The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 263, Ed. 1 Friday, May 2, 1941 Page: 1 of 4
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WEATHER
DENISON AND VICINITY
Partly cloudy and showers
today and Saturday
The Denison Press
PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT
SUNDAY
YOUR HOME-OWNED
DAILY NEWSPAPER
35c PER MONTH
REPRESENTATIVE OF THE UNITED PRESS
DENISON, TEXAS FRIDAY, MAY 2nd, 1941
WEEKLY FOUNDED 1930—DAILY 1934
VOL. 7 iNO. 263
roops Refuse To Leave British Air Field
EVERYDAY
DENISON
LOUIS ANDERSON
m------------------ -.....*
Latest Gallup poll shows that
the majority of Americans favor
staying out of war even though
some American ships might be
sunk in convoy duty by the axis
. . . Jan Vultin, author of Out of
the Night, ribald best seller, now
turns out an article of hi.s earlier
life for Reader's Digest in which
he answeis Americans who want
to know how he now stands on
“isms” . . . German people deify
Hitler when they should bang him
. . . Dorothy Thompson articles
that Nazi propaganda has pene-
trated Texas . . . One Oklahoma
paper cracks it can’t understand
why a guy will hope for work for
a long time, then get a job in a
i national defense plant and immed-
iately strike for higher wages.
That is hard to understand . . .
"Beaverbrook Made
Economic Dictator
UOiNDON, May 2—Lord Beav- > be confronted with the task of co-
erbrook was chosen today as vir-1 ordinating industrial priorities and
tual economic dictator and deputy [ increasing tank and other war
prime minister of Britain by Prime machine production.
Minister Winston Churchill. j Other government changes iri-
Beaverbrook was given the port- eluded the appointment of Minis-
folio as an aftermath of the Brit-
ish disaster in the Balkans, and a
week before Churchill will appear
before parliament in debate on
the British losses of Yugoslavia
and Greece.
Churchill also moved to meet
another frequent criticism--that
of charges of delays at docks
where the turn around is essential
to speedy land movement of sup-
plies—by merging the ministries
of transport and shipping under
one head, Frederick James I.eath-
ter of Shipping H. K. Cross as!
high commissioner to Australia,
and the trade of jobs between Col.
J .1. Lleweilin and Frederic Mon-'
l ague.
mentary secretary to the Ministry
of Transport and Montague parlia-
Transport
Planes To
Britain
British Aid Now
On Hour To Hour
Basis, Announced
Senate Passes Bill To
End Drugstore Sales
AUSTIN, Texas, 'May 2—The
senate today adopted a concurrent
resolution receding from its four
amendments to Dallas Blankcn-
| ship’s bill to end drugstore saloons
, in dry areas, but the house ad-
I journed to Monday before con-
curring in the. senate-originated
resolution,
By the resolution the senate rec-
ord was corrected to show that the
bill was passed by the senate with-
out amendment and in the exact
1 here is no such thing as the
American flag it’s the United The new ministry will be called
States flag, according to the TT.S. the ministry of wartime communi-
F3ag Association ... A filmite cations.
cracks that a man she knows is so| So far as is known, tin changes
strong he can read Esquire with-will not aifect the war cabinet.
WASHINGTON, May 2 Brit-
Llewellin becomes parlia- ih:h aid flom the United States has , , , ,
teen placed on an hour to hour form as it passed the house.
basis, informed sources said today,] A point of order ha? been
mentary secretary of the secretary!and ic was known t,lat the axit|laised in tkp house ,hat concur-
of aircraft production I powers now look on America as rence can be bad only on a two-
It was ^ understood Leathers “WO per cent enemy.” .m is./"f
would be created a baron. That1 President Roosevelt has placed] the bill will still be in its legisla-
means he will sit in the house of transport planes at the disposal of tive parliamentary tangle
la t . ’ • t . I. 1.1 • " If n T oiinlfml’ n n .1
Lords and leave Lleweilin
I Britain in its fight with the axis,
one hand.
Neal O’Hara tells the one about
Boston Columnist Bill Davis who
received a fan letter from ai guy |
who said be loved a homely girl
with no money, but she doesn’t
love him, yet a pretty gal with
money loves him and he doesn’t
reciprocate the feeling. What
should he do. The scribbler ad-
vised the twerp to marry the girl
he loved and send the name and
address of the other to the news-
paperman . . . Confidentially we
think we read that one in Joe
Miller, 1901 . . . Lana Turner has
turned to platinum blond tresses,
which columnists claim are not too
becoming. But who looks at her
hair? • . Minneapolis has a law
forbidding impersonation of Santa
Claus . . . Dizziest thing: a pub-j
licist has » fern star ready to auc-
tion off the recently removed ap- |
pendix of Vic Mature, for British |
war relief . . . When Berlin i? j
raided by the RAF, the Reich
writes the accounts for American
The new title given to Beaver-
brook was chosen because it was
essential to find a non-depart-
mental designation. In such a
category are the Lord Rrivy Seal,
Lord President of the Council and
Minister Without Portfolio.
Beaverbrook’s new post was ex-
pected to answer some critics who
have argued that the war cabinet
members are too burdened with
departmental tasks to give the
fullest attention to the broader
problems of the war.
Widely credited with unusual
success in stepping up aircraft
production, Beaverbrook now will
few hours after FDR had re.
vealed he would send 50 big tank-
I ers with vital oil to the British.
Tuesday, President Roosevelt
| announced that he had requested
Jesse Jones, secretary of eom-
| merce, to comb the available
planes in the ranks of private Am-
erian concerns and individuals and
see how many could be bought.
Thursday Jones wrote the
President:
i “I have your letter of the 29th
Railroad Commission’s current' ti that , arrange to se-
proration yardst.ck-part.cularly; cure from th, air transport indus-
..it pat .rung to do with market^ and fronl private owners a sub-
dimand—was being eyed in three . .. . ______. <• _■____..c .____
spokesman for the cokbined min-1 a
i. try in the house of commons. ■
1
Eye Proration
Oil Yardstick
Of Commission
AUSTIN, Tex., May 2—Thai
Kart Lovelady and Penrose Met
calfe wrote the resolution which
drew the bill from its entangle-
ment in a conference committee j
where it was in jeopardy because |
of possible disagreement or delay
Blankenship had asked the sen-
ate to take this action in a form-
al letter to Lieut. Gov. Coke Stev-
enson and when compliance was
voted the bill was beyond further
harassment. It now goes to the
governor for approval.
The measure limits a physician
to 100 liquor prescriptions in any
ninety-day period, which is entire-
ly too small to make the liquor
drug store profitable when only a
comparatively few physicians will
write floods of liquor prescrip-
tions.
Thousands of liquor prescrip-
tions hive been in Texas ory areas
to defeat the
Tommies Ready
For Another Fight
With The Germans
Collins Makes
Feeler Tour
Into Denison
LONDON, May 2—British and
Laq relations were strained to
; the breaking point today after
Iraq troops at Habbaniya refused
i to leave the important British air
base there, while Nazi movements
toward the Russian frontier were
Ha! H. Collins of Mineral Wells! rePorted
president of a mineral water com-]
London quarters said
pany and former Denisonian, con-1’^ relatlons »>ad >>*en
ducted one of his daily broadcasts!*'»« “ P™-Nazi government
today at 12:45 p. m. from the side-
walk in
prohibition law and (Street. Collins is enroute on a
British-
strained
make money for the drugstore sa-
loon.
Civil Service
System Passed
By The House
newsmen who can word them any
way they want,
strange to them.
The truth is
AUSTIN, Tex, April 2—After
I paring it down to cover only the
] state department of public welfare
! and unemployment compensation,
I the house today passed, 124 to 1,
j n bill by Thomas Wolters estab-
. , „ | stantial number of planes of trans- , , „ . „
branchc, of Texas government to- t for ai,ocation by you to! commerce today, following com-
,lay- the democracies under the lease- P'®11™ of, ,tsd^en CensUS °f
The attorney general’s depart-' )enj act | retailing for 1939
ment appealed to the Third Court;' ..j am pleased to advise that we I They showed, for example, that
of Civil Appeals from a 126th die- jlllVe contacted the principal air i
Diet court ruling which temporar-l |,„e officials and owners of pri- HF ATH ROL
ily enjoins the commission from vate planes and without exception |
enforcing its May propration order J they have indicated a willingness
in the Continental Oil company’s' to 00mp|y with your request.
C onoro-Driscoll field in Duval ' “A substantial number of planes
county. Set for hearing in 53rd will be delivered within the next
district court Monday is another' three days.”
a'tack on the commission’s yard-1 Jones gave no figures, hut one
stick application in the Gulf-Mc-! pf his assistants estimated that the] houn.
Elroy field in Crane county. The
92 Per Cent Of
Stores HomeOwned
NEW YORK CITY, May 2.—.regardless of the decade-long hue
Significant facts concerning the and cry that the local merchant Is
retail market place have just been; doomed, 92 per cent of the na-
released by the department oft tion’s stores were still individually
Commission, being filed by royalty
owners. Gulf Oil corporation, the
main defendant, filed a cross ac-
t:on against the commission.
Favorably reported to the house
of representatives was a bill by
number of planes to be turned ov-1 of Denison
er in the next three days would
owned in 1939. the latest year for
which governmental data are jivail-
able.
According to governmental cen-
suses, the individual retailer con-
trolled 77.6 per cent of the na-i
tion's retail sales in 1829; 71.3
per cent in 1933; 73.3 per cent in ]
DR W W SIDLES 1935. In 1939, according to the
Dr. W. W. Sidles, 33, 608 West latest retail census, he controlled
Owing, died suddenly in a local fully 74.7 per cent of the nation’s!
hospital Thursday at 3:15 p. m.,! t'fctaii sales.
following an illness of only a few; against 20.3 per cent in
He had been a resident. 1929, 25.4 per cent in 1933 and
six months. j 23.3 per cent in 1935, the chain
1 tablished itself in Iraq on a coup
the 300 block W. Main u’etat several months ago.
Collins is enroute on a Kufusal to withdraw from the
feeler” tour to discover if the British base, 60 miles from Bag.
! public wants him to run for the dad, ielt the Iraq troops in a »er-
| senate and made a talk in the ious situation since a second con-
| interest of his candidacy. | tmgem of British forces was land-
For several years Collins wa-' ed today, it was reported. The
manager of the Denison Auto com-! British also declared they intended
. puny and took an active part in to tighten their control of the
I civic affairs here among which; Near East country, vital jn British
j were erection of a YMCA build plans for defense of the Suez ca-
ing, now occupied by the Kraft j na!.
Cheese company, and assisting M.| It wa.-: also understood the Brit-
| M Scholl, then a newspaper edi >-h were taking over stronger Iraq
I tor, and Martin Ashburn in the government supervision with the
proposal for a free bridge acros-1 complete backing of its neighbor,
Red river In the latter phase, I Turkey.
Denisonians awoke one morning to The additional contingents sent
find the city a mass of sticker to Iraq, following the initial land-
Collins had printed advocating the: ings of April li and 18, presum-
frec bridge project. He left Den-! ably are for these reasons:
ison in 1925 for Mineral Wells.
28th Well Put
On Production
In Cumberland
DURANT, Ok., May 2
Oil company’s 28th com
1. To discourage the Germans
from trying to send air and sea-
borne troop= to next-door Syrian
protectorate of beaten France, and
make Syria a ba*e for a drive on
Suez.
2. Stiffen Turkey’s back against
u Nazi march through by land to
i the middle East.
■ ! Provide greater protection
.. lp , d; for Mosul oil fields.
Cumberland field well w-.s put on j 4 tiu. FrelK.h in Sy-
Fure
production test after circulating
Remains were taken overland to! --tore’s share of our j c^mpuTi'" at^OTg ’fltt^Tn The foothold the,e
of the na-
i i ia from letting the Nazis get a
Authoritative British
acknowledged that the
sources
present
cnee is styled Marrs vs. Railroad er ,n lne next curve j .....-.......... . .. , jv„nnoj
be about twenty to thirty, The air-j Wichita, Has., by Short-, lui ray ■th”na. J third zone of the Bromide sand
C“,J “? T™ "”'r" It:™-, wa, don, by „„|||and •PP-arrt f.voiwbl, » a »~di MhaMn, who ar. In pow-
SWTIuT'SJ'»S Dr s!dl„ ... boa. January «. «***-«. »«»« !»“”!Z l ^ "St1- ** "» " “ ' *» ‘ **»
! . . ;n;0twrtifin i uft» -it Wichita son of Mr ;»nd Louse, by catalopueaS and by | demurred against the nev» troop
v,l Aeronautics Administration U 08 at \\ u h.ta, ^o * various other methods. I « made onlv a «ma11 Vrodncer.1 on ,he ground that the
has said that 17,351 civil aircraft j Mrs. K. O. Sidle* and \m at a r , . , . The company’s No. l Thomn-j , . , _ j.j lbj vet
Breckenridge, I were registered in the United, uate of University of ( aliforma, SI 34*i 356 units in'5011-106 in sw section 21 ll'e,‘ P1^ll>a',?
. !wjt“^. c i e°r" hy i
has a marriage date \\i.h ^^"{Qqy W. Lee O'Daniel when it was I ir. determining oil allowables fori Whether the transports would Dallas for several years, came to '
— It i.il.cM iltn W /wclll.lklll n rwilt*. I .... - .... ' r. ... 1 1 1
I lishing u merit council and civil) Rep. Lester Clark,
I service system
Cary Grant’s current picture is
Penny Serenade, but in real life
he _
bara Hutton the Woolworth hei*-- j pointed out that establishment of
ess. Dime Serenade ... George lhp (.ounci| was 011a of the ondi-
Raft is 15, attributes hi.s young-: t|ong on which the state would re-
ness to the fat ho never has touch- (>cjve fet)t.rai funt|s for state fed
ed a drop of red-eye . . A \ ir- , rated social security programs. * behalf of the Clark bill,
gin in band, a" ,35 of ’em, wants to . AnienHments by Gene McNn- Before passing the bill out, the
join the United States army. 1 e marft stnl(.k from the bill author-. commjUee )lear(| t)le bill attacked
boys probably wont get in en |)y for t.Xending civil service to hv Tom Hunter, Wichita Falls,
meese, but Unde Ram gives them ■ ,ny otllP, departments. . who said: "I see great danger in
a kind eye . . . Defense savings, Th(, jg nno iaiaiy for a merit!.;;., bm •>
bonds went over with the puhlig. aystem supervisor wa- whittled
yesterday. One Texas city of ‘ <e j,000.
about 3500 bought $.>0,000 worh j (bree-memher council is to
in less than two hours ■ • Add bp appo(nte(] by tlm governor with
simile: As changeable ns a report j ( n#(e confjrmntion. \ SlO-ncr-)
on the Greek evapuation . Gov
ed States in 1939. In competition
rels of oil through open casing.
Greece, are
preparing for
now
another fight, prob-
ably again.-ax - forces attempting
to drive from Libya toward the
i Suez canal. British troops at To-
census bureau as chain stores;; -',0 1 r-uue-zuts -v, sw mv are sajj t0 be still holding
in 1939; 131,430 In 19S51« se«>on 27, 5-7 was drilling be-1 out a(rainst the Germans although
1929 were 151 712 i ^fber Bryan county drilling re-
; establishments defined by the P°rt» were:
the state’s ifelds. I be used to reinforce British Em-j Denison six months ago. He was
In the administrative branch, I pire troop concentrations in the a member of the First Christian w^i^^em m
two railrd.vd commissioners had: Mediterranean area, where Axis chun i- PPnsu- ... c*nre«- 1 Little-208 in sw ,-w
gone before a house committee in forces are apparently aiming a| Surviving are h.s widow; two “ “
vast pincers movement at Suez, i brothers, R. T. Sidles of Dallas and . i low 4.141 feet in the Viola |
was not known Noble Sidles of Wichita and three and JJ.l 95 in 1.3. i No 1 Iittle-O04 in « sw r>f ax 8 i0'd,m Baxe penetrated
There was some speculation that sisters, Mrs. H. Kilkeary. Mrs. 0UTn^Td ITt ThaT'bv oZ' 2-' 6-7‘was drilling below\ 'he *** ot ** Mediter'
8 numher of ,be P’anM miRht be! L°U,8e Wh,te “nd MrS- Ed"“ | nine to one in 1929; by nearly ter, I L2M feet in the Viola j ' ^rman torce8( comp,eted with
to one in 1933. hv nearly eleven] No 0 ln ne ,ne mopping up in the Balkans, are
|_____________________ ... Desnite the tears' of motion 27, 5-7, new location
pressed into service carrying pilots; t>, al1 of Los Angeles,
from Britain to Newfoundland.
JfcW. Lee O'Dnniel signed^tbat t«* j provi(|ed
i day salary for council members is
nil! shortly before midnight Thnrs-I Rocodification of the state’s
day, barred photographers because j luw, was ,|e|aV( d, perhaps penna-
some of the 'nlons who should ,,ent|y, when Lon ANup was sue
have been on hand were at home j , e,sfu; in sen(|jnK buck to appro
__ ______I priation committee Dill v which
Cotton Prices
Are Higher But
Are Uncertain
IYQUTHFUL FARM SPEAKERS
(I'O ADDRESS FARM BUREAU
ton McMillin, retired farmer and
, resident of route 1 three years
L. who died Wednesday night after behalf of individual rrtatl enter
Taylor of Dorchester, Betty K. an illness of 19 months, were held prise, independents, in 'W, out
Russell of Southmayd and Alda! at 3 p. m. today from the South- numbered chains by over thirteen I
Fred Finke of Denison, T.
(Continued on page four)
$2:156 Defense
Bonds Sold In
Denison May 1
The first day of the United Sta-
tes defense bond and stamp sales
closed Thursday at the postoffice
here with $2,156.25 worth of ser-
ies E bonds sold and $'19.75 worth
of saving stamps, James R. Brown,
postal savings department head,
pnnounced today.
The bonds were bought by twen-
ty purchasers, one purchasing a
$1000 hond and the others in $25
$50 and $100 denominations.
(One hundred and seventeen sav-
ings stamps were purchased in
denominations of 10c, 25c, and
50c. No $1 of $5 stamps, nor
any $500 bonds were sold during
the day.
Mr. Brown said the sales were
comparatively light although he
Wii.- deluged with questions con-
cerning the issues by prospective
purchasers who promised to buy
later. Sales today would probab-
ly exceed those of Thursday, Mr.
Brown predicted.
I called for grants of some $75,000
| 'V>r recodifying the taw .
More Trophy
Donations Urged
From Merchants
WASHINGTON, May 2—Under
stimulus of increased industrial
• ml consumer demand and large
government purchases of votton
textiles tT!| the margins between
these and cotton, prices have ad-
vanced sharply the past few
months, it was shown in a study of
the cotton situation made public
today by the Bureau of Agricul-
tural Economics in the Depart-
ment of Agriculture.
Domestic cotton consumption
As the Denison dairy show/ during March established a new
scheduled for May 15, draws near-1 high record of 854,000 bales, the
Dell Francis of Tom Bean, the | side Christian church, Rev. G. C
FFA and 4-11 club representatives. Minor ofifeiating, assisted by Rev. j
who spoke before the house of; I. R. Lamb.
representatives at Austin Monday,; Interment was at a \ an Aistyne
will repeat their speeches tonight I cemetery, Denison Funeral Home
before the county farm bureau at directing. Pallbearers were Om-
Sherman in the court house. i ar Parks, Tom Bassha, l D.
________ [Neely, H. J. McGill, Ernest Cook
Advertise in the Denison Press and Bill Lind ay.
low 4.141 feet in the Viola
No. 1 Little-209 in sw se sw of
section 27, 5-7 was drilling below
4,266 feet in the Viola.
in 1933. hv nearly eleven I N'“-J ln ne ,ne nwi mopping up
I MME*‘ POLTON McMILLIN , to one in 1935 Despite the tear^ ‘ un ** ’ 0 *' M A 1,,n j turning ba k toward the Russian
i Fun^raT^r^^ ToL that have Wn shed and the obit-! ^day, was digging i frontie^ lt wa, reliably reported,
paries that have been premature'}-j j but no open conflict between the
written by chain store critics in 0 ", e .' „ in nsK !tU Narsis and Red' was expected ev-
of section 34, 5 7 was still a lo- * , . , , /
en though relations between the
^stion. ,
.. 1 two nations apparently are stram-
Un the Marshall county side,' i
Chains alone, employed, operation, were
to otte.
1,118,374
1939.
store employees in
Australia claimed that 43,000
er, A. W. Long, Chamber of Com-
merce manager, today issued an
appeal for more trophy donations
from local merchants.
The Chamber has already sub-
scribed $200 i'l prizes and will
furnish all ribbons in the dairy
cattle judging. Mr. Long point-
ed out only eight of the fifteen
bureau reported. The seasonally
adjusted index of cotton consump-
tion also made a new high record
in March of 147 per cent of the
1928-50 average. Likewise the in-
dex of cotton mill activity, based
on eighty hours per week opera-
tion, rose to 116.7 per cent of
capacity in March to break the
trophies to bp awarded had been lecord set in February.
pledged and he urged merchants
to notify his office of future tro-
phy pledges at their purliest con
venience. The show is the first
of its kind to be staged in Denisor.
authorized use of Forest
Park tor the event.
The dairy rhow catalouge, con-
taining rules, classes of the show,
premium lists, etc., will be of the
press Wednesday, Mr, Long said.
Dot ing March the volume of un-
filled orders is reported to have
Increased about ono-fourth. The
slackening in sales during recent
weeks has decreased the volume
-jslightly since April 1. hut the
large enough to insure a record
level of consumption welt Into
next season. Textile prices have
advanced sharply in recent months
and manufacturers’ gross margins
have widened materially.
and is to be made an nnnuivl af- ^
fair. The city commission re-! back-log of unfilled orders Is still
ccntly
Nazis Claim 40,000
Lost By Britain
New Budget Of
Scouts Mapped
At Conference
Plans for the new budget to
"oT
ro ar> rig. death, and admitted that the Brit-
No. 1 Little 207 in nc sn nw , , „ ,,
nf , ; ish campaign in the Balkans is
of section 34, 5-7, was drilling be
low 4,965 feet in the Bromide I 111'
No. 1 Little-210 in ne se nw of
section 24-5-7, was drilling below
1,242 feet in the Viola.
No. 3 Metz-105 in sw nw nw of
section 28, 5-7, wras drilling below
3,397 feet in the Woodford
j become effective in the Red River
Valley Boy Scout Council’s fiscal i \j„„ „ Huff Ir*
year beginning July 1 will be map-| LlUri 1H
Two Accidents
BERLIN, Germany, May 2 were
German military sources said Fri-
day that two-thirds of the British
expeditionary force, or about 40,-
000 men, can be regarded as lo. t
ir. Greece.
(This is almost diametrically
opposed to British official state-
ments which say that 48,000 or
80 per cent of the force of 60,000
men were rescued.)
This estimate of British losses
presumably covers casualties and
prisoners taken by the Germans
since DNB, the official German
news agency, said an enormous
number of prisoners were taken ut
Thermopylae and Mount Olympus
in the Peloponnesus.
Most of the prisoners taken
ped out at a meeting of the coun-
cil’s executive board at the Cham-
i ber of Commerce tonight at 8 o'-
' clock, presided over by Dr. Char-
Austral ians and New Zea-j ics Hess of Durant, council
landers, DNB said. president. W. L- Ashburn Jv.,
The number of dead cannot yet is chairman of the budget commit-'
be determined, the German report
said. All heavy motorized equip- (
ment and guns of the British were
left behind in Greece, DNB said, miss MOSSE TO'STATE
An Australian army officer said
that during the Greek campaign,
the Nazi soldiers had little regard
for their lives and marched to cer-
tain death "like they were doped.”
! .He .-aid allied forces picked the
Nazis off like clay pigeons, but
l Still they came on while the Brit*
i ish and Aussies fired until their
arms ached at easy targets.
i Carol To US?
a date to begin
the bulget drive at the meeting to-
night.
because of attacks by the German SmeET AT AUSTIN
air force. ____
The news agency said ttiat many Evelyn Mosse, DHS ready writ-
of the prisoners were taken during'ei Hnd second place winner in the
the mopping up of central and I recent regional meet, is in Austin
southern Peloponnesus and much today to compete in the state tour-1 and damaged her bicycle early West Main street,
war material was acquired there, ney. She was qualified when j Thursday night, but that the child1
The agency said that hundreds the first place winner became ill i refused assistance and ran tmray-
uf British armored ear-, truck-1 not attend the slate. I fleoree Lively. 312 F.. Munson
Two small accidents were re-i ijsBOX, Portugal, May 2—
ported Thursday by city police,! Former Ring Carol of Rumania
but none \va*s hurt seriouslx. I Vvax reported to have hoarded an
Leonard Crenshaw, driving on American |iner bound for New
highway 75 to Sherman, was m-. Yory Citv. His eventual destina-
jo red about the head slightly when; lion was believed to be Chile.
his car went off the road and i _____
struck a tree. A Short-Murray G.„ Tr,n>f„
ambulance was called but Cren- ! __
shaw had left the scene before jjarcu- |, Tyrone, transferred
the ambulance arrived. -ron, Ljule Rocki assumed his
John Garry, 605 West Gandy duties ,odav. us land altent the
street, reported his oar had struck ,, g Enf?;m.er office's land ac-
a small negro girl, Doretha Shaw j q„isitlon division. He is residing
and cannons were taken and that
the luftwaffe destroyed forty en-
emy planes on a single airfield.
Betty Jo Blakemore, regional1
winner in extemporaneous speak-
ing, is also competing at Austin.
street, reported the theft of 26
chickens last night from the back
yard of his home
NOTICE-
If yx>u do Hot receive your Pit*,
before 5 :30, please pifione $00 an#
one will be tent you.
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Anderson, LeRoy. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 263, Ed. 1 Friday, May 2, 1941, newspaper, May 2, 1941; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth526806/m1/1/?q=+date%3A1941-1945: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.