The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 26, Ed. 1 Monday, July 27, 1942 Page: 4 of 4
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I MH N1
THE DINBON P<
MONDAY, JULY 27, 1942
• . ..
'yeah, but think of those unfortunate
people at home who'll have to walk
to the movies!"
"Men In Washington,1942" Latest
March of Time At Rialto Tonight
Never in its history has Wash-
ington, D. C. attracted so many
colorfully and important person-
alities. 'As the wartime capital
of the United Nations, it has be-
come a Mecca for statesmen and
iKings bent upon the destruction
of the Axis. Yelt <Wa.shigton,
more important to Americans
than eveT before, has never been
so inaccasible.
^Nevertheless, tire-rationed citi-
zens need not despair. Tonight
the March of Time brings to the
1 screen of the Rialto, the
then on Sunday and Monday, the
capital and its key figures in
<|Men in Washington, 1942." In-
stead of braving the swamped
travel, rooming and restaurant
facilities of the overcrowded capi-
tal, Denison moviegoers may visit
on the screen people and places
Which few people who do get to
Washington ever see.
' Because important personali-
ties in Washington today cannot
take time out to pose for motion
pictures, the March of Time cam-
era has caught them in striking|
Notes On The
Movie Colony
Fide
HriULYWOOtD—Another
of Hollywood:
Hedy Lamarr, in dark ni*k>up
for her "White Cargo" role, is
lunching in the M-G-M restaurant
when the telephone rings. Over
in the corner, a blue uniformed
boy answers. 'tMiss Lamarr?" he
says. "One moment, please."
The boy brings the instrument
to Hedy, plugging it under the
table- >He stands by w'niie Hedy
talks, then returns th-> telephone
to its corner, awaiting the next
HH
His name is Ray Osborn. Tele-
phone service, from noon to 2:30,
is but part of bis 9 to 5 working
day. The rest, with two half-hour
rest periods, he gives out infor-
mation and directions io callers at
the studio administration build-
ing.
Ray is 18, handsome, a little
shy, but capable of breaking into
a personable photogenic grin. He
is the first subject of these "oth-
er side" sketches to admit—reluc-
tantly but frankly—that he
wmgl^.a studio job because he
wants to be as actor.
"I've never admitted it bo-
fore", he says, "because people
would all say: "So you want to
be an actor—ha! But 1 do--why
not say so? I've wanted to act
since I was so high. Came after
/Vlan Ladd's stand-in. The boys
painted and refurnished the house
themselves, are furnishing it and
buying a car—settling down for a
long siege of Hollywood. Both
cook, each shares grocery, rent,
cigaret, incidental expenses.
Ray has been to Ciro's (as
guest of a friend) and to Earl
Carroll's on his own. He likes
night club's, dancing, seeing peo-
ple. 4He saw Garbo once: she'd
at Metro, too.
When he is being a very old
man of 18, Ray insists that stars
are only "interesting and fasci-
nating, not glamorous," to him.
Joan Crawford is his favorite.
But he shops for his movies not
by stars, but by stories. He
reads serious literary
ALONG—
(Continued from Page 1)
Car Thief Arrsted Hers
Edgar Greein of Marshall has
turned over to the sheriff's de-
partment of that city today to
face charges of car theft follow-
ing his arrest here by l'olice Chief
Paul Borum in the COO block
South Armstrong avenue Saturday
afternoon.
Brazil £*r«xy Recovering
RIO DE JANERIO, July 27—
Doctors revealed today that the
President of Brazil virtually has
recovered from injuries suffered
in an autoombile accident. Presi-
dent Vargas was hurt while on
his way to address a May Day
celebration.
V
DEATH ROLL
(Continued from Page 1)
ried at McKinney to Mrs. Lula
^May Snyder. lie was a member
of the Baptist chruch, Brother-
hood of Locomotive Engineers and
the Security Benefit association. '
Surviving are his widow; a son
Sacra at Madill on March ^1,
1907. f.Irs. Baum died hat*
April 25, 1934. He was a rnem->
bw of the Church of Christ and
the Masocinc lodge.
Surviving are two daughter^,
(Mrs. Robert Ray Rutherford of
!'alias and Miss Frances Alice
Baum of Denison; three brother*,
Burney Baum of New Orleans,
Mux Biulm, serving with the arm-
ed forces and Herbert Baum, in
lHawaii; three sisters, Mrs. Tolta
Chaney of Wilson Okla-, Mrs.
Helen Spence of Dallas and
0. J. Wolfe of Medford, Or*.
CITATION.
THE STATE OF TEXAS
To Thomas L. Jetty Greet-
ing:
You are commanded to appear
and answer the plaintiff's pe-
tition at or before 10 o'clock
A, M. of the first Monday after
the expiration of 42 days from
the date of issuance of this clti.
tion, the same being Monday the
nth /day of August, A. D.,
1!M2, at or before 10 o'ckxfc A.
M., before the Honorable Dis-
trict tourt of Grayson County,
at the Court House in Sherman.
Guy Snyder of Ix>s Angeles; two
candid sequences more Sf'Worth'and^M™. EdgarVhl *ein* Na 4J.061
than any posed shots could be. 1 *
,, i • • •_ , °f San Antonio; two brothers,
Crowds arriving in Washington,! '
* * ...i ;♦+!«, ,„k,' Webster Mayfield, Nashville,
groups of strangers splitting cabs ... _
, , . . . . i Tenn.; and two sisters, Miss Cor-
bus-fashion, guests turned away
~~———————— DUS-1&0IUUII9 kucsw vui iicvi , ,• ij r xt .ji. *11 j l fie uaiUrO
their pictures were on a mantel from hotels> vestaurants crowded of An^ 'uit bein* wUhmtially
Piece. rnom for more1 |Mra- lda Crai* of ^os Angeles. ........ '
Said plaintiff's petition wai
filed on the 0th day of July,
IJ42. The file number of
The
names of the parties in laid
m't are: Vdma Jetty as Plain-
tiff and' Thomas L. Jetty as De.
fendant. The nature of said
I" into parks to make room for more!'*"' of ,LoS Angeles, " f°N
chair6made 0^0™° 7a2ned °"Ta T"' k, apart^, ^ LAZARUS A- BAlfM P^s ** «"««««
around the frame which formed ^ "howT And" everywhere is' £ ot R^umTs 1U2 ^ ™nHff°f aU^M
•*' - - nSSr??,2,
in. .The old time genteel cour- Because the Washington of to- * ® ®c ' " 0< tempered; that he cursed and
tesy and relfinment that char arc- day k the outgrowth of the ad- six P'e'k<i ° "g B" lllneBS °f, abused her on mnny occasions,
tenzed the Texas all of us know, mjn-rt.ration of one man, Frank-/SIX s' . . '
was still with them although they lin D. RooKevelt, the film lecalls'T Fn"era' f,,v,ces tw,1> be, *el,d
were in lees fortunate circum-. hi^liKh^ of his 3 temrs> climax . Jutsd«y ^f ernoon at 4 0 clock
stances than they had seen in oth- n these with strjkjnff candid se-, from ®hort^Murray chapel. In-
er ' quences of the men who are mak-1 ernwnt ^ •" Oakland ceme-
A fersh drink of water from ; history in Washigton today.I ter.£ n°*th of Madl1'" .
... the well was offered in the F atured are such prominent1 Um WaS b°rn June 23'
novel^l friendly bucket with the old- a™ Li. \ " Mississippi, the son of
the figures as Landis, Nelson, Hender-! ^ and Mrg> Jonathan Baum_ He
were
likes to have friends, mostly moy-l fashioned dipper and we were son Honkins The camera fur- ....
ie extras, in for talk sessions. | asked to sit and visit with them. the; shows Wallace, Donovan,1 accomaPnied parc"t8 ^ Ard"
He doesn't know what the next 9ne could not helP but shed a'Davis, Eisenhower and Rockefel- more ® a small child, and
step is for Ray Osburn, fuiure llUle tear for that couple as they ler an piayjnK their parts in thel^as reaved a"d «ducat«d tj161"6-
actor, but he's sure his chance *at their alone now with their tremendous reorganization of la- ® e" . ^oc®ry bus'"®88
sons out in the world somewhere bor industrv and morale for all W cam€ Denison in 1921.
fighting for its freedom. ? out' war pVoduction. I waS married t0 Miss E"telle
What a contrast this was to a How the United Nations War|
home just a little farther on up Council ,g bending all its efforts,
he road. T[^ere the husband for a swift and decisive victory is
was gone to follow a labor "pro- flh(>wn along with the men who arel
ka™sj?ft'guding U. S- military destinies:'
Marshall and Admiral
will come. Meanwhi'.a he's "in-
side" a studio and happy about it.
Western star Tim Holt has hung
up his boots av.d saddle for the
duration. Until the war is won,
the handsome young son of veter-
curer'
son who are at,Long Island, N. Y.
If Barbara Stanwyck doesn't
an screen star Jack Holt will do the day before for some point general
most of his sitting in the cabin of where big pay was promised him.'jfjng. 1
an army plane. He reports to He left the wife and two chil- 8c'enes of activity on the vari-1
the air forces after a quick good-1 d.en, the cows and chickens and-ous battlefronts serve a* a re-
bye visit to his wife and young other things which called for his ,ninder that the success! of these'
temaimng, to raw the big pay he campaigns depends ultimately on'
was told awaited him jf he would- t,he V8st army of workers in Wash.'
. j°r,y where the steerer ington. But even greater than!
watch out shell be typed as a im. *the responsibility of these ia the!
« , ^ r r/ M sl8trip l685® dan,Ceu m f'lT r°8"l ^ f ■ d,RJUP a burden of a great and final re-
from "Hanford, Calif., nfter higHf sibly because of her outstanding certain sum of money in order to «nnnQihnitv of ;* thoVirmrf
school dramatics and Visalii jun-J performance in "Ball of Fire," secure a "permit" to start work.V nqjt-lif
ior college. My family? They she has been signed by Hunt He did not have the fee of 150- JLcutive from whom all these1
think I'm insane and always stromberg to play the lead in a | asked but did manage to get to- functiona stem—a responsibility1
motion picture treatment of Gyp-(gether a down payment. The man- h even ter than that
sy Rose Lee's "G-Stnng Mur- was said to know practically noth-r which faced ^ther L| , Wil.
10% OF INCOME
IS OUR QUOTA
IN WAR BONDS
iSJiie further alleges that thert
was one child bom of snid mar-
riage which said <'hild died
in infancy and that no children
were adopted during said mar-
riage.
Wherefore plaintiff pray
the court that on finil hearing
she be given judgment dissolv-
ing the bonds of mntrimony now
existing; for co^ts of s<uit and
ruch other and further relief
as to ihe court may seem prop-
er to grant, and for restoration
of Iher maiden name of Velma
Flowers.
Issued this the 6th day of July,
: 1)42. Given under my hand
and seal of said Court, at office
in Sherman, Texas, this the 8th
day of July, A. D., 1942.
V. R. Henderson, Clerk
15th District Court, Grayson
County, Texas.
Bv Pauline Wiggins, Deputy
7-6; 13; 20 ;2T
ders."
have," he grinned, "but I be-
lieve if you want something badly
enough there's no reason why you
can't have it. In my job I get to
know everybody—of course, they
don't know me—but some day it
may lead to something."
If Ray expected to be "epotted"
by some talent-hunting director;
—and he says he didn't—he has,
been disappointed. "The direc-|
tors are so busy wit'i their own af-j announced
_V ...
Air Station
Contracts Made
ing of the electrician's trade, as gon
was true of three other boys of Striking views of the outward!
Rut \<vinV*1 'i• Wf° changes which are taking place in
h ma t!r ,t0 /^.'Washington together with re,veal-
promoter who was out to land hfs • j-j 1 * i.i_
suckers in* candld studies of the men re-
" / ... . , ' sponsible for those changes make
reeofocr h shrdlu cfwy fw fwv . . _ , ,
e . * . y this new ^larch of Time an inval-,
Th U. S. Engineer office today hi. dUr'sonsTo Z frZ to'fight SETS"W^hS
nounced contract awards on for a free home and the precious jq '
fairs I doubt if they see anybody ajr force stations at Ardmore and heritage handed down to us by t ] 's ,.ontr;h„tinn<. thov
who isn't right mu 1 ...un- ^.i mental contributions they are
says-
with them," he Childress.
"bn Thursday Martin and Grace conscienceless
the forefathers, while anothea- 1 • i _i j t
— _ making toward a new and better
rld.
wor
racketeer
He is just getting over being 0f Dalian was awarded a contract around enlisting our young sons
aensitive about his position as, in an am0unt le3s than $60,000 and husbands in his racket and c ^ " .
practically speaking, a telephone- jor the construction of a railroad fleecing them of their money and students C^rO^fC!
bearing robot. "I always feel bet- • 8pur track at the Ardmore proj- disrupting farm life and in gen- . • O 1
ter," he confesss, "when one of Kt eral making this dreadful bloody KeCreatlOn Park
them says 'Thank you.' " j \ contract in excess of $100,- war a source of gain for his low- 1DEINTON Tex—^Summer nights
, , 000,000 for area grading, road browed schelme. , | students at the North
Ray makes $23.50 a wefk, af- an<j gtreet grading and drainage Wow long are we going to stand Texas State Teachers college
ter starting four months ago as a waa jsgued last Wednesday to R such? We don't believe it is for crowding the NTSTC recreation
messenger at $18. (He shares w Hable of Cor8icana for the long. The man who thus capital- park> where each summer the col-
Real Estate Loans
To finance the buyirjr of homes, or any
repairs or maintenance permitted under
Fedeal Restrictions.
FOR DETAILS, SEE OR PHONE
DENISON FEDERAL SAVINGS
and LOAN ASSOCIATION
119 60. BURNETT AVE. PHONE 27J
Member Federal Home Loan Bank System
a lease on an old housejin the hills (Childress air force station,
behind Hollywood with Don Otis,
Steakley Chevrolet Co.
The Place to Buy O. K. Used Cart Cheap
cape.
T*l*ph«o« 231.
S Dwmctt At*.
izes on our grietved homes and ]eg>e sponsors one of the most un-
■ ood.v fight for freedom will 'usuai and extensive recreation
soon come to the hour when he programs in the state.
wi call for rocks and caves to Twice weekly students see mo-
l!™ bUt theTe Wi" be no es". vie« in the opeiLair theatre and on
Saturday night they attend the
traditional stage show and movie.
Three nights a week there Is danc-
TSCW National Prestige ing on the skating "slab," some-i
Texas .State College for Wom-( times old-fashioned square danc-
has full membership in seven'ing and sometimes modern jitter-!
leading educational organizations, bugging.
j including the American Council' Intramural contests in all,
on Education and the Association' sports, swimming, skating, golf,|
I'Of American College and is ap-' tennis, badminton, volley ball and
proved by the Association of Am-' croquet are all a part of the re-
erican Universities. I creation program which helps NT(
| STC students relax after summer,
ESTAB. 1914 JM*
C. B. SULLENBERGER MFG. CO.
J08-110 W. Chestnut street Phone 1022
—MANUFACTURERS OF—
High Class Mill Work
including doors, windows, frames, interior trim. We specialise
in winHow and door screens. Galvanized or black wire. Spe-
cial
cabinet and fixtures to suit every need.
classes.
• -V"
One Placement fftade.
The Chamber of Commerce'^,,.^, H#a|th p TCCW
maintained Homos Registration
office today recorded one new
placement, *Mr. and Mrs. T. B.
A new 50 x 150-foot outdoor
swimming pool at Texas State
kt 1 e r> 1 j .. . College for Women gives that
Nelson from Garland, a Katv ,, , . .., .. . 1
. *. ' college complete athletic and rec-
iivw wi n r
Woodard-
fireman, now residing at 817 W. .
reational equipment. A round-
the-year health and physical educa-
tion program is carried out-
—V-
227 Counties Represented
Young women from 227 Texas
counties, 29 state, and 6 foreign pirlt )Us« Rifle Rang*
countries were enrolled in Texas' Texas State College for Worn-
State College for Women during en maintains rifle ranges and on
the past session. | one occassion the team of girls
team. outshot the Texas A. and M.
Men like the way we wash our ap-
parel , . . our price! prove econ-
omy, too! You'll find our work
on household bundles equally sat-
isfactory I
Hand Finished
SHIRTS
Collars starched smoothly,
Just the way yeu want them.
PHONES 716-717
SNOW-WHITE
LAUNDERERS-CLEANERS-DYERS
tufl
m
<s
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Anderson, LeRoy M. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 26, Ed. 1 Monday, July 27, 1942, newspaper, July 27, 1942; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth328547/m1/4/: accessed May 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.