Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 303, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 2, 1924 Page: 4 of 8
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Oct
stock-
mix-
round
For Girl of
I
de
I'l
aw
i
Si
8 GAMES, 6 IN TIAA
ON EAGLE GRIDIRON
SCHEDULE THIS YEAR
**• .♦—
• * B
of the
Fouts
i me
tVUIHM
latter
II be
Sahara"'
Claire
t he
pat
'it'-
Oct
Dec
Spots steady 28.88.
COTTON
2.—Holiday.
"Moviay.
COTTON
. X.—Future!
A
1
the
fin.
pe-
rm-
Co..
s#
H
■ I fer
Kansas city livestock
"KANSAS CITY. Aug.
■. receipt! 800.
Man”
John
la
Baylor, the
S. M U. k
to
r
More Golfers Turn in
Trophy Qualifying Scores
Several more members of the Den-
ton Country Club have played their
qualifying round for the Homer S.
Curtii Trophy tournament to open
Sunday and their qualifying scores
have been turned in as follows:
Fred Rayzor 105. W. T. Bolton
"98, Arthur Rayeoe 04, jHwmva Kay-
xor 82, Dr. C. L. Oliver 103, Brent
C. Jackson 103, Billy Adams 102,
Ernest LeBeau 101.
&
Mt •
■ ITO
114
LIVERPOOL
u LIVERPOOL, Aug
»- No market today nor
MARKET STATEMENTS
c The E. B. Norman Company's
Thomus
up
sched-
Col-
for
within
dates
ol the
at home
:th Dan-
F S
A’t)
NEW ORLEANS COTTON-
NEW ORLEANS, Aug 2.—Futures
rleeed steady.
Month open high low closing
lan ... 27.14 27.83 28.87 27.48
March 27.75 27.75 27.05 27.58
Jay —. SL3Q 27.35
27.12 27 73 26.75 27.52
27.11 27.70 26.70 27.50
games—six of these with
the Texas Intercollegiate
Association—make up the
for the football
of the Denton Teacluhrs
for the coming season
I training will begin
three weeks. Fin| I
NEW YORK <
NEW YORK. Aug.
closed easy
Month open high low closing
Jan 27.18 27.70 26.85 27A2
March . 27.48 27.95 27.10 27.72
May 27A0 28.00 27.50 27.86
28.00 28.48 27.55 27.28
___ 27A5 27A5 2tLS« 27.62
Spots steady 81A0.
M1M GLADYS KELSO
Teacher of Piano
Great ears and attention given ea-
RaeUlly to technic. Phono 806W
E..L5.. ■
jr- DENVER—Seven persons
faljnred. two seriously, when
" Denver A Rio Grande Western
PhglBter train was partially derailed I
by the engine plunging through an
•pen switch.
* Catholic Church—Rev Raymond
MnMwat, priest. Maas at 8 and I
——■•teleck Bunday morning. Similar
EffliWII'l—a will be held Sunday, Aug.
31. at 8 and 10 o'clock.
PORT WORTH LIVESTOCK
— FORT WORTH. Aug. 2.—.Market
■ conditions Saturday were unlike
these prevailing at Friday’s. close.
Receipts were small and quality
was unattractive. The estimates
. nailed for 450 cattle. 1.000 calves
and 200 hogs. The cattle count in-
cluded 250 on thru billing Choice
hogs brought $9.50 with bulk sales
at 89 to 89-25. Nothing fresh ar-
rived in the sheep house.
Cattle—Beeves 83A0®8.00; stock-
era 984)0^5.00; cows 82.50®4.25;
^heifers |8J)0®7.00; bull, |2A0®4.-
R5; Calves 82.00(6,6.50; canners 81.75
®2.00; yearlings 83.50®H00.
Hags— Medium 8».25®9 50,
«d light 88.75449-25;
1---r®«; pigs 86® 8
> and lambs—Lambs 88.50®
yearlirtgs 88 00® 9.00; ewes
7.00; culls 5LOO@2.OO; goats
J wethers 87 00@7.75;
sheep £L50®4.50; feeder
|800®8.00.
Chicago grain
CHICAGO, Aug. 2.—The feature
to3ayTa sharply higher nfiixh in
ain future! was the aacension
Into new high grdtitd of all corn
!'delijwies. The advance .was 2 3Uc
r •- for’Rptember, 4 5-8c for December
and 8 7-8 for May.
Wheat news was extremely bull-
E"; ish and 'made for a strong market.
Heavy buying of corn persisted
L baaed on unfavorable crop news.
^.Oatka followed other grains to a
'close. Reaction in hogs and
k some inquiry caused a sharply
ff/.hteber proviaions cloae
wheat—September 81-32 3-8. De-
* eember 81.35 7-8, May 51.40 7-8.
k.- Cora—September 8114 1-2, De-
| . ; ember 81.04, May 81A4 1-4.
Oats—September 49 3-4, Decem-
ber 52 5-8, May 55 1-8.
Jt Twenty1
PETROLIA—W. C. Rocheitrr,
loye of the Lone Star Gas
an.^killed by a bolt of lightning
id Dalton Harris, who was work-
< nearby, was stunned.
Simmons College and San Mar-
Teachers College and the Can-
Teachers College teams are to
here to play. The Simmons
will probably come the flut-
ter part <f October or the first of
November and the Canyon game
will be late in November.
Two games (iway from home the
coming season will be on holidays
the Eagles being scheduled to play
Sam Houston Teachers at Hunts-
ville on Armjbtice Day and Trinity
University at Waxahachie on
Thanksgiving.
FIRST PAIRINGS
The pairings for the first
of play are as follows:
M D. Penry, Bert Fowler
Bitsy McCray, Frank Camp.
Clifford Witherspoon, Lawrence
Schweer. ' ,
B E. Drake, Francis Craddock.
Billy Adams, Ernest LeBeau.
Bolton, Otis
Sterling P'Poole, H W^ McDade.
Bob .Muy, W. C. * Edwards.
Finley Hare, Jack Schmits.
Gabriel, R. J. Turrentine.
Dr. Lipscomb, A. C. Rayzor.
Jimmy Jlpyzar, Homer B. Sinoot.
Geo. M. Crutaingar, T. 11. Met-
zenthin.
Ed Waggoner. Fred Rayxor.
Dr. Oliver, Brent Jackson.
R _M. Barns, Jerry howler.
Walter Smoot, Dr. Hill Rowe.
Dick Criddle, Bala Williams.
All matches -are to be played at
match play.
If there is anyone who has quali-
fied that is not paired here please
turn in your cards to Drake or
Curtis.
l-4s 102.14;
third 4 l-4s
l-4i 102.16.
LIBERTY BOND MARKET
P,. NEW YORK. Aug 2 — Liberty 3
1-21 101.12; first 4
' Meend 4 1-4. 101.28;
- ' 1M.18; fourth 4
K'-
'KAMEL—"When a Man's a
S' by Harold Hell Wright;
t Severs and Marguerite
Motte in title roles.
Eight
teams of
Athletic
schedule
ule
lege for the coming
which training will
about three weeks,
have not been set for threi
games but the first game
will be early in October w
iel Baker.
Following his custom of the last
few years Cbach T. J Fouts has
made arrangenieM' to meet the
Southwest Conference teams of S.
,M. U. and Baylor, the latter his
alma mater.v S. M U. will be met
on Sept. 27 and Baylor the follow-
ing week on October 4. Fouts does
not arrange these gu^e- with
expectation of winning but as
ishing games for tl^e training
nod of his squad. In these two
games his men see what enn be done
by the proper work and application
of their training instructions and
they get un insight to the brand of
football of schools that can afford
large coaching staffs that give men
much individual attention.
Beside, the Daniel Baker, ^ame on
the home field for the coming sea-
son
cos
yon
come
game
- J8ANBAK VITY, Aug. 2.—Cattle
i‘4.» Peeaipts 800, calves 150. for the
‘ week grain fed steers and yearl-
iafl 60 to 75c higher. Cake-fed 25
to 50c higher. Better grades gras-
aars strong to 26c up. Plain qual-
ity dressers selling below 86 w8ak;
grain fed cows and heifers 25 to
Me higher. Medium cows dull falr-
' ly ateady bulls steady, light feed-
to 75c higher. Other cows
ateady Better grades stockers and
' 7«eders strong to 25c higher. Others
fairly steady.
Hags—Receipts 15—Shippers mar-
hat 26 to 35c higher; top 89.60.
Packers 15 to 25c higher top 8940.
Balk desirable 190 to 800 pound
averages 89^5 to 89 50. Packing
’ Mvi 87AO to 87.75; pigs dull
-Hr
l MriOTTD
rrwvavL
VFAI-ACE-"A Son of the
L#i;.L .witb Bert Lytell and
HR Windsor.
-- Norman
statement to the C. H.
Catton Company follows:
NEW ORLEANS. Aug. 2.-After
early declines under overnight sell-
|| ing favorable crop accounts and
. further bearish comment concern-
| ing testers annual statistics the
r market bulged in a wide way on
I the news from London that the
' Interallied Reparations Conference
hkd accepted the Dawes scheme af-
I tor reaching complete agreement on
all disputes which hitherto have
I stood in the way. This was easily
the most important news of the
' day but we fail to see how its ef-
I feet on cotton can be anything but
passing ' provided the near future
does not bring more favorable con-
I dttipns to the growing crop than
has the recent past. Favorable crop
I accounts continue to come from the
L greater part of the belt and point
I to a' resumption of the decline af-
I ter temporary bullish influences
' have lost their power.
.1
I
i
1
aquare, roll ef billi
twe «r thme «Me.
■ ■■
1 ■
KF you are looking for something I
J, different, here It Is. A demure I
looking frock of checked taffeta |
krlth a plain bodice,'very full akirt. I
V-neck and the perkteat of ruffles do |
ing duty as sleeves. If you are mote I
than f, howevev. and If you haven t I
an mn«.m. ba*, face, paca tt
l» to not Im you.j J |
.A
TOO UTE ID CUSSIFY ,
FOR RALE—One of boot lota on
North Locust. Rise 70x140—curb
■nd gutter laid. O. IL Tomlinson. 808
FOR HALE—Lot 75x280, with nine
room henee, at 2111 W. Hickory
St! Tohbs to aait. Bee Owsley A
Owsley. . ---- • .MB
ISportNe^
.ME
4
same
from
lit
J.V
ELEVENTH ANNIVERSARY
I
J, P. MA GEE, Insurance and Loans
that each year shows an increase over
bad.
To the Borrower:
I believe that 1 have a more attractive contract for Farm Loans than that offered by any
other company, and that it would pay you to investigate this contract before securing a loan
elsewhere.
RECORD SPEAKS FOR ITSELF
This record speaks for itself. It tells of a long line of satisfied customers who have
found service satisfactory and proof that 1 am reliable in my business dealings.
c
1 have
within a few
.JjKto
Started with One Company
When 1 started business here just eleven years ago today, August 2, 1 91 3, 1 had only one
company. It was the only one 1 could get until I had built up a business and had insurance ex-
perience. That company was the Niagara Fire, and I still have it in my office.
$16,000.00 First Day’s Business
The first day I opened for business my good friend, Ed Wilson, gave me $16,000.00 in
insurance as a starter.
Business Has Increased Each Year
Since that first policy my business has never failed to show an increase each month over
the corresponding month of the year before. This means
the previous year, whether times have been good or
Have Added Twenty Companies
In these eleven years 1 have added twenty of the strongest old line companies in the
world to my original company. These companies operate under the Insurance Commission-
er’s rule and represent combined assets of over $235,000,000.00. With these companies,
the facilities of this office are now unlimited.
No Loss Has Run Thirty Days Unpaid
In the eleven years I have never had a loss go as long as thirty days unpaid,
never had a claim that was not satisfactorily settled. Often this settlement came
days of the loss.
Farm Loans Added
Three years ago 1 added Farm Loans to my other facilities and loaned $125,000.00 the
first year. Since that time 1 have had a steady increase in this business. The first seven
months of the current year we have closed or have in process of closing a little more than
$107,000.00 in Farm Loans.
Record Made Possible by Friends 1
The steady forward progress I have made I attribute greatly to the loyal support of my
friends and the public who have made this record possible. I want to take this opportunity
to thank them most heartily for their support and patronage. 1 have tried to give them the
best insurance service to be had. During my eleven years of business 1 have been absent from
my office twice for a period of six days each. 1 have signed every policy, every check, every
letter that has gone out of this office, and I have given my immediate and painstaking per-
sonal attention to every loss.
The Next Eleven Years
During the eleven years to come 1 hope to be allowed to continue this same service, this
personal attention to your insurance needs. And I hope to merit the same support
my friends and the Insuring public who have made this record possible. ,
WHY NOT INSURE WITH MAGEE?
4 3
gRpSHrwMWBWKTS • J
- '
DENTON RECORn-CHRO>aCLR^8ATI RDAY, AUCL’gT 2, 1»>4
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Edwards, W. C. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 303, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 2, 1924, newspaper, August 2, 1924; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1239116/m1/4/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.