Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 250, Ed. 1 Monday, June 1, 1936 Page: 4 of 6
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I
DENTON, TEXAS, RECORD-CHRONICLE, MONDAY, JUNE 1. 1936
page rorm
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SPORTS TALK
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June
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COURT HOUSE
the experts
DENTON
BUY IT IN
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MEN’S STRAWS
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BURR’S
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Your Carburetor
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For YOUR BUILDING,
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REPAIRING,
REMODELING
&
SHERWIN-WILLIAMS
C
PAINTS
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Phone 724
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Annual Student
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HURRY! HURRY! HURRY!
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CALL 184
COPIES
FREE
AND ASK FOR
IN EVERY.
I
ADVERTISING
HOME AND
DEPARTMENT
DORMITORY
4
■ • _ -E5-
■ M -—
Indians Go On
Warpath, Hot on
Trail of Leaders
Big Assortment To
Select From
Denton Outslugs
Era Nine, 19 to 13
Paint Up Now!
For Beauty and
Protection Use
City Schools to
Begin Tomorrow
Meyer to Get
Auto Race Prize
Bruce Davis to Get
Degree From S. M. U.
Francis M. Craddock,
Grocer
Morris & McClendon
219 West Hickory
SURE-FIT
SEAT COVERS
Wall Paper
Now Showing
New
Spring Patterns
H. H. Hardin Lbr. Co.
feeds your motor 8 to 10,000
times per mile, and if wrong,
yoii pay the bill. Our carbu-
retor corrections do save far
more than they cost. Why not
have them.
Totals:
Era—
Wylie, 2b
B. Cowling, 3b
P. Cowling, ss
Duggell, c
T. Odam, If
Patterson, cf ...
Gray, lb
J. Wylie, rf
Morris, p
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.444
.409
.419
(Bye- Associated Press)
Today’s schedule:
Fort Worth at Dallas,, night.
Tulsa at Oklahoma City, night.
Houston at Galveston, night.
Beaumont at San Antonio, night.
Four games slated this week if
weather remains favorable will
bring to
!
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►
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y
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DILLON SMITH
MOTOR CO.
Telephone 268
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13
18
17
21
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21
27
30
Pct.
.643
.633
.581
.571
.532
.447
.356
.234
KING RADIO SHOP
Phone 351
$495
see
$365
EE
t
fit1
ph
Let Us Help You
CLEAN UP, PAINT UP, REPAIR AND EQUIP
Your Rooms and Apartments for Summer Students.
We Have the Supplies!
JACOBSEN HARDWARE CO.
Pct.
.659
.595
.512
.500
M.
c
Git
i0(
GL
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Cr:
WE CLEAN YOUR
UPHOLSTERY
with an Eelectrolux ma-
chine, wash and lubri-
cate your car, ail for
$1.50
Hopper-Blackburn
Phone 16
1211 W. Hickory
Our Spring Economy Festival
offers you many unusual values!
GRAND LEADER COMPANY
—*
Week’s Play to
End Civic Half
r»
----------------------------------■----------------------------:-----------I
Get Your Copy In Early
For This Edition
Make Your Car Look Like New With A
DUCO PAINT JOB
CALVERT BROS. SERVICE
115 South Locust St. Telephone No. 356
i
Denton Net Aces
'1
you find our materials
and service helpful.
msK’jwrt
Phone 57
in
the Record-
Plan to see Warren Williams in
“Times Square Playboy” Tuesday
and Wednesday at the Palace. If
your name appears among the ads
in the Classified Directory Tues-
day you will receive a guest ticket
to this picture. 251
OWNERS EVERYWHERE PRAISE ELECTROLUX
It has no moving parts to wear, has lasting efficiency
and low operating cost. See it today at
WALDRIP MOTOR COMPANY
1706 N. Elm Phone 666
PI
a/
nc
co
fir
in
toil
th
IN
ch
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14
17
20
20
23 .452
23
26
25
Pct.
.698
.591
.585
.523
.500
.475
.325
.286
Also USED CARS to fit your purse.
GRACE-BARROW CHEVROLET CO.
311 West Oak St. Phone 99
Taliaferro & Son
HARDWARE AND SPORTING GOODS
Telephone 125
Staple Groceries
fresh fruits and vege-
tables. Do your food
shopping by phone and
save time and worry.
Phone
London agents report the Royal
and Ancient Golf Association about
ready to give a decision on the pro-
posed British Walker Cup-Texas
Cup match here in late summer as
a Centennial attraction. . . Odds
here are that the Britons, still mi-
nus the thrill of having seen “wild
and wooy Texas,”1 wil accept the
invitation.
<■ ■■
Attention, Denton Merchants
More than 3,500 Students and Faculty
Members Wil! Be Back Again This Week
In Our Two Magnificent Colleges.
Denton Man Gets
University Degree
Poe F. Gray of Denton, son of
Mrs. C. F. Gray, 2201 North Lo-
cust Street, will receive his bache-
lor of business administration de-
gree at the University of Texas
June 8, and after that will be lo-
cated in Dallas, where he has ac-
cepted a post in the accounting de-
partment of the Dallas Power and
Light Co. Gray, graduate of Pilot
Point High School, was for three
years a student at Teachers College
before going to the university.
Smith, To Waco
New Cotton Dresses
“Happy Home”
Laces, sheers, suitings,
plisse seersuckers, organdy,
voiles, values to $1.95, now
$1.00
One Lot Dresses
Sheer, cotton
49c
The Texas Tech mid-summer
coaching school is now extinct. . .
The most famous of all coaching
schools, where big-wigs of the pig-
skin profession gathered to ex-
change ideas, has been “postponed”
by Texas Tech authorities. . . West
Texas State Teachers College will
take up the torch.
Al Baggett, head man of the Can-
yon school athletics, will have a
school, with Raymond (Bear) Wolf,
i late of TCU, now of North Caro-
lina, as a featured attraction. . . It
begins Wednesday.
THE ONLY COMPLETE LOW PRICED CAR
GENUINE CHEVROLET SERVICE
and Genuine CHEVROLET Parts SAVE YOU
MOTORING DOLLARS
and your satisfaction is guaranteed.
Totals:
Lost articles are round,
secured, real estate is sold
J INDIANAPOLIS, June( 1— Oil-
remains favorable will For the third eight years
a close the first half of
the Civic League softball rounds,
and the second half play will begin
Monday, June 8.
The Lions and Kiwanis Clubs
clash this afternoon at City Park
to open the week’s play. Tuesday af-
ternoon the Methodists meet the
CCC Camp; . Wednesday the Odd
Fellows play the Knights of Py-
thias; Thursday or Friday, not yet
definite, the CCC Camp and Lions
Club play.
5
5
5 0
5 0
5 1
5 0
5 1
5 2
5 3
Coupes—85c up
Sedans or Coach
$1.50 up
CUT RATE AUTO
SUPPLY CO.
Telephone 323
, help is
ovvuavu, ,=VWJJ through
Record-Chronicle want.aids.
Edition
Louis Meyer of Huntington Park,
Calif., will step to the front toJ
night when his name is called and
receive the $20,000 first prize check
for having won the 500-mile Mem-
orial Day automobile race at the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Prizes for the first 10 finishers
and the consolation awards forj
all starters in the race will be
presented to the drivers at the
annual speedway dinner tonight.
Meyer raced to victory here Sat-
urday in the record breaking time
of 109.069 miles an hour. The pre-
vious record for the long grind was
106.340 set by Kelly Petillo, also of
Huntington Park, Calif., last year.
J-U.IJ ..............-IJ,
Davis, and Cecil Alsup, who will,-^
graduate npxt year, returned home
with his grandparents.
General assembly for pupils of
the sixth, seventh and eighth
grades, who will attend the Junior
High School during the summer,
will be held at 8:45 Tuesday morn-
ing at the school building, it is an-
nounced by W. G. Woods, princi-
pal.
Pupils of the ninth, 10th and 11th
grades will attend Senior High
School and of all other grade's, the
R. E. Lee School.
No tuition is charged the sum-
mer school students.
Will the occupants of cars which
stopped to render aid after the col-
lision of the M. A. Gay; and E. Clyde
Whitlock automobiles near Fort
Worth Tuesday afternoon please
communicate with William E. Jones,
672-J, 250
The Boston Store
YOUR STORE
Basement Values
Dress Fabrics
New! Fresh! Real Savings!
Broadcloth, prints, suitings,
cretonnes
10c yd-
Get Your Message to Them Thursday and
Friday of this Week
Chronicle
Watch Texas A. and M. football
teams the next three years. . . Ev-
ery other cadet next year will ei-
ther be a former all-state or dis-
trict man. . . Alumni tell you the
famine is over and Coach Homer
Norton will lead the farmers from
the football wilderness in short or-
der. . . Latest star to cast his lot
with the Farmers: E. C. Thomas,
all-district end with Vernon High,
pride of West Texas.
25, 50 and 100 lb. size.
See them before you
buy.
Three Deh ton netmen, all well-
known figures bn North Texas
courts for performances in both in-
ter-college and open and invitation
tourneys, will go from here to Waco
this week-end to enter the Texas
tennis tourney.
They are Fred Barns, sophompre
sensation who next year will cap-
tain Coach Pete Shands’ Eagle net
squad, former Eagle Captain E. C.
Dittrich and Elliott Smith, Teach-
ers College graduate and one of
the ranking players of the Eagle
teams for four years here.
The open state tourney will be
played on the courts of the Waco
Lawn Tennis Club, and performers
who shine: there will probably en-
ter the Chicago national open
rounds a few weeks later.
Atz’s ‘Talking To’
Gets Bucs Busy
BARGAINS In USED
REFRIGERATORS
MORE MERCHANDISE FOR
LESS MONEY!
AT THE ECONOMY GROCERY &. MARKET
' I
SUNDAY’S RESULTS
Texas League
Dallas 8, Fort Worth 6.
Galveston 6, Houston 4.
Beaumont 8, San Antonio 4.
Tulsa 10, Oklahoma City 3.
American League
Washington 6, Philadelphia 4.
New York 5, Boston 4 (12 innings).
Cleveland 7, Chicago 5.
St. Louis 11, Detroit 10.
HOW THEY STAND
< Texas League
Team—■ W
Houston 27
Dallas 21
■Beaumont 25
Tulsa z 28
Oklahoma City 25
Ban Antonio 17
Galveston 16
Fort Worth 11
American League
Team— W
New York 30
Boston 26
Cleveland 24
Detroit 23
Washington 22
Chicago 19
Philadelphia 13
St. Louis 12
National League
Team— W
St. Louis 27
New .York 25
Pittsburgh 21
Chicago 20
Cincinnati 19
Boston 20
Philadelphia 18
Brooklyn 18
That Are Really Worth the Money
1935 Ford Coupe Deluxe, new rubber, perfect mechanical shape, and
is a steal for j , •••
• 1933 Ford Coupe, perfect mechanical condition, good rubber,
this slick little car, a buy for
1931 Dodge, real service in this car at a price you can afford.
Several other good models with prices as low as $2.50 per week.
FRYAR MOTOR COMPANY
Your Chrysler and Plymouth Dealer
Phone 40
at the CCC park
here* next Sunday afternoon at 2:30
o’clock.
The box:
Denton—
Moses, 2b
McCrary, lb .
Pearson, p
Hogan, ss
Meredith, If ...
Brown, cf
Stuart, c
Cogdell, rf
Veanueva, 3b
D. Pearson, rf
The Denton Independents annex-
ed another victory by hard work at
the plate Sunday, when they invad-
ed Era and defeated that independ-
ent nine in a bitterly-fought base-
ball battle, 19 to 13. A return game
By FELIX R. McKNIGHT
Associated Press Sports Writer
DALLAS, June 1.—(ZP)—Take a
ticket, or even two tickets, on Mil-
dred Babe Didrickson to win the
women’s Western open golf cham-
pionship at Chicago next week. . .
And that's straight from the “eta-
ble.”
La Didrickson hands out that ad-
vice herself. . . The Wonder Girl
athlete, now a professional, admit-
ted while resting at Beaumont that
“I’ll bring back the Western open
mug.” She went to the semi-finals
last year but says her game js far
better now.
Add to list of those professional
who made Babe a golfer: Stanley
Curtis, Los Angeles. . . Babe said so
herself. . . Dallas golfers like to give
those posies to “Lefty” Stackhouse,
former driving range pro, now at
Corpus Christi.
1
AB R H E
3 1
4 2
2 1
1 1
2 2
2 4
2
1
1
1
By SID FEDER
Associated Press Sports Writer
Those Indians from Cleveland are
on the warpath.
Tomahawks swinging, they’re hot
on the trail of the American
League’s leading and most highly-
priced scalps—the New York Yank-
ees and Boston’s million dollar Red
Sox.
Pulling up from fifth to third
place fast week, the Tribe camped
today only a half a game back of
the Sox, after stretching its win-
ning streak to five straight with a
7-5 victory over the Chicago White
Sox yesterday.
The Indians’ surprising showing
in the last several days, particularly
in a general-better performance
record by the Cleveland pitchers
was climaxed yesterday by a whole
landslide of surprises all down the
line in both leagues.
For instance, in the American,
the hapless St. Louis Browns upset
the Detroit Tigers 11-10 for the
third straight time, and the Yank-
ees, with Joe di Maggio again in
the hero’s role at bat, made it
three out of four in a week over the
supposedly mighty Red Sox with a
5-4 triumph. Rounding out the day
for the league, Pete Appleton, in a
si^-inning relief trick, outpitched
three members of Connie Mack’s
up-and-down Athletics hurling staff
for a 6-4 win by Washington.
Giants Cracking
The unexpected was even more
marked in the National League. The
daffiness boys from Brooklyn hand-
ed Bill Terry’s Giants, who seem to
be cracking as expected, a 4-3 set-
back, their third at the Dodgers’
hands; the Boston Bees, after tak-
ing four losses on the chin from
the Phillies, turned on the heat and
came through with a 6-5 win in
11 innings; Dizzy Dean was belted
for 19 hits- by the Cincinnati Reds,
but the Cardinals slugged just as
hard and came through 8-7 in a
12-frame thriller, and the Cubs, on
the strength of Ethan Alien’s time-
ly single in the tenth to score the
winning run, outlasted the Pitts-
burgh Pirates 8-7.
The sudden form reversal of the
Cleveland pitchers in the last week
along with generally better fielding
rank as -the most likely reason for
the tribe’s big push. In the five-
game streak they have yielded a
total of only 38 hits while the In-
dians were collecting nearly twice
as many. Mel Harder came through
with a nine-hit performance yes-
.terday as the Indians fell on Vernon.
Kennedy, who won his no-hit-no-
run frame at their expense a year
ago, and shelled him for 13 safeties.
STANDINGS
See Us for LOANS!
G. W. MARTIN LUMBER COMPANY
Phone 293 N. Locust St.
Black-Draught
Good Laxative Barns, Dittrich
Black-Draught has been kept on
hand for all the family in the home
of Mr. W. A. Lemons, of Indepen-
dence, Va., since twenty years ago.
Mr. Lemons writes that he takes it
.as a laxative in cases of “headache,
dull, tired feeling, biliousness.”
“And I take it if I feel uncomfort-
able after a heavy* meal,” he adds. “I
‘especially use it for sick headache.
It certainly is good.”
When a man says “Black-Draught
is good,” it is probably because he
remembers the prompt, refreshing re-
lief it brought in constipation trou-
bles. Its benefits are felt because it
is a simple, herb laxative, so natural
in composition and action that
thousands and thousands of men
and women prefer it when a laxa-
tive is needed.
When Uncle Jake Atz took charge
of the Galveston Buccaneers a few
days ago, fans were happy to see
the veteran actively in the game
again but were inclined to sympa-
thize with him over his lot.
The foundering Pirates, in sev-
enth place, certainly offered no
vistas to Uncle Jake.
But to confound
and surprise even his staunchest
admirers, Jakie gave his nine, a
good talking-to and awoke today
to find himself the talk of the
league after the Bucs trimmed the
league-leading Houston Buffs in de-
cisive fashion yesterday, 6-4.
Besides the feat of trimming
the leaders, the Pirates gloated
over their first victory of the sea-
son over their hottest rivals.
The Galveston team was outhit,
10 to 8, but five hits and three
walks in the fifth inning gave,
them all their runs, plenty to win
the ball game.
Steers After Cats
As Uncle Jake basked in, the
light of his reflected glory, the
Dallas Steers were, primed for an-
other assault tonight on the luck-
less last-place Fort Worth Cats,
hoping to catch up to the Buffs.
If they could trim Fort Worth
again as they did last night, 8-6,
and Uncle Jake’s boys could turn
the trick over Houston again, they
would be leading the league.
Showing they had a punch when
needed, the Mavericks were one
run behind until the seventh, when
Jim Stroner, member of Dallas’
“murder’s row,” connected for a
Jiome run with two on the, paths.
). Two big innings, the second
and fifth, won for Beaumont over
San Antonio, 8-4, and Tulsa’s Oil-
ers pounded the Okalhoma City
Indians, 10-3.
Bruce Davis, grandson of Mr.
and Mrs. A. G. Davis, will be grad-
uated from the S. M. U. law school
in Dallas Tuesday evening. Davis
was president of the 1936 class. He
was graduated from Teachers Col-
lege with B. S. and B. A. degrees
several years ago. He plans to
remain in Dallas. Mr. and Mrs.
A. G. Davis were in Dallas Sun-
day for the s. M. U. baccalaureate
sermon and will return for grad-
uation exercises tomorrow. Young
DRS HOLLAND
& HINKLE
announce association in
general practice and
surgery.
Denton Hospital
&. Clinic
—Office-
525 S. Locust Street
Dr. Hinkle’s Private Office,
316 Smoot-Curtis Bldg.
Quality
Used Cars
1935 OLDS TOURING SEDAN —Almost new. It has
solid steel “Turret-top” body, hydraulic brakes, open-
coil “Knee Action”, dependable enginie, and' out-
standing beauty makes an appeal to the careful buy-
er. It’s equipped with radio and 7 cu.fi. trunk,
1933 PLYMOUTH COUPE—Motor has been com-
pletely re-conditioned and carries our 30-day guaran-
tee. Tires, paint, body, brakes, etc., are all safety-
tested. : J ' '*
1929 FORD COUPE—Has been carefully used; has
good rubber and dandy motor.
1934 PLYMOUTH COACH—A popular car at a pop-
ular price. Has Knee-Action, Floating Power, All-
Steel Body and Hydraulic Brakes. Low down pay-
ment and easy monthly payments.
Become “SELF-Conscious and Buy with Confidence
S. I. Sell Motor Co.
Phone 2 201 South Elm
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Homer Rambo and Ruby Krueger.
R. S. Zachery and Lillie Kissinger.
Huston Worthey and Myrtle Ful-
ton.
AUTOMOBILE REGISTRATIONS
301948—Miss Myra Sowell, Denton,
Pontiac coach.
301949—L. M. Walker, Lewisville,
Chevrolet sedan.
301950—Huffines Motor Co., Lewis-
ville, Chevrolet coach.
301951—Miss Lois Pearman,
ton, Oldsmobile coupe.
301954—W. S. Long, Denton, Buick
sedan.
‘ 301957—Fryar Motor Co.,
Plymouth sedan.
301959—Emory C. Smith,
Oldsmobile coupe.
301961—C. E. Hastings,
Pontiac sedan.
301966—R. E. Speegle,
Pontiac sedan.
310969—Huffines Motor Co., Lewis-
ville, Chevrolet coach.
PILOTPOINT
PILOT POINT, June 1.—Dr. and
Mrs. T. M. Harris went to Dallas
Monday to attend the graduation
exercises of Robert Harris, who re-
ceived his M. D. from Baylor Med-
ical College. After a short visit in
Pilot Point young Harris will go to
Austin to take the state examina-
tion. He will do a year’s interne
work at West Durham, N. C.
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Ledbetter Jr.
returned to Louisiana after visiting
here.
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Overall of
Denton visited Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Foust.
Dr. George H. Stephenson of Pa-
ducah will begin a series of ser-
mons at the Church of Christ Fri-
day, June 5. Services will be held
at 10 a. m. and 8 p. m. Arnold Gib-
son will direct the song services.
J. D. Elder, who has been attend-
ing Teachers College, is home for
the summer.
Miss Grace Kibler, who taught in
Eectra, returned home.
The Pilot Point branch of the
Denton County Historical Society
will meet tonight at the community
building.
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 250, Ed. 1 Monday, June 1, 1936, newspaper, June 1, 1936; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1304404/m1/4/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.