The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 268, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 17, 1939 Page: 1 of 4
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- O.
Weather
DENISON AND VICINITY
Partly cloudy today
and Wednesday
THE DENISON PRESS
DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY
35 cents
Per Month
MEMBER OF THE UNITED PRESS
DENISON. TEXAS WEDNES, MAY 17. 1939
WEEKLY FOUNDED 1M0-DAILY 1M4
VOL. 5-NO. 268
Great Britain Seeks Moslem World In New Front
King And Queen Arriie To Begin
Epic Tour Of Canada And U. S.
Every Hour Is Taken Up for
Britiah Sovereigns During
Brief Stay in Quebec j
QUEBEC, May 17 (UP)- King
George VI and Queen Elizabeth
begin their historical tour if Can-
ada ami the United Suite- today i
from this ancient walled city,
which welcomed them wilh magni-i
filienee rarely before seen in the]
now world.
The t'ov.il flotilla moved up the
St. Lawrence liver from the isle
of Orleans i2 miles away, where
aaeiiored fur the night in the
fl.'i'v of bouylights, 1'gltthou-r?
uni infires and tied up at the
Wolfe cove here in time for their
ni.ij 'tics to come ashore about
8 ,'U) a. m. Denison time.
The liner Empress of Australia
bearing the royal party of 2-1 was
preceded by two Canadian des-
troyers find followed bv two Hii-
ish cruisers, They pulled anchor
and left the island about X a. m.
for a leisurely conclusion of the
perilous, wearisome voyage across1
the Vtlantic in foe and ice that
had made their arrival two day-
late.
Already, their majesties had
received the unofficial greetings
of a crowd that came alongside
in the pilot boat, and others who
had lined the river banks.
Dominion and Quebec provin-
cial officialdom assembled on th-
pier cn masse for the greeting and
the day’s scheduled program, the
first of the 30 day tour that will
cover 11,554 miles. Every hour
was occupied until their majesties
retire for the night at the sum-
mer residence of Lord Twecdsmuir
the governor general, in the cit-
adel.
Epidemic
Of Bank
Robberies
— —
Bloodshed For Feelers
Harlan Is Seen Put Out
On Move
HARLAN. Ky . May 17 (UP) the United Mine Worker.- «fi
- Mntn-ual guardsmen patroling’ America to pro .do.,- Kuo welt'
- 'Hu lun county coal mines had for withdrawal of troops whit.
Diplomatic Quarters Claim " t-t-L.il" crib • - t..■ i.,u*-i i a■. •• p,-ted mi: e . , ,
Great Britain Attempting1' of -d union threat nor
To Gain More Opposition : ' " ie v. the mil tia' ••miimida- Carter >u! •),. ■
To German-ltalian Axis e i; " or dm applied " ■ i-enev. ......
----- The m der was announced bv. ‘•ary." lie declined t.
B-is den I. I-,:be f ar'er, in eo1' -.further,
m.uid of the 810 guardsmen and! “1 don’t rare to t-n la I
Tehran Pact
Is Based On
sxplni
j French Try to Tell Russia
They and Britain Not Try
ing to Duck Responsibility
$
Unparalleled Since Heyday*
Of Floyd Hamilton and
Clyde Barrow; Patrol
Warns Stnall Town Bank*
One Suspect
Is Arrested
Everyday
DENISON
of
Be On The Alert For Bank
Robbers, Banke.-s Told As
More Are Expected Soon
LOl'IN
By
A n i t:ll.SOX
i,
The hoy
HARLAN. Ky.. Mav 17 1LTP
Officials of the Alim Work"!
America warned President Room -
today that rioting and bloodshed!
inay occur at any moment in the!
ti'uek roal field of Harlan c m- PVK1- May 17 (UP)—Diplo-
fv I He-' n-l:ed him to ok with-! matir quartei reported today
Ejdrawal of mttiona! r nardsm-e ' bat (i1 n Bi n was considering
inmefllately to relir < n r an effoit to ire up countries of
,,,n- t'n. Moslem world in sol’d bloc.
I he tele;. ■ am, co is f \\:,.h ' • I * me:.til"' 'In British-Fench
K. Dish- j wen vent to Attorney Genera oeurity front, to oppose Nazi-
I ,a>' - I rusk Murphy and Sena:ois Alben Fa-c .-:t exoansionist policies.
’ Th" First S‘atu ba"k !l ^hrn lv,'L Bark . and M. M. I t. Iran (1 rsia), Iraq. Ar-
j Texas wn mbed of $ t ,500_ by | Elizabeth arrive in Washington Kentucky, was signed *> HP;,,,,"!'. u Afghanistan with Turk-
ght '-lute i- a how from I I'urnb.'a-.ei, district president -1 ’ cy a- the key nation was men-
f the women who George J. Titler, district ■ eretary tioned a likely mcmbeis of such
urtsurer of the mine union. la h!oe.
1 DALI VS Texas, May 17 (HIM
A sudden enidemie of ■■a? 1; roh
; hor!e« unparalleled since the Floy«l
• Hamilton ••Clyde Banov' day- to-
day prompted tin- sta'.u hijrh^av ;-'innim* t«
• p.itvol to 'iirn mall town hanks *The fir-1 <>i mr nf the
j that an organized riny apparently ! I;k<-aH1 f• Chief of Police J
] was opovitHnir in the state.
h'-r< about>•
take their
v.’ii at ;on-
n« ?, u no Im. lt t
1 two bandits yesterday a- the fifth the
in a series that started ix weeks ]tl:e hip. . Stun
aim with the robbery of a lank! will meet them complain they are
ANCHOR FOR NAVY MAN-Six-foot anchor made of poppies is presented in Washington to
Navy Secretary Claude A. Swanson, seated at right. Later it will be dropped in Severn river, near
A.rmaoolLs. in ceremony by Veterans of Foreign Wars as tribute to Navy and Marine Corps heroes.
President Roosevelt May Be Invited
To Visit British King and Queen
at Graford. Officers shot and
captured Pete Pinion. 28. last
night. They said Pinion was
one of the men who held up the
Ghico bank.
Authorities hoped to learn from
Pinion whether he was a member
nf an organized band preying on
small banks. He was shot through
the arm.
Had Felt Safe
’In
High School
Honor Rolls
On Increase
Honor rolls at Denison high
school showed an increase of If!
over the previous month, aooord-
QUEBEC May 17 (UP)—When
King George is in Washington
next month he will invite Pres- j
ident Roosevelt to visit him in
England.
It is both a matter of prece-
dent with the British monarchy
and of tradition with the royal
family, which spends much of its
$2,000,000 annual allowance in
lavish entertaining.
The king maintains four palaces JV™ fjdi-
__ J Until the Graford holdup, offie-
; ers believed that they had scared
[bank robbers out of Texas. The
| state went for more than a year
j without a bank robbery.
After that at Graford, however,
j the robberies began coming in
| rapid order. All of the towns
■ were small, and in each case the
j robbers picked a time when not
i more than two persons were in
, , . _ the bank.
Matthew ■?. Sloan, board ehair-|and general manager; J. K Gar- iA)ways except once they fled
vin of St. Louis, vice-president in ] without firim? s(l0t. President
charge of traffic and George T.;w D VVilemon of the Mavpearl
Atkins of St. Louis, executive vice-jhank wa? shot to tle!lth when he
failed to move quickly enough to
suit the bandit.
Inspection
Group Here
•1 Sonu Hi1 i-s reported that the
I Brili.-): government already had
I nut out feelei - a- < egards Egypt
behalf of our people,”
Burton Franks case, -a,d. ”1 am appeuling tu yn , as
•n the Bonham Fa- our president anil great human!-'i
!an:.n that sieps be taken mimed- and tl. ■ Arab -tutes
ate!y to relieve tbi= situation and Anv uch Hoc would ensure
protection be afforded the 15,000j communication-- in th. custom
tiieir wives and | Mediterranean and the Red sea
hippy enough as it is . . , \ new
angle of the
was revealed
vorite, which alone carried the
iinfo: when Franks was returned
there by the Ellis county sheriff,
he took the officer to the Red
River bridge near Bonham and
showed him the exact spot from
which he threw the pistol used
in the Maypearl bank robbery
and murder . . . The American
Medical association thinks that
present methods used in prepar
ing a student for an M.D, degree
are all wrong. The medicos claim
the course takes so long the stu-
dent is old and gray before he
graduates with the coveted de-
gree.
coal miners,
families and rights and civil lib- Even $f pan ir ipation in the secur
orties of these people be preserv- r.. ... .a
ed.’
V D* ■’ >'• • passive the g-mir-
anteed neutrality would afeg’uard
Britain’s' communications to Indi*
and the far cast.
rectorh of the road arrived at the
union station here this morning
at 7:30 in a nine car special train,
president.
The train was stopped here
only a few minutes to allow the
changing of crews and it depart-
ed for Dallas arriving at 8 a. m.
mostly for the enjoyment of his
guests, and the requirements in-
cumbent upon his position leave
me- iiicvimr miMHii, bu-um.- little from his income. His laun- , . . .
. - . . ...... , . c.1onAr encoute on their annual inspect.on
inr to a renort from Sunerinton- dry b ll alone amount to s] s.nnm ,
,, n .. T. ' !iq> ot points served bv the lines,
dent B. McDaniel. The final non-hi year. v , wu
,, , , ., oon' Among those accompanying the
01 ,10, 1!'%“ °]( A<! j ^0st his lavhhno-s is n*qu' r ra;j presjdent were Charles Dh enroutc to Houston from which
on both the fmri^seconrMolD!,,, „f him. or forced upon him \s Hille, aml ,iamo Bush> direct------
ii man and a tourist “George VI, j ors of New york. s. \y. Fordyce,1 (Continued On Rage 4)
by the grace of God of Great Bri <)f st LoujSi director; Frank’ W.|--------
Inin and Inland, and of the Hr t (;,ace. of Dallas, vice-president!
ish diminions beyond the seas,! _ _ DttJ D«*rA»>
king, defender of the faith, cm- . D| i IVca IVlVCr I llltV
peror of India” will appeal to th" CftWyer r*I01W
general public of Canada and the I I J D J
United States weighed down wilh \JllCter 1 l*OpOS£Cl
luxurie- and inclined to be more __
nervous than exacting about
them.
compared with 323 the month be-i
fore.
All classes wilh the execution
of the tenth grade gained in hon-
or students. The eighth grade
increase «:u largest.
Students making 5)5 or higher
for the !a-‘ month were:
Eleventh grade: Martha Louise
Beam, Mai R. Bremerman, Ed
dina Burch. Lilly Darnell. Edna
Groezinger, Rosebud Guyncs.
Clara Heimburger, Frances .Ten-
kins, Leon Lacey. Robert McGa-
hon, Dorothy Milam, Lucy Bres-
son, Orville Thomason, Ann Rod-
dy.
Tenth grade: Mildred Baker,
Mildred Cantrell, Merline Jackson,
Sam Kirkham, Lloyd Roddy, Glen-
adene Seibman, Ray Simmons,
Melvin Tucker, Elaine Wood.
Ninth grade: Lois Ashburn,
Joan Baggett Betty Blankenship.
Charlotte Bothe, Wilson Bridges,
Helen Bruno. Peggy Bryan. Jeam
Edmonston, Ethel Cathey, Cleo
Crittenden, Georgia Davis, lteha
Davis, Howard Eldredge, Doll
Lr.nderman, Raymond MeVny,
Jessie Miller, Melba Myrick, A. J.
Newsom, Alma Ruth Rowland, Zoc
Ella Rutherford, Virginia Seale,
% Hurry Winter, Louise Porter.
# Eighth grade: Gene Berglund,
Betty Jo Blakemore, Nancy Casey,
Dorothy Hawkins, Watancie Jett,
Gladys Kelly, Jean Marshall,
Batti McDaniel, Dorothy Murrell,
Camilla Dayton, Irclone Kennedy,
Robert Speeglc.
Always the loot was small,
ranging from $1,0(10 to $2,000.
Officers recovered $150 when
they captured Pinion.
The state highway patrol s*a-j putch
] tinned men in almost every coun- j ticket!
There seems to be plenty
bank robberies occurring in Tex
as right now. In the spring r
man’s fanev must turn to thoughts
of bank robbery ... A California
grand jury will have nothing to
do with the case of publisher
George Putnam kidnapping. Lead-
ing one to believe the GJ might
think the whole thing Smells . . .
The ratio nf women to men in
Washington is about 3 to 1. Quick
my Washington train
. . . George Tucker says
The me sage warned that the
situation “is so tense that if the
mnUa and gu:n ds as.-irting them Friend.hip I. Pled«d
!." ' r°a! °‘ir:’..... guards) con- „ u,)lJergtnod that, if the
l.m.e toy:,My on. « and blood-■ p)w, rf8fh(>d th(S business stage,
Jit would be based on the Tehrau
’ " Sl '(‘ ' pact of 1936, in which Turkey.
J'JTV! ,ra<1 Ir'r’ ard 'fghanistan pled-
i. as ■• ( a, g.e(j themselves to friendship and
non-nggres«ior a- ‘brother. of
, Asia.”
Vsked what he thought about, „ , , ,
f ( ;h. us.- of N :.ona. Guardsmen in1 ,u . ' ' ". J'" ****
! Ha nan. he u joined that wa- a ' . ;t h< l-ssihle to nego-
, i , lflt' n' agreement which would
1 brin.. Ru---: , fully into the -ecur-
Jity front.
shed will occur '
| !)■ AVash'iigton.
. e .d that he had n
I the telegram and
h- press cunferenc whether he!
wo.ii intervene, said
Survey Completed
j tv and instructed them to bo par- that Dave Ellman spends all his
ticularly alert for bank robbers. W\me dijr?rinfr into people’s life.
Temporarily many patrolmen are finding out their hobbies. One of
taken off their highway cruisinc the strangest is a fellow who
j job- and stationed in small town \ r.l S(,s angleworms for fishermen.
] offices. j The worms are fed on a -trict
j The precautions were similar to‘ djot These railroaders can
thocp taken when Hamilton and ,nro (jjjr up phrase peculiar to
Much like
His Life Saved
By Dead Man
NEW YORK. May 17 (UP) —
John Perillo's life wns saved to-
day hv a dead man.
He fell into the elevator nit of
the Hotel Murida at Long Beach,
where he was employed, but in
stead of landing on concrete ho
fell on a body.
Tlntelemplo-yFes responding to
his cries for help, found that
Charles Altman, another worker,
apparently had fallen into the
shaft Monday and was killed.
MANGUS, Ok., May 17 (UP)
T\I iiiaooff fi m .,- Army engineers have completed ........_ ,........ ,.........
III!-) \ n , | " j"’ ' detailed survey of a proposed dam I Barrow with their red-headed gun, (h,,it. that tt,P i„vmfn will
; I , l ',.,,nn, ’ cv; and reservoir on the Salt Fork of moH. Bonnie Parker, were travel- understand in i year. Do.-idle
any lourtst, he nyry Ih.rd lawyer u, Honda and ;R R f)v„ mil(,s of(ing Texas highway -hooting, kill
sa d to he worrying a out how he j relieve the congestion in that pro-: , , im. and robbing
will hoar up under the strain of fes ion was before a legislative ‘ ____ ______
16,664 miles of travel, including: coimnittee today. Maps and data i*reparcd b\ an
two ocean crossings, and 20 niyhts Rep. CJeorjfp Scofield, who in- or'Uinferintr party headed bv 1
M. Havnes will it- submitted
iWi’P for t jo ’
Chandler to decide.
Heavy Rains
Strike State
Help Drought
IT [’i rr- in diplomatic quarters
her. won that Britain had gone
’’ 10n- wav. in it- new note to
( i '''aid removing Russian
ohjeet-ons i" previous proposals.
It «:is reported that the Brit-
ish government was now ready to
*-- | ui' scril),. to a common Fi’ench-
Temperatures .Fall to 58 De- Briti-h-Russian declaration that if
grees Here Today With any Baltic natiui. wen- attacked
Rainfall of Few Minutes ]and 1 a'!"d for aid from Russia,
. Britain and France would autom-
Heavy rain? throughout the 1 atically g. tr Russia's aid.
-late yesterday and today helped Pren.-I . aders hoped that on
-ome drought stricken sections of *his ba-it would be possible to
sleeping car. He is nc*r troduced it, advocated ‘‘two plow-;
about ?he public speeches1 ines a year by means similar to j
in a
vous
scheduled for him in Canada and'those used in crop control,
the U S. which he has been re- The bill was referred to the
hearsing for months to overcome j bouse committee on livestock.
hi* tendency to stutter. ' — --------—
-----1-::------— TRUCK LIMIT CHANGE
BOBS UP \GA1N
A. J. Riddle
to,
Capt. T.. D. Clay, di tricl engin-
eer at Donison. Texas, who in turn
will make recommendations to
the war department through the
division engineers at Little Rock,1
Ark.
The proposed Maneum reservoir
New Research
To Aid Leners
Possible Now
Texas, while other- helieved the!revise ‘he Frcnch-Russian military
downpour might hinder crop-. nact in such manner that the re-
Denisoin area farmet -aid the' suit would he a rea-iiranee to
Imd enough rain before th, fail!Bus-m that Britain and France
(h'ir lingo, the railroader? belong, Iki.- morning that totaled ele-e to aver, mu trving to evade anv ro«-
| to on,- of the best races on earth. « quarter of an inch. Tempera pnn.-ioilities.
_ 'lure? ranged from a high of 79: _____-____
\ booklet from John Francis degrees Tuesday afternoon to JEALOUS HORSE
GARVILLE. La., May 17 (UP)
There is revived hope and
AUSTIN, Tex.
I agreed that at least 85 per rent
would be approximately fivfjnpu note of expectancy today in | nf the people of the U. S. not only
square tt,i 1 es in area and have anj*h’- vil'age. huddled hehitul ! loathe the idea of war a- tar as
but would take
every reasonable step to avert a
Neylan, whoever he is. is entitled, ,,u °f degree? this morning
“A common sonse plea for Amen I Forecast- were ter scattered
iea to finance peace, life and I thundershower? and warmer tem-
construction, not war, death and peratures today and Thursday in
destruction” . He claims that; Texas and Southern Okla
“notwithstanding' the position of'^oma
the president, I think it will he! A‘: il"ne received an inch and n
half and points 100 mile? in all
directions indicated the rain
SMtSHES AUTOMOBILE
, ............ May 17 (UP) .. ..................
Is Appointed to be downed, advocates average depth of approximately j M i>siss>ppi -iver levee, fora fr,?h 11 eo.ieemed
““ I of a heavier truck load limit ini-j 30 feet, containing a total of ap-1 attack on luprnsv hn« been started ''very reasonable
.. , , . . , ,! tiated today in the house a new proximately 105,000 acre feet ot at (he Cnrville leprosarium.
News has been received here of, ,lt((,mpt t{1 Vequest state agencies {water. ' j experimentation ha- been
to waive enforcement of the 7000[ Th eo.-t has been estimated at,made possible with the comnara-
uound limit against transporter-' approximately $4,000,000. Thejtively recent discovery that a Sy-
of livestock and farm products, i reservoir has been proposed as a rian rodent is susceptible to Icp-
A prior resolution by Weldon combination flood control and h--
Burney to instruct the Railroad; rigation project.
commission and, public safety de- j--—--------- —
Freed On Bond
! pending thr enactment nf addi- K ANSAS CIT\, M.),, May li
the appointment of A. J. Riddle.!
southwestern division manager I
for the Kraft-Phenix cheese cor-j
poration, whose office is estab-j
lished at the local headquarters,
as chairman of the dairy develop
men. and advisory committee of. tment to ccasP enforcement
the Texas Dairy products associu- . .. 4l
i n, >n , I i Iwr tlx,, • , no o MXX fl») t\ t Mil.fl-
tion.
The organization has been
tinnnl legislation was ruled out of • (UP)—Ralph Messina 30, fight-
11 i order. The new resolution chang-! ing extradition to Wichita, Kan.
cently formed to promote enlarge- (he instn|ction to „ rc e,t. | un an eight year old charge of
rosy. Befiire there had been little
conflict in Europe". . . .Now that
the last week of school has be-
gan here high school students are
jittery, wondering whether they
are going to pass or not . . .
Victor Marsieo fishing on a priv-
rhnneo to study the disease forint1’ take here yesterday, said he J01111®’ hole.- in roof- and doing
there were no "guinea nig-” for j couldn’t tell whether the fish •>-U00 damage to a school. The
scientific research. (were biting or not, because he
Ait the leprosy congress in Eg- spent all his time dodging the
was
general, breaking a drouth that
had become alarming. Some
tions received as much as three
inches. The moisture assured
BUFFALO, N. Y„ May 17
'1 P) A horse’s attack on an au-
tom a,;,., cost Joseph Run er, rid
in,.' academy owner. $200 today.
\ judgment again?! Runser wn-
"■rant..! Arthur C Schmitt, who
charged 'hat (hr riderless horse,
supposedly jealou- of the car,
at hi- mi -’nod on its
hind feet and pawed and kick'd
a j hi- vehicle with vicious propen-
for j pity.
ment of private herds and the pro-1 , , , ,
• , ... , , . Vc'ion on it was delayed,
ccssintr and marketing oi dairy m t
products. Headquarters of the
association i? at Fort Worth.
Edgett Funeral
Stowers’ Services
Funeral services for Mrs. Sam
Stowers, resident of Denison 19
vears who died Monday evening at
Funeral services for George W .her home, 1100 W. Morton fol-
Edgott <14, resident of Denisor. lowing an illness of eight weeks,
02 vears were held Tuesday at'were held at 10 a ,m. today at
4 p. m. from his residence, 1230 .the Sbort-Murray chapel, Rev.
W. Coffin street., Rev. John Out- .Limes E. Spivey officiating,
chfield officiating. Interment wns at Fairview cem-
Interment was at Oakwood cem-! etery, Short-Murray directing,
etrry, Short-Murray directing Pall j Pallbearers were Ross Stoddard,
bearers were L. B. Hammett, R. W. L. Peterson, David Platter, R.
P Fitzgerald. Sam Haskins, Bob I B. Hutchison, A. M. Brennekc J.
ypt, report? were made that thi-
ono animal is susceptible A box
filled with the squeaking roden*-
! arson, was free today on $3,000 [was brought to the laboratories j
jhond pending an appellate court’s [hero—and the fight was on again,
hearing May 25 on his second ap- But. still, the fight has just bo-
plication for a hn' eas corpus w rit, j gun, scientist say.
The first habeas corpus applies- j For centuries the chief weapon
water moccasins . . . All in all.
that’s a heck of a fish story to
bring back.
tion was denied
Gray, M. S. Shipley and Gilbert
Thompson,
W. Madden, Byron Mitchell
Oliver Hayes
and
Smith Service*
Funeral services for Edgar
Smith, 68. retired Katy engineer
and resident of Denison 45
rears, who died Tuesday morning,
will be held Thursday afternoon
at 3 o’clock from St. Luke's Epis-
copal church wtih Rev. Harry Lee
Virdcn officiating. Interment will
be at Fairview cemetery with
Short-Murray directing.
in the fight has been an odd-
tasting drug from the Orient,
called chaulmoogra oil. Some Car-
F. ville inmates take it three times
a day, other less frequently. All
hers added to the Denison Cham-
ber of Commerce during its pres-
ent drive to raise funds to finance
the 1939-40 fiscal year believed
to be one of the most important j hours, starting late Monday,
in the history of the citv . . . One ' h"'11"' Persons were injured
fellow here smokes one of the j slightly when a hailstorm forced
largest pipes these tired old eves j ca,’s off the road between Jolly
hut a few of the 370 men, women j have ever seen. And judging fromilin,l Henrietta, in (lay county A*
and children have taken gallons I he odor issuing therefore, it also j Archer City. Archer county, hail
of the liquid. It is agreed that {must be the oldest ... The FFA! smashed the courthouse windows
the oil in some cases retard- the j of the high school has it? Mother- i,nff broke eleetric light globes
disease, hut still more important Father-Son banquet tonight lt:i?cn. Hill county, and sur-
Condolenees to Sam Stowers on rounding communities receiv'd
____________; needed rains averaging .92 to 1
(Continued on rage 4) ^nch greatly benefiting crops
favorable planting season
cotton and other late crops
Strawn Damaged Exam* Begin Today
At Stawn. Pale Pinto county. Finn' examination- in the two
wind and hail wa reported, hat H igh -chools, white and negro,
started today as student); entered
the final lap of the 1938-89 sc-
mester Final- foi ward schools
here will begin next Monday.
Baccalaureate sermon for the
Denison high graduating class will
begin at 8 p, m Sunday at the
-chool auditorium. Rev. J. F.
Spivey of *he Pro-byte rian church
making the main address of the
evening.
pupils had been dismi-sed because
of storm threats Tuesday after- |
noon and the water flooded the
empty school rooms. Stores were
forced to close because of holes
in the roof which damaged stock-
There have been 111 new mem- an(i SPT,t customers surrying
Grain crop? too, were damaged.
In the Olney territory near
Wichita palls a three-ineh rain
drenched the countrvsde for 12
n the doctors’ minds are the old
requisites of good health—rest,
sun. fresh air and nutritious food.
Yellow Jacket* Ready
The Peni-on'hieh school year
honk, the Yellow Jacket, will he
give n t» students Tuesday morn
ing. May 23. it wa? announced
today Rural students may ob-
tain their copies the following
Friday.
NOTICE
If you do not receive your Ptos*
before 5:30, plea-e phone 300 an*,
one will he sent you.
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The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 268, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 17, 1939, newspaper, May 17, 1939; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth738925/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.