Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 230, Ed. 1 Friday, May 8, 1936 Page: 3 of 10
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1
6
FISHING TACKLE
That Catches ’Em
X
■!
.... $1.45
.....$1.95
98e
5<t
..... 78<t
3”
K . \
5?V
V .. ;
Ip^-. Coupe • . -
I W Coach or f
| fSedan .
COT
Erlfe
,1
I
.< ■•
: ' .'V-
CLEAN, COOL
COMFORTABLE
SO
premier
SLIP COVERS
iiiiiiiHl
■■■■■■■!
/am venYhappy fo\L
f ANNOUHCf THAT rtOttyM
+noR€ people Afte
savihc moh^y on x-\®
BABOLCN-6 CTOTORV"
oi l 7/ftN ev&t sepone^j
WHY DON'T YOU SAUp/ J
fOO/vcY YPU/tfeiPo^J^
\j~e s s/— I ir ri
. lOt, <
MINNOW SEINES
10-foot ..........................98c
|15-foot
20-foot
READY MADE
TROTLINE .
READY MADE
BANK LINE
MINNOW
BUCKET ..
25<£
LETS GO FISHING
' Owfol ‘5
$1.29
Each
PISTON
PINS ......
PISTONS
Chevrolet 4
$1.15
Y-ach
PISTONS— d»1 QQ
Mode£ A-—Each ... Of? k '■
KING PIN no. |
BOLT SET
RING GEAR (frA QE?|
AND PINION.....tPHb.S'vM
V-8 PLUG WIRE SET 48c3
.7/
/
V-R
i
Set
Chevrojet 4
95c
Set
SHOCK ABSORBER
LINKS
FAN BELT
MODEL A
FAN BELT
V-8
, 25c
35e
_______ 45c
PISTON RINGS
Model A
95c $2.25
Set
, FAN BELT O £ ,
| BELT...............OOC
| SPINDLE /»[-
f BOLT SET OOC
PUMP (Exchange) $1.95
> PISTON RINGS
P Chevrolet 6
t ( $1.40
Set
Standards
95c
/
Heavy Duty .. $1.45
s
A
25c up
Mg»J
Ki
Radiator Caps
And Ornaments
T J
1930-33 Chevrolet.
1930-31 Ford.
Stock
limited.
WIRE
WHEELS
RADIO
BATTERIES
45v Batteries
!-=l
man
SIBl
IE
Jai
I
))■
£
J ^5
Folding
BABY
SEATS
I 78©
I Fits over the
} back of auto
front seat. The
baby can ride in
comfort without
anyone holding
him. jt
ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES
k
No. 14 Insulated Wire, per foot
1c
Snap Swiches .. 15c
Brake Lining
$1.10
Model A
Chevrolet — $1.65
is
3-way Sockets 25c
Pull Chain Sockets
Light Bulbs,
10c 15c 20c
Iron Cords
Iron Plugs
/ We Install
Window or
Windshield
Glass
\ • For Any. Make
K Car
i
I!
S'
isn
IS
■?
£ .-. < I
a..- ... !'
II
ii
We Have Added a Good
Assortment Of
fl
we
VA
1
-
. ...39c
GEAR
!■
■
!■
Ii
You’ll
Save
Plenty
on These
New
Quality
We carry Madison,
DuPont, Real
Coat Enamels
Paint Your Car
Nov/!
.. 60c
$1.05
S'
IS
IS
I
- - IfM
l-.A '
9,s
EXCHANGE
4.50- 20 . . .
4.50- 21 . . .
4.75-19 . . .
11 5.00-19 . . .
4n 5.00-20 ...
5.25- 18 . . .
5.25- 21 . . .
5.50- 17 . . .
.■-.m
hi
? ii a
11
LONG-LIFE
45-Plate
LIFE TIME
GUARANTEED
BATTERY
This Battery is
unco nditionally
guaranteed for
the life of your
car. against fire,
theft, and defects.
BATTERIES
RECHARGED .
. 15c
. 55c
.95c
$1.95
r-i vJi
I*' ;;,y!
!
1
111
" “ 5 pounds .
- - 10 pounds
■ 7 ■
Babolene
GREASE
NO. 3 CUP
1 pound ...
5 pounds ..
10 pounds .
25 pounds ,
IB
LONG-LIFE
Batteries
As Low A*
Exchange
6-Month
Guarantee
PRESSURE SYSTEM
1 pound 20c
5 pounds 69c
ti Brumswisfc
SereW
TIRES
. . . $4,35
. . . 4.95
. . . 4.80
. . . 5.15
. . . 5.35
. . . 5.75
. . . 6.35
. . . 6.45
VAwES
<*■
I
i
$
A
I
I
I
p t
©
ts®
Across From Bus Station
Phone 252
4
Z
$
9
iiiiauiSi
4
For Sale or Trade
DICKSON HAMILTON
v!
■HB
A wJL* W
Telephone 248. Wrecker Service Day or Night
1931 Chevrolet Sport Coupe
1931 Chevrolet Coupe
1930 Chevrolet 4-dqor Sedan, With Trunk
1930 Ford 2-door Coach
1929 Chevrolet 2-door Coach
1929 Chevrolet Coupe
1929 Hupmobile 4-door Sedan
1926 Ford Coupe
MORE MERCHANDISE FOR
LESS MONEY!
AT THE ECONOMY GROCERY & MARKET
.. ■
Mi; z
the
!. M BIKEIl I USS »
GIFTS
MOTHER
IN OUR BASEMENT STORE
NEW SPRING AND SUMMER
DRESSES
3.95
WASH FROCKS
79c to 195
UNDERWEAR FOR MOTHER .
GLASSWARE
SANDALS
SILK HOSE
39c to 59e
Knee length and longs in all colors.
Washable silks and solids in the newest styles and
colors.
Hundreds of items for you in our basement and we
ask that you shop this store for Mother’s Day gifts
and see the new things that have arrived in the last
tew days.
New and crisp are these new wash frocks and so ap-
priate a gift for mother on her day next Sunday.
98c to 195
Beautiful new white Sandals just unpacked for your
approval tomorrow. All sizes and styles.
5c to 35g
Cherry blossom and hob nail patterns. Glass Bake
and Pyrex - 5c to 89c
49c to SI
New slips and gowns at a very moderate price for
their quality.
R. R. A. Asked
for Work Report
Red Flag Incident
May Blow Over
Mahan to Face
Quick Trial on
Kidnap Charge
WASHINGTON, May 8—(ZP)—The
senate today asked the Rural Re-
settlement Administration for a
full report of its expenditures and
activities.
A resolution by Senator Barbour,
(R-N. J.), requesting the report was
adopted by the senate without op-
position.
Senator Robinson, the democratic
leader, said he had no objection to
the resolution and added that he
had been informed by the officers
o fthe Resettlement Administration
that much of the information re-
quested already is available in pub-
lic reports.
The Barbour resolution asked for
a report on expenditures, on pro-
jects undertaken, on the effect up-
on state and local taxation of the
projects, the extent to which the
projects have benefited, and the
' effect of the program upon the set-
1 tiers.
The Federal indictment includes
tw0 counts charging Mahan with
transporting the boy across a state
line.
The district attorney refused to
say whether Margaret and Hermon
Waley, both convicted last summer
in connection with the Weyerhaeu-
ser abduction, would be brought
back from prison to testify in case
Mahan pleads innocent.,
“We haven’t come to that yet,”
he asserted.
Mrs. Waley is in the Milan,
Mich., Federal women’s; prison, and
her husband is in Alcatraz peni-
tentiary.
TACOMA, Wash., May 8.—(/P)—
William Mahan’s role as “the
brains” of the Weyerhaeuser kid-
naping led him to a jail, cell here
today: facing a quick trial for the
$200,000 crime.
After his capture yesterday
noon in San Francisco by De-
partment of Justice agents, Mahan
was jailed here last night scarce-
ly a dozen blocks, from the( spot
where he snatched nine-year old
George Weyerhaeuser from the
street on last May 24.
Two blocks from his cell in an-
other direction, Federal officials
prepared to arraign him, within 24
hours on charge of kidnaping and
mail fraud.
Ready for Trial
“We are ready to go to trial,”
United States District Attorney
J, Charles Dennis announced.
In his office, Department of
Justice agents and deputy prose-
cutors organized their case fQr a.
speedy presentation before Dis-
trict Judge Edward E, Cushman.
Captured while sitting dejectedly
in a San Francisco parking lot
Thursday noon, Mahan arrived
here in a chartered airplane at 10
p .m. last night surrounded by a
dozen Department of Justice men.
At. the Tacoma airport, he was
met by a dozen deputy marshals,
state police and city officers, who
battled a crowd of more than 400
persons who rushed the plane.
Officers hustled him into an auto-
mobile in the center of a line
of cars, cut a path through the
crowd and dashed directly to the
city jail.
There Mahan was taken to a. dell
on the third floor. Both the soli-
tary stairway to the jail and one
small elevator were guarded at
top and bottom today.
Faces Federal Indictments
Dennis and state officials agreed
Mahan would be tjried—if he
pleads not guilty—on the Federal
indictmentis drawn a year a)?o.
Pierce County prosecutor Hany
H. Johnston said he did not plan
to ask a trial in state courts,
though the Washington State law
would allow imposition of a death
penalty if Mahan were convicted.
Under the “Lindbergh law" he
cannot be sentenced to death, since
the kidnaped boy was not injured.
Xcrt lrocli|
WASHINGTON, May 8.—(ZP)~
Uniformed guardians of decorum
at the Supreme Court fairly ached
today to administer a spanking to
the Harvard boys said to have con-
ducted the red flag raising at the
august tribunal’s very doorstep.
But the pranksters were far from
the scene of the “revolution” and
so it seemed the incident would
blow over.
Woods McCahill, treasurer of the
Harvard Lampoon, said at Cam-
bridge, Mass., last night that stu-
dent editors of the humorous pub-
lication were responsible for the
flag-hoisting and were on their way
back to Cambridge by automobile.
Mother with Howers
Place Your Orders Now For Early Delivery
a
A
SI
# s
Mother Will Appreciate
POTTED PL
here. Give us your order today.
Phone 223
i
A Nice Assortment Of
Mixed Blooming Plants
MOTHER’S DAY
SPECIAL!
a corsage or a potted plant,
of Hydrangeas, Begonias, ,-C
There is nothing nicer as a remembrance than flowers
and you can find no nicer flowers than may be had
Denton Flower Shop
FREE DELIVERY
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Waldrip, Props.
n.
Vehave a nice selection
Tauiums, etc.
^59sUP
SHERWIN-WILLIAMS
PAINTS
Paint Up Now!
For Beauty and
Protection Use
Cotton Planting,
Already General,
Speeded by Rain
Former Resident of
Denton Dies Friday
Morris & McClendon
219 West Hickory
A Record-Cflronlcie want-ad will
rent that room or house.
Mirs. Mollie Thurman Utley, 72,
wife of the late J. A. Utley, died in
Dallas Friday morning at 6:15 at
the home of a daughter, Mrs. Lena
Barrett. She will be buried in Ver-
non Saturday afternoon at the
First Baptist Church, of which she
was a member, at 2 o’clock. The Ut-
leys lived in Denton for many
years, leaving here about 17 years
ago. She is survived by two daugh-
ters and one son, Luther Utley, of
Oklahoma City. a
That Denton County cotton
planting will be speeded by Friday’s
ranis, was the concensus of reports
here during the day.
With planting considerably delay-
ed, farmers even in dry sections
were busy this week putting seed
in the ground, growers queries here
said Friday. Despite the need of
moisture, farmers had started gen-
eral planting, unwilling to wait
longer.
Because of the widespread ac-
ceptance of the maximum acreage
cut under the new Federal farm
program, a 35 per cent slash, the
county’s total cotton acreage is ex-
pected this year to be cut in about
that proportion.
chine in our window.
20c
Per Dozen
Purity Bakery
Landon Ready to
Make Hard Fight
Makes Ready
for Balloting
on Amendments
New in Denton!
DOWNYFLAKE
DOUGHNUTS
See the new electric ma-
E* O. Thompson
to Begin Campaign
AUSTIN, May 8.—(ZP)JErnest O.
Thompson, chairman of the Rail-
road Commission, today planned a
campaign fpij re-election with a
limited number of speeches, open-
ing at Alvord May 30.
Thompson’s opening at his birth-
place, petitioned by his “home-
town” friends, likely will spur the
four-man race into full swing, a
scant two months before the first
democratic primary. Thompson liv-
ed at Alvord for nine years, later
removing to Amarillo.
AUSTIN, May 8.—(ZP)—R. B.
Stanford, secretary of state, today
signaled the approach of campaign-
ing on six proposed constitutional
amendments with a setting May
20 of drawings to determine their
sequence on the ballot.
Liquor control stood out as the
proposal most likely to attract
sharpest public interest. Early cam-
paigning for one to raise salaries
of several state officials was direct-
ed by Lieut.-Gov. Walter F. Wood-
ul, who termed low remuneration
now provided “a disgrace to the
state.”
Metropolitan areas will be pitted
against the rural group on another
to limit maximum representation
Arts Building
Nearly Complete
Work on the new fine arts build-
ing at S. C. W. is almost complete
and the structure will be .ready
for occupancy in two weeks, ac-
cording to W. M. Loveless, busi-
ness manager of tjhe college.
About six weeks more will be
required fhr completion of the
science building on the campus,
Loveless stated.
how a horse will work until you
hitch him up.
“The returns of the last two
Kansas elections might answier
that question. I don’t think any-
one ever considered our political
by number easier than by title.
Voters also were enabled to famil-
iarize themselves with proposals by
location on the ballot beforehand.
TOPEKA, Kas., May 8.—(ZP)—
The nation had a broad hint from
Go. Alf M. Landon today that
the coming presidential campaign
will be “no pink tea affair” if he
receives the Republican nomina-
tion.
What the nation needs most, hei
said, is a revival of confidence. He
assailed the New Deal, as betray-
ing “our high national ideals” with,
“wasteful, slipshod, lincom.petejnt/
happy-go-lucky administration,” he
said “progressive government de-
in the house. Others proposed a I serves something better than cas-
teachers’ retirement system, com- I
pensation insurance for state work-
men, and limitation of the gover-
nor’s pardoning power.
Conforming to a 1935 act, the or-
der set by the secretary of state af-
ter a public drawing must be used
in all counties. Previously the se-
quence was determined separately
in each county.
Campaigning wais simplified by.
the change. Advocates or oppon-
ents could refer to an amendment
i ual experiments.”
The “pink tea” remark dame
when Kaltenborn asked the gov-
ernor whether he would make a
“real fighting campaign” if he
were nominated..
Landon replied: “Well, that
depends on how you judge a man.
Some people judge a man by the
amount of talking he does. Oth-
er people judge him by what he
gets done . . . As to a fighting
campaign—well, you can never tell
DENTON, TEXAS, RECORD-CHRONICLE FRIDAY, MAY 8, 1936
FAG®
Beginning May 1
Cities Service Radio
Concert will be broad-
cast at 8 p. m. Eastern
Daylight Saving Time
(6 p. m. Central Stand-
ard Time).
Hopper-Blackburn Co.
HAND BAGS
The Newest
98o
L
BURR’S
TEN WORDS, SIX TIMES, 30 CENTS
Junior-Senior
Prom Set Tonight
Juniors ai one tjenioi' High School
will honor the 124 seniors at the
school at the annual junior-senior
prom in the high school gymnasium
tonight at 8 o’clock.
All members of the high school
faculty will be guests 'of the two
classes for the dance.
MIIDBIIHIli
SK
liiiii
I!!!!!!
"*SSS!
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 230, Ed. 1 Friday, May 8, 1936, newspaper, May 8, 1936; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1304376/m1/3/?q=%22~1~1%22~1&rotate=180: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.