The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 289, Ed. 1 Monday, June 2, 1941 Page: 1 of 4
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<§
WEATHER
DENISON AMD VICINITY
Thunderstorms tonight and Tuea-
duy, Continued cloudiness
The Denison
PVBUABCO DAILY UCVT
4UMDAY
YOUR HOME-OWNED
DAILY WEW5PAPE*
36c PEE MONTH
•—
REPRESENTATIVE OF THE UNITED PRESS
DENISON, TEXAS MONDAY. JUNE 2nd, 1941
WEEKLY FOUNDED t«30—DAILY 1 34
VOL. 7—NO 289
Great Britain Surrenders Crete To Germany
Germany Accused
Dropping Bombs On
Ireland, Killing 35
(DUBLIN, Eire, June 2—-The
Eire government today officially
accused the German air force of
the severe attack which killed at
EVERYDAY
DENISON
By
PAT FERRY
City Commissioner C. J. Ussery
was in for some good natured rib-
bing Saturday as he paid off a $1
fine for overtime parking Friday.
Police tasked the car after Mr.
Ussery had left the vehicle stand-
ing in front of the city hall dur-
ing a commission meeting and lat-
er walking up to the Chamber of
Commerce to sit in on a parkins
meter discussion. Like the good
sport he is, Mr. Ussery only grin-
ned at the police ribbings and paid
off . . . The latest thing in fire
fighting equipment, Van Alksyne's
new fire truck, arrived in a blush-
ing red streak Saturday. Accord-
ing to the Yan-Tex Letter, it took
many people by surprise as it was
the best looking piece of fire-fight-
ing equipment that most of them
had ever seen . . . Members of the
Grayson college ex-student's asso-
ciation here are receiving invita-
tions to attend the annual reun-
ion at Whitewright, August 24.
(Doris McFerran has concluded
a survey of American truck driv-
ers and has compiled a dictionary
on their speech so that the aver-
age layman, like you and me,
belongs above all to the people im-
(Continued on page four)
Special Speakers
Select Hotel Week
As Their Themes
Manager Lute Loy of the Hotel
Denison announces that for Na-
tional Hotel week, which runs
from June 1 to 8, he has secured
some outstanding hotel men and
speakers who will appear before
the local service clubs this week
The first speaker appeared to-
day before the Boosters club, and
was presented by President R. C.
Vaughan, president of the club.
The speaker was Geo. .Scott, past
president of the Texas Hotel
association and now head of the
Scott group of hostelries.
Announced for Wednesday to
speak before the Lions club is
Henry Love, manager of the Tt-x-
as Hotel, Fort Worth.
Thursday at tfie Rotary meet-
ing, Tip Newell, manager of the
Hotel Grayson, Sherman, will be
the speaker.
Matters of ho>v the hotels serve
the community and how they form
an asset to a city will be brought
out. The slogan for the national
hotel week is "hotels, an asset to
the community; a service to the
nation."
Heavy Air Raid
On English Town
UOilDON, June 2—A northwest
England town was subjected to its
heaviest raid in months Sunday
night and early today, suffering a
number of casualties and extensive
damage to houses, as large num-
bers of German raiders swarmed
over.
The town appeared to be the
main tnrget of the Luftwaffe's ac-
tivity over Britain, during which
London had its first alarm in six-
teen days. No bombs were drop-
ped in the capital and only occa-
sional bursts of antiaircraft fire
were heard. It was London's
twenty-second consecutive bomb-
less night.
The sirens shrieked their warn-
ing in the capital for the first
time since the night of May 16-17.
The ground barrage, unheard for
so long that it had a strange
sound, was in action briefly a
ahort time later.
least thirty-five persons and in-
jured 120 others in Dublin last
Saturday.
Neutrul Eire, it was announced,
is sending a protest to Berlin in
the strongest terms demanding
compensation and reparations for
the Irish loss of life, injury and
property damage.
The announcement identifying
the Dublin bombs as being of Ger-
man origin was made after for-
eign planes Sunday again swept
over County Wicklow, south of
Dublin, and dropped bombs in op-
en fields, shattering the windows
of about twenty cottages.
The bombs fell in fields near
Athlone.
The Dublin press meanwhile
urged Prime Minister Eamon de
Valera to protest vigorously to the
belligerent power responsible for
the Dublin bombing which de-
stroyed or badly damaged seventy-
five homes.
A government statement listed
the Dublin toll aa thirty-five dead,
120 injured and 300 homeless.
Rescue squads still dug in the de-
bris for more bodies.
(Authoritative German quarters
in Berlin intimated that British
planes and not German aircraft
hnd bombed Dublin and said when
the British bomb Irish territory
"one can see with what intent.")
The Eire government once be-
fore protested to Germany against
aerial bombings, following a series
of attacks on the night of Jan. 23.
Early Sunday foreign planes
which eluded searchlights but may
have been those responsible for the
Athlone bombing flew over Kings-
town, also south of Dublin, but
dropped no bombs.
Germany has accepted responsi-
bility for previous bombing of
Eire soil after protest* by the De
Valera government.
No. 1 Little Is
Shut In After
Quota Produced
DURANT, Ok., June 2—Pure
Oil company's No. 1 Little-210 in
se se nw of section 31, 5-7 was
still shut in Saturday with its al-
lowable already overproduced dur-
ing drilling process last week, and
is still pumping mud to kill off
Sycamore gas which blew out
twice this week. The gas has been
controlled and has not blown out
in the last two days, but it has not
been completely killed off yet.
The ocmpany's No. ;1 Little-208
in sw sw nw of section 27, 5-7
flowed 89 barrels of oil through
<5-64th inch choke in 24 hours
while waiting on cable tools to
complete. It was bottomed at 5,022
feet with rotary tools.
In a general increase of allow-
ables in most Oklahoma oil fields,
the Oklahoma conservation com-
mission this week raised the Cum-
berland field allowable 200 barrels
daily for June.
A new well, the No. 2 Thomp-
son-107 in ne nw ne of section
33, 5-7, Marshall county, was
spudded in Friday afternoon and
was drilling Saturday at 97 feet.
Meld operations in Bryan coun-
ty were:
No. 6 Little-106 in ne ns sw of
section 27, 5-7 was drilling at 3,
272 feet in the Woodford.
No. 7 Little-106 in sw nw nw
of section 34, 5-7 was drilling at
2,267 feet in the Pennsylvania.
No. 8 Little-106 in ne nw sw
of section 27, 5-7 was drilling at
1,755 in the Pennsylvania.
No. I Thompson-108 in sw ne ne
of section 28, 5-7 was drilling at
2,585 feet in the Mississippi-Can-
ey.
On the Marshall county side
operations were:
No. 2 Crisstnan-104 in ne se se
of section 20, 5-7 was drilling a;
2,257 in the Pennsylvania.
Fire Not
Caused By
Sabotague
blaze Could Have
Started From A
Cigaret, Say FBI
JERSEY CITY, N. J., June 2—
File Chief Frank Ertle estimated
today that damage from a fire
v hich swept eight blocks of the
Jersey City waterfront Saturday
night and still burned Sunday,
had caused damage in excess of
$25,000,000. Much of is was to de-
fense stores.
Federal Bureau of Investigation
agents, who automatically investi-
gate fires involving national de-
fense, were on hand. Ertle, de-
scribing it as the worst fire in the
history of Jersey City, said the
lause was not known, but added:
"Get sabotage out of your mind-
It could have been caused by a
discarded clgaret."
Starts in Cattle Pen.
The fire started in a cattle pen
hay loft on a pier at the foot of
Sixth street at about 6 p. m. Sat-
urday. A strong southeast wind
spread it over a six-block area
within an hour. Its destructive
progress was aided by a half dozen
explosions in an eight-story grain
elevator, where more than a mil-
lion bushels of grain had been
stored.
At times the flames mounted
1,000 feet in the air. Intense heat
kept firefighters from approaching
close enough to pour water on the
burning structures. They were
able to approach one warehouse in
which $25,000,000 worth of mer-
chandise, much of it intended for
shipment to Britain was said to be
stored. The building, a seven-story
brick, concrete and steel and sup-
posedly fireproof structure, still
was burning Sunday afternoon.
Most other buildings in the area
were leveled.
Thirty Tom of Water
The New York City fireboat,
Firefighter, was shooting water
into the building at the rate of
thirty tons a minute.
"This is the strongest building
in the east," Chief Ertle said.
"Any other structure in this area
would have collapsed long ago.
The water from the Firefighter id
hitting the walls of that building
with the force of a 300 mile an
hour wind "
More than 400 firemen worked
on land through the night and
Sunday, aided by two New York
fireboats, a half dozen Erie rail-
load tugs and six coast guard
boats.
Law Violations Is No
Longer Deferment Excuse
Revision of Selective Service
regulations, as a result of the mod-
ification of army requirements,
now will permit induction of many
registrants who had been barred
from military training because of
convictions of law violations, na-
tional headquarters, selective ser-
vice system announced today
the Denison area draft
Initial Bids On
Bomber Plant
Materials Issued
Lynn T. Webb, head of the ad-
ministrative division of the U. S.
engineer office, returned today
from San Diego, Calif., where he,
with Paul Dupont, chief of the
supply and cost section here, and
J. C. Sterling, chief of the supply
and cost section of the Tulsa dis-
trict, conferred with officials of
the Consolidated Aircraft corpor-
ation regarding purhase of approx-
imately $3,000,000 worth of indus-
trial supplies for the Fort Worth
and Tulsa bomber assembly plants
for the army.
Mr. Webb disclosed bids for
purchase of the supplies, including
drill presses, lathes, planes, shap-
ers, grinders, welding equipment,
metal cutting saws, type benders,
jig borers, electric hand drills and
miscellaneous machines, were is-
sued May 28. The initial bids cov-j
er only about $1,000,000 of the
equipment needed, he said, and
will be opened at the San Diego
plant of Consolidated Friday. Du-
pont and Sterling were retained at
the plant to supervise selection of
materials specified in the bids.
Other bids, Mr. Webb disclosed,
will be opened from time to time
as the materials are needed.
Six Furloughed
Katy Men Called
The Katy railroad today recall-
ed six furloughed employees to
work at the Denison carshops, ac-
cording to James R. Hayden, car-
shops superintendent.
National defense 'work has
greatly increased the need for
more cars, Mr. Hayden disclosed
and the men will be emplpyed on
caboose construction.. The super-
intendent stated that more em-
ployees would be recalled about
the middle of this month, and es-
timated the number re-employed
would rea?h fifty.
Invasion Expected
By July On Britain
NEW YORK, June 2—Johannes
Steel, radio commentator, said
today, on his arrival from Europe,
on the Dixie Clipper that certain
members of the British govern-
ment expected Great Britain to be
invaded in July.
Steele, who spent several weeks
in Ivondon, said also that the Por-
tuguese government, fearing Ger-
man invasion, had evacuated to
the Azores its standing army and
some official archives.
Aboard the clipper were sixteen
passengers from Lisbon, one from
Horta and twenty-five from Ber-
muda.
FORMER KAISER
P,ASSI-B ILLNESS
RAINFALL SUNDAY
MEASURES ONE INCH
One inch of rain fell Sunday
night in Denison, according to the
B. J. Lindsay gauge. The rain,
which began shortly after 7 p. m.,
fell in huge torrents, flooding
streets and avenues, but slacked
off during the latter part of the
right. Rainfall for the month of
May measured 2.49 inches ,the
Lindsay gauge recorded.
through
board.
vl'he changes have been made in
the regulations which define "class
IV-F: physically, mentally or mor-
aly unfit." They remove the
sweeping disqualifications of all
registrants who had been convict-
ed of "any crime which under the
laws of the jurisdiction in which
they were convicted is a felony."
This banned from military service
many men because of youthful
violations of the law which were
felonies in their states, but are
not generally classed as such
I he Reviled Regulations
The revised regulations now ban
specifically only those law violat-
ors who (1) have been convicted
of certain heinous crimes; (2)
have been convicted on two or
more occasions of offenses which
come under the generally accepted
definition of a felony; (3) are
chronic offenders with pronounc-
ed criminal tendencies and have
been convicted on at least three
occasions of offenses punishable'
by jail sentences; or (4) are be-
ing retained in the custody of any
court of criminal jurisdiction, or
other civil authority.
The heinous crimes named are:]
treason, murder, rape, kidnaping,
arson, sodomy, pandering, any
crime involving sex perversion, or
ajiy el'ime involving illegal deal-
ing in narcotics or other habit-
forming drugs.
The provision concerning de-
barment of any registrant who has!
been convicted on two or more oc-
casions of an offense which comes
under the generally accepted def-
inition of a felony specifies "any
offense for which he could have
been punished by death or con-
finement for a term exceeding one
year in a penitentiary or prison,"
but excludes "conviction for an
offense committed in violation of
the seletive training act of 1940
or the regulations prescribed pur-
suant thereto"
With regard to registrants who
are being detained in custody of a
court of criminal jurisdiction or
other civil authority, the revised
regulations provide that: "in the
event such court, or other civil
authority, releases such registrant
from custody, upon final adjudic-
ation or otherwise, such registrant
may be reclassified."
Other Provision*
Irrespective of these specific
provisions concerning laAv viola-
tors, the regulations as amended
also provide that any registrant
"who is found morally unfit for
bvHitary service" shall be placed
in Class IV-F, toegther with any
registrant "who is found, after
physical examination, to be phys-
ically or mentally unfit for nvili-
♦ary .service."
Class IV.F also includes any
registrant who has been dishonor-
ably dsicharged from the Army,
Navy, Marine Corps, or Coast
Guard, or has been discharged
because of "unoesirabflity or of
habits or traits of character."
Pontiff
Upholds
Freedom
Society Not An
End In Itself,
Declares Pope
VATICAN CITY, June 2—Pope
Pius XII defended the right and
duties of the individual and fami
lies against too extensive state in-
terference in a radio broadcast
Sunday commem-
orating the fif-
tieth anniversary
of Pope Leo
XIII's social en-
cyclical Reruin
Novarum.
The pontiff,
speaking in Ital-
vrit
//
We Were Lucky
To Escape/' Says
British Soldier
LONDON, June 2—Great Bri-
CAIRlO, Egypt, June 2—Blood-
tain today announced the surren- spattered British soldiers who es-
der of Crete to Adolf Hitler's air-leaped from a secret rendezvous in
bom invaders after twelve days of
the fiercest fighting of this war.
Fifteen thousand surviving imper-
rial troops were evacuated to
Egypt from a slaughter worse
than anything since Dunkerque.
Crete under cover of darkness,
said today that even the battle-
fields of Dunkerque and Greece
were nothing compared to this
show.
They have been streaming into
The war office, .announcing Cairo for several days, bootless,
Britain's fifth such retreat of the I exhausted and with Uniforms
war, told only of severe British stained by blood from their
losses in the Battle of Cete. But
informed observers predicted they
would exceed any since the Dun-
wounds dressed under machine-
gun fire.
"We were lucky to escape," they
kerque evacuation of a year ago,| said. "But we had to leave many
which cost Britain about 13,000 of our pals behind, either killed,
wounded or prisoners."
They told how, as the Germans
smashed across the rocky island
and it became apparent that the
to freedom in his! ormous in the war office state- j British could not hold it, Major
physical, spiritu-. ment describing one of the most Gen. Bernard C. Freyberg drew
casualties and 40.000 prisoners
lan over the Vat-j Enoamout Lo e .
ican radio, up- German losses,
held man's right planes, also were described as en
in
men and
Pod* Pius al and moral
movements.
He warned against the error of
the belief that the scope of man
on earth is society.
"Society is not an end in itself," i
valiant stands of the 21-month-old i up an evacuation plan.
conflict—a defense doomed in its The troops were moved to a £+•
early stages because the British cret beach rendezvous on the
and Greek allies on Crete werej southern coast while rear guards
without air strength to meet the held the Nazis in the hills and val-
leys.
ing sighted and the information
DEATH KOLL
German (Soldiers Acted Dop*<l
German bombers droned over
i constantly, trying to hunt out the
soldiers on the beaches, but many
of them were able to make their
way to sea in the darkness.
The theory that the German
.-oldiers had been doped—previous-
ly advanced by officers returned
from Crete—was put foward by
many survivors as an explanation
arid for many years a farmer in of the ferocious dynamism shown
Kaufman county. He died Sunday j by the invader^.
morning at a Dallas hospital of a | Many .said they were convinced
heart attack suffered more than a | that the air-borne advance guard
week go. For the last several years' had been drugged into a state of
he had been retired and resided! mad recklessness.
the, tit 3G14 Travis, Dallas. j While the Germans were able to
and j iMr. Greer was the son of thi-i throw in thousands and thousands
the Holy Father asserted.
The right and duty to work is
considered imposed upon man in
the first instance by nature, lie
said, "not by society as if mani
were nothing more than a mere| THOMAS A- GREER
slave or official of the commun-j J. Lee Greer, Denison Chamber
ity." | ol Commerce president, had been
It follows, he added, that "the' advised today of the death of his
duty and right to organize labor'brother, Thomas A. Greer, 63,
mediately interested; employers'former Dallas street car operator
and workers."
Ony when they fail to fulfill
their functions should the state in-
tervene, he declared.
The Pope defended the church's
right to say whether any given so
cial system harmonized with
unchangeable order of God and| >Mr. Greer was the son of the
laid down a series of moral prin-|late James E. Greer and Adeline'ft fresh troops as the fighting
ciples to govern use of material Kerley Greer, early Dallas county j grew in intensity, the Anglo-Greek
goods, labor and family. 'settlers. He was reared in and defenders were forced to fight
He defended private property asj near Dallas. | without rest.
the basis of the family, giving the1 Surviving Mr. Greer are three' "We had to keep fighting all the
father the healthly liberty hei sons, J. Howard Greer, Albert L.
needs to fulfill his duties as headi Greer and Thomas A. Greer, Jr; a
of a family. I daughter, Mrs. Thelma Monk;
He advocated the opening of j three sisters, Mrs. Walter Kynerd,
habitable regions and vital spaces I Mrs. Jess Greer and Mrs. Kate
now abandoned to wild nature] Frank and two brothers, J. E.
vegetation to immigrants. j Greer of Dallas and J. Lee Greer
"Thickly inhabited countries will! of Denison.
be relieved and their peoples will j Funeral services will be held at
acquire new friends in foreign
countries, and the stages which re-
ceive the immigrants will acquire
the Weiland funeral chapel, Dal-
time with men who had little
sleep and often had no real food
for days," an antiaircraft officer
said.
There wasn't a jest or a 3mfle
among the lads. Yet they did not
complain. All they did was repeat:
"If we'd only had air support."
One of them added, "if only we
had mined the airfields, the same
wouid
(Continued on page four)
5 Leap To Safety
As Train Hits Car
las, at 4 p. m. Monday and bur-j as we do at home, they
ial will be in Grove Hill cemetery ; never have been able to use them "
I An English antiaircraft gunner
MRJS J. D. HILL • who limped painfully along the
Loy Is Head Of
Fund Raisins
For Army Boys
DO<fRN. Holland, June 2—The
former Kaiser has passed the crisis)
of his illness and his condition to-
dnv was described as satisfactory.
He had been ill with a severe
cold, following many months of
frail health and last week grave
fears were held for his life because
of his advanced age of 82.
Another IFticiit Leader "Retifni"
POME, June 2—Ovaldo Sebas-
tiani, chief private secretary to
Mussolini has resigned for "per-
sonal reasons," an official an-
nouncement «aid today.
<?o«tnl Receipt* Cain
The Denison postoffice gained
a \1 per cent increase in postal
receipts during May, it is report-
ed by Acting Postmaster John H.
Parish, compnred with the same
month in 1940. Receipts for May,
this year, he said, totaled $6,-
496.44.
Appointment of Lute Loy aa|
general chairman of the fourth
congressional district in charge of
the United Service Organization
campaign for raising funds was
announced today. It is stated by
Mr. Loy that the quota for the
whole district is $17,250. Break-
ing down this amount to the sev-
eral counties, districts and towns
has yet to be done, but will be an-
nounced at the later dtfte, it is
declared.
The organization is formed
for the purpose of providing funds
for the boys in the camps of the
country and will take care of such
items as are necessary to furnish
them those needful things that are
not taken care of by the army
equipment. The movement came
as the anawer to the request of
people over the country who wish
to send funds to the boys to pro-
vide books, amusement and other
items which go to keep up the
morale of the boys from home.
Up until the forming of the U
S. O., several hundred organiza
tions were sending funds to be
used for the purpose of providing
for the boys those camp extras.
Now all funds for such purpose
will go through the U. S. O. No
charges will be made nor will any
member of the staff who will so-
licit the funds from the people, i*
is specifically pointed out. All
nirney will go to the boys in camp.
The onganization is whoJIy one
of volunteer service and carries
no remuneration of any kind for
any one, and those giving to the
cause are assured that it will all
Co to the boyi.
W. 11. Kelly, of Tulsa, his wife,
mother-in-law and two children,
leaped to safety Sunday morning
and escaped death as the south-
bound Katy Limited came thunder-
ing toward their stalled truck at
the Hull street crossing abou 9:40
o'clock.
Engineer E A. Hoskins and
Fireman F. A. Ramsey failed to
bring the huge train's locomotive
to a halt in time, resulting in
crashing the rear end of the 1941
model pickup truck. Slight dam-
age was done to the locomotive.
A resident of Denison nine
I years, Mrs. J. D. Hill, 82, died
j Saturday at her home, 428 E. Par-
! nell, following an illness of two
weeks.
1-iuneral services were held Sun-
day afternoon at 1:30 from Short-
Murray chapel, Rev. Bruce Hib-
bitt officiating. Interment was at
a Coleman, Okla., cemetery, Short-
Murray directing.
Mrs. Hill was born Oct. 21,
1858, at Princetown, Penn , daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. James Braddu.
She was married to Mr. Hill at
gangway of a rescue ship said,
"Their technique was perfect.
They had every gun position pho-
tographed and then sent over
swarms of dive bombers until they
silenced u* "
City Jail Is
Almost Filled
With Violators
City police were pondering to- I
Colbert, Jan. 20, 1880 and after' day whether to request an addi-
residing at Durant for several Itl0n ^or 'h'1 citv jail as the hastily
vears, came to Denison She was t almost filled with sixteen
a member of the Baptist church I drunks, vagrants and would-ke
Surviving are two sons, Charlesl burglars.
and Ted, both of iDurant, four1 rh<* <rowd wer« Pick«d
The train was delayed several ] dauchters, Mrs. G. W Hardy of UP ov''^ the week-end and ^ait
minutes while Conductor Ben ^ j l^onison, Mrs. A N Bauman of
Boydstun and Brakeman J. A. Durant> Mrs .Ella Fillmore of Mil-
Heacher, with the engineer, con-jburT1i ok)a snd Mrs Resgje Mo
ducted investigations of the cci-,Nee|y of j^bbock
dent. I ■
LEO STEWARD
PAUL HRHMM"E*.MAN
ATTENDING WATER SCHOOL
1
in? trial before Police Judge C. B.
Carroll Tuesday. The majority
were drunks, with vagrants com-
ing in second.
Among the prisoners was a self-
styled "Brown Bomber," negro
Leo Steward, infant son of Mr. youth arrested for fighting at a ne-
and Mrs. Frank Steward of Ha-j gro beer tavern and a 17 year old
german, died this morning at 6 youth arrested by C. H. Hender-
Paul Bremmerman, Jr., is in I o'clock at Hagerman, shortly after son, Clarence Faecke and Cecil
Austin today representing the Red! birth. Interment and funeral set'- ^ Taylor for attempted burglary
River Valley Boy Scout council at | vices were held at Basin Springs j when he \vn reported by neigh-
a nationa acquatic school being, cemetery, west of Pottsboro with Von for breaking windows of the
taught by Fred Miller of New I short-Murray directing j American legion hall. The reason
York, national Boy Scout health] The infant is survived by hi- for the three offirt-r* arresting the
director, at Camp I parents and grandparents, Mr, and
| Mrs. J. 11. Steward of Hagerman-
was sent to the ■■■
and scafety
Wooten.
Bremmerman
vouth. it is explained, was that
they didn't know what to expect
until the call w-as investigated.
Four of the group, arretted for
camp by the council because of hi* PATRICK flENRY GREEN
selection as assistant waterfront] Patrick Henry Green, retireo non payment of old fines, were
instructor for the annual outing at Katy section foreman, of Milford.J sent out with a work crew today
Camp Grayson the latter part of, Texas, died this morning at 9:45, to clean up Oakwood cemetery,
this month. The Denieonian is en-1 at a local hospital Funeral ar-
tering as a post-graduate, having] rangements, to be in charge of
already received his senior Red Short-Murray, are pending arrivil
Cross card for life saving here. * of his children.
If yeu de net receive year
before 5 .V), please phene 100 aatf
1 ene will fee sent yr ,
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Anderson, LeRoy M. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 289, Ed. 1 Monday, June 2, 1941, newspaper, June 2, 1941; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth328250/m1/1/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.