The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 7, Ed. 1 Monday, June 29, 1936 Page: 2 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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I to N.wv
Fibber Me-
. CBS—Guy
I; Mnaeak’* en-
(0 WACO KMOX.
f Troubedoure, WBAP. Or-
, KRLD.
IM NBC—Margaret Speak*,
WOAI WKY WFAA KPRC KVOO
WDAF; Melodiana WBEN. CBS—
Songa at Eventide, KGKO KWKH
KTSA KTBH KMOX WACO. Ra-
dioettef. KRLD.
7. NBC—Greater Minstrels, W
LB WKY KVOO WREN KPRC W
SM WOAI WLW KOA WFAA;
Horlick’a Romany Singers, WHO
WDAF WMAQ. CBS—Radio the-
atre, KTSA KTRH KOMA WACO
KRLD KMOX KTUL KSL WWL.
7:30. NBC—Studebaker Cham-
pions, WOAI WKY WMAQ WDA
F WHO WFAA KOA KVOO WL
W.
8. NBC—Carfree Carnival, W
ENR WREN; Contented program,
WOAI WSM WKY WHO KPRC
WDAF KVOO WMAQ‘ KOA WF
AA. CBS—Wayne King’s orches-
tra, KSL KMOX WWL. Galaxy of
Stars, KRLD.
8:30. NBC—The Town Where
Nothing Happened, KPRC WMAQ
hlHH
crude oil produced in Teaae ie
converted into manufactured pro-
ducts by refineriee located within
the State, according to figure*
jnst related by the Mid-Continent
Oil end Gas Association of Texas.
This information is substantiated
by figures for 1938, compiled by
the U. S. Bureau of Mines and the
Petroleum Administrative board,
Washington, which show that Tex-
as produced 391,097,000 barrels
of crude last year of which 262,-
926,000 barrels were utilized by
home refineries, the products of
which were shipped to other states
or consumed within the state.
The Texas oil industry provides
a large labor payroll, which is ma-
terially augmented by home man-
ufacture of petroleum products
through its 197 refining plants lo-
cated at strategic points through-
out the state. This of a para-
mount importance to the people
of Texas since the encouragement
of home industry affords addition-
al employment opportunities for
labor which might other wise be
diverted to other states. As a re-
sult many thousands of persons
mm
m
■
WDAF; Russ Morgan’s music, W:*re gainfuly employed by these
LW WENR WREN. CBS—The^ refineries which process Texas
March of Time, KSL KRLD WWL
KMOX. Sweet and Low WFAA.
9. NBC—Amos ’n Andy, KVO
O WKY WMAQ WDAF WHO WF
AA WOAI KPRC WSM. CBS—
Clyde Lucas’ orchestra, KGKO W
ACO KTSA. Sports, KRLD.
9:30. CBS—Pick and Pat, KSL
KTUL KOMA KWKH KTRH KM
OX KRLD KGKO. NBC—Mar-
garet Speaks, KOA; Magnolia
Blossoms, WDAF WSM WKY WO
AI. Step Ladder and Saddle tramp,
WBAP.
10. CBS—Vincent Lopez’ or-
chestra, KSL KWKH WACO KG
KO KTSA KTRH KMOX. NBC—
Shandor, WKY WSM WREN WM
AQ; Jack Berger’s orchestra, WD
AF WENR. Dance orchestra, KRL
D, WFAA.
10:30. NBC—Ben Pollack’s or-
chestra, WSM WREN WMAQ. CB
S—Hawaii Calls, KTSA KOMA
WACO KGKO KTUL. TN—Ray
Noble’s orchestra, WOAI KPRC W
FAA. Streets of all Nations KRLD.
11. CBS—Eddie House, KSL
KMOX KWKH KTSA KTRH KR
LD. NBC—Fletcher Henderson’s
orchestra, KPRC WREN WSM K
OA WKY WENR WOAI.
ADVERTISE IN THE PRESS
crude oil for gasoline, kerosene,
fuel oil, lubricants and scores of
other vauable products which are
constantly in demand throughout
the world.
In contrast with the oil industry
of Texas, which utilizes two-thirds
of all the °il produced in the
State, are the cotton and wool in-
dustries which, according to the
Texas Almanac and Industrial
Guide for 1936, ship out of the]
state nearly all of the raw ma-
terial producted. Only three per
cent of all the cotton produced in
Texas, according to this authority,
is actually consumed by Texas
cotton mills. This means that of
the latest annual cotton output
aggregating 2,406,00 bales, only
72,180 bales were utilized by
home industry. In the case of
wool production, in which Texas
leads the nation, all of the raw
product is shipped out of the state,
none being consumed by the Tex-
as manufacturing industry. The
Texas Almanac states, “There is
not even a scouring plant in Tex-
as, and it is estimated that freight
charges on grease and dirt, alone
costs the wool growers $750,000 a
year in sending its wool to mar-
ket.” The neighboring state of
wt of
tntfiv* Board, refined 67,422,000
barrel* of entds ofl ln its bon*
refiner!ts, but (hipped out to
other (tat** o total of 126,000,000
barrels. This mean that Okla-
homa utilizaa twenty-nine per cent
of its raw materials against sixty-
seven per eent which 1* consumed
by Texas oil refineries. A balance
sheet of Texas oil industry shows
that crude oil in shipped to twen-
ty other states as well as numer-
ous foreign countries. Texas also
receives crude oil from Oklahoma
Louisiana and New Mexico, as
well as- some foreign oil, a por-
tion of which is reshipped in in-
terstate and foreign commerce. |
Texas leads the world not only
as the largest producer of crude'
oil but also us the largest manu-
facturer of petroleum products.
In 1935 Texas produced forty per
cent of the nation’s, crude oil sup-,
ply and its 197 oil refineries pro-
cessed twenty-seven per cent of
all oil manufactured into' petrol-
eum products in the United’ States
This combination of leadership ini
raw material and home manufac-
turing makes the Texas oil in-t
dustry a vital influence in tNe 1
economic welfare of this great
State and exemplifies the popular,
slogan, "What Texas Makes,
Makes Texas.”
Cheer up. Big Bov, Don't Be Sick
ALKA-SeLT?EI? does the trick
Why don’t you try Alka-Seltzer
for the relief of—
HANGOVER
Stomach Gas, Headache, Acid Stom-
ach, Colds, Neuralgia, Fatigue, Mus-
cular, Rheumatic and Sciatic Pains?
ALKA-SELTZER makes a pleasant,
■sparkling drink. As it contains an
analgesic, (acetyl-salicylate) it first
relieves the pain of every-day ail-
ments, then by restoring the alkaline
balance, removes the cause when
due to Excess Acid.
At your drug store, at the soda foun-
tain, and in Me and 60c packages for
home use.
Be-TYISE^EMLIZE’
Toull M
0*
1
Dependable
Efficient t
Neighborly
Intelligent
Square
4 Orderly
Non-Partisan
% MM 10IMN! "W Wl
WIDE
ASKING
iMis
&
IS IT RIGHT
OR FAIR
TO THE DENISON PRESS
For Advertisers to use us as a prize pole to force local
newspaper competition to come down pn their con-
tract rates, and then not give THE DENISON PRESS
some reasonable amount of their advertising account
IS IT RIGHT to force local newspaper competition to
grant advertising favors that they before could not
secure without the presence of The DENISON PRESS
and then leave out of their advertising budget consid-
eration for the Press?
Is it good business ethics or sense to neglect in your
advertising budget, Mr. Business Man, the very paper
which now gives you a club to get fair dealing and
prices in your advertising account?
THINK IT OVER AND WE WILL BE WAITING
FOR YOU TO SHOW YOUR MISTAKE AND GIVE
US A DECENT BREAK.
N. B.-We are glad, of course, that the opposition now
really fears us and shows it in many ways, one of
which is indicated above. i
The
Denison Press
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The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 7, Ed. 1 Monday, June 29, 1936, newspaper, June 29, 1936; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth737940/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.