The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 232, Ed. 1 Friday, April 10, 1942 Page: 1 of 4
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§:
O
WEATHER
DEN ISDN AND VICINITY
Not much change in tenrpsmture
tonight und Saturday
The Oenison Pr
PUBLISH CO pAILY tXCBJtl
SUNDAY
rOUR HOMEOWNID
DALLY NEWU>Ai>EA
Ike PER ItOKTU
REPRESENTATIVE OF THE UNITED PRESS
DENISON, TEXAS FRI., APRIL 10th, 1941
WEEKLY FOUNDED 1930- DAILY 1934
VOL. VIII—NO. 232
Stars And Stripes Still Wave Over Corregidor
I
ALONG TH€
N6WS B6RT
BY THE EDITOR
m •
They Are Our Boy .
^•others are all alike>—they may
be patriotic enough to keep their
spirits up when they see their sons
leaving for the front and the trag-
ic things of war, but they love
those tons so much th-«- it fairly
b/caka their hearts to h?.ve to see
them go.
One mother of our acquaintance
—and there are many like her
these days—has just returned
from a visit with her son; who
also is the only child. They will
never have another child in their
family. And that is also true of
many mothers who are giving their
only son to the forces of Uncle
Sam in this war brought on by
this maniac from the beer cellar.
But that mother to whom we
refer, says she is proud of her son.
Even while he is facing only nine
weeks before leaving his present
location and lenviryr his civies, he
thinks of the money he can save
his parents by not purchasing a
needed pair of shoes for the se-
vere drilling he is to undergo be-
fore the nine weeks are over. And
while he is considerate of the
funds his parents have to put up,
he is preparing to give his all if
■necessary, for the cause of libertyj
and freedom.
But that particular mother takes
the position that while it is a fear-
ful thing to think of her boy not
coming back, she also says that
there will not be anything worth
coming back for if we do not win
the war.
She is willing to say through
her tears that it is all right* for her
boy to go if it will mean saving
■all that is dear back at home.
Can you imagine, then, how aj
mother or father of a boy like that,J
and who bow to the call of their
son for the cuntry's armed forces,
will feel to learn of some others
who are thinking in terms of get-
ting hold of every dollar they can?
Well, we have plenty here who
(Continued on page four)
Buenos Aires
Firms Charged With
Giving Axis Steel
v WASHINGTON, April 10 —
Charges are reaching Washington
from U. S. business circles in Ar-
gentine that business firms in
Auto Supply
Store Head
Dies Thursday
Started Here With
Small Station; Now
Owns 17 Stores
Production Of Planes And Tanks Guerj||a Warfare
Far Ahead Of Schedule-Ray burn
to Keep Nipponese
Forces On Defense
Lashes Out At
Administration
Critics Thursday
Jess E. Bobcock, 59, who, with
a brother, left jobs as railroad en-
gineers in Kansas to found a chnin
of seventeen auto supply stores in
Texas and Oklahoma, died at 'Har-
Dealers To
Report To Gov't.
Guns On Hand
Denison dealers ""'ho have shot-
guns, pistols and rifled in stock
have been ordered to report to th
government on their inventories
of such firearms, many of which
will he bought by the government
through the Defense Supplies Cor-
poration. Forms PD-382 andPP-
383 have been sent to them for
this purpose.
Sales of firearms have been re-
stricted by the WPB in Limitation
Order L-60, issued on Februnry
27, except for sales for state, lo-
cal and federal government use,
to allied governments, or for lend-
lease purposes. Information on
other permitted exceptions should
be secured from the governmental
requirements bureau, V.hich Is ad-
ministering the order.
Officials ox' the bureau said that
as soon as the report forms are
tabulated, steps will be taken to
unfreeze the stocks which the gov-
ernment does not need. Meanwhile,
users such as war plants may ask
the governmental requirements bu-
reau for permission to buy arms.
V
AKINS TO ATTEND
COURSE IN AKRON
Carl Akins, manager of the
Firestone Tire and Rubber Co.,
hero, is leaving Saturday for Ak-
ron, Ohio., to attend a 30-day
course in salesmanship conducted
by officials of the Firestone com-
pnny there.
Mr. Akins, of Dallas, recently
appointed manager of the local
company, is definitely assigned to
this store and will return to Deni-
son in approximately 40 days His
family will remain at their home,
210 East Hull. An acting man-
ager, to be sent from Dallas, will
be In charge while J7r. Akins is
absent.
Unrmploym*nt Decreases
WASHIiNflTOK, April 10—
"Howard Hunter, WPA commis-
sioner, reported today that the na-
tion's unemployed had dropped
from four million to 3,(100.000 be-
tween .February and March.
Buenos Aires are handling large
quantities of supplies and have
large amounts stored up, the sup-
plies to be turnpd over to the
axis firms.
These supplies are said to have
been shipped here from the United
States, and orders are still being
filled from the same source, many
of Which articles are said to be
either exhausted or running low in
the States.
Some of the articles stored here
for the axis forces are much
needed drugs, also large quantities
of iron, steel and other supplies in
amounts to run the axis for
months, but none of which is
available for the United States.
Protests are also asked to be
made and steps taken to have the
Buenos Aires government seize the
supplis, which they have the pow-
er to do.
SULPHUR SPRINGS. Texas,
Acril 10—Angering critics of .he
n.tional « • efforr Specter of
the Hoiui Sam Raybvrr told a
in ity rally here Thur'co; that the
P'-i (iuctio.i of plane* and tanks is
far ahead of schedule.
Rayburn assured the cheering
crowd that the United States is
making 3,300 planes a month and
that the nation and its allies "can
and will build two and a half times
as many planes as all our enemies
put together."
"I can say, without divulging
military secrets, that one factory
alone is turning out each day a
trainload of tanks.
Filling FOR'* Quota.
"I can assure you that we are
more than filling the quota set by
President Roosevelt In his January
message to congress. The Presi-
DANISH SHIP OFFERED U. 5.
WASHINGTON, April .10—Al- wave over Corregidor and the gun*
) though the defenders of Bataan of the fort still bark the'r defiance
have been driven from the Penin- at the hordes of Nippon.
I sula, the stars and 'tripes still How long the fort can hold out
| — | is declared to be a matter of food
j and munition, but they :ure still
i able to deal out trouble to the at-
j t ackers, it being reported that the
nuns brought dawn tvo Japanese
planes today.
Also groups of defenders are
still active in various parts of the
islands fighting to hold ground,
j although they are without the
■ heavier guns and planer. It will b
| a constant guerilla warfare, it is
, declared and one destined to keep
! a large force of Japanese def n< -
! ers on the island.
Red River
Reaches Crest
2 P. M. Thurs.
Atkinson Bridge
Shaky, Traffic
Being Rerouted
dent called for 60,000 planes in
Jesse E. Babcock
lingen Thursday of a heart attack.
He went to Harlingen from Dallas
in 1938 when ill-health forced his
retirement from active duty as
president of the Babcock Brothers
Auto Supply company.
A native of Anderson county,
Kansas, Babcock and one of his
eight brothers, Floyd 0. Babcock,
received their first employment
with the Katy railroad in Parsons,
Kans., were promoted to engineers
within a few days of each other
in 1010, quit railroading ten years
later to open a small store and
service station in Denson.
In addition to the seventeen
company-owned stores throughout
North Texas and Southern Okla-
homa, the Babcock firm has eight
associate stores.
In 1935, Jess Babcock moved
from Denison to Dallas.
He is survived by his widow,
two daughters, Mrs. J. D. White of
Harlington and Mrs. Frank Boren
of Denison; a son, Dale Babcock
of Harlingen and his brothers.
. V
Cement Co. Files
Complaint Again st
Katy, K. O. and G.
OKLAHOMA CITY, April .10—
The Oklahoma Portland Cement
company of Ada today filed a
complaint with the corporation
commission charging seven major
railroad companies with making
excessive freight chnvpe on /ement
shipped from Ada to points within
80 miles of that city.
The complaint asks the commis-
sion to force the seven railroad
companies to adopt the Texas
scale of freight rates for the ac-
tual short line mileage from Ada,
a distance of 80 miles In all di-
rections. It also asks that the
commission give the cement com-
pany damages for excessive
charges made during the statutory
period.
The Texas scale,the complaint
says, means lower rates for short
hauls.
The railroads involved are Rock
Island, Santa Fe, Frisco, Katy,
Kansas, Oklahoma A Gulf, Okla-
lahoma City, Ada and Atokn and
Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe.
MacArthur No, 1
Hero Of Cadets .
At Randolph
RANDOLPH FIR'JD, Tex., April
10—Randolph field cadets, ballot-
ing in their first poll of likes and
dislikes, picked General Douglas
MacArthur as their No. 1 hero in
preference to President' Roosevelt.
Their vote was a perfect illus-
tration of one of the democratic
principles these flying youths wiW
soon be fighting for—freedom of
expression.
The poll Illustrated the melting
pot of occupations which is the
army air corps cadet group.
A year ago 53 per cent of the
youngsters—average age, 23—
were college boys; the other 47
per cent were busy at a host of
other jobs. Salesmen peddled
vacuum cleaners, steel pipe, tires,
automobiles; some were teachers
and a few were already in the
army.
The poll also showed a fourth
of the cadets are engaged; they
prefer brunettes, blondes and red-
heads, in that order.
Football is the favorite sport
and steaks ran away from chicken
and ice cream in the food depart-
ment.
Clark Gable and Lana Turner
are their favorite actors and
"Sergeant York" their favorite
movie—strangely enough, it glori-
fies the infantryman instead of
the flier.
"Any special Riessage to the
general public?" asked the poll.
"Yes, get your head out," some
advised. In flying parlance that |
means get your head out of the
cockpit and see what's going on.
V
Federal Court
Indicts Denison
Man For Forgery
' -
SHFJRMJAN, April io—Claude
E. Nixon, 26, was given a two-
year federal prison sentence by
Judge Randolph Bryant Tuesday |
on his plea of guilty in federal
court here to a Dyer act charge, j
Nixon was charged with having
driven a stolen Ruick sedan onj
Feb. 17 from Chicago to Denton,
near where the car was involved j
in a wreck.
R. J. Wilson, Denton county
farmer who was arrested working
in a navy shipyard, was given a;
ninety-day sentence by a jury on a
charge that he sold some cows and
mnrej mortgaged to the farm se-
urity administration in October,
1939. He also was placed on five-
vear probation.
Cecil Bert Murphy of Denison,
route 1, was indicted on a charge
that he forged the signature of his
father-in-law, Ernest Meadows of
Pottsboro, on a $10 governent
chrrk last Dec. 8.
A 16-year-old youth from the
Beaumont division was given 18
months in a federal institution to |
he designated, on a charge that he|
stole a government check address*
ed to his father and forged his fa-
ther's signature.
SAIL8 SPREAD WIDE to the breeze, the Danish Government training
■hip "Danemark" here rides gracefully over the waves of the North
Atlantic. The Danish Minister In Washington has revealed that the
captain and crew of the vessel have offered themselves and their ship
1942, which would include 45,000 ito the United 8tates to serve In eny desired capacity In the "Joint flghi
combat planes. j If^V^jy aiMLIIIierty.V"
"Present production rates indi-l ■'
cate 125,000 planes in 1943. Of j
the total, 100,000 will be combat I
planes. We have every confidence'
that this schedule not only will be!
met, but exceeded.
"The President called for 45,000 |
tanks for 1942 and 75,000 for,
1943. We now are ahead of the.
i Red River at Colbert crested at MacArthur Issues Salute.
2 p. m. Thursday with a height ofj WASHINGTON, April 10 — 1
17.4 feet, the U. S. engineer liy-j report from Australia savs th"'
draulic division revealed today.j Gen. Douglas 'MacArthur in hi*
;The Guy F. Atkinson company's;own handwriting has saluted the
Membership Drive Of
C. C. Has Net Gain $3,049
temporary service bridge further
upstream at the Denison dam site,
washed away by flooding waters
of the Red twice previously, was
reported still standing although
all traffic over it'has been halted.
Traffic of the Atkinson's equip-
brave defenders of Bataan for
their gallant stand. He declared
that their fight was one of the
glorious spots in the present war
and hat they did as he was satis-
fied they would.
There is no official report from
. | ent, including the huge earthbear- j Xokjo that thp battI<J ^
come to
1942 schedule and the nrosnects' The membersj"P campaign of Hopkins and R. D. Leathermun asking trucks are being detoured; an end) thua eivinR rise t0 the
for 1143 are verv encouraging the Chamber of Commerce c°"- the committee securing the largest, over the highway 75 bridge at rPport that tho battle is still
>"ru . v, - „? nnft eluded late Thursday with war sav- number of points, according to Colbert, as the temporary span was j ^
The sc edu e ca s lor 0, jngg bonds being presented E. L. W. L. Peterson, general chairman, said to be too shaky from the riv-
antiaircraft guns. This also is | Th# campaiKn> is announced> 0nslaught.for much strain.
Local Youth
being met.
Ship A Day 'Launched.
"The President said we must
build 8,000,000 deadweight tons of rfGld C_)n RaD6*
shipping as compared with 1,000,-
000 tons last year. That schedule RODDCry Charge
undoubtedly will be met by sum-|
mer or early fall and
| will continu euntill allcards and
The report from Germany that
Gen. Wainwright has asked for a
Engineers said the Red was held truce is not borne out by facts in
I prospects have been seen. J on its crest until 10 p. m. | the case.
The campaign netted the Cham-J In Oklahoma Blue river reached; —
I her $3,049 in increased dues ofj its highest flood st^ge in four Citizen. Are Stirred. •
present members and of new mem-s years and today was but three] WASHINGTON, April 10 *H~c
fcers secured. On the final day feet short of the record. Both the j defeat 0f ,he Americans on Ba-
probably , A . of the drive $682 in increases and I Washita and Red were reported taan pP„insuln if: having its decided
will be exceeded by several million' J" "°W men,berS Were ! haying left their banks at several taction 0n official Washing
tons before the year ends. At pres- f: npni(,„n '1{h f'P '-riminnllv' P°?u u , pomts. | an(i the growing sentiment foe
ent a ship a day is go^ng into the) itu^ting and robing , 3 J? lhursd > OH Field Under Water. j elimination of the forty-hour work
water, but by next summer or th* Tmitb .nTTf wcro: | Washita river stood at 35 feet j week and putting in more time on
early falj I confidently predict thatj t Th ... ' I Adams Lumber company, F. L.j at Durwood, Okla., and at 30 feet) production, as well as the stopping
two ships a day will be launched." e..„ " Hin„ tn ' „ ■ n_fo tiwJBaker' Blue Ron"et cafe, Mrs. A at the Cumberland oil field north-; of all profitevlng is reported as
A"co,rdln^ \° P° r reports, the! E. CIymer> H_ H_ Cummingi Dol-!w*st of here at noon today and coming from all sections of tU
youth knocked on the front door
The giant rally, said to be the
first of its kind in the nation, filU f th unmo ,.,.j ~ — • aw.. unmt un v. «
ed to overflowing the spacious «'t-ie„ram The woman hid re- ^en'son Bowling alley, Denison highway 70 west of Durant wasj . ne* >■
municipal auditorium and attract-L-. . f , h. -f., , -nf j Credit company, Denison Food blocked west of the Washita the people are making «ueh de-
ed political figures from all parts . . .... . stores, G. Dahl, Mrs- R- R- Farm- bridge. Buses to and from the west mands in increasing numbers, and
of the state. Also on the program! ' ' ,an ,' 0 " 1,°?.r "V 'i" er' Foster's Butane gas, Gullet & were being routed through Deni-j others of the upper and lower
was Congressman Wright Patmanj i"13* .!( ° ' Gullet, Hale Halsell Wholesale son. ; houses are determined that pro-
2.„_ I she was hit in the mouth with a, Grocery company. | Operations at all the drilling duction shall be speeded up.
H. C. Hollwell, Foxhall Hurdles- j wells in the Cumberland field were. The loss of Bataan has stirred
larhide & Harris, Rev. B. J. Deeny,j was still rising. Traffic on U. S. country.
Senator Josh Lee (D.-Ok.) gays
of Texarkana.
There was a definite political
flavor to Patman's introduction of
blow knocking her to the floor,
| . , _ , , , . f ( «. v. nuiiweu, ruxmtn nuruiep- wens in ine uunweriana iteia were, me loss oi jincaan nas stirrea
«as s lippe .in __ a en o\u o a j0n, Jenkins Studio. J. A. Johnson, halted by the flood conditions. the people as nothing else and
divan were she was raped and - - - -- - - -- — • —
forced to tell the whereabouts of
some money and car keys.
Ward was said to hav« tied the
| woman's feet with
A. E. Kildeau, J. H. Laughlin, R. Although there was
C. Marlow transfer, Bill McCoy, drizzle of rain here
an
George P. Mecham, Mrs. W- B.j morning, it did not cont&in enough;
moisture to register on the B. ,T.
ndsay gauge. By 1 o'clock
a slight since it involves so many states
Thursday throught the soldier sons of par-
. |Munson, Jr., Open Front grocery. { moist
iromnS| palace Hote]( w N porter, Red; Linds
(Continued on page four)
Rayburn. >
Rayburn Successor to 'FD£l.
"When the time comes for a
change in the head of our govern-
ment* said the Texarkana con- . . , . ... , , .
gressman, "our distinguished , . u <9ov,' " ° .! Ball taxi, J. M. Roddy, G. P-Shaf-jThursday afternoon the rain had Dp" ATH ROf I
speaker will make a worthy sue-!™;'Sfc J?* I f«r, Sanborn's cafe, Saratoga cafe, stopped completely and later
cessor to Franklin Delano Roose-; 1 a. ,a" erc ,e ne" H. M. Scott, Harry Stephens. I the afternoon the sun shone
velt."
amounted to over $50 and the ra-
Tropical Gardens. John S. Tay-
Rayburn lashed out at critics l'ist attempted his escape in his . j ^ Tipton Tire Co., C. B.
' | victim s automobile, but was un-
of the administration and charg-
ed that "lack of unity and confi-
(Continued on page four)
able to get the vehicle started.
• , . . . , After he had fled, the woman ■
dence have hampered our efforts . . . . ... .
r ^managed to get her feet loose and ri i« • rp .
ran to a neighbor's home where t* liipinOS 1 rain
(Continued on page four)
- ! she was untied and police called, n j-v rp
Through the medium of radio. POr l\.etUrn IO
the youth was arrested by Denton i wj i J C
'police riding in a taxi in a town, rJOmelanClS OOOn
i near there. He had taken a taxi; ■
j from Denison to Denton ar.d ae-j cAi«P SAN LUIS OBISPO,
j cured another_taxi there. He was Calif., April 10—A small baod Siilphur Springs
brightly for the first time sincc FRANKLIN P. WALLOW
Easter, ! A resident for 37 years, Frank-
The danger of flood at Wichita '>n P. Mallow, 62, retired Katy en-
Falls lessened. Holliday creek and, tfineer, died this morning at 5
the Wichita Falls river apparently o'clock at his home, 1015 W- Nel-
hnd reached their crests and were son, following an illness of sev-
falling. eral months.
Etex Roads Closed. Funeral services will be held
Highways in the East Texas Saturday afternoon at 4 o'clock
area were closed and two lakes from Short (Murray chapel With
near Tyler reached their highest Rev. L. R. Lamb officiating. In-
recorded levels. terment will he at Fuirvievr cen
Highway 154 from Cooper to with Short-^Iurray direct-
Home Remodeling
Made Easier By
WP Board Today |c„n,« «n™«r^ ™ - caw., Apn. >o-A sm.n moi Snlphur SprinM WM reporte(1 fnff.
I 'eturned ^ «e"'son shortly be- of grlm and determined men, who ^h^ped under about four feet Mr. Mallow was bom at McKin
-DALLAS, Tex., April 10—The f«re ? o clock this morning and hope to accompany Sen. Douglas ()f wate highest stage ever ney Sept. 3, 1879, son of ptr. and
WPB moved today to make it ] the money, with the exception of MacArthur when he goes bac>. to known Jn that areB thp hi(rhway Mrs. Oliver Mallow, and was rear-
easier for owners to remodel hous-;**8. w] ch he had spent, was re- the Philippines, form the nucleus. dppartnient ,Cported. Also blocked ed and received his education
of „ United suteg army Filipino hy W9ter werp highways 37 from there. He was married Sept. 28.
' infantry battalion here. R0g«ta to Mt. Vernon and 34 from11 00, to Miss Wanda Pope at
I "Our destination u? the Philip- Qroenvme to Terrell. Hichwav 37 MrKinney The couple rnme to
j pines, said one officer. i fyom jtogata to Clarksville also Denison in 1905 where, he became
l Only recently activated by the was r(,portp<j impassable, but the mi M-K-T fireman, later advanc-
army and still small in numbers, ],|Phwnv department said this sec- ing to engineer. <Mrs. Mallow died
the battalion ^ expected to IITOw. :tion of ^ road prohably wi„ be here on F-b. 25, 1932.
open soon. He was married on April 80,
ing that can provide additional1 covered
living accommodations necessary
to the war effort, the Dallas
priorities field office was advised.
The order was effective at once
and assigned an A-5 preference
rating to deliveries of materials to
builders and their subcontractors
where such materials enter into
necessary low-cost remodeling
projects.
It limited such ratings, however,
-V
Wilkie Elected
Director Of Fox
NEW YORK, April 10—Wen- All the enlisted personnel and
! dell Willkie today was elected a di- most of the officers will be Fili
rector and chairman of the board pinos.
of Twentieth Century-Fox Filmj Tho commanding officer is the
Six highways in Southeastern 1938, at Durant to Mrs. Emma B.
Oklahoma were closed by high Fike. (Mr. ^fallow retired doe to
water. The Oklahoma highway pa-; ill health on Oct. 10, 1940- He was
V. V W . corporation. j «l of a fomer governor general ,r0, #>|d fhftf inrh<>, of wnteP: „ m„mber of the Baptist church
to projects for which the cost of Directors of the motion picture of one of the Philippine islands. st0o<1 on t, g Mrhwav 77 south snd Brotherhood of Locomotive
materials that are on the war hous-1 company also appointed Winkle's He talked the native Tagtlog dia- f but trgffic WM> pt!|I ablc Eneil,eers.
xiruu,"P° ,nir to go through. Surviving are his widow, two
With Bataan'8 opposition appai- v son., Mertoon of Auburn. Cal.,
Spyrous P. Skouras, who had ently crushed by the Japanese, flT,d Lvnp of Sftnta Barbara( c^).,
long been connected with the mo- Capt. Turso G. Farjardo, execu- MAY MAKE AVRF.S L dau^)lter c C Dobson of
tion picture industry, was elected.tive officer, said: JOtH Denison three brothers', W. P. Mnl-
president and chief executive of-J "The men are anxious, to get) WASHINGTON, APRIL 10 —|jow jjlovis, N. M ' Bob Mallow, of
ing critical list does not exceed an. law firm as counsel for the com
average of $100 a room, and thorny.
scarce materials for each structure
at a cost of $800.
In addition, such projects must
be located in critical housing areas.
Owners will not be permitted to ficer. He succeeded the late Sidney back to take the Philippines away
sell or rent any dwelling unit in- R. Kent who died last March 10.1 from the Japanese. Filipino men
eluded in such a project at a price The announcemeQt said that! are transferring rapidly from oth
higher than that approved on the Willkie would not be connected er army units to be with us in the , .ujc.w,, .. p
application, in any case no morel with actual operations of the com army when we retake the Philip- Cascade Locks, Or*., prohr.biv wfll, NO I
than $50 monthly for each dwell- rwiny, but would act chiefly as a1, pines They want to be with Gen- be reclassified for noncombatatit, |f you do not receive «">:ir **re
ing unit ot a sale price of more letrnl advher in the newly created eral MacArthur on his return drty If he can pass army phytic0j before B-.80, plea*e phone 1100 fn^
Selective Service Director I*wis g T and (Smith Ma„0Wi
B. Hershey sair that Low Ayres, v Te*
Hollywood movie star now in a
conscientious objectors' camp at
than $6,000.
I post of chairman.
| trip there."
^ requirements.
or<e will be tent rot.
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Anderson, LeRoy M. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 232, Ed. 1 Friday, April 10, 1942, newspaper, April 10, 1942; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth328462/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.