The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 31, Ed. 1 Monday, July 31, 1939 Page: 1 of 4
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Wi
WEATHER
OENISON AND VICINITY
Pair today and
Tuesday
«Tem
The Denison press
DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY
35 cents'
Per Month
BER OP THE UN’TED PRESS
DENISON, TEXAS
MONDAY,JULY 31st 1939
WEEKLY FOUNDED 1930-^AILY 1934
VOL. 6—NQ. 31
Everyday
DENISON
LOUIS ANDERSON
Edwin C. Hill, pinch-hitting for
Walter Wincbell over the air last
night put himself in solid wtli
many, American by his swell de-
fense of John Nance Garner in
the pop off of one John I,. Lewis,
who described the vice-president
ais a "labor baiting:,whiskey drink-
ing;, poker playing, evil old man.”
And one of the most unnecessary
addresses of Lewis, who makes a
specialty of talking too much, on
the wrong subjects. . .One night
tha” Good Will hour will have
some person on the program who
can speak so you can understand
him. . . .One fellow who came
to Denison over the weekend said
lie read both Denison papers and
realized the differences In print-
ed stands on the alleged gambling
going on in Denison. He agreed
the Press was acting sensibly in
its "hands off” policy . . . Look
this issue claims that Russia has
the best air force in the world
and that Soviet relations with Ger-
many will not be broken.
Congressional Adjournment Jeopardized
m
Speaking yesterday at Austin,
Gov. O’Daniel raid in part: "I be-
lieve the price of financing social
security is too high when the price
paid must be the licensing of pool
halls, slot machines, horse race
gambling and the re-estabishment
of the open saloon.” Which makes
it sound like Texas is a very wick-
ed state . . . Best laugh of the
week: CCO enrollees at a camp in
Nebraska are experiencing a wave
of permanent wave getting be-
cause they figure that curley lock-
ed boys do much better with the
opposite sex ... A Dallas homo
owner is having the laugh on a
thief who stole 50-feet of water
hose from his yard. It leaks like
a seive ... In a Chamber of Com-
merce letter today, President. T.
J. Long praises local citizens for
their fine spirit and work to gain
its present outlook. He said the
outlook for Denison "is very, very
promising."
\Japs Charge
Soviet Russia
OPFOSED—So much opposi-
tion aritai in Spain to Ramon
Serrano Sunar, above, advo-
cate of dose relations with
Germany and Italy, that Gen-
eral Franco has dropped idea
at making him Premier. ... —<
Irish ‘Army’
Threatens To
Attack Isles
London Bobbies Are Kept On
Guard After Terrifying
Notes Are Sent Today,
Ina Ray Hutton, oomph gal of
the dance bands, has disbanded
her girl orchestra and organized
one composed of mere males. . .
(Continued on page four!
Tourist Camp
To Be Erected
Among the new lots sold in the
Redick addition, on highway! 75,
between Denison and Sherman, are
two to Denisonians.
Charles It. McGregor, 721 N.
Chandler avenue, has purchased
the north tract of the addition, a
wooded section, for a tourist
camp.
Loren E. Simpson, 817 West
Woodard, has purchased a lot for
residence.
The addition extends on both
sides of the highway for approxi-
mately two miles. Agreement of
sale carries restrictions against
use for sale of beer and liquor,
dance hall, junk shop or wreck
ing station, gambling and provide”
against sale or occupany by ne-
groes.
Sales, are being handled by the
Will H. Evans realty company of
Sherman.
LONDON, July 31 (HP)—Scot-
land Yard was warned today of a
terrifying attack on England by, a
battalion of 50(1 men of the out-
lawed Irish Republican Army) in
reprisal for wholesale expulsions
being carried out under Britain’s
now antiterrorist law.
The warning, contained in an
anonymous message, heightened
fears of new bomb outrages and
full strength of Scotland yard and
the London police was held on
the. alert with all week-end leaves
canceled. Thousands of officers
were deployed around strategic
spots including government build-
ings, railroad stations and the
homes of cabinet ministers.
The anonymous message coin-
cided with statements in the Brit-
ish press that the I.R.A. had a
large expeditionary force, divided
into bombing squads of 100 to 200
men each.
Newspapers openly charged that
the Irish terrorists were being sup-
ported and financed in part by
Germans. It was alleged many
Germans attended meetings held
in the United States recently by
Sean Russell and contributed to
the Republican Army’s declara-
tion of war on England.
Disorders, heretofore centered
in the large cities of England,
spread to Glasgow' Sunday, with
rioting in the Gorbal district
where two rival Irish gangs'—(he
stickers and the Beehive Boys—
fought with bricks, bottles and
iron bars. When police intervened
the gangs joined in resisting the
common enemy and there were
pitched battles in the streets for
two hours. Four large plate glass
windows were broken and minor
looting was reported.
TOKYO, July 31 (UP)—Extra
police were assigned to the Am-
erican embassy today as anti- Am-
erican posters appeared on the
street, proclaiming:
“'Britain, America and Russia
are our common enemy."
Jt was believed that the pos-
ter.) Wire sponsored by an aoscure
political organization, but police
took special precautions because
of ruoni-r that a demonstration
might he held before the embassy.
The newspaper Mainichi of
Saka, in an article hy a diplomatic
commentator, asserted that if the
United States denunciation of the
Japanese - American commercial
treaty affected Japanese citizens
re ading in the United States, "tht
United States will forfeit the loy
ally of more than 100,000 citizens
of Japanese parentage‘in Hawaii."
As police guarded the Ameri-
can embassy, 50,000 Japanese par-
aded past the British embassy,
shouting but in the main good
natured, in an anti-Itritish demon-
stration organized hy a “citizens’
committee.”
The temperature was 05 and the
humidity was high, hut the crowd
was in good spirits if perspiring.
Testing Machine
Bids Accepted
By Engineers
U. S. Engineers here are now-
asking sealed bids to procure a
300,000 pound capacity precision
hydraulic testing machine and
pipe joint compound, pipe, valves
and fittings to,be used during con-
struction work on the Denison
dam.
Bids for the compression test-
ing machine will be opened at 10
®.m. August 9. Bids for the pipe,
valves, and fittings will be opened
at 10 a. m. August 7.
After working for the Red river
SifcYNGIiAI, July 31 (UP)~
Japanose army authorities alleged
today, that Rus-ia was financing!
a Chinese guerilla campaign again-
st Japanese airdomea and supply
depots in the Shangbai-Nanking
area “with the support of British
authorities.”
The British consul general rc-
.orted that the entire statement
in which the charge was mode “is
full of lies from beginning to end.”
A formal statement issued by
the Japanese army press bureau j
entitled “extra new” staid:
“As adverse British feeling to-
ward Japan has been aggravated,
the British consul genera] has been
watching for an opportunity to in-
stitute retaliatory action against
Japan.”
Recently’ British consular au-
thorities succeeded in establishing
close contact with the Soviet con-
sulate at Shanghai with a view of
exchanging information regarding
“"Consequent* it has been lea,- LLraofwa
ned that surprise attacks against &
Japanese airdomes and arms sup-
ply depot in the Shanghai-Nanking
area, by making use of Chinese
guerrilla forces, are being contem-
plated.
"According to reliable informa-
tion the sum appropriated for re-
quired expenditures amounts to
about 15,00'yuan ($1,350) a
month which is to he given the
Chinese communist party through
the Soviet consul general.”
Japansee -bombing attacks on
American hospitals, missions and
schools in two Chinese cities were
reported in dipastchcs today.
Lending
Bill Is
Whacked
j President's, Program Cut to
Pint Size as Congress Goes
into What Was To Be
Final Week of Session.
I "
Another Week’s
Work Is Seen
Frank Morphy to Deliver
For.nal Opinion On Hatch
Bill to Roosevelt Today.
TANGLED LEGISLATION—Wagei-Hourj Administrator Elmer F, Andrews, left, who opposed
ehsngsi In Wsgei-Hours bill, chats at Washington hearing with eommitt*#. They are: Represen.
Mivg^Sabath, Illinois: Mary Norton, House Labor chairman, and Bardan of North Carolina.
TEXT OF PHILLIPS’ PROTEST
Condemned Men To Live Longer
Because Executioner Gets Sick
Secretary of War, Washington.
Dear Mr. Secretary:
Under the provisions of 11. R.
10018, approved June 28, 1938
iah"Lnfarnt|la,'ltl thh“t nri ‘NEVV YORK, July, 31 (UP)—' celebrated criminals, was seriously
thereof under the sub-head Red Iiobcrt EUiott 65, executioner of ill today and authorities of New
IWigiw thsit nmi di’ sim I lha ..
n.. , —41 iijjiil inane speed record
^ between San Francisco and Reno.
Sally Sets
New Record
SAN FRANCISCO, July 31
(UP>~ -Sally Rand, San Francis-
co’s largest employer of theatri-
cal talent, set a mark for other
tired business executives to aim at
today'—a light plane speed record
-1aff here for the past 4 months,'
William Richards, accompanied by
his wife, were enroute to Memphis
Tenn.,
With E. E. Mouton, former gov-
ernment Aeronautics Inspector,
as a passenger, she flew from
today where Mr. Richards! Treasure Island £*8*iLncisTo
• 11 t\r r.
will resume his duties.
Three pickup trucks and two
canopy express trucks were deliv-
ered to the engineering office late
Saturday by the Downtown Chev-
rolet company of Tulsa, recently
awarded contract as lowest bid-
der for furnishing the trucks.
The vehicles will be used to haul
materials to and from the Denison
dam site.
POWERFUL SECOND
NAVY FOR FRANCE
PARIS, July 31 (UP)—A pow- night ail'd-commercial shipping has
erful second navy, for France, con- asked to make new sacrifices in
sisting of eighty-three warships to- order to speed up naval orders and
taling 340,000 tons, is taking form bring about complete rejuvenation
rapidly and will be added to the of the French fleet by early 1942,
fleet charged with maintaining Campinchi said.
French supremacy in the western' Campinchi said that French na-
Mediterranean, Navy Minister Ce-'vail policy had been admirably ric-
sar Campinchi, said today) | fined by Interior Minister Albert
Campinchi said the ships range Sarraut in a recent speech to
from battleships and airplane car-J French ensigns on the eve of their
riers to submarines and the world’s departure on a world tour, when
fastest destroyers. ! he said:
France is aiming at a fleet of I “France aims at no hegemony,
750,000 tons, he explained, to con-J but we will build a naval power to
solidate its pasition as fourth exact, loyal ami controlled meas-
ranking world naval power which ure of our needs.”
it is determined to hold at all costs “The consistency of this policy
aigainst Italian and German chal-
lenges.
Sub Fleet To Reach 100
To meet the threat of the dic-
tators’ mass construction of sub-
marines, France will concentrate J
on this arm until it has ai modern '
fleet of 100 sub-surfacc Wasps,
the minister said.
Every private and national ship-
yard in France is working day and
has been striking," Campinchi said
“and the definition of the needs
of the French navy is translated
in remarkable continuity in these
figures:
“In 1912 and 1921, as in 1939
the Frenoli navyi aimed to reach
a total of 800,000 to 900,000 tons
which corresponds to its actual
needs for defense of communica-
tions and maritime frontiers,”
Lowest bidder for the sale of
six passenger sedans for executive
personnel use of the engineering
staff is the Denison Auto company.
Delivery is to be in the next ten
days.
j Bay to the Reno airport in one
hour and 54 minutes, beating the
existing light plane record by 41
minutes. The distance is apprpxi-
n:,r>tely 200 miles.
Infant Daughter Die*
The infant daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Tyrus Fitzgerald, 806 West
Coffin, died Sunday night at 11:
30 at a local hospital, shortly
after birth.
Funeral services will be held at
4 p. m. today wt Fairview cem-
etery, followed hy interment with
Short-Murray directing.
Surviving are the parents; the
C.
For the providing of approxi-
mately 150,000 pounds of ice, at
a rate of 50 to 1,500 pounds daily,
the Two Cities ice company, be-
tween Denison and Sherman, was
lowest bidder
grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. J
Coffey: and Mr. and Mrs. R.
Fitzgerald, all of Denison.
poses that electric power will be
under' your direction either have
begun or soon will begin opera-
tions to construct the Denison res-
ervoir. From newspaper accounts
the first act in the construction
work will be the clearing of the
right-of-way for the dam site. 1
am also advised, not officially,
that you have caused to be filed
certain condemnation suits for the
purpose of taking land located
within Oklahoma as a right-of-way
for this project.
State’s Rights Invaded
You are hereby officially noti-
fied that the state of Oklahoma
has certain property rights within
the proopsed reservoir area, such
as beds of streams, state* highways
and rights-of-way therefor,
bridges, culverts and in addition
owns a considerable acreage ot
land in fee simple. You are also
advised that the state’s sovereign
and quasi-sovereign rights will be
| WASHINGTON, July 31 (UP)
-Congrc ion.-il adjournment plans
i wen jeopardized and President
; Rno.-ev. ’ S3,060,000,000 lending
I id being cut to pint size
j today as congress entered what
to have been the last week
of this season.
Leader- were pessimistic of ad*
journment by Aug. 5. Some ot
them believed a’ least another
".'■‘ek would b( necessary to eom-
| plete the session’s labors. But
I limitation of senate debate effec-
tive today mav enable a lending
vole before midnight.
The Pre-ident will confer with
i U.J, CACLUUUI1CI vi “i lUUctt ctUU A Lt l II (; 1 11 lu s OI A <*AV I IK I lt*'ifIC,nt Will COIlleT
Bruno Hauptmann, Ruth Snyder, j York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, h - legislative leaders today
.Judd Gray, an hundreds of less! Massachusets, Connecticut
Pickets Fight
With Cops At
Fisher Plant
CLEVELAND, July, 31 (UP) —
Two thousand pickets at the struck
Fisher body plant fought police
today in a pitched battle. The
pickets carried clubs and threw
stones, and officers countered with
tear gas. — -----------»
Police said a picket leader stood scheduled dates,
on the roof of one of the plant’s
building and directed the strikers’
siege through a loudspeaker.
Scores were arrested
ami
pr,c ably will receive another cop;
of the gloomy reports which re
cently have characterized exchang
os of views between the Whit
House and the capitol.
Attorney General Frank Mut
pin iv; scheduled to deliver ,
formal opinion on the Hatch bi!
!o take all hut top bracket fedei
employe, out of politics. Mui
phy ha- indicated to officials tha
he believes the bill is constitu
KlliottN wife announced last/ional but Mr. Roosevelt was no
night that his condition was such!---------
that there wa3 no possrbiliy. of, (Continued from page one)
his officiating at either on the ! -—---------------
and
Vermont realized suddeny thqt
there was no substitute immedi-
ately available for his grim du-
ties.
As a result throe condemned
nieit—two in Massachusets and
the other in New York—may live
longer : '.an they had anticipated.
Th> Ms--achuset.- executions had
cetn set for this week, the New
Yio k me for A ig. 24
(Continued on Page 4)
funf.ral services for
ACCIDENT VICTIM HELD
So persistent have been reports | FUNERAL iE™CES FOR
that Elliot: was “cracking up" up- J°SEPH UANZER' 7
(Ipr tho efpoin of Al-n.-C i„ ei
Funi ral services for ,|osep
Banzer, 79, a resident of the (>a
Grove community 54 years, wh
der the strain of dispatching the,
criminals of six states, that Mrs. j
OCDIl - WUUI it'll UStt.U. ' Lxivt .Mi •
The fight began over attempts| EUiott took particular pains to de-
of non-striking workers to pass! nY he was suffering from “a ner-
through the lines to their jobs in I v°Ms breakdown or anything men-
automobiles. '
Funeral services for Earl Sat-
phens, 23, laborer at the Denison
Rod and Gun club, who died sud-
denly at a local hospital Saturday,
were held at 2 p. m. today from
Short-Murray chapel, Rev. Paul
O. Cardwell officiating. Inter-
ment was at Layne cemetery,
Short-Murray directing.
Stephens was born, roared and
educated in the pubic schools here' the
and was unmarried.
Surviving aie his father, E. N.
Stephens, now of Dalhart; an un
Police use tear gas to drive
back the crowd, but it formed
again quickly.
They said 30 to 40 shells of the
gas were fired. Several persons
were injured by, flying missiles.
Police said they had had to use
“He is suffering from sheer
ph\sical exhaustion due to over-
work,” she said.
P.; cle, and aunt with whom he was j _
‘ residing Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Whal-1 BrSVCS Fllld
Virtuoso To
Become Pappy
LOS GATOS, Cal., July 31
'UP)-—Yehudi {Menuhin, young
violin virtuoso, will become a fa-
ther next October, his parent,
Moshe Menuhin, annouced today.
The elder Menuhin also reveal-
ed that Y'eliudi’s sister, Mrs. Heph-
ziw.li Nicholas, whose home is in
Melbourne, was expecting a child
next. February. Her husband is a
■brother o' Yehudi** wife, the
former Wela Nicl.ooh of Mcl-
licurnc.
Combustion 'Blaze
A barn on the farm of Fred
Morrison, northwest of Denison,
was destroyed by fire Saturday
night after spontaneous combus-
tion, caused by green hay, ignited
, the structure. Firemen arrived
too late to save the barn.
Thefts Are Reported
Three thefts were reported to
city police during the weekend,
none of them resulting in heavy
loss.
Bill Harris, 200 W. Hull, police
reports said, reported the theft of
a .22 calibre rifle and Arthur An-
derson, 1013 W. Shepherd told
officers someone had stolen gas-
oline from his car. Mrs. L. E.
Becklemam, 213 West Gandy, said
an alarm clock had been stolen
from her residence,
died Saturday at his home .
route 3, were held at 10 a.
today from Short-Murray chap
Rev. Ben F. Hearn officiating.
Interment was at Fairview cei
__________. _ j atcry, Short-Murray directing. Pt
! bearers were M. T.Malone, L.
SUGGS TO SPEAK Defratus, John Shearer, W. I
AT LOY DINNER Fisher. L. T Cathey and J.
- John T. Suggs, Jr., judge of Atkins,
gas also to cut off the pursuit by] forty-ninth district court, will. He wa.- a a,ember of the Cat
pickets of a non-striking worker| speak on "Judge Low and Deni- olic church and married Miss El
Whose car hadI been overturned . ,0n" at tlu, appreciation dinner Harris in Denison May 23. 1893
At east one other automobile wasj to be given Tuesday night at Surviving an in. widow, four so,
pushed over. I Hotel Grayson Sherman, in recog- J. W. of Salt Lake City Uta
A patrolman on a horse, Joseph | rrition of Judge Jake J. Loy, elect- Robert of Houston Edward a,
Pataky, 35 Was injured .by a ed president of the National Asso- Ha".,V Banzer. both of Wichit
swinging club. jciation of County Officers at its Fans.; a daughter, Mrs. John j
Police said the announcer at recent convention at Ogden, Utah. {McClure of Denison; two brothei
loudspeaker yelled at the Other speakers will include Victor of Denison and Adah
crowd: Were not going to let Co. Commissioner, P. J. Waldorf. Banzer of Switzerand; a nephe-
Bon F. Clifford, G. P. Webb and Victor .1 Banzer of Denison ar
Judge Randolph Bryant. six grandehilden.
those other ‘finks’ through.’
ey of Rt. 2, Denisiyi; two brothers
Carl and Ira Stephens of Dalhart;
two sisters, Mrs. Alice Bush of
Durant and Miss Frances Stephens
of Dalhart.
Pallbearers were Raymond Lin-
stead, Bosie Mauk, Levi Morrison
“Rain,’ Drink
It, Jugged
FORT WASHAKIE Wyo., July
p , >i (UP)—The “great spirit” be-
Elmer Christman Lyman Poe and d the sun aent rain and a ,e.
Ilarry Chastain. .... .....*, , , ,.
W. L. Ashburn, Sr.
Succumbs Today
Death came to William “L. Ash-
burn, 83 year old pioneer Deni-
soninn and retired dairy owner
and ice cream manufacturer, af-
ter an illness of three months.
Mr. Ashburn was horn in De-
Kalb, Ala., July 20, 1856, the son
of Mr and Mrs. 'Martin Ashburn.
When he was fourteen years old,
he came with his family to Grape-
vine, Texas, where he was reared
and educated. He farmed for a
while, acted as itinerant minister
for several years and also taught
school. He was married to Miss
Mary Elizabeth Currie, September
23, 1879, at Grapevine, and ten
children were born to this union,
eight of whom survive.
He came to Denison in 1888
and entered the grocery business.
He moved to Preston Bend where
he conducted a grocery store, then
returned (o Denison in 1901 and
entered the dairy business.
His business expanded to in-
clude the ice cream manut icturing
business and he continued in this
capacity until his retirement in
1929. Mrs. Ashburn died in Aug-
ust, 1929. He was married to
Mrs. Nannie Langston August 13,
1933.
He was a member of the Trin-
ity Methodist church. Funeral ser-
vices will he held al the Short-
Murray chapel at 2 p. -n. Tues-
day with Rev. Paul O. Cardwell
officiating. Interment will be at
Fail-view cemetery, Short-Murray,
directing.
Mr. Ashburn is survived by, his
(Continued on page four)
face audience provided a bountiful
feast, but the ceremonial rain
dance of the Shoshonis and Ar-
rapkoes was rudely desecrated to-
day 'by two recalcitrant Jiourg
braves who showed up drunk.
They wound i n in the hoosegow.
Hundreds c* braves, their semi-
naked bodies dabed with red, yel-
low and white paints, their heads
plumed with dyed turkey feathers,
entered the 48th hour of their
traditional dance at dawn with a
DEMONSTRATIONS
BREAK IN JAPAN
lOKYO, July .,1 (UPi — Extra Cisdor^ wa- canceled. Instead 1
police guards were thrown around
the British Embassy Monday when
ultranationalist Japanese organ-
ized anti-British demonstrations
demanding that the British be
compelled to enter into real coop-
eration with Japan in China.
Authorities feared that a new
attack might be made or. the em-
bassy, coincident with the resump-
tion of critical talks in the Anglo-
spirit of joyful thanksgiving ^Japanese conference, but a eitiz-
Their prayers sent up the rays ofjPIls committee of the ultranation-
the sun to the “great spirit” had j alis-t groups said the demonstra-
hrought rain the yellowing wheat! Hons would be orderly
A. MaeRae, British commerc
secretary, conferred at the foreij
office with Consul Tanaka a:
Keichiro A saikai, secretary; of tl
East Asia bureau.
British Ambassador Sir Robe
L. Craigie agreed in consultati*
with Japanese representativ
from Tientsin to the subcomnr
tee's appoinment.
Indications that Craigie, in I
talk with Foreign Minister H
chiro Ai ita Monday might ask th
the Japanese army lift immediat
l.v its blockade of Britain's Nor
and corn of the reservation —the1 The demonstrations appeared ! China concession in Tientsin wi
first in 30 days. I designed to warn the Tokyo gov- seen in the arrival of R. H. D(
But nil was not so well with the ' eminent that it must maintain a nis, British chief of police in Ti(
leathery-faced old medicine men1 stern stand in compelling the Brit-J tlSin. to confer with Craigie.
who squatted on the edge of the ish to recognize the new order in The Japanese, said to be rea
mudy circle made by the stomp- Japanese-occupied regions of | to reject any British request
ing, chanting, tom-tom thumping
brave. Two incidents in the early
hours of last night had offended
the—the appearance of the two
inebriated braves, and a group of
paleface spectators who came,
watched ami laughed nt what they
saw.
(Continued on Rage 4)
China, particularly in matters of an immediate lfiting of the Th
economic stability. - —--- -
The scheduled 9 a. m. mee'ing
of a subcommittee of four—two
Japanese and two Britons*—to
consider the financial situation at
Tientsin, where the Japanese
have blockaded the British con-
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The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 31, Ed. 1 Monday, July 31, 1939, newspaper, July 31, 1939; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth737301/m1/1/: accessed April 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.