The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 52, Ed. 1 Friday, June 14, 1946 Page: 1 of 6
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ENISON PRESS
RSnUDSmTATIV£ OF THE UNITED PRES8
DENISON, TEXAS FRIDAY, JUNE 14th, 1940
VOLUME 17—NO. 52
OPA Powers Are Drastically Cut
ALONG THE
NEWS BEAT
BY TUB EDITOR
THE DEVIL GETS FOREMOST
You have beard for a long time
that old saw about “every fellow
for himself and the devil take
j
GRAYSON COUNTY VOTES ON BEER JULY 2
Utr Many
[Bloody Tragedy In
the ’’"idmost.”
Well, like a lot
of otkci* of our
glib sayings, it
is all wrong.
lhe fact 'a^e J carry their point in the forth
fellow who does ..... *.....
practice the
Denison Wipes Out Lateral Canal
Heads Two Families Red River Case
House Approves|Candidates Put Ban
On Being Center At
Articles
frf’KAYSON VOTES
With both sides squaring off to
policy of being
for himself
stiictly, and ho
gets out in the
front, the devil has already got
him, and the poor struggling guy
struggling along in the hindmost
part of the procession is not of
particular use, or at least not so
valuable a tool for the devil as
the man in the frontmost section
of the line of march.
The more a man practices this
policy of “every fellow for him-
self,” the less of human kindness
he has in his soul and the more
of the sourness of the devil.
Of course, the devil has the
ability of appearing very sweet
and attractive, and the more like
an angel he looks, the more he is
able to deceive the saints. He
has plenty of devices, and one of
them is making, a fellow think
he deserves to get out in front
and leave behind the struggling
firm of his weaker or more con-
sciencious brother.
When Moody arrived in Lon-
don they told him they "hoped he
would he able to do something
for the miserable poor.” He an-
swered that he ‘hoped to do some-
thing for the miserable rich.”
Sam Jones went to Brooklyn to
hold a revival meeting for a cer-
tain congregation and the proud
folk of the church, headed by
the pastor, thought they would,
by a ruse, get him dressed up in
tails. He had the suit fitted,
never chirping a word that he was
on to what was going on, until he
stepped into the pulpit for the
opening sermon. He paraded
back and forth on the rostrum,
swinging the tails as he did so,
and casting an eye out front oc-
casionally at the brethren in the
pews eyeing their dressed-up par-
Bon from down Georgia way.
Then Sain remarked to the
membership, “If you people had
as much religion as you have of
pride, you would not need to send
to Georgia to get p preacher to
hold a revival for you.”
This thing of getting, ahead, has
an angle of pride to it also, and
it reaches far afileld, even into
the religious circles. We do a
lot of climbing and pushing others
around in this life in order to get
out in front and be in the public
eye.
We do not need to be so con-
cerned about the fellow in the
hindmost section or the miserable
poor. Better take a long look in-
to our own status—maybe the
devij already has us and Is making
a splendid tool, and the Good
Ropk says something about this
thing of taking the high seats and
Standing in the market place to
be seen of men.
Also recall the Teacher said of
such "verily they have their re-
ward.”
coming election July 2nd in Gray-
son as to whether or not beer is
to be sold legally, the campaign-
ing may get warmer, hut so far,
not much torridness has been en-
gendered.
The boys who have been com-
pelled to go across on the Oklaho-
ma side| of Red River, or bring in
their beer from Dallas or other
counties, are saying that it is
time to stop {this spending of
money in other territories and
let it circulate here in Denison,
along with letting Grayson coun-
ty have its shaie of the taxes in-
stead of letting it go elsewhere.
The argument that beer can not
be secured does not hold good,
say those claiming to be in the
know, since the beer Denison and
the rest of Grayson county has
been getting from other cities
will be diverted' here, while at the
same time the county will get the
taxes which so far have been de-
nied for expense purposes for the
various causes to which tax mon-
ey goes.
Grayson before permitted road
houses, but it is understood that
this will not be so any more as
ah beer sold must be within the
police area of the city.
There has been an overwhelm-
ing vote in the larger centers in
favor of the legal sale of beer
according to records, it is dec-
lared, but it is the massing of the
smaller community vote which de
Dies the localite,- their wishes in
the matter. However, it i- un-
derstood that the manner in which
the petitions were signed all the
county over, this sentiment has
considerably changed.
The election was called follow-
lowing a checking of the several
petitions circulated over the coun-
ty and presented to the county
clerk,
City Turns Down
Request to Create
Airport at Randell
Following a request that per-
mission be given the Civil Air
Datrol to place an airport in
the vicinity of Randell lake, the
Friday morning the condition of
Ali. s Geoigiuna Cuchenor remain-
ed critical at the Madonna hospit-
al. A brain specialist from Dal-
las came up with a staff of as-
sistants to see if anything could lie
done in the way of removing the
bullet from the brain of Miss
Cuchenor. It is understood that
while some relief was given, her
condition was such as to make
it inadvisable to remove the bul-
let. Her condition was still pro-
nounced critical Friday morning.
Funeral services for the other
three members of the family were
held Friday morning.
Another one of those regretta-
ble date lines to Denison was ad-
ded this week when the news
was flashed that one more, and
the most grewsome of all trage-
dies hud been enacted. Hardly
believing their ears, hundreds
sought to be convinced with act-
ual- sight of the scene of a hus-
band and father’s work with a .38
calibre automatic revolver, which
first took the life of his mother,
then his wife, and following up
his killing spree by chasing his
only daughter into the yard, fir-
ing at her. He then turned the
weapon upon himself and his body
was seen prone in his own yard.
The shooter In the tragedy was
George Cuchenor, and his vistims
were his own mother, Mrs. Lena
Cuchenor, his wife Mrs. George
A. Cuchenor. Later the husband
and father died of his wounds,
The daughter, Miss Geovgine,
who told police her own father
did the shooting, is still fighting
to live at Madonna hospital. She
had only a week prior to being
shot down, received her M. A.
degree from T. S. C. W. where
she had been doing some teaching
following the receiving of her A.
B. degree.
The physical facts in the trag-
edy seem to point to the fact that
death came upon the household
like a thief in the night, as the
mother was in the act of doing
some sewing and was wearing a
thimble. The wife was eating a
sandwich and was sitting at the
dining table when she was shot
1 through the head as was the first
victim. The daughter was in the
act of packing her grip for re-
turng to her school work.
The House of Representatives
voted approval of the $43,000,-
000 Red River Lateral Canal,
which was a part of the 1946
Omnibus Rivers and Harbors
Bill, on June 6 by a majority
vote of 208 to 68.
Although the Canal project
still has to be passed on by the
Senate, it is very probable that
the OVERTON RED RIVER
WATERWAY will secure con-
gressional authorization during
this session of Congress. Sena-
tor Overton, Chairman of the
Sub-Commerce Committee of the
Senate has notified the Red
River Valley Improvement Asso-
ciation and the Department of
Public Works of the State of
Louisiana that his Committeo
will open Senate Hearings on
the Rivers and Harbors bill on
Monday, June 10|. Your Asso-
ciation will he represented, to-
gether with the Director and
Chief Engineer of the Depart-
ment of Public Works of thd
State of Louisiana in support
leading citizens throughout the
State of Louisiaan in support
of the Rod River Canal project.
In a rampant session of the U.
Pip ^vlinnprc Affain 's. Senate Thur day night the body
rlC 0U|jpCI5 Hgfllll dealing m lash-
Again the candidates for ol- ing blow to the powers of the
1 ices m Grayson county have OPA and ceiling prices were re-
Senator Overton has also noti-
fied the Association that Senate
Hearings on the $77,500,600
Red River Interim Flood Con-
trol report will be conducted by
his Committee on June 24. The
plan has the approval of the
Flood Control Committee of the
House; and House action is ex-
pected during the week of June
10.
It is recalled that the father of
| George A. Cuchenor was found
city authorities denied the po-u„„, • , ■ , , ,
...: ,, , . , 1 . dead in his laundry with a pistol
tition on the ground that if , ... . , , ,
hazard to the!'™ "hich,a shot had Wen tired
ilyiiip at his side. The verdict
from self-inflicted
might pi ove a
water’s purity.
A representative of the pa-jwas deat*1
health hazard for the lake, tho wcunds,
mission and made the request. | The Cuchenors for several years
and on the grounds it might
A new policy has been an-
nounced for U. S. Army Engi-
neer opei ations on Red River
below' Fulton, Arkansas to its
mouth at Old River in Louisi-
ana. Two areas have been set
up by Colonel B. L. Gahalager,
New' Orleans District Engineer.
The Shreveport area, under the
direction of Field Assistant
II. G. Casserleigh, will have
headquarters in Shreveport, and
will be responsible for supervi-
sion of construction of existing
projects* in Sulphur River. Cyp-
ress River. Bodcaw and Wallace
Reservoirs, and projects on main
stem Red, from Fulton. Arkan-
sas, to Natchitoches or Grand
Ecore. Below Grand Ecore and
extending to Old River the area
office will be located at Alex-
andria and for this area, super-
vision is under Field Assistant
'Henry F. McDowell. As in the
placed a ban against being the
tioys to put up cash for pie sup-
pel’s and the like which are so
popular ruling election years,
and by a vote of some 24 can-
didates, they ruled they would
not patronize the parties.
In the old days pie suppers
sold at auction pies and cakes
at a big profit and the per-
centage of profit for the holders
was such as to make it highly
profitable for the. sellers and
rather costly for the buyers. It
was to hedge off this expendi-
ture and stop the competing
with each other at an auction
that the boys decided they
would hold rallies but stay shy
of all long profit-making affairs.
June 15 is the final date fot
candidates to file and it is un-
derstood additional filinge at the
last hour are likely,
A committee composed ot
three candidates with no oppo-
nents will map out a schedule of
speaking dates. They are Ray
Short, J. C. Buchanan and
Roger Q. Evans,
As tentatively scheduled, the
final campaign week begins
Monday night, July 22, in
Whitewright and continues
through the week at Van Al-
styne. Whiteslmro and Denison,
and closes Friday night in
Sherman.
Other assemblies to he con-
sidered are 'a, rally at Howe for
dune 14. Gunter picnic in mid-
,Tu]v. picnics in Pottsboro and
BelL and a July 1 celebration
in Van Alstyne.
June 15 is final date for fil-
ing for county offices Final
arrangements for the rallies
will he announced after that
date.
moved on many articles of the
family diet such as market basket
items. Included in the group
were -nch item as milk, butter,
eggs, chicken-, meat. The vote
was 53 to 11.
The lid will comeoff as of June
3o this year.
OPA backers fighting back in
an angry frame of mind, declared
the tep taken would “massacre
and crucify” price control, and
that the coalition which put over
the act would regret the step in
six months.
Those pushing the measure de-
clared they were freeing business
so that it might go ahead more
speedily with full production.
Dr. Levinson
Adds Jones To
His Offices
Dr. A. J. Levinson, wTho re-
cently returned to his optome-
tric office after three years in
the service, has added an able
assistant in the person ol' Rich-
ard (D. Jonest, a graduate ol
the School of Optics, Brooklyn,
he announced this week. The
Levinson offices are at 509
Main street.
Mr. Jones, who was born in
Denison, decided to return to
and his home town after his gradu-
Tax Hike For City
For School Causes
Being Given Study
Hiking taxes in Denison for
city school purposes to carry on
the work of the school, and
part of the increased taxes to
go toward bringing the salaries
of school teachers up to a level
in keeping with other schools of
like grade in Texas is a matter
to be token under consideration
! at once by the city council, it
was announced this week.
Recently it was brought be-
fore the school board that the
negro school teachers with an
equal amount of preparation as
whites in the same grades
should receive pay commensu-
rate with thoiit training regard-
less of color. The daise was
brought before the courts and
a ruling made in favor of tha
nlnintiff.
The school hoard asked the
city to give the matter of an
increase in 'axes for school pur-
poses close study with such an
objective in view.
past all designs, plans
other details are to ho compiled| tion from the school of optome
by Colonel Gahalager’s District try.
„ N« Orleans; '»»»"-, ^ „ the lirookll, sch„„|.
Starting with this week, Mr.
;He left the field of rail-
J reading in Denison to take his
prove a
source of
it
creating
operating their laundry,
which was taken over on the death
health hazord for the lake, the
request was thought not to bo the father- were fa™l'a*' faces
granted.
MOORE WIlVlDRAWS
IS FOR BOYCE HOUSE
FOR LT. GOVERNOR
Brownwood, June 10.—Latest
development in the swift mov-
ing campaign of Boyce House
for Lieutenant Governor is the
withdrawal of Bob Moore, Ama-
rillo and Brownwood publisher,
from the race, land the an
on Main street. They had the
policy of closing down Saturday
.. „ noon and would spend the after-
Neither the working hours nor,
the vacation time of tho Presi- ""0I' and evcll"'K vialtlnK 8tores
dent of the United States has <b’wn town. They always ap-
ever hcen set by law, peared most congenial. The news
of such a termination of the pop-
ular family came doubly shocking
People south of the equator j
see Southern Lights, or Aurora to frl0l1(ls‘
Austral ig ______
When the
sod falls into the
his support of, open graves and the minister
says “Earth to earth, dust to
nnuncement of
House.
Moore, one of the leading dust, ashes to ashes and the soul
candidates until his withdrawal j-0 f;0d who gave it,” only Divine
several days ago, is widely, wj.dqm and mercy will know the
known over the state and Politi- !answor and judge aright as to
cal observers had predicted heivhal shall be thc fate of the hus-
would ha would have polled a
credible vote,
band and father and son,
st.ruction supervision in the
Field will be under the direction
of the Field Assistants in the
areas heretofore mentioned.
Tho arrival of additional
equipment at Lucas Bend "’as a
welcome sight to observers on
Monday, June 3. A dredge boat,
a pile driver with smaller craft,
and a quarter-boat housing 78
imen of the crew, arrived lor
an extended stay at tins trouble
spot on Red River. This signals
the start of extensive! operations
on Red River,
On Thursday, May 30, ap-
proximately some 30 miles north
of Shreveport on the Rienden-
horn Plantation the river cut
through a narrow neck of land
in forming a new channel and
eliminating a deep bend of ap-
proximately 1 1-2 Mills.
Although it is too early to pre-
dict what effect this "’ill have
on the river below and abovd
this cut-off, it is being watched
closely by the Department of
Public Works and the United
States Army Engineers. The
rate of fall at this particular
point is approximately 7 7-10
per mile. A
Jolley was placed in charge ot
all dispensary work, adjusting,
repair work, and is to serve as
credit and advertising manager.
Dr. Levinson will give his
full time exclusively to eye ex-
aminations and glass fitting
IMr. Jones is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. E. 1). Jones of this
city With his wife, the format
Miss Virginia Harvey, he live;
at 816. W. Woodard strep;
They Waive a six-year-old son,
Dickie.
Cooling
System At
Saratoga
Announcement is made thi*
week by Jim Johnson and son
Jimmy, co-owners of the Sarw
toga Cafe, that a cooling sys-
tem of 14,000 pound capacity,
of the Super Cold type, is be-
ing installed at their cafe, 101
W Main. Installation waa start-
ed Monday and the cafe was
planned to be opened by Wed-
nesday.
This '.achine is a complete
air-condiVioner. Some alteration
and decoration will be made on
tho interior of thd cafe while it
is closed for placing the ma-
chine, the Johnsons announced.
AIR SCOUT CAMP IS
OPENED AT CAMP PERRIN
Approximately 200 Air
Scouts of America from 30
towns in Texas, Oklahoma and
New Mexico began a five-day
encampment at Perrin Field
Monday for axiition training
tinder the \AF T’”'i"inV Coin-,
mand.
Scouts will follow a schedule
similar to the war-time aviation
cadet training program, On the
field, they will be housed
in bachelor officers’ quarters
and eat at officers’ mess,
BILLY BRUCE ARRIVES
FOR FOURTEEN DAY STAY
Billy Bruce, son of Mr. and
Mrs. F. L. Bruce, 5(21 E. Mor-
ton street, who is connected
with the Army Ordnance Depart-
ment in the wheel vehicle auto-
mechanic section, is home for a
fourteen day visit with his par-
ents and friends. He is sta-
tioned at Camp Killmer, N. T,
In his training Billy has been
in Georgia and other states.
Whib' in high school here.
Billy was one of the route boys
for the Press and Inter learned
considerable of the mechanical
end. Billy later worked several
monhs as an apprentice for
the Sherman Democrat He en-
listed last year,
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Anderson, LeRoy. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 52, Ed. 1 Friday, June 14, 1946, newspaper, June 14, 1946; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth527114/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.