The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 60, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 31, 1940 Page: 1 of 8
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WEATHER
DENISON AND VICINITY
Partly cloudy today and
Sunday
THE DENISON PRESS
PUBLISHED DAJHLY, BKCEPT
SUNDAY
YOUR HOME-OWNEp
DAILY NEWSPAPER
95c PER MONTH
REPRESENTATIVE OF THE UNITED PRESS
DENISON, TEXAS
SATURDAY, AUG. 81, 1940
WEEKLY FOUNDED 1930—-DAILY 1934
VOL. 7—NO. 60
Germans Retaliate To British Raid On Berlin
THOUSANDS TO PARTICIPATE IN LABOR DAY PARADE, FESTIVITIES
rumani/Tagrees
to nazi bases
EVERDAY
DENISON
By
LOUIS ANDERSON
• «l
Big Jim Parley, best liked of all
new dealers, democrats or republi-
cans, steped down out of his post
after acting for seven years as
good-will ambassador to the pub-
lic, smoothing over mistakes of
the Rooseveltian t dministration.
He leaves the cabinet still a
staunch democrat, but very much
against a third term for 'fDR . . .
Farley, who gets a big kick out
of dropping in on postoffice em-
ployes over the nation recalls how,
passing through Memphis, Tenn.,
he told the employe at the only
window open "I'm J!m Parley."
The employe called another, re-
marked in a stage whisper;
"There's some darn fool here who
thinks he is the Postmaster Gen ^ _ _ ^
eral." At another point in a small | of jtg fal, te*rm> £ept 19> £r Ho":
Tennessee town, he approached ( mer p Rainey, president, said to-
events to begin
at 10 a.m. monday
Thousands of marchers, fifty make up the program mapped out
floats, ten bands, all in a gigantic for the largest Labor day celebra-
parade, a tour of the dam site, a tion Monday ever to be held in
huge fireworks display, greased the city of Denison.
pig contest, street dance and ad-j Retail stores, the public library,
Carol Barely Averts Overthrow Of
Cabinet; Rumania Approves Demands
dresses by prominent speakers will
Naval Reserve
Training Corps
At T. University
AU9TFN, Tex., Aug. 31—The
University of Texas probably will
install a naval reserve officers
training corps by the beginning
BUCHAREST, Rumania, Aug.'
Ill—Protest demonstrations over j
Rumania's action in ceding half
of Translyvania to Hungary after.
German and Italian pressure, are
breaking out all along the Trans-]
lyvanian frontier, reports said to-
day.
HbCIEAKEST, Rumania, Auer-
roosevelt dodges
willkie's demands
postmistress, who threw up her
hands with: "Oh, my Lord!" . . .
Press reports from College Station
say that Bill Conatser of Denison
will be a half-back starter on the
Aggies this fall. Bill recently
made a quick trip there to make
pictures for Life mag.
, day.
The announcement followed a
conference Thursday between the
university's national defense com-
mittee and Commander James M.
Lewis, USN, following the school's
! application for a unit, pending be-
fore the navy department.
— , Credits for a four-year course,
Laugh: At London, a piocosS| num^er 0f classroom hours re-
server walked into an establisn-j ed and hou9jng facnjtjes wore
lishment, started to hand the war-, discuased
rant to the boss. Just then an air j Rainey said that establish-
owner j *
L. S. Engineer office, postoffice,
Kraft Cheese division headquart-
ers and plant, railroad offices and 31—King Carol of Rumanian nar-1 WASHINGTON, Aug. 31—P.- private plants for
other establishments will' be closed rowly escaped overthrow of his litical circles today were buzzing poses.
so that employees may participate cabinet and perhaps wrecking of over President Roosevelt's dod*-
!n the fun making. The Ka'y will an Italo •German pUn of Halkun >ng what he termed "an attempt
operate only a skeleton force, ne- peace, when his crown council to- to get him into a political d\s
cessary to maintain proper opera- day approved the .surrender of cussion" by Republican piesidcn-
tion of its line. j half of Transylvania to Hungary, tial nominee Wendell Willk'e
defense
pu 1'-
Farley Steps Out
Of Cabinet Today
After 7 Years
Boy Scouts will assist the po-j The crown council in the midst
lice in keeping crowds orderly and of rising public anger, approved
will also assist city firemen in giv- the ceding of betweoi HI,000 and
ing t'irst aid treatment to those'21,000 square miles of l'ransyl-
who may become injured. 1 vania to Hungary in exchange for
The events will get underway a formally signed guarantee that
at 10 a. m. with a four-mile par- Italy arid Germany would throw
ade down Main street and prizes up a barrier aga'tist. any Russian
totaling $180 will be offered for invasion from the north.
the best floats and bands in the German troops will be sent to
procession. The parade has at-' the Rumanian-Russian frontier--
tracted entries from several towns' across Hungry from the Reich—
and cities within a seventy-five' if and when there develops a
radius of here. Visiting labor or- threat of a Soviet drive into the
ganzations will join the small army! Balkans, the Rumanians were
of union members here in the eel- promised.
ebration that is to outstrip any The surrender was agreed to at
event the city has ever fostered." 3:10 p. m. Friday in historic Bci-
A special feature of the Labor; vedere palace at Vienna and the
in which the GOP candidate de-
manded FDIR state his position on
government commandeering of
Roosevelt declined to comment
on whether he was in agreement'
with the acceptance speech of!
Henry A. Wall; ce, his running WASHINGTON, August
mate, in which Wallace called the James A. Farley, best known dem-
Repu'blican party one of appease- ocratic party leader with excep-
tion of President Roosevelt, wi"
ment.
frc/mer Local
Woman Dies
At Gainesville
The /Republican presidential
nominee was commenting on Mr.
Roosevelt's refusal to announce
his views on the Overton-Russell
| amendment to the senate-approved
j draft bill.
This amendment would permit
of the late James D. Lee I government operation of plants
, |needed tor defe
GAINESVILLE, Tex., Aug. 31]
-Mrs. Nettie C. Leeper, 75, wife
pioneer North Texas lumbermw.
1 nd capitalist, died at a hospital I
ense when the sec-
!l retaries of war and navy
i not reach agreements with
could
The war-,rnen* corPs> 8 miniatuie^ of j eVent will take place at 1 p.[crown council's ratification came
raid alarm sounded, the
streamed for a sl>®ltor- Visitor* the naval academy course at An j m'and Continue untii 4 when the at 2:40 a. m. Saturday after a
servea . . ._ hSnMa „„ Wls,Btlve wiu be, stormy four and one-half hour ses-
work sion.
LONDON, Aug. 31—Germany j back in fierce fighting before the
retaliated to a British air raid on Nazi raiders could reach the en-
Berlin today with three attacks on virons of London.
Britain, all of which were turned At least six German planet werj
shot down in the third day-light
raid of the day, but a number of
Nazi craft was said to have pene-
trated the British defenses about
London, but dropped no bombs.
Nazi planes ranged over a wide
t area of Britain today, damaging
some property with gasoline incen-
diary bombs.
Berlin admitted British raider*
did heavy damage Ihside the city
iii a raid early today, one bomb
destroying the fire department
headquarters less than four blocks
from the Wilhelmstrasse, besides
damaging an electrical company,
a church, hospital and other
points. Explosive and incendiary
bombs were dropped on the city
with many fires said to have re-
sulted.
The raid was the second of the
war on Berlin proper and antiair-
craft guns blazed for more than
an hour.
_ , j Germans claimed low,flying
Epypt Are Slain British planes swooped down in
j some areas of Berlin, raking the
Egypt, Aug. 31 Tl,t *treets and buildin^ with machine
n, , x , s . , • u* 1 Jt-Munii ivuuaeveil,
At Rushville, Ind., Willkie todav] . , „ ,,
„ .. . , ,. , . ,„ • step out of the Postmaster Gen-
reiterated his demand that Mr. • .. Tt •<. 1 i .
, , . erulship of the United States to-
Roosevelt clarify his stand on in-' 1 * • . , ,. ..
. , . , . .day for private business activitv.
dustrial conscription. r, 1 r j
1 Farley, for seven years, made
seven
himself famous for his smile,
hearty friendiness and ability to
mix with any group. He relin-
quished the chairmanship of the
democratic party earlier this
month.
Two Americans In
rant was abo_ dVy7ei-| napolto, hinges on legislative pas-j "puhTic7 fVr" the >irst time,
to .J {. j one ol: 8aKe* exP®cted this week of a ^ 1 permitted into the actual
ebration Monday will a trinliner the personnel of naval re-, . . nnn nr[ri ,
zone of the $54,000,000 dam on As the council met in Carol's
Red River. Palace, sullen crowds milled in the
| Also scheduled for the after-] streets and guards with rifles took Nettie Jim Leeper. " ,iad the c'ear duty to do so, partie- 25, had been killed Aug. 23
every favorable consideration, noon jg a grease(i pQ|e climbing,] up posts around the palace. | As Nettie Bennett she was born u'ar'y when he was seeking
. I tripling the personnel
the warmest welcomes ey serve units in American colleges.
received anywhere. Denison , already have been assured
long been noted for its hospitality! y
. . . Rittersweet: A German,^ ler, Riven the university's ap-| leased pig" race," softball games
was niarnt o plication if the bill passes, Di. an(j 0^j,er athletic events. I Gei 'man and Italian demands sent
Er0X3L_e camn Rainey , | At 8 p. m. in Forest Park, an I here from Vienna, it. was announc-
m.y H* " TZ' «m, I, to b. m.d, b, Dr. E.1-! officially.
here Thursday night, following a
brief illness. ' owners.
Funeral services will be held at1 "If my ««®mory ,serves me c01'-
the residence at 4 p. m. Sunday. lrectIy' ' W,llk,e 8a,d !n a Bt,ate"! CAIRO.
conducted by, the Rev. W. Harris "lent a^i-ward, "the President, uinted States Lepation informwl f,rc-
on Baker, Methodist minister, llt has commented many times on thj} gtate Department toda that German planes struck at Low
Greenville, formerly of Gaine - "L'ndinR '°«lslatlon- , u ! Dr. Robert Grieve, 28, an Ameri-1 don during the n.ght in the second
ville. " But he added that even if the can medica, missionar fr0m g 'longest air raid alarm of the war,
President had not commented, he kane> Wash and his'vr\fe, about 'astlnK 6.,hours andt39 minutf?'
' 1 " ' ' * ■ - ■ —1 but no military objectives were hit
by the bombs, the British claimed.
'The German [high command
Rumania had capitulated under jn Matamoros, Mexico, and mar- third terrn'
One newspaper story says
John N. Garner never intends to
be seen in Washington again . . .
Least interesting news of the
week: the marriage of Vivien
Leigh and Laurence Olivier . . ■
Hedda Hopper, the columnist, re-
fuses to publish the name of Elsa
Maxwell, she of the famous par-
ties. Miss Maxwell is proudest of
a Peter Arno cartoon showing her
in bed, an ice pack on her head.
Standing to one side is the butler,
telling a visitor: "A party threw
Miss Maxwell."
2,100
win Alexander Elliott of Fort]
lege naval personnel from
to 7,200 by Sept. 15, has beeii| worth, regional director of the members
approved by the senate and house National Labor Relations Board' some of them had not been on pany, and still later
As the crown council
at loggerheads
She is survived by a daughte
him rhf> f ir>nr rtiir« tr nn «n. rtnrrii*- i . •
in an
Italian air raid on their outpost in
an isolated region of the Anglo-]
Willkie said the chief executive Egyptian Sudan near the Ethiop-
and his running mate, Henry A. ian frontier.
Wallace, were 100 per cent wrong Information received at num-
met, it? ville where he became identified in implying that the republican] toum from T)r, T. A. Lambie, fie)d additional twenty-six today
because with Waples-Painter Lumber com ; party is the party of appeasement.! t|irect0r of the Sudan Interior Mis-
lied James 1). Leeper at
in 1884.
They later moved
Denisxr
to Gaines-
claimed eighty British planes were
] shot down by Nazis in air fight-
Khar- K °ver British soil Friday and an
and now needs only the signature
of President Roosevelt after the
senate agrees to a minor amend-
mnt.
Eleven universities now have
naval units—Harard, Yale, North-
western, Georgia Tech, California,
Michigan,
and veteran Texas educator. Judge band the previous night to vote on Leeper Brothers
Orson Welles, who scared the
living daylights out of a few dizzy
Americans with his Martian air
series a couple of years ago, is
finally getting a film underway,
and reports say it has the box-
office touch. One newspa| ,vr
heads Welles' picture "Jerk or
Genius?" . . . The latest Gallup
Poll startles the world with the
inside information that republicans
are leading in Maine. Rememlur
the famous 46 and 2? . . . Sally
Rand has been barred from the
(New York worlds fair. Her pet
aversion is against those crndid
camera fiends who insist on snap'
ping the shutters at the proper
moment while she does her fan
dance, which, naturally, is done
sans clothing. . . . George Tucker
tells the one about the golfer, an-
gered by his knocking a golf ball
into a water hazard, threw his
clubs in after it. Then he pickrd
up the protesting caddy, threw
him in followed by himself.
Tom Suggs of Denison will also'the virtual ultimatum from Vien-
give a short address. ■ i<a, there were widssp ead fea^s
A total of $350 worth of fire- of a cabinet overthrow.
works is to be shot off in Mun- Had the government been over-
son field at 9 p. m. in the park thrown, following a split within
and the program will come to a the crown council, the territorial
climaxing close at 10 o'clock with surrender t<> Hungary might have
a street dance in the 400 block been repudiated and the entire
Adolf
organize 1,
Lumber Com-
in Texas
,
C HURCHES
UCLA, Washington,
Minnesota, Oklahoma and Tulane ^
Sixteen more are contemplated ^rcgt crawford, which will be rop- Balkan peace formula
under the bill's provisions.
of
ed off to prevent traffic from in- Hitler and Benito Mussolini been'
terfering. j wrecked oi thrown out of gear. I
—-:t—— r- I Under the hgreement surrender-
Purte Is Stolen | ing the Tranansylvania area, Ru-
; manian troops will withdraw from
! Mrs. C. C. Welch, 617 W. Craw-1 the ceded territory within two
Therefore, the Press^ ford, reported to police the theft | weeks and all Rumanian subects
, of a small black purse Friday af- living in the ceded territory will
by two negroes. Th<,>
NOTICE
Press employes, laBor « union
members, „will be given the day
off Monday to participate in the
celebration.
will not be published that day. Re
sumption of publication will be ternoon
made Tuesday. I purse had no money in it.
pany with yards
Oklahoma.
Mrs. Leeper was one of the
founders and ei.rly, presidents if,
the Forty-One Literary Club in
Gainesville, also organizer fcnd)
for many years, president of tl 3 niunion, Rev. Minor Bounds.
Associated Charities, to which Evening service, 7:30. Sermon
she contributed large sums ofiby Rev' Mln0^ Bound3-
... , Young people, senior and mter-
and extensive persona'! . , ' „ "
H mediate leagues, 6:30 and 7 p. m.
Raiders over Britain today came
in flights of about fifty planes
each, but were turned back at
most points in "wild disorder."
Waple Memorial
Church school, 9;45.
(Morning service, .10:50.
Com-
n'.oney
service.
Her father, the late Willi: ni' Lutheran MU.ion
Bennett, was one of the foun j Sunday school 10 a. m.
ders of the Presbyterian church Divine worship, 11 a. m. Ser-
at Denison. I mon "A Secure Ship or. the Sea
Following the de: th of her hus-, of Life."
'sion, with which the couple was,
! associated, confirmed British re-
ports of their death, the legation
I said.
Besides Dr. and Mrs. Grieve, the
1 Rev. and Mrs. Kenneth Oglesby,1
also Americans of Brooklyn, were
I reported by Dr. Lambie to have
been gravely injured,
High British sources said the
Italian dropped thirty bombs and
machine gunned the missionary
station at Doro, in upper Nile
province, despite frantic efforts to
signal them with American flags, conference at Vienna
ATHENS, Greece, Aug. 31—
Greece today had called up all its
reserve officers as Italy evidently
made plans to use Albania as fo-
cal point for a series of verbal
battles on the Greecians.
They tell us the new football
stadium at Bonhain will be the
best in this area. ITenison has
long .been known as the city hav-
ing the best athletic plant in hi^h
school circles ... A. W. Wells of
the Gainesville Register and a
math teacher in the high school,
Bitter Debate
Is Scheduled
obtain Hungarian nationality, but
if they desire to be Rumanians,
they must adopt their new nation-]
ulity within six months and leave
the newly acquired Hungarian ter-
ritory. Hungarians of Rumanian
nationality who lived in Transy!-
I vania before 1919—When it bo-!
; longed to Austria-Hungary—may
[ choose Hungarian citizenship with-
in six months. |
WASHINGTON, Aug. 31—Con- sidered starting Thursday. Therij
gress took the weekend off today | will be no restriction on debut.;
preparatory to what appeared on amendments.
would be a bitter fight Tuesday ( Democratic leader Sam Rayburn
over an amendment to the Burke-1 of Texas said he hoped a final vote
Wadsworth conscription bill giving could be reached by Friday but
the government the right to take told the house he wus prepared to
over private industry in an emer-
gency.
The amendment, tacked on the
conscription measure by the sen-
Camporall Is
Planned For
Scouts Here
Plans for a "camporall" in the
believes the Leopards will win Tuesday.
district BAA this fall. His figures
might prove all wrong because he
still has Denison and Sherman as
contenders . . , Sam Turner, game
warden visiting here now, recent'y
underwent an apT>eri3Tx operation.
In the Press office to drop a story
on dove hunMng, he wanted to
swap yarns with this corner on the
carving theory . . . J. B. Head,
Sherman high mentor, is In the
devote a fifth day to the legisla- future in which scouts of the Red
tion if necessary. ! River Valley Boy Scout council
The republican complaints will camp overnight out-of-doors,
against restriction of House de- study scout craft and other ac
ate, then sent to the house, would'!bate on con8cripUon
allow Washington to conscript prl-| particularly at the decision to lim- eastern state teachers' college at,
vate industry on a rental basis if jj. t0 jwo dayg, ' | Durant as guests of the school at
the demand was necessary. It Representative Robert Michener its homecoming football game will
(R.-Penn.), J. William IDitter (R.- be outlined by George A. Holland,
Penn.) and Leo E. Allen (1^,-111.) scout executive at meetings of
argued that the (house might re- j scout groups next week. The in-
main in session only an hour or, vitation was extended by T. T.
two each day and demanded in- j Montgomery, president of the col-
over «"e-|8tea(j that at jeagt twelve hours lege,
band, she was elected a vice-l
president of Waples-Painter,
Lumber company.
Mrs. Leeper tived in one of
Gainesville's most palatini resi-
dences, where a continuous
stream of underprivileged ner-j
sons went to receive her philan-]
thropy or her benedictions.
St. Xaviers Will
Open Tuesday
For Fall Term
Only one change in the faculty]
of St. Xavier's academy is *n-|
! nounced for the 1940-41 terra j
that begins Tuesday, Sept. 3.1
Sister Evangelista is leaving for
Wichita Falls and her position as
teacher of the sixth ;.,nd seventh !
Fir t Presbyterian
9:45—Sunday school. Morning
service, 10:45. Sermon by Rev.
Eugene H. Surface. Young Peo-
ple's meeting 7 p. m.
No evening service due to a',-
sence of the pastor.
There was no indication, however,
from what altitude the attack was
delivered.
The governor general of the An-
glo-Egyptian Sudan, a British of-
ficial, charged the Italians wi*h
deliberate machine gunning of th.5
remote missionary station.
The Grieves were described here
as a
their missionary careers 6 months
BUCHAREST, Rumania, Aug.
31—Reliable sources today said
that Rumania, in its four-powe*
this week.
has agreed that Germany could
establish air and land bases on
Rumanian soil, evidently to ready
itself in case Russia made any
furthei; movements into King Car-
ol's nation.
In Vienna Nazi Foreign Joachim
von Ribbentrop had dictated terms
whereby Rumania handed .Hun-
threatened to overshadow the con-
scription bill proper, and bitter
controversy was expected to de-
velop in debate, to begin at noon
Yesterday the house,
First Christian I had devot«d a W to a special
Sunday School—9:45, Mornin J study of tropical diseases.
worship 10:45. Evening service
7t30. 1 .Advertise In The EJenison Press
Pure Oil Waits
On Chi Reports
.TH,,, SL1Plll v.„ v grades will be filled by Sister' —
were aimed tiviti'es'lnd'then"go"to the"south-| Coletta from ° r Lidj Vic j "U^T Aug, 31—Cumber-] ploration of the Upper McLish, >•
tory college, Fort Worth. land field Pure Oil company of- section of the Wilcox sand goal
Other than that the staff lints licials were awaiting u repor. of the pure oil company, when it
Mother Ferdinand, superiores, from Chicago on the electrical started drilling in the Cumberland
pnd superintendent; Sister Marie, log taken Thursday in the coni-l field.
Josephine, principal; Sister Mi r.v pany's No. 1 Park College-2011, There mas more <basil) however
tencher of music both in tlv>| Bryan county well, and with the) to reports that the well will be
tu'lc>t5 , , I gary half of the disputed territory
tudious couple, who began * ^ ]vani in 'return promis.
nissionary careers 6 months Ul 1'*" . n-iu*
. . T* me: Rumania German and Italian
:\2;o at the lonely Doro post. He, ., - . , A .
i,L j. j . aid if Russia marched in "Rumania.
Preliminary Air
Field Work Is
.Completed Today
The Airport Engineering Ser-
vice of Fort Worth today had com-
pleted preliminary field work and
engineering plans on the proposed
site of the joint Denison-Sherman
airport, two and a half miles south
of Pottsboro. The proposed site
Is to occupy 893 acres.
The next steps are preparation
of reports for national defense
projects, preparations of the mas-
ter preliminary plans, topograph-
ical survey, location and obstruc-
iAcadeMiy and in private lessons; report expected orders regarding plumed bade for a test of the t>,an on n 30 to 1 gliding ratio,
Al*. 1 II. .... rii.l Yllflllln 4L\n... .. t *1. .. ..... 1 I ' • 1 1 1 . ... _ 1 J!
(Continued on Page 4)
end.
The rules committee and demo-
cratic chieftains agreed that the
controversial measure should be
called up at noon Tuesday, that
general dicussion should be per-
mitted until Wednesday night and
publican protests, passed resolu- j of Kenerai debate be permitted
tions limiting general debate on Asserting there were many pro-
the conscription bill to two days | cc(jentg requiring a specific deter-
and a final vote before next week m|nat|on „f debate time by hours
rather than by legislative days,
Dltter said:
"I want to maintain the dignity
of the house in keeping with the
position of the senate, which held
full and free discussion on tho
that amendments should be con-
Sister Mary Margaret who did future operations at the well,
graduate work this ywar at j The Halliburton electric log
,, , . _ . .. . Washington University, end Sistei picture was rushed to the Chicago
°*\ t..1 Mirinm Therpa.n who studied at, office of the company for inter-
Dominica college, California, hi?h| pretation, and a report on it
school teachers; Sister St. Clair, together with orders was expect-
and S'ister Coletta, intermedi te«;l ed immediately.
n«d Sister Marian Coleste ! nd
Sister Marv. nrimary.
The consolidation of certain
courses hns strengthened, fhe e«r,
Durant district scouters will be
held at 8 p. m. at the Chamber
of Commerce there, with Mark
Staton, chairman, In charge,
Tuesday a troop committee
meeting is to be held. Another
troop committee meeting is also
scheduled for Saturday. Troops ri(.uhlm tt is rM,orted. There hn«
to attend the meeting had
heen an increase In : ordinations
been worked out today, Mr. Hol-J for ^ M(fk „chool and
land said
tary divisions.
The well was shut down a.fter
the log was taken Thursday i f-
temoon, but the crew whose
tour started today was ordere.l
to report for duty.
There was still talk here thai
the well will b i
drilled deeper possibly for e*
upper Bromide sand which, mad a
450 feet in oil in a drillstem
test at 5,115-25 feet last Sunday
It was believed that horizon
would make 25 barrels! an ho -
or about 500 barrels a day.
which likely is consider: ibly more
than the proration allowable for
any well in the field.
Oil men believed the i Uowabr-
for the Pure field will be recoil
mended at the state wide market
demand meeting toeing held at
Oklahoma City today,.
layout pirns showing landing
strips, runways, taxi strips, pre-
liminary field lighting tooundaria*
end a ten year wind date sheet.
The completed plans and dita
Is to be presented to the CiviV
Areonautics bo: rd for approval,
and corrections, if necessary,, will
he made, as provided in the cor-
trrct.
"flhe joint nlrnort Is to be of
the class 3 variety and It Is to
serve for miVltarv. riirl'ne, feed-
er, comfmercial, private flying and
recreation: 1 purposes. ,
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Anderson, LeRoy M. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 60, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 31, 1940, newspaper, August 31, 1940; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth328022/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.