The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 260, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 29, 1941 Page: 1 of 4
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WEATHER
DENISON AND VICINITY
Cloudy and light rains today
and Wednesday
The Denison Press
PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT
SUNDAY
YOUR HOME-OWNED
DAILY NEWSPAPER
1
36c PER MONTH
REPRESENTATIVE OF THE UNITED PRESS
DENISON, TEXAS TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 1941
WEEKLY FOUNDED 1930—DAILY 1934
VOL. 7-NO. 260
British Warned To Leave Spain Immediately
Dam Stand Of Phillips
Irks Marshall County
ARDMORE, (Okla., April 29— | state highway 99 came in for caus-
Governor Leon C. Phillips’ attitude (tie comment recently at the hands
toward the Denison dam on Red
River and his position in regard to
the ultimate routing and improve-
ment of U. S. highway 70 and
EVERYDAY
DENISON
Itv
LOUIS ANDERSON
•-------- ------ *
Personal nomination for the
least loss the U. S. has suffered so
fur: Charles A. Lindbergh as a
colonel in the US air corps reserve.
'Admiration for the Lone Eagle (in
fact now) died in the American
people long ago . . . John Barry-
more laughed at his director when
he asked if the Profile feared to
work in a sequence with a tiger.
After five wives, The Great Man
said, the tiger has the appearance
of a tabby cat . . . One columnist,
panning the Hays office for its
(Continued on page four)
of Milam Ewing, widely known
Madill civic leader, in an address
before the Ardmore Chamber of
Negroes Have
Right To Ride
The Pullmans
Washington, April 29—The
nation's railroads must provide the
same first-class service* and ac-
commodations for negroes that are
n:ude available to white travelers,
the Suprtemc Court ruled today.
The decision brought to a tri-
umphant end a three-year court
fight begun by Representative Ar-
thur W. Mitchell (D.-IU.) a negro,
after he had been compelled to
move from a Pullman car to a Jim
Crow car while traveling between
Memphis, Tcnn., and Hot Springs,
Ark.
Mitchell, holder of a first-class
ticket, was denied Pullman accom-
modations on tile Chicago, Rock
Island & Pacific railroad because
of an Arkansas law which requires
segregtion of white and negro pas-
sengers. He challenged application
of this statute to persons moving
in interstate commerce and de-
manded equal accommodations for
the two races.
He lost the first round when the
Interstate Commerce Commission
upheld the action of the carrier, ,
ruling that there is not sufficient j
first-class traffic among negro
passengers to justify costly
changes or additions which the
railroads would have to make to
meet Mitchell’s demands.
Lower courts upheld Hie
and Mitchell carried his fight to
the higest tribunal. Its opinion,
written by Chief Justice Charles
Evans Hughes, was unanimous,
with Justice Hugo Black and Jus-
tice Stanley Reed, who come from
■tilabama and Kentucky, respec-
tively, participating.
’’Colored passengers who buy
first-class tickets must he furnish-
ed with accommodations equal in
comfort and convenience to those
afforded to first-class while pas-
sengers,’’ the opinion held.
(Continued on page four)
More Assistance
To Britain Is
Urged By Group
The threat of the retort re-
verses in the Balkans and Greece
has intensified the neeii for m-
ri; ',anc".' to Great Britain, .1 Lions
lub scrap iron commi’.te; through
it. chairman, Major Roland r•
ll'own, declared toda \
Disappointed at th' "V'h . I.ow-
i.g of patriotism, the- icons com-
mittee pointed out America’s first
line of defense lies in. Englan 1
and the one Small way every
Denisonian could assist in build-
ing the morale of the British
fighting forces and at the same
time assure them of plenty of am-
munition in their defense against
Nazi Germany is by donating
scrap iron found about the yard,
attic, cellar, etc.
The Lions have designated u
vacant lot alongside Katy rail-
Miners
To End
Strike
FDR Brings About
Agreement After
Mediation Fails
$200 Prizes In
Spring Dairy Show
WASHINGTON, April 29—The
national defense picture today
was brighter after southern coal
operators agreed to resume pro-
duction Wednesday morning.
Washington estimated that 400,-
000 miners would go back to their
work Wednesday and Thursday
and that production would be at
top speed before the weekend,
thereby ending a serious coal
shortage threatening to cause a
stoppage in national defense
plants.
It was estimated that the coai
squeeze in some defense plants
had put the plants so far back ini
production that it might be weeks’
before they will he able to hit the
peak where there were no coal
mine strikes.
The White House last night an-
nounced the agreements had been
reached after President Roosevelt
had intervened when the labor
vwean'v im ____., ____ mediation board failed to bring
road tracks between Mirick and the employees and employers to an
In order that dairy stock rais-
ing in Grayson county may be en-
couraged rather than the beef type
bulls, the forthcoming Denison
Dairy Cattle show announced for
May 15 will give $200 in cash
prizes as well as a number of
trophies. In all there will be 15
of the trophy cups and will soon
be on display in the local jpwelry
stores.
A registered young, bull and a
registered heifer are being offered
as prizes for exhibitors and atten-
dance.
The trophies to be offered in-
clude nine for champion trophy,
four for senior and junior cham-
pion and two grand champion.
These trophies wil be suitably en-
graved to show the. classification
und the donor of the trophy.
Recently in the meeting of
dairymen held in Fort Worth it
was developed that attention was
being given to breeding beef cat-
tle to the falling off of dairy stock
with a consequent letting down of
the grade of milk. It is with the
idea of growing more and better
milk stock that the local exhibits
are being fostered.
With Texas fast becoming a
dairy center and with this city
having the largest single cheese
plant in the world in the Kraft
Cheese plant, Grayson county is
especially interested in bringing
up the standard of the dairy cat-
tle. It is deci-reA that already
the supply of milk from dairy
stock is already suffering.
Senate
Passes
Tax Bill
23 Millions Will
Be Brought In By Lyle Hopkins
Legislative Measure n A e
-- Passes After
| .AUSTIN, April 29-The Texa.^i . Ill pe
j senate today had passed its tax OIlOl l HUlcSS
hill 31 to 0 and experts said it
Invasion Talk Is
Resumed At London;
Swiss Threatened
Denison To Cooperate
In Home-Builders Week
Barret avenues for depositing
the metal to be collected later and
transported to smelters for redu*
Cion into billets. From the plants j
the tnetal will be shipped directly |
agreeable understanding.
President Roosevelt’s proposals,
which he publicly recommended on
April 21
would bring in an additional in
come of $23,500,000.
According to the comptroller’s
revised estimate, the bill as it was
brought into the senate would have
produced $22,556,254 of addition-
al revene. It lost $1,683,813 by
adoption of A. M. Akin’s amend-
ment striking out the article tax-
ing soft drinks. It has suffered
other losses by other changes, but
while these cannot be computed
now, they will probably be small.
By the Fritz Maiuritz amendment
it gained about $1,200,000, by Ol-
an Van Zundt’s amendment about
$900,000, and by an amendment
udopted Saturday raising the tax
on production of cement from
John Lyle Hopkins, 36, owner
LONDON, April 29—Great Bri-
tain today renewed its talks of a
German invasion after Nazi planes
and long range guns had thunder-
ed at the southeast coast of Bri-
tain, while reports from Berlin
void that British envoys in Spain
had warned subjects there to leave
1
l-2c to 2 and l-2c per 100
| pounds it gained approximately
Denison is included in the more duetion manager for the FHA.
than 130 Texas cities and towns Gov. O’Daniel has proclaimed j ,nd
expected to co-operate with Gov- the week of June 1 as Texas 1 p0Utms ,
ernor W. Lee O’Daniel, the Fed- Home Builders Week, which is the $232,000. iater with Western Union and
eral Housing Administration and cause ot the building spurt urged] The gum oJ. these Kajns $2,-1 then with the C. C. Odle cleaning
the Texas building industry in a j for that period Each home, to | 332,000 which exceeds the losses! and pressjng establishment. He
state-wide group of typically Tex-1 be known as I he Texan the j by ^648,187, and indicates, on the j wag married to Miss Mary Den-
reP‘ I basis of the comptroller’s rcsived | ton Carroll at Madill Oct. 26,
and operator of Careful Cleaners, I Ihe country at once,
cleaning and pressing establish-1 London did not comment on the
ment, resident of Denison all his. Herman reports, but it has been
lile, and civic booster, died at 4:20'rumored for days that the Reich
a. m. today at a hospital where I was planning to strike immediately
he had been a patient since last (toward Gibraltar through Spain,
Thursday night. He had been in with the aid of Generalissimo
il' health several weeks. ] I' rancisco Franco.
F*uneral services will be held at British leaders put little cre-
3 p. m. Wednesday from the First; dunec in rumors that Adolf Hitler
Presbyterian church with Rev. might make his spring invasion at-
James E. Spivey officiating, assia- tempt soon, but German planes
ted by Rev. J. C. Ogesby. Inter- roared over the southeast coast
ment will be at Fairview cemetery! early today, dropping more than
with Short-Murray directing. | 10,000 incendiary bombs on one
Hopkins was born Sept. 16,(city alone in fifteen minutes, and
1904, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. I German guns on the French coast
Hopkins and was reared and edu-1 shelled the Dover area for hours,
cated here. He was first employ- Nazi planes, met over the channel
ed with the Kingston drug store,! by British fighters, were driven
as homes which will he built im-! home built for Texans,” will
mediately and exhibited publicly' resent the best efforts of
'D’ed j ton Carroll
| estimated, it will yield $23,204,- 1930-
back later this morning in some of
the heaviest air fighting in the
area since last spring.
In Africa, the axis machine has
stalled on the Li by an-Egyptian
frontier and Britain is taking the
“1.
to Engand for conversion
munition*: and armaments
v ar.
Major Brown said for every
1110 poundh of scarp iron, one
machine gun could be manufac-
tured firing 3IH1 shots a min-
ute, a id “nothing is more impor-
tant to England than implements
of war.” Civic and service clubs,
church groups and schools are al-
so urged to share in collecting of
scrap iron which Major Brown de
dared “will do so much good at
this critical hour.”
'Assisting Major Brown in the
appeal are William Hoag and L.
M Tibbals, other members of the
committee.
I wore * uuu»K 11 v
The miners and operators cording to an announcement of P. artistry of the architectural
. n t u p rx-.n.... rr,inma Jp-tummer nrnfpssinn.
into ] already in agreement resume coal
for j production under the terms of
that agreement.
"2. The operators and miners
who have not yet reached an
agreement, enter into wage nego-
tiations and at the same time re-
open the mines, the agreement ul-j . . ,
timately reached to he made retro-1 gg Asked .50011
active to the date of resuming | _
and! 1
S. Luttrell of Dallas, Texas pro- home designing profession. Al-1
louring the week of June 1, ac- state’s builders and the skill and, 44] However, this appraisement
I ,. . --------------- r. ..oBitpctnral and must be taken as tentative until
. some of the changes made can be
though they embody, as a group,] examined more closely than is pos-
a wide variety of styles, each may j sjjjje now
he described as a typical Texas 1 The ja3t worjc 0j tbe Senate on I 3bop again. Careful Cleaner' wav.
home, entirely compatablc* with i s[ Monday had to do with allocations j Was established at its present lo-1 British and Greek forces
climate and the local conditions: - ......-
Bids For New
Soils Lab To
The first cleaning and pressing opportunity to send reinforce-
shop under his own management ments to the area, and a reported
was in the Hotel Denison building,! British-Free French drive on
later accepting employment with French Somaliland and its import-
Snow-White and then to the Odle , ant capital of Djibouti was under-
were
: which influence building.
Other towns in this area to co
j operate with the plan are lifted
. - 1 as
j of the bill, particularly to the old j mtion,
(age assistance fund. Allen Shiv-
Shipping Meet
Draws Thirty-Six
Representatives
Thirty-six railroad, express,
truck line and shipping represen-
tatives were attracted to a por-
| feet shipping meeting Monday]
I<X night al the Legion hut, sponsored
Associate Engineei Appointed
George A. Linski of Dallas has
been appointed by U. S. Engineer
office here as associate engineer
and assigned duty in the engin-
eering division. He is temporarily
residing at Hotel Denison
Vichy Ponders
African Fighting
VICHY, France, April 29—The
retain government today consider-
ed throwing France's overseas ar-
my back into the war in Africa,
against British and Free French
forces attacking French Somali-
land in a drive against the import-
ant port and railroad terminus of
Jibuti.
French defense forces, ordered
to resist the Somaliland attack,
were said in an official announce-
ment to be remaining loyally at
their posts and to be refusing to
enter into any agreement with the
attacking Free French dissidents
of Gen. Charles de Gaulle.
British warships were said to
(C»*tl«u«d on four)
by the Denison perfect shipping
committee composed of A. W.
Long, Chamber of Commerce
maanger, and R. 8- King, Katy
freight agent.
Principal address for the occas-
ion was bv E. I Jackson of Hous-
ton, traveling loss and damage su-
pervisor for the Railway Express
agency, who Illustrated his talk
on proper handling, packing and
other factors contributing toward
elimination of freight losses with
slide pictures. Mr. Long was
chairman of the meeting.
Of the total attendance 17 were
railroad employees, 4 represented
the express agency, 4 for truck
line and 1 shippers. Speakers ot
this group included J. J. Gallagh-
er, superintendent of the MKT lin-
es; E. M. Tanner, joint agent of
the T&P and KO&G railways; W.
R, Minter, agent for the Frisco;
Norman C. Dorchester, Texas El-
ectric Railway agent; E. E. Lucas,
Railway Express agent; and W. S.
Johnson, Southern Pacific lines;
Charles Pippin, terminal manager, I
United Transport company; R- C.
Malow, owner-manager Murlow j . p.*|.
Transfer company; Ralph l’orter.| [Ninety DllllOnS
vice president, State National
hank; H. L. Houghton, foreman of
Kraft Cheese company; C. J. Mc-
Manus, proprietor of Dad and
Lad’s store; and J. B. Chitwood,
manager Babcock Bros. Auto Sup-
ply store.
(Out of town representatives at-
tending were G. E. Jlai-sHHarprer,
K'Uy spent, Pottsboro; F„ W. Cam-
wood, Katy clerk, Durant; J. b.
Moore, Katy agent, Durant; J. W-
Bailey, Katy agent, Sherman; W.
T. Peyton, supervisor of Katy
agents, of Dallas.
work.”
At the time the proposal was
advanced the northern operators
and the union had reached an
agreement for wage increase, hut
the southern operators and miners
were deadlocked.
Earlier in the evening a delega-
tion of southern coal operators
conferred with Commerce Secre-
tary Jesse Jones. It was under-
stood that the cabinet member
urged the southern producers to
accept Mr. Roosevelt’s proposal
that the southern mines enter ne-
gotiations with John L. Lewis
United Mine Workers, reopen the
mines and make the ultimate
agreement retroactive to the date
production was resumed.
_________
Postmaster To
Buy First Of
Defense Bonds
Acting postmaster John H.
Parrish has filed application to
purchase the first United States!
defense savings bond in Denison,
May 1, James R. Brown, savings I
department head, announced to-1
1 day.
Mr. Parrish applied for the|
third denominational bond of $1001
i was revealed, which is sold for
75 per cent of its maturity value
and will mature in ten years at an
annual interest returun of 2.9 per
cent, compounded semi-annually-
Although the postoffice can ac-
cept appliutions, it cannot legally
release the bonds to purchasers
until May 1, Mr. Brown said. Mr.
Parrish’s application was the only
one received so far.
j by Luttrell as being Sherman
- Bonham, McKinney and Farmers-
Having previously approved ville.
plans and specifications for con-,
.traction of a shed on the east ‘ r«» wl" h*
421 W. Main, in June of! still fighting the Germans in
__________________ ______ — . 1933. He was a member of the] southern Greece, but Germany
ers offered an amendment inereas ] Presbyterian church. Elks and claimed it would he ended soon in
ing the old age assistance alloca Knights of Pythias lodges. j mopping up drives. London admit-
Remains will lie in state this, ted the loss of men and war mg-
afternoon at the family home, 110 terials in the Greek campaign
I would he heavy.
widow; his! Germany asserted that an addi-
tion fund $-100,000 a month, giv-
ing it a total of $1,750,000 month-
ly of state funds alone, making jjj. huh
the annual amount something like] Surviving are his
—^ mi/u 111 aviiiciiiiiiK unc Surviving are III.' w iuuw , ■ uit iii -ny ttivsci tcu mok «** »’**'*•
*ti lution uf <1 • h‘ d ° a ceptable as security for mortgage 1 $21,000,000 which would be j parents; one brother, Everett Hop- , tionril five British ships were sunk
side of the concrete laboratory of jnsuranCe,„ Luttrell 'aid- "Theychable by an equal amount of fed-! kins of Denison and one sister, off Greece yesterday.
the US engineers at tne dam site Ml , ,____mr< ,_______! r.r„l fund* V.™ Zandt nrooosed. vt.. A„r.„oe «-v>o;8imr nf Dallas i The offi ial German news agen-
cy, DNB. warned the United
Slates that use of convoy for ships
taking aid to Britain could end in
j nothing more than sinking of US
| vessels.
Germany joined Italy with ver-
* hi attack' on neutral Switxcr*
j land, charging the Swiss with hold-
I ing an anti-Nazi status, and hint-
id tha "one day our patience
mmm iss?^Ss3iS5=?!=--.........-
♦ n m TW w _______
In The Bromide
Of Cumberland
DURANT, Ok, April 29—Pure
Oil company today had two well
. - „ . m , j. , • , in plan and type of construction > $200,000 which would make the i’t* r\„t|]‘ _
Major Gordon E. Textor, district jol. tQ buidhR. Many of these amount of state funds available to ] I WO L)rilling
engineer, o ay annoume ^ * 3 bnmeg w||] involve higher construe- old age assistance $1,600,000. The
will be issued shortly tor eq ip-1 tjon standards than those required Shivers motion was adopted,
pmg the new sods lab the and tbis, „f ,0urse, is---=>----
!rJon ,1, e highly desirable in a home which Rainfall
tween $700 and $800 worth of em- ,g ^■rej>nsfn. lht, best „fforU of| 1 eXaS Kaimail
e s ry ^t o ep hi c e' t h e' dam a geal n^- ^ and buiUl °“r • CaUSeS RiverS
chinery caused by the fire and[ 1 x'
th.-.!; many of the articles required ‘‘In proclaiming home building; To RlSC High
could he puchased in Denison, week, Gov. O’Daniel recognizes
Each bid will be considered on its the extent to which this state’s :u-
merits and given every considera- dustrial development and rapid
tion, it was explained. growth of pop-nation demand more
drilling in the Bromide sand on j will conic to a'i end.” Observers
I its Cumberland field.
The companys’ No, 5 Little-106
in ne sw sw of section 27-5-7 was
drilling in the Bromide pay sand
believe this wil be a prelude of an
axis invasion of the small nation
encircled by axis and axis-dominat-
ed nations.
Lights rains fell in Denison
during the night and early today
- - , denia™1 m°re more forecast for Tuesday j feet aftcr drilling out
'Engineer* had first planned to and more homes. Texas, a leader .end Wednesday, whue the re.it ot | ^ 4,893 feet,
move the former Holder residence amng states whicn develop a h.ghj Texas suffered from excessive ] j (Jttie-209 in se se sw
approximately 3200 feet to the ( volume of Federal Housing Ad-. downpours. 07.5.7 the well now casting
soils lab site but afte further ministration business, wil! extend] Corpus ChrLsti reported j tbe -brightest picture on the south-
study decided the moving would itself in this program and I antic-! heaviest fall of 5.57 iuclyes. Ov- f tbc f(e]d because it >0 avn dISHNER
he too expensive and abandoned ipate
DEATH ROLL
considers!,!? increase
the idea.
* home building as a resul;.’
Jones Predicts
Debt To Reach
\V]ASHtNGTON, April 29—
Jesse H. Jones, administration
leader and former Texan, piedict-
od today that the national debt
would reach $90,00,000,000 (bil-
lions) eventually.
Jones said that mor? great
congressional sums wouid be ap-
propriate for national defense in
the next two Lo four years ard
urged business to “stop bickering"
with the government,
May Try Invasion
Of Malaya Peninsula
13.31, Brady 3.12, San Marcos
'I 3.44, Victoria 2.50, Luling 2.76,
] Cuero 2.48, Carrizo Springs 2.25
i md Brown,wood 2.20 inches.
structures are lunning much high- Funeral services for Jo Ann
er than the Park college. iu«t 400' x>ishner, 3-year-old daughter of
yards away, was drillin-e* below r and Mrs. James Dishner of
Dallas and crandaughter of J. R.
Dishner, 400 E. Texas, were held
Advertise in the Denison Press
SINGAPORE, Straits Settle-
ment, April 29—'The threat of an
attemped invasion of Malaya, at
the tip of which lies Britain's
great Singapore base, definitely
exists, (Lieut. Gen. L. V. Bond said
today.
The military chief of the Brit-
ish Empire’s Far Eastern bastion
suggested smilingly that the garri-
son had strengthened itself suffic-
iently since his appointment in
July, 1939, to give ayn would-be
invader a tough fight. He said re-
inforcements still were pouring in
by virtually every arriving ship.
"Malaya’s air forces aire infi-
nitely stronger than ever before,"
Bond said. “That is essential to
the defense of this country, be
cause the potential invaders must
have bases available from which
they could launch large scale air
attacks.”
Regarding American aid, Bond
paid tribute to the United States
and added that, other than planes,
Malaya is receiving from America
only Tommy guns and military
trucks.
General Bond said any attack-
ers would face more difficult and
unique problems of land communi-
cations from the north than those
to be encountered anywhere else.
“Also, they won’t have any
fifth columnists here to help," he
said.
He expressed belief that the pos-
sibility of United States naval in-
tervention might prove a deterrent
to any action by sea, adding:
“However, the most recent in-
dications of United States inter-
vention in both the Atlantic and
Pacific might prompt Japan to act
more quickly.”
Agreeing that Japanese policy
seemed to follow a course parallel
4,079 feet in the Viola topped at
ta nro'wmvoou mvuc*. ^ ^
'.three feet above normal, section 34, 5-7 which wa* drilling. offiri'itin^r
dropping two feet two feet from Mow 4,734 feet j ' lntPment was at Oakwood cem-
110 overnight peak. | ^ , uittle-208 in sw sw; etery, Short-Murray directing.
| At Robstown, where ten inches ^ of 34.5.7 was drilling below. pai|i„.arers were Caney Heart,
of rain fell in two days, wate- s gl_ ffet in thp Sylvan Rud Traweek. C. H. Henderson,
somo holmes and more than toot Nq , Little.2i0 in ne se nw, nd GeorRe Tinkle. The girl died
was two and a half feet dee-p in of sp(,tion 34) 5.7 was drilling he- Sunday at the Dallas home of her
low 4,026 feet in the Sylvan which parcnt'p
was topped last week at 3,780 ---
feet. MR'S. ,A. H. ,ALLFN
The company’s No. 1 Thompson- Funeral services for Mrs. A. H.
206 in sw sw sw of section 21-5-1 Ailpn 43j rpsident of Denison for
7, was cleaning out mud and shale] many vpars xvh„ died Sunday, will
cavings at 5,015-53 feet to eom-j bp bpjd Wednesday at 10 a. m.
deep on the highways to Sinton.
Tha Guadalupe River rose six-
teen feet at Comfort when a
throe-inch rain fell there. Cy-
press Creek was up ten feed. At
Gonzales, lower down the river,
a twenty-six foot stage was re-
ported with water still rising.
The San Marcos River was atill
rising at Ottine, a short disitarce
north of Gonzales, and had twen-
ty-seven feet of water.
At Llano the Llano R-ver was
up seven fee*. The San Bah**
River blocked highways between
San Sabar and Richland Springs
and between San Saba and Rich-
land Springs and between Sari
to that of the Axis progress in Eu- j Saba and GoUlthwaite.
n 1 • 1 .1 n 11 • j A 1 T m! mUa.1 ati 1
rope, Bond said the Balkan situa-
tion might presage a new Japa-
nese move to the south.
However, he said the Russian-
Japanese agreement did not seem
to as-cumc much significance
“Russia had a nonaggression
pact with Finland, you remem-
ber,” he observed.
At Trinidad on the Trinity
River the torren* was more tin 1
a half mile wide as it
feet above flood stage.
As Presidio where th* Rio
Tmieho had cut off the eitv from
Mexican points across me horde 1
limited traffic was resumed late
Monday,
luviug.-*) ve. .....- | ne neiu » runrsuoj »■ •••-
plete with cable tools, and mean-1 ^rom Short-Murray chapel. Rev.
while flowed 284 barrels of
through open casing.
No. 3 Metz-105 in sw nw nw of
section 28-5-7 was drilling at 3,-
266 feet in the Sycamore.
No. 2 Crissman-104 in lie se se
of section 20-5-7, was still waiting
on rotary tools.
L. R. Lamb officiating.
Interment will be at Fairview,
Short-Murray directing. Pall-
bearers will be Harry Sarrett, J.
\Y Lloyd, Carl Planery, B H-
Waggner, E. R. Bryan and Guy
Storey.
Rolled By Negresa
R. B. Bryan, Abilene trucker, i(jr ur(
... told city police Monday night that j scboop
rose 4,2 an unknown negress rolled him for a(ja|nsd
$26 in cash and a billfold. He__
said he was unloading his trucl< KinTirT
when the negrees approached and * INvj 1 lvt*-
Four Youths Arrested
Four youngsters were arrested
by city police early Monday night
for breaking windows at Laimar
Action was expected
the youths today.
propositioned him, hut that he re
fused, later finding that she must
have picked his pocket-
If vau d» net recsive ystK Prest
before 5 30, please phone 308
one will be sent y«a.
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Anderson, LeRoy. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 260, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 29, 1941, newspaper, April 29, 1941; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth526488/m1/1/?q=+date%3A1941-1945&rotate=90: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.