The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 224, Ed. 1 Monday, March 17, 1941 Page: 2 of 4
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:
THE DENISON PRESS
MONDAY, MARCH lYth, l94i
TW O
; m--
THE DENISON PRESS
Established in 1930
Telephone No. 300
Office of Publication 607 W. Main
Issued Daily Except Sunday
LeROY M. ANDERSON ............................ Editoi
UROY M. ANDERSON, Jr.......Mechanical Snp’%
LOUIS V. ANDERSON .................... City Hditoi
National advertising representative Inland News-
paper Representatives, Inc., Wriglajr Building, Chi-
aagp. HI.____
Dedicated to clean and responsive government;
to ipdividual and civic integrity; to individual and
civic commercial progress.__
BOX NUMBERS, Care Denison Press will be given
advertisers desiring blind addresses.
SUBSCRIPTIPN RATES
One Week .....................-..................................... 18®
Sue Month .................................................-....... 96®
Three Months (in advance) ...................... $1.00
Six Months (in advance) ................................ $1.75
One Year (In Advance) ................................ $3 60
0KARGE ACCOUNTS are acceptable from persons
having telephone listed in their own name and up-
•n agreeing to remit when bill is presented. 10 pel
cent will be added on unpaid private accounts after
36 daye from date of first insertion._
CANCELLATIONS must be received by 11 a.
ia order to avoid publication in current issae.
CLOSING HOUR: Copy received by 9 a. m. will
be published the same day.
ERRORS: The Denison Press will not be re
sponsible for more than one incorrect insertion.
OUT or TOWN ORDERS for
iteictly payable in advance.
classified adt era
the
be
Any erroneous statement reflecting upon
character or reputat>on of any persons will
gladly corrected if brought to the attention ef the
publishers. The Deaison Press assumes no reepen-
sibilRy for error in advertising insertions beyend
the price ef the advertisement.
fi Furniture Factory For
Denison Needed
Why not a furniture factory for Deni
son?
Reports are that suc^i factories are now
sprining up in various parts of the country
and that they are so simplified as to make
profitable business, while at the same time
such a movement is in line with the decen-
tralizing of industry.
There is ample wood of a kind near
this city which could be huuled by truck
easily to supply a furniture factory or so
with raw material for many years.
Modern means of furniture making is
akin to that of the auto—a special machine
for each part of a given furniture design.
As the raw lumber goes down the line
each machine turns out its specific part of
the item being turned out. The parts are
gradually assembled and when the end of
the routine is reached the product is
ready for shipping-.
There are mills here now which
could be easiy turned into the making
of furniture. By selecting a series of de-
signs and concentrating on them, there is
no reason why we could not meet the mar-
ket price of most of the furniture shipped
here.
T^he wood in this section dres-
ses beautifully and would make attractive
substance for furniture. With thousands of
acres of sucjh material within a distance of
fifty miles of the city, all tjhat is needed
is for someone to get started.
Such a plant would also tie in with
the manual training we are giving our boys
in the higfi school. Denison would not on-
lv have vocational training, but would
also add the angle so much now being
discussed, that of vocational guidance.
----OO-
jTjie automobile now has something
like nine taxes fastened on it by the law
oiarkets and now they want to add another
in the form of a liense tax on every driver.
The auto today takes the place of the
horse and vehicle we used to draw us. We
did not think of placing all those taxes on
the horse and the buggy. Now Progress
gives us an auto and also comes with it a
deluge of reasons why it ought to be
taxed. It does not add up that there is that
much reason for taxes between a horse and
buggy and an auto.
Charles Boyer and Margaret Sul lavan take the leading role in
“Back Street, at the Rialto theatre showing currently. The pair
are supported by Richard Carson Frank McHugh, Tim Holt and
Stvmuel S. Hinds.
POLITICAL
DOPE
DENISON
THEATRES
THIS WEEK
&
for
the
. WHAT
OTHER EDS
ARE THINKING!©
---«
9
Interesting Bits
About Our Friends
pEATH PENALTY
The Texas Digest, differing
with views here expressed adverse
to abolition of the death penalty
indicts as erroneous the opinion
that capital punishment discour-
ages murder and thinks a change
necessary in order to quell the i non and family,
rapacity of defense attonerys in comfort to me,
acquiring the wor.diy we at I h of
clients for whom they secure ae-
quita!
It is quite ti-ue that the Ameri-
can murder rate is high, despite
the death penalty, but the fact i
A Family That Carrie. On
While assisting down at the
steps of a local church Sunday
morning the widow1 of the late
C. W. Cuchenor, that good lady
remarked that she still misses her
husband, although he has been
dead many years. "I have my
and they are a
she added. The
is Gerge Cuchener, and he
is a worthy successor to the busi-
ness which his father labored so
long to establish. George took
un right where his father left
son
1 off and with the help of his wife
direct v chargeable to our fail-
ire to assure certainty of punish-
ment. In England, where the
death penalty exists and prosecu-
tion is successful in a high per-
cenetage of cases, murder is com-
paratively rare. Even in our own
county there are many instances
on record where desperate crimi-
nals have hesitated to ri-k capital
punishment, but have slain cal-
lously inside the borders of •
state that does not execute few-
er loopholes in our criminal law-
end practice plus the death penalty
will reduce our murder calendar
to a minimum.
As to the Texas Digest’s war on
the rapacious barrister, contempt
for his methods is mingled with
the thought that his acquistiveness
often brings to his clients thp rot
ribution that hi» -kilt denies - In-
law power to apply. The criminal
attorney's bill is the only sure
penalty for the slayer.—Dallas
News
ami daughter Georgene, set out
to erect a new building modcrnly
equipped. After that wasi done,
and the building located on South
'Mirick, business got better and
the daughter was sent to school
at Denton where she is now tak-
ing a special course. Mother
Cuchener now at an age where
> can’t help hut little in the
business, sits in her home not
far from the laundry ana enjoys
i the experience of having a son
who carries on in a business in
which she has been interested for
more than a third of a century.
Along the New. Beat
Today is the day for wearing
the green for it’s St. Patrick’s
day. And like all other men of
history, he has been greatly ex-
aggerated.
Down in Dallas on the wall of
one of the business concerns is a
motto which reads something
like a great institution being onlv
| the lengthening shadow of some
ESTAB. 1914
1941
C. B. SULLENBERGER MFG. CO.
108-110 W. Chestnut street
—MANUFACTURERS OF-
Phone 1022
High Class Mill Work
including doors, windows, frames, interior trim. We specialize
in window and door screens. Galvanized or black wire. Spe-
cial cabinet and fixtures to suit every need.
great man. Ana how true it is.
To live to cast a shadow of
good and noble things, to live so
that posterity will honor your
memory—that is far more than
houses and lands.
Most of the great men have
been men of little means. There
is something about the absence of
struggle for good things that takes
away something fine in man-
cases for most of us.
We heard a mother pray the
other day that her boy would not
be rich in this world's goods, so
that he would not get away from
the Lord. She may have the idea
that men, can’t be well off and
sitill be good men, but she certain-
ly has the right idea in wanting
her boy to be one of those from
whom memory will not hide its
face.
Here is Denison we have some
j mighty fine shadows in institu-
tions that have been left by men
who have lived and wrought. Their
sons in some cases the busi-
ness, while in other cases the
business has passed on into other
hands and the men are doing a
good job in handing the torch for-
ward.
One reader remarks that if Hit-
ler had his way in iDenison, as some
here want him, he would confis-
cate every bank account, turn
the machinery here into producing
ItGerman war machine equipment,
order every conu/iercial club,
lodge, union, Boy Scout troop,
to close down under penalty of
death or concentration caimp, and
otherwise make this another Pol-
and or Belgium.
To think that we have those in
our midst and in most every other
community who would welcome
the presence of a man like Hitler
is enough to bring about a special
day of celebration that this coun-
try signed a lease-lend bill to aid
our brother Democratic countries
who today are our front lines of
defense in a real sense.
Call a Nazi a snake, and all his
sympathizers the same, and
then let providence send us anoth-
er saint whether he be Patrick or
Jones, to run the snakes of that
kind all out of this country and it
would take a whole week to give
us time enough to celebrate the
event. We would not wear the
green but the red, white and blue.
Harry Gliddcn, candidate
mayor, says that “this is
damest campaign,, it keeps me
busy trying to correct the lies
they are telling on me, and I am
satisfied that some of my friend:,
are telling lies on my opponent.”
Woulu suggest that the candi-
dates, then, have an extia line
printed on their candidate cards
reading “We are all liars—you
and me both.” That would get
us introduced: right from the
start.
As we understand it, there is
one party that) some is said to
have told a lie on and they tol l
it on the wrong party. He is not
a candidate but is a strong friend
of one of the candidates for
mayor.
Monday— Back
Boyer, Margaret
RIALTO
Sunday and
Street, Charles
Sullavan.
Tuesday and Wednesday
Rage in Heaven with Robert
Montgomery, Ingrid Bergman.
Thursday—Laddie, Tim Holt,
Virgina Gilmore.
Friday and Saturday—This
Thin,- Called Love, Rosalind Rus-
sel, 'Melvyn Douglas.
TORCHY
Political
Announcement
City Election
The Press U authorized to an-
nounce the following candidates
for the offices to be filled at the
City election to be held April 1,
1941.
FOR MAYOR!
HARRY GLIDDEN
DR. T. J. LONG
FOR COMMISSIONER
J. B. HEACKEB
U. J. USSEiRY
TO SEE
BETTER
You’d Better See
B. R. BUSBY
Graduate
Optometrist
J. E. MEADOR, DDS.
First Door North Security Bldg.
110 N. BURNETT
USE OUR
BUDGET PLAN
for purchase of
BICYCLES
BATHOS
ACCESSORIES
TIRES
BATTERIES
M. K. JONES
Call 388 for Your Laundry |4i«di
HIGH QUALITY SERVICE
SAVE
CASH-CARRY ,15% DISCOUNT
IDEAL LAUNDRY
Blonde Betty Grable, the glamor-
our star., of “Down Argentine
Way” has another sensational
role in “Tin Pan Alley,” 20th
Century-Fox musical which stars |
her with Alice Faye and ,shows for
last times today at the Star.
HIBDON’S
Watch Shop
FOR BETTER WATCH
REPAIRING %
’428 W. Main Deniaon ^
WW/.W.V.VJAVAVJ/AV
See the New 1941
Buicks!
V.V.VJ-’.V.'.V.V/.VAVAV
? DO IT NOW!
RATE
STAR
Prevue, Sunday and Monday—
Tin Pan Alley, Alice Faye, Betty
Grable, Jack Oakie, John Payne.
Tuesday only—Here Comes
Happiness, Mildred Coles, Edward
Norris.
Wednesday and Thursday—Dr.
Kildare’s Crisis—Lew Ayres,
Lionel Barrymore.
' Friday and Saturday—In Old
Colorado, Wm. Boya, Russell
Hayden.
Things must be getting rather
drastic when the kind of game is
jplayed to try and ruin a candi-
dates chance of winning by let-
ting the impression go out that
they are backing that particular
candidate. That’s the dope on a
certain situation, they tell us.
See certain signs going on that
L. S'. Lacey may throw his hat
into the ring. We hinted at thu
yesterday and the dope today is
he is taking it under serious ad-
visement.
R I O
' Sunday an d Monday—Face
Behind the Mask, Peter Lorre,
‘Evelyn Keyes.
Tuesday and Wednesday—Mi
aer Among Friends, Marjorie
Weaver, John Hubbard.
Thursday, Friday—Man About
Town, Jack Benny, Betty Gru-
ble, Phil Harris.
Saturday Only—Timber Stam-
pede, George O’Brien.
Contract rates will he given
upon application. Legal rates a
one cent per word per insertion.
1 Time lc per word
3 Times 2c per word
6 Times 3c per word
Minimum charge is for 12 words
(For consecutive insertions)
5 See Grayson County
J. Abstract and Real
0 Estate Company for
f ABSTRACTS
Kraft Bldg. Pbo. IM J
/W.VAV.V.V.V.VNWW.
R. W. PINKSTON
Superintendent
National Life and Accident
Inturamce ip°-
lOrdinary and Industrial Insurance
IP.O. jBox 335
IVEY
MOTOR CO.
SALES—SERVICE
211 S. Rusk phone 1023
STEEL
Flag Poles
Denison, Tex.
Short-Murray
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Phone 113
W. WOODARD
EMERT SEWING
MACHINE SERVICE
C. W. EMERT, Owner
Parts and repairs for
and make maiehine.
Phone 1307 1°4 W- Main
For our patriotic Americans.
Get yours now and float
’OLD GLORY”
George Clark’s
WELDING SHOP
QAY PHONE 824
NIGHT PHONE 1404-J
114 S. Austin
401
BABCOCK BATTERIES
ARE
City Drug Store
First Class Service
Doctor in Attendance
In Hotel Denison Building
For Winter
Appetites
Suggest:
• COTTAGE CHEESE
• BUTTER MILK
• St)UR CREAM
• SWEET BUTTER
• ICE CREAM
Barker Dairy
AND
and Creamery
And reader, before you smal-
low all those campaign charges
against this or that man, just ana-
lyze them for a moment. You
may spare yourself some embar-
rassing moments or a lot of un-
necessary worry.
©-
Campus Capers
By JULIENE DORMAN
WWWW//MWAWA AVWWJmVAWmVJWWWMW. ww WWWM
DENISON IS GOING FORWARD!
DENISON’S
We understand that some
white man has gotten some of the
colored population into a kind of
jam by his prompting them to
ask certain questions and make
certain demands in a circular
distributed. Such a white man
is working on the colored citizen
of Denison to their own hurt and
he would capitalize on them. He
is not earing for their skin at all
hut is after breaking up the good
relations whites and blaclf have
j enjoyed here if only he can
carry his point. It’s like a man
who would come into the home
of a married couple that has been
getting along for years without
any trouble and try ana disrupt
them by raising matters that
would bring about a breach. The
husband and wife ultimately turn
on such and in this case the
guilty white man will feel the in-
dignity of both races. Our col-
ored brethren are not looking for
trouble and promoting question-
naires calculated to raise com-
munity trouble and they did not
hatch this thing up. It is the con-
temptible tricks of dirty politi.s
and the perpetrator will be dug
out into the open. This is one
time the gable is overplayed.
PAIN IN BACK
MADE HER
MISERABLE
Steakley Chevrolet Co.
pain, try this simple
recipe . that thouaanda
The Place to Buy O. K. Used Car* Cheap
T«Uph«m« 231-
you suffer
tia or neuritis
inexpensive home
are uiing. Get a package Of Ru-Ei
Compound today. Mil it with a quart
of' water, add the juice of 4 lemon*,
It a aaiy. No trouble at all and
pleasant. You need only 2 table-
apoonfuli two tin© a day. Often
within 40 boura —» sometimes over*
spiodid results are
the dzIoi do not .
and If rou do not I
----. Ru-Kc will coat you
«*k,n# t» try u it I, Kid b,
your druggist under an absolute
■aoney-badc guaranty* Ru-Ex
fi Compound it for aalo and recora-
S88888888888aS888iS888888888888888888888«8888888888888S ««* b' Gcwi Evwrvbn*.
-206 S. Burnett Art.
Lemon Juice Recipe Checks
Rheumatic Pain Quickly
from rheumatic, arthri-
wimio 16 n<
Read How
She Found
Blessed Relief
Muscles were so sore
ehe could hardly touch. ..........™,.vww,
them.* Used Hamlins Wizard Oil Liniment and
found wonderful relief. Try it today if your
vp Jr
muscles are stiff, sore, achy. Hub It on thorough-
“----------- relief. Pleasant odor. WilPnol’
ick guarantee at all drug store*
awvwtww—
WIZARD OIL
LINIMENT
For MUSCULAR 'ACHES and PAIHS
RHEUMATIC PAIN —LUMBAGO
Martha Barnhill seems to be
interested in I’ete Fisher these
days. Wonder who the little Fish-
er boy is interested in. In Mar-
tha of course but she isn’t all.
Who is it that Janet Hauser
goes with? A number of students
would like to know this—includ-
ing boys. We know one who would
like to get his bid in. If you wish
long enough it is supposed to
come true but he said he thought
it was hopeless.
Benedean Burget is a charm-
ing person—isn’t she. Her eyes
sparkle when she is happy. She
has a grand personality and ev-
eryone likes her.
Harry McCool! Harry McCool!
Does the same seem familiar?
Not to us but it does to one cer-
tain girl in school. Don’t look
now but it is that girl with the
brown hair? Could be!
Betty Jo McCain and Tommy
Badgett are still going together
It looked like for a while some-
one was trying to barge in on
their little affair but they seem
to have it straightened out.
June Renfro and Warren Rey-
nolds make a nice couple. It is
evident that they get along with
out fusses. Or do they?
Charlotte Bothe and Kenneth
Bible have decided not to quar-
rel any more. Now isn’t that
grand! Hope that they live up to
it.
Not to be nosey but have you
noticed who Lalla Faye Lewis
has been flirting with lately? Why
is it that she always picks out
someone that is almost impossible
to get. This time she is up agianst
a stone wall and she should
know that she won’t succeed.
Hope everybody has a grand
time over the weekend.
Pitching
CerRcm
TlisFastWsi/
-cr Money Bstk
CHAMBER of
COMMERCE
IS OUT TO ENROLL
EVERY' CITIZEN IN
ITS MEMBERSHIP
A PROGRAM OF WORK
TO BENEFIT ALL HAS
BEEN ADOPTED
ALL OUT for DENISON!
For quick relief from itching of eczema, pimples,
Ithlete’s foot, scabies, rashes and other ex-
ternally caused skin troubles, u.....-rid f .n: . r
xxjling, antiseptic, liquid D.D. D. Prescription.
Trensclcss, stainless. Soothes irritation and
quickly stops intense itching. 85c trial bottle
proves it, or your money back. Ask your
Iruggist‘today for D. D. D. FRESCRIPTIOU. \
We need all the man power at our command to put
over the program.
May we depend on you, good citizen, to help in the
campaign for members?
Campaign Opens Tuesday 18th
Be ready to receive the special committee that
call.
will
Enroll today-be among the first to get on the
line.
front
SENiSOM CHAMBER 8F COMMERCE
WAWVWAWAVAWWAWAWJAAWAVWAWVAVWWAVWJWViWYWWW
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.
Anderson, LeRoy. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 224, Ed. 1 Monday, March 17, 1941, newspaper, March 17, 1941; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth527382/m1/2/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.