The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 48, Ed. 1 Friday, May 18, 1945 Page: 2 of 8
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fA&t TWO \
Ippl
** ’ ’■'■
THIS tWNISON PRESS
apt*
mmi
FRIDAY, iMAY 18TH, 1046
THE DENISON PRESS
Eatablish«d in 1980
Tolephon* NO. 800
Office of Publication 206 W. Main
Issued Each Friday
LeROY M. ANDbfRSON
..Editor
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
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By the Year ........................................
One Year in Advance ...............—.........
jjtx 'Months in Advance
MM.."*
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$1.00
Outside County add 26c each six months
National advertising representative Inland News-
paper Representatives, Inc., "Wrigley Building,
Chicago, 111.
CHARGE ACCOUNTS are acceptable from presorts
having telephone listed in their own name and up-
on agreeing to remit when bill i3 presented. 10 per
cent will be added on unpaid private accounts after
SO days from date of first insertion.
OUT OF TOWN ORDERS for classified ads are
strictly payable in advance*
ERRORS: The Denison Press will not be re-
sponsible for more than one incorrect insertion.
CLOSING HOUR: Copy received by 9 a- m. will
be published the same day.
CANCELLATIONS must be received by 10 a. m.
in order to avoid publication in current issue.
be s£en in vetjorjans' hospitals. There is
ample testimony of that fact recently
brought out.
Physicians and the medical profes-
sion in general, along with far-seeing
'citizens, oppose state medicine because it
has seen that government in. medicine
will not bring adequate1 medical care to
all the people.
State socialism and state medicine
control, knows but a one-way road. The
people will be socialized—not the doc-
tors. Medical standards will be lowered
’by such and there is nothing the people
nor the doctors can do about it. Your
family physician will become a thing of
the past and from a profession it will de-
scend to the level of political job cater-
ing to men ranking higher and higher,
with each successive strata trying to play
politics with the one higher up while
fmedidaV care and science will go a-beg-
ging.
It will be the people) who will sui-
tes, should state socialized medicine
come into existence as some are trying
to make it. It is therefore, their problem
and they should now be on the alert, to
put an end to every tendency in that
BOX NUMBERS. Care Denison Press will be given
advertisers desiring blind addresses.
Denison is the playground of the
Private Mattie Carr Ii
Promoted In Marine Corpi
Parris Island, S. C.—Private
First Class MATTIE CARR, pu-
rine Corps Women’s 'Reserve,
daughter of Mrs. Nina D. Craw-
ford, 101 West Bond St., DENI-
SON, Tex., recently was pro-
moted to her present rank.
She enlisted in April 4, 1941
and completed her “boot” train-
ing at. ' Camp Lejeune, N. C
She w’as ordered to this post on
July 12, 1944, and is on du y
in the Post Recreation Depart
ment here.
-V--—
New York City is built or
three islands, Manhattan, Staten
and Long Island.
-V-
Our nearest port to the Ori-
ent is Seattle, Washington.
Chesapeake Bay is the largest
inlet in the United States.
RATES
Contract rates will he given
upon application. Legal rates at
one cent per word per insertion
1 Time lc per word
3 Times 2c per word
6 Times 3c per wrord
Minimum charge is for 12 words
(For consecutive insertions)
MOTOR—Horse and a half JRt, 2, Parksdale Farm, Deni-
motor, in good condition. Want. son. Young and Boysenberry
$36 for it as is. Press office. plants for sale. THOfl. PARKES
KODA'CK—For sale, a new
Pickwick camera, will take $8.00
as is. Never been used. Press
office.
GOI^D STAMPED printing on
your leathor hand bag, purse,
bill fold or book. Call at 295
Main Street, Anderson & Sons
Printery.
SOCIETY PRINTING—Or en-
graving if you wish. Any style
and all designs. Quick Service
and priced right. 206 Main
Street, Anderson & Sons Print-
46-8t.
BABCOCK
BATTERIES
ARE
BEST
•
BE
SURE
AND
FILL
WJTH
BABOLENE—10c
H
Steakley Chevrolet Co.
The Place to Buy O, K. Used Cars
Telephone 231-
-206 So. Burnett Ave.
VVVVvVVVvV
Any erroneous statement reflecting upon the Southwest and there is BO doubt about
character or reputation of any persons will be^that. No US|e for US to go looking foi
gladly corrected if brought to the attention of the other places when we have what it takes
publishers. The Denison Press assumes no re- g-jve ^he best in entertainment right at
sponsibility for error in advertising insertions. ftnd wh(m the government fin-
berdtcledPtoecl^tllfriSnrentgov.rnment; ishes thd park work along the shores of
to individual and civic integrity; to individual and|Lake TeXOma, look Ollt brothel’ tor a de-
civic commercial progress. jluge of seekers for the pleasures to be
- — jfound along its banks. Denison must ex-
SOCIALIZED MEDICINE A pect that and get ready and stay that
w.v«v.v.wAv;r.r.v;v
I DO IT NOW! |
1
a
See Grayson County
Abstract and Real
Estate Company for
ABSTRACTS
Kraft Rid*. Phone 8:?3
way all the time for such business.
ONE WAY ROAD
If you want to know about the red
tape of government control on medicine,
ask the veteran who knows. Politics One good thing the end of this war
bakes precedent over the requirements of (will bring—we hope. And that is
good medicine. Many veterans are get- .’much dabbling with the laws of supply
ting worse than poor medical care for the jand demand. Canute tried an impossible
reason treatment is swamped in red tape, thing, but some government regulators
it is reported. have never heard of that individual, it
Tragic examples of state medicine may seems.
r ■ .V.V. V. V. V. V.V. V.V.V.*. V
mm. ■: rerri'i’rtffi vrmrn 11 Hjl
a
Short-Mllrrav
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Phone 11.3
401 W. WOODARD
< 8
•i Attention Farmers!
•I
.* Make Your Own Bean Beetle Exterminator
On account of Gas and Tire Rationing we are
releasing our Formula to the public. Bean Beetle
Exterminator kills Bean beetles, Cabbage Worms,
all Flea Bugs on any and all Garden Vegetation
instantly. Also all insects on Tobacco Plants in
Bed or Field, including Worms. Kills Chicken
Mites and Lice, Ants and Roaches. Also insects
on Flowers and Shrubbery and is used for spraying
Fruit Trees and Cotton. Is easy to make.
.WAWAV.W.'vVWAW,
I INSURANCEi
« %
:•
WHAT OTHER
EDS ARE
e----------»
1 GIVE
•YOU
TW
Tailored Ensemble
Saves for Bonds
all kinds
jl Lillian Handy Cavender £ jj
D—B—A
J.R.Haniiy Agency
303V> Woodard
■ ”aAS
« ■**» I W.'.V.’.V.V ■ ^.'.VAV.’.V.V,
Ingredients can be b ought in any drug store.
Costs less than 6 cents per pound. Can be used
in Wet or Dry Sp ay. Get this and help win the
war by raising more food.
Club in with your neighbors and get this 3 formu-
las for $1.00. Full instructions sent. Money
refunded if not satisfactory.
Southern States Chemical Co.
P. O. BOX 261
GLASGOW, KENTUCKY
.V.V.V. iV.V.V.V.V.
J JLL/1
• kf
30YCF
HOUSE
Dangerous Reversal
(Mineola Monitor)
Such a gale of events has!
struck the nation the last few j
weeks that few have noted one
particular straw-in-the-wind— |
pointed in the direction of a
danger that would affect all of]
us. I
After once having ruled that Charley, the printer on
foremen did not constitute anl Arkansas country weekly
appropriate unit for collective^ your columnist edited
bargaining, the National Labor l,ear« ',va: an incurable
Relations Board suddenly re-
versed itself and decided
they do.
Dissenting from
ing about-face one
W
-.'Si;;:.
'
the
that
for a
practical
Soon after coming there,
that 1 wrote a paragraph criticizing
the presence of a wasp’s nest
this surpris-! in the courtroom and Charley
board mem-; kept running back and forth tell-
ber asserted that “collective bar- ing me what he claimed the ||
gaining by foremen would seri-]county judge (a former preacher) f
ously disrupt managerial and had said and then telling the y
production techniques” . . . and judge what T was supposed to j s
at this time when high war pro have said in reply-—with the -re- j
liuetion stiil is needed o lick! suit that both of us, being men j j
Japan, and when industry is j of peace, dodged cH'. h oilier
trying to prepare for reconver-j for two weeks, which is quite a |
.sion to high employment for di.- feat in a town no bigger than |
charged servicemen after vie- j 1'iggott.
tory.
The question is: To whom
would union foremen owe alle-
giance? Flow could unionize
#' 4
It was BEFORE my advent |
however that Charley achieved X
his masterpiece. Piggott was a §
“dry” town but a prominent
citizen, (Jones will do) had left
a jug of “corn” in the news-
paper office and he’d drop in
end take a dritlk, now and then.
, u,u j To keep out of sight, he would
same union should represent both!
foremen and workers under
them? These are but a few' ques
tion ot' its foremen affect man-
agement's ability and scope of
action to selec, and train em-
ployees for promotion to higher
managerial posts? What if the
w
w
tions raised.
The effects of this would
reach down into every factory in
every part of the country. And
because our great industrial
plants art mainsprings of our
whole economy, its effect in
slowing up production now and
reconversion latpr, and boosting
prices all along the line, would
he felt by every individual
among us.
Congress has been stirred to
set aside the NLRB
Congressman May,
Democrat, urging the House to
take necesssarv steps to counter-
act this new bureaucratic rule
which is contrrar,- to the clear
inten' of the lawmakers.
i step into the elephone boot!
and duck beneath the level
the glassed upper half of
door, while quaffing.
Tailored clothes are going soft, and
with most becoming results. Typ-
ical of this trend is a slim, trim
outfit of weskit, blouse and skirt.
Its feminine touch comes from the
little bow tic, bloused sleeves and
of skirt with unpressed pleats. Select
(hr- the pattern In a local store, and buy
War Bonds for Victory.
V. S. Treasury Del'urtmini
This particular day was a
July “scorcher” and Jones was]
in the act of taking a nip when
iie heard Charley say, “Hoddy ,
do, Aunt Sallie” and Jones: ^;a
recognized the shrill reply as!
coming from the town’s most
s' rict of inhabitants. Thinking
she would leave in a moment,
he remained in his stooped po-
sition. But the conversation
There is only
cano in the
proper—;M . La sen,
one active vol
United States
in Califoi-
-tV-
York is the
largest port, in tonnage
sets entered and cleared.
world’s
of v-es-
knows all the an-
Twenty-two percent
land surface of the
States is desert.
decision by j went on and on. Two or three „
Kentucky] times, Aunt Sallie would say lNo 1Iian
goodby r|nd then Charley would j swff8, . ,
, ,? .. tm" ,, , Homer couldn’t give the solu-
ask another question. The sweat to th(. riddle some boyB
volled down the trapped man. k -what caught,
V lBff’ f*reWTe T 0X;We ’eft behind- what we did not
changed and Jones staggered W(1 bring. wUh UB» The
weakly into the fresh air, ex- “Lice,
claiming, I thought she never
would leave.”
of the
United
Lake Michigan and the Great
Salt Lake of Utah are our two
largest lakes that lie entirely
United States
- THE
MIGHTY
Charley roared with laughter
—Aunt Sallie hadn't been there
8i all; Charley, a natural mimic,
had carried on the entire con-
versation. He almost got licked
when Jones realized how unnec-
essarily he had suffered.
The riddle of the Sphinx was,
“What animal walks on four
feet in the morning; at noon on
two; and in the evening, on
1 hrop.” The answer to that one
is, “Man—who crawls in in-
fancy, walks upright in man
hood and, in old age, uses a
cane.”
Our armies, our navy need more guns, more ammunition, more food—more
of all the supplies that go toward victory . . . and they need them nowl
That’s why you are being asked to back them in the biggest, toughest War Loan Drive
ever—the Mighty 7tb War Loan, NOW! Your fighting dollars
are needed, urgently needed, to help pay for fighting equip*
ment-you must lend your share. Find your individual quota
of extra War Bonds, and meet it! The quota is larger-because
the Mighty 7th is really two War Bond Drives in o»e—but re-
member, when you buy War Bonds you don’t give, you invest.
You’ll get back every cent you put into War Bonds, and more!
Buy more War Bonds now—our fighting men are making
even bigger sacrifices for victory! £
BUY BIGGER WAR BONDS NOW-
WAR LOAN
(N THE MIGHTY SEVENTH WAR LOANI
The State National Bank
Capital Structure $600,000
Member Federal Insurance Corporation
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Anderson, LeRoy. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 48, Ed. 1 Friday, May 18, 1945, newspaper, May 18, 1945; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth527535/m1/2/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.