The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 108, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 5, 1941 Page: 1 of 4
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WEATHER
DENISON AND VICINITY
Considerable cloudiness, scattered
showers tonight and Thursday
The Denison Press
PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT
SUNDAY
VOUR HOME-OWNED
DAILY NEWSPAPER
86e PER MONTH
REPRESENTATIVE OF THE UNITED PRESS
DENISON, TEXAS WEDNESDAY, NOV. 5th, 1941
WEEKLY FOUNDED 1930—DAILY 1984
VOL. V111—NO. 108
Flying School
To Be Occupied
Defense
Week Is
Bu hnd Of Week Proclaimed
Thq, General Sights, a Gun
I ----------- - i?*-
By the end of this week it is unit as officials do not plan to be;
expected the Grayson county basic caught short this time as they were
air corps flying school will house when twenty members of a medi '
its first cadets and utilities are be- cal corps at Camp Grant, 111., ar-
ing connected today along with rived here last week to find they I
other preparations to receive the were "orphans of the storm,’’ as |
--------- I fucj]jties at the school were still
I incomplete.
j An initial unit of 100 men from
Goodfellow field and a half dozen
America Must
Face Longer
Working Hours
hyot: park, n. v., nUv. 5—
President Roosevelt warned Amer-
ica today that it must face longer
working hours and harsher times
if it is to protect its way of life
... . , , . ‘v" against the pagan slavery proposed
officers are expected here by the, ^ wou|().b[. dlot.ltor; of the
weekend. In the meantime the '
I
I Lone Star Gas company has eom-
ipleted a line to the edge of the,,^^ that , hours arp
f,eld while the sub-contractor cn fo). American workers in
| world.
It was the
President’s first dec-
in
the distribution system has laid
pipes to the end of the gas com-
1 pany’s main. Connection was made
!Tuesday and tests were to be ma
today. z
Electricity is available now in
A. W. Long
Resigns As
C. C. Mgr.
Announcement was made short-
ly after noon todeyTy Secretaryj most of the housing area. The wa’ j cxert^their full powers to protect
Manager A. W. Long of the Deni- ter system is connected. The ov-J their way of |jfe
son Chamber of Commerce that he eihead water tank is 70 per cent lAyor|( Longer Hour*.
Ihnd tendered hie resignation to complete end the sewage disposal. Jn an unheratded tatement to
the board of directors and that it; plant is nearly done. ^ ^ ^ jU[)her -n the civilian Defense week
was accepted at the meeting
that group this morning.
iMr. Long handed in his resigna-.
(Continued on page four)
the all-out effort for defense. In a
statement prefacing the Nov. 11
“"I to 16 Civilian Defense yveek, Mr.
‘Roosevelt announced that the time
for half measures for defense has
i passed and all Americans must
Telephone Army, Navy Lose
122MenBattle
Of The Atlantic
Denison May Find
Itself Cut Off
From Long-Distance
Passed by censor
MAJOR-GENERAL H. D. G. CRERAR, Chief of the General Staff of
the Canadian Army, sights one of the new 25 pounder guns that
Canadian industry is now producing. General Crerar, an artillery officer
/ith the Canadian Corps in the World War, is now head of the Canadian
Army’s activities in Canada. Unequipped to manufacture big guns at the
mtbreak of war, Canada is now producing large numbers of a new type
4 rounder, many of which are already in service on various battle fronts.
Seventy-one of the 135 “!Mr. Roosevelt proclaimed to the | r p A 1 IT A * j
are due to be turned ever to, world t bray son r armers Asked 1 o Assist
tion Sept. 29 and actio.i was tak-j
en this morning. The resignation !
becomes effective Dec. 15th.
Mr. Long has made one of the I
most effective secretaries the lo-i
cal chamber has had and many|
here regret deeply that hi:- rocsi-
nation was seen by him to he the|
best.
He has been in charge of Ihe I
local organization since April 11,j
1940 and haw advanced manyj
helpful
the best interest of the city.
(Continued on page four)
Denisonians may awake one
morning soon to find the city vir-
tually cut off from all long dis-
tance telephone communications as
will cities in 41 other states—all
except Vermont, New Hampshire,
Washington, Oregon, Nevada and
Montana, if the proposed walkout
of 15,000 long lines telephone
workers carry out their threat.
John F. Moran of Pittsburg, the
; president, has served notice that
I the strike, if carried out, would
tie up long distance wires, civil
(and military, as well a- national
I radio hookups, the transmission of
| photographs by wire and teletype-
writer service. Moran added that
the proposed walkout would be ...
., , . .. ] who is considering
cancelled if the dispute was certi-]
fied to the defense mediation
■ °^d- , , , i ,1 by an architect, the drawing
| I he union lias demanded that; ,, , , .
i the American Telephone and Tele-
I graph company of which the Bell
WASHINGTON, Nov 5 — The no loss of life in the latest inci-
j United States army and navy have dent to be reported—the torpedo-
lost 122 men in connection with ing of the l.'.S.S. Salinas, naval oil
| the battle of the Atlantic, It was tanker,
disclosed today, although there was The tanker, the navy announc-
d, wa. torpedoed without warn-
Applications
For inspection
Of Homes Taken
Service Is Free
Under ‘Repairs for
Defense’ Program
ing la.,t Wednesday night while it
ms traveling in a convoy south-
: west of Iceland It wa; seriously
' J,. ........i hut reached an undis-
|. losed port in safety,
j Abau Juii jio|>c Iui Lrow•
Even a new detail; of the
■ druggie accumulated into a story
of submarine - surface fighting
'without precedent, the navy form-
; lly abandoned hope for those list-
ed a- mi.- ng in the torpedo sink-
> • of tli United State- destroyer
Reuben James, west of Iceland.
That means that the death list
I in the Reuben James incident
i'
Vacancies Exist
In Marine Corps
Aviation Units
There are still many vacancies
in the U. S. Marine aviation corps,
a- in other branches of the corps
id na>- auvance.i ma-iy, , , . ,,, . - ci
, . , . r „ and Sergeant Lyde Chappel of the,,
and constructive plans for ... • ... . iti
' l)a as reorutting station will hl“
“Cruel” Is Charge
! Hurled At Okla.
Governor Phillips
Oh'VJfAIIOMA CITY, Nov. 5—
An administration legislator today
charged Gov. Phillips with “vindic-
i lr' r1 1 99 f* •
In rood-ror-rreedom Campaign f°mnt v i,,m"e 1,1
___________ I tials in pay
Free inspection service is now
available to any one in Denison jstood at ninety-seven officers and
Repairs for] men—ore of the most'y costly
Defense." The service will consist losses in modern American naval
of an inspection of the property history.
of Other losses have included elev-
i one-line plan and an estimate of en killed in the torpedo attack on
costs. | the destroyer Karny, eleven navy
Applications will be received by;
A. W. Long, manager of the Cham-1
her of Commerce, who has been!
(Continued i n page four)
'r I‘^^<-nt'* -1 •, 11 c-'* niiige appointed a.s acting director of the Jhree ScOUtS Get
,rr if. ! local Homes Registration ofti
iray-011 county farmers were E. C. Winn, chairman County USD! L om $18 to,$06 a week for men . The applications wii; then be stud- I Ranlfina At
cd today to do their part in the A Defense board, as follows: ‘'ind from $13 to $31 for women, ^y a jot,a| cornrnJttee which will IValllUIIg
Court Of Honor
is deserving of the highest order M-'tioned
b , uveness and a cruel sense of ret-
«•» -IrXrSIK: 15,0000 Acres In
asked
! "Food-for-Freedom” campaign by 69,580,000 pound of milk, in-
I increasing their production of milk crease of 1,430,000 pound- over
I by 1,430,000 pounds and egg- b.v 1 lull 1,911,000 dozen eggs, in-
181,000 dozen iri 1942. icrease of ,181,000 dozen over
Tentative production goals set! 1911 Ten per cent increase over
for the county were announced by 19401 in number of hog - for mar-
*--------kel or to be slaughtered on the
of cooperation in any tie d lo the postoffice here ^ friendly" toward democratic na-
choose to go and beginmng Thursday ^o e (tjona, PommRteeman Robert S.i [0Ve CoUTltV MaV
Kerr.
which he may choose to go
friends wish him the best of sue-;
cess in whatever he anty choose! _
to do. He is a man of high char- rme l0l,|,i'
prospective applicants.
Men desiring to list in the Ma-
for aviation duty are
1 . i- -n, „„,i n.,o required to enlist for general ser-
actcr and sterling worth and otic, . 1 ,
who will not he out of circulation vlce and complete a course of re-
long where merit is needed. I l'rult trainln(f' UPon c0mpletl0n of
not been revealed,
en out at an early date he declar-
ed today-
• ‘ ~ 741
EVERYDAY
DENISON
By
PAT l’ERUY
Rep Frank Grayson of Atwood, ^0 R(*d^Cmcd
in Hughes county, said that his
wife had been fired from the state LuU , oy has returned from a
cru.t training, upon comp.euoo „ welfare board, forcing d«*P, trip to Marietta, Okla., where he
this traising those desiring aviation nl,t "f ,l]f ;-en'or H went in interest of lending sup-
. ■ ' •: - - ' because “someone told the gover-1 (o the move of citizens of
nor that I admired Kerr. , p] that section to redeem something
| national committeeman is consul-^
jered an assured candidate for gov-1
farm.
"These goals are minimum rath-
er than maximum goals," the
chairman pointed out.
a union attorney said A company
spokesman declared A T & T.
had offered to make increases to-
taling more than $2,000,000 a
year.
Tlie mediation board 1 now
meeting in full force at Washing-
ton, concentrating on an attempt
to settle the union shop dispute in
by
weed out all applications that are
not eligible under the program.
The approved applications will
j then be sent to the Home Own
or.-.’ Loan corporation in Da la-
; which will uiuthoriv.e the inspec-
tion to be made. Property owner;
| will not he under any obligation
as a result of the application or:
official re-
His plans for the future have] .
hut will he giv- dutV ma>’ an
quest to the major general com-
mandant for transfer to an avia-
tion unit, which is generally ap-
proved.
Aviation mechanics are trained
] for the -most part in the regular
I station shops, although a few spec-
I ialists such as aerologists, radio-
I men, parachute riggers, ordnance
1 men and aerial photographers, re-
j ccive training at naval schools.:
of pay is according to'
like 15,000 acres of land in Love,
county.
ernor to succeed Phillips. | The land is in the Wa'nut Creek
Grayson said his wife wa«||)ayou arPa and will make choice
promised the job so that he might!
complete his law course this year-1
hind for farm purposes, it is state-
ed, when redeemed and will aid
He said lie registered at the uni-j^ a(frieu|tura] aprtion of tiiat
the farmers of the county can pro-
duce more than enough lo meet
the goals. If they can, then that’s,
all to the good. The county L'SDA j
Defense board will consider the!
goals, which were submittn) to
u by the state USD A defei e
(Continued on pag‘ fou a
Jewell Johnson
Acquitted, Assault
to complete the repairs they are
Atkinson Holds
Small Hope For
Restoring Traffic
While we take a day off to learn | The rate
what the score
Clarksville, Tenn
matters in the following explana
tion which appeared in a recent
issue of the Union Portal Clerk:
versity hut withdrew shortly
ter Oct. 1 when his wife
discharged. 'dated when the Denison dam
Phillips in his press conference | pomplett.d
1 county materially in securing land
I to offset land which will he imtn-
Use those mines’ entire output.
_ 1 tree to use any contractor or ma-i
torial dealer they prefer. The in-]
-pection and cost estimate will en-
able them to determine the ap- j
proximate cost of repairs and tin
income that can be derived from]
the property after it is repaired.
~ The chief requirement is that,
The Guy F. Atkinson company the'repairs made will provide j
Tuesday began moving equipmen* housing facilities for additional
to the Texas side of Red River to families who are in defense work.l
| resume excavat ion work on th* and that the additional revenue to I
dam spillway with little hope helu he derived as a result of the re-
. . for restoring: traffic over its serv- pair l
To Murder Charge bridge at the dam -
• A portion of the equipment wa.' The Home Owners Loan corpor- j
. , I shipped bv rail from the Oklahoma ation will provide fund- for r
isj A fifteenth district cou ] side 0f the stream to the spillway j pair? only for borrowers who now
at Sherman, deliberating less tham^ 0ther heavy trupks Wero!have loan« with them and whose
e a dav off to learn The rate of pay is according to’ . , , r.-ovs-on V,-»l heenl 1 ,, , - . ... r.f T „ area. Other heavy trucks were nave loan- witn tn.-m amt wno-,-
bus“• ......H-■“V*}»'Vrs:" ■
following explana- Also if a man is detailed to duty | cven know she wasT;hllc t.he la,)d " ,V J.»* V‘UL. k ‘ I stream when tin- river got on a * .pair .
The life rank, next to the high-
■ honor obtainable in scouting,
wa presented three Denison Boy
Scout.- during the court 0' honor
ci-ri-rnon. he'd -it the Waplf-s Me-
mori;. Methodi-t church Tuesday
night. Roy K Ownby was chair-
n-an of •! court, and was aided
l.\ \ ! Dorchester and Fred
Conn.
Receivin ' the life rank were
Bobby late of troop 205, Bobby
Garn.-r of troop 207 and Edward
Moore of troop 208.
The third highe-t rank, star,
wa.- pre-ented Eugene Savage of
troop 205-
The program consisted of a
flag ceremony and scout songs by
Iron 200. comments on Dr James
E Wert, national Boy Scout ex-
ecut-ve, l,y Mr Ownby; reports
fr an trooa- -n progre-s being
mad on the coat circus,
G-> Bu-h was advanced to sec-
ond via- and Howard McCarley
fir-: 1 la-.- during the ceremony.
Merit badges wer pre-ented as
duty j
involving flying he is entitled to
50 cent cent increase in base pay
working for the state. I don't care
deemed totals 15,000 acres.
Mr.|.Judge R. C. Slagle presided. , ran on 0ct
arrested ami > . ,
Now for a few answers to the] for the period he is so detailed,
daily Wliys, Whins, Wheres,
Have and Have Not* in the life
of a stamp clerk:
A penny postcard is worth a
(Continued on p.tgs four)
Texans Mentioned
As Successors To
Josephius Daniels
^ WASHINGTON, Nov. 5 -Three
Texans are being mentioned as
possible successors to Josephus
Daniels, who resigned Saturday a-
antbnssador to Mexieo.
The Texans are Representative
Luther A. Johnson of Corsicana, a
member of the hquse since 1923,
and now ranking majority of the
house foreign affairs committee;
i a thing in the
Kerr or
I ......;.............., . ., „„ (found near Sowell’s
All normal replacements for av-:
iation come from the recruit de-
pots at Harris Island, S.C. and Skn | gOVernor you could have fooled
Diego, Calif., and are sent to the, me j.m not eoingr around criticiz
squadrons at Quantico, Va-, an.l
the naval air station at San Di
ego.
j After completion as second lieu-j
tenants in the Marine corps re-
serve and orderd to active duty (
, with aircraft squardons of the
. “ ‘ a]
| ond lieutenants, all officers will | proclamation issued todny Gov. j
he eligible for promotion to first. Coke R. Stevenson designated the j
lieutenants.
I.oy states. The movement has the Mrs. Johnson was
world about ,!obL„dorselll0nt of Congressman Sam placed under a guard at the CityLm
,, „ TwnL.^n‘ltLfo0rino!!-' Rn>’hurn a,0ne with Senat0r i hospital here May 31 when she al-; 0‘klahoma alld Wichit:, Fall, area.- this program. Application forn
matter. They mean nothing in m> , |jPl. Oklahoma, Congressman j Ugediy shot A L Hodo-e. route 1.
Last
4 and was later- quirements and local building and
Bluff, Bon-1 loan association will provide loan-
week heavy rains in1 that meet thiir requirements fot
| book. If Grayson is for Kerr for
' I governor you
me- I’nt not g
ing people for -upporting Kerr."
Gov. Proclaims
I Lee of Oklahoma,
I Wilbur Cartwright
| Oklahoma.
Mr. I.oy states that the leader,
, of the movement are pleased with
| the outlook and are proceeding
i with the assumption that the niat-
Hodge, route SVi*cpt away two more spans of are now available at th
and others of Cherry Mound, in. the neck and lhp treatIe, leaving a portion on I of Commerce
left side of his chest in an affray,^ Tcxag Mp nnJ anothpr on thp|
that morning it, a downtown cafe. I Ok|ahoma endi 1)llt with the w|,o
(Mrs. Johnson, according to P<>-1 midsection llliasinE.
lice reports, was attacked by
Hodjre with a b(er bottle, result-
Eujjene Sa
reading, swii
personal h*
physical dc
troop 205
heai
.ter will he given the endorsement
Bill of Rights Wk. ,ot tlle government and w>!l set .......__
“ | aside sufficient funds toward, ing at Mr. Hojge's daughter, Lillyl^j. norma] f|ow
I corps. After three years as sec- AUSTIN, Tex", Nov. 5-In „i Pushing the project. ; Mae. Hodge was injured when
Repair work was started immed-
j iately after the first section went
ing in cuts about her head, down, but has been teraporaril
eye, following the alleged «hOOl*| ubandoned until the riV resumes'
75,000 Tons Of
British Shipping
Reported Sunk
At Marietta principal movers in
the plan are
he and Claude Johnson, her hus-j
'period of Dee, 8 to 15 as Bill of |
j Rights Week and urged the citi-
I zenry to give earnest eo-operation
and support to the endeavors of I
citizenship educational service in
| sponsoring the 150th anniversary
j of the ratification of the Bill of
' Rights.
--— ' In so doing, Stevenson’s procla-
As construction on the Grayson ( matjon reejted, “We rededicate
ourselves both individually and
collectively, to the proposition that
liberty is not only a heritage, but
a fresh conquest for each genera-
tion."
3ids Asked For
Flying School
Fire Alarm Siren
Backs 50 Yards
To Avoid Wreck
Representative Richard M. Kle*; county basic air corps flying school
berg of Corpus Christi, a member 1 draws nearer to completion and
since 1932 and now one of the in-! the problem of proper fire warn
fluential member of the agricul- ing arises, the U. S. Engineer of-
tural committee, and Maury Mav fine today announced invitations
erick of San Antonio, former] for sealed bids in duplicate have
member of congress, former mayor been is-ued for a fire alarm siren
of San Antonio and now fie'd rep-j completely equipped. The bids will
resentativo of the Office of Price .be opened here at 11 a.ni., Nov. 13
Administration. 1 The siren is to be of the com-
Generally considered most likely pletelv weatherproof, vertical type,
to be appointed is Lawrence M.jand driven by a five horse-power,j TYLER, Tex., Nov. 5—E. R.
Lawson, chief of the International ] squirrel-cage induction motor de-, Germany of Dallas, state detrto-
Boundary commission, who has signed to operate on 220-440 volts, cratie executive committee chair-
had extensive dealings with Mexico j 60 cycle, 3 phase. The motor is (man, unsuccessfully backed his au-
and ns head of the boundary cam- to be controlled by nn inclosed j tomobilly fifty yards down a high-
mission worked out a peaceful set- ^ across-the-line type magnetic start-, way Tuesday to avoid a collision
tlement of all boundary questions [ er provided with thermal overbid with an oncoming car being driv-
hetween the United States and,protection and start-stop push but-j on on the wrong side of the road.
Mexieo. Lawson is a native of the; ton in cover. The transmitter is T),e rars collided, but no one
District of Columbia- to he equipped with four code j wa8 injured.
------—■:——------ • wheels so that four distinct codes, Germany and his wife had
Hat Is Stolen can be given on the siren automat-j stopped to pick up two youths
Robert Parke, 1430 W. Sears, 1 ically by placing code wheel desir-|when they noticed the car headed
reported to police Tuesday the' ed on the transmitter movement directly at them. He began bnek-
theft of a hat from his automobile] and then operating lever. I ing frantically.
Richard C. Smith, j band, attempted to wrest the gun RcCOMStrUCtlOn
John Tippitt and John Ket fr......- wo Of Dutcll GoV*t
DUTCH HECKLERS KEEP NAZI U HopeC of fdr
OFFICERS BUSY; JAILS FULL
AMSTERDAM, the Netherlands teen or twenty guilders the curds
Nov. 5—-Dutchmen are throwing; are available. Their sources are
monkey wrenches into German j various; Some peasants churn for
official machinery just as fast as
the Nazis think up new regula-
tions.
Because illegal butter cards are
disrupting distribution, German
authorities have ordered new ones
introduced.
The forgers are just as quick.
themselves and sell the cards;
some of the poor sill cards at high
prices; some are plain forgeries.
The number of lost cards last
wek totaled 20,600, of which it is
asserted only 20 per cent were
lioua fide losses. Henceforth a lost
. - butter ticket can he replaced only
Police laid hands on one man of--jn ^ of hous,-break, fire or
fering a new butter ticket m «i bombardment,
restaurant, searched hint and ,
found twenty more cards, hut were . Man>’ I*'™"* »' larf Dl‘u'h
unable to discover the secret print- al,'fd>' hav" used up their
bread and potato cards for weeks
ing press.
The evasion of food regulations
has become such a favorite sport
the Germans have become sterner
in the punishment of severe cases.
Five days after a new decree
was issued the courts had five
Dutchmen standing before a spe-
cial judge. It still is a question
whether they are to be condemned
I to death.
parked in the 400 block W. Chest-: Included In the bids are to he 11] The driver of the car was hold] The number of persons who
nut Saturday night. Value was code control unit, central station j„ jaji pending filing of drunk have more butter ration cards than
placed at $5 j transmitter and lightning arrester, j driving charges. jig legal increases daily. For fif
in advance. This is a particularly
! BERLIN, Nov. 5 — The high
; command claimed another big sue-
| cess for its submarines and uir-
! planes in the battle against sea
life lines today, asserting that
I nearly 75,000 tons of shipping in
I eluding a destroyer and 11 mer-
_ t chant ships from a single Atlantic
HYDE PARK, N. Y , No\ 5— convoy had been sunk
President Roosevelt today express- The high command -aid that in
ed a fervent hope for reeonsfruc-; °ne big attack against the Atlan-
tion of the government of the Ne- tic convoy 53,000 ton- were sent
therlands as it was before the Ger- ’» 'he bottom,
man conquest in 1940. A second destroyer and three
Holland’s exiled Crown Princess, merchant ships wert
Juliana, was- present as the Presi- pedoes and damaged, it said
dent spoke of her country in ex- (A similar announcement b\
temporaneoti- remarks from the 'he German high command la.-t
portico of his home- Comparing preceded the Washington
the democracy of the Netherlands revelation of the sinking of the
with that of the United State*, Mr Reuben James.
Roosevelt said he hoped that soon
londitions would be such that both WOMAN (INJURED IN
Juliana and her mother. Quern AUTOMOBILE COLLISION
Wilhelmina, would be aide to re-
turn to their home. Mrs. E. II Coffman, '•»’* "■
Mr Roosevelt spoke at a rally Woodard, sustained -light cut-
of his democrat neighbors ce’e- «'>d bruises when the 1935 model
bruting a clean sweep of their 1‘ord coach in
ticket in the township and county riding, driven by
, 205, basketry,
«'mining, pathfinding,
..'tli, public health and
v-'npmr-nt; Bobby Tate,
reading, scholarship,
carpentry, first aid to
»■ -man-hip, safety, pet-
ti, public health ana
I:hy~ - development; John Alex-
i'd r, 205, camping, cooking,
nn':.finding: Gene Rush, 205,
-w amiing; Tommy Canon, 205,
-wimming nd pathfinding; Tom-
m\ Rond, 205, pathfinding, per-
sonal health, public health.
Robert F,. Cox, 207 camping,
-afe:\, rending and woodwork-
Bobby Garner, 207, reading and
pub'ii health; Edward More, 208
public health; James Hawkins, 209,
pi - irn! development, pioneering,
lird ,-tudy and carpentry; Billy
r0w,H. ‘09, bird study, handi-
craft and woodwork.
Rayburn Returns
To Capital Today
.Speaker of the House Sam Rav
hurt enroute to Washington via
train today from Bonham, his
hom . where ho officially dedicat-
ed ti>e Bonham aviation school and
later -poke at the Greenville
Chamber of Commerce’s annual
banquet.
Believing trains through this
area to lie tiid un due to floods
ii Oklahoma, as they have been
for -pveral days, the congressman
di parted from his usual custom of
... , boarding a train here and was
which she was „ , ......
,, ,, ,, driven to T xarkana by ms nrotn-
Mr- Coffman, 1 _ , . , , ,
serious situation because bread elections. The President recalled collided with a 1941 model Ford
and potatoes are main staples.
The problem of what to do with
persons charged with dodging food
regulations has become a major
one. Since the jails are jammed
with those convicted, thousands of
others are walking the streets
while waiting for a room in which
tu serve their terms. As a result
plans are heing made to
Dutch concentration camps.
er. Tom, whi re another line is tak-
ing him toward the nation’s rnpi- .
tal- Unknown to the m’on, how-,
ever, the train which he was to
t ial, was the first to get
1 the flooded area.
through
that it was the fir-1 complete vie- driven by Roy Burke, 921 \\
tory for the democrats in normal Gandy, shortly before 10 p. n
ly republican Dutchess county Tuesday in the 1000 block Maim h, lkp K;)U Texas Spec
since 1871 Mrs. Coffman was administered ,u_____%.
Almost 300 fellow townsmen of first aid emergency treatment
the President swept onto his estate long-Sneed hospital and was r
and cheered the victory. Accont- leased. The Coffman vehic e, .*
panted by Mrs. Roosevelt the Pres- cording to police reports, wi
ident walked out ov the nnrtico to headed north on Tone avonu
erect^eongrn'ttlnte the victorious eandi- while Burke was driving «»
I dat
I
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Anderson, LeRoy. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 108, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 5, 1941, newspaper, November 5, 1941; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth526734/m1/1/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.