The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 45, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 16, 1941 Page: 1 of 4
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WEATHER
DENISON AND VMWITY
Partly cloudy, not much change
in temperature tonight, Sunday.
The Denison
PUBLISHED DAILY KXCITT
«UMDAY .
YOUR HOME-OWNCD
DAILY MEWSTAPEJt
Aj. JJ
86c PER MONTH
REPRESENTATIVE OF THE UNITED PRESS
DENISON, TEXAS SAT., AUGUST 16th, 1941
WEEKLY FOUNDED 1930— DAILY 1904
VOL. 8—NO. 45
U. S., Britain Plan Confab With Soviet Union
Many Entries Arc
Listed For Labor
Day Parade Here
H. Gilmore Webster
/
New President For
Citizens Nat. Bank
Sixten floats, 69 decorated cars said, but many more organizations
and 11 walking delegations com- have not listed their parade entries
posedo of over 6,500 union em- with the committee and as it takesI
ployees of this area are considerable time to segregate and f ^
already assured for the line-up a five-mile parade he is-|
proposed five-mile parade up Main sued the appeal that the entries
street for the Labor Day celebra- be listed at once. Deadline for en-
tion here Sept. 1, according to tries, he said, Is Monday, Aug. 25-
Carson Sebers, parade chairman, j Other than Sebers, the committee
This is a fine start, Mr. Sebers is composed of Paul Borum, Verne
Murray, Jerome MciKnney, Adolph
Johnson, Harold Schmitzer, Ralph
Geisenhoner, Joe D. May, John T.
NaH, George Holland, Fred Conn
and Raymond Howard.
Gigantic Affair.
The parade is not confined
strictly to labor union alone, the I
H. Gilmore Webster, of Hunts- Mr. Webster will succeed the late
ville, TexasT, has been named as Ford Seaie, who served as presi-
the new president of the Citizens^ tent of the local institution for
National bank, it became known .several years and who came to
here Saturday shortly before noon.1 Denison from Garland.
Mr. Gilmore is expected to take
( EVERYDAY
DENISON
By
PAT PERRY
Unfair" Barber
Shops May Be
Picketed Monday
Smolensk
Cost Nazi
Millions
Union JShops Hike
Haircut Price To
15 Cent Increase
his position with the Citizens Nn
tional about the first of Octo-
ber, it is understood.
Mr. Gilmore is a strong bank
man with wide experience and
started his career in Whitewright
and is a Grayson county boy. He
acepted his first banking position
with the Planters National bank
Germany Launches
Fourth Large Scale
Offensive Today
Question Of Resources
Proiiding Maximum Of
War Supplies, Discussed
MDSCOW, Aug. 16—The bitter-
ly-contested battle of Smolensk
which saw the city change hands
repeatedly in 30 days of bloody
house«to-house fighting was re-
ported to have "cost the Germans
hundreds of thousands killed and
wounded."
The first detailed Russian de-
scription of the battle was con-
tained in an official dispatch from
a Russian general.
™ . „ ., j~, ! " T7"T I chairman stated, and if open to a"
x)om milady s egs to sode'3 . .. .... , , .
„ . f, ... ... , organizations friendly to labor,
powder bag, old silk stacking? for T. „ A
j. . j 1 he parade this year, he said, u
defence will be the new?st project i. . ., . ... '
to be sponsored by the Veteran, t0 befassem^ed as one of the most
of Toreign Wars with collection to' ^antic and spectacular events
i ever to be held in Denison. "Give
at Whitewright and rose to cash-
ier. He married a Whitewright
girl, Miss Alamo Sloan, and has a
daughter.
He left Whitewright about ten
years ago to accept a position with
Pickets are to be placed aboutj ^he Huntsville National and some No Spectacular Keaulu.
several barber shops here early| nionths back was elected to the BERLIN, Aug. 16—The Ger-
next week, unless they comply in i position of acting vice-president mans appeared today to
ihe meantime with the union I 0f the bank. 1 loosed a fourth grjnd offensive
scale of 50 cents for haircuts, I He has several friends in this center on the southern, western
Clarence Duckworth, president of city, among: them being former and northern approaches to Lenin-
the barber's local, said today. ; Whitewright people all of w'iom grad, while the available evidence
Employment On
Flying School
Reaches 944
Eleven Barracks
Are Practically
Complete Today
A total of 944 carpenters, la-
borers and electricians are now
employed at the Grayson county
flying school south of Pottsboro,l
have records of the three unions here i
Meeting ii Result Of (Talk Of
Roosevelt and Churchill While At Sea
WASHINGTON, Aug. 1G--Preb- tives meet with him in Moscow to
ident Roosevelt and Prime Minis-] discuss al'.o -ation of war supplies
ter Winston Churchill had follow-' to the Soviet Union.
ed up their historic S2a conference: The me sage made public he e
today with a jo,'lit proposal to was delivued to Stalin by the Aro-
I'remier Joseph St.a 'ij that h;gh erican and .•it'tish ambassadors in
British and Amur lean reprcsenta-) Moscow.
I The two leaders of the western
Crvntr *•# «« Rpr# c«A« 1 ?owers J,ra'<:t'1 thu sPlendid <*•-
IxCCCSoCo ^ fense of the Soviet Union against
the Nazi .ittac't and asserted that
the United Stains and LiriUin wc re
co-operating to "provide you the
(Continued on page four)
Rayburn Returns
To Native Texas
start soon . . . Just to demon-' ., . , • •'« - —— ——^ j « ^n. r--i— — «— ••—- —
,an J us equipment, he pointed outj The majority of union shops, in' aay he is an exceptionally fine clt- indicated their thrusts into the Uk-
U ! "nnH WP will chnw vnn a eirrVif f/■>' I -1L *. . . i i i _ • . r a.! i__i a i a.
strnie that Nazi bomber* can1
stop shell production, we ran'
"and we will show you a sight to!
teres* this news item: A man sav-' beho!d' wfith j!""* of, hot, ba,nd
ed n chicken from a bombed house' T r ,n V ST* bC"
in nn East English xo-.vn. It' tW'e" the °F m°re d'V"'0nS- .
promptly laid an egg . . . Ten °n?anixations sponsoring entr.e3
thus far are listed as:
Painters and paperhangers. float
and walking delegation; Sherman
(Continued on page f' uri
Electrical
Workers Sent
To Kansas
accordance with agreement, went jzen and business man.
raine for the time being at least
up to the 50 cent price Friday, His first position in Whitewright i were producing no spectacular re-
Mr. Duckworth revealed, an in-1 Vvas that of rural letter carrier. su]t
crease of 15 cents over the pre*, Having ambitions to enter the
vious price. Shaves remain at 25 world of business, he took a cor-
cents.
The 50-cent haircut charge was
maintained here from 19IS to
Berlin itself had little word to
give to general operations in the
respondence course with a com- south, other than to repeat the
panion, E. J. Lilley, now manager I standing claim of some days that
of the Wolens store here. After] pressure was being increased up-
completing his course he secured a(0n the Black Sea ports of Odessa
painters and paperhangers, float (depression which required a
and walking delegation; Chamber iower price, Duckworth said. The] position in one of the stores ini,nd Nikolacv and that the Re<'
of Commerce, float; bu'iding and 35C charge prevailed here several Whitewright and later entered thoj retrent was being hampered by
construction laborers, flont and| years_ The president said the un-i employ of the Planters Nationalj violent bombing attack.
1500 walkiing delegation; Interna- jon Relieves the 15-cent increase, brink of that city. He left there, German planes attempted ta
tional carpenters, Sherman, floatj rt tUrnincr the price to normal, is| to enter the employ of the Hunts- raid Moscow during Friday riight
and walking delegation; Denison fajra nd will meet the approval of^ ville bank and has been with them hut an official announcement said
International carpenters, float and^ penisonians. "Wages for mosft oth- for ten years. Jail craft of the small attacking
•Mr. Webster, with his wife and| force were dispersed and prevent-
child are expected to reach thej e(j from reaching the city.
Nine members of the local elec-
trical workers union have beenj 100 walking delegation I pr groups have been restored to
sent by Roger Q. Evans, business] Klectrical workers, local No.] pre.(iepression levels and many
agent for the local, to assist in the, 338, three decorated cars; barbers, ^een ;ncreased beyond that
construction work going on at thej local No. 395, Denisor., decorated| point „ pXpia;ned,
big ammunition plant at Indepen-| car and walking delegation; build-; nuckworth-pointed out that bar-
denee, Kas., it was learned today.l ing and trades council, decorated bpr supp]je3 and equipment have1 church life.
They are E. E. Kertinson, Bert'car, motion pictu'-e operators,1 il)Creased from 35 to 50 per cent] =:
Crofut and George Black of Den-| float and two decorated cars; Op-, and the increased hair-cut charge Roa frl
-,nd John F. Owen, E. E. Wil- j erating engineers, Local No. 819,| wag necessary to offset this. | J
WASHINGTON, Aug 16--With
disclosed today. I both senate and house in rece-ss—
Carpenters now assigned on bar-] the house unti'l Sept. 15 and the
racks, mess halls, hospital and senate for an indefinite period, or
ison
liams of Sherman, H. O. and O.1 float and mechanical equipment. | "'^"president indicated that jR^organized, First
city about the fisrt of October. |
He is a member of the Methodist Nude Women D*coy§.
church and is active in civic and MOSCOW, Aug. 16—Germany
is sending nude women to distract
Russian troops in battle, a dis-
patch said today.
It said a division, presumably]
i
W. Padgett of Durant, J. A. Aus-
tin, Fort Wortha nd H. E. Hall of
Corpus Christi, all of whom have
been working out of the local un-
ion at the basic flying field pro-
ject.
Brotherhood of Locomotive Fire- sf)me sj,opg had not planned to
men and Enginemen, local No. 8; niPPt the union demands, but in j | ir)*}£ ^.'lnCe 1919
ten decorated cars; B. of L. F. & fairness to other shops pickets
E.,'Local No. 776, nine decorated wouI(J hp
necessary unless they |
cars; Boy Scouts, 150 walking del-, complied- I
■■ it
other units number 460 of which
thirty were sent out today by the
Denison and Sherman locals, Geo.
Shields, busines agent, reported.
Mr. Shields disclosed eleven two-
story barracks were practically
complete today.
Roger Q. Evans disclosed he, has
sent out 24 elctricians and has de-
ceived a call from Ball and Cen-
tral, housing contractors on the
project, for five more men Mon-]rtay periods unti! Sept. 15
day. Wiring is placed in the
buildings as quickly as carpenters'
work permits, he said.
Four hundred and sixty labor-
ers, supplied by Denison and Sher-
man locals, are now employed, ac-
cording to figures of C- A. Swink,
business agent here. Twenty-five
laborers were sent out Friday, he
said. 1
until the finance committee re-
ports the national defense tax bill
—most member? of congress plan-
ned to visit their districts and dis-
cuss pending legiv'ation and ques-
tons of national and international! khaki-clad suspects
Young Bride's
Skull Crushed;
Su&pect3 Held
J.UFKIN, Tex., Aug. 1C—Two
were ques-
tioned by county officers her
day in connection with the fatal
bludgeoning Thursday of Mrs. Rojr
Morehouse, 19-year bride of four
in Finland, brought hundreds of
camp followers from Hamburg.
T)urinc a recent battle the women,
naked, waded into a river defended
LABOR DISPUTE AGrMN
FACES DISNEY STUDIOS
HOLLYWOOD, Calif., Aug.
16—Walt Disney studio may be
shut down temporarily, officials
said, unless its disputes with the
A. F. of L. Screen Cartoon Guild
For the first time since it was
egation; 40th battalion, Texas De-
A total of 25 men are now em- fense Guards, commanded by Ma-1
ployed on the local project,
Evans stated today.
Mr.
£>>13 Nazi Planes
Shot Down By
Poilsh Airmen
jor John 'T. Nail, 200; Meat Cut-
ters & Butchers of Sherman, float
and walking delegation; Interna-
tional Typographical Union, dec-
orated car.
International Plumbers local, 2 announced today the Denison Cot-
Cotton Gin To
Be Opened Soon
Rosser Bell, of Preston Bend,
floats, 5 decorated cars; Mainten-
ton Gin would be ready for oper-
ation early next week.
Work of installation of an ov-
erhead cleaner, weighing several
■ established' in 11919, the Denison
(Fairview-Oakgrove Cemetery as-
j sociation was reorganized by the
city council Friday afternoon.
R. T. Arthur, secretary of the
board, asked the council to name
a successor to fill the vacancy
caused by the death of Julian C.
Fetid. In checking its records,
the council found the original or
dinance granting annual election
of three members one year ynd
by Russian troops. The Germans. | "on be settled,
depending on the women to divert
the Russians' attention, attempted
j a crossing at another part of the
stream. Dispatches said the Rus-
sians were "not fooled.
ance of Way local^ float and 14
decorated cars; Independent Order
_ of Oddfellows and Rebekahs lodge
I. N, Aug. 16 Royal Air, f|oat and walking delegation; Sher-
Force fleet of more "
bombers, followed a daylight | walking delegation; Fred W\ Wil-'bale of cotton, expected about Sep-1 the board
sweep of North France in which a son post> American LeRion( float;! tember 1. The first bale last year1 Elected for the one year
Order of Rainbow Girls, float, five was brought in August 24.
DENISONIAN RECEIVES
REPLY TO OLD NOTE
Five years ago Ennis Ray Simp-
son, 17-year-old son oflMrs. W. C.
300 East Pheppaid, dropped a bot-
tle with a note corked inside, into
„ .tons, is near completion, he said four members for two year.-, and Red |River with his name and ad
than 300 man mjj| workers union, float and, and would be ready for the first( immediately began
Polish squadron shot down
term
were Mr. Arthur, Mrs. W. J.
reorganizing^ dregg durin)!r the dedication of the
new free bridge opening on high
1 way 75.
ply.
When the guild ended its long
strike recently, both sides agreed
that some of the nearly 1,000
employees would have to be
laid off. But the guild contends
loo many strikers on a lay-off list
of 260.
f?tudio officials claim better
employees aid not strike, and
iiriy that explains the large per-
c entage of strikers on the list.
policy tvith their constituents.
There will be no recess for longer
than three days, but a few mem-
bers of the hous? will remain in
Washington and necess for three-1 months.
| Mrs. Morehouse, 1940 Huntinjt-
Most Texas members of the[ton high school graduate, was
house plan brief visits to Texas found dead in the kitchen of her
and many of them departed forj farm home two miles east of Luf-
their homes Friday night. Others, kin Thursday by her husband, a
will leave Washington Saturday, I ffrocery truck driver when he re-
or within the next few days. | turned home from work- Her
Speaker Sam Rayburn will leave skull was crushed.
Saturday night for his home atj Justice of Peace Josh Cochran,
Bonham. He probably will not re- who returned an inquest verdict of
turn to Washington until just be-l murder, said she apparently had
fore Sept. 15. been dead eight or ten hours when
Senators Tom .Connally and W.Jshe was found.
Lee O'Daniel will remain in Wash- Mrs. Morehouse was struck
ington. Senator Connally is a three times on the hend with a
member of the senate finance! heavy weapon, Sheriff H. C. Bil-
committee, now conducting hear-| lingsley reported. No weapon wai
ing? on the defense tax bill, and found at the scene, he declared.
still
the
j Senator O'Daniel has just recently) The sheriff said officers
for
Railroad Whittling Reduced.
Following a request of citizens^ r:5o, it is believed
residing in southeast Denison, the]
Katy, Frisco and Southern Pacific
come to Washington from Texas were without a motive
and said he was devote most of his slaying.
time to study of pending legisla-j Besides her husband, surviyon
tion. I include her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
J. C. Johnson; one brother, one
Officials of the Katy railroadj sister and a grandmother, all of
here said today Rayburn would] Huntington.
probably use regular equipment] Funeral services were held here
and not charter a special car as Friday
they had received no information
concerning his movements. If the
speaker left Washington tonight, j
in all probability, he would arrive,
in Denison aboard the Katy Texas]
Special Monday morning about
British Ships
Shfllecl Fri. Nile
fperman planes, attacked a Han-' deoorated Cars; Guy F. Atkinson! Delay this year has been caused Leeper and Mrs. B. J. Lindsayi( Retty j0
W^ver, Matdeburg and Brunswick c(>mpanyi fleet of trucks and worklhv proper poisoning for boll wee-! for two year term the board nam- Texa_s wro
1 orated cars.
during the night.
The air ministry said many fires] .^"Helpers,* 3 flonta.
were started and that those at clprks 12 decorated cars;
Hanover were 'especially large." man telpphone operators, 5
British attacks centered on cen-
tral and northwest Germany and
authoritative forces disclosed that
not only were attacking formations]
strong, but they dropped the heav-i
iest bombs Britain had. The raidl
caused an air alarih in Berlin but|
the capital was not the Brkishl
target.
City In Quandry
About Trucks
The city council Friday after-
noon was in quandry as petitions
of citizens were read by City Sec-
retary Clyde Wideman.
A petition signed by sixty-one
Friday he received <a re- railroads have been requested to] Dallas Murderer
| reduce their train whistling in that: . .
Ford, 14, 'of Sumner, area as much as possible, it was! ^jtlll At Large
rote Simpson her father revealed att he city council meet-,
equipment; Teamsters, Chauffeurs! vils, which is now on the govern-1 ed Everett Hopkins, Harry K. found the bottle while fishing. 'ing Friday afternoon
Retai^ ment's priority list.
Sher^of the poison has been great cur-, Knaur.
Manufacture i Steele, George Morgan and S. C.
dec- tailed, he said, due to
production.
defense
ARSON, BOMBINGS, ANTI-JEW
VIOLENCE SPREADS IN VICHY
will suffer if disorders continue
An order issued by Adolf Hit-
residents of Crawford asked thuti ler's military commander in
truck routes be changed to some, France, Gen. Heinrich Stulpnaget.
other street. Another petition,! announced that anyone guilty of
signed by eighty-one residents of communist disorders such as oe-
Chestnut street, protested any con-, curred in Paris Wednesday, will
templated move of the council of bo executed by a firing sqaud.
German authorities in the north-
ern province of Lorraine, exacting
reprisals for the flight of able-
bodied youths to unoccupied
France, ordered the deportation
and splitting up of their families
unless the sons returned by mid-
night Friday.
Stulpnegel's stern order appar-
ently resulted from riotinf Wed-
VICHY, France, Aug. 16—Out- nesday around the Saint I^zaire
breaks of arson, bombings and railroad station and Saint Denis
anti-Jewish violence spread gate—blamed on "Jews and corn-
through both Nazi-held and unoc-' munists."
cupied France today. A spread of arson was reported
German military authorities ^ from both zones of France, direct-
warned bluntly that the entire ed mostly against nrms plants and
population of the occupied zone; other war industries which are un
Steele, clerk in the Katy division
superintendent's office, was nam-
ed as Feild's successor and Hop-
kins vice-president of the State
National bank, will replace Ben
Russel.
The board will elect officers at
its next meeting.
Truck Line Men
To Discuss Defense
Movements 20th
EFFORTS MADE TO DELETE
PART OF O'DANIEL'S TALK
HUNTSVILLE, Tex., Aug. 16 -
Warden W. W. Waid of the Texas
penitentiary said today that Roly
Lynch, 31, Dallas murderer, ap-
parently had made good his escape
but said that state and local of-
ficers were on guard along high-
ways and side roads.
Lynch made a break late Thurs-
i FOLKESTONE, England, Aug.
jlfi—German long-range guns on
the French coast shelled British
ships in the straits pf Dover for
almost an hour FYiday night, fir-
ing- two-gun salvos almost every
minute.
Guns at Cap Gris Nez ended
their bombardment with n four-
Tun salvo and a few minutes Jater
the battery at Calais fired two
shells. Crowds gathered on the
cliffs of Folkestone and Dover to
watch the action.
Two small ships in Ih? channoi
scurried to port with shells explod-
ing around them, but they arrired
routing trucks and busses on that
street. Promising to study the pro-
posals, the council ndjourned
witheut solving the problem.
Engineers Anign Electrician.
Julius W. Champion, 201 W.
Sears, was assigned as an electric-
ian by the U- S- Engineer office
today.
der German control.
An important electrical parts
plant on the Boulevard La Mo-
reaux in one of the Paris Red su-
AUSTIN, Tex., Aug. 16—Lynn
B. Shaw, general manager of the
Texas Motor Transportation asso-
ciation, announced today that lead-
ers in the Texas trucking industry
would convene in DaflaSTSug. 20
to discuss priorities on equipment
H'ifci which had important war or- and parts that vitally affect the
ders was set afire. Three men who national defense program and the
ran from the plant as the flames movement of defense merchandise,
spread were fired on by police, but( Movement of thousands of
escaped, it was reported. I troops on army maneuvers and the
Another mystery fire destroyed shipment of large quantities of
the Graff factories at Versailles,1 material for defense industries has
outside Paris, with 2,500,000 presented a serious problem for
francs loss. Another blaze destroy- the motor transportation industry,
ed a convent at Selingnan, near! Shaw said.
Bourg en Brease, which is north Also up for discussion by direct-
IDALLAS, Tex., Aug. 16—Last so the people did not know where^ day with two other convicts, but. apparentiv untouched.
minute efforts were being made in he was." j his companions were crptured- 1
Texas today to delete part of Sen- Germany said he believed 0'- They were HarrV'Weaver ard Har- DE1SISONIANS RECEIVE
ator Lee 0'l)aniel's transcription' iiiel ha(j made the ^a^cription1 ry Smith' both «ervinP twoyMr, MARRIAGE (LICENSES OK LA.
to the broadcast over the radio . ...... , , I sentences for robbery. Three rounles of Denison and
Sunday in the Lone Star State, in '« Washington several days ago.j Thp conv!ct, cut a hoi, in the|vj ^suVd maSVI-
which the senator said that "Pres-( thinking that President Roosevelt roof 0f the prison stora building eensc? al Durant this week, rec-
ident Roosevelt thought it best to tfone on a fishing trip. He said j outside the penitentiary walls and ordg compiiod by Dewey Loper,
hide out and take to the high seas" | O'Daniel "was only jesting." | leaped into the yard of J. E. Rain- Rrvall county cierk, indicated to-
after hearing that O'Daniel was "(Later, when it was learned < er. Weaver was captured by da^,
coming to Washington. I what the President's mission was,^,^,. a„d Smith was taken by a Receiving the licenses wefe:
E. B. Germany, state demo-1 «"d the seriousness of the occasion ?uard at Wynee prison farm near c, . R|mpr clBrk prison ,nd
cratic chairman and friend of the senator probably thought it not, here. ; Miss Bettje Smith, 18, Sadler.
Voin Clyde WiThum, 22 and
O'Daniel, tacitly admitted in Dal-, wise to jest about a thing so seri-l
las that he had wired radio sta-, ous and hence wanted it changed."
tions planning to broadcast the Germany said-
transcription asking them to delete
one paragraph.
One telegram signed E. B. Ger-
many and received by a radio sta-
tion quoted the part to be deleted
as follows: "Maybe he (President
Roosevelt) had read what some of
PIPE EXTENSION ON
ACHBSON SEWAGE GRANTFD
The speech is due to be broad- To facilitate proper
cast Sunday. Radio operators said, drainage, a request of City Fngin-
it is possible to delete one para-' eer A. L. Cornell for permission to
graph or parts of a transcription' purchase 164 feet of four-inch pipe
so that the audience will not know! to extend on present pipe on East
it has been cut. | Acheson street, was granted by
During his campaign for the j the city council Friday afternoon,
the Texas political newspapers', senate, O'Daniel frequently said Mr. Cornell said the lift pump
printed about me and got the idea he was going to Washington to'0f the overflow well in that area
M'ss Doris Ruth Moore, 19, Deftl-
sewage Ru0Ver, 3S and Mils Lillian
1 had horns and thought it best to | "twist the tails of the pussy-foot-
hide out and take to the high seas ing politicians." Last Sunday he
made his first talk by radio, also
of Lyons and close to the boun-|ors will be the matter of compen-j before I arrived. The folks around
dary between Nazi-held and unoc-sation insurance on movement of * is thc «"t time any by transcr.pt,on, since he ha, been
cupied Prance. / defense merchandise j President ever got completely lost a senator
was not always in proper working
condition and by extension of 154
feet of pipe it would carry drain-
age beyond present housing. The
cost was estimated al |20.
Blanks, 36, Denison.
t awnmower Stol«n
A rubber-tired lawnnvower
was stolen sometime during the
last eight or ten days, police ret-
old- showed today.
NOTICE-
If y>nu do not receive your
before fi -80, please phone S00
j nne will be sent yo - t
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Anderson, LeRoy M. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 45, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 16, 1941, newspaper, August 16, 1941; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth328313/m1/1/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.