The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 70, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 11, 1937 Page: 2 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 22 x 19 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
p®
THE DEN1SON PRESS
BataMlshed In 1VSJ
Telephoue No. 100
Uiu 4 Daly Bxoept Hunclay
^
Entered as Second Class Mutter June 23, 1938,
fct the pout office at Denlson, Texas under the
aot of Maroli 8, 1S7 .
Dedicated to clean and responsive government;
to Individual and civic integrity; to Individual ana
clvto commercial progress.
' BUBSRIPTION RATES
One Week l®c
One Month 850
T?hree Months (In advance) 90c
Six Months (In advance) J1.75
One Tear (in advance) $3.5o
BOX NUMBERS. Car,' Denlson Press will be given
advertisers desiring blind addresses.
CHARGE ACCOUNTS are acceptable from persons
having telephone listed in their own name and upon
agreeing to <-emlt when bill I* presented, 10 par cent
will be added on unpaid private accounts after SO
days from date of first insertion.
CLOSINO HOUR: Copy received by 9 a. m. will be
published the same day.
ERRORS The Denlson Press will not be responsible
for more than one Incorrect Insertion.
OUT-OF-TOWN-ORDERS for classified ads are
strictty payable In advance.
Any erroneous statement reflecting upon the
character or reputation of any persons will '>e gladly
corrected If brought to the attention of the publish-
ers. The Denlson Daily Press assumes no re-
sponsibility tor errors In advertising insertions be-
yond the price of the advertisement
CANCELLATIONS must be received by 10:00 a m
m order to avoid publication in curren issue.
Mr. Thomas Breathes Out
Slaughter At Dallas
The speech of Norman Thomas, avow-
ed socialist, made in Dallas Thursday night
likes only a match to set off the highly,
inflammable matter which formed a large
part of his utterances.
He was clearly a highly nervous, in-
temperate speaker, letting out breathings
and slaughter against all those who dared
to think different. He went far afield in
the direction of stirring up basic- passions
in those who are not too far removed
from the pack.
There was nothing of elevation or men-
DE.NIS0N TOSS
SATOUDAY, Sept. II. 1027
tal stimulation of tho nobler kind in his
talk, and if his type of leadership for the
labor movement is in the saddle, we may
look for nothing but turmoil in the ranks
of workers and with industry.
If his speech is a type of the intemper-
ance with which he would run labor, may
the Good Lord spare us from such men
being placed in charge of anything.
Mr. Thomas is a type of man who in-
flames others to deeds that are violent in
order to get their ends, his speech bristling
with such implications.
If there ever was a penalty to speech
making, Mr. Thomas comes nearer ap-
proach the point where some speeches
should not be permitted than any man who
represents the labor cause. Fortunately,
we have other leaders for the labor move-
ment. However, Mr. Thomas brands them
as traitors to the cause and of being in
league with those who oppose the closed
shop.
Drive carefully Mr. Safe Driver. Do
you know that 90 per cent of the traffic
•cidents are caused by experienced mot-
orists? It is figured that men get so good,
at driving they get careless at times. The
best skaters get the hardest falls, •
00
The Press carried a story this week
of Denison 35 years ago in which a lady,
Mrs. French Sexton, set fire to her dress
when she stepped on a match lying on the
sidewalk down town. In these days of
curtailed skirts as to length it would be
a flambo that would be needed to catch
the bottom of any lady's dress.
oo
Observation of the 150th anniversary
of the Constitution of the United States is
coming up for the week of the 12th of
September in this country. If there is any-
thing that needs attenion more, and a
wholesome interpretation of, we fail to
know just what it is. Out of the heat that
may arise during the week let us hope for
some light also.
THIS PACE FOR YOUR DAI LIT *#ANTS
EXCHANGE
that
EXTRA
ROOM for
CASH
The "Rooms to Rent"
"Board and Lodging"
umns will bring you desir-
able people—and rooms ad-
vertised generally rent with-
in 3 day*.
THE DENISON PRESS
RATES
1 Time le per word.
> times, lo per word
t times, lo per word.
Minimum ofcarge Is for li words
(For oonaeoutlve Insertions)
Contract rates wll bo given upon
application. LegH ratp at ons
cent per word Insertion.
If you have a leaning for col-
lecting old oddities, try an add lo
the classified. We can help yott
make the contact.
INTERESTING BITS ABOUT
OUR FRIENDS
Food Fancies
Fig Bread j ,
One-half cup figs, one-half cup
raisins, two tablespoons shorten-
ing, one cup honey one egg, two
and one-half cups flour one-half
teaspoon salt, one teaspoon baking
powder, three-fourths cup sweet
milk, one-fourth cup sour milk,
one-half teaspoon soda, one cup
nuts.
Cut raisins and figs in small
pieces. Cream together shortening
and add honey. Add beaten egg.
Sift dry ingredients together. Re-
serve a little to flour fruit and
nuts. Add alternately with milk.
Add nuts and milk. Bake in mod-
erate oven at 325 degrees for one
hour and ten minutes.
Egg and Crumbs.
One egg, 2 tablespoons water,
1 1-2 cup crumbs.
Mix the egg and water and use
to cover te cutlets.
/Shamrock Cutlets
Pour tablespoons butter or mar-
garine, 7 tablespoons flour, 2 cups
milk,2 egg youlks, 1 1-2 cups tuna
fish, 1 tablespoons minced pars'.ey,
2 tablespoons minced celery, 2 ta-
blepoons minced green peppers
(optional), 2-8 teaspoon salt, yA
teaspoon paprika.
Melt the butter. Add flour.
When it is thoroughly mixed add
the mi'k. Cook sfowly, stirring
constantly until a very thick
sauce forms. Cook 2 minutes. Add
rest of the ingredients. Cook one
minute. Cool. Take tablespoons of
mixture and roll in the crumbs,
then in the egg and again in the
HARLEY SADLER
dies'' of thin green pepper strips
and a few slices of radishes may
be added as garnishes.
Tomato baskets also are good
stuffed with fish, chicken, veal or
cheese salads. Or they may be
filled with a mixture of finely
minced onions, cucumbers, green
beans and radishes—moistened
with French dressing to which a
little Roquefort cheese has been
added.
Beet ,and Carrot Balls
Beet and carrot balls mixed to-
gether and seasoned with horse-
radish, minced onion and celery
salt. The balls were made after
the vegetables were cooked and
cut with a French vegetable cut-
ter. French dressing was added
just before the salad was served
Cottage cheese molds topped
j with salad dressing and pimiento-
stuffed olive slices add a pleasing
contrast. The cheese, well sea-
soned, is passed into cups to make, _.
round molds which are later un- . lc ur® 01 e 'n comedy makeup.
is Harley Sadler, head of the big'
Likely one of the best all-
around musicians the city hae ever
had the privilege of having as its
resident is none other than Mrs.
Lockie Marshall Pyle, who lives
at 715 West Owing steet. Pos-
sessing a rich mezzo voice, and
with ability to make it carry, she
has appeared in many groups
during her residence in this city
which has reached over the past
twenty-five years as a singer.
Sought by other cities and in other
states from time to time she has
a wide experience and thousands
have enjoyed her lovely voice
Mr& Pyle graduated from the
Kidd-Key conservatory and has
studied under such artists a*
Richard Hageman, Louis Grvaure.
Herbert Witherspoon, Graham
Reed and Loius Versel. She ha?
been soloist in varous states and
several /larger churches, among
them being Morning Side church.
New York City; Crear Memorial,
Chicago; People's Church, Landing
Mich, and also the Texas Federa-
tion of Music culbs. Several ra-
dio stations have also used her
splendid talent.
"You are one of the best boost-
ers in the city—in fact, I think
you are the best. I don't want
to treat you too hard, but I wish
you would boost those football
boys of ours more and don't say
they are the 'under dogs'. I may
be funny that way, but I believe
we ought to boost the boys all
the way through and tell the
world we have a fine bunch."
That is what one of our friends
said to us Friday. And he meant
it. Well, this column does not
write the football dope. If we did
we might have them making a
home run when it should have
been an end run. Or we might
think that they were winning big
when they were getting penalized i
for clipping or holding. But it
strikes us that if we shouted out
how good they were when the
rest of the people knew darn well
they were not, or if we shouted
out they were bad when our read-
ers knew they were plenty good,
it might come to the point where
■nobody would believe a darn thing
we said.
g) (|
Anoweii's to
News Quiz Column
A «
1.—Wide open gambling in the
city
2.—Only fifty.
■3.—'George Gerhardt, G5, em-
ploye of the scale department.
4.—A defective flu.
5.—A watermelon-eating con-
test.
6.—A theatre party.
7.—They believe there is yet
to be the worst depression to ever
strike the U. S.
8 Clyde Davis and F.arl Raw-
lings.
9.—They have since been 'em-
onstarted as sound reporting.
10.—They double shipments of
previous years.
fARM AND GARDEN
325 BULBS GIVEN AWAY
Our large, illustrated catalogue—
a true Gardening Encyclopedic—
will soon be ready. To compile
a list of appropriate addresses i
genuine gardening friends, wo
will send you FREE a nice as-
sortment of HYACINTHS, TUL-
IPS, DAFFODILS, CROCUS, IR-
IS, ANEMONES, GADIOLI, etc.,
325 bulbs in all, which is suft'ici
ent for a wonderful display. It
suffices to send us for packing,
carriage, etc., a ONE dollar note
bv registered letter, and to men-
tion your name and full address
in block letters. Do not send coin<
or stamps. Please, mention also
the name of this paper. Dispatch,
carriage paid, all over the world,
without increase in price. KWEE-
KBRY TULPENBURG, Postbus C
397, AMSTERDAM—C„ HOL-
LAND, Europe.
Pope Condition
Dangerous Says
Latest Report
ROME—According to reports
from the summer home of Pope
Pius, the Roman church head may
never see the Vatican again. His
health condition is given as the
reason, it being declared that his;
life hangs by such n slim thread
that moving him back to the Vati-
can might prove too much for him.
A heating plant is being installed
in his summer home.
FOR S.AJMC—1 horje yow '
rect ourrent motor. Price# rln nt m
(10. Phone 300.
L,0ST—• Black .'eather billfold,
containing about $16 in eurreii-^
cy, Katy annual passes, watchSlf
card, two bank books, two keys
and other article:j. Liberal re-
wad for return to Pres3 office.
* 70-3t
V.% V.*
FOR LIFE, FIRE
WINDSTORM AND HAIL,
AND AUTOMOBILE
INSURANCE
AND AUTO LOANS SEE
J. V. CONATSER
Pho. 173 115 S. Burnett
eaassssiaas
8KB
iA
"•The sum Rood Mystery:
by L&vtas Allen Browne.
OTHER EDITOR'S THOUGHTS
molded onto crisp lettuce.
Numerous other attractive sal-
ads may also be prepared.
Cucumber Boxes
Cucumber "boxes," for instance
may be made by hollowing three-
inch pieces of cucumbers and fill-
ing them with shrimp salad mix-
tures or just plain shrimps and
sauce.
White cherries blend well with
grapefruit and pineapple in a re-
freshing fruit salad.
Governor Allred has called the
legislators to meet in a special
called session of the Legislature
on September 27, in order to pass
measures to produce additional
actors, realizing that election year
is at hand, and listening to tl e
demands of their constituents for
deceased costs, decreased taxes
and a general reduction along all
lines, will no doubt be very reluc
tant to vote" in favor of new taxes
of any kind and it is very possible
that the session will result in lit-
tle if any action on the Govern-
or's demand for new taxes to meet,
the needs of the tSate. The peo-
ple of Texas are about to the
point where they are ready to
big1 Bo on a "non-tax-paying" strike,
stage show bearing his name, I ftnd if the State Government lev-
which will play in Denison one day |ies new taxes, there may be less
^ _ Tomato slices, too, are tasty
crumbs. Shape shamrock fashion.' spread with fish or cheese paste,
Chill un/til serving time. Fry in - cut into cubes and piled on let-
deep hot fat until' the shamrocks tuce or other salad greens.
browned' (About five Since tastes in salad dressings sheet wjtlT spatula. if7ast"waf.
minutes). vary ,t ,B best to serve assorted
Relish Dressing dressings in convenient contain-
One-fourlh cup French dress- ers- Mayonnaise, French dressing
only, Thursday, Sept. 16.
one egg, two tablespoons water,
one-fourth cup_flour, one and
one-half cups chopped nuts.
Cream butter, stir in sugar, add
egg and water. Add flour mixed
with nuts. Drop by teaspoonfuls
on a baking sheet greased with an)
unsaited fat or oil, at least two
inches aparf. Bake about seven
minutes in a moderate oven, 325
degrees Fahrenheit, until brown.
Remove from oven, let stand half
a minute and remove from baking
paid than is now coming into the
state coffers. There is a limit
to the ability of individuals and of
'business institutions as to the
burden they can bear, and it is
just about at the limit now. There
has been more business in Texas
the past year, but a yet no insti-
tution has recovered from the
losses they sustained during the
depression years, and increaes in
salaries, or in employment have
'not been able to be met. Until f
this period is reached, there is
not going to be any great in-
crease in collection of taxes, hence
it would seem to be folly to levy
SYNOPSIS
The immense estate of million-
aire Gerard Montieth at South
Cove adjoins the lesser estate of
Major Forrest, whose son-in-law,
Harley Stevenson, a writer of
crime mystery novels, tells this
story. Mary, niece of Montieth,
does not want to marry David For-
rest. Montieth tells her he will dis-
inherit her if she does not marry
David. At an afternoon party on the
Forrest grounds word comes that
Montieth has been murdered.
While County Prosecutor Fox-
croft, a guest at the Forrest party,
goes to investigate, Harley breaks
the news to Mary.
CHAPTER III
Mary stopped in her tracks, the
Hast bit of color leaving her face.
"No! Oh, no,* no, he couldn't have
'been. Davison must be hysterical."
Then she did something peculiar.
She stood still and looked all about
the grounds, back at the stile, over
to the sunken Italian garden hedged
thickly with shrubs, across to the
old stone gate cottage—all about.
"Tell me all about it, Mr. Steven-
son," she said, as we moved on.
I told her all that I knew.
"Do you know of anyone who
would want your uncle out of the
way ?"
She looked at me quickly when I
naked this.
"No, of course no one in his right
mind could have any reason to kill
Uncle Gerry."
We didn't say any more. I took
her in the front door. A car was
turning into the driveway.
"Doctor Sutton, I think. Davison
telephoned him first. I wouldn't
come out to the library porch,
Mary."
Mrs. Johnson, the housekeeper,
was in the hall. She had seen us
servants about; someone must have
seen or heard something."
"Thai's right, Harley. Say, will
you help me? I know that your
crime mystery yarns are all theory,
but you did put in a lot of time t.s
a private detective, practical work."
"Nothing would please me better."
"You wifl have to be on the level,
Harley. I know you are friendiy
here, and you know my feelings to-
ward Mary, but nothing must pre-
vent us from revealing every truth
we uncover."
"I understand. I probably know
few things, already, that will
make your eyes pop."
"As soon as this? You couldn't.
Come now, Harley, no theories."
"Things I learned before this
crime, this afternoon. I was talking
with Gerard Montieth about half
past two this afternoon."
"Well—who's under suspicion?"
Additional taxes when it is im
'possttflelo pay those already lev-1 c°m>nE-
* . ; Come Mary—up to your room,
for a while," she urged.
it-d, assessed and due. Governor
Allred may have another "do-
nohting" session on his hand's
in the special session that is com -
ing on at the end of this month.
—Honely (Grove Signal-Citizen.
A-THOUGHT- A-L1NE
ing, 3 pimento-stuffed olives,! —plain or mixed with chili sauce
chopped; 2 tablespoons minced "~°r Roquefort cheese dressings
sweet pickles, 2 tablespoons chili :'re general favorites.
•auce. 1 tablespoon lemon juice, | chieken s.ud
ers get too hard to remove easily
return to the oven a minute and
then remove.
Frozen Peach Whip
One and two-thirds cups fresh
' .Primitive peoples in nearly ev-
ery portion of the world have had
legends of a great flood
' Ancient Egyptians thought the
source of the Nile to be a rapid?
only half way up the Btream.
Domestication of cattle is said
to Tiave begun ID,000 years ago.
Cows were worshipped in Baby-
lonia in 200 B. C.
' Cockroaches were originally
confined to the tropics. They
peaches, one cup sugar, one-third j spread with the increase of com-
u - v....v.on cup chopped nut meats, pinch of merCe.
*i aapoon salt, H teaspoon pap- ■ 0ne and one.ha]f cup8 diced salt, juice of one orange, one ta-j J
Mix and chill the Inli.H . 'cooked chicken, one cup diced eel- ' :e Poon lemon juice, one cuP) With the 1030 census, the fo-
and J,"oncr£otSc.T' tW° ^'"Poons French dress- heavy cream. Unborn population of the
ma-oes or other fre«h vS.W*' three"fourlhs CUP may°n"i Mash peaches to a pulp and add, United States totaled more t
1 . . " ve*®table naise, lettuce, one tablespoon ca- sugar, nuts, salt Mid U nit juice.
com ina ions, pers or sliced stuffed olives. | Chill mixture until thoroughly!
Tomato Baskets Combine chicken, celery nnd cold. Whip cream and fold into 'COTTON BALEACE OFF
Tomato baFkets nmy be made French dressing and chill. When fruit mixture. Turn into refriger-
by removing the skin from the ready to serve mix with mayon- ator tray and freeze..
14,000,000.
tomatoes, cutting out the core naise, arrange on bed of lettuce
with a sharp knife and scooping and garnish with capers or sliced
out seeds and pulp with a spoon.
Then the tomatoes arc inverted
and chilled until serving time,
then stuffed quickly with thin
slices of cucumber nnd two-inch
sticks of cooked asparagus, "Han-'
stuffed olives. Sliced hard-cooked
eggs may also be used as a garn-
ish.
Nut Wafers
Two tablespoons, butter, one
and one-half cups bftswn sugar,
1
Name* to be inscibed in thr
•Hall of Fame in New York are
chosen every five years.
Independence hall in Philadel-
phia is open daily to the publ r
without charm.
IN. GRAYSON COUNTY
When the Pope dies, the Papal
secretary of state serves as hea
of the Catholic church until b
new pope in elected.
Skirts will not be shoter this
fall than they have been during
the summer. Suit skirts, how-
ever, will be pencil-straight and
slit.
Most visitors looking over N
York harbor sse only the piers
of the giant liners and think the
have viewed the watefront. The
real romance is found in Brook-
lyn where there are miles r
miles of docks for small freight
ships from all corners of the
globe.
Locate Youth
MINNEAPOLIS, Ind — Search-
Cot'on baleage in Grayson coun- in>f for missinp Robert Talkington
tyis several thousand bales under \ ^ foun(J ,he M ,ocke(1 „
i the same period last year prior to ,
0 . - .. 4 . | . garage where he said he had been
Sept. 1, according to Federal sta-, * *
tistician G. O. Peterson today., !;1«ced by two o'her boys. He
This year only 8,521 bales have; w is dirty, scared nnd naked. Po-
been ginned in comparison with lice placed a sack with holes
11,680 at the same period in 19-|for :irms on him and took him for
30, Mr. Peterson sdid. a bath and his home.
Mary hesitated and looked at me
"You can be of no help—it will be
too much for you. I will see you in
a little while," I told her. She went
upstairs with Mrs. Johnson.
Davison came into the hall
"Bring the doctor out to the
porch," I said, and went into the
library that opened to this porch.
The figure on the glider was covered
with a steamer rug, as Davison had
telephoned us he had done. Major
Forrest and Foxcroft were on the
porch. The Major was standing on
the steps, looking down at them.
"There would be no footprints, be-
cause of the gravel walk," I said
"There might be, Harley, if a man
walked over the grass instead of
along the path."
That was true, but the closest ex
amination failed to show a trace.
Foxcroft was standing a few
puces from the glider, taking in
eYery detail of the little porch that-
wns open to the nouth, but glassed
In at the east end, and almost hid-
den with honeysuckle and climbing
roses.
"Out there, sir," we heard Davi-
son say, and Doctor Sutton came in
He was startled to see the steamer
rug over the figure and removed it
a* once.
"Look here—this is death by vio-
lence." He turned to the butler,
*Why didn't you tell me?" he de-
manded.
"I didn't want to waste a moment,
«ir, in words. I hoped he might be
saved."
The doctor proceeded to open the
dead man's shirt. He made a quick
examination
' "He hasn't been dead more than
an hour and a half or two hours,"
the doctor said., "Did you find the
,-weapon ?" He looked at Davison and
•at Foxcroft. They shook their heads.
"Peculiar wound, right to the
heart, indications are that It was a
I thin stiletto; the autopsy will deter-
. mine that. I must send for Evarts."
I Evarts, I learned then, but did not
,'know before, was the coroner.
"I<ook here, Wally," I murmured
"What do the servants know?"
Foxcroft asked. • ,
"That Mr. Montieth died suddenly,
sir."
"You didn't tell them—they think
it is a natural death?"
"Yes, sir. I felt it out of place
for me to tell them any more."
"You've a good head. Let them
think so for the present, and see
that none of them leave. If any try
to leave, stop them or let someone
in authority know. Some of the
State Police will be here shortly.
Oh yes, did you see anyone or heat
anything?"
"No sir. Mr. Montieth was sleep-
ing. I went up to my room for a
brief rest and my pipe. In my quar-
ters, I smoke a pipe."
"Someone could have entered?"
"I am afraid so, sir, but no one
over has entered unannounced dur-(
ing the twelve years I have been
here." ^
|ift*\fh
"Blood!" Dr. Sutton exclaimed. "Fresh blood, just drying."
FoxcToft, "thers are s flock of I fini; h«d his call.
"All the servants here, Mary, even
myself, since I saw him a few hours
ago."
"Mary? Don't be getting nonsen-
sically dramatic!"
"If you want me to work with you
and your county sleuths, Wally," I
said, "at least listen to whatever I
present, before you moke any de-
cisive comment. Mary was to be cut
off, penniless, if she refused to
marry Dave Forrest. She knew il—
she was told so this afternoon by
Montieth. She "
"Whew! Are you sure?"
"I will tell you how sure I am,
later. Then there is a man named
Griswold; he lives in Kingsbury.
Mary is, I have reason to believe, in
love with him, or thinks she is. She
went to Kingswold college, that's in
Kingsbury."
Wallace Foxcroft stared at me in
undisguised amazement.
"1 don't understand why you per-
sist in being a poor novelist when
you might be a second Sherlock
Holmes."
"Chance—things I happened to
overhear and to see—pure chanoe
and luck," I assured him.
"Evarts is on his way," Doctor
Sutton announced.
Foxcroft took the telephone then
and got in touch with Sergeant Har-
per of the local station of State
Police. As ho was waiting to get
the call through he said to me, soft-
ly, "Get the butler here."
Davison was waiting when he
$ Short-Murray
\ FUNERAL DIRECTOR8
Phone 113
506 W. Main St.
—-—
W. F. WEAVER-
PLUMBING CO.
PLUMBING SATISFACTION
624 W. Main Phone 2742
I
"Mr. Montieth was alive when I
left, Davison?" I asked.
"Oh yes sir; he didn't take to the
hammock for a half hour after
that."
My father-in-law came in to us, tn
the library.
"You boys have sharper eyes," he
said. "Why not see if there are any
signs that someone came through
the library?" A
"We will, Major," Foxcroft re'
plied.
We began looking about. The ma-
jor sat in the comfortable swivel
chair at Montleth's desk and
watched us as we looked about. He
stared around here and there and
suddenly cried out.
He pointed to a spot on the wall, a
tiny red streak running down from
a silver eross, or "rood" as U was
called.
Doctor Sutton, nearest, put his
flngw on the streak.
"Bloodl" he exclaimed. "Fresh
blood, joet drying."
I took my hanakerchief and, with
it, lifted the silver ornament from
its little hook, but as I did so i
dropped it.
We all stared down at it in amaze
ment
W
and an ugly, narrow four-inch blade'
The fall had released some spring
Wly, nar BriMI
protruded txotn the button, of Sfee
cross.
This blade was blood-etatned I
(To be eootinoed-) ^
e«rrtiMtoU ti*aMan M
PMrlMM« H "'*< raNW fceJMU, M>
IkJl
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 70, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 11, 1937, newspaper, September 11, 1937; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth327697/m1/2/: accessed March 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.