The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 268, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 8, 1941 Page: 2 of 4
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THE DENSON PRESS
HstafcHahed in 1»*0
Telephone No. 300
Office of Publication 607 W.
Main
Issued Daily Except Sunday
LeROY M. ANDERSON ......
L*®0Y M. ANDERSON, Jr.
LOUIS V. ANDERSON
.................. Ediloi
Mechanical Sep't
. ...... City Editor
National advertising representative Inland News-
paper Representatives, Inc., Wrigley Building, Chi'-
cage, HI.
Dedicated to (dean and responsive government;
to individual and civic integrity; to individual and
eivhc commercial progress._
BOX NUMBERS, Care Denison Press will be given
advertisers desiring blind addresses.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One Week ............................................................ 10c
One Month .......................................................... 35:
Three Months (in advance) ...................... $1.00
Six Months (in advance) ................................ $1.75
One Year (In Advance) ........................... $3.50
CHARGE ACCOUNTS are acceptable from persons
Waving telephone listed in their own name and up-
en agreeing to remit when bill is presented. 10 pel j
cent will be added on unpaid private accounts after |
30 days from date of first insertion.
CANCELLATIONS must be received by 10 a. m.
in order to avoid publication in current issue.
CLOSING HOUR; Copy received by 9 a. m. will
kt published the same day.
ERRORS: The Denison Press will not be re-
sponsible for more than one incorrect insertion.
ftUT OP TOWN ORDERS for
strictly payable in advance.
classified ads are
rear doors are kept locked most of the
time as a protection from theft and for the
reason of cutting down he need of having
an employee spend his time from other du-
ties of the store while protecting the real1
doors.
In many eases deliveries of goods will
require only a few minutes, and the driver
cf the truck does not take time to request
that the rear doors be opened for him.
Also at times while such deliveries are be-
ing made the truck doors are left standing
open, thus creating a still greater haazrd
to traffic.
The alleys were paved at a heavy
cost of the city for the purpose of facilitat-
ing handling of goods for the local stores
and the should he used for that purpose
primarily. However, they are not to be
used, as'Some seem inclined to, by the com-
pany for parking their trucks for long
periods at a time.
----00---
Those who heard the address of Mar-
tin Dies here Tuesday heard an orator
who speaks from what he has seen and
! card. It was no academic treatment of
words and phrases set to catch ihe ears of
the public. He was more like the ancients
evaluation? Yet that is the spir-1
it, when you get right down to it
of this American generation.
These young are thinking of the
meaning of life more than they
are in the length of years one may
live. ,
Perhaps you might be surprised
parents, if you took that son or
daughter of yours to one side for
a good serious talk as to how they
hold life. They mieht surnrise you
by saying something that will
make you glad you are their Bar-
ents and that they have the blood
of the martyrs coursing in their
veins.
Most of our voung people are
!ookin<r for the life of a frontiers-
man. The trouble is in our smug
complacency and live easy wav we
have lost the ability to sound the
clear, clarion call to something
that challenges the host and nob-
lest in them. We have been afraid
in our churches to offer a pro-
gram that carried denial and he-
roic activity. We have held back
lost we discoruage them with too
severe a test, while all the time
we have been watching our pulse
to keen from getting excited, thev
have been ahead of us in this j
thin" of wanting something real
worth while that sounded the
depths of the cull for them to be
come a modern Columbus and ex-
plore.
Put the burden on their shoul-
iTwo Ages Blended
In Modern Africa
' A FRICA today is almost com-
/\ pletely different from the bar-
baric laud of yesterday. »■
There arc, says Janie* Saxon
Quldcr, in the June issue of Cos-
mopolitan magazine, two Africa!
— the primitive about which we
know little, and the modern, about
which we know less, Childers, a
globe-trotter by profession, attend-
i-1 a wild war dance in an African
who warned of the deadly Damascus blade i dors and watch them snap into it
Any erron&ous statement reflecting upon the
character or reputnt»on of any parsons will be
gludly corrected if brought to the attention of the! ^his t.j^y beard
publishers. The Denison Press assumes no respon-j _ ‘ ” ,r
tibility for error in advertising insertions beyond Martin Dies here when he warned the peO-
which was overhanging the people. Savan-
arola in his fiery speeches could not have
had much on the forcefulness of Dies. No
mere shaper of phrases can equal the mov-
ing power of addresses such as the people
in the able speech of
and make you open your eyes at
what they ran really do.
the prise of the advertisement.
and
Traffic Problem and Our
Truck Deliveries
Denison’s recent steps taken to try
cure the evils of double; parking by !
ole in what he said was more than his
liiOth speech on the matter of the dangers
of ihe subversive activities in this country’.
-oo
With a new electric generator
it is possible to shoot power
through the air like a beam of
light.
ARTHRITIS
Asthma Mucus
Coughing, Gasping
Thanks to a Doctor’s prescription called
Mendaco, thousands now palliate terrible re-
curring attacks of choking, gasping, cough-
ng, wheezing Bronchial Asthma by helping
lature remove thick excess mucus. No dopes,
excess mucus. No dopes,
no smokes, no Injections. Just tasteless,
pleasant tablets. The rapid, delightful pal-
liative action commonly helps nature bring
welcome sleep—a “God-send.” A printed
guarantee wrapped around each package of
Mendaco insures an Immediate refund of
the full cost unless you are completely sat-
isfied. You have everything to gain and
nothing to lose under this positive money
back guarantee so get Mendaco from your
druggist today for only 60c.
tyou. Muit jtcM*
Vitamins A and D
You must have Vitamin A
as an aid in protection against
infec.tions which are mor<
likely to occur in the noset
throat, eyes, ears and sinuses,
when, there is a deficiency of
this vitamin.
You need Vitamin D to help
the body make proper use oi
the calcium and phosphorus iq
your diet.
If y„ou are not getting
enough of these two important
vitamins, A PENNY A DAY
will insure adequate intake, il
you take
RATE
ConCtaot rates will be given
upon Application. Legal rates n
one cent per word per insertion
1 Time lc per worn
3 Times 2c per word
6 Times 3c per word
Minimum charge is for 12 words
(For consecutive Insertions)
WANTED
Boy to learn the printing business.
Start at once learn while you
earn. Apply at Press office.
TO SEE
BETTER
You'd Better See
B. R. BUSBY
Graduate
Optometrist
R. W. PINKSTON
Superintendent
National Life and Accident
Iniurawce fo.
Ordinary and Industrial Insurance
P.O. |Box 335 Deniion, Tex.
BABCOCK BATTERIES
ARE
EMERT SEWING
MACHINE SERVICE
C. W. EMJ2RT, Owner
Parts and repair* Nr
and make machine.
Phone 1307 104 W. Mala
"Bigge,t Little Store in Town”
Staple Groceries TtokedM- Ice Crain
Your Fiavorite Beer Drug*
Giant Slse ’Wimpy’ Hamburger* 10a
Choice Steaks Copked to Order
WHITE FRONT STORE
513 N. Houston Av*.
Short-Murray
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Phone 113
40! W. WOODARD
:]i[
ONE * DAY
VITAMIN A »no O TA«l£TS
JO tablets 35* 90 tablets 85*
180 tablets $1.50
An African Native
Tourist Trade.
wm i
Dressed foi
Those dodgers of the draft law who ottenbrin^wet
Don’t despair
of relief from
tt rrible Arthri-
tis aches or
pains. The
NEW Colloidal
Iodized Sulphur
capsules called
SuLPHO-I
truck.s in their daily deliveries, will bring j made answer to the trial judge that if he
on something to be appreciated by the peo- | would change the ten commandments then
pie whether or no! the answer will be met. they would change their conscienious ob-
Some of the local stores have rear ] jections, show a deplorable sign of the
doors for delivery purposes but delivery in I lack of knowledge of the Old and New
Don’t
give
up
hope
come relief in
Arthritis due
to Sulphur de-
ficiency. Small
daily cost. Mon-
ey back if no
relief after 30
days’ dosage.
Begin taking
TODAY.
many cases has been made, at the front
with the trucks parked double while deliv-
ery is being made. This has brought on a
congested area in the streets which is dan-
gerous to traffic, especially in case of
emergency.
It is understood that some of the
'Testaments. First of all there is nothing in
the ten commandments which would pre-
vent a man from enrolling in the draft, nor
to give him grounds for refusing. And
again the New Testament has displaced the
YourDruggist has SULPHOTtAPS
Kidneys Must
Clean Out Acids
Excess acids,
blood are rei
Ids, poisons and v
emoved chiefly by
Nights, Burning Pi
and wastes In yo<
your kldnei
Getting up Nit
ache. Swollen Ankles, Nervousness.
ys.
assages, Back-
Rhei
?s. Nervousness. Rheu-
matic Pains. Dizziness, Circles Under Eyes,
and feeling worn out, ofterf arc caused by
iion-organlc and non-svstemlc Kidney and
. . . * Bladder troubles. Usually in such cases, the
Old Testament both m spmt and in applica-
lion.
. WHAT
OTHER EDS
ARE THINKING
9----------•
NOW WHOSE BILL IS T?
In his regular Sunday radio ad-
dress of Sunday morning Govern-
or W. Lee O’Paniel claimed,
among other things that Repre-
sentative G. C. Morris was at-
tempting to claim credit for
social security program hi- l.ad
put through.
Now just what did the Govcriif-v
have to do with the pa.-.-agi of
the revenue bill d> - -. ned to
nance 301 had ri
peatedly termed it a “mei pit-
tance,” hut when h- :-uw the S n-
ate and House would pa t "V-
his veto by an overwhelm" rci
jority, he said “wa- a good hi I,
al'hough it didn’t provide quit*-
much revenue as 1 had hoped
Interesting Bits
r
non-org
Bladder
rv first dose of C'ystex goes right to
lping the Kidneys flush out excess acids
and wastes. And this cleansing, purifying
Kidney action, in just a day or so, may eas-
ily make you feel younger, stronger ana
thorn in years. A printed g1
.exage of C;
lly
better
Previously the Governor had
submitted two programs. f0ne was I
the old 1.6 per cent mu|‘iple sales | . _
The other wa- an omni-1 AuOllt Qlir Friends
irantee
itex
wrapped around each package of .
■urea an immediate refund of the full cost
ou are completely snttsfled. You hi
mg to gain and nothing to lose uni
iltlve
unless yc
everyth!]
this posl— -------1 - --------- -
C'ystex lrom your druggist today for ouly 33c.
money back guarantee so get
......onl:
jungle which lie describes ns terri-
fying. The only trouble, he relates,
is that the witch doctor, frightening
in his paint, feather , and rattles,
had forgotten to take off his wrist
watch.
An encounter with the pygmies
of equatorial Africa is one of the
astonishing experiences * Childers
describes in his article. Some ro-
mantic authors have called them
the “adorable gnomes of the forest,”
hut Childers found them to be the |
nastiest, scabbiest, stinkingest
people on earth.” Far from being
ihy, as they have so often been
Jescribcd, they appeared willingly
when the chief was given a fee
jf ten francs, and the pygmies
themselves showered with their
’avorite luxuries, tobacco and salt.
The author was allowed to take pic-
.ures, but only at the price of one
franc per shot.
When they went into their tribal
dance, Childers says, they hopped j
*nd doddled about in such a stiff
inhappy sort of way that it was)
obvious they were dancing for
francs, not for fun. “They looked
fo bored,” he writes, “that I told
the chief to call it off. I am told
that pygrni" ” <’t t> the, that they
never w > ildren, even at
birth, ana i believe it.”
USE OUR
BUDGET PLAN
for purchase of
• BICYCLES
• RKiDIOS
• ACCESSORIES
• TIRES
• BATTERIES
M. K. JONES
WHEN^MORWNSAmp’cUX/W APPlA
DOST WASTE TO UR TIME A WH ININA
UT ALKA-SELTZER LIFT THE TOR
W0 It FIND THE SUN $UIL SH|NIWS.
-
Liked Addre,, of Die,
'I thought it was one of
Inc
bus tax measure that would have
put mc> of the burden on every-
thing else but natural resources.
Both bills were quick}’ killed. The |
Morris Bill, which has as its hast'! ,
i natural resource tax that would ; L. ‘ thr,llinf addresses to which I
impose most of the taxes upon
other .states and notions that are
exploiting our natural resources,
went over with a bang.
And now the Governor says
Representative Morris is attempt-
ing to claim credit for social se-
curity financing and to take the
away from him.
But the
he Hill Billy baud perhaps
-onvinre quite a
Texans - young Texans ak
-that he did the job when
of his bills were killed.—
iviile Herald.
have ever listened—it was won-
derful. He is a fine speaker and
certainly carries conviction,” de-
clared Mrs. T. J. Long here Tue,
day afternoon shortly after the
address of Congressman Martin
Dies who spoke in interest of his
campiagn lor the Senate
feed the late Morris
to sue-
Sheppard
FASHION PREVIEW
Upholding an old tradition of l/ie 'ioulhland that n hrUla cun kt
utignre in cotton, Alice llensler, the June Cosmopolitan enter girl. Hear,
this bride's gown of flower-embossed rollon organdy with rwhratk Hitt:
Mitt Beasley, who was the Cotton Maitl of 1941, strikes a note of beau.if.,I
simplicity with a dotttd iwir headdress designed by Jolin-Fret^riu,
number ofl°"ly “ st“a"’ b’f a spirit
n, _l| “kin to that of the Hugenots.
Truly, he is the crusader. He hit?
labored so long at the job of
awakening the people of the U.
S. to the dangers of the sub-
versive elements within that he
has at last made enough realize
J what is and has been going on to
make him appreciated. Emerson
said that “Great men must create
the atmosphere whereby they are
to be appreciated," and Mr. Dies
has done just that. If elected he
will be in still better position to
carry on the fight.
Along the New, Beat
A young friend gave a revela-
tion of himself this week that we
I did not know was in him. It
showed he was thinking' deeply
and seriously and that he was in
the class of those who say that it
uoe.s not matter whether one lives
a long span of years, the main
thing is to do something worth
while- And if you ran do it in a
few days, weeks or years, and
in the doing if it maybe lay down
your life, that is better than long-
evity with nothing accomplished.
“A life at the average is around
the 60 year span," he stated, “and
if I die at thirty or under and
have given my life for my country
and the American way of life,
"ha! i- that to be regretful over?
What is thirty years when you
think'of eternity and the life be-1
yond? And what does it -profitI
me if I live to be sixty and spend'
the last thirty of it in bondage to 1
some dictator. I had rather die
standing up lor my liberty and
freedom than to spend the re-
mainder of my days on my knees
begging some dictator," he con-
cluded.
Now is not that a noble state-
ment and a high sense of human
-AN URGENT MESSAGE-
to women who suffer
FEMALE WEAKNESS
Few women today are free from some sign
of functional trouble. Maybe you've noticed
YOURSELF getting restless, moody ner-
vous, depressed lately—your work too much j
for you —
Then why not take Lydia E. Pinkhnm's
Vegetable Compound to help quiet weary,
hysterical nerves, relieve monthly pain
(cramps, backache, headache) and weak
dizzy fainting spells due to functional ir-
regularities.
For over fiO years Pinkham’s Compound
has helped hundreds of thousands of weak
run-down, nervous “ailing" women to go
smiling thru "difficult days." Why not give
this wonderful “woman’s friend" a chuuco
to help YOU? Try it I
Do You Lie AwdU Night*?
yut ILLIONS do. The wont ti
R you never know when
l sleepless night lx coming.
Why not be prepared?
DR. MILKS
SH*r»e*eent Nervine Tablet*
Wp he relieve tana* name
M permit refreshing (leap.
Stop in at the drug itor* to-
Aay and get a package.
Try Dr. Mile* Nervine Tab-
let* far Nrrvousntss, SUrp-
U****** dsn to Ntrvnvjneat,
Stsrvsms Htadacht, Ntrvosss
Kdtpertlon, Hrrvosss Irrite-
MH*.
SbuO fry cage 8*
Large v'adkaga Us
Ha targ* pack*** 1*
•MV* *n«M*nlral f
c
,.o*. Wtei
[Mowing after;?/
A HEARTY dinner or rnld-
A night lunch, * little too
much imoklng, perhape ■
cocktail or two—great fun to*
night; a miserable letdown,
hcadachty feeling tomorrow
morning
You people who occaitonally at-
tend a party and enjoy good f*l*
low,iiip and good food, often pay
next day for th* fun you bad.
Why don’t you try Alka-8*ltz*r
for that “Morning After" feeling?
Alka-StlUer I* one medicine uie-
ful in the relief of many mine,
aliment* becaum Alka • Seitz*,
oombtnaa a reliable analgetic pain-
reliever with buffered «ik«firing
sella
Try It whenever you have Head-
ache. Arid Indigestion. Cold Symp-
toms, Muscular Fatigue, Neuralgia
Muscular Faina.
Alka-Seltzer la non-laxative and
pi,aunt to tak*. Your drugglal
Mila Aik,-Seiner by the flat* a!
hit soda fountain and In eoo- . u,
venlant package, foe home
use. Why not get a par keg
th* next tlm* you
in Is i drug
Mora
WAWYWYVUW/WNW’
DO IT NOW! £
See Grayaon Count/
Abstract and Real
C Estate Company fer
£ ABSTRACTS
£ Kraft Bldg Pbo. eee
W/AVWWVVVWVWWN
STEEL
Flag Poles
For our patriotic Americans.
Get yours now and float
“OLD GLORY”
George Clark’s
WELDING SHOP
QAY PHONE 824
NIGHT PHONE 1404-J
114 S. Austin
For the Family
Table
Ve Suggest:
• COTTAGE CHEESE
• BUTTER MILE
• sDur Cream
• SWEET BUTTER
• ICE CREAM
Barker Dairy
and Creamery
AVAVifi
Printing
*irmjiTmrmff*irTifTfniinTmnmnMi¥frfmn»im»iT»m
Do they LOOK like spring?
You’ll enjoy Spring twice as much if youY
,ifussed in clean, freshly pressed clothes. . .
lollies that FEEL clean, LOOK clean
ARE clean. . .Clothes that rival Spring it-
self in airy freshness, vividness, and new
ness. ..
You’ll stride forth into the sparkling
i,rightness of Spring knowing that YOT
."re in step with the season! And that you
look it!
Free Pick-up ... One Day Service
PHONE 716
Stum White
LAUnDPiV t CLtAnW 1 Phone 300
ft
9
Anything from a
VISITinG CARD
to a
nEWSPAPER
9
«l
JL
f7t\
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our prices
for Superior Printing
Anderson 8* Sons Printerv
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Anderson, LeRoy. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 268, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 8, 1941, newspaper, May 8, 1941; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth527479/m1/2/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.