The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, September 8, 1950 Page: 2 of 4
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FACE TWO
THE bENlSON PRESS, bENtSON, TEXAS
THE bENISON PRESS
"Entered as second class matter May 15, 1947, at
the Po t Office at Denison, Texas, under the act
of March 3. 1879."
LEROY M. ANDERSON Editor and Publisher
V i
is announced. Of cOUrse theire is no sug-
gestion that since the campaign is using
bogus Confederate money the whole thing
will be something you can't cash.
OUR DEMOCRACY
by Mai:
Telephone No. 300
Offic* of Publication 206 W.
Issued Each Friday
Main
1MIONAI ADVERTISING tfMKSCNTAltVt
WEMTISIMC
chicago detroit new york
It seems rather incongruous to some
of the old timers who recall that the build-
ing now known as the Security building
was at one time a four-story affair and ev-
ery floor was loaded with hardware, and
farm implements with several drummers
on the road, for the same Denison to be
seeking even a small dealer in farm im-
plements as compared to what we at one
time had.' The old Hall-Leeper Hardware
concern was something in these parts in
those days.
331
mem&ir
Dedicated to clean and responsive government,
to individual and civic integrity; to individual and
civic commercial progress.
BOX NUMBERS, Care Denison Press, will be given
advertisers desiring blind addresses.
ERRORS: The Denison Press will not be re-
sponsible for more than one incorrect insertion.
CLOSING HOUR: Copy received by 9 a. m. will
be published the same day.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By the month 20c
By the year $2.50
One year in advance ... $2.00
Six months in advance ... ................. $1.00
(Outside county add 25c each six months)
OUT OF TOWN ORDERS for classified ads ~
strictly payable in advance.
CANCELLATIONS must be received by 19 a. m.
in order to avoid publication in current issue.
CHARGE ACCOUNTS are acceptable from persons
having telephone listed in their own name and up-
on agreeing to remit when bill is presented. 10 per
cent will be added on upaid private accounts after
30 days from date of first insertion.
Any erroneous statement reflecting upon the
character or reputation of any persons will be
gladly corrected if brought to the attention of the
publishers. The Denison Press assumes no respon-
sibility for error in advertising insertions beyond
the price of the advertisement.
Spreading Southern Advantages
Southern manufacturers are launch-
ing what is termed a "huge publicity cam-
paign" and as a device to catch the eye
thousands of bogus Confederate ten dollar
bills are being distributed. The idea is to
call attention to the South as a place for
the area's many advantages both as a place
to live and as a location for industry. More
than $15,000 in prizes will be awarded, it
Now comes the news that students
from the University of Connecticut will
make Denison as a segment of their sight-
seeing trip next spring. The students of
the colleges of the north and their dads
are always welcome down south way. If
they knew as much about the South and
its habits as the South knows about the
Yankee brother and his habits, we would
not hear so much about the "negro prob-
lems," and some of the other problems
which the man from across the Mason and
Dixon line has fancied. A man from the
North visiting in the southland is not the
subject of stares and quizzes about the
"wild east." But let a man from the
South go North and he is stared at, quizzed
and classed as a cowboy or a shootin' son
of a gun.
Any time in the future you want to
brand a party as being the incarnation of
a blocker who violates all the ethics of
lair play and who stops at nothing to
spread a doctrine of false representation
in an effort to discount the truth—just
call him a Malik.
Only in America can the people give
the President and all the members of his
cabinet, along with a lot of senators and
congressmen the very dickens for marplot-
ting, lackadaisicalness, blundering and
general inefficiency in safeguarding the
Nation against the attacker and the great
mass of its citizens not only not arrested
for expressing their views, but they will
also buckle up their fighting armor and
go across the waters even to make their
country safe for their democratic heritage.
when you cook on a modern automatit
Imagine being cool, relaxed and rested after preparing a lavish
seven-course dinner. Sounds like fiction, but it's fact . . . with
a new electric range! Cooking electrically is now a small matter
of turning a switch. You just prepare the food ... set the auto-
matic oven control that maintains an even, uniform heat . . .
and dependable, low-cost electricity does the rest. No fuss, no
bother . . . perfect results every time. Your kitchen remains
degrees cooler, because your electric range is insulated to keep
heat inside. Then, too, its high-speed cooking units are in direct
contact with the cooking vessel, so very little heat escapes
around or up the sides. No wonder, the happiest, best cooks
choose modern electric ranges!
ING 1
Gene Kelly Supports Kids* Day
across this bridge the race citizens ok two
NCIGHBORINO DEMOCRACIES PASS F.tCELV BACK AND PORTH
AS THEIR. WORK OR. THEIR. PLAY REQUIRE.
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TEXAS POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8,
OUT OF
GODFREY'S
TEABA6
Everybody's back from vacation
so exhausted they have to gti
away and take a rest.
THE PEACE BRIDGE- OVER THE NIAGARA RIVER AT BUFFALO, My, -
IS A TIE BETWEEN TWO PEOPLES WHOSE WAVS AND INTEREST#
MAV DIFFER., BUT WHO LIVE IN HARMONY BECAUSE THEIt,
CONCEPTS OF DEMOCRACY ARE THE SAME.
CITATION BY PUBLICATION
THE STATE OF TEXAS
To: Albeit T. Bain GREETING:
. You are commanded to appear
and answer the plaintiff's petition
at or before 10 o'clock A. M. of
the first Monday after the ex-
piration of 42 days from the date
of issuance of this Citation, the
same, being Monday the 2nd day
of October, A. D., 1050, at or
before 10 o'clock A. M., before
the Honorable District Court of
Grayson County, at the Court
House in Sherman, Texas.
Said Plaintiff's petition was
filed on the 4th day of August,
1950. The file number of said
suit being No. 58308.
The names of the parties in said
suit are: Velma Bain as Plaintiff,
and Albert T. Bain as Defendant.
The nature of said suit being
substantially as follows, to-wit:
Divorce on grounds of cruel treat-
ment.
Issued this the 15th day of
August, 1950.
Given under my hand and seal
of said Court, at office in Sher-
man, Texas, this the 15th day of
August A. D., 1950.
S. V. Earnest, Clerk. District
Court, Grayson County, Texas
By Iva Davidson, Deputy. 8-4t
The Low Down
From Hickory Grove
• •
A bunch of dairymen had a
meeting here at Hickory! last week.
One milk and butter man said that
our Govt, has over 100,000,000
pounds of butter on its hands that
is so strong that Sambo has to tap
it on the head each morning to
l<eep it quiet. That is what the
man said—exactly.
Now, what I am driving at is
this—if Govt, management of but-
ter is so lame, then how-come any-
body, anywhere can be in favor
of putting Sambo further into ev-
en more technical and difficult
tasks. In this broad land more
folks must decide to listen less to
will-o-the-wisp theories—and de-
vote more time to pondering. Folks
who have an off-shoot growing up
and who would like to sec their
little "Butch" amount to a hoop,
have an opportunity to show his
metal, to profit according to his
effort—be a pride and joy, instead
of taking it easy and secure under
a Govt, shade-tree, these folks
should take great heed of what is
in the wind—as the socialist plot
thickens.
Without getting personal, and
choosing to make nobody mad, and
not wanting to be sniarty, I can
venture this much in favor of
"thinking" versus "just listening.'-
Look at Mr. Mule—all ears—sec
where he landed. Not bad, says
Henry—unless the shoe fits. Thank
you very much, I says.
Your with the low down,
JO SERRA.
Fish Supplies Same
Quality of Protein
As In Other Meats
In addition to the recreational
benefits derived from fishing,
there can be added to the fisher-
man's justification for spending
long hours at his favorite fishing
spot, the value of fish as a food.
According to Lucille Shultz, asso-
ciate extension foods and nutrition
specialist of Texas A. & M. col-
lege, fish rank.-, high among the
more nutritious foods.
She points out that fish sup-
Horses A-Plenty to
Be Featured at Texas
State Fair Oct. 7-8
If Lion-Hearted King Richard
III were to attend the 1950 State
Fair of Texas he would be sur-
rounded by horses, but he truly
might have to give his kingdom to
buy one—at least one being shown
in either of the three horse shows
during the Mid-Century Livestock
Exposition, Ray W. Wilson, live-
stock department manager, said.
Equine royalty will prance at
the world's greatest state fair on
each weekend of the big exposi-
tion for the most outstanding and
colorful horse shows in Texas his-
tory.
High-stepping American saddle
horses will trot into the ring Oct.
7-8. This will be the fourth an-
nual American Saddle Horse Fu-
turity of Texas, Wilson said.
Horses will be shown under sad-
dle, in harness and in hand on both
days of the show. Frank Brad-
shaw, Georgetown, Ky., will judge
all classes, Wilson said, .
The quarter horse, first true
American horse, will go through
his paces for State Fair visitors
the second weekend of the Mid-
Century Exposition, Oct. 14 and
15. Breeders will display their
mounts for $3,000 in premiums.
Palomino horses will be shown
in stock and pleasure horse divi-
sions and will be displayed both
under saddle and at halter.
More than 300 of the finest
horses in America will be exhib-
ited. All horse shows will be
judged in the huge 200-foot, flag-
bedecked grandstand tent arena.
The tent will seat more than 3000
persons.
plies the same high quality protein
that is found in other meats and
that it) is easily digested. Most fish,
she continues, provide vitamins A
and B and one of the more re-
cently discovered vitamins, D, is
present in some fish such as the
mackerel and salmon.
Fish also score well on the nu-
tritionist's check sheet so far as
minerals are concerned. Mineral.-'
are present in both quantity and
variety in most fish. Salt water
and shell fish are very rich
sources of iodine and should be in-
cluded regularly in the family
menu, says Miss Shultz.
Now there is always a good
chance that the fisherman will
come home empty handed, so far
as fish are concerned, but this sit-
uation can in most cases be taken
care of by a visit to the grocery
store. The frozen prepackaged
fish that is today available in most
markets makes it easy for fami-
lies to have good fish just about
any time they want it.
The specialist says there is lit-
tle or no waste when you buy the
boneless strips or fillets and only
a little more when fish steaks are
the choice, but the waste is consid-
erable when whole fish are pur-
chased.
Miss Shultz says it is best to
purchase fish from markets which,
insofar as you can determine,
store their shipments of frozen
products promptly after they re-
ceive them and keep their freezers
at the correct temperature.
Unless the fish is used on the
day it is purchased, it should be
placed at once in the freezing unit
or frozen food compartment of the
refrigerator, she says. Fish steaks
and fillets can be cooked without
thawing, but it should be remem-
bered that more time will be
needed for a thorough cooking
The popular young star of many Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer musicals,
Gene Kelly, draws admiring glances from seven year old Charlotte
George, of North Hollywood, Calif, as he tacks the first 1950 National
Kids' Day poster on his dressing room door. , , •.
Spearheaded by the more than 3,150 Kiwanis clubs throughout
the United States and Canada, Kids' Day will be observed this year
on Saturday, September 23. It is a joint project of Kiwanis Inter-
national and The National Kids' Day Foundation, Inc., designed to
focus additional attention upon the problems of underprivileged
children. It is expected that fundraising events conducted on Kids
Day will benefit millions of children for money raised in- a com-
munity remains in that community to be spent for youth under the
supervision of the local Kiwanis Club.
Prevent Accidents On
Washing Machine by
Checking on Safety
Many smashed fingers, some
crippled hands, a few broken arms
and other injuries have resulted
from accidents that have occured
around the washing machine. Most
or all of these could have been
prevented, says Bernice Claytoi,
extension home management spec-
ialist of Texas A. & M. college,
had the machine operator known
how to operate the safety release
on the washing machine wringer.
She points out that prospective
purchasers of the wringer - type
washers should check the machine
to be sure that the safety release
on the wringer can be easily reach-
ed and that it will work at all
times.
All wringers on washing ma-
chines have safety releases, but
some meet individual safety needs
better than others, says Mrs. Clay-
tor. The location of the release
is a mighty important considera-
tion for if it is on the opposite
side of the machine from where
Boy, oh boyl Don't talk to me
about insurance. I've certainly
got a bunch of It—all kinds too
Some day I'll have to get sick
and see if it works!
MINUTE MAID
That Archie Bleyer certainly has
a fine orchestra and the men are
so alert. For three years now they
have been playing the same
theme song—and tonight for the
first time not one man had to
look at the music.
job. It is better, however, to let
the fish thaw out in the refrigeiK-
or before cooking and most of the
packages have attached to them a
label that gives the time needed
for thawing.
One last word of c-aution from
Miss Shultz. She says never re-
freeze fish that have been thawed.
The job of squeezing half a billion
oranges a mor.th has been elimin-
ated for American housewives :n 48
states who now use frozen concen-
trated orange jaice, says Miss Min-
ute Maid. Perched amid tree-ripened
fruit, she reports quick frozen
process iS so speedy it's almost as
if the little six ounce container!
grew on trees.
the housewife stands when putting
clothes into the wringer, it will be
hard to reach. Then some releases
require considerable pressure and
may call for more strength than a
woman can exert in an emergen-
cy.
Some machines, she adds, are
now being equipped with an auto-
1850
Of ***
1950
A Century of Progress
. . . and Amicable
Labor Relations
Makers of the famous LEVI'S ov-
eralls salute the men and women
of labor in Denison with the pass-
ing of another Labor Day. Labor
Day is a part of our American
tradition. The forward march of
American Labor has paralleled
the conquest of the frontier, the
building of great cities, and the
rise of giant industries across our
continent. We take this occasion
to pay sincere tribute to Amer-
ica's working men and women
who have contributed much to
the progress and prosperity of
our nation.
mm
-made in Denison by—
LEVI STRAUSS & CO
Factories—SAN FRANCISCO, SANTA CRUZ, SAN JOSE, VALLEJO, CALIF.;
SEDALIA, MO.; EL PASO, WICHITA FALLS, DENISON, TEXAS
■
$ •
I sure love to get out in the court
try—see the grass, the tre---,
watch the animals—the chicken;
—the cows. Incidentally, spe«>k
ing of cows—I passed one on *
farm yesterday and there she wn
standing looking up at the clour g
—watching the rain maker trying
to get rain out of them. Sh.-
watched this process for a little
while and then she turned to an
other cow and said: "You know,
I know just how that cloud feels
She just ain't got it to give!"
There was quite a to-do the oth^r
day in London. The King got to
gether several of his worthy suh
jects and bestowed upon them the
Order of the Garter, Snappy affair
eh what?
hiard on cis taunt scouts
matic sli...-off which stops the
rolls when the release bar is
tripped.
She suggests that prospective
buyers do a little extra checking
before buying. Visit a friend or
neighbor who has a machine of the
type you like and try operating it
on washday. This way you can
get first hand information. If the
dealer demonstrates the machine,
be sure and try out the safety re-
lease. Sec for yourself whether
or not you can reach the release
without difficulty and can trip it
easily. This one feature might
some day prevent a serious acci-
dent, concludes Mrs. Claytor.
RATES
Contract rates vill be giv«n
upon application. Legal rates al
one cent per word p<*r Insertion.
1 time le per wo'd.
:t times 2c per word.
li times 3c per word?
(for consecutive insertions
! Minimum charge is for 12 word;
9
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Anderson, LeRoy M. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, September 8, 1950, newspaper, September 8, 1950; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth328990/m1/2/?q=%22~1~1%22~1&rotate=0: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.