The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 87, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 3, 1940 Page: 1 of 4
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WEATHER
DENISON AND VICINITY
Generally fair and cloudy
today and Friday
THE DENISON PRESS
PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT
SUNDAY
YOUR HOME-OWNED
DIAILY NEWSPAPER
35c PER MONTH
REPRESENTATIVE OF THE UNITED PRESS
DENISON, TEXAS
THURS., (X7!'. lin'i. 1940
WEEKLY FOUNDED 1930—DAILY 1934
VOL. 7-NO
Chamberlain Quits As British Cabinet Head
EVERDAY
DENISON
Uy
LOUIS ANDERSON
W. Lee 0 ’Dani To Be
In Denison Tuesday
Reports tell
Valley fuir at
the best there
us the Red River ,
Word was received in Denison the home of Mr. Morgan where
Sherman is one 0fjth‘S mo,ni"* PY Representative- the governor will he glad to re-
________ nmi !elect M, B- Morgan, that Governor ceive informally any who
years
Bill
Conatser, former Denison flash,
has the beet punting record in the
j W. Lee O’Daniel will arrive
the city next Tuesday evening
may
in wish to call,
at The hospitality
British
To Open
Sealane
Motion Granted
To File Petition
AXIS SEEK TO
DRAW IN SPAIN
southwest conference this week,!
6'30. lie will be entertained w'th home for the night lias been of-
will
averaging 43.33 vnrds per try . . /. pr,vaf* dlnner and ,w'11 ,spend ftred tllp governor as
John Kimbrough'of the Aggies, |lne, n'Kht he'e> 11 's Plam,ed' suitp of rooms !lt Ilotpl 'DenUon
with 5.09 yards per try, ranks1 A lctt*r from,the *overnor .re" by Manager L,lte Loy- but il '»!
seventh among hall carriers uuests that no formal reception not known which the governor will
Orville Lee in the Paris News'still]bc planPed by any that accept.
I the visit he kept informal in ev- The visit of the governor is part
of a tour he is making over the-
state to meet the newly-chosen
AUSTIN, Tex., Oct. 3—The Su-
j prente Court today granted a mo
i _____ tion for permission to file petition
well as a1 Japanese Expected to Protest fo1 mandamUs- offel,d th'' ta3)
I Onenim, nf 1,1 (,lvlllp S. ( arpenter vs. Cump-
of the Morgan
Opening of Burma Hoad
to China; Due Oct. 17th1
Warning Given
US and Britain
con*ends his Wildcats will over ,
come Sulphur Springs Friday jlly'espett' .
night, which may or may not tell . rbe ,r"vAV * “
the district what the flats reallv1 bome 01 Mr- Mor8an> 907 "est representatives and senators and is „ _ ... ,
Fred Allen gcu]"oodard stlcet al 6:30 Tuesday n precedent in this line. The gov. Ban On War Supplies JVHght
have in 1940
off to a good start under a
sponsor over the air lanes
night, and drew his best laughs by
and will be escorted by Mr. Mur- enior says he wishes to meet the
last Kan and w'7r '0 country home ,nl.n hand and be better pre-'
Bring on Active War, Jap
anese Press Warns. Said.
served.
The party
ad libbing, which weren't too good,, . ,
... Ruth Millctt comments that if!b,*hway wbere
a woman turns the pages of a
magazine and stops on an article]
telling how to glamorize herself,
she is ptobably unmarried, but;
doesn’t intend to stay that way
very long . . . Swell personality:
Mrs. Nora Gullett.
I of Representative-elect Roger Q. inte„i(?ently hand,e mat.l
Evans on the East Main street
supper
will be
j LONDON, Oct. 3 — Informed and Palacious (Camp Hulen),
tors of importance to the people circles today said Britain would V'as announced hi re today.
troller George H. Sheppard and
State Treasurer Charley Lockhart
and set submission for Oct. l(i, to
decide the soundeness of Atty.
Gen. Gerald C. Mann’s opinion
that state officials and employees
going into military service as of-
ficers lose their civil positions.
The opinion by Mann would
oust from their state jobs Rail-
road Commissioner Ernest O.
I Thompson, several members of the
- legislature and other public offi
Beginning Sunday, the Southern!cja]a jf anf] whPn they are called
Pacific Lines will establish daily j,:to armed sendee, as expected at
coach service between Wharton any time.
Southern Pacific
Installs A New
Train Service
will then retire
of Texas
to venes.
when legislature
600 ALIENS IN
VITAL INDUSTRIES
’* Carpen- er has little chance o'f
retaining his position as chairman
at director of the Texas Unemploy-
arriving at Dalacious nlont Compensation Commission
after his term expires on Nov. 21,
as Governor OlDaniei is believed
Liable To Chain
Store Taxation
National Guardsmen here know
little or nothing about how or ex-
actly when they will be called, al-
though the 25th of this montli lias
been set as the date. All guard1
work now is carried on with reg-1 committee investigators have dis-
ular army forms . San Ju.ii,lC|rtBred tlmt more than 600 0f 2,-
l uerlo Itico has a population ot 000 mqlls who frequented the
140,000, yet George lacker says (;e,.man . American Bund Camp
he has seen hut one street car . . .jNor|and al Andover, N. J., are
laul Harrison says if you want to Llil>ng employed in factories doing
see the result of stiff-necked en-i
tertainment, glance at the Metro i-------
I'olitan opera, and its deficit . p*ll*
Hollywood actre.'ses have formed Lllllllg xjlallOnS
Blond, Inc., a non-profit thing to
be used to prove blondes are not ]
so dumb as the general belief . , .[
Most intense desires for publicity)
must have been instilled in the]
former actress, Bebe Daniels, who] AUSTIN, Tex., Oct. 3—By re-
nt the insistence of an agent, fusing a writ of error, the Su-
drove down a street rapidly in that prone Court upheld today the
district of a tough judge. Result:! state’s contention that gasoline
publicity and ten days in the clink] idling stations which also sold
. . . Tlie U. of Missouri made a hit merchandise are liable for the
with campus romancers by install-,chain store tax.
ing two-seat benches on the Refusal of the court to grant a
grounds. Except they were too review in a test case, which the
close to electric lights. I state brought against the Standard
--- ! Oil company of Texas for taxes on
Gov. W. l.ce was in Paris visit- twenty stations in West Texas, left
ing Tuesday. He will be in Den- as final the court of civil appeals
ison next Tuesday . . , A. W. Nev-j holding that selling of merchan-j
ille in Paris News says some of1 disc deprived such businesses of
tiie reasons given in Lamar county1 exemption made for places engag-
in 1917 to get out of conscrip-jcd in the “storing, selling or dis-1
tion were: I have a weak back. I1 tributing of petroleum products!
am partially insane. I am a bank] and servicing of motor vehicles.’’
cashier. My jawbone is bent, i] With the victory, the state will!
of j proceed with prosecution" of a suit]
C0||J reopen the Burma road to China The train will leave Wharton
jafter October 17, and might sup- 9:35 a.
__I ply the Chinese with oil and other at 12:01 p. m. On its return the
Jvital war materials, a distinct slap!train will arrive at Wharton at
at Japan. |2:30 p. m. i to have another
The war supplies would be sent Approximately 95 delegates if $7,,"00 place,
on credit, it was reported, in an the Brotherhod of Locomotive Eu-1 According to
effort to gain the good will ofjgineers will be aboard two extra] Tom Hunter of Abilene will be the
the Chinese. j sleepers of the Katy Texas Special „(.xt nleniber of the railroad com-
The movement was expected to out to St. Louis, through hero mission if Thompson loses his
anger Japan, which thought it had Friday morning, enroute to San piace when he goes into armed!
(closed all routes to China by tak- Antonio for the Southwestern un- service. Hunter was named by!
in view for
common belief, I
NEWARK, N. J., Oct. 3—Dies government or vital defense work,
it was announced today.
/Rep. Joseph Starnes (D.-Ala.),
ling over French Indo-China. ion convention.
A Japanese military monopoly; -
on the sale and transportation in H. F. Thelman ha.
North China of cotton, hemp, jed as
been assign-
engineer and Jeff Ransom
O’Daniel as Texas representative
of the Interstate Oil Compact
Commission when the governor
chairman of a Dies subcommittee hides and furs, reported earlier in a- fireman on the through freight
the Peiping press, was interpreted placed in service earlier this week
here as move aimed at Americans on the Choctaw divison between
who have placed orders for $750,- Denison and Muskogee.
000 worth of goods and who hith-1
erto have conducted a large share The Tulsa University football
squad, aboard an extra sleeper of
investigating subversive activities
in this area, said 300 of these
were employed in a single plant
and that numbers ranging from a
I few to fifty worked in oti\er fae-
I lories.
The camp manager, August
Klapprott, German-born bricklay
er, unemployed ventriloquist and
bund leader on the eastern sea-
board, said the bund’s purpose was
(Continued on page four)
DEATH ROLL
to command the leadership of 20.- j
000,000 people of German descent
in tlie United States.
“If we could organize
20,000,000," he said, "we
keep tlie country out of war.
the Katy Flyer, will pass through
Denison tonight from Muskogee,
enroute to San Antonio. The
squad will return to Tulsa Sntur-
—- , day.
LORF.N ID. OAFFEY Three high school football spec-
I Funerals services for Loren D. ials are to be run by the Katy
Gaffey, 72, a carpenter and con-j Friday to various points over the
that Tractor who had been a Denisonian state. A six car special is to be
(Continued on page four)
College Prexy
And SenatOrS berlain, shown above in happier I aad
J Tr» Dllfv RAF during the
uruerea i u l/uiv KlulJp muni.
- of pressure. Championed by the .;01> worka Hl Essen, the British
OKLAHOMA CITY, Oct. 3— ]]>nme minister, Winston Churchiii, ] command said.
Six members of the state military since Munich, Chamberlain was of-; Twenty sections of Londoa
I RESIGNS POST—Neville
berlain, shown above in
LONDON, October 3—Neville
Chamberlain, lord president of the
.British inner council, resigned hie
.post today after months of agita-
tion by political enemies, while
(Europe heard the axis powers
I were seeking to throw Spain right
into the middle of the German-
llalian-British war.
Chambcrlai 1 resigned his post,
repute ily of ill health and Sir
Jclm Anderson, home security ud-
jministratoi, was named as his
i.ccessor. Other important shake-
tp in the cabinet were made.
Chamberlain left the cabinet
with a statement he was positive
the new council would successfully
prosecute the war to the British
ends.
Agitation against Chamberlain
hn> been going on since he was
replaced as Prime Minister by
Winston Churchill, because of his
appeasement policy at Munich.
I Spanish envoys were said to be
enroute to Rome where Italian
leaders will attempt to bring Spain
into the middle of the axis-British
war by signatures on some sort
of mutual assistance pact.
London underwent two air raid
alarms since daybreak buf no
planes were seen over the city.
Nazi bombers struck at the city
last night, but did little damage.
German holdings along the Eno
li.'-li Channel, at Amsterdam, Rot-
other areas were
could Ytars' were held at 10 a. m.]operated from Gaineville to Wich-
today from Short-Murray chapel, (ita Falls, seven cars from Temple
Kalpprott admitted he had told Uev" Har?rove Grounds officiating,to Austin, and an eight car train
camp habitues that a small racial •"‘•""'em was at Oakwood cent-.from Lockhart to Smithville.
group controls the American press, !*tely' Short-Murray directing,
movies and part of the govern-]Pal,lbtarers were Joe Capelle, Carl
n)ent IDeVault, Rupet Mosso, John Por-
“lt is still my belief," he said ter* J" H" May and W p Graham
‘That was the song of that en-
(Continued on Page 4)
Hebrew New
Year Underway
MRS. LYNNE W. <PUA J'Y&R
Funeral services for Mrs. Lyn-
ne W. Platter of Austin, widow of
jthe late Lingo Platter of Denison, Seventy-five of the 100 Denison
were held at 11 a. m. today from district Boy Scouts will attend tlie
St. Luke's Episcopal church with. Red River Valley council’s camp-
Rev. Harry Lee Virden officiating,oral at Durant Oct. 11-12, it was
Interment was at Fairview cem-l disclosed at a round table discuss-
Seventy-Five
Scouts Plan To
Attend Camporal
taff, including one college presi-!frciully said to have re.-ign
dent and two state senators, today c;i use of "illness.”
were ordered to active service for!
a year’s sendee with the U. S. Qkz-jyf.M[iiki-Av
army in connection with operation! 1-1Y1UJ l tXy
of the draft in Oklahoma.
Ordered to duty effective st
once were:
Lt. Col. Clive Murray, Tisho-
mingo, president of Murray Agri-|
cultural college.
d be- 1,, pl.(, jn t|le mght raids, 4s
. were sections of Scotland, and
Berlin said a British attack early
! today failed when planes could not
bieuk through the Nazi defenses.
Germany denied it was taking
over Italian activities in the Med-
■erranean and northern Africa,
t ut that Italy was capable of
, 'handling its own affuirs in the
Capable of attaining a speed 0 ;
Ambulance Is
Latest Model
Lt. Col. Ellis Stephenson, Ok- 100 miles per hour, a 1941 mode! Vuginio Gajua, sometimes ot-
lahoma City. .ambulance, consisting of a 130-1 fjcjaf spokesman for Benito Mus-
Lt.Col. John Sanford, Pawnee, | horsepower V-8 LaSalle motor and j so]inl) editoriany said that Russia
state senator from Noble and il Sil>’els all(l Scoviii body. wa3|[.as UIn(e(i with the axis iii an ec-
Pawnee counties. !r,a<,{,fl in service. ioda? bY th,‘
Lieut. Col. George Davis, Ok- ] Short-Murray funeral home,
lahoma City, assistant postmasteri P*lp ambulance ha.- an overall
of Oklahoma City. j!pnSth of 244 inches and a wheel
Major Louis Ritzhaupt, Guthrie,159'2 i:'rhes; Tbe pxU'';'
state senator from Logan county. *or painted in black enamel
Today and tomorrow the He-|ptery, Short-Murray directing.; ion of the five scoutmasters amijkogee.
Captain Joseph Stafford,
"lave blood poisoning. One _ . _____„ .... ........... .... ...
'my legs is longer than the other| filed last year against the Hum- brews of the nation are joined by Pallbearers were Clyde Jones, Ev- assistants at the Chamber of Com | Gen. George Lewis said the ib:,'r
On an air show last night a. hie Oil & Refining company for local Hebrews in celebrating theiric*rett Hopl.l's Ross Stoddaid, Oi- merce Wednesday night, presided'officers would be stationed
question asked several men if they! $730,180 claimed as due under the! New Year, 5701. Stores will be >ver 'Hayes, Judge Tom Suggs,
believed in influencing their wives
on how to vote. All thenmen said
“no,” while one woman said she
SMALL THEFTS ARE
chain store tax on 250 filling sta-j closed for two day as is the 0us-i Clifford Esler, George Knaur
tions in Texas for 1936-39. At-,torn of these people, and all over ,IDavid Platter,
torneys for the state said the same] the world as far as is possible
could neatly slip in some sugges-j principle is involved in the Hum- they will assemble and pray to Je
tions to her husband, when hejble case now pending in District,hovah for peace and liberty,
wasn’t watching . . . Army offic-1 Court here, as in tlie Standard. Local Jew will join their bre-.ii-
ials, too, believe in the freedom of]case. ]ron in other places in some in-
tv > press ... A woman calls in to | The twenty stations of the Stan-j stances wher a synagogue service
aJ desk she believes Denison-)clard were of several classes, in ]may be available and will hear the
ianV should give more of a hand
an i
or.omic pact against Britain.
Athene reported II Duce was
strengthening his army in Albania,
liordciiiic Greece, but Greek offi-
cials >ai i the nation would not De
....."caught napping." A genral mo-
Mus-i while the interior i.- luxurious!1, (bilizntion of all Greek man power
|f nished with bergundy color mo- ,.um01.(,d bul 8trict censoriW-
H s .tied with siren, »f.■ L,events the information t0 cw#
in «ty *'««« ''I?1**. baby basket- f"'st from official =oun'es.
over by Fred Conn, district com- Oklahoma City. The war de-
missioner. I partment orders said they would
Each troop is to be aceompan- |„. assigned to planning in con-
ied by two adults, scoutmaster and nection with selective service.
more
to Jacket players when they come
off the field of football play.*
A number of smal thefts was
reported to city police here today:
Dr. S. O. Levin said a clock was
eluding those admittedly owned|message of some rabbi. jslolen from the glove compartment
and operated by the company andj Although Christianity displaced ,fac*ng of his car, parked in the
assistant scoutmaster, it was deci-j
REPORTED HEREjded, ami plans were pushed to
have every scout properly outfit-
ted in uniform by the time to ev-
ent takes place. Plans were also
made for adopting the Boy Scouts
of America National Emergency
Program.
Harry White tells us his son,
Hurry, Jr., will be right in there
battling when Oklahoma* Baptist
plays at Little Rock, this weekend
those operated by distributors un-|in tbe order of revealed religion
der contract. The appeals court!the old Mosaic law and its corn-
ruling held that under the distri'b- inandments, relatively few of the
utor's agreement contract the com-!Jews ha\e embraced Christianity,
puny exercised control of the sta-j still holding on to the law of the
tions to such an extent as to bring covoenants and tbe ordinances of
Dn top of his footballing, Hairy is them within the act.
(Continued on page fouri
More Changes
At Engineers
Headquarters
Following the advancement of
Capt. Gordon E. Textor to th?
post of Denison district engineer,
succeeding Major Lucius D. Clay,
other changes in personnel have
been necessary, it was revealed to-
day.
Lieut. John Anderson has been
placed in charge of the relocation
work and Lieut. E. A. Tillman will
replace Anderson in charge of the
personnel department of the U. S.
engineer office.
A. M. Philleo, head of the con-
*fp(e seetion, is succeeding A. H.
™ividson, Jr., ns resident engin-
eer on construction of the outlet
work, who has been.transferred to
army service at Fort Knox, Ky.
Mr. Philleo will handle the new
Moses and the prophets.
Engineer Head
Is Transferred
To Newfoundland
Samuel G. Neff, head of the op-
erations division of tlie U. S. en-
gineer force here, has received
war department orders transfer-
ring him to St. John, Newfound-
land.
Mr. Neff will leave for Wash-
ington by plane Sunday where he
will be stationed temporarily and
fben goes to St. John where is to
assist in the government’s national
defense program, Tlie exact na-
ture of his new position is not
known.
He has been head of the opera-
tions since his transfer here Sept.
12, 1938, from Ft. Peck, Montana.
He is a native ot Casper, Wyo.,
and he and his wife have made
their home here at 815 W. Wood-
ard street.
Mrs. Neff will visit in Los An-
duties along with other assign-; geles before joining her husband
mentis, it is announced. at St. John.
Durant Defers
Action At Meet
DURANT, Oct. 3—The protest
of Judge R. L. Williams against
use of the city hall auditorium by
religious bodies on grounds such
use is a violation of the constitu-
tion of the state was discussed and
the city council today had decided
to defer action and leave the de-
cision to any church organization
which may wish to test the law,
when it was pointed out there
would be no penalty against the
city in such case.
Judge Williams had pointed out
iu his protest he had no desire of
interfering with the revival meet-
ing in progress at the present time
in the auditorium.
Judge Williams in his protest
suid if tlk city rented the build-
ing to any organization in the
future he would file suit in the
district court seeking an injunc-
tion against such practice on
grounds that the state constitu-
tion has been violated
alley of the 200 block W. Main
street.
A. T). Murphy of Snyder, Texas,
said a suitcase containing clothing
was stolen while he was in a cafe
in the 100 block S. Austin avenue.
An awning was stolen from the
rear of Lee Fawcett’s cleaning and
pressing shop.
Fire Losses
Higher During
First 9 Months
Negro Pleads
Guilty To Charge
^ Fire losses for September were
Fire 1Leader To Speak far below the same period in
Eugene Sanders, assistant state 1939, according to a report today
fire marshall, will be in Denison from Fire Chief Pat Lowe and
October 10 and 11 in interest of Fire Marshal R. M. Gray.
Fire Prevention week. Next] Losses for the month on 59
Thursday morning he will speak calls were $1,425.20 compared to
before the Denison high school loss on 17 calls in September,
the
student body.
Pure Oil Has
Good Showing
(DURANT, Ok., Oct. 3—Pure Oil
company has good shows of oil in
two of its Cumberland field wells
today as one of them moved be-
low the 5,000-foot mark. Both are
drilling in the Bromide sand top-
ped last week.
The company’s No. 2 Little-400
had three shows of oil, one at 4,-
831-44 and 4,850-55 and one at
4,858-64. This well is one location
west and slightly south of the dis-
covery No 1 Little-100. It was
drilling at 5,000 feet.
The company’s No. 1 Metz-105,
northwest of the discovery, had
a show of gas at 4,879-90 and a
good oil sand at 4,895-4,907 feet.
Crews at the company’s No. 1
1939, of $3,725. Loss for
first nine months of 1940 was
$24,888.47, compared with $18,-
048,90 for the same period last
year.
Chief Lowe said a record num
her of 240 calls have been an-
swered by the fire department so
far this year, while only 96 calls
were answered in the same time
of 1939.
aid kit, heater, and other acce
sories, including drop seats and
hydraulic brakes.
Rear windows of the ambu!anc“
are heavily draped with bergundy I
and are equipped with shades that j
may be drawn for complete pri\-i ^ Denison negro, residing in
ap>’- (southwest Denison, pleaded guilty
Ille 1939 mode! vehicle ot ' m ,n Grayson county court at Sher-
same manufacturer, tormerly used man today before Judge Jake Loy
a* an ambulance, w'ill be convert" 110 a charge of having in his poss-
■ ---ion intoxicating liquor for sale
I in a dry area.
j* The negro was nabbed on tbe
! Bells highway late Wednesday by
Deupty Sheriffs Virgil Evans and
Paul Smith who searched his car
and found one gallon and a pint
101 liquor. He was placed in the
untv jail and la^ed trial today.
Park College-200 in seetion 27-5-7, THt,?r> OF LHC-ISUATORS
Bryan county was building a stan- ' ARE IN DRAFT AC.F.S
dard rig and rigging up tools for _
production test of sands above ] AUSTIN,, Oct. 3—More than a
the 5,116 foot mark. ] third of the members of the house
Drilling reports on other wells 0f representatives, to convene next
in the Cumberland field were: (January, are within the registra-
No. 3 Little-100 was drilling at t;on ape Hmits and face „ possibIe
3,485 in hard brown lime of the
Sylvan horizon.
No. 2 Little-101 was drilling at
4,193 in the Viola.
No. 1 Little 106 in Bryan coun-
ty was drilling at 2,207.
No. 1 Little-201 was drilling at
4,282 in the Viola.
The company’s No. 1 Thomas-
202 was drilling ahead at 4,719
feet in the Bromide.
year’s training unless exempted, a
compilation shows.
Ther are 52 of the 150 memb-
ers within the 21-36 age limits.
Thirty-one of those in the con-
scription age, are married, and
may expect some degree of defer-
ment for that reason If not other-
wise exempt. Twenty-one of the
group do not have a wife as dep-
endent.
ed into a funeral coach and the
1936 Buick Meteor funeral coach
will no longer be used in active
I rvica.
Rayburn Sees
FDR Victory
In November
WASHINGTON, Oct. 3—Break
ing a rule he has imposed on him-
self and has observed during his
sr\TE trfasury shows
$46,167,082 IN' PASH
AUSTIN, Oct. 3—-At the c’ose
of business Sept. 30, the state
twenty-eight years of sendee in ' easm y had cash aggregating $46
the House of never leaving Capi-] ‘67,082 and unpaid warrants to
tal Hill while the House is in scs-111\ 1 ing: $31,970,890 in the 103 sep-
sion, Speaker Sam Rayburn „f-grate accounts carried on its book*
Texas was honored at the weekly 7or lke '®ri°us agencies,
luncheon of the National Women’s) phe Jificit in the general fund
Press club and was its guest was $25,586,119 and the Gonfed-
speaker. jerate pension fund $2,072,077.
While his speech was off the' Largest cash balances were state
record, the Texan did make an)highway fund $,.430,446; perma
election forecast for the record, jnent school $1,454,564, county
“I think Mr. Roosevelt wilt car-(and road district bond assumption
ry plenty,” said the speaker, who $6,284,243; highway motor fuel
has been made director of tho tax $4,517,911; road bond and
campaign in six southwestern I coupon paying $2,184,313, avad-
states and plans shortly to open (able school fund $1,186,347. free
regional headquarters at Dallas textbook purchase fund $1,004,231
“He carried forty-six states in and teacher retirement savings
1936 and it looks more nearly un-jan 1 interest $942,911 with all oth-
animous now than it did then." jer accounts much under $1,000,-
Among prominent Texans pres- 000. Howevei, the foul separate
ent for the luncheon were Mrs.|relief of bread bond accounts ag-
Jesse Jones, wife of the secretary (gregate $3,573,947. These accum-
of commerce; Mrs. Morris Shcp- ulations are more than ample ta
pard, Mrs. R. Ewing Thomason fay all ‘"terest and principal on
and Mrs. Fritz Lanhain. |ti' bor<L a« they become due.
I
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Anderson, LeRoy. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 87, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 3, 1940, newspaper, October 3, 1940; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth526605/m1/1/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.