The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 107, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 26, 1940 Page: 1 of 4
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WEATHER
DENISON AND VICINfTY
Fair and warm today
and Sunday
THE DENISON PRESS
POLISHED DAILY EXCEPT
, SUNDAY
YOUR HOME-OWN Ef
DAILY NEWSPAPER
Me PER MONTH
REPRESENTATIVE OF THE UNITED PRESS
DENISON, TEXAS
SATURDAY, OCT. 26, 1940
WEEKLY FOUNDED 1930-DAILY 1934
VOL. 7—NO. 107
Axis Expected To Strike In Mediterranean
EVERDAY
DENISON
By
LOUIS ANDERSON
e -------------- •
Much to the chagrin of some,
this corner comes right out and
comments tliut Sherman high,
based on its performance here
la st night, has the sweetest team
the district has seen in years. For
this writer to have suspected Den-
ion might win must have bein
sheer sentimentality and the Cats
knocked out any idea we had that
any 5AA squad would down Sher-
man high this season . . . The
Denison lads played one of the
best defensive games seen here in
years, just didn’t have what it
takes to beat a superior outfit.
We never did overestimate the
Jackets, merely underestimated
the Cats after watching them play
Sunset and Bonhi . . . And the
Sherman fans lost their shirts >r
b 1 b, giving too many points.
One man showed us a book of
bets where he had 18 points to
the tune of almost $50, another
had 20 points and 25 bucks up,
both were small bets compared
with some . . . Howard Rogers,
SHS back, was injured last night
hut not seriously and will play
again next week in all probability.
Cary Giant takes one of bis!
most important roles in The How-]
ar l of Virginia, a saga of pre ur.dj
revolutionary days in the goodj
ole US • . . Fans last night were
impressed almost as much hy the
hand displays before the game
and at half time as they were!
with play on the field. Neil Shir-1
ley of DHS and Billy Collin* of
9HS, band directors, deserve plau-
dits . . . Boh Crosby, brother of!
Bing, has been taken over by the
flickers and the younger member
of the singing fam'ily is one of the
most steady players in the busi-
ness. Seldom does he ever blow
up in his lines, takes things in
stride with little effort. The
brothers Crosby have real talent.
Boh says he has written about a
thousand songs, but only three
have been published. ..Ruth Mil-
lett says a wife is a person who
tells the world how much her hus-
band knows tells him how little...
A Greek monastery recently
reported the death of an
82-year old man who had never
seen a woman. Ferns are not al-
lowed inside its confines whether
they be human or animal.
Bill Woodside, Paris News writ-
er here to see the game last eve,
says he sent a gill to cover the
Paris-Hugo melee. So don’t be
surprised if the Wildcats wind up
with a heaootiful team . . . That’s
kidding, of course, because there
are many capable women in the
newspaper profession . . . Rome
columnists believe Roosevelt will
take a wide blast at newspapers
before long. Mr. DDR doesn't
like the "treatment" accorded him
by the fourth e'fate when he
Jacked the supreme court, at-
tempted the congressional purges
—that failed—and a few other
tricks . Nino Martini, the op-
eratic warbler, made himself un-
popular in Puerto Rico recently;
when he insisted air conditioning
in (he joint where lie was singing
be turned off. Thousands of
formal-dressed listeners sweltered
that night.
Park College
Keeps Drilling
DURANT, Ok.4 Oct. 20—If pa-i
tience and perseverance get their
reward. Pure Oil company will |
eventually get a producing well
in its No. 1 Park-College-200, east!
outpost of its Cumberland field
Mothers Of
Gobs Sponsor
WIHITEWRIGHT, Tex., Oct. 26
—Mothers of boys from this com-
munity now serving in the U. S.
Navy and Marine corps will spon-
sor a program at the Palace thea-
tre at 2:30 p. m. Sunday in ob-
servance of Navy Day, Oct. 27.
They will also have a display of
Navy trophies and pictures in a
window at the Community Public
Service company store.
The theatre program will in-
clude a motion picture of life in
the Navy in addition to songs and
music by local talent. W. E. La-
roe will be master of ceremonies
and will announce the following
program.
Call to assembly.
Song, “Jesus Savior, Pilot Me,”
by audience.
Patriotic music, by band di-
rected by Mrs. Bebe Bodnmer of
Denison.
Invocation.
Reading, Janis Jane Horton.
Music, hy band.
Tribute to Navy Mothers.
Song, “God Bless America,” by
Eettye Nell Yeager.
Music by band.
Showing of motion picture of
Life in the Navy.
Benediction. Taps.
There will he no admission
charge and the public is invited
to attend.
District Dinner
By Bryan Demos
IDURANT, Oct. 26—Every cit-
izen in Bryan county is urged to
take part in the district Roosevelt
informal banquet to be staged at
the national guard armory, Sat-
urday night at 7 o’clock. Sponsors
of the affair are members of the
district League of Young Demo-
crats, who are cooperating with
the central committees and cam-
paign committees of -the demo-
cratic party
The entire theme of the pro-
gram and banquet will be “Roose-
velt." Principal speaker will be
Oklahoma’s senior senator, Elmer
Thomas, who has just returned to
Oklahoma from Washington, D.
C. He has spoken in Tulsa, Ok-
lahoma City and will keep his
date here Saturday night. Speak-
ing with the senator will he Na-
tional Committeeman Robert S.
Kerr, Oklahoma City and Con-
gressman Wilburn Cartwright,
who will also he on the after-
noon program at 3 o’clock at the
city hall. Tickets are on sale at
the Brvan hotel lobby for the tur-
key banquet Saturday night.
northwest of here.
After bailing and swabbing to
the bottom of the plugged-back
depth of 5.094 feet today, the
well made a fair show of oil and
gas, according to reports. Crews
were continuing to test and were
to drill deeper into the bottom j
plug.
The company at the same time
announced three locations in Mar-
shall county, making 19 in all
completed, drilling or located in
the Cumberland field.
The locations are:
No. 2 Little-203 in neswnw of
section 28, 5-7e, about a half
mile northwest of the discovery
well.
No. 2 Little-105 in swsene of
section 28, 5--7e, about one quar-
ter mile southeast of the discov-
ery and near the Washita river
bank.
No. 1 Little-204 in nesesw of
section 28, 5s-7e, about one-half
mile southwest of the discovery.
Of the latter two, one is the
furthest southwest extension of
the fields and another is the far-,
tlip-t southeast extension thus far
located.
A Bryan county well, No. 3,
Little-100, was nearing pay sand,
drilling today at 4,592 feet after
topping the Bromide at 4,482
feet.
Also in Bryan county is No. 1
I.ittle-106 drilling today at 4,038
feet.
The company’sNo. 1 Cris.-man-
104, which showed only a small
amount of oil after washing and
bailing, was shut down today
awaiting cable tools which will be
used to complete its tests.
Other operations in the field
Home Defense
Equipment Seen
The twu home defense units he-1 tween the ages of 18 and 62 is!
ing organized here will be furn-1 eligible for membership in this'
ished rifles and other available organization,
equipment according to a state-] “The Denison Defense Councili
ment issued at Washington Friday Is composed of two members from]
by Secretary of War Harry L. | each of the following organize-] MixeS Drink
itv Omin-1 * I
FRENCH CABINET
HEARS REVIEW OF
HITLER’S PROPOSAL
Harry L.
Stim-on who said the war depart- tions of our town: The City Coun-j
Two Die In
LONDON, Oct. 26—The Nazi
air bliztkrieg against Britain was
stepped up today but,* rumors
were persistent it was only the
Marshall, Texas ,n
- i IA Rome newspaper, Virginio
MARSHALL, Texas, Oct. 26—] Gayda, sometinies mouthpiece of
John L. Lewis
Lewis Swings
Over To GOP;
ment was ready to turn over the] cil, Rotary Club, Boosters club,:
supplies to state, home guard or- Ttads’ Club, Veterans of Foreign]
ganizations, formation of which Wars, Chamber of Commerce and
be described as “of great import- the American Legion.
■••nee to the development of the “The duties of this Denison Dc-;
national defense. fense Council are as follows: ! ... .. n , „„ . „ ,, . 4 . ...
To clarify a misunderstanding “To accept applications from! M'ss,Nora Pcrkin,s* ,d8> , cou"*ry Bemto Mu^ol,n,» commented that
regarding the organization here ally citizen eligible for member-
of the units “to p; teet our town j ship and in turn to decide upon
from any unforsegv discord which the fitness of each applicant who
might occur during the
of ou: National Guard,
|g linked |i<'dcn, chairman of the Denison receive the same consideration,
storekeeper was dead today after the war will soon shift to the
| she took a friendly drink of whis- i Mediterranean and that the Ital-
j ky from a neighborhood farmer, ian navy would “play an import-
absence applies. There will be no favorit- daba Newman, oO, from a bottle ant pait.
Harry ism shown and each applicant will' °f h(,uor which he apparent,y pre' I British authont.es were certain
Defense council today issued the matter what
following statement: ] his politics.
“Any white, male citizen be-]
his age, religion or
WASHINGTON, Oct. 26—John
L. Lewis, head of the Congress of
Industrial lOrganizations, Friday —, — , — .
night endorsed the presidential 10 IvSLlSC F UUCS
candidacy of Wendell L. Willkie!
and charged that President Roose- [
velt’s motivation and objective is:
For Color Guard
pared as a suicide potion. Francisco Franco, Spanish dicta-
County Attorney Stanley Tim- tor, will not enter the war, reliev-
mins said both died of poisoning, j jj. tension that he might, thereby
Newman entered Miss Perkin- t.jvin the axis a backdoor base for
atacks on the British base of Gi-
braltar, key to the Mediterranean
offense.
A Ficnch cabinet meeting was
in session today at which vice-
1’ieniier Pierre Laval will outline
preference in
dio address delivered
“This organization is for the] store at Harleton and asked her
pioteetion of our town and to be to fix him a toddy. Miss Perkins
a success must be supported by fixed herself a drink also,
the entire citizenship. ] Newman, who was married,
"If any applicant thinks he has] had been a customer at Miss Per-
the experience for a commissioned, kins’ store for several years.
... , officer he will be given every op-- Assistant County Attorney Har- peace term as presented him re-
, color Zt 1TSk] portunity to submit his qualified.j ry W McGee, Jr., said his invest!- j rently at Paris by Chancellor
» . . ’ j , .. .1 tions. The sajne holds true for'nation indicated Newman had put Adolf Hitler.
Dei^on” Labor Tralc.f 0^11 has! enlisted personnel. The applicant: poison jn the wh*sk^ Moscow reported it would, for
called a meeting Monday night at may a^d ,hat lf he ls Pa*i l,he "Vf’ ™.e oC ° «“*■, f'V"
7.;i() m ,lt ,| Chamber of triotic enough to send m his appli- tie of whisky, with a quantity of on any Danube river commission
Commerce ' , cation, then this committee in the poison in solutioji, were found meeting and informants said the
turn will treat his application with on Newman’s body. Reds were ready to protest any
McGee said he did not believe Nazi invasion of Greece or Bui-
“One of the first things done Miss Perkins 'knew the liquor had garia.
hy this committee after perma- been poisoned. He said his inves- File air alarms were sounded in
nent organiation was a motion ligation had not uncovered any London since daybreak but few of
that reads as follows: ; motive on Ithe part of Newman. attacker- could break through
“ ‘Should any member of this ’ 01 whether the farmer intended t|,e British defense. Britain dis-
Miss Perkin- should drink counted Berlin reports that raids
cation for membership in the1 ,he !i(luor. ^ ; last n;ght wege destructive to
Justice of the Peace H. L. ( al- many important British points,
war.
’He said that Mr. Roosevelt’s ]
reelection would be a “national
evil of the first magnitude,” and
if it occurred he would regard it
as being the equivalent of a vote
of no confidence by the CIO in
hi* (Le;vis,) i!eadersh,ip a,,d w:ou'd The color guard will consist of
retire from the presidency of the ,mc Ame,.iean fiag> 0ne Texas' < veG' re8pect
oigamzation. flag nm| a high school flag. Den-
Lewis revealed his presidential]-^ js t,)e only town in thii area
a. 11 F'n’lnute Ja not having a color guard, it was)
a j ff-1'01!*1 10„. 11 j disclosed and as the band and
oak-paneled office here. His re-
(Continued on Page 4)
marks were carried over 362 sta-1 toward''mukh^ the’t Labor) council d«*fe submit hia aPP>H jBat
tions of three national networks , . ,, . , * . .- •
, . , i- , ... day Booster trips of the labor or-
to a potential audience of 20,000,-1 gan;2atjons
000 persons and at an estimated
cost of $45,000
The expense was borne by the
Six Companies
Asks Rights To
Serve Dam Site
DALI.AS, Texas, Get. 26— Six
transportation companies now op-j
erating under temporary permits
expiring in February, submitted
data at an Interstate Commerce
■Commission in the Baker Hotel,
today for permanent permits to]
serve the Denison dam from Den- ]
ison and from Colbert, Okla.
M. B. Driscoll, representing the;
ICC; Lon A. Smith of the Texas;
Railroad Commission and Bennett
Bond of the Oklahoma Corpora-,
tion Commission heard the re-]
quests. Evidence will be studied,
by the ICC after which rulings
will be entered for each of the
companies. The contracts are for
hauling materials to the dam site.
Companies participating indud-!
ed Riss & Co., Kansas City; John-]
son Motor lines, Fort Worth;]
Northeast Texas Motor lines, Par-
b; Houston & North Texas freight
lines, Dallas; Yellow Cab Transit
corporation, Oklahoma City and
] Luper Transportation company,
Shawnee, Okla.
a success, the trades] Home Defense Unit, either as a
council plans to present them with! commissioned officer or enlisted
the color-guard. j math he must at the same time of
The school board also furnished makinS application submit his res-
F°m.TUl;e,°f, Df.mocratsja large school bus with driver and! 'Smation as a member of the De-
paid all expenses, it was recalled, fense C ouncil. Upon receipt of
to cooperate in making the two-i fh's resignation the secretary of
,|ay Boo-ter trip a success, which' Hie Denison Defense Council will
Lewis charged that the ilemo-, llttraoted an estimated attendance: notif>’ *he organization of which
cratic party had broken faith with of 20 ()00 tn U]e huge celebration thia member was a representative
here Rept. 2. ' t° this council, and ask that this
It was estimated the cost of the organization’s presiding officer
color guard will be approximately immediately appoint another mem-
8100, which is to be di-i ,ier of bis organization to become
mg the last seven years of power] vl(Je, nmong the various labor or-U member of this council to fill
laway ordered an autopsy for] j)Ut admitted many civilian cas-
both Newman and Miss Perkins] na]ties.
before returning
their deaths.
verdict for
for Willkie, Alan Valentine, ex-
ecutive director, announced in
New York.
organized labor, which contribut
ed huge sums to the President’s
reelection in 1936, and accused
the administration of failing dur-
Postmasters
Are Instructed
Toward Caution
German authorities asserted
that the Empress of Britain, one
of the world's ten largest pleas-
ure lines, had been bombed and
-unk off the coast of Ireland, but
London did not comment. The
(Continued on page four)
to -olve the nation’s
problems.
and
Washington not to offer any sug-
gestions
he is an alien or not, or
F. B. Hughes, local postmaster
and other postmasters over the
most vital1 ganizations * *Them7rf‘uT0 he! *>>e vacancy.’ "ation todaV have bfen faution*d
presented at a home game of the “It is a custom of the military,^ the P0;t°fflce epartmenta
Lewis said he spoke as a citizen, yellow Jackets in the near future.' en’ice thilt ever>’ man stands on
u an American, but later he was announced. 1 h*8 own merits and I can asure
called on the CIO leaders, many] __________..___________ any applicant who submits hU ap*; any^petsott
of whom already have endorsed a q. j , fj* l plication that as long as I am
third term and are working ac- OeaieCl DlClS chairman of this council it will be
tively for the Roosevelt-Wallace A o • j handled this way. Each applicant
ticket “to sustain me now or re-] awGCClVGCI will be given a hearing as to his
pudiate me.” qualification* and he will be
“I will not chide you, and will. Sealed bids in duplicate are now j graded wholly on those qualifica-
even hope that you will not re- being received, by the U. S. En- tions.
gret your action.” he said. , K'ineer office to be publicly open-] “As time is the main element in
To the United Mine Workers of ed at 11 a. ni. November 4 for perfecting the organization ot
America, some 400,000 strong, the sale of tires, batteries, fire] these units, the only request that
Van Field Asks
50 Per Cent Boost
AUSTEN, Texas, Oct. 26—As-
or attempt to influence sorting the a Iditional crude would
in determining wheth- not cause a reduction in other
of Texas purchases. Pure Oil eom-
which he has headed for many extinguishers and miscellaneous
years, Lewis appealed for support tool-
against creation of a political die- The property will be sold “as
tatorship in America. Similar! is, where is," at its place of stor-
pleas were directed to the steel,] at?c without warranty or guaran-
automobile, shipbuilding, mari-, ty as to quality, character, condi-
white-l Don size or weight, color or kind
I will make of any prospective
applicant is that he get his appli-
cation in the mail at once, so that
it may he considered along with
those already received. Also, I
pany sought today in a railroad
commission hearing a 50 per cent
boost in the Van field allowable.
The Van Zandt county field
now has a quota of 12,030 barrels
or an average of
] about 8,500 barrels. An Increase
of 3.500 to 5,000 barrels to sup-
ply its Smith’s Bluff refinery wa*
requested. The increase would
displace oil previously purchased
in Arkansas, it was stated, and
in
what country he is a citizen ir
registration of aliens now being]
conducted.
The postmasters were instruct- ]
ed that if an alien gives his cit-
izenship as Czech, Austrian, Pol- with shutdowns
i-h or any other nationality now]
subject to the Germans or other i
totalitarian countries, he is per-:
mitted to do so, and no attempt
must be made to have him change
it, or to aid him by suggestions.
The postmasters were also in-, products would be marketed
structed not to enter into lengthy ] the main out of Texas,
discussions to determine whether Raybourne Thompson, attorney
According to the swiftness of
polls, it looks like Dr. Gallup gal-
lops all over the country ... A
family In Minneapolis has children
born Jan. 1, July 4, Dee. 25 and
Nov. 11. Not all the same year,!
you unnerstand . . . Some observ
era believe John L. Lewis’ swing
to Willkie will lose the GOP can-
didate more ballots Nov. 5 than
the union cun bring him . . . But
the wild stories coming out of
Berlin sure show you how many
bat-brained run the Nazi govern-
ment. Even a moron can’t go for
most of the official Reich reports
. . . Critics are booing Don1
Ameche’s dialect in Down Argon- j
tine Way. They think his accent
lias odor ... It won't he too long
before the Denison National]
Guai dsmen leave for that year of
intensive training. Most of them
look forward to it, hoping to moke
the nrmy a lifetime job.
CHANNEL PORTS
ATTACK BY RAF
time, lumber, textile and white-! Don size or weight, color or kind that there have been no
collar workers. ' or that it is condition or fit to be or appointments made hy this
To the wogien of America he ] f|JI' the purpose for which it ouneil. The council will meet at
directed this plea: was originally intended or for any, 7:30 p. m. Tuesday night, Oct.
29, 1940, at which time all appli-
personally assure any applicant # js citi2fn of th# United for Pure> took i3sue with conten
promise? Cinrao 'olian hut tn nrivieA
Rtates or a’t alien, hut to advise tions of some other companie.-
"May I hope that on election ] 'Alter purpose, and no claim
day the mothers of our sons will,| *»ny allowance upon one of thej cations received will he formally f','1'1'np aliens have been regi
I'
such persons to regi-ter as aliens
and look into the matter later.
Since the starting of registra-
tion here August 27, a total of
(Continued on Page four)
the sacred ballot, lead the -afore-mentioned grounds will be) opened and read for the first time )v , l(-a, nost0f f Jee Mr
by the council. The council will ™ J Jj. ° Th’ registration
then take them one hy one and
] notify each and every applicant
; when to appear in person for his
fir.-t interview.” Advertise tr ttie Denison Pres*
with
revolt against the candidate who
plays at a game that may make
cannon fodder of your sons."
Miss Margaret Lilly of White-
wright is shopping and visiting in
|)enison today.
LONDON Oct. 26—Mile after
mile of Germany’s invasion front
along the French coast was en-
gulfed in flames early Saturday
under a thunderous RAF attack
that followed the fiercest duel of
the war between British and Nazi
long-range guns.
The cross-channel shelling, in
an intensified struggle for con-
trol of the narrow Straits of Do-
ver, followed official British re-
ports of the sinking of a Nazi tor-
pedo boat and a 6,000-ton Italian
supply ship in combined naval-uir
assaults extending from the North
Sea to the Suez,
A three-hour bombing of the
heart of Berlin, in which a great
lire started in the center of the
city guided relays of RAF bomb-
ers to their targets early Friday,
was described in an Air Ministry
communique.
The Admiralty admitted the loss
of the 1,090-ton British destroyer
Veiietiu—thirty-second British de-
stroyer lost in the war—which
went down with some casualties,
after hitting a mine.
The RAF's smashing attack up-
on the Nazi-held French coast be-
tween Boulogne and Calais occur-
red after attacks on both British
and German convoys in the Dover
Straits by long range guns and
bombing planes,
Sheets of red and orange
flames rose along miles of the
F'rench shore.
The torpedo boat went
down off Adolf Hitler’s French
invasion coast under an attack of
th veteran submarine Swordfish
while the Italian supply ship was
sunk somewhere in the Mediter-
ranean by the submarine Regent,
the admiralty said.
ROCKFORD 111., Oct. 26—The
Rockford CIO council, claiming to
represent 6,000 members, today
had repudiated National CIO Pres-
ident John L. Lewis for his sup-
port of Wendell L, Willkie foi
President and reiterated its en-
dorsement of President Roosevelt
for re-election.
Clarence Reilly, president of
the council, announced the reso-
lution of repudiation after Lewis’
national broadcast address had
heen heard by union members at
CIO heudquarters. He said the
resolution had been passed last
Checking Nears
Its Completion
period closes December 27
---;-
COLLEGE STATION, Oct. 26 ]
—With the exception of a few
late conservation practices, per
formance checking under the
| 1940 AAA program has been
] completed.
Crews are still at work in sec
] oral sections of the state measu.
ing newly-eonsructed terraces
legumes, and checking a fev.
] other practices which can he car
, . . . . , , ried out in tly fall, according to
Wednesday whenJ.ewtis’ projeoted, ,, N HolTO,n statP nHminj<
endorsement of Willkie had been
revealed.
The resolution placed the coun-
cil “wholeheartedly in support of
the re-election of President Frank-
lin D. Roosevelt,”, and cited labor
p-nins made during the democratic
administration of the last seven
years, including the Wagner act,
the wage-hour law and the anti-
child labor enactment.
that there L an overproduction of
crude in Texas. There may be
an exces- flow in other states, he
said, “hut we do not feel Texas
is out of line."
Pure is drawing on storage that
ha- been reduced to thirty days’
supply, he said, and beginning
with the first of the year its crude
need.- will rise as ga-oline stocks
are built up for the summer sea-
son.
Commissioner E A Thompson,
who conducted the hearing,
summed up Pures’ contentions as
-howing a firm market for the
■rude, the products of which will
he marketed out ide of Texas,
that the additional crude would
. not inordinately increase stocks,
i an I that it could he produced
the ] without waste.
L A. Ogden, division engineer
for Pure, testified the current al-
Rutler of Washington, are in Den-! cial attorney for the department. Inwable f°r the field, ot which
ison today conferring with Capt ; Cleon Summers, federal district Pure owns 75 per cent, yields an
Gordon Textor, district engineer, attorney at Muskogee, named as annual withdrawal of only -9* Pe*
and the engineer legal staff here, a defendant in the governor’s suit.1 cent of the future reserves while
The men will represent the gov- ] will ul-o aid the government’s in eleven voar= it had produced
eminent at Durant Monday in u . ase. 27 per cent of its reserves. It
--- * state’s
INJUNCTION SUIT
AT DURANT MONDAY
Two attorneys of the depart Mr. Butler is attorney for
and creage planted to winter raent 0f justice, C. P. Harris of land division of the department
Oklahoma City and Charles O.] of justice and Mr. Harris is spe-
trntive officer of the AAA.
In December compliance cheek
in? of winter wheat and e..rl\|
f“rrtahie-1 In area* having v<w’-', three-judge federal'court to"quaahl Governor Phillips is to he re-1 has 3.37 per cent of the
table allotments will get unde i^ov Leon C. Phillips’ injunction presented by Randall Cobb, first ipserves but onlv .0 per cent of
suit against the Denison dam. On! assistant attorney general, Wil-,the allowable. Dicovered in 1929
the bench will he Judge Eugene! liam Coe, a special attorney, both] it had an allowable of 50,000 bar-
Riee, federal district judge and; of Oklahoma City, and C. C. Hat-pels dally ou Oct. 1, in rnd
circuit court Judges A. P. Murrah ehett of Durant, also a special at-1 1932, but in succeeding years has
lyoc t'ho administrator said
Meanwhile, nnri' 1 photornnhv
re-nrk :' ontbrninc" with si>:|
nlenes flving whenever weather
permits In various sections of the
state.
and Walter T. Iluxman.
i torney.
been reduced consistently.
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Anderson, LeRoy. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 107, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 26, 1940, newspaper, October 26, 1940; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth526971/m1/1/: accessed June 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.