PAGE fourDENTON, *mi*Denton County Men Join Army.Pictured above are the 35 volunteers who left Denton Monday morning for Dallas, the second contingent of white men from the local Selective Service board,Sitting, left to right, are: Hiram Newton Williams, Wm. Brooks Stovall, John Travis Reeves, Braley Villanueva, Aubrey Pearl Chapin, Alvin Leonard Meador, C. W, Row and Claud Goff Johnson,Kneeling in the second row. left to right, are: John Herman Gattis, Glenn Pace, Joseph Dalton Parsley, Lanier Chestnut, Billy John Coleman. Robert Lee Hilliard, George Albert Godl. J. C. Blundell. J. C. Jones. James Stanley McFall, John Bennett Hussey. Bob Voeth Smith and Howard Jess Miller, The two in the center kneeling behind the second row are Douglass Crouch, left, and Prank Sawyers, right. Standing in the back, left to right,are: James Hayes Schell, assistant leader, Horace Glenn Teel, leader, Henry Gordon Goforth, Wm. Wyett Lowry Jr., Ray Owens, Mose Wesley Hampton, Leo Adolph Till, Em-mitt Alonzo Helm, Monroe Littrell, Robert Pressley Beaird, Alphus Orlando Buster and Ted RooseveltParker.• i*♦The amount of British dollar exchange assets available for war purchases in the United States was put by Morgenthau at $1,811,000,000.When Senator Connally (D-Tex) asked whether the treasury did not plan to continue to keep the French assets frozen” for an Indefinite period, Morgenthau said:Ve are guarding them closely.” n your field of responsibility, what can the president do under this bill, that he can’t do today?” Vandenberg asked.Before answering, Morgenthau turned and whispered with treasury aides for several minutes, and thenreplied:“The chief new power would be to make available to countries he decided, munitions and other war supplies on credit.”Once when Morgenthau paused before replying, Senator Glass (D-Va) turned to Senator Byrnes (D-8C and asked:Why the devil do they opposethis bill?Senator Barkley (D-Ky) who had overheard, remarked: “They arepettifogging.”No BIjt Gold ProductionIfRoosevelt toListen to AdviceIn Extending AidWASHINGTON, Jan. 28. ~~m~President Roosevelt reportedly told a blpartlson conference of legislative leaders at the White House last night that, while the present aid-to-Brltain bill would authorize him to “do anything under thei sunnintentionlII■m ming the vast powers except to the extent his military and naval advisers considered necessary to aidBritain.One conferee said Mr. Roosevelt manifested a “very receptive mood toward three of the major amendments which have been urged on Capitol Hill to curtail somewhat the bill’s broad grant of powersThe chief executive was understood to have listened favorably to the suggestions that the bill impose a two-vear limitation on his lease-