The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 195, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 13, 1941 Page: 1 of 4
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WEATHER
DENISON AND VICINITY
Partly cloudy, generally fair
today and Friday
NISON PRESS
PVHJSHtD DAILY CXCITT
SUNDAY
YOU* HOME-OWN Ep
DAILY NEWSPAPER
S6c PER MONTH
REPRESENTATIVE OF THE UNITED PRESS
DENISON, TEXAS THURS., DEC. 13th, 1941
WEEKLY FOUNDED 1930—DAILY 1934
VOL. 7—NO. 195
Nazis Nay Strike At Suez, Gibraltar In 30 Days
Deportation Proceedings Opponents
Against Bridges Ordered q . c
Concessions
WASHINGTON, Feb. 13 -At- necution and part of the drive
torney General Robert H. Jackson against labor.’
today ordered new deportation (Bridges will be sal ved with a de-
proceedings against Harry Bridges,, portation warrant and appear be-
while the west coast CIO leader] fore a trial examiner at public
claimed the proceedings were "per-
EVERYDAY
DENISON
Bv
LOUIS ANDERSON
Over Purse Strings
There may be no connection,
but take it as you will: Sunday
night Walter Winchell asked what
had happened to the Harry Bridges
deportation case. Within four!
' ) days afterwards, Atty. Gen. Rob-
ert Ja"kson announced deporla-
B tion proceedings against the wut
^ coast labor leader were to be re-
opened. . . .And now that the ail-l properly, contained no
ministration has conceded that si0ns of recommendation.
ning''March si" Fr8"eiSC0 “Administration Will
Similar proceedings institut 'd! Give CongrtSS Power
by Secretary of Labor Frances!
Perkins previously brought a re-
port from Dean James M. Landis
of the Harvard law school, the
trial examiner, that Bridges was
energetically rad.cal, but was not
a member of the communist party.
Since that time the Bureau of
Immigration
has been transferred from the La-
bor to the justice deprtment.
The justice department made it
clear that it was not passing upon
the merits of the ease.
The report of the FBI said Jack- j
son, was purely factual and* quite
conclu-
SLIGHT DAMAGE
BY HIGH WIND
forecast for tonight and Friday.
A gale reaching 65 miles an
hour in some areas, hit Dallas dur-
Trees were blown down, homes
slightly damaged and quite a bit
of embarrassment brought on by
a high, gusty wind that struck ing the day, hut Denison was moie
Denison Wednesday. j fortunate. Some areas of west
The wind abated late Wednes-j Texas reported a wind velocity of
day night but had risen slightly ; 85 miles per hour,
again this morning. Partly cloudy; An inspection of the city this
Greece Rejects German
Peace Plan; F ranc In
Conference With Peiain
I DR will not be given the blank-
check authority over which con-
gress has been bickering, wonder
what congressmen will find to fcoi
around with on the national de-
fense legislation? . . . And per-
haps the Italian armies should be
called nomads. British and Greeks
see that they don’t stay in one
place too long . . . The Chamber
of Commerce’s annual banquet
will be held when directors here
can get in touch with President
J. Lee Greer, somewhere in Flor-
ida on a fishing trip. 'They want
him to be present ... To Dem-
sonians wondering about elimina-
tions of the county athletic-liter-
ary setup this year: both Denison
and Sherman go directly to the
district this spring, do not compete
in the county.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 13— The skies and unsettled weather
Senate will begin debate on the
lend-lease aid to Britain bill today
0. Friday after admistration lead-
er ; had conceded opponents of the
and 'Naturalizationj m P“:’lts that would Kiva
congress a firmer hold on the def-
ense program purse strings.
In essence, their proposal would
require that the President obtain
authorizations and appropriations
from congress. Sen. Alben V/.
Barkley of Kentucky, senate dem-
ocratic leader, explained that first
the President could ask for auth-
ority to enter into contracts for
mamifacure of .supplies and their
delivery to Britain. Later he
would have to ask specific appro- ______________ _______ ________________
shown to have been members of or| printiors .listing the number and. will go to Dallas that afternoon| at Tvler in East Texas
affiliated with organizations advo- kinds of equipment. to confer with James S. Allen, ic I was near
The modification, it was said,! gional administrator of the fedcr-
Bcfore the first proceeding
against Bridges were closed, the
Supreme Court laid down a rule
that aliens in such cases must be
To Map Plans
To Get Food
Stamp Plan
Denison city commissioners will
join Sherman city commissioners
and county commissioners in con-
ference at 10 a. m. Friday in the
county commissioners offices at
Sherman to map plans to secure
of the food stamp plan for Gray
son county as a who)*.
Following the conference, rep-
resentatives of the commissions
eating overthrow of thp govern-
ment by force and violence, at
the time the proceedings were,
started, not some time previously.
,But since then, Jackson said,
congress has enacted the alien committee i ejected
registration act of 1940 to alter! mendments offered by
would remove any basis for charg-
e that the lease-lend bill itself
was a blank check to the President.
The senate foreign relations
a series of
Robert
the rule of the supreme court de- Taft (R-Ohio), approved in
vision and make deportable an
alien who at any time in the past
hs been a member or affiliated
with a subversive organisation as
described in the act.
War News To
Be Given Out
By Department
ciple or in language all the amend-
ments written into the measure by
the House, and appointed two sub-
committees to rewrite certain por-
tions of the bill.
Formation Of
Community
Councils Urged
al surplus commodity corporation,!
in an effort to push plans for th»
project.
Under the plan, relief folk of I
a-ithe county, instead of standing in]
A.| line tediously at welfare ware-1
prin-1 houses to rercive a dole of whnt-j
ever surplus foods happen to ! e
on hand, will be able to shop at
their neighborhood grocery stores,
pay cash for every item on their
menus and choose what they wish
to buy.
The government practically re-
! tires from distribution of fond to
relief clients. Through city-county
morning revealed less damage was
done property than believed at
first.
All day Denison men were chas-
ing hats, blown from heads by the
tricky wind, and women had their
hand's full with skirts, bonnets and;
light coats. At some neriod citi-
zens had to almost bend double to |
cut through a wind that buffeted ,
them about almost at will.
The wind, according to army
engineer estimates, was blowing at
a 40 miles an hour velocity Wed-
nesday but today had declined to
31 miles an hour.
Amarillo, Big Spring and Mid-
land had bad dust and sand during
the day as the winds raged, and
visibility I
was near zero as dust rode
through the area on a forty-mile-
an-hour wind.
Ponca City, Okia.. and Tulsa
were saved from dust by a light,
rain which fell in those cities dur-
ing the day, but Ardmore and
Fort Sill caught dust nearly as
bad as that which descended on
the capital at Oklannma City.
Stuck Drillpipe
Is Fished Out,
Drilling Resumed
Arthur Miller Gets Thirty Year
Service Emblem. Thanks Of Sloan
Arthur G. Miller, KFF clerk in thirty-year service emblem
the office of Katy superintendent! congratulatory letter from
LONDON, Feb. 13—An author-]
ized British spokesman today pro-j
phesied Germany would hurl a,
two-prong attack in the Mediter-]
ranc-an within the next thirty days,
but meanwhile actual, not specu-j
lative, occurrences were happen-
ing all over Europe.
The spokesman suggested that of transportation here, is being
Adolf Hitler would hurl his might! congratulated today by fellow co-
al most simultaneously against the' workers on having obtained a
Suez canal and Gibraltar, strik j
ing through Greece and .Spain.
Speculation of experts brought
about -these guesses:
1. Germany would strike
through Bulgaria and Greece to-
ward Suez, forcing Turkey into
the war on the side of Britain, j ~
(’Turkey has hinted it might not; WASHINGTON, leb. 13
wait for attack to move against There is no shortage of skilled and
the Nazis.) I semi-skilled building trades work-
lb Franco has okyed an axis! ers, in spite of the unusually large
plan that would allow German j volume of construction begun the
troops to pass through Spain far! months, Paul V. McNutt,
an attack on Gibraltar.
No Shortage Of
Skilled Workers,
McNutt Declares
and
Mit-
and
I edera!
thew S. Sloan, president
board chairman of the lines.
Mr. Miller has actually seen
thirty-two years of railroad ser-
vice, having worked two years for
the Frisco at St. Louis and the
Missouri Pacific lines at Chester,
111. He was connected with the
land department of the Frisco
while the road was opening a line
through the Rio Grande Valley
and was a clerk in the division
engineer office of the Missouri Pa-
cific.
tin February 15, 1900, Miller
came to Denison and accepted a
position with the KFF department
Security administrator, j here. In 1911 he was transferred
to Dallas where he held various
positions including that of demur-
rage and merchandise clerk. Elev-
en years later, April of 1923, he
was again transferred to Denison
in the KFF department where he
has been stationed since.
Mr. Sloan’s letter said in part:
3. A move through Greece to} declares in a statement today ex-
Suez would imperil the British! Plaining a national survey recently
navy in the Mediterranean and the) completed by the social security’s
land forces now fighting in Afri- board bureau of employment se-
ta, chief objective of Hitler. I cur‘ty-
4. Germany might be diverting! There may be temporary short-
attention so the axis powers can j aK®3 ‘n a ^ew communities McNutt
strike in the Far East where Japan l'a'd’ but these have been and are
has been obtaining bases in Thai-! bein* corrected an(j ..q ti,e Jo-j “Since you received the 25 year
land and French Indo-China. mands met by recruiting workers emblem, the Katy as well as other
Rumors, unconfirmed, said that] from near-by communities where railroads has encountered many
Greece has rejected a German j surP,luse3 exiit’, , | difficulties. Throughout this try-
peace offer that would guarantee.
Most of the proposed school im-
provements here will be done by
skilled labor, therby throwing most
of the cost on the city government. I
The federal Gov’t, doesn’t figure!
it to o'ive work to a skilled tighten control over information
twelve j given out by the war department | which all local groups are repre-
for publication in newspapers, I sented is recommended for all sec-
WASII1NGTON, Feb. 13
NEW YORK, Feb. 13—The for-
mation of community courcils in
The survey shows that more ing period our company has main-
the Greeks against axis attacks if tban Per cent -be mor,? than taired its position of leadership
Greece would quit fighting the 2ie;000 “killed and semi-skilled primarily because of the whole-
lalborer who draws ten to
who*hate^ sec women7n''slacks Secretary of War Henry L. Slim-}Hons of the United Slates by the{
wouldn’t have minded the ferns 011 '°day
in th^t lishment of a bureau if public re-
DUKA'NT, Ok., Feb. 13 — A| Italians in Albania, ask removal workers reKistered are concen- hearted cooperation of those meni-
welfare setup, it supplies reliefers; stuck dril)pir(1 in pllre Oil com-] „f British forces in Greece and trated ln five states—Texas, Cali-, bore of the organization who are
with food stamps good for purch-, ’ ,g No 2 Thompson-205, deep-| maintain a strict neutrality in the f°"ia« N'e"„ York’.,0hiVnd,^_r; called veterani As head of the
ases of food stuffs in every gr>] cg(. drmjng weR j„ the Cumberland
eery store agreeing to the plan anu; fieM was fished out today after-
at the same time sees that clients 0| h’ourg fishinfr operations. The'
have 50 per cent more purchasing . wag stuck „t 1,170 feet in the]
n.iomoQc tboio- bottomed at 4,54 6 feet in the, trated
power. Private business, there-]
fore, gains new customers, finds
future.
Greece was understood to have
realized, in rejecting the peace
offer, the possibility of a concen
sylvania. Texas alone has 12,971
skilled workers registered as job
seekers.
organization it is my privilege and
pleasure on behalf of the manage-
ment and your fellow workers to
Th administrator said that mure' thank you for the important part
German-Italian attack ,han 250'000 were registered for v0U have had in this accomplish-
announced the estab- Council for Democracy, r.s a means j
many old customers with more
to spend, reduces surplus
wearing ’em yesterday
high wind . . . Prediction: if the
GOP party keeps heckling Wendell
Willkie, the 1940 candidate might
change parties . . , An ud says
you can walk a mile on a slice of
bread. Recalling that gag about
taking a pill two times a day . . .
Loretta Young, maker of many
horse films in the last few years,
h j really scared to death of the
orutes . . . Gov. lliillips is buck-
et reaching the greatest national ™°"e!
... . , - „ foods through traditional merely
efficiency in defense preparation
and for preventing serious disloca-|
tions after the emergency is pass-1
andising methods, and business
conditions in general improve.
tance of cavalry in
defense program.
the national
I Continued on page four)
House Bill Is
Slap To Texas
Teachers, Said
) AUSTIN, Tex., Feb. 13—A sen-
ate bill requiring an oath of alle-
giance to the United States for all
Texus school teachers and profes-
sors today was called a direct slap
at the teachers by house oppon-
ents of the measure before it was
sent back to committee for further
consideration.
Leading the fight against the
bill introduced in the senate by
Senator 'Clem Fain Representative
S. J. Isaaeks of El Paso declaied
in the heated debate: "It is the
duty of teachers to explain the
isms and what they mean."
The bill provides that teachers | switch frog connecting the intor-
wiil he dismissed if they are found change track that leads in the
guilty of expounding doctrines company’s tie yards n the 500
contrary to the United State* block South Mirick avenue.
Constitution. Although an amend-j The removal of the frog Is es-
ment was accepted in the house, timated to cost between $2,000
changing the word expound to ad- and $3,000 as all new equipment.
lations to be operated directly un-
der his supervision and control. All
agencies of the war department
concerned with public relations or] ed. |
with the furnishing of information The local community councils fY|rlj*KrimA IVIfin
to newspaper correspondents or should he prepared for co-opera-j
other persons are to function un- tion with existing agencies. the I PlcW0d Ud
dor the supervision of the new bu- recommendation said. In ill's any *
,.eau j community energy can he directed- ^
While this new bureau will not 1 into constructive chnnols,” it said.- Charles Tucker,
constitute a censorship over news,] instead of into plans to hunt sub-| Wednesday by
it will effect a censorship over in-1 marines, shoot parachutists or \ iig'l
formation that is made available! evacuate cats in case of bomb-] the request of Dudley Branom,
to the press. Major Gen. ’Robert! ings.”
'C. Richardson, Jr., has been derig-1 The committee also recommend-
I’uted director of the new bureau. | ed a farming out of contracts by
General Richardson, a native of big companies to prevent migra- day to face a trial by grand jury
Charlotte S.C., comes to Washing-] tions of labor and to decentralize I on a charge of drunken driving,
ton from Texas. He commanded1 industry. Such action would pre-| Tucker allegedly collided with
the First Cavalry division at Fort I vent the creation of short lived] another automobile on the night
Bliss, El Paso, until recently, and I boom towns, the council s.vd; oi
to him is given much of the credit- place the nation in n stronger po-
for the development of horse tac-j nit ion by making it cxceedinly dif-
tics that have increased the impor-j ficult for bombers to seriously,
arrested here
Deputy Sheriffs
or Virgil Evans and Paul Smith at
bomb-j the
Garfield county sheriff at Enid,
•Oklahoma, is accompanying the
Oklahoma officer back to Enid to-
Sharp Curve In
Interurban Frog
Will Be Removed
A Texas Electric Railway section
crew in charge of Foreman Jim
Westbrook is today moving a
voente, it has now been nullified
rim-c the bill went to the state af-
fairs committee.
Issaeks chnllanged sponsors:
"Tell me and the house why you
single out one class of people, one
including track will be required.
The removal is being made, Agent
Norman C. Dorchester explains,
because of the difficulty of get-
ting long cars with stiff wheel
trucks in and out of the inter-
Nov. 16 1939, on a highway
near Enid. He made bond at a
preliminary hearing and left town
before his trial came up before a
impede production, should greatly | grand jury. Local officers, fol-
veduce relief problems, prevent' lowing receipt of a warrant for
the building of temporary schools his arrest, placed him in the city
and reduce housing problems by jail until the Oklahoma sheriff ar-
ennbling workercs to remain in 1 rived,_
their present locations.
Fairness to all aliens who wish
to be loyal Americans was urged.
Fair wages and treatment for
all workers also was recommended.
All community leaders were
warned to keep an eye on the end
of the defense emergency in plan-
ning for new industries, the coun-
cil saying that a serious dislotation
after the rush is over could be-
come more dangerous to the coun-
try from within than nre the pres-
ent threats from the outside.
Viola lime, and drilling was start-,
ed immediately after the fishing!
job was completed. The well is -n
i section 21-5s-7e.
V)thcr operations in the Cum-,
! Borland field were routine drilling,
i or preparations to spud in.
| In Bryan county, Tare's No. 3
Little-106 in swnenw of section
34-5s-7e, was drilling at 4,491}
feet in a hard formation of the,
Viola. I
No. 4 Little-106 in nenwsw of]
section 27-5s-7e, was drilling at
3,033 feet in the Sycamore.
No. 5 Little-106 in nwnwnw of
section 34-5-7, was waiting on ro-
tary rig.
No. 1 Thompson-J07 in nenene
of section 33-5-7, had completed
derrick and was waiting on rotary.
Gther operations in Marshal!
county were:
No. 2 Thomas-102 was drilling
at 4,055 feet in the Viola topped
at 3.995 feet.
No. 2 Thomas-202 was drilling
at 3,740 feet. These two wells are
in section 28-5-7.
No. 2 Thompson-206, another
section 21 well, was drilling at
3,846 feet in the Woodford shale.
through Bulgaria in a drive to
employment in selected conn rue-
take Salonika, probable ba*e from oceuPati°'>s on Dec 7, 1940
although the demand for such
which Hitler hopes to attack Suez
Nazi troop concentrations ir
(Continued on Page 41
ment.
The De- *on hound Black Gold,
crack passenger train of the Fri‘-
cn ni-rived at the union station at
11:15 here this morning, seven
Denison Bankers
At Dallas Meet
Fifth District
workers in the buliding of military
projects and new industrial plants
has been steady. WHi'e some of
these registrants mav liavj obtain- hours behind scheduled time he-
ed employment, the bulk „>f them, cause of a fire on a railway bridge
as well as those who registered
subsequently, are stUl available
for work. However, the supply of
construction workers Is reported
to have > decreased substantially
Denison bankers from both the, 11'
State National and Citizens Na- ’
tionat attended the Fifth District, Yu*cler| CjJVCS
Bankers meeting at Dallas Wed- #
nesday, attended by several hun- Qpeninfif Pr&VCf
dered bankers from the district. g 8
The morning session was devot- LiOWer llOUSe
ed to discussions of matters os- _
pecially interesting to the banking
fraternity with entertainment, a Major Harry Lee \ irden, form-
banquet and floor show for the i er,-v of D<”’ gave
afternoon and evening. I I>ra>'er in the House of RaPresen
(Cofltinned f*nr»
First Steps In
Organizing Cub
Pack Underway
The first step in organizing a
Boy Scout culi pack will be made
at the Waples Memorial church to-
night beginning at 7:30, when a
training course will be launched.
The church is sponsoring body
of troop 205 and plans to organ-
ize a cub pack for younger boys
Attending the event,'held at the tative* Wednesday at the invita-, interested in scouting work. Com-
Adolphus Hotel, from the State] ljon. of SPeaker Sam Ra>'burn of, m,ttees a^fned bV ^e church to
National were W. L. Peterson, I «o
Willkie Raps
Fault Finders
Murphy, Ralph Porter and Jack
Berry. From the Citizens Nation-
al were Morris Regensburger, Hen-
ry Etter, Ralph Geisenhoner, Jam-
es Woodruff and Corwin Groves.
Reproduction
Bids Accepted
Bonham.
Major
Virden, rector of St.
attend to this duty are Mr and
Mrs. David Tlatter, Mr. and Mrs.
Luke’s Episcopal church here for J. D. Bond, and Mr. and Mrs.
years, went on duty with the Tex-j Bassett Watson.
as National Guard last fall and
was assigned to Washington for
duty, arriving there January 18.
Instructors at the course will be
George A Holland, scout execu
tive, and E. R. Owens, former cub
He was chaplain with the 55th cal-! master of troop 209 assisted by
vary brigade of the National Noel Jennings Denison district cub
Guard and was assigned to Fort pa k organization chairman. Fol-
Hliss, near Ei Paso, where the unit lowing completion of three courses
received its intensive training.
a cub master will be named foi
class of officials for this oath! change due to a sharp curve.
when you do not include other of-
ficial*. Why do yon propose that
teachers are not loyal?
Gets Transfer
I C. M. Christmas of Denison, re-
cently sent to the reception center
of the 3Cth Division at Camr How-
ie, Brownwood, under provisions
of the selective service law, has
been transferred as private to the
I44th infantry regiment.
becomes especially difficult, Mr.
Dorchester said, when the cars are
heavily loaded.
The frog is being moved twen-
ty-five feet north from its present
position and will eliminate the
sharp curve when completed. It
i wlh the at least a week before
automobile traffic on the east side
of the avenue block will be per-
mitted through the area it is
learned.
Man Caught With
Missing Machine
NEW YORK, Feb. 13—Wcndellj racy an expanding do,trine, we
L. Willkie, who returned Sunday, can he the dictators who can de-
train personal examination of Bri-, (ermjne that there shall lie a peace
tain at war, Wednesday night'
challenged the republican party to
preach a positive doctrine, and
warned against its lapsing into a
mere party or negation given only
to fault finding.
“I am here,” he said at a Lin-
coln day dinner of the National
Republican club, "to challenge you
A nifin, allegedly in possession
of a stolen car, was arrested early
today in north Denison by City . . _ .
Patrolmen Louis Winchester and to a lygher fate than compromise,
Clarence Faecke. | negation and death.”
The machine was said to havo| He made but brief reference to
been taken from its parking place his recent flying
at thp Denison dam site and was
the possession of J. H. Woody, 505
E. Monterey street.
Pete Dishner reported the thett
of a gas and radiator cap and cig-
arettes from his ear late Wednes-
day.
transAtlantic
journey to study conditions in
warring Britain, but reiterated his
call for sufficient American aid to
make jBntuin victorious.
“If we give those fighting men
of Britain the equipment to win,”
he said. “We can make n democ-
where all men live under free-
dom.”
The 1940 republican presiden-
tial candidate made it clear to hi?
listeners in a nation-wide radio
broadcast that his current agree-
ment with the bulk of the new
deal’s foreign policy does not mean
acquiesence to the entire new
deal.
He asserted instead that what he
called the new deal party is with-
out faith in the people though it
has “at last grasped the meaning
of the interr.'itional situation."
Still, he continuod, “It dumped the
London economic con'erence,
which might have saved all this
world chaos.”
The U. S, Engineer office here ’After serving there, Virden was the pack and active work with the
is accepting sealed bids in dupli- j ordered to duty in the chief of boys will begin.
cate to be publicly opened at 11 chaplains’ office in the war de-, -----------
a. m., Feb. 21 to procure photo-j partment at Washington. He is ALIN RESUMES HIS
stat reproductions, negative! and] now assigned
to handle National; ENGINEERING DUTIES
Equipped with important data
that probably will be used to ad-
vantage in construction work of
the Denison dam and reservoir,
Senior Engineer Akel Alin resum-
ed his duties here this morning as
head of the IT. S. engineers offic-
Aliti has been on temporary-
positives exact, size, enlargement?] Guard affairs in that office.
or reductions of various subjects! —------•>------
of tracings, black-line prints, blue-i TRAFFTC IS S’VGGPEP
prints, correspondence, etc.; to be] BY HIGH WIND
made on medium weight photo- --—
copying-machine paper and blue- Automobile traffic in the 500
print reproductions, exact size,1 block South Mirick avenue was
from any type original any size UP| halted temporarily late Wednesday e’s operations division,
to 54 inches in width by any. morning when a high velocity of
length, on medium weight paper j wind toppled the poster ,-ign hoard duty ou the Wolfe Creek dam pra-
of not less than 50 per cent rag I on a vaennt lot into the avenue. ject at Nashville since Sept. 1 but
content. A Texas Electric Railway sec- for the past several weeks has
Quantities specified In Invita- tion crew had the east side of the been tourning eastern projects se-
tions mailed are estimated require- block roped off due to work 0:1 curing data for use on the Denison
ment* as it is impossible to deter-] the track there and the wind coni- dam and reservoir. He declined
mine the number of reproductions pleted the blockade for the whole a permanent position at Nashville
to he required during the contract, block when it blew several sections in favor of the Red River project.
period and the contractor will be] of the signboard across the west, ------
required to furnish only such1 side. City police were required to NOTICE
quantities as may be ordered,] handle the auto traffic until the r jf y„u f|n m,i roc one your Press
whether more or less
number stated.
than the] signboard could be removed. Inter-; before Bigo, please pbon* 300 and
| urban traffic was unaltered. ! op? will be sent you.
1 I
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Anderson, LeRoy. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 195, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 13, 1941, newspaper, February 13, 1941; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth526529/m1/1/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.