, Lehigh, flying the Stars
and Stripes, had been torpedoed
| off the west coast of Africa Sun-
09 Tin- 'ts crew of thirty-nine,
some of them wouned, took to the
lifeboats. One boat with twenty-
two men wa> picked up. The fate
of the other seventeen was uncer-
tain. All its crewmen were Am-
erican citizens.
Within the hour, marine circles
in New York reported that the
well known in the pre-war Newj-
York-Caribbean run, was en route1'V™er. can-owned freighter, Boia
to Alexandria with American sup- Venture, t'lying the flag of Pan-
plies for British forces when
mishap occurred-
(Shipping circles expressed sur-
Being represented at the meet-jer of a congressional attempt to
Ing will be the Denison fire de-J extend greater federal control to
partment, police department, U. the oil industry, told the ,12th con-, were holding well in all sectors
S. Engineers, Cotton mill, South- vention of the Independent I'etrol-|
ern Ice company, Kraft cheese.] eum association of America today)
theiama, had betn torpedoed enroutc
from Baltimore to England.
The state department later con-
I prise that "the" government had noticed the Bold Venture's sinking,
announced a sinking that occurred! although it did not say whether a
! almost three months ago.) submarine, surface raider air-
The San Juan left New York I mine was responsible. It
April 3, stopped at Buenos Aires
! and then headed for the Red Sea. .
j Its normal complement was sixty
men. No word was available
I the safety of the crew.
said the sinking occured last
(Continued on page four)
on
oft Commerce who won't like that April there will be no new-car pro-,
. . . A pessimistic book critic says duction, bringing a disastrous ef-
no great fiction is written nown-'fect upon the auto loan business,
days. Perhaps he doesn't rend the Milan V. Ayres, analyst of the J Floods Ra<*e
war communiques. 1 American Finance conference in &
] Chicago, predicted Tuesday as the ^ ]
Private Jack Weaver, 616 East Texas Association of Auto Fi-' TOPEKA, Oct. 22--Across the fro expressed pleasure over coopera-
plains of central Kansas six rivers! *"-/I iv
Monterey, has been transferred
from Jefferson Barracks, Mo., to
Kelly Field, San Antonio, where
he will take an examination for
technician in an airplane crew . .
. Every time we make up our mind
to buy ourself a lot of new clothes
nance companies closed its annual
convention at the Hotel Adolphus
LO>flDON, Oct. 22—Russia re-
Others are expected to enroll to-! he still believes congress should; ported in communique^ today that
,t' enact oil control legislation. its army had thrown back savage
| Cole, who in 1935 headed a spe-l attacks led by manned tanks in
t cial committee to investigate the. four vital sectors of the Moscow
*IrOn for America I petroleum industry, at the same front.
time reveailed that Roosevelt hadj -■ —- '■ — —-
Teacher Shortage
Pure Co/s No.
Little Drilling
At 5,710 feet"
7
Armistice Day
Program Planned
By Legion Post
,
flooded today joining their ram-
"The auto loan business will, P-iK'tR torrents to form gigantic
grow less and less with curtailed j lakes under which they buried
and dwindling production," Mr. ■ many towns, transcontinental high-
Ayres said. "The virtual ending of. ways, railroads and communica-
the new-car business will cause' tion lines.
WashrngtonT odav
SEMINOLE, Okla., Oct. 22—
Fred 'McDuff, oil field equipment
dealer who had offered to organ-
we hesitate. Washington Is hop- loan companies to face one of the! No livea had bee" reported lo i7e an 'iron for America" drive
int pro reduce the volume of credit mo.«t perplexing: periods in busi- J but thousands were homeless andi |° ol.ster supp les or tie see
business . . . Denison schools are'ness history." . | three major cities and at least' ™ustry, annouced today that he "When I came to Washington
planning to join other institutions He predicted that the United eleven towns were inundated;! would go to Was ing on to j ejght and one-half years ago,"
of learning throughtout the state i States would be in the war in a! thousands of acres of farm land out for myself w ly tie o ice ^o £0|g directly quoted the President
in observance of Defense Savings shooting way before long and that were under water and hundreds of j production^ managerrun as
Stamp and Bond Week Nov. 3-11 the world conflict would last at. heads of livestock were destroyed, amined
as proclaimed by Governor Coke least until the end of 1913. I State guardsmen, highway pat-
Stevenson ... A local pessimistic! Mr. Ayres said similar condi-,rolmen and federal troops man-,
observer thinks GOP stands for tions probaihly will exist in other i ned motorboats, army trucks and. telegram I sent 11 days ago
Gone O.it of the Picture. . .Short- phases o
AUSTIN, Tex., Oct. 22—School]
tion of the Interstate Oil Pact.
The Maryland congressman said DisCOVef^d i-J T
he was making public for the first I ' * *
time with the President's perinis-|
sion remarks made ' ~
earlier this year
pact extension was presented '|sicence, music and
the White House for the Prest
dent's approval.
IDURANT, Okla., Oct
'l^when tlnTcm^1 leaoher's' especially those speeializ-j J'J.own' san<(1*'
wanted t"n* ' commercial subjects, Another Cu
was presented at.
should have no trouble finding a:
uncommunicative on the
proposal.
"The OPM hasn't answered the
say-
installment business,] road building tractors to navigate] ing I am ready to donate 100 tons
Major Brown Is
TransferredAgaiin j
Major Roland C, Brown, former,
acting district engineer here, who
was transferred a few months ago'
to Auburn, Ala., as an instructor]
in military science and tactics at'
the Auburn Polytechnic Institute,
and of scrap iron to the government
and to start an iron for America drive
auto business,' farmers, ! ^ McDuff, who directed an
he predicted, all would be busy The town< of Salina, Abilene "iron for Britain campaign ear -
■ • ier this year.
age of dental instruments feared particularly where production is, throughout the flood area
because of government* orders.1 curtailed due to defense and war rescued stranded motorists
Mentioned only because we love to production. In th
see children smile.
1 turning out tanks and other arms, and Emopria were flooded.
INFERIOR SUBSTITUTIONS
ON FOOD BRANDS SLATED
Texas Awarded
FFA Gold Emblem
i
as saying, "oil was selling at a
price which brought producers on-
j ly 10 cents net per barrel. He
faced the problem of whether to
encourage state action through the
compact method or go to federal-
ization of production and distri-
bution.
• "I said I would try anything
once. If it worked, fine," the quo-|
tation continued, "I am (lelighted]
it pa.ssed. I will send this compact |
to congress as soon as I can." I
The Maryland representative re-
vealed that he had discussed oil
problems with the President many
times and had found him desirous
to minimize federal interference
Taking advantage of Armistice
j day as a time to introduce the ne-
I cessity of patriotism, a committee
Pure'headed bj George Hagans of the
Oil company's No. 2 Little-210 in I American Legion, will visit in
«w se wn of section 34, 5-7 was -chools and otherwise disseminate
, drilling at 5,710 feet today, still 'he ideals of America, following a
in the McLish zone in a hard, decision of the officers of the lo-
j cal post Tuesday night.
Cumberland well deep-' Mr. Hagans will phce speakers
mathematics, ninpr rlri!led to ">,173 feet in the, in the various schools and likely
Bromide sand. other gathering peaces leading up
position ths year. There is a short-1 The company's No. 3 Crissman- {o a fitting celebration of Armis-
age of teachers, it was reported1<104 jn sw Re se of action 20-5-71 tice day Nov. U.
today by Miss Miriam Doaier,I flowed 135 barrels of oil through' -— •'
secretary of the University of 2l'-64tih inch choke when opened]
i Texas teachers' appointment bu- up> xhe No , [ittle-208 failed to
reau. flow.
More than 2,000 requests for, j;o. 3 Metz-105 in sw nw nw of
teachers have already come to the] o8( 5.7 flowed 145 barrels through
bureau while there are only 1,000 0pen casing while drilling at 5,033
applicants available to fill the jobs.I feet with cable tools. It spent some!
Applicants decreased largely be-] time cleaning out.
cause of the draft and availability : So- 2, Thomas-203 in ne nw tie
of jobs elsewhere, Miss Dozicrj ,,{ 28, 5-7 drilled to 4.0'il feet in
said. the Viola lime.
Britain, Mexico
Resume Relations
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Oct. 22
Led by bands from Texas and] :•
DALLAS Texas. (Jet 22—The no developments which would con-' .Michigan, delegates to the Nation-i O _ gl.
., , „ . I _ !.!_ .1 u«'n1 Piitnro Fnrmer* nf Ameripji IJV.UIII
inerican housewife who goes in
to the groc
GOP CONGRESSMAN URGED
TO REPEAL NEUTRALITY ACT
o vince him of the probability in the a' Future Farmers of America ^
ery and asks for this-! near future of any food commodi-1'convention, now under way here, pvPTlt
, J I.: 1 naradeH hefore matinee crnwH ^¥c"1 l^r.1 WIVIO
is being sent to 'Fort Benning,' aM,|-.surh brand of so-and-so, may! ties becoming exhausted. 1 paraded before a matinee crowd
<Ga., it has been learned here. , iu U)H future have lo take what He said he thought Americans'"/ 1C>0(?0 al American Royal A|.0 Summoned
Hi* new assignment becomes ef- ,|u, can j.-et, and hubby will have should realize they must sacrifice
fective Nov. 1 and he will be as-1
to like it.
signed to an engineer brigade at]
the fort. Engineer duties with, p,.t indulgence of always having
troops consist principally of huild-i .,t she wants in the way of
Ing roads, hauling rifles, gradefs ^ j MfLaruin, president
of the United Slates Wholesale
Grocers Association Incorporated,
—even to a disruption of the us-
She may have to give up her ua] dinner table spread—but he
and bulldozers along with trucks
full of building materials if they
'find it necessary while enroute to
their assigned bases during war- ftfcLiiurin, hero as guest at a
fare. The engineer brigade is also (>jiex«s Wholesale Grocers' associa
called upon for bridge construc- |on ,uncheonf in an inter-
tion when it become necessary tol vjew (ha( beCBURe! of the national
cross streams, where original spans, ^fense program the housewife
;have been destroyed.
SURVEY CREW DISPATCHED
TO NEW ENGINEER PROJECT
A survey crew of the Denison
army engineer force has been dis-
patched to Hensley field, near
Dallas, collecting data for add
might have to take substitutes,
first in brands and perhaps later
in the commodity.
"The pinch," he said "has not
begun too much in that direction
but with Hitler desiring to con-
trol and dominate America's ship-
ping lanes and thereby threatening
the safety of our shores, anything
tional construction phases there, i may happen suddenly-
The phases Include four addi- He said hands of fond might go
tion buildings, parking aprons, off the market because of manu-
extension of fueling system, exten-| facturers heing called upon to
sion of runways and a few minor turn facilities from established
changes in the control tower. | lines to items essential to national
This ia the ninth project assign- defense.
od to the enjineeri. 1 However,
he said he had seen
felt they could take it. ^
Roy F. Hendrickson, surplus
marketing administrator, said in
an interview here today that the
first $50,000,000 allotment of
lease-lend funds for prucha.se of
food-stuffs and other essential ar-
ticles for the British would he ex-
hausted soon.
"British purchases have enabled
producers of some food stuffs,
notably dried fruits and applies,
to pull out of a slump," Hendrick-
son said.
"Animal protiens are in the big-
gest demand, such as pork, eggs,
evaporated milk and cheese. Texas
is furnishing eggs, evaporated
milk and canned goods."
He said the surplus marketing
NEW YORK, Oct. 22—Wendell
L. Willkie and more than 100 oth-
er republicans appealed today to
GOP congressmen to lead their
party back to political leadership
by outright repeal o£ the neutral-
ity act or by rewriting it without
The Boy Scout circus event di- obstructing aid to Britain and itt
•Duane] rectors, recently named, held their allies.
Munter, 18, Coleridge, Nebr., who! initial meetng Tuesday* "Tiight to j "Millions upon millions of re-
while attending) review plans for the circus to be publicans are resolved that the
high school with his pure-bred 1 held here next month. I ugly smudge of obstructive isola-
tionism shall be removed from the
Horse show today.
Before the performance started,
W. A. Cochel, Kansas City Star
farm editor announced
Angus cattle, poultry, swine and| Each director plans to hold
crops, had earned the award of meetings with scoutmasters whose
star American for 1941. Texas re-; troops are participating in the di-
ceived one of five gold emblems rectors particular phase of the
1 ckcu one u 1 1 m v ^viw v iii«> vimi ----- r ■ 1 - -- ---
awarded states for general excel- circus to work out. final details gress.
face of our party," Willkie said
in a statement to which was ap-
pended the repeal appeal to con-
lence, and the Cotulla chapter'and schedule two rehearsal dates,
ranked as a silver emblem winner-1 The directors include R. D.
PFA officials have conferred, Leatherman, in charge of the pro-
with Santa Fe representatives,! logue "Dictator
concerning the return of the FFA] ments"; Kenneth
At t.he same time, Willkie took
occasion to criticize the adminis-
tration's handling of labor-man-
Youth Move- agenient relations, the manner in
Ransom, the
special train through Kansas,
many parts of which are flooded.
Two hundred Texas hoys made the
trip here on the train from Fort
Worth Sunday. The Texas Special
w ill be erouted to avoid the flood-
ed Emporia area. Unless condi-
administration would continue toj tlons get much worse. , the special
support the market where sur-Jwill leave here for Fort Worth to-
pluses appear over the country, night at ^1:45.
and pointed out that Secretary ofl Completion of national judging
Agriculture Claude R. Wickard contests and a banquet for all del-
had asked for increases in produc-
tion of food and feed.
Grand Entry of Cubs and Scouts;
Hugh Chestnut, scouting games;
J. B. Hunsaker, signaling; Rev.
James E. Spivey, flint and steel;
which the foreign policy was given
to the people and asserted that
"the desire of many in the admin-
istration to rewrite our social anil
economic life under cover of th"
R. C. Nichols, Scouting Ready for n!,tional effort mu.-t be ruled out
Emergencies; T)r, Garland W.
Clay, of Durant, Indian dancing;
W. T. Hall, Durant, investure cer-
during the.emergency."
Willkie declared that "the
quirement for America today
egates tonight will wind up the
convention.
emony for new Scouts and for a forthright international pol-
achievements round-up streamer^ {, yt designed to encompass the
awards; Robert M. McKee, camp- destruction of totalitarianism b>
ing and pioneering; Ben Burget, whatever means nescssary."
M. G. Hauser, clowns, and Pan*, "This policy should be present-
Dorum, finale- j ed u us by our ejected leader
as
frankly and not by do.«
though we were children," Wil
ke's statement said
The signed appeal appended to ''
Willkie's remarks said the neu
trality act was not of republican)
origin, but "nevertheless we recog-
nize that in these dangerous and
uncertain times that many republi-
cans have felt that it offered a
measure of protection or at least
favored giving it a fair trial." i
It recited further that, tile sign
ers wanted to "express our convic |
tion that, whatever purpose the
neutrality act may have served
MEXICO CITY, Oct. 22—Grea;
Britain and Mexico resumed diplo-
• matic relations today after a dapse
■ ince 1938 resulting from the Car-
denas administration's expropria-
tion of oil properties in 'Mexico.
The annoucement was made by
Voreign Minister Ezequiel Padills
a cl*m:>x of long and friendly
, negotiations undertaken by the
1 incumbent President Manuel Avils
I Camacho.
It was made public just as
■ A ilia Camacho was leaving th?
•apital to inend several days at
i t :• bed ide of Ijaznro Cardenas,
j hi.- predecessor, who ie seriously
t his home.
."The governments of Mexico
and Great Britain," T'adilla said in
p formal statement, "desiring to
normaliz" diplomatic relations in-
terrupted hetwe' n them in 1938,
and firmly convinced that the re-
newal of these relations will not
on'y rebound to the benefit of the
-incere friendship which bind# the
countries they represent, are hap-
py to announce that, beginning to-
dav, tliev have re-established their
iiriginally, it serves no useful pur- '"espective legations in London and
pose now; that its existence rath-,'^l:' raP'tnl.
er exposes the United States to
the greatest threat of our history; Doubled
that in its effect constitutes aid to ,WTIN, l<x., Oct. 22--"'X-
Hitlcr; that in the sense that it. an<i "early twice a* mnc 1
proclaims our neutrality in strug- rnoney 'n savings accounts >n "
gle in which neither the people nor hank a- lliej did it. 1939, a re-
the congress have shown them- ,M"' >'tntP department of
selves neutral, it is now both hypo- hanking revealed today- Deposit^
criticcal and degrading; and tl.at "l'iv'np' departments o.
-tnte banks totaled $9,580,61J,3
wifh
degrading; and that
is preventing the fulfillment of
mere t 1 of |4,080,709 94
a policy of aid to Rritain and her( in September a compared
Allies which the American ^5,499,939 14 in October of 193ft
overwhelmingly endorse."
Signers included six governors ,
former members of congress and NOTICE
present and former national and rf W(, (,0 „„t rer#|vf your
state committeemen and women hpfor„ , plea.,e phon, 800
the chairman. j one W1„ be 9ent ^ ,
•
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Anderson, LeRoy M. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 99, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 22, 1941, newspaper, October 22, 1941; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth328367/m1/1/: accessed May 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.