The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 219, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 24, 1942 Page: 1 of 4
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m
WEATHER
DENISON AND VICINITY
Continued warm tonight
and Wednesday.
The Denison Press
PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT
SUNDAY
VOUR HOME-OWNED
DAILY NEWSPAPER
85c PER MONTH
REPRESENTATIVE OF THE UNITED PRESS
DENISON, TEXAS TUES., MARCH 24th, 1942
WEEKLY FOUNDED 1930- DAILY 1934
VOL. VIII—NO. 219
U. S. Submarines Sink Nazis Slay
3 More Enemy Vessels
Combatant Ship, Two Freighter* Believed jpavLn„n fivpc
Damaged; Bring* War’* Total Now To 183j^dyDuni U1VC^
WASHINGTON, March 24— of Japanese ships announced of-j LllclorSCIIlCIlt^^)f
United States submarines, making ficially as destroyed or damaged m ww l
Japanese waters their hunting by American and Australian ac-j | KCSOllltlOn
grounds, have sunk three more of tion since the start of the war to' *
the enemy's merchant ships, at- 183. Surface ships, airplanes andj __
tacked and probably sank a com-j submarines accounted for them,
batant ship and damaged two! An undetermined number of ves-
freighters, the navy reported to- seis also was sunk by the Dutch,
day, ; Of the American-Australian total
The communique ran the score of 183, the United States navy has,
sunk or damaged 118 vessels. The
Their Own
Wounded
NationsPlaceJapanO ensile In
Pacific, Land Driies Being Broken
Red* Reported To
Have Killed 1,800
In Past Two Day*
Norwegians Defy Nazis
Favor* 48-Hour
Working Week, No
Double Pay Sun*.
ALONG TH€
N6WS B€AT
BY THE EDITOR
latter figure breaks down as t'ol-|
lows:
35 Combatants Sunk.
Combatant ships sunk or
lieved sunk, 35; damaged, 10; non-
I combatant ships sunk, 48; believed
! sunk, 16; damaged, 11.
WASHINGTON, Mar. 24—The
' movement to alter the wage-hour
1 law received powerful support to-
be-! day when Speaker Sam Rayburn
of Bonham, Texas, expressed the
1 opinion that time and a half pay
I should begin after forty-eight 1
_____ The navy communique said that) hours instend of forty- ' ;
What Are We Fighting For? | the combatant ship probably sunk ent'
In a lengthy speech made in was a destroyer or antisubmarine, . .
Paris Friday night, a leader of one; vessel indicating thnt one Amer-! a provision .in a
of the labor unions, charged that icun submarine skipper turned the Sunday during a inas mectng in
the present move to get action in! tables on the Japanese. The mer-i Dallas.
the war program “is nothing but .chant ships sunk were described; I endorse the .resolution pi -cu
a movement to hold labor down, as a 7,000-ton tanker, a 6,000-ton !'n Dallas, calling for a forty-eig it-
and regiment us.” He Then fol-! ship and a 5,000-ton freighter. ! hour work week, he aid.
MOSCOW, March 24—Germans
are said to be killing their wound-
ed and burying them to cover up
their losses, in the Staraya Russa
sector, where the whole sixteenth
army division is hopelessly trap-
ped and cut off from all sources
of supplies from the German.
At another point northeast of
Moscow, in an unnamed town, 1,-
800 Germans are said to have
been killed in the past two days
and eleven tanks wiped out.
The Soviet communique said
twenty-six German aircraft were
gave his views in endorsing| ,d™> ,S“,id“y an?,tl,rL'e
resolution adopted I Moscow Monday, while a supple-
ment to thi- announcement listed
249 nazi craft destroyed in the
March 15-21 period. Soviet losses
from March 15 through Sunday
were listed at eighty-eight.
Emphasis wa? shifted to the air
Monday re-
ported no substantial changes in
positions- on the land front.
regiment us.” .... ______ -----...-------—„------ .
lowed it with the statement that: The succinct phrase, “United |thml< thaf tn"c an,‘ 11 haI‘ shou ' j fighting as both the morning and
“these laws, if enacted, would States submarines operating ,-n ! he paid for employment after 01' j n;Kht communiques ” ’ —
never be repealed.” ; Japanese waters,” has appeared ty-eight hours.
This charge seems to be the with increasing frequency in re-1 There is a rising clamor on cap-
stock in trade of some labor lead-icent weeks in the ters navy an-; Hoi hill for new labor legisla-
-----nouncements. It suggests Ameri-|tios, but President Roo-eve.t ha
can underea boats are lurking' taken the position that things are
hard by the sealanes from big Jap- go'"g along pretty well now and
i anese ports, stalking and picking
I off Nipponese ships outward bound
with war supplies and troops or
Japs In Radio Broadcast, Admit Lo*s
Of 7,000 In Rabaul Invasion In January
WASHINGTON, March 24—A have additional ships in order to
German radio broadcast quotes a take advantage of the lands they
Japanese spokesman as saying that, have conquered.
Japan is now on the defensive in
the Pacific waters and that it roust
Kraft Has Not
Violated Any
Law, Says Riddle
Issues Statement
Regarding Recent
Federal Indictment
(Continued on page four)
DEATH ROI L
MRS. WILLIAiM WOODEN I inbound for fresh loads.
A resident of Denison 36 years,' In addition to this campaign of
Mrs. William Wooden, 62, died attrtion again-t the troop and car-
this morning at 7:15 at a local hos- go carriers, the American skippers
pital following an illness of one' ge an occasional shot at a war
year. j ship convoying the freighters.
Funeral services will be held Besides operations in
Wednesday afternoon at 2 o’clock around Japan proper, the
from Short-Murray chapel, Rev.
Nephew Of
Penisonians Is
Killed In Action
1 indicated opposition to a change in
the law.
Rayburn was asked for hi- opin-
ion about double pay on Sunday- _
and holidays, now provided in Mr amJ jIlv Harvey Cotton,
some union-management contracts., j,0- j, nay, received a mes-age
“Double time,” he replied terse- tem,1(r 0f the death of their ne-
- My. “I think that ought to he out.” j,|ieWi Claud Mathis, Jr., 23-year-
Hailing from a congressional 0]d jj s. seaman, and son of Mr.
TESTIMONY to the spirit of indej .Jence which still burns brightly
after nearly two years of German occurauon is this photo cf a telephone
pole “somewhere in Norway.” The pole bears a picture of King Haakon
VII, Crown Prince Olav and the latter's little son, Harald, mounted by
patriotic Norwegians in spite of the heavy punishment which is inflicted
on all those caught by the Germans. Under the picture are chalked an
•”H 7” (for Haakon VII) and V for Victory. Photo is one of several
(brought from Norway by a refugee who escaped to Britain by sailboat
137 Musicians, Singers
To Enter School Festival
Ben F. Hearn officiating. Inter-
ment will be at Fairvicw cemetery,
Short-jMtirray directing.
Mr?. Wooden was horn in Knox
county, Mo., Dec. 31, 1879, daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. William Lind-
scy and received her education at
Hedge City, JMo. She was married
on Oct. 22, 1902 to Mr. Wooden,
M-K-T. store helper, at Schyler
county, Mo- They resided at Moul-
ton, Iowa before coming to Den-
ison.
Mrs. Wooden was a mrjnber of
waters district and a state where
Ameri'l indignation meetings have
can submar'nes have found targetsi held to urge -uspension ot
in the China sea, route for Japan’s'
supplies to the South Seas front,| _
and at other points referred to by
the navy only as in Far Ea-tern ^Pgpt, OnciyS
(Continued en page feur)
waters.
.V---
FDR Approves
Grant For Tex.
New Projects For
ArmyEng’rs.Here
The war department announced
AUSTIN. Tex., March 24—Pres- today construction had been au-
id rt Roosevelt has approved a thorized for an army cantonment
grant of $1,90-5,5,’r in federal
the First Christian church and f»inds to the Texas state depart-
ment of health to continue a varied Hosed location in Ttxa» to cost
health aid program which )vis been more than $5,000,000.
at Gainesville and also for
manufacturing plant at an
projects
Denison
the Royal Neighbors of America
80 Wivin* are her hu-hand• two' carrtafon 'by^the department’for Construction at both
dauch ers ’ MrsCarl iavo and more than a year. Senator Tom will be supervised by the
Mr- Ralnh Tnhnson of Denison’ a' Connally today notified Gov. Coke district engineer office.
Mr?. Ralph Johnson of Denison, a At the same time award of a
brother, William Lindsey of Ottun- 1 department program contract was announced to the
wa, Iowa; and two sisters,<Mrs. F ,ta e .' .* , i'Austin rnmnanv Cleveland for
F Rvl« of Nebraska and Mrs consists of medical and dental Austin Company, Cleveland, tor
F. Bylce of Nehra-ka ' dini(.S) som„ permanent and other architect - engineer and manage-
of the traveling types; laboratory ment services in connection with
manufacturing plant in Texas.
niass and Mrs. Claud Mathis, Navasota,
been Texas.
thei The message stated The young
seaman was reported by the navy
department as “killed in action,
somewhere in the Pacific.” No
other details were given. Mathis
enlisted !n the navy four years
ago and lacked but two years of
finishing his first “cruise” with
the naval forces.
Mr. and Mrs. Cotton also dis-
closed every member of their
family is now assisting in ail-out ,,fi0
for victory program of the United
States.
Their ;on, Endall, is now with
an army infantry company at Fort jp.ppcics in th
Blanding, Fla., and is being sent an(1 Texas,
Steno, Typists
Fxams Scheduled
Piv Civil Service
a new
undis-
to an officers’ training school at Tj,p ijnl;t. for th
J. M- Collier of Ottumwa, Iowa.
MRS. SUSAN M. SCOTT
Following an illne-s of six
weeks, Mrs. Susan Margaret Scott,
73, a resident of route 1, Denison,
for 35 years died this morning at
(Continued on page four)
Camp Penning on April 2 for three ,;on ar„ j# to 53
months training during which, f jjmit doe? not
ho is successful, he will be gradu-
ated as a second lieutenant.
Another son. Randall, is a cadet
at Gardner field, Calif., basic fly-
ing school.
A daughter, J4i?s Doris Cotton,
is PBX operator and typist, at
Charles L. Gripies, high school
music department director, an-
nounced today he was entering thu
sixty-piece Yellow Jacket band in
the Texas ,Music Educators Com-
petition-Festivals, northern divi-
-------- ion 0f region 111, to be held at
The United States civil serv'ee North Texas State Teachers Col-
commission announces open com- lego in Denton Friday and Satui-
potitive examination for the po.-i- day, April 17-18. William Tall-
• ions of junior stenographer $1,- madge, vocal instructor, is entei
440 a year and junior typist, $1,- ing a chorus of 37 voice-.
a year The register resulting The festival, which last year
from this examination will be used urew several hundred high schoo
in filling vacancies in the.e posi- musicians from this section to tin
tons in various federal government college campus, resulting in many
states of Louisiana of the award being won by the
local high school band, is open t
all school music groups from towns
in the northern part of region III
or near the borders of adjoinin,
In. a statement i-sued
through E. N. Berglund, south-
west sales manager for the Kraft
Cheese company, A. J Riddle, di-
vision general manager aid that
the Kraft cheese company and its
executives have not violated the
'Bhermart anti-trust law or any oth-
er law.
His statement, which'Mr Berg-
lund -aid was also his sentiments,
was in reply to the recent news
as.-.ociation dispatch which listed
Riddle and Berglund among indi-
vidual defendants on which two
anti-tru-t law indiclincnts charg-
ing conspiracy to fix prices on
American and brick cheese were
returned March 18 by a federal
grand jury at Chicago,
i A total of 141 defendant wa-’
named in. the indictments.
Controlled Production.
One indictment charged seven-
' teen corporation and twenty-three
of th‘.ir officers and agents with
conspiracy to fix prices to he paid
by dealers to produr- for brick
cheese old and shipp'd in inter-
rommeree. It aid the do
It i claimed that as matters'
now stand these ngw holdings E”0
of no use to them with the long
communication lines and growi g
shortage of ships caused by recent
sinkings. The communique urges
output of ships now in the maki g
i in Japan.
The broadcast, it is tnted, may
be for hom consumption and not
entirely true to the facts, howeve”
' Gen. ’Dougin MacArthur, at Sy I-
ney me age states, is hurrying a
- every possible way to take tl e
initiative in tin offensive and
make good his claim that he “will
go back again through the lines f
the Japanese,” a- he came out f
today;them from the Philippines.
l osing .Pushing Pover.
It is known that with the grow-
ing trouble being experienced by
the Jnpanevi in keeping up th- >
long lines of communication and
state
(Continued on page fou»)
Doris Miller
Resigns From CC
Miss Dori? Miller, 1806 West
Bond, has tendered her resignation
as office secretary of the Cham-
ber of Commerce to neept a posi-
tion as typist and clerk at Perrin
field.
(Her new appointment becomes
effective Thursday. She has been
connected with the C. of C. here,
since August, 1940, accepting thej
position under A. W. Long, then
secretary-manager.
Succeeding (Miss Miller is Mrs. I
Billie Kay, formerly of Dallas,
hut now residing at 72914 West
Crawford.
--V---
Soldiers May Ruy
Peer Within Camp
work, the fighting of various dis-|a
eases which reach epidemic pro-'Whether this was a second plant ^ engineer office here An
portions and the providing of or the same simultaneously au- ^ (, ^ Mi., Leontine,
health workers. 1 thorized, was not disclosed. v- the en(rjneer staff Monday
Doctors, dentists, nurses, assis-; plant, to cost more than $5,000- ^ >( ist
tant nurse? and other public 000, also will be supervised by the ^ thjrd dnu(,hter if
health workers will be kept in the. Denison engineer office. ; !tn;ttinyr for the Red Cross, and
field as the result of the cxten-| ........ their youngest, Barbara first
sion of the federal aid. It will be STEVENSON TO SPEAK ffrad, student at Central I’hool
possible to establish additional BEFORE ETEX CHAMBER
venereal clinics near military AUSTIN, Tex., Mar. 24 Gov.
camps.
Coke Stevenson Monday accepted
; knitting
their youngest,
grade student at
I makes regular purchases ea h
week of defense stamps from the
School PTA.
--_.V------- 1 an invitation to speak before u,u ^ jg &n offjcer in the
Jack Cox Made Corporal j East Texas Chamber of Commerce ffUar,i company here and
Jack Cox, on of Mr. and Mrs. in Longview April 20. MrSi Cotton attends food for vie
M. G. Cox, 201 W. Gandy, physi- The governor declined an invi- { and nutrition cln,5e8.
cal instructor at Lemore field, tation to attend the convention of
Calif., has been promoted from the National Association of Coun-
private first class to corporal, ty Officials which will be held in
his parent? have been informed. Hollywood May 20 to 23^__
xamina-
The maximum
apply to per-
sons granted military preference regions-
because of military or naval ser-
vice.
Competitors will be notified
when and where to report for
the written examination.
Application card form 4000ABC
may be fited with the Manager,
Tenth U. S. Civil Service District,
Customhouse, New Orleans, La.,-
until further notice.
Futher information and applica-
tion forms may be secured from
the Manager, Tenth U. S. Civil
Service District, Customhouse,
New Orleans, I.a., or from Mrs
Mary K. Roach at the Denison
postoffice.
Debaters Appear
On Club Program
Member- of the Denison Hoo.-xt-
or4 club Monday were treated to
; oratorical contributions on the
phrase “To provide for the oom-
! mon defense” as those words ap-
1 near in the preamble to the Co;**
f Ftitution of the United State.-, the
i orations being delivered by two
(Continued on page foar)
Denison Tinfoil
Sponsor At Will
Rogers Field
Staff Sergeant Jay Biuton for*. .
mcr’y of DenLon, is one of th»
cold; at.'ionc-d at the Will R -.;-
ei - f'cld army air force bomba d-
-r.ent ba e near Oklahoma City.
Sergeant Bruton i- assigned to
:-n air base squadron there as the
i tan’ Sergeant Major in prr-
sonnel- H** is the husband of
Mr . Juanita Bruton, of Oklahor a
City.
Sera cant J. Warren Bruton is
nn<- of the pon-ors of the ’’tinfoil
for victory” campaign which g-'t
: .'. . ucce sf ully in tl.0
Ha.-- I’er-onnel office and will bo
. arried to ail part-, of the field
R‘ fore entering the army .a
Sore-ant Bruton resid’d
here. Before reporting to W !I
n .,(1 field on June 10, 1941, he
was on duty at Fort Leonard
Wood, Missouri,
Boosters To
Attend Services
R-
from
ation
praye
byter
Directrs of competing
groups mu.st be members of the! hiprh school students, proteges of
Tata- Music Educators association,! Otis Hilliard, instructor in debate
•ponsore of the evert. |and speech at the Denison hich
Drum-Bugle Corp» AI«o. |»choO.
Competition.- will be held for ! The oration- were delivered F > ^
bands, orche-tras, ensembles, ehor- i Betty .To Blakemore and Bi ly
uses, instrumental and vocal sol-- Earle Campbell, ana formed th
ists and drum and bugle corp .j program for the session. The pre-
The Denison entries will includ ! tmun committee was composed of
ensembles, 3f> instrument: i Mr. Hilliard and Noe! Jennings-
vocal solo:-to and - Ibe club gave a vote of thank.- for
-V---
$15,000,000 IS ASKED FOR
CONTINUED WORK ON DAM
Washita River
Bridge Approved
German Air
Commander Sent
To Sicily? Said
seven
•soloists, thre
'probably the 37-member girl '
•drum and bugle corps.
Solo and ensemble evpnt wi'l
■be Friday, April 17, and other
competitions the following Satur-
•day. The festival will be climii”
'ed by an inspection, marchin
'competition, and ma sed band per-
(Continued on page four)
the splendid program and congrat-
ulated Mr. Hilliard for his splen-
did work with the boys and gill?
of his department.
Both of the student- are slated
for the state contest in the finals
to determine the championship in
the oratorical contest, which is
sponsored annually by the local
American Legion post..
i LONDON, 'March 24—The Nazi
commander who directed the deva-
; station of Warsaw and Coventry,
Field Marshal Gen. Albert Kessel-
FARM WORKERS AVAILABLE
AGAIN THIS YEAR BY WPA
WASHINGTON, March 24—; The engineers suggested that
War department engineers report- $40,500 could be spent profitably
cd to congress today that upwards for completion of
of $22,188,500 could be expended buildings, landscaping and demoli
profitably during the 1943 fiscal tion of the construction camp at suit of the construction of the I-eil
year on construction of flood con- the Fort Supply reservoir on Wolf river dam and the flooding of -late
trol and rivers and harbors proj- creek near Woodward. highways and lands
ects affecting Oklahoma. ! If the engineers’ recommenda-
The chief project would be an tions were followed, $3,565,000 OAVID DORCHESTER MAKES
contin- would be made available next year U.T. SEMESTER HONOR ROI L
approved the design for a new rjn, has been put in charge of Ger-;
bridge on U. S. highway 70 across man airmen in Sicily, Brit .-h in-
the Washita river between Kings- formants reported today,
ton imd Mead, Chief Engineer Van j The move was interpret' d here
T. Moon said. | as
No estimate has been made of Up
AUSTIN, Tex., March 2F—Sol-
diers may buy and drink bepr
within nrmv ramp? in Texas—nrn- additional $15,000,000 for
viding the war department gives tied work on the huge Red River for continuation of work on the
authority—and the state is power- dam hydroelectric project on the $13,870,000 Canton reservoir on
less to interfere. Oklahoma-Texas border between the North Canadian
Tlhis was the effect of an opin- Duran-t. Okla., and Denison, Tex. Blaine county, Okla. At the end of
ion hy Attorney Genera! Gerald Another $180,000 would be pro , the last fiscal year work on that
C Mann, given at the request of vided under the engineers’ recom- project was 6 per cent completed.
Gov. Coke R. Stevenson. mendations for continued work on Engineers estimated $11,000,000
ptevensnn inquired with sneeial the Lugert-Altus reservoir and ir-| more would he required to com-
' reference to Camp Bowie. Brown igation poject near Altus, Okla., plete, maintain and optruL the
county, and Mann replied that Work already has started. The works.
properly authorized beer sales by budget bureau has recommended While no operations were pro-
the war department, even In a dry that $100,000 be spent next year j posed on the levees and floodways
area, could not be prohibited by on the project by the Interior de-
the state. I partment’s reclamation bureau, ' (Continued en page feur)
OKLAHOMA CITY, March 24—
The state highway commission has
for a ___
In keeping with long-establi?hed’fnt time and, naturally, some of
policies providing for the release those are not qualified for farm
of qualified workers from its rolls jobs because of their age or phy.
possibly pointing to' a stepped- whenever their services are needed sical handicaps.”
of up aerial offensive against Malta, by private employers, the Work The district manager emphasiz-
permanent the coat of the bridge, which is one possibly followed by seabgme in-'Projects Administration this year ed the Importance of the farmer
of the bridges being built as a re- vasion. aRain will be prepared to assist seeking UFA labor contacting the
The 55-year-old marshal, who farmers who need labor in Gray- United States employment service
also figures largely in aerial oper- son county, it was announced to- of Texas or supervisory person-
ations again t France and Russia, day by Gus W. Thomasson of Dal-
| is expected to increase co-ordina-1 las, WPA district manager-
I tion between the German and ltal- ‘The WPA is one on the alert
i inn air forces, both of which op- to make qualified men and women
David Dorchester of Denison crate from Sicily. instantly available for farm
and David Bryant of Sherman are Malta has been raided daily work,” Thoma son declared. W
river in announced as among the Univer- since he took charge in Sicily, and recognize the fact that the drat: urges that request?
the rocky Mediterranean island and defense industry employment made to one of these sources, ne
fortress has become known as one have made inroads on the normal ?nid.
of the most bombed snots on earth, farm labor supply. WPA does not require that thi
Monday was a typical otic on the “Of course, the farmer must certified worker be paid his nor-
malize that the extent to which mal WPA wage while in private
WPA can refer worker- to him is agricultural employment, accord-
nel on WPA work projects. At
certified workers , he add d, are
registered with the Employment
Service and are available there.
To be able to assist the farmer to
the greate t possible extent, WPA
for labor be
sity of Texas student- listed on
the honor roll for the first semes-
ter.
Dorchester is the son of Mr.
and Mrs N. C. Dorchester, 816 life of the battered island the realize that the extent to which mal WTA wage while in
W’. Texas. He i« n freshman in Germans blasted away without WPA can refer worker to him t- agricultural employment,
the university and spent a year pause from dawn to dusk and in so governed t?> u i.uo >•> gi'ei b> th tug to Mr. Thom ror.
following his graduation from doing lost three planes for certain numbers of certified men and
Denison high school in archaeolog- and two probables and six others worn n now assigned to projects
icnl research and amateur photog- w re damaged. Not a single RAF In Grayson eounty there are bu’
ruphy> j fighter was lost. i 526 men on projects at the pres-
“The only requirement of WPA
is that the worker receive a wage
(Continued •« p»z» feur)
ui ' to an invitation
th Deni.-on Pastors' essosi-
to join in the noon-day
r -ervii r- at the First Pr s-
a„. n connection with the
,.f pr—Easter services bcirg
by the Pastor ' association,
D" on Boo ters club voted
i„ ittci d ". a body the meetirg
next Monday.
The matter was presented to
the c uh ,,t it- meeting Monday at
Hotel Den ?on by President Ken-
neth Mr'.- The plan is to have
th- member of the club meet at
11 15 nt Woodard and North Bur-
nett avenue Monday and go in a
group to the church. Following
the servic - they will then go to
Hotel D nison and conduct their
regular bu-ine-s meeting and have
lunch.
-----------V-----
SEVEN PLACEMENTS MADE
BY REGISTRATION OFFICE
Placements made by the Homes
Registration office today include:
(Mr. and Mrs. Jack B. Shelton,
from the Terminal addition, Eat
Well cafe employee, 92S W. Nel-
son.
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Kirk, Dallas,
Atkinson mochanic, 923 W. Nel-
son.
Mr. and Mrs Harold Clark,
Muskogee, railway mail eervica
clork, 930 W. Gandy.
F Brown Woodliff, Houston,
draftsman, 709 W. Texas’-
Mr. and Mrs Alvin Rumels,
Dallas, with Grayson Hardware
Co., 1416 W Chestnut.
Mr. and Mrs. Morri P. Gage,
E Gandy, dam engineer-
Mr. and Mr. J T. Dade, Pari?.
Rollins-Forrest engineer, 523 E-
Woodard.
______________V———~-
Amistant -En(rine«T A«»i*n»d
Newton B. Rodino of Bells was
assigned by the U. S. engineer of-
fice today a an assistant engineer
(civil.)
NOTICE—
If you de not reeeive your Pr
before R.dW, please phone 880 r ‘
| one wlM be »ent voe.
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Anderson, LeRoy. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 219, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 24, 1942, newspaper, March 24, 1942; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth527326/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.