Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 273, Ed. 1 Friday, February 3, 1933 Page: 3 of 8
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PRINT DRESSES
Made of fast colored prints and solid linenes. Vat Dyed,
Extra Special— 2 FOR— —
Me
Cut on the Maa.
SLIPS
OUTING GOWNS
RAYON GOWNS
CHILDREN’S DRESSES
An food shadee.
Sheer
selling tor
_________ EACH
“GOLDETTE” PANTIES
LADIES’ FRENCH PANTS
Excellent quality gowna for ladles. Lace
trimmed. Extra Special -EACH
Fast Prints and Linens. Regu-
lar * 1.20 values. New* Shipment
EACH
$1.50 GORDON SILK HOSE
69° SILK HOSE St MMeMese»s»a«e«a«^ioe»-«seeMe««ae«eeeeMMee»«M>eOd J
FASHUN CREPE ^2,5
NOVELTY PURSES
French crepe material. Cut on the Mas. Lace trim-
med. Extra Special-------------------------- EACH
Full cut. Excellent quality, napped out-
ing j^.i ■■ m.... i.. I FOR
..........——■ I I
VI CC|]Cy An liMUopensaMe cleansing tissue. Also good for
ALLlHlA handkerchief use ---------------------------B BOXES
SPRING HATS
A. B. C. PRINTS
OVERNIGHT CASES sition construction. Black color
EACH
LADIES’ WINTER COATS Mma^
KNIT DRESSES =
Children’s. Regular
value « FOR
Pink and Tea Bose Shades.
Satin Applique trimmed.
S FOB
GARZA SHEETS
81x09 Full sire after hemming. Made In Texas of
staple first grade cotton. Limit 4 to customer—
2 FOR— —
;‘1
(0
ft
SO
B jfl
L >40
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Peer Down This Column of Items. Here
Reposes the Greatest Dollar Days Vai-
ues of Our Entire History
GRANGE QUITS, AN ERA ENDS
Chicago Produce
■MM
1
10,954
r ’
Selected Stocks
Red Grange . . . hangs up old No. “77” and his ( leak'd shot's
—v
Cottonseed Oil
Fort Worth Grain
few
«
...
New York Financial
New York Cotton
52,
53;
Our
Chicago Grain
Business
Is
To sell safe
investment
securities to
New York Industrials
conservative
investors.
CIRCULARS ON REQUEST
YOAK,
CHILD’S LIFE HANGS IN BALANCE
Name
Addretm
New Orleans Cotton
Systems
Income Tax
Aud’ts
July
I
PHONE 25
Rusk County Lumber Company
Wholesale & Retail
Texas
Henderson
a
7
il
Sit
£
Lawmakers Plan
To Enact Rigid
. insurance Laws
Plan for Better
Control of Colds
Proved by Tests
H. <;. YOUNG * CO.
Tyler, Texan
Without obligation to buy you may
mail circulars.
654
590
604
616
646
586
.600
611
616
578
592
604
TYLER OFFICE
316 Swann B'dg
Telephone 3367
Close
652- T
589-90
603-04
615-16
622- N
628-N
634-35
648- T
Close
650- B
587- B
600
611
y
Children’s hospital. Dr. Chevallm
Jackson, noted Philadelphia suf
geon, rushed to the capital to at-
tempt an operation in an effort to
save tha child’s Ufa.
Drr ium.
geSMHg
*
Leading Stocks
B I M I---- 1 ■ »
*
■
636 626
650
HEWELL & HEWELL
ACCOUNTANTS and AUDITORS
LONGVIEW OFFICE
Chamber of Com merce B'dg
Telephone 1528
When a wooden screw that aha
swallowed became Imbedded in
ona Of her lungs, little Yvonne
Wilmar of Washington, was kept
alive in an oxygen tent at tha
Sr MS
«, • -W '1
■ - * -'A ,U
ram
yel|ow 65, 68; 3 yel-
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NEW YORK, Feb. 3. (UP) —
Cotton oil futures closed unchang-
ed to 2 points lower. Sales were
48 lots. Spot was 3.50 bld.
AUSTIN, Feb. 3 (UP)—Plans
for rigid regulation of life insur-
ance companies in Texas are under
way. A series of eight regulating I „o,iB o, tue golueii decade
bills has been filed. Another em- ou,y HuU1 rcll4U<ilB.
bracing features of the insurance I iUU oujeis, De.upscj, Tuimcy,
nm.'.i, uoiks and Grange, have
rcuvued talc end of their splendid
wUu.potiuou.
| Cuu.ige, a little fat now, nearly
the policy-hold- UJ^a Uiut tul, I1UlUe tiiat swept
.11 ♦ V>r» Kills sold * . . , ■■ i ■
inin to greatness unparalleled uy
Ovd. r j.iaycr a.neo the World
has burned itself to an eiu-
'■'Mill
Everything to Build a
HOME
« '
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■
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Greensboro, N. C.—In clinical
tests among thousands—in schools,
colleges and homes—the use of
Vicks Plan for better Control or
Colds reduced the number and dur-
ation of colds by half!—cut the
costs of colds more than half! Full
details of. the Plan are in each
package of Vicks VapoRub and the
new Vicks Nose & Throat Drops.
I
! /ill
M
NEW YORK, Feb. 3. (UP) —
After an early technical advance J
of more than 50 cents a bale, tlic !
cotton market sold off on increas- |
ed offerings today, but steadied r*“
and held a few points above the
previous closing levels in quiet
trading.
Near the end of the session the
prices rose to the day's highs due
to the Influx of a heavy volume of
price-fixing orders and lack of of-
ferings.
A good part of the business
again cons.sted of switching out
of March into later futures in prep-
aration for first notice day.
nr—4-
FORT WORTH, Feb. 3, (UP)
—Cash grain close:
Wheat— l hard 51 1-4; 52 1-4.
Corn—2 mixfed 38 1-2, 39 1-2;
2 white’ 39 1-2, 40 1-2; 2" yellow
39 1-2, 40 1-2.
Oats—2 red 23, 23 1-2; 3 red
21 1-2, 22 1-2.
Barley—No. 2: 33, 34N; No. 3,
32, 33N.
Milo—2
low 60, 65.
Kaffir—2 white
white 51, 52.
NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 3. (UP)
Cotton futures closed very steady.
Open High Low
Jan 646
Mar. 583
May 598
.. 610
NEW YOAK, Feb. 3. (UP) —
Cotton futures closed very steady.
Open High Low
Jan 654 654 647
Mar 588 590 581
May 602 604 594
July 615 616 606
Aug. ......... .....
Sept
Oct 635
Dec 650 650 639
Spots quiet, middling 600; sales
CHICAGO, Feb. 3, (UP). —
Cash grain close.
Wheat, no sales.
Corn, 3 n: / d 23 1-4, 23 1-2;
4 mixed 23 1-1; 2 old 25; 2 yel-
low 24 3-4; 3 yellow 23 1-2, 24;
4 yellow 22 1-2, 23 1-4; 5 yel-
low 22 1-2; 6 yellow 22; 2 old
25 1-2; 3 white 23 1-2; 4 white
23, 23 1-4; 2 old 25 1-4; 3 old
25.
Oats, 2 white 16 1-2, 16 3-4;
3 white 15 1-2, 16 1-2; 4 white
14, 15 1-4.
Sample grade 12.
Rye, no sales.
Barley, 25, 36.
Timothy, 225, 250.
Clover, 550-800.
£ 73
I
i .
I 1 T ]
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Oct 628 630 623 631-B
Dec 640 640 640 644-B
Spots steady, middling 585; sales
1,297.
< mi mx ■■ ■•»<><»<>«» »•«
NEW YOAK, Feb. 3. (UP) —
Standard Statistics Company's
bond price indexes today:
20 industrial 63.6.
20 railroads 64.8.
20 utilities 82.3,
60 bonds 70.1.
By BILL BRALCiL-.;
NXj.< ocrvivo ^porls «uunor
NEW lOiln. 1 eu. 3.—uae by
one tne great lueu of »poritr moot
glorious eru nave taueu from lao
picture.
Tne other day in Los Angeles
fk'J Grange a....ounceU he v.aa
Inrouga v....i lay gi.uiroa. Taat
i.iea..., uiat ot -tae *<ve uoaniia. ug
of
w J
w J
KF jflE
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NEW YORK, Feb. 3. (UP) —
Railroad shares came to the fore
late today and helped check an
early decline that embraced all
sections ot the stock exchange list
save the gold mining group which
experienced another rise to new
high ground for the year.
Nearly every stock of the rail-
road grotip moved up late in the
day. Most gains were fractional
although in' a few instances, in-
cluding Delaware & Hudson and
Northern Pacific the advances
reached a pont or more.
Trading in the general market
was under yesterday. Volume was
particularly dull on the late recov-
ery.
1'\4‘-
“'4
NEW YORK, Feb.”3. (UP) —
Wall Street Journal’s stock aver-
ages today:
30 industrials 58.77, up 0.08.
20 railro^ls 28.16, up 0.49.
20 utilities 24.91, off 0.35.
Am Can 58
Am Pwr and Light 6 3-8
Am Tel & Tel 100 7-8
Anaconda 7 1-8
Auburn Auto 41 1-4
Avn Corp Del 6 1-8
Barnsdall 3 5-8
Beth Steel 14
Byers, A M 12
Canada Dry 8 3'4
Case, J I 42 7-8
Chrysler 11 3-4
Curtiss Wright 1 7-8
Elec Auto Lite 17 1-2
Elec St Bat 24
Foster Wheel 7 1-2
Fox Film 1 3-4
Gen Elec 13 3-4
Gen Foods 23 1-8
Gen Motors 12 1-2
Gillette S R 16 1-4
Goodyear 12
Houston Oil 12 1-2
Int Harv 20 3-4
Johns Manv 19 3-8
Kroger G & B 17
Liq Carb 12 1-4
Mont W ard 12 7-8
Natt Dairy 14
Ohio Oil 61-8
Para Publlx 7-8
4 Pure OU 3 1-4
Purity Bak 7 8-8
Radio 4 1-8
Sears Roe 18
Shell Un OU 4 1-4
Socony Vac 6 1-2
Sou Pac 171-2
Studeoaker 3 1-2
S O N J 25 3-4
, Texas Corp 12 1-2
i Texas G Sul 22 3-8
Texas & P C & O 11-2
Un Carb 25 1-2
United Cei-p 7 3-4
U S Gypsum 20 1-2
U S Ind Ale 18 1-4
y U S Steel 26 7-8
Vanadium 111-4
Westing Elec 27 1-4
Freeport-Tex 22 3-4
United Cigar 1-4
r
CHICAGO, Feb. 3, (UP) —
Produce:
Eggs easy, receipts 9,487 casei;
extra firsts 12, 12 1-4; firsts 11
3-4, 12; current rects 11 1-4; dir-
ties 10.
Butter easy; receipts
tusb; specials 17 1-4, 17 3-4; ex-
tras 16 3-4; extra firsts 16 1-4,
16 1-2; firsts 15 3-4, 16; seconds
15, 15 1-2; standards 16 8-4.
Live poultry weak, receipts 24 j
trucks, fowls 11 1-2, 12; spring- ,
ers 13, 14; leghorns 9 1-2; ducks I
9, 11; geest 9; turkeys 10, 15; ,
roosters 9; broileis 14, 15; stags
11 I
Cheese: Twins 9, 9 ’-2; Long-
horns 9 3-4, 10.
Potatoes on track 174 cars, ar- 1
rivals 48; shipments ; market'
dull; Wisconsin round Whites 67
1-2; Idaho Russets 115, 120; Colo. :
McClures 115, 120.
»I
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HllliSr
iOw -p
I Ml Ml Ml Ml
New York Curbt *
1!-------—J
Cities Service 2 3-8
Ford M. Ltd 3 1-4
Gulf OU Pa 26 1-8
Humble OU 43 1-2
Niag Hud Pwr 12 3-8
8 O Ind 201-8
Lone Star Gas 7
----------o----------
Direct Telegraph Wires to Princi-
pal Exchanges
HANBERRY GRIFFITH
& RUMFIELD, Brokers
Cotton, Stocks, Bonds, Grain, Com-
modities. A complete Brokerage
Service. Member New Orleans
Cotton Exchange. Hightower Drug
Co. Bldg. Phone 300.
A series of eight regulating ■
Another em- |
features of the insurance I
laws of Wisconsin and New York j x
will be offered, P L. Anderson, ' f<
author of the other eight bills an-
nounced.
'•protection for t
er” is the aim of all the bills, said
Anderson. A vigorous c"-'rt •->
put these bills through will sup-
plant the move ne:’,i t ;a* titSv \ .
started to repeal the Robertson in-
surance law, requiring non-Texas
companies to invest 75 per cent of
their reserves in the state.
Bill one is aimed at what Ander-
sen s”ys is an insurance lobby that griuiro,lb.
has been maintained at the* state Mlciug„ 11 was going to stop him.
cap.lol during legislative sessions. u(. four iouc.idowns in 14
minutes. Penn was going to stop
him. iie raged up and down a
snow-filled and muddy field like
some storm god.
Ohio State was going to stop
him. And after tiiat game tlie
newspapers carried the line, “The
Buckeyes Halt Grange.” But the
story explained tiiat the old gal-
loper was held to a mere seven
yards per try!
Nobody stopped him. Finally
time forced him out. Like Demp-
sey, Tunney, Tilden and Jones, he
was stopped by the calendar.
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I_____
BY UNITED PRESS
Stocks irregular; rails rally to
small gains late in day; utilities
weak.
Bonds irregularly lower; Ger-
mans weak.
Curb stocks erratic after part
rally from lows.
Foreign exchange easiety ster-
ling steady.
Wheat dips fractionally; 'corn
and oats ease.
Cotton holds gains of a
points.
MARKET QUOTATIONS
Fort Worth Livestock I
0 —- -j-r---,--« ■■ »*•
FORT WORTH, Tex., Feb. 3
(UP)—Livestock:
Hog's 1,100 including 446 directs
and 90 thru; truck hogs 10 to 25
cents lower; no rail hogs offered;
truck top 3.15; bulk better grades
185 to 250 lb. truck hogs 3.10-3.15;
packing sows 2.00-2.25.
Cattle 700, calves 300; trade
poorly tested, market fairly active
on available supplies at prices
steady to strong; steers 3.00-3.25;
few fed yearlings 4.50 down; no
good cows offered, butcher sorts
1.75, low-cutters 1.00-1.25; stocker
steer calves 4.00-4.25; slaughter
calves, bulk sales, 2.75-3.25; few
heavies 3.50.
Sheep 1,200; few sales steady;
good wooled fat lambs up to 5.00;
medium grade fat yearlings 3.50;
shorn fat wethers 2.50.
it. always iv.U be easy to remem-
itiosc lofig strides, sug-
laziness, the sudden
the Hashing "77" tiiat
ra..gvU up and lioun Hundreds of
maintained at th<* state
finer locrictluf ivp Rp.ssions. '
It requires the filing of a list of all
vouchers issued in connection with
le~i Ir.tive matters.
Till two bits at. excessive sala-
ries for officers and directors of
insurance concerns. Now the sal- j
ary limit is $5,000 unless the direc-
tors approve more. This bill re-
quires approval also by the state
insurance commissiotv Reports, on
file, Anderson said.'JIvhal that ex-
ecutive officers of some companies
are receiving exorbitant' salaries
while the companies are borrowing
money from the Reconstruction Fi-
nance Corporation.
Other bills require annual In-
stead of biennial examinations of
the insurance companies; require
full information covering loans and
investments; prohibit dealing In
any property in which a relative
or director of the company is inter-
ested or In property or corporations
in which officers of the insurance
concern own stock; require share-
holders to render their stock for
tax and make policy reserves liable
to taxation.
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Superior “DoHor
Day.” Value,
at Packman’s v ,
Looking ’Em Over
Through “Rose Colored’*
GLASSES
—Everything Is Rosey Now!!
This Event
Closes
Sat.
Nite
BROADCLOTH SHORTS
, A 1
■ mU
BOYS’ PAJAMAS. Made of . j , MEN’S ATHLETIC UNDE
Broadcloth. Solid and $< aILK 9°^ qu"; $1 SHIRTS. Ribbed Knit 4
stripes 2 FOR I rty. novehy cmigns 4 for I White 4 FOR
MEN’S SHIRTS. Genuine FR. FLANNEL SHIRTS. S
Broadcloth. Novelty $4 BROADCLOTH SHORTS $4 ing for $1.95 regularly.
Patterns EACH I 4 FOR------------------ I Choice---------2 FUR
---
$ic£mairA
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, FEB. 8, 1933
PAC
ir*' • A’T6W”rar<«
.. .. ,..,...
HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, HENDERSON. TEXAS
--_______ ______’ —. .4.....Jesuit'HIX- -U—"'■■«»!
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“Dollar Days” Bargains
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Bowman, George. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 273, Ed. 1 Friday, February 3, 1933, newspaper, February 3, 1933; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1309971/m1/3/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.