The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 208, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 11, 1942 Page: 4 of 4
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FAfW FOUR
THE DENICON PRESS
WED., MARCH Uth, 1942
SOCIETY NOTES
Culinary Artists
Of Denison To
Serve At USO Thurs.
Kartenders and culinary .tr-
usts of Denison will be in cha'ffe
c-f refreshment arrangements
Thursday evening at the UST
party for enlisted men at Recre-
ational Hall
Individuals picked at random
by Mrs. Agnes Oliver, host.;*?,"
served refreshments to the en-
listed Imen of Perrin Field and
Military Maids Tuesday.
Refreshments consisted of
cake and punch and those who
served were Mesdames N. S'ayre.
E W. Wright, N. E. Hodges,
Joe H. Linn, Rose Con-win, J
S. Shaw, Harry Weingarton,
I po Short, Ralph Aspley. S. C.
Keanr, J. L. Greer, A. P. Linn,
J M. Cox, Miss IRote Knaur and I
Miss iBenita Boone - j
Games and dancing were I
jnyed during the coarse of
iwwning.
Bill Hilliard and her dauhtor,
1-eth, visited friends in Dallas
j Tuesday.
Griffin Dollnrhide Jr., will
leave Denison Saturday fan- Dal-
Int where he will be inducted into
the Navy.
m. W. Bonhani of the II. S.
Clothing store transacted busi-
nes« in Dallas Tuesday.
Among the out of town people
who attended the Rubinoff con-
cert Tuesday evening in Denison,
wore Mrs. Lilly May Harris, and
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Haskell, of
Durant.
Don Grey, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Grey, 417 S. Perry,
j« recovering from an illness at
h>>: home, where he has been con-
lined for more than a week.
William Walker, special agent
on- from Wichita Falls for the Feder-
the | a! Union, was in Denison yester-
day on business.
International
Meeting Held
'Members of the .Business and
Professional Woman's club held an
International Relations mee;in^
at the homo of Miss Bessie Wil-
lis Tuesday evening.
Miss Mary Etta Chapman,
chairman of international rela-
tions, presided over the busings-,
.essiom, after which refresh-
Mrs. Edna
daughters in
Freels visited her
Dallas Tuesday
Miss Rosalee Gissey is leaving
tonight for St. Louis for a short
visit with her brothers there.
COTTON QUIZ
VUT<S A GOOD NERVE
TONIC FOR MUSICIANS**
I}
KV
English Reporter
In Hot Water
With U. S, Navy
TO STOP THE ME HVE - JANGLING
RATTLING OF PROGRAMS, THE
TACOMAlWASH.; PHILHARMONIC
0«CHtST*A IS NOW rWTWfh
PRINTING ITS PROGRAMS M|0„ ,
ON SPEOAL NON-RATTLe ^
COTTON FABRICS
DEATH ROLL
man, the wur department general
staff of 98 officers "will concern!
itself primarily with major plan-]
ning of military operations audi
with formulation of policies gov-]
erning the army," the war depart-j
ment announcement said. Duties i
WASHINGTON, Mar. 11' I he 0f administering the army are as-
United States navy and the Lon- sjg.ne(j t0 commanders of the
don Daily Mail tangled today in an ground forces, air forces and ser-
open—if informal—dispute over viceg of iUpp,yi thfi three new;
the significance of an exclusive (,najn jji-oupings. It is in the latter
dispatch from a Mail correspon- division that Col. CMiy has been
dent reporting mass movements of assiKnc<i_
American convoys to Australia fi
and incip^nt sea battles without
parallel in history.
The dispute has been dubbed
the Farr Incident," because the
correspondent who wrote the dis-
patch was- Walter Farr, the 'Mail's
representative in this country who
first "broke" the story of the
Roosevelt-Churchill Atlantic char-
ter meeting several days before it
was announced.
The navy, in a "final" report on
the matter, stated that Farr's dis-
patch contained "no factual infor-
COTTON QUIZ
(Yjcffl IS COTTON UMQU£
AMONG U.S.CROPS?
GERMANY NOW KNOWS SHE'S
LICKED, SAYS REPORTER
Japs Bayonet 50
Britishers To
Death,Says Eden
■ * ii.
LOiMD'ON, March 11—Foreign
Sccietary Anthony Ed°r> isse'itd
tod: j that testimony of ey wit-
nesses had established the fact of
Japanese atrocities against military
nrisoners and civilians at Hong-
kong. He charged that 50 offi-
mation x x which has not been cers and men of the British army,
been
COTTON IS THE ONIV IM-
PORTANT CROP, GROWN IN THIS
countrv,which CAN .fWTWft
NOT BE USED UNTIL IT COTTOH )
IS PROCESSED INTO V^W/
FINISHED GOODS ...
| published by the American press": bound hand and foot, had
previously. hayonetted to death.
| The Daily Mail, defending the! "Women, both Asiatic and Eu- ... ■ . t ,,, 3v,iv,„4„„ *.i. j j. . *.
.accuracy of Farr's account, as-! ropean, were raped and murdered 'he'rapprovaatWashngtonbd th«r fears of ultimate disaster
' to and on; entire Chinese district was * bc dv^,sed for the cont act I don't -mean that the Nazi re-
will bo completed in the Durant
office, Mr. Cotnefr said, and after Nazi officials talked
I Germany today knows she io
licked but continues to fight
(ith undiminshed fury in an ef-
fort to postpone as long as pos-
sible the time of potwur repris
' als, according to Alex Dreier, NB
C correspondent and last news
nan to leave Berlin when war
'vas declared.
"I saw the first crack in Ger
inany's morale when the bliu
victory over Russia, which Hitlei I
htd promised, failed to material
ize," Dreier states in a signed
^ tide In- the current issue of
the American Magazine. "A.s
illations between Washington
..nd Berlin grew more tense, 1
naw the widespread uncertainty
of victory turn into a convktioi
of defeat.
I "On the $ve of Pearl Harbor
Germany ha 3' been, so undermin-
ed with hopelessness that eve 'l
■ openly of
j serted that American reaction
1V1RS ALICE PIERCE bad "f°rced official revelation declared a brothal regardless of
Following an illness of two °*ih\ °?! ^ .ih\°?atUS °f i^^itants," he said,
months Mrs. Alice Virginia Ger- v<>lyeA-~the position of the con- All survivors of the B.t.sh gar-
hardt Pierce, 34, a resident of voys concerned at the tlme the.nson, he charged, were herded in-
Denison 25 years, died Tuesday — Waa "*•"
afternoon at 5:50, at a local hos- - _
pitai. | ALONG—
letting for the new bridge and Ki«,e ab0\st to crack up. Far
Mrs. John
former Hazel
her marriage
C. Russell,
Hagana,
in September,
the '
Funeral arrangements, to be in'
charge of Short-Murray, are in-
•(Continued from pas* on*)
"to a camp of brick huts without
" doors, windows, lights or sanita-
tion. The dead were buried in a
' corner of the camp, he said.
V
, complete, pending arrival of dis- p0rk barrelers.
befjre tant reiatjves.
BRITISH-
re~
(Continued1 from rapre one)
f In Washington we have one
Mrs. Pierce was born at Stre- group trying to keep alive all the * " ~ "
turned last evening from Tyler benville, Ohjo, January 8, 1908, alphabetical organizations, while ment to new bascs. had 8truck a
v here she and her husband visit- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George gtin another is telling us that they heavy blow at u JaP naie a'«-
menta in the St Patrick's Div f f ^ h°m* ^ Ws br°>t,her T I J- Gerhardt. She wa< graduated are outmoded and the times call dtro™« ,atu Manlmein, dropping
1 1 8 > ■ ■ and sister, 'Mr. and Mrs. L. from Denison high tchool and later f„r their death. Rtlcks of bombti a",o"K fourteen' employed in the office had found
road,
Mr. Cotner estimated that the
letting would be ready to adver-
tise late in April or early May.
Personnel working in and out of
the engineers sub-office will com-
prise surveymen, inspectors, off ce
engineers, compilers, draftsmen,
clerks and typists.
The offices ocoupy a large part
of the space in the 50x140 foot
building while the rear of the
building is being ^quipped for
storage of motor vehicles.
.Most of the 30 persons to be
note were .':erved.
Among those who attended
were Mrs. Joe Capelle, Miss Em-
ma Klopp, Mrs. Guy Vinnedjre
Mrs. Orilla tfudd, Mrs. Nora Gul
leu, Mrs. J. M. Dempsev, Mis-
Kva Bond, Mrs. Lilly Satumons,
Mrs. Underwood, 'Miss Chapman.
HOSPITAL S
J. K. Shaw, 60C West Monter-
ey, was admitted to the Kutv
r nployes hospital Tuesday for
treatment.
C. Wilbanks. IMr. Russell left
settled
from Draughon business college.1 Some politician* are more in- s^att?re^ P'anes and setting two'homes today and were
j Tyler for "Camp Wolters where She became the bride of Jerdme terested in higher prices than they 'ires- Fighting planes, too, lift-' down for work.
he is stationed. i J. Pierce, a railroad brakeman, on aPe in raising more essentials. Oth- ted a sb'e'd over t'u' retreating "Most of us are married peo-
——* I Sept. 16, 1941, at St.-Louis. She ers want less overtime production, l!i"ops" JaPanese air raid upon pie," Mr. Cotner said, "since near-
Laura Pnvnc, daughter of Mr. I was a member of the Trinity an(j more overtime pay. ' Tharrawaddy was admitted to ly all of our young single men
and ^Irs. George Payne, 103 H Methodist church. ) «e says that was the sort of hnv? ki,,pd somp Burn,ese civilian.;, have been called into army ser-
W. Gandy, is recovering at her I Surviving are her parents; hus-, thing that lay open the gates for Signaling the total loss, for the'vice."
home from bruises and lacera- band; grandmother, ^frs. Alice invasion of France and observes
tions received when she fell from Stenger of Strebenville, and one that we are in danger unless we
- diff while attending the Camp , sister, Mrs. B. W. Finley of Den- wake up to the real trouble we
face.
Buying Our Congreismen?
la
Fire Council _ Fire Saturday ison.
morning. Her grandmother,
time being, of extreme southern litt'* f.7u* "• « lost in moving
Burma, American engineers and from Denison to Durant for drafts-
drillers were carrying out great men and engineers came along
j demolition? at Bassein, the import- with their desks, and stenograph-
i ant port ninety miles west of ers with their typewriters and he-
Mr*. A. J. Wilson, of Dallas «•-| _
rived in Deniscr. early Sunday j LllriOrCI'rllll CjGlS
morning to bs with her.,
W. H. Washburn, a section
btrer of Bells, will undergo a'i
operation at the Katy hospital to-
day.
R. E. Bailey, switchman on the
MKT railroad, became a patient
in the Katy hospital Tuesday.
I
Eldon Killough, 610 South !^a !
mar, was admitted to Long Snee,l'
Battlefield Of
South Seas Larger .
Than All Asia
Contract For New
Palestine Airport
J Here's another confusing thing,
also. This week we received a let-
ter from John W. Fouis, genera!
manager of the Trinity Improve-
ment association, who is trying t
^ret congress to order a probe into
ment was
floor.
MARKETS
v
the activities of the Association of
DENTON,
I iousness of
!.us been brought
'hospital Tuesday
treatment.
evening / or
Miss Olita Bible who undii
went an operation at I-ong
Sneed hospital Saturday was <c-
moved to her home in Bells,
Texas, Tuesday evening,
Mrs. G. I. Stricklin, Ml4 W
Chestnut, was removed to hr-r
.V.«ine from Long-.Sneed hospital
Tuesday.
II. E. Mc'Elroy, 515 W. W ood
ard, was removed to his home
Tivesd'ay afternoon from *h.'
Katy hospital and expects to re
turn to his work us brakeman on
the MKT Railroad soon, it m re
ported.
•A
BRIEFS
Mrs. A. Shuckleford of Dal-
las was a guest of her mother,
Mrs, J. M. Beck, KI5 W. Hu'l,
and friends here Tuesday.
torp. Phil Latona, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Latona, 801
F Johnson, will return to Kelly
Field today following a ten 'lay
visit with friends and relative '
here.
Tex.—The true ser-
the war situation
home to one
ex-student of the North Tex-n
State Teachers College, Sam In-
pritm, who wrote this week to
Charles Daineron, editor of the
f'TSTC yearbook. His letter
tomes from Corpus Christi,
wm re Ingram is on duty at the
Na\al Air Station.
''Since I have been here I have
realized the serious position we
are in," Ingram says. "We
have been informed here and
fhown figures and pictures that
,-liould be put before the people '
l''e you and I and our nex*
doer neighbor and theirs that
r.uist snap out of rt.
"The afrnount of territory
around just Pearl Harbor '.hat
was attacked could never b«
MOtited if we had a million men
and airplanes, because the bat-
tlolield of the South Seas is
bigger than all Asia ami the.
.'.liantic put together," he co'n-
t.'i ues. '"Our Navy ig making
f "ogress, but it nvust be kept se -
cret. for your good and that of
cvt rytbody else."
A slant on morale is gained
liorn -Ingram's statement that the
military leaders are "the most
cllicient and best in the world.'
fit urge® that the. public put
complete faith in them and in
ti.e.r government, declaring, "Eir-
Li^body in school there should bc
iei known that our county is in
serious danger and the best way
for them to help is to hvn
confidence in their leaders."
While in college, Ingram was
Gifford-Hill construction com- American Railways.,
i pany of Dallas, former contractor* That gentleman makes the state-
jfor construction of the field and ment that "there is not a Con-
i runways of Perrin field, has been pressman in the United States
'awarded the general contract for who could be re-elected if the rails
construction of a new municipal placed him on the black list. You,
airport for Palestine, to be con- of course, know this, as well as
, structed with a Civil Aeronautics every member of congress. There
i Administration allocation, which has never before developed, in
^%\nennonrTd fr°m l263,°°° the United such a bad ^Jap^e"''toward
to $64)0,000, It was announced uation as this ■ fc ma Brjtish bodje which
here today. No, we confess we did not know J T_„
, The contractor will move in that the rails held such a power
heavy equipment this week to over the election of our congress-
, start immediate construction, men.
, Grubbing and fencing work has We do understand, However
been in progress for three weeks that this little group of railroad
Rangoon, which itself already had pan work as soon as their equip-
been evacuated of military forces ment was moved onto the new
and stripped of all of military val-
ue.
Violent "Tank Arnaults.
Afield, 'Lieut. Gen. Harold R. L.
G Alexander's forces were de-
.•lared officially to have made a Fryers, under 8 lbs 16c
svccessfut withdrawal northwr.rd 'Fryers, over 3 lbs. ...T 13c
toward Central Burma, thus, extri- *Hens, light 15c
caiing themselves from what ha«'. Mens, hemvy lfe
been a most grave position. ! Old roosters
This was made possible in heavy Turkeys, yisuni* hens 10?
separate actions, a subsidiary Brit- Turkeys, young toms 14c
iph force previously isolated Trukeys, No. 2 9C
around Pegu, forty miles north of Turkeys, old hens 16c
Rangoon, smashing its way through Turkeys, old to'ms He
a junction Hni^e^s. wn^h v.... 25e
mixed 26j4c
in turn broke through the Japa-| Mutter, best grade* 30c
nese astride the Rangoon-Prome { Cotton
road in two violeijt and bloody i Strict middlng 19.35c
tank and infantry assaults.
. , , ^ , 3 GIRLS ELECTROCUTED
under supervision of government men represent less than one per TAKING BATH
labor foremen supplied by the Den- cent of the people of the United
ison district army engineer office. States. If that small percentage of
The government allocation has people among us seat or unseat
been increased substantially to our congressmen, then what has
make possible an even greater air- become of this much vaunted de-
port than originally planned.
V
^mocraey we hear about and for
, whi<!h we are sending our boys to
jthe front by the millions?
j Are they fighting so that this
one per cent may fend our con-
gressmen to congress and then tell
, them what they do FOR the one
1 per cent and how they should
, " " I HOLD OUT against the 99 plus
The Fred W. Wilson post of the pgp ce„t? I
American Legion will * entertain Yes, we admit, things are a bit
members of posts in surrounding ponf^inp in thig country.
V
Legion Plans
For Anniversary
Celebration Here
ODESSA, Tex., March ,11 — A
coroner's verdict of accidental
electrocution was returned today
in the deaths- of three sisters who
died when an electric light cord
fell into the tub where they were
bathing.
The girls were Euton, 8; KIo-
ma Jean, 5 and Anna Joyce Harry,
3, daughters of fMr. and Mrs. L. V.
Harry.
ENGINEERS—
rContinued from page one)
AUSSIES—
(Continued from page one)
towns March 17 in observance of
the anniversary of the national or-
ganization's founding, Harold
j Schmitzer, commander, disclosed
i today as a result of a meeting ~ ~ . "
i Tuesday night. t same ate M 4 at other
The event will be in charge of, "c*'v®d
the entertainment comtoittee, S. D.
Brown and George Hagans, assist-
ed by Paul McBee and Leo McMil
Frisco.
j Final plans and specifications
i for the highway and bridge relo-
1 cation project, started in Denison
Gram
Corn, wnite (red cob) 75c
Corn, yellow 75c
Wheat. No. 1 $1.01
Marine* Built Road |
U. S. Marines, supervised by
Marine Corps (Engineers, helped
l uild the Sino-Amer'can high-
way near Tientsin, China.
A
Bent Diplomat*
Arthur "Bugs" Baer, famous
columnist, often called the U. S
Marines the best diplomats the
United States over had.
V
I'oicd A Bandit
Sgt. Herman Henneken, now a
lieutenant colonei in the Marine
Corps, captured one of the
tnfit notorious Haitian bandits
by posing as a bandit himself.
from it. I'va seen its fighting
machine, and it is still magnifi-
cent despite losses on the eastern
front. In fact, recent attacks
have given Germany a, will to
fight with a new ferocity.
Little Fellow Is jAfraid
' The little fellow under Hlt*
h"' is afraid of what will hap-
pen to him after he stops fight-
ing. 'I talked with German ••
Wivo believe Vr.:)t a murderono
horde of avengers—downtrodden
Russians, Poles. Czechs, Se*V
Norwegans, ,Belgians, Danes.
I'lt'ch and French—will swarm
cvei Germany once (military o*>-
f:r.''iions have ceased. A Nazi
vffieer told me that if Germany
is defeated 30,000,000 German -
wilf die—and not on the battle-
field.
"The Nazis told the world thev
s'nrted this wnr on a crusade
But the ."rerage German t.old me
h' wis continuing it oti* of fear
—-fear, of postwar reprisals."
T.'re'er the last American
ctrresnondent fo leave Germorv
t and his conclusions rirp based on
j last nvnute oh=en'atior's,1R(l 1"
| formation. He quit the ReVfa.
i at almost the moment that Jap
planes swooped down on Pearl
Harbor. Later in Switzerland,
Spain and Portugal, while waft-
ing for a plane home, he was able
to maintain news pipelines into
Germany. He sayt that todav
the average Geynan faces the
war like th;e:
"We've knorked over nine
countries in Europe and what
has it got us? Our food tsr.V
better and our clothes are worse
Something has gone wrong in
I Russia and now we've got the
| United States against us too
, We ll be lacked in the er.d, but |
I -an't quit."
Wilton'* Idealism
"There is no hnmediat?
chance of internal collapse in
C< lr.iany," he writes. The aiv
trage German places no fafth in
the protestations of the- demo
cratk' world that, a fari peace will
bc established after the Nazi ov
erlords are overthrown. He
thinks of President Wilson's
.Fourteen Points that never ma-
tM'Jalited and1 he descr'ibes the
Roosevelt - Churchill Atlantic
^barter as Wilson's idealism
1 boiled down to eight points. H ?
' •
knows that before victory is in
their grasp the United State.i
must suffer tremendous I03-
scs and endure untold hardships,
and so his fear of postwar re -
\tnge, I am convinced-, will keer>
him fighting desperately, if fu-
tilely, to the bitter end."
-YOU GlRLSh
13 to 25 Who Suffer
DYSMENORRHEA
And Need To Build
Up Red Blood 1
If pain and distress
of functional
monthly disturbances
make you feel weak, dragged out,
pale, cranky, nervous at such times
-try Lydia Plnkham's Compound
Tablets (with added Iron).
Plnkham's Tablets not only re-
lieve monthly pain (cramps, head-
ache, backache), but also help
M
soothe nervousness due to
cause. Wonderful to help build up
red blood and thus aid In promot-
ing. more strength. Hundreds of
thousands of women remarkably
helped! Follow label directions.
V
NEW! "BACTERIOSTATIC"
FEMININE
HYGIENE
now finding great favor
among women...
Many doctors recommend regular use
of douches as a precautionary meas-
ure for women who want to bc clean,
dalnty-for women troubled by offend-
ing odor or discharge.
Some products may be harmful to
delicate tissues. But not Lydla E.
Pinkham's Sanative Wash I Pinkham's
Sanative Wash Is, gaining great favor
because it's NOT a harmful germicide.
Instead-lt's a mighty effective "bac-
teriostatic" (the modern trend). It not
only discourages bacterial growth and
Infection but thoroughly cleanses, deo-
dorizes. Very soothing-relieves minor
irritations and discharge and has a
tonic effect on delicate membranes.
Inexpensive! All druggists.
Save Worry
About what you are going to
order for the next meal—Let
us do the planning and cook-
ing—you'll be delighted at
the change.
A la carte Lunches
25c-35c-45c
Special Luncheon, 35c to 50
Special Steak
Dinners 60c, 75c, $1
Sunday Dinner
Country fried or baked
chicken, cocktail to
dessert 60c
CORNPED U. S.
INSPECTED MEATS
Carl's Grill
1 105 S. Burnett
While
fighting
Cabinet
heads of the Australian
forces discussed with
members in detail the
TONE UP
YOURSELF .
E. E. Kennedy, 013 S. La-
war, continues to improve at his
•home where he has been confined
for three weeks. He expects to
rttum to his K^ty position about' an outstanding student in the die -
April 1. rmment, having exhibited
- - throughout the Southwest and
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Snii l. 'a.*t summer, in San Diego,
r '; r, to move to 705 W. 'Mun.son, | California.
f tvm Dallas Saturday. Mr. I V——
;ih 'has been employed al LONCVIEW MAN ELECTED
! >! nefeld Hatter for 0 weeks PRESIDENT OF EIGHTH
DISTRICT TEACHERS ASSN.
GRFiENVILLE, Tex., March 1,1
Hi# youn* daughter,
\ ill probably attend
srhool.
Patricia, ,
Peahodv
-H. L. Poster of Longview was
Mrs. G. P. Patillo is visiting
jV.r several days in Port Worth
while her son, T. P. Yoakum, at-
tends to business matters *in
I 'alias.
lian, who were named last night. \mos[ ^ points of invasion and
The post decided to continue use™0*' tot ™ee 41threttt' L,euJt'
of the hall by the Church of Christ Gen', S[r Itven MacKay, command-
on a rental non-profit basis and « the home forces, warned the
naimed Harry Glidden, Ralph Gels- Puubl,c «<> to sit back and wait for
enhoner and Verne Earnest to a oth1e" t0 defen,d ^ c°unt7' .
committee to investigate expenses. **e se*'e , f.sj5.n y ' ,
Another committee was formed ^°",d be diff cult bu^
to confer with the Denison softball n<>t.b,^0n.d th*,r capacity' he sa,d
group desiring permission to use at £. 8 ' . . . f . _ ..
the Legion showgrounds in the 200 Pr,met! Min!rt" J°.bn, ?rt^'
block east Woodard as a softball commenting on the arrival in this
park. The corrtmittee is composed °' I0,|f.,c,al tr™. Athe
of Bob Dunn, Ruck Everett and fh Ea8t I"d,M' d««ribed Aus-
T-_.j tralia not only as a base from
uewey jareo. whlch to attack the enemy, but "a
sancutuary for all our allies."
Curtain suggested that next
D. Srhwurtg of the Cinderella
VVfrmen'i Wear shop is spending
the day In Dallas buying row
r;< fk.
*ra. J. ^ Compton aceor"p.ai'
«•(! lfy h^r two tfni'Ktiier*. MU-
Mnrtha Ix>u 'Compton an 1 M s
Czechoslovakia.
•V-
I elected president of the eighth dis-ITHBATRE MAGNET CHOSEN
trict of the Texas State Teacheri'TO GAS DIRECTORS BOA.RD I _ A . .. . ,
association and Longview was DALLAS, Tex., March 11-Karl ^uL^^twa
| chosen as the 1943 convention city Hoblitzelle, of Interstate Theatres, "ationa' prayc '
at the closing session of the or- was elected by the stockholders 0f.tb«.ann'7^^1^lr^rr"«n in*
"anization's annual meeting here.' the Republic Natural Gas company v,1MOn 0
Other officers elected are: Miss to the board of directors today. A
Bertha Allen, county superinten- dividend of 20c a share payable
dent of Gregg county, vice-presl- April 26 was declared to stockhold-
dent; Ben Copass, of Mineola.'ers of record April 16.
'treasurer; Wiss Brotze of Marshall, Other directors elected were: W. trip to London to stuJy Great Bri-
; ecretary. Sopt. V. L. (Moffett of J. Morris, P. M. Maver and W. H. tain under fire. The trip was
center was chosen as the executive Wilde* of Dallas; R. C. Foulston, made several months before the
committeeman from his district to 'and Ralph J. Pryor of Wichita, United States declaration of va<\
the meeting of the Texas State Kansas and W. W. Turner, Chi- In the re-made high command,
Tcachers association. cago. "modeled somewhat after the Ger-
SPRING
COLONEL-
(Oontinued from pago one)
for
WITH
Vineland Tonic
A valuable tonic and stimulant to the ap-
j etite. . .Especially recommended for con-
valescents and elderly persons.
iT.e tonic your children need to cast off
Liuggishness and bring back vigor.
(PINT BOTTLE
.ss
KINGSTON
HAS IT
1?BKFGCr
U/ORK
Men like the way we wash our ap-
parel . . . our prices prove econ-
omy, too! You'll find our work
on household bundles equally sat-
isfactory!
Hand Finished
SHIRTS
Collars starched smoothly,
just the way you want thein.
PHONES 716-717
SNOW-WHITE
LA UNDERERS-CLEANERS-DYERS
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Anderson, LeRoy M. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 208, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 11, 1942, newspaper, March 11, 1942; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth328436/m1/4/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.