The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, March 25, 1960 Page: 1 of 6
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'1
LAKE TEXOMA REPORT
Water level 613.62. Water temperature 45
Barometer 30.17, rising
Winds light easterly, fair weather
64 - 45 - 75
REPRESENTATIVE OF UNITED PRESS
The Denison Press
VERSE FOR THIS WEEK
Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon
earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt
and thieves break through and steal.
Campaign begins to open
airport north of Denison»gu«t speak«
Lt. Governor of
Kiwanis Sowers
After several whisperings about
this city tieing up with Durant in
Oklahoma on a deal to use a cer-
tain spot some eight miles north
on highway 75 and to the east of
that highway, the opening guns
were fired down at the city hall
here Tuesday.
A group of men consisting of
W. E. Volwiler, J. Stephenson,
Harry Cowan, 0. 0. Bretches, A.
C. Holcombe, John McCraw, C. E.
Bowling and Forrest Smith ap-
peared before the city council
with their story and appeal which
struck fire insofar as the mem-
bers of the city council was con-
cerned.
After some brief discussion of
the plans the council moved to
give all possible encouragement to
the move and push the case as
fast and far as is advisable under
sound and sober Judgment.
For some years the land north
of Denison in Oklahoma, of which
it was stated, “A Democrat start-
ed the landing field and Demo-
crats ought to complete it,” has
been used as a landing field for
planes, it was pointed out. The
land is 2,000 by 5,000 feet in di-
mensions and has a runway of
5.000 feet long. It was an FHA
move.
The idea suggested that F.aker
field could easily be turned into
a place for landing mail, commer-
cial purposes, and some passenger
service. It was stated that a pop-
ulation could be served of some
40.000 persons and could be turn-
ed into a first class airport in-
side of ten years.
The proposal centers around the
idea of joint operation of Eaker
field as a municipal airport for
Denison and Durant, and is spon-
sored as a project of the trans-
portation committee of chambers
of commerce of the two cities.
9 out of 10 fatal
accidents involve
traffic violation
Over 90 per cent of fatal acci-
dents on Texas highways involve
a traffic violation for which a
ticket could be issued — if the
driver at fault is not a victim.
A study of Department of Pub-
lic Safety traffic reports by the
association of Texas fire and cas-
ualty companies shows that only
one time in 12 Is there no moving
traffic violation in fatal rural ac-
cidents.
The association’s study found:
In one-automobile fatal acci-
dents, 84 per cent involve traffic
violations.
In fatal accidents involving two
or more automobiles, statistical
experience shows there are viola-
tions more than 99.5 per cent of
the time. In 81 per cent of mul-
tiple-vehicle accidents only one
driver is guilty of a ticketable of-
fense.
In accidents which cause injury
—but not deaths—traffic viola-
tions are involved in about 80 per
cent.
In non-injury accidents, 84 per
cent involve traffic violations.
On an overall basis, traffic vio-
lations are present in about 85
per cent of all Texas rural traffic
accidents, fatal or non-fatal.
The association study is based
on DPS figures for 1958, the last
complete statistical year.
Flenniken Const.
Co. gets contract
1.2 miles hiway 75
A contract for 1.2 miles of con-
struction on Highway US 75 in
Grayson county has been awarded
to a Dallas firm, it was announced
in Austin this week by the State
Highway Commission.
Flenniken Construction Co.,
Inc., and Rodney D. Larson, Inc.,
submitted the low bid of $ 1,607,-
612 on the project. Construction
of grading, structures and con-
crete pavement, from a point
north of Houston street to the
M. K. T. railroad in Sherman, is
expected to take 240 working
days, according to L. D. Cabaniss,
district highway engineer at
Paris.
C. C. Cagle, resident engineer
at Sherman, will be in active
charge of the project while it is
under construclioln.
NWS
• A “peculiar people”
It was our pleasure this past
week to be invited to a meeting
of a peculiarly
refreshing na-
ture — in fact
something the
average business
man rarely ever
has the pleasure
of attending. Al-
though it was an
unusual meeting
for business men,
yet in the strict
sense of the word, these men
were engaged in the greatest bus-
iness in the world.
There were some fourteen pres-
ent, all members of the Christian
Men’s Fellowship of First Chris-
tian church.
They were from several walks
of life and with various grades of
wisdom and education.
Yet, somehow, they struck a
note of heart-warming kind that
was so uplifting that the group
seemed loth to leave the meeting,
which had already lasted from
7:15 to 9:30.
It was a meeting of the kind
of which one may read in the
book of Acts of the Apostles, sec-
ond chapter in that they “were all
together, of one mind” and were
praying. And like the pattern set
in Acts, 2nd chapter, they were
there on the mission of soul win-
ning.
They had on their hearts the
business of winning men to Christ.
They meant business and seem-
ed to wonder why all men did not
feel somewhat the same way about
this business of evangelizing.
The singing was enthusiastic
and deeply spiritual and everyone
felt the uplift of song and prayer.
(See ALONG THE, Page 6)
Local Baptist
100 strong to
attend S.S. meet
More than sixty persons from
local Baptist churches are to be
among an expected 20,000 persons
attending the first nation-wide
Sunday school convention spon-
sored by the Southern Baptist
Convention in Fort Worth, March
29-31.
The three-day convention, the
first of its kind ever staged by
Southern Baptists, will feature
evening sessions at Will Rogers
Memorial Coliseum and age-group
and sectional conferences in five
Fort Worth Baptist churches and
Southwestern Baptist Theological
Seminary.
Evening general sessions will
spotlight addresses by seven Bap-
tist leaders. Age-group and sec-
tional conferences are designed to
give suggestions on improving the
Sunday school to teachers, offi-
cers, pastors and educational di-
rectors of local Baptist churches.
Principal speakers include Dr.
James L. Sullivan, executive sec-
retary of the Southern Baptist
Sunday School board, Nashville,
Tenn.; Dr. W. A. Criswell, pastor
of the First Baptist church of
Dallas. Both speak during the
opening session Tuesday, March
29.
Dr. Ramsey Pollard, president
ot the nine-million-member South-
ern Baptist Convention, will speak
Wednesday evening. Other ad-
dresses will be brought by Dr. A.
V. Washburn, secretary of the de-
nomination’s Sunday school de-
partment, Nashville, Tenn.; and
Dr. J. N. Barnette, retired Sun-
day school department secretary.
Emphasis will be placed on
Baptist youth in the concluding
session. Speakers include Dr. G.
Kearnie Keegan, secretary of the
Southern Baptist student depart-
ment, Nashville, Tenn.; and Dr.
Chester Swor, youth writer, coun-
selor and lecturer from Jackson,
Miss.
Convention theme is "Go . . .
Teach.”
Denison boy, R. Stapp
member of touring
band of N. T. S. C.
DENTON — Richard Leroy
Stapp of Denison is a member of
the North Texas State College
concert band, which will perform
15 concerts on a three-state tour
March 23-31.
Stapp, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mar-
ion J. Stapp, 611 W. Baker, plays
it, the string bass section.
The 90-piece band, conducted
by Maurice McAdow, will open the
tour in Wilmer-Hutchins March
23. Other Texas cities scheduled
are Weatherford, Eastland, Big
Spring, Andrews, Brownfield,
Plainview, Amarillo, Borger, and
Spearman.
The band will also perform in
Garden City, Kan., and four Okla-
homa cities: Beaver, Woodward,
Lindsay, and Ardmore,
DENISON, TEXAS, FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1960
•j/sa- T~t ^ . ■ ./> - j ■ rm F~
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VOLUME 32—NUMBER 37
The potential in the human soul
us is discovered in the work of
such organizations as the Kiwanis
club, formed the basis of thought
for the thinking at the weekly
meeting of the Denison Kiwanis
club Tuesday. The speaker was
Lieutenant Governor of the Ki-
wanis club of this district Cullen
Sowers who is also a member of
the Commerce club and is dean
of the East Texas college at Com-
merce.
Leading off with the thought
that potentially every man is a
power for a positive or negative
effect, he admixed his philosophy
with that of the classroom and
that of the popular vein. He
praised the club for its standing
in the rank of the clubs of this
area and stated their record as it
had come to him through the ac-
credited channels revealed the
Denison club was making marked
progress, and had within the past
few months passed from about the
13th place to that tieing with two
ether clubs for second place. The
local club’s gain in membership
had showed up well, he asserted,
and bid fair to have it stand at
the top at the next reckoning of
club’s standing as of this district.
Urging the need of attending a
convention, he stated those failing
to attend some convention are
missing out on a great source of
inspiration and intoning their own
souls with the deeper meaning of
Kiwanianism. Denison now rates
third place as to clubs of this dis-
trict, he informed the group.
“The spirit of Kiwanianism is
not giving with the aim for mate-
rial objective, but rather for the
spiritual values of life. We are to
aid the human in its spiritual
needs. Kiwanianism is to help
humanity meet its problems. It is
a "group of men whose hearts
God has touched,” he urged. Ev-
erything we say or do is positive
or negative and carries with it an
influence, either immediate or re-
mote. In a very true sense no
man lives to himself, nor dies to
himself.
“The worst problem of a club
is to have a committee that has
no problem at which it is work-
ing. Such a club is not current
in a moving world. It lacks in
dynamics. A club with no prob-
lem to solve, leaves a problem
with no club to solve it.
“To have our young people at
our clubs is to pattern after the
great teachers of the world. Their
minds absorb something of every-
thing which they contact. Throw
around them the influence of a
good Kiwanis club and you have
gone far into the field of meet-
ing the worst of all problems of
any day—throwing around the
plastic mind of the youth and
appealing to it with our best in-
fluences. Impressions on the
plastic mind of our youth is of
eternal value. This is really a
man’s job. It is not a job to be
considered lightly when you deal
with plastic minds.
“The most disastrous thing to a
club is to have a committee in the
club that is not functioning as a
part of the club,” he stated with
emphasis.
After the meeting he sat in a
circle with the local board of di-
rectors for further discussion. He
was presented by Jack Bradley.
Visitors were Timothy L. Smith,
Commerce Kivyanian, E. Daniel-
son, Durant. Presiding was Jim
Whiting, back from an absence
of one week while serving oh jury
duty.
NEW STORE FRONT STARTED—Danielsen Construction Co
employees F. J. Burnough (with sledge hammer) and Roscoe
Crouse start demolishing the former Superba theatre build-
ing front and interior at 215 West Main. When extensive
remodeling is completed, a new Army & Navy store will be
located in the building. (Press staff photo)
Senior high school band
to have concert Sunday
The second appearance of the
year of the Denison Senior high
Loading zone
regulations for
downtown Denison
The following set of loading
zone regulations for downtown
Denison were finally passed at
the council meeting Wednesday,
March 16th. While rather lengthy,
and somewhat complicated, they
will sene until the physical situa-
tion of downtown is changed to
different proportions from the
present:
10. Loading zone requests, pol-
icy recommendations:
Recommendations of the plan-
ning commission on loading zone
policy:
I. Loading zones should be
granted only for one of three
reasons:
A. A store having no alley en-
trance and loading requirements
which cannot properly be met
from the street during off hours.
B. Regularly and frequently
used service trucks exceeding the
number of alley parking spaces
available behind the store.
C. Regularly and frequently
used service trucks owned by the
store and by the .store across the
alley exceeding the number of
parking spaces available.
11. The loading zone is not to
be for the use of only one busi-
ness. It may be placed at a par-
ticular location because of a par-
ticular business’s needs, but it
toes not become that business’s
property or individual ownership.
III. Loading zones shall be
available for use by only commer-
cially or farm licensed vehicles:
A. Loading and unloading (not
to exceed reasonable loading and
unloading time), or
B. Bona fide service vehicles
waiting to make a service call.
IV. Exceptions to this licensing
requirement shall be as follows:
A. A loading zone may be used
by passenger vehicles for loading
and unloading bulky items (not
for purchasing same) with evi-
dence of loading and unloading
readily apparent with loading and
unloading not to exceed five min-
utes, or
B. For parking of regularly or
frequently used service or deliv-
ery vehicles ready to make a serv-
ice call or delivery.
V. Vehicles not conspicuously
marked to indicate their use as
service and delivery vehicles all
shall be required to have a card
approximately six inches by elev-
en inches in size placed in the
right corner of the front wind-
shield while parked. This card
shoupld say "service vehicle” or
"delivery vehicle” (with the firm
name), so that the policeman on
duty will know which cars are le-
gitimate parkers.
In line with the above recom-
mendations, we recommend that
loading zones be provided us fol-
lows :
1. On Fannin avenue just south
of the Western Auto service en-
trance.
2. On the east side of the Wal-
ter Jennings furniture store in
the first stall from the north.
S. In front of Wilburn-Miller
wholesale meat market in the sec-
ond stall south of the alley.
school band is announced for a
program at the Junior high audi-
torium Sunday, March 27, at 2:30
p m. Larry H. Thomas is the
director. The band is not only
equipped with the best and most
varied of instrumentations of
bands in the south, but its ability
to handle the classic in music is
of some note. Mr. Thomas is not
only a great director, but his abil-
ity to draw out of his students
the best of performance goes to
make the band a peer in its line.
The concert next Sunday is in
two parts and opens with a num-
ber from the greatest march writ-
er of all times, John Phillip Sousa.
They will present his “Daughters
of Texas.”
Program
Daughters of Texas, March,
John Philip Sousa.
First Suite in Eb for Military-
Band, Gustav Holst. I Chaconne,
II. Intermezzo, III, March.
Snow White Fantasy, Morey-
Churchill. Incorporating the mu-
sic from the Disney movie “Snow-
White and the Seven Dwarfs.”
Show Boat, Selections, Jerome
Kern. Selections from the stage
production and movie of the same
name.
Intermission.
Variations on a Folk Song,
Walter Schumann. Narration by
Gary Towers.
Annual Band Awards, Luther
Oliver, Band Parents president.
Arion Award; John Philip Sousa
Award.
Scherzo for Band, Frank Erick-
son.
There’s Something About a
Band. Music, Ricard Bowles;
Words, Philip Maxwell; Narration
by Robert Geer.
On the Mall, Concert March,
Edw-in Franko Goldman.
| Transformation of
old theatre into
modern building
What Is to be a transformation
of one of Denison’s oldest fronts
on Main street, known as 215
Main and which for more than 46
years housed the Superba theatre,
had the first stroke of demolition
Wednesday morning. The old
front and the insides from front
to alley is to undergo a change
to a modern building whjch will
house an up-to-the-minute Army
and Navy Store.
It is not to be classified, it was
stated Wednesday, as the usual
run of such stores, but the two
business men back of it are qual-
ified to meet modern demands for
merchandising such goods. And
it is assured through the State Na-
tional bank, whose officers nego-
tiated the deal, that the business
and the building will be a credit
to not only the 200 block, but to
the city as a whole.
The parties who are backing the
deal are Paul Allen of Dallas and
Hilton Stubbs of Ardmore. A
hiother of Mr. Stubbs, it is stat-
ed, will manage the store. The
other two gentlemen will retain
their residence in their respective
cities.
Work has already started on
the structure and will be pushed
lo early completion. A rear en-
trance for handling shipments will
be one of the features and the
entire front with modern display-
windows is to be rearranged.
The property is in the estate of
the late E. J. Smith, which estate
holds several buildings on Main
street and other locations.
The new addition to the 200
block as represented in the com-
ing of the firm of Messrs. Allen
A- Stubbs, will make a fitting set-
ting to that block on the north
side which has for several months
been a disturbed situation as to
its physical appearance.
The Denison Press building has
recently undergone a face lifting
at the front and plate glass win-
dows of the flush type with the
sidewalk marks the change, flood-
ing the front of the front office
building with light and adding
considerable space.
When the Citizens National
bank moves into its entirely- new-
home in the block, which is ex-
pected in a few months, the north
I side of the block will be practical-
ly entirely a new look for Deni-
Banks of Grayson
county continue in
deposits gain, shown
Denison
Police
Blotter
11. W. Aderholt
new manager of
Hotel Denison
Howard Higby, who has been
manager of the Hotel Denison for
eight years, has decided to retire
from the business and will make
his future home in Dallas, where
he will settle down with his wife.
He has made a good man in Deni-
son and it is announced that the
incoming man is rated as a man
highly suited for Denison. His
successor, Howard W. Aderholt, is
declared to be a man in the hotel
business for the past 38 years and
comes from Lufkin.
Aderholt started his hotel career
at Hot Springs, Ark., in 1922 and
has held hotel and catering serv-
ice posts in Pawhuska, Okla.,
Wichita Falls, Dallas, San An-
tonio and several other points.
Denison will not be altogether
strange to Aderholt because he
served in France during World
War I with an ambulance com-
pany organized by Dr. Leland El-
lis of Denison and which included
several Denison men.
Aderholt was born at Taylor,
Texas, and w-as reared at Vernon.
Mrs. Aderholt died some years
back. His son is connected with
the Stoncleigh hotel in Dallas.
Mr. Aderholt is a past president
of the Oklahoma Hotel Associa-
tion.
Few people have the courage to
resist the crowd, even when they
know the crowd is off base.
Goodyear Tire
to erect home at
730 ^ est Main
The Goodyear Tire & Rubber
Co. has announced plans to estab-
lish a large auto accessory and
home appliance store at 730 West
Main street.
Final papers have been signed
for the company’s acquisition of
two lots at the southeast corner of
the Main and Armstrong intersec-
tion.
C. Collins Jr., with the Goodyear
leal estate department in Dallas,
said construction probably would
start in May and the new store
opened in August.
The corner property was pur-
chased from heirs of William Lan-
am and the adjoining lot from R. |
L. Kay, a retired Katy cnductor. |
Frame dwellings on both lots will
be moved off to clear the con-
struction site. The Davis real es-
state firm handled the deal.
Copy phoned by the
people daily to the
police department
| •-----«
Abandoned car at 1400 West
Bond street . . . Drunk reported
at Texas street and 5th avenue
(384) . . . Grayson sheriff reports
Richard T. Brown broke jail at
Edna, Texas (all officers) . . .
Man reports door broken open at
.-cuthside water standpipe . . .
Coat reported stolen at senior
high school. (Winchester) . . .
Report of five cases pop bottles
stolen from Madonna hospital.
Report cars racing around
biock at senior high, making con-
siderable noise . . . Officer wants
to know who ran truck into traf-
fic light at Burnett and Main,
3:17 p. m., 3/18/60 . . . Maga-
zine salesman, in 600 block West
Sears, needs to be checked . . .
Emergency message for 1109 W.
Owing. (Silva) .... Woman at
821 N. Perry avenue reports a
window broken out in her house
.... Report of man yelling at
top of voice in 500 block North
Chandler avenue. (Ross) . . . W.
C. Lane, 124 E. Sears, wants to
tee police at Claunch’s garage,
reference to water running down
alley from Green Gables.
Roll of new bailing wire re-1
ported in street at 700 block W. |
Morgan . . . Report of parties |
shooting .22 rifle in the Layne
school district . . . Stray dogs in
several parts of city are reported.
Strange man reported sitting in j
front yard, 631 W. Day . . . Ring-j
lei’s reports a theft from their!
store, 311 Main . . . Auto accident I
at 900 block So. Crockett ave. . .
Drunk reported in yard at 414 W.
Washington. (Duckworth and Sil-1
\a). On above call man placed in!
jail, charge drunkenness . . . Re-!
port of Layne school being broken j
into . . . Officers brought man to j
of fice on warrant . . . See woman I
at 1506 S. Travis. (Silva) . . . .
Traffic hazard at 1000 block W.
Main.
(No. 408). Report of fight in!
2500 block W. Walker street . . . j
(See POLICE. Page 6)
The national banks of Grayson
county continued in their spiral
mounting as to deposits, it was
leveaied when al the figures were
added as of last Friday when the
called for statements were com-
pleted.
With a grand total of $71,560,.
499 for all ten reporting banks in
Grayson and the usual largest
figure being to the credit of the
M. & P. bank of Sherman, and the
Denison banks each following on
a close second, the prosperous con-
dition of Grayson’s banks follow-
ed the usual patter::, according to
a report of banks as called for by
tlie banking examiner.
fhe ten banks making their
tatements as of one year ago
show the figures of $69,092,160.
I he deposit total showed a drop
°1 $2,896,256, or 3.89 per cent,
from the all-time record high set
by the ten banks on Dec. 31, 1959.
1 he deposit total at that time was
$74,450,755, with loans and dis-
counts amounting to $32,247,677.
Higher at year end
Bankers noted that yearend de-
posits are u-ually higher than at
other times during a year, since
many funds and private accounts
are higher at that time than at
any other.
Denison deposits totaled $27,-
832,070, up from $26,265,768 at
the time of the 1959 spring call.
Loans at the Denison banks total-
ed $13,342,012, up from $12,590,-
”92 at the comparable period in
1959.
Deposits at
State National ....
Citizens
M&P ......
Grayson . ..
Whitesboro
Van Alstyne
Whitewright
Tom Bean
Bells ..........
Collinsville
Total .......
glance
$15,807,693
. 12,024,377
25,133,919
8,873,745
3,330,491
2,046,578
1,590,055
1,034,950
1,029,522
689,169
$71,560,499
Council holds
hack decision
on butane ^as
The city council Tuesday refus-
ed for the time to act on a plea
from Chas. Baecht, a merchant
on highway 75 just outside the
city limits (until taken inside the
city limits some months back).
Baecht, who moved about with
visible pain of body, has been op-
erating a business several years
| and with it has used butane gas in
jars to meet the needs of tenants
! in trailers on his lot. He is ask-
i mg permission to continue the sale
of butane gas. He is 400 feet
| from any residence or any build-
ing lot, he stated. His business is
in part, servi-ng the gas in small
, ., - ; lots in bottles to his customers,
during the I960 census of popu-1 He has a fuil clearance to han.
iation and housing which sbms ,|e the ^ frQm ,hc railroad com.
April 1 will participate m three n,issi he stated> and has a!1 the
Ii'itminff uacoinnc nOVt VVfiPK )K-
Census takers
i>et complete
info this week
Census takers who will
every dwelling unit in the
visit
area
training sessions next week, Dis-
trict Supervisor Harry R. Scheid
announced this week.
R. R. payments to
count as income in
new pension ruling
Retirement payments received
by veterans under the Railroad
Retirement Act, will be counted as
income under the new pension
law effective July 1, 1960, Ed-
ward P. Onstot, manager of the
VARO in Dallas, Teas, said this
week.
Under the present pension law,
railroad retirement payments do
not count as income. This will re-
main true for those veterans who
stay under the present law, which
they are allowed to do even after
July 1, Onstot said.
Those veterans, however, who
choose to come under the new
law must count all of their rail-
road retirement payments as in-
come. Full information on any
question regarding the new pen-
sion law may be obtamed at any
VA office.
safety devices necessary. He was
very fair and humble about his
request and stated firmly his live-
The training sessions, to be con-; ]jhood depended on his ability to
ducted by the crew leaders, win j continue in the business of selling
be held on March 28, 29 and 30. butane under the strictest of con-
Kach census taker will receive a ditions. However, he stated, he
total of approximately nine hours ttou)d not bp fussy about itf but
of instruction. Emphasis will be
placed on the importance of a sys-
tematic, thorough canvass of ev-
ery dwelling unit during the cen-
sus to insure a complete count.
Class room training will cover
proper manner of asking ques-
tions, use of the census question-
naire, census definitions, and map
reading.
Map reading is an important
census-taking technique since,
without maps, defining the limits
of each district to which a census
taker is assigned, the job would
be a welter of, confusion. About
250,000 maps have been prepared
for the 1960 census. This pro-
vides an individual map for each
of the 250,000 districts into which
the country has been divided for
the census. Every census taker
will be furnished with a map of
his district. As they make their
rounds, census takers will he re-
quired to canvass every street and
road and visit every housing unit
within the boundaries of their as-
signments shown on these maps.
pointed out how his physical lo-
cation made his handling butane
as safe as could be made. Some
ol tlie council members were not
ready to vote as the case now ap-
pears.
Tlie council was loathe to plank
down a decision ex cathedra. A
city fireman confirmed the posi-
tion and statements of Baecht. It
was pointed out that Sherman sold
the gas, and possibly two or three
places in Denison sold such gas.
However, the council adjourned
without definite steps in the case.
Baecht, in a very humble man-
ner, arose and hobbled from the
hall to await the verdict.
Baecht, before leaving, pointed
out that he was all right until the
i tty took in his large place. Now
he stands cut off from one valu-
able source of livelihood while he
will also have to pay taxes to the
city on all his property, which
will more than eat up his income,
should he be cut off from sales
of butane gas, which, he stated,
ran about $100.00 per month,
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Anderson, LeRoy M. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, March 25, 1960, newspaper, March 25, 1960; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth528002/m1/1/: accessed June 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.