The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 88, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 15, 1938 Page: 1 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Grayson County Frontier Village.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
/ATHER
DENISON AND VICINITY
Partly cloudy today and
Sunday here
THE DENISON PRESS
A FAST GROWING
PAPER
35c Per Month
MEMBER OF THE UNITED PRESS
DENISON. TEXAS SATURDAY, OCT. 15, 1938
WEEKLY FOUNDED 1930-DAILY 1934
VOL. 5—N0.88
Hitler Advises Hungarian Leaders to Be Careful
Canton Army
Clashes With
Japanese Units
Noted Musician
1
II
HONG KONG, Oct. IT, (UP)--
•Advance forces of the Cantonese
army clashed today with the Jap-
anese south China army which is
advancing on Canton. Ferocious
fighting was reported at Taimshui,
Fingshan and the key city of Wai-
chow on the Swatow-Canton high-
wav. the immediate Japanese ob
jectivc.
Early reports told of important
Chinese successes and heavy Jap-
ane e losses. Canton celebrated—
but somewhat prematurely. The
Japanese reformed after suffering
reverses at Tamshui and Ping.shan
and latest reports indicated that
they were advancing s'owly.
Two Japanese columns, which
marched from the coast, joined at
the town of Mnansnng and from
there stormed Waichow, five mile
away. They met the main Chinese
defense force of the area in the
suburbs of Waichow and there,
in n temperature of 100 degrees,
the Chinese %nd Japanese fought
Everyday
DENISON
LOUIS ANDERSON
(ft--------------f\
Paris sportswriters last night
raved about how good Roy Mc-
Corkle was against the Wildcats,
assuring this correspondent the
local quarterback would make his
all-district team this year. Shorty
has already made our mythical
eleven, practically. To let youj
in on a secret, Elvis Blankenship
and Clements McCoy also are rap-
ping at the door of mythical famei
. . . Ed Harris might make it if
he perks up the rest of the sea
son . . . The Jackets suffer from!
penalties more than anything else,
most of them coming from hold-'
ing, a 15-yard offense. Some of
the fans here feel like the offi-
cials are unfair in penalties
Name Mediation ,
I *
i Laborites Are Informed
i
i
their first important battle of the fhp Japkctf( but if a nnm-
southern campaign, am.d smok-L,. pf npw offi(,ials ra|) the same
ing ruins and shattered bodies ^ fipId mprl) thorc must be
which told a grim story of yestcr- ROmpthinp to it . . . Take a neat
day’s air raid.
Campaign Clearer
Roosevelt Administration In
I First Steps to Put End to
National Labor Disputes
COLUMBUS, 0., Oct. 15 (UP) '
—The Roosevelt administration
I made its first definite move to
end the dispute between the Am-
erican Federation of Labor and
the Committee for Industrial fn
ganizitinn today by suggesting
that both sides assign representa-
tives to a mediation committee to
j begin work at once.
In an address at an anniver j
sury celebration of an unaffiliated
railroad union, Secretary of Pa-
llor Frances Perkins proposed that |
I the API, and CIO each appoint
(“five trusted and experienced re-
presentatives to a mediation com-
mittee and give them authority to!
'bind their respective organizations
to any agreement they may
Ireach.”
p, j * , 1 She suggested that these tern
UOftSt IJniOnS lm,n select three impartial pcr unsj
I as additional members of the com-!
President William Green of aml that ttlp chairman |„
Treasury Ready to Distribute New Coin
ARRIVAL — Only picture for
which Arturo Toscanini, noted
Italian conductor, would pose on
his recent arrival In New York.
He has had frequent clashes
with the Fascists.
Federation In
Move To Gain
mittec and that the
AFL Says Group to Fight ]ho'l'n from neutral mem
For Maritime Organization! ’ , ... .
If the AFL ami CIO cannot
HOUSTON, Tex. Oct. 15 (UP) afv'eo "n nou,ral
-The American Federation of
said, their choice
members,
should be
Labor today opened a new cam- *" "some outside trusted person.” |
4_ .ali.l ______1 • If dlf‘h n nlan ie ..,1 ....
MOBILIZE TROOPS
IN HUNGARY FOR
CZECH INVASION
BUDAPEST, Hungary, Get. 15
(UP)—The government today an-
’ 1 meed that mobilization of 300
' On «!••• y reservist ordered for
Monday, wa necessitated by vio-
MUNICH, Oct. 15 (UP)—Fran-
I tisek Chvalkovsky, Czechoslovak
I foreign minuter and Koloman do
Daranyi, former Hungarian pre-
j tnier, left together for Prague to-
day after talk with Eeubrcr Hit- lent treatment accorded Hungar-
| ler on their minority dispute. Ot iai s in Czechoslovakia,
to 'on Erdmanr.sdorff, Ge man. Reports from the Czechoslovak
i minister to Hungary, left diru t province of Ruthenia that soldiers
i for Budapest by airplane. and gendarmes, using airplanes
j' nd armored cars, had rounded
| BERl IN. Oct. 1 i (I P) Kenii- up 305 Hungarian terrorists
rer Adolf Hitler has advised both
I Hungary and Czechoslovakia to
I make another effort ti negotiate
their minority dispute directly, it
was reported today.
I Reliable quarter- said that Hit-
ler fel* that direct negotiation v -
were
renewed here with excitement.
The Czechoslovak delegation at
('■ neva charged that a reign of
terror was spreading through the
' "*■ of Ruthenia and Slo'ak-
in, that it was tiring directed bv
Mmtiv;. : n armv leaders, and that
..... rs had been
how, Louie, you predicted a"Deni*| ^°^st “p »*I ,f SUCh " |,ian is accepUfl
The Jananese plane of campaign | cxtraordinary
became cleaver. The attack onl ..... .... „
son win, and it did, which is very
■ chartering the Seafarers Union of sourecs believed that President I
To bring up
North \merica.
Wait-how indicated that, when and|fifth"down?thaUrthev^after thc fl‘fIeration
on the
a short time;
in'
ended
William Green, jf
convention j
(Roosevelt ultimately might be a»k-(
cd to pick the three extra numbers. I
Address Follows FDR Appeal
fifth'“ueu yesterday, named Harry' Miss Perkin’s address, apparent-1
Lundeberg to direct the fight on. Iy wa® made with White House an j
the Committee for Industrial Or-I pro-val. It followed bv less than |
Iganization maritime union. [two weeks Mr. Roosevelt’s person-j
j Green said it was the first in-'al appeal to the AFL convention)
jternational move to organize 125 ,'n Houston, Texas, and by onl' j
if the city wore taken, they „ first down
tended to make their main drive| thpn apored
a’ong the Swatow highway | ,atpr Ask anv of the scorers
to Canton. 80 miles to the west. , thp box ahout it.
Thero f«eemod no doubt, from| __
reports, that in earlv flashes south' I
of Waichow tho Chinese had stop- Football reaches its wildest! 000 maritime firemen, enginemen, a few days an address to the same,
peak here Sunday when Joe Pen-, stewards, fishermen and unlicen-'convention by wage hour admini -
nor stumbles into town in “Mr.'sed ship personnel. Lundeberg,trator E'mer F. Andrews. Ro’h
Doodle Kicks Off” . . . John Ros-iSs temporary president will direct urged a prompt settlement of thc I
onfield, reviewing the latest Wal-, organizing on the Pacific, Gulf, AFL-CIO dispute
film,j Atlantic and Canadian coasts, on
ped the Japanese for n time. It
was asserted that at one point,
unspecified, the Chinese ambushed
a bir Japanese force which was
marching unsuspectingly in column - lece Boery-Miokey Rooney
formation, and killed 5,000 men. “Stablematfls,” says it will prove 'be Croat Lakes and inland wat-
ITo’ ever, thc Japanese air- popuar with thc public despite no.cra.
plane which had no effective on- romantic interest, whatsoever. Pro I He is head of the Iederation 8 Miss Perkins said:
positi n. were blasting a path for b.ibl.v because they are the two I <«' 'V* union of thc Pacific, in-1 "Cooperation within thc newj
the g nund forces and it was in-1 bc=t acton in thc husincss . . . eluding 8,000 men. |dividcd movement is needed if 1a-
- - With You” isj Financial and moral support for hor is to achieve its proper place!
NEW STYLE NICKLLS—Getting ready (or the distribution of
the r.ew nickels, soon to be issued, here is Nellie Tayloe Ross.
Director of the M at, Inspecting some of th» nr\v coins at the
mint in Philadelphia One s'tle o( the nickels Hears thp portrait
or Thomas Jellvrsor. w tli his Monticelto home on the other side.
Order calls for 12.7(10 000 of the n'-ke’s.
U.S, To Protect
American Rights
Recalling that labor accord is'
of interest to wage earners, man-
agement nnd the general public. |
Commissioners
Not To Outlaw
Use Of Butane
|tion to a dead’oeked whicli tli
jtered new trouble in Europe,
j Diplomatic quarters held that
'the advice would be in line with
, Hit le- s desire to keep Czechosio-
jvakia as strong as possible now
'that the Sudetenland dispute has
j been settled.
j That Poland and Hungary were
(injected at all into the Czechoslo-
vak minority dispute was attribu-
ted here to Premier Benito Mus-
solini of Italy. If Hungary re-
Isumed direct talks with Czechosio
vskia, it would be regarded here
as additional evidence that the
' center of gravity of the Berlin-
Rome axis had settled firmly in
j Berlin.
Hitler was believed to feel that
'Hungary, almost surrounded as
1 -ho is by the members of the lit-
jtie entente (Czechoslovakia, Rou-
I mania and Jugoslavia) i.- much
weaker than is Polanil, for in-tan-
I e. and that her mobilization of
(army reserves to back up her min
■ t into th • country from a Hun-
garian trail ing camp for terror-
i ts a1 Kisvarda.
Hungary oal'ed five classes of
of ,vmv resertjats to thc colors
yesterday a few hours after i*s
delegation negotiating a territor-
ial dis ■ it< with Czerhoslovakia a*
the border town of Komarom. an-
nounced that discussions were
hope’esslv deadlocked.
The Hung:rians withdrew and
•he '- .vernment began appealing
to the big four powers signatory
‘ -i the Munich agreement, asking
them ‘n -cttle the dispute as they
hr"! done the German Czeehoso'vak
territorial crisis.
FIRE INSURANCE
RATE CUT SEEN
proving a success in
tatinn throughout the countr
hut mo«t fans wonder what it is|
"I you can't take with you. or if you I
’ -------,J once you find out . . . F.N. j
in the Dallas News claims Martha j
Rave’s latest "Give Me a Sailor”
is just too silly for words, re
minding her of the old Keystone
comedies.
If you are interested in why
screen ndap-'^be new seaman’s union was prom-
I ised by Green.
“Another Term
Would Be Bad
For Country”
interc't may bo concerned.'
dioat* i that the Japanese nnd “You Can’t Take It
heen able to resume their advance.
So iubi'nnt were people of Can-
ton a. news of Chinese successes
that newspapers speculated on thc
possib lity that thc Japanese may j would once you find out
retreat to the coast.
Refugees jammed the wharves
at Canton and crowded the h’gh
ways, hut the citv was ea'm. Huge
crowds silently read the porter"
regarding mass evacuation of (00,
000 men, children and aged men
Emergency laws were drafted yQU mighf not click with other; Ko( SinpU a,!minis; ration may
here today, authorizing the Hong pe,..op, anf) have never reached «wripo out" the middle class and!
Kong authorities to requisition atU ,y,p poa| you SPt up years ago, the dl,stl.oy democracy. I
stores and, H necessary, to contro | ^Oj|owjng r];pp0(j article might! pettengib's statement was a po- Official Asks
help. jlitical valedictory ending eight Keep
Man’s imperfections lead him to'ycars. congress. He voluntar-
make many mistakes in life, amd j]y relinquished his house rest ‘.his I
the pointing out of these frailties yj»ar return to la.v practice. Ant
Cil
efu
of responsibility in the United,
State. \s I have said before di*-| rnon
solution and division inevitah y p.,* ,. .
lead to loss of influence and pres- might s,. a
Itiee of all those involved, partic- ,ng fur
ularly in matters where thc public i mud. h f r,
bv home
WASHINGTON, Oct. 15 (UP) , Dog Is
—Rep. Pettegill, I)., Ind., said to-1 R.OpOJ*tod III
South Denison
day that another four years of
* is installed
| merchants,
i City Enginet
j discussing its
1 tane was good
in tho home
when it has been
WASHINGTON, Oct. 15 (UP)
-The state department today as |een(ral F
stiicd American Jews that the
United States would take all ne-|
cessary steps to protect American!
rights and interests in Palestine,
despite reports that Great Britain
contemplates halting emigation to,
the Holy L<md.
In a formal statement issued in,
response to hundreds of protesting!
letter* and telegrams sent to the'
-tat' department. United Stab- i
Jewry was informed that the sit-!
nation in strife-torn Palestine is A new method of
being followed closely bv officials. [Denison boarding hou ;e o
Justice Louis D. Bond e is of the) “-n- unearthed by a si
for practical uses. Supreme Court spent more than landlord today and polio*
and business house an hour with President Roosevelt; a u-erning to other room
installed p
the ii?
ealed
dung*
situation, which
at the moment is highly satisfac-
tory to him.
New Gyp Game
Played Here On
Room Operator?
vners
\ M. Brenneke,
» here, said bu-
Tex. Oct. 15 (UP)—
fire !o«« record con-
s present low level for
thc year, the state can
her reduction in insur-
Marvin Hall. Fire In-
nmis. inner, said today,
this should be an in-
all citizens to hold
- during thc few re-
eks. He said that as
t* !!)3s figures have
ited. showing premium
ire "me and losses, a hearing will
be held to consider changes in thc
-t ■ d on this year’s exper-
ience Hall said that in spite of
• he 5 g building program in Tex-
•u • ir.ee thc depression, there had
■ pn rn ri*e in rates and that re-
dact i ns of thc last two years
have stood unchanged.
ta
j Friday night at the White House. !
Leon a c'ose watch
prices in all commodities. Thc
regulations were thc result of
sharply rising prices for foodstuff
since the Japanese landing.
perly and thorough cher‘ks made j He refused to discuss the nature! er--” who palm themselve
at regular intervals to determine his visit, \nother phase of the' emnloyees of the U. S >
whether the tan1' arc in order or growing refugee problem was dis-.in,T Corc*» here,
a leak has developed cussed hv thc most Rev. Samu"t \ hoardinj hon"c nnci
Authorities claim butane is ap flitch, Roman Cntho'ic hishop'rotv'y offeers this mom
proximately twice as heavy as ai •. °f Milwaukee, who reported to a n-an gnncarpd a* hi" n
Residents of southwest Denison■ nnd v hen a ' ■ ■ • h. • ■ m ■ ting he e t1, it . ■ - : t • ft- ■ • ■■■
Residents To
Pets Confined for
Days and Watch Reactions
r 3\ving Room
Applications
On Increase
has engaged thc attention of rc- pa,.)y supporter of the new deal, |,0,lay W’T'’ "'amed to he on the ‘nth"'" at tl ■ b w. -t joint a a ”"1 ■ f the C.atho’ie church
formers and philosophers in a 1 he broke with it over tho supreme k>okout f-»r a dog suspected of be-jhmr or bin
ages. \ recent writer enumeratciijcouit and government rcorganiza- iat)id after the animal had ’■ ‘ "
M / P“S3s Ordinance Prov'd-
in*» For Suneevisicn of In-
stal'ation |of The Gas Here
bv* I'nrc for rooms nnd n
until a suffic- German and Austrian Nazis hasUud his wife, the lattr
; tn )),. jgnited. intensified since Austria bornmeiRoek. Ark., until a’
what he considers to be the seven I tjon issu,.Si becoming one of the bitten a child in the 100U block When t' 1- "" ”! ,tl1 TIci, b
greatest mistakes of man as fol-, administration’s foremost oppon-1 " ^ Cheslnnt street late Friday, tho-ities said, the ■■ilt 1 • Ida t A-chbi-hop h'trteh. a menu 1 f \f. ” a eg
lows'. !ents. City dog authority I.iovd Craw- might blow ua buiidirg. and take 1"' 1 "mnuttec for Catholic Rcfn-
1. The delusion that individual ' I ford, failing to find the susp.....ed hun
advancement is made by cru hingj u j. ' 1 ! af(
** . j . 1 ■ I .
da" after- many professional men and warn-
s were in- cn-
Applications at the
others down.
2. The tendaney to worry about
things that cannot be changed or
(corrected.
Denison| 3. Insisting that a thing is im-
Requests Recall
Of Ambassador
“oogiTiPor” a*P "upper. s*avod '
ni<vlit. a^e breakfast and went
work.” The operator followed i-'
t , a point in south Do’u 'U. *V
tnou'red at tho armv offieos hei
about his hoardor The latter h"
GRAYSON COUNTY COTTON
OFF FROM YEAR AGO
\ t tal of 25.413 bales of cot-
ton lave been ginned in Grayson
r.t;. f (let. 1. 1938, rs com-
. , 1 with 39,889 the same dn'e
- i. u. arc. 1 ding to reports re-
, leased Friday by G. O. Petersor,
n-\ re ord keeper for the gov-
TWO ARE ADDED
TO EXTRA BOARD
BERLIN, Oct. 15 (UPt-
(1'fe
rabid animal after a lonjr search Tin* move of *h
• tot nijrht, said it was a mixture lowed an e<n’okion in
between a fox and rat terrier, nal cafe hun* Wednr
Immediately after the doff had oon where five
bitten the small child on the hand, jured on" seriously. Butane was Thl‘ st,ltp departments assur-,«rv- heen connected wi’h th*
The' «t disappeared and has not been used in the building, but authori ' ment'on Catholic ref- , at ffiees
sewing room are increasing faster possible because we ourselves can-]government has requested Brazil'-seen since,
than thev can be handled, Area n’t accomplish it. |(o recall its ambassador to Berlin,] Crawford asked th.it d
Rnnarvisor Mrs. Lvdin W. Ballard 4. Refusing to set aside It was announced today. in that area to keep their pets in collection of l itane, or n; urn! v *
told city oouncilmen Friday after-trival preferences in order that] close confinement for the next ■
____ I important things may he accomp-i Mercury is Lower fourteen to twenty-one days and Whi'o councilman took no ic- ' ! r 'rni'IK'!1'' . 1^ " *’ r" ' efrd in ■ niio
lished. | Temperatures reached a new keep a check on any strange ac- tlon on pas-age of an ordinance n'a' proposed in i.ir i a e. '.me 1
5. Neglecting development and] low in highs Friday afternoon tions. It was not known whether giving the city aut oritv t sup -
refinement in the mind by not: when only 83 degrees were regis-jthc rabid dog had bitton othor \’i.so instailaton and checking c
acquiring the habit of reading. tered on local thermometers. A dogs, but Crawford said the hunt butane n od In >v, th* \ indicated
(1. Attempting to compel other low of 57 degrees was reached ed canine might he in any section thev might within the coming
persons to believe and live as wo early today. 'of the city today. weeks,
do.
E.....u to to the Stock Show at
Kansas City. 4-H club boys an!
• ' - will ride in three chair can
added to the Blue Bonnett st
Muskogee, Oklahoma.
noon.
Mrs. Ballard said the local pro-
jects had 150 whites and negroes
.working now, but that 25 whites
nd 45 negro applications have
been made during the recent
week and that there is no place
for them unless double shifts are
put on.
Apnroxiinntelv $5,000 a month
are paid sewing room experts
here, the supervisor indicated.
MURRAY SERVICES
ARE HELD TODAY
and eol-
Tlr entire cast of the "Soaring
TDgh” theatrical company will
leave Denison October 17 on the
Katv Flier for Waco, Austin and
1 Oklahoma City.
(Continued on page six)
7. The failure to establish the
habit of saving money.
Funeral services for Edwin R.
Murrsv. former Denison resident
who died in San Francisco Wed-
nesday, were held at 11:30 this
morning in that city with burial
in the National cemetery.
Mr. Murray died in the Veterans
hosnital after several (lavs illness
of heart disease. He had served
twelve years in the U. S. naivy j regardless of general belief, one
and had recently made his home
in California. \
Look this week turns out an
interesting life story of Carole
Lombard, part of which is pro-
Lnblv pure fiction ... A sight to
behold is an elderly man on a
hair tonic drunk. Took a look
at one in the police station this
morning and it turns the stomach
. . .He must have thought we
wore another one of the hoys,^p|s
because before we left he was'
calling us "pal” . . . Lloyd Craw
Jurors Allowed
Weekend Off
SEAFARERS UNION
CRANTF.D CHARTER
British Troops Begin Marches Today
To Reach Points for
JERUSALEM, Oct. 15 (Ul’)_ (*en- Edmund AHcnby’s expedi Outhi. ik; ne, wvio
NEW YORK, Oct. 15 (UP)
j Jurors chosen for the’ trial of 1 International Union of N rth Am
three alleged members of a Nazi | erica. 1- a rival to the Committe
■ soy ring wore released today for|for Industrial Organizations N \
! the weekend without even theitionil Maritime Union.
1 customary instructions to refrain! Green said the federation - rA
A carload of new Chevrolet*
from Kansas City arrived this
—*— ! morning for Stoaklcy Chevrolet
HOUSTON. Tex., Oct 1 • (T P) company The new automobile"-
■ "ling in on every train, an
j American Federation of 1 a1'"’ Pxtra ear being required yesterday
l"nnouneed today a charter had £0 carry twenty of them.
] been granted for the Seafarers | ' -—
W. E. Nichols and F. C. St.o-
from discussing the case or road-lenitive council granted the ehT’1’
^',ing about it in newspapers. jus the first international move to
British troops wore on the march tion ‘lurin? tho world war. More ported from all parts of the na
throughout Palestine today, en were being landed daily from T5gy-,tlon nnd travel k me So little v - known f the nu-i > miz- 125,000 niartim. t
route to strategic positions for a l’1, Malta and tho British Isle ". ] ilous that many British families turp of the g0vernment> evidence men, enginemen, steward • " 1
general campaign against Arab re-1 It was evident that the troops 'vho had been in J, ru idem on va , , p pd (l. (]1P di,p;lrjnil ,t ,y ihormon nnd al! uolieom i slvi'
j were about to begin punitive com- nation, joined the a-my envoys j)IRt-pc an(j ag1M1ts of United!
Roads out of Jerusalem were pnign against rebel strongholds, headed for their home towns in <gfntPs Attorney Lamar Hardy, I
glutted with army lorries, armored based on the decision of the Rri-i the interior. judge John C Knox said !'
frrd, city dog expert, warning oficairSi radio cars odinancc and med- tish colonial office that the Arab Rebel - v -e iv.t . d in the hi l- v . “not necossni > t i..« k
a mad dog loose in Denison, s&id]jPB] iorr(ea and marching men. rebellion must be suppressed be- around Jeru alem watching th. jury up" He advised them opt.
British rciforcements within the fore any plan can be devised for t-oop- and, undeterred hv them, t,ot to be biased by any speeul
they might read in newspa-
since] Palestine mnnda'c. [of the r’ty, killing and looting, [pers
chmer have
switchmen’s
heen added to
extra board.
th*
(Continued on page six)
past week had reached the largest settling the critical problem of the made persi- tent sorties to tli 1 '
military force in PalotMue since] Palestine mar.c!a*e. |of the .'ty, killing and looting.
i o’^onTH'l.
Tho tomporary presidency
“ nded to Harry Lundeberg. hea l
the federation’s sailors union of
I -eifie, whose jurisdiction will
i- elude Atlantic, T’acfic, Gulf and
Canadian coasts and thc Great
I,sites.
J. \ Singisor, chief dispatcher
for the M-K T. ami John Tropn
Denison city golf champion, will
represent Denison in the first an
mud Cotton golf tourament at
McKinney tomorrow. Five hun-
dred dollar* in prises will be
awarded.
NOTICE
If you do not receise your
bv 5 p. m. each d»y, pl«»»n phono
300 nnd one will be tent you.
THF DENISON PRESS
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 88, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 15, 1938, newspaper, October 15, 1938; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth527051/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.