Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 208, Ed. 1 Monday, April 13, 1936 Page: 6 of 6
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DENTON, TEXAS, RECORD-CHRONICLE, MONDAY, APRIL 13, 1936
PAGE SIX
pa
Specials
net
Close
PERFECT HEALTH FOOD
PASTEURIZED MILK
I
Mar ....
J
I
DREAMLAND
to-
(Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation)
disappointing spot
THE SAFEST WAY
TUESDAY and WED.
B
with
TUESDAY ONLY
I
BIG
FIRSTSTATEBANK OF DENTON
NIGHT
I
I
Last
JOHN
HELL SHIP MORGAN
Phone 423
1
II
&
f
SHOW
M SYSTEM
SPECIAL for MONDAY, TUESDAY
Wo
t
H
Good Hardware
*
o
M-’j
A
*
ALWAYS AT YOUR COMMAND
a
WEDNESDAY, Apr. 15
'A'-
s
MT
k—
I
M Turn To-dau
“MISMANAGED”
with EDDIE MORAN
SEATS MUST BE RESERVED IN ADVANCE,
NOW ON SALE AT BOX OFFICE!
s i fs rt?sj
City Court Fines
Given Total $65
Mrs. Fred Wilson
Dies at Quanah
EAST
SIDE
Oct ....
Dec ....
Jan ....
Mar ....
Wall Paper
, Now Showing
1 New
Spring Patterns
H. H. Hardin Lbr. Co.
Oct ....
Dec ....
Week’s Services
End. Nine Baptised
20c Kotex, two for ,
18c Kleenex, two for
Mineral Oil, extra heavy, pint
Aspirin, 100 for
Milk of Magnesia, pint
25c Milk of Magnesia Tooth Paste, 2 tubes
35c
25c
49c
39c
39c
35c
“Game of Jai Alai
TREASURE CHEST
- , ONE DAY
> ONLY
3 SHOWS AT 2:00 - 4:30 and 7:30
T. E. HIETT
INSURANCE AGENCY
Good homes for sale on easy
terms
Phone 87. Office 210 W. Hickory
Electricity is an ever obedient servant, it is economi-
cal and convenient. Use it freely.
Mustard Greens, Turnip Greens,
Carrots, THREE BUNCHES
Denton Typewriter Exchange
Phone 321 East Side Square
For Battery Service
PHONE 242
Sparkman Battery
& Electric
402 W. Hickory
For Every
Printing Need
Phone
RE-ROOF WITH
Johns-Manville
Roofing
5% Loan! Easy Terms’
3 Years to Pay!
HERE TO SERVE YOU!
GLAD TO KEEP YOUR MONEY UNTIL NEEDED.
CONSIDER YOUR LOANS CAREFULLY.
SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES FOR YOUR
VALUABLES.
Grover S. Campbell & Co.
GENERAL INSURANCE
McCIurkan Bldg.
•X*!
A shingle that does two jobs at
one cost . . . gives you the de-
pendable weather protection of
the finest asphalt shingle, plus
ROOF INSULATION. Makes any
home cooler in summer, warmer
in winter. Saves fuel.
Weather surface of slate, imbed-
ed in asphalt. Under side covered
with cork which acts as a barrier
to heat and cold.
M Timet Todau
PRICES
MATINEE
Lower Floor
83c and 55c
BALCONY'
All Seats 55c
NIGHT
Lower Floor
$1.10 and 83c
BALCONY
All Seats 55c
with
George
BANCROFT
Ann
SOTNER N
Victor Jory
M. A. GAY
Roofing & Sheet
Metal Co.
15 years in Denton with
Southwestern Life Insurance Company
Consult me about your insurance problems
ELI P. COX
A policy for every jieed. Phone 430-J.
.A
? 5,000 i
; MAXIMUM <
INSURANCE
FOR FACT
DEPOSITOR
jsna0Z Town
GM
JANET GAYNOR ROB’T TAYLOR
Neal & Lakey
Phone 188 We Deliver
P. Lipscomb, M. D.
Southeast Comer Square
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Glasses Correctly Fitted
Phones: Office 296; Residence 542
669
Office Supplies
LUSK
Printing Co.
223 West Oak
Ik.
IIMTl't
,| Phone 45 I
Last Day Today
CITY OF DENTON
Water & Light Department
-TTniBiiawnniniin-«(ii' nr-n ""rr--rrM»ir~inr-nniiiiiriB»aiBi>iiiiii*imn»iwir—WTfnmWllii—
Call 1133 and 1153 for groceries and fresh meats.
-> Plus
“PRINCE, KING OF DOGS”
by PETE SMITH
with 15 STARS
“PARTY WIRE”
with
Jean Arthur
Victor Jory
NEWS - CARTOON
■
■
“FINER POINTS”
GRANTLAND RICE SPORT
^mmrajHiHiius
TEXAS
____________________________________________________________■ ■. ■. ■. . ' . ■ ■
Sold on
Easy Payments
Moonlight and Melody
with BUSTER WEST
but Timet lo-ihiK
MEE MUSKETEERS
sama
TUESDAY, 10c
Two human hearts in a
drama of wild horse
courage and dog devotion
o ■
LAWN MOWERS AND HOSE
See how nicely we can supply you in these necessary
and labor-saving helps—guaranteed quality, priced low.
L. & H. RANGES
Attractive, high quality Ranges. Save gas and do bet-
ter work. Outstanding values; sold on easy terms.
SPEED-QUEEN WASHERS
Take drudgery out of wash-day; do better work; last
lifetime; lower prices; easy terms.
GARDEN TOOLS AND SEEDS
Nichd’son’s fresh, tested Garden and Flower Seeds—
also Hegari and Red Top Cane Seed.
A baptismal service was held for
nine converts in the First Baptist
Church following the sermon Sun-
day evening, the result of a week’s
pre-Easter services conducted by
the pastor, Rev. J. D. Grey, assisted
by Dr. W. T. Rouse, teacher of Bi-
ble in the state schools, who taught
the day-time Bible lessons. Twelve
united with the church by letter,
making a total of '21 for the week.
Interest and attendance were un-
usually good.
I «... /a
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___-
uciicuA ou o/o uy x
Anae 22,200 39 1/2 up 3/4.
G M 20,800 70 No.
Am Int 19,900 13 dn 1/8.
Socony 18,700 15 up 1/8.
US Steel 18,100 72 1/8 up 1/4.
US Rub 16,300 34 1/4 up 1/4.
White 16,100 27 1/8 up 7/8.
Cons Oil 14,900 14 1/8 dn 1/8.
■
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feke^Home:
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TEXAS COTTON
DALLAS,. April 13.— (AP) — Cotton
11.25, Houston 11.65, Galveston 11.55.
CORK INSULATED SHINGLES
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STUDENTS
ASK FOR SPECIAL
STUDENT’S TICKET
Illi t Illi'ini ii'i mi i >ni mi i in mm mi in
I'
TYPEWRITERS. We sell, rent,
repair typewriters. Also typewriting sup-
plies.
Doctors always recommend it, and the mothers of small chil-
dren and babies add their testimony concerning its value in keep-
ing families well! That’s an extra reward that no amount of money
can buy, when you let Denton Dairy save for you! Children aren’t
the only ones who benefit by its health qualities, either! Grown-
ups, in every activity, find that drinking Denton Dairy Pasture-
ized Milk means better health . . . and they enjoy the fresh fla-
vor that sets it apart from ordinary beverages! Phone 292.
DENTON DAIRY PRODUCTS CO.
I...' '
'44. .
free sample and
It's the TOP in roofing
H0U
—THE—
Denton County National Bank
OF DENTON
p-.l
MJ
l Even Hardware Co.
Phone 130—For fcel
PENRY BROS. |
■A-'
’ ¥ if
LET US TAKE YOUR ORDER FOR A
NEW SPRING OR SUMMER SUIT
CUSTOM MADE. NEW STYLES AND PATTERNS
| CAMP CLEANERS
GoldenRain
byt^argaret tTV/iddemer^*^
parties and the victories over such
as Georgia.”
“I do like going places and seeing
things. So would you if you had been
brought up without money, and un-
der a system of obedience and seclu-
sion which dated from Aunt Ella’s
girlhood.”
“So far, so good. But I wouldn’t
stay so late at the Chaeau next time.
Georgia can get away with that sort
of thing better than you can. And,
little sister, watch your step—-Geor-
gia is a clever girl—”
He was not looking at her as he
spoke.
“Oh, Owen—” she poured out her
explanation. “And I thought Georgia
had done it, till I found Phina and
Camilla thought I did!”
“Georgia’s line was, of course, that
you had,” said her brother. She
thought he looked relieved. “She
ought to know, it was her own habit
last winter. There’s nothing Georgia
doesn’t do, understand. But you
have to be her kind to do it.”
“Was it very serious?”
He patted her. “Nothing’s serious
these days.”
“But, oh, how gorgeous!”
* * *
But Iris reflected that Mrs. Morgan
understood, or Phina .wouldn’t be
leasing the Woodlands. Mrs. Morgan
was her kind of person. And when
she was driving down in Allan’s com-
pletely repaired low-slung gleaming
. dark-blue car, with Allan as easy and
amused and casual as ever by her
side, life was all exciting.
“We’ll take the grounds first,” he
said, as they finally drove through
a pair of wrought-iron gates. “Little
girls from mid-Victoria always pre-
fer the simple pleasures of a garden,
don’t they?”
“If you keep on teasing me about
being from mid-Victoria I’ll be driven
to a terrible effort to be modern. And
I’ll do it badly. And then you won’t
like me any more,” she said, laugh-
ing.
“Then I’ll certainly stop, for you
do this superlately well. And here’s
the first garden, Beautiful.”
He stopped the car and they got
out, moving through .a tall barrier
of forsythia bushes. They turned
down through a bridlepath. It wound
through parklike green for perhaps a
quarter of a mile, went through a
delicate small woodland, and ended
S W//l^inAN€£NSS O
’ ex fAQ1 -W
WG DEPOSITOR Ai
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to-
HE."
1 smCSSMqSI
25 lower; few sales fed steers and
yearlings 6.75-7.25; best held above
7.50; plain low down to 6.00 and be-
low; 7 loads South Tex\ grassers un-
sold, held above 7.00; low cutter and
cutter cows largely 3.00-75; 2 loads
South Texas 3.65; sausage bulls
largely 4.75 down; load 4.50; common
and medium slaughter. calves 4.00-
6.50; very few fat calves above 7.00.
Sheep 4,000; shorn fed lambs
mostly 25 higher; other classes
steady.- spring lambs 8.50-9.50; shorn
fed lambs 7.50-75; shorn aged wethers
4.85 down.
Attractive, nor-fading colors and
extra thickness add to roof
beauty. Made 011J7 by Carey.
Before you reroof or build, inves-
tigate. Get free sample and
prices.
VALUE.
Bell Roofing and Sheet
Metal Co.
Back of Postoffice
Telephone 796
Mrs. Fred Wilson, 47, formerly of
Denton, died in Quanah Friday
night, and funeral services and bur-
ial were held in Quanah Saturday
afternoon. She was formerly Miss
Lottie Pearl Squires, daughter of
M. MJ. Squires, west of Denton. She
was born in Adair, Ky., Dec. 13,
1888, but came to Denton County
when quite small and had lived here
until about eight years ago.
Besides her father she is surviv-
ed by her husband, a step-son, El-
mer Wilson, and the following sis-
ters and brothers: Mrs. W. L. Pierce
and C. C. Squires of Irving, Mrs. N.
J. Burns of Pilot Point, Mrs. W. G.
Watson, Miss Dollye Squires, H. G.
Squires and M. M. Squires, all of
Denton, and P. P. Squires of Dal-
las.
Mrs. Watson, Miss Dollye Squires
and Mark Squires and C. C. Squires
attended the funeral burial. Her fa-
ther was unable to go.
Spot cotton closed, steady 5 points up.
Sales 577; low middling 10.66; mid.
dling 11.66; good middling 12.26; re-
ceipts 5,068; stock 446,412.
STOCKS
NEW YORK, April 13.— (AP) —
Scattered firm spots were in evidence
in today’s stock market, but many
of the leaders were subjected to quiet
profit taking pressure.
Coppers, rails and specialties gave
the best account of themselves. The
close was irregular. Transfers approx-
imated 1,500,000 shares.
MARKETS AT A GLANCE
NEW YORK, April 13.—(AP) —
Stocks irregular; coppers, rails and
specialties steady.
Bonds mixed; U. S. governments
and low priced rails lower.
Curb uneven; specialties higher;
utilities lower.
Foreign exchanges quiet; /changes
narrow.
Cotton steady; local and trade buy=
ing- unfavorable weather.
Sugar lower; increase in quotas.
Coffee quiet; disappointing spot
demand.
CHICAGO:
Wheat mixed; unfavorable weather
Southwest.
Corn lower; receipts somewhat lib-
eral.
Cattle steady to 25 lower.
Hogs steady to 10 up; top $11.
CHICAGO POULTRY
CHICAGO, April 13.— (AP)—Poul-
try, live, 1 car, 9 trucks, steady; hens
5 lbs:, and less 22 1/2, more than 5
lbs., 21; Leghorn hens 18 1/2; Ply-
mouth and White Rock springs 27,
colored 25; White Rock fryers 26,
Plymouth and colored 25; White Rock
broilers 26, Plymouth and colored 25,
barebacks 20-22, Leghorn 22 1/2;
roosters 16 1/2; hen turkeys 26, young
toms 23, old 21; No. 2 turkeys 20;
heavy old ducks 19 1/2, heavy young
ducks 23, small 17 1/2; geese 17; ca-
pons 7 lbs., up 28, less than 7 lbs., 27.
FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH, April 13.— (AP)—
(USDA)—Hogs 1,700; truck hogs
steady with Friday; top 10.10: good
to choice 180-300 lb. averages 9.90- 1
10.00; good underweights averaging I
150-175 lbs. 9.25-80; packing sows J
and pigs steady, feeder pigs mostly
8.00; packing sows 8.50 down.
Cattle 2,700; calves 1,400; market
slow, slaughter steers and yearlings
weak to 25 lower,- she stock steady
to weak; bulls steady, calves around
e «
DAILY MARKET QUOTATIONS
Leading Stocks
NEW YORK, Apr. 13.—(AP)—Sales,
closing price and net change of the
15 most active stocks today:
Mother Lode 50,900 1 3/4 up 1/8.
Cal&Hec 46,500 14 up 2.
NYC 42,600 42 up 1 1/4.
Gdrich 25,800 22 up 1 5/8.
Chrysler 24,200 103 3/4 up 1 1/4.
Gdyr T&R 23,500 30 3/4 up 1 3/8.
Bendix 23,200 30 3/8 up 1 1/8.
.1
zx-
cording to a. lot of fool professional
exposers. You can imagine how that
irritated Georgia. She broke with
him, and he disappeared. He was
found drowned a few weeks later. It’s
about a year now. Left everything to
Granny.”
“Oh, how could Georgia?”
“I don’t blame her, exactly. As she
said, Jim’s name was clouded. That
and no money together were a lot
to ask her to stand.”
“I don’t think so at all!” Iris said
hotly. “Even if she hadn’t loved him,
she owed him loyalty and honesty. I
think she was hard and greedy, and
ill-bred.”
“Well, you never did like each
other,” said Allan gayly. “You should
have been Jim’s girl, not Georgia.
But, as he’s dead, you’ll have to put
up with me.”
He caught her ungloved slim hand
and swung it. “Now let’s stop being
sad and go visit the stables. Frank
had this place constructed on the
plan of an Elizabethan manor house,
stables and all. The house rambles off
into a few Spanish spots and Louis
Fifteenth bedrooms, but in the main
it’s all for good Queen Bess. Show-
place, really.”
“The grounds are big enough for a
township. But they’re wonderful, I
never saw anything like them,” Iris
said with her usual frankness.
They finally returned, through the
very impressive front doors. They
could have driven in with a motor
bus. Honora was directing a man-
servant to lay a picnic lunch on an
Elizabethan refectory table. A fire
roared in a fireplace, where a coat
of arms, all red and gold and lions
and unicorns, stood out from the
paneled wall above the mantelshelf.
Two Titians, a Madonna and a De-
scent, flanked the enormous fire-
place. Iris gasped, then laughed ir-
repressibly.
“If you don’t mind my criticizing
your uncle and my aunt, it’s a cross
between a hotel and a movie palace,
only all real,” she said.
“Showplace,” Allan said coolly, but
he laughed too.
And then Phina was entering from
another door, marshaling a bored
Owen, filling the place with the
whirlwind of her driving intentions
—upkeep, renewals, necessities for
setting the estate going again. Phina
treated Allan with what was for her
docility. When he finally rose to
leave, she went with him to continue
discussions of ways and means.
(Copyright, 1933-36,
Margaret Widdemer)
Iris takes an important step,
morrow.
Fines assessed in a brisk morn-
ing of Corporation Court Monday
put the week’s total to $65, given
on five cases. Mayor J. L. Wright
received two pleas (Of guilty to
charges of drunkenness and two
to charges of affray, and assessed
fines of $13 in each case. A similar
fine was impoosed on
guilty to disturbance.
Chapter 33
LECTURE
The brother and sister dined alone
that night; Phina was in bed, after
the excitement of lease-signing.
“Oh,: I love New York! It’s a magic
city!” Iris said. She crossed the room
and leaned out the windows. “The
tall buildings, the skyline with all
those starred gray heights against it,
and the. dull-rose glow in the sky
behind.”' •
“I know,” said Owen gently. “I
hope it will never look like just Park
Avenue to you.”
“Oh, you talk like Uncle Will. You
ought to be back in our hermitage,
I believe-you’d like that,” Iris said,
half t lasing, half annoyed. “We were
cast wrong. You don’t really like the
pleasures and palaces; . you would
have been .happier than I with Uncle
Will.and Father and Aunt Ella. May-
be you'd have been a real artist.”
“Well, I had Mother till I was
twelve, you know. She was the sweet-
est. thing—gay and impulsive and
affectionate; not a bit like Phina.”
i “I.wonder what she’d have thought
about- this exciting world of yours.”
“Yours, my child,” said Owen, a
little cynically. “You happen to be
the family passport to smart society.
Oh, any unmarried man not too ill-
mannered can spend his night in all
the best-stag-lines; but, you see, I
was selfish enough (or Phina con-
siders it selfish) to prefer Sigrid. You
like the roadhouses and the dinner-
Cash may be lost—it may be stolen.
Be wise—a bank account is the
safest way—especially so when
your deposit is insured, as it will be
when deposited here.
liLUvan
M THE ,ROSE
Waiter Connolly
Randolph Scott
Elizabeth Patterson
SHEMP HOWARD" g
in “Officer’s Mess” I
J
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
NEW ORLEANS, April 13.—(AP) —
Gaines of 3 to 6 points were scored
by cotton futures as trading was re-
sumed today after the three-day Eas-
ter holiday.
All active positions shared in the
advance as May sold at 11.26, July
at 10.99, October at 10.40 and De-
cember at 10.41.
Cables were better than due and
continued unfavorable weather in the
belt induced considerable speculative
buying. Houses that ordinarily act
for foreign account bought October
and December.
The market maintained its initial
gains during the morning but the
volume of business fell off and trad-
ing was a quiet affair at mid-day.
May sold at 11.25, July at 11.01,
October at 10.41 and December at
10.40. Old crop options came in for
a little selling in hedge operations
while speculative interests kept the
new crop months around 25 cents a
bale higher.
ROAD S HO W PRE SENT A T IO N
^7 m....
Tl,e Majcsly of SkahesPeare • • -The MeMy of
Mendelssohn...The Mastery of Reinhardt...
Magically Blended to Create the Most Thrill-
»n^ly Beautiful Screen Spectacle Ever Filmed!
W Warner Bros. Present MAX REINHARDT’S Production of
MIDSUMMER
mV'
I 4- W
rffllL
s|
■ «
James Cagney * Joe E. Brown
Dick Powell • Anita Louise
Olivia De Havilland 8 Jean Muir
Hugh Herbert • Frank McHugh
Ross Alexander • Verree Teasdale
Directed ty Max Reinhardt & Wm. Dieterlc
104.7 104.5 104.7 j
. . . 101.31 101.28 101.29 I
Home Own Loan 102.27 102.23 102.25 1
tv
i
With
ARLEDGE
LOUISE LATIMER
MORONI OLSEN
"LIGHTNING"
the dog
"WARRIOR" r
the horseNIGHT’S DREAM'
By WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
Music by MENDELSSOHN
CAST OF 1000
at another wrought-iron gate, single
and low.
Allan opened it for her and stood
back as she passed between the high
hedges. She stood, slim and tall and
starry-eyed with the excitement of
what she saw about her, her coat
blown back by the spring wind,
her face flushed and rapt.
Tall flowering trees stood about, as
in an orchard close. But crocuses and
snowdrops thrust up along the bor-
ders of the paths; masses of rose-
bushes would be covered with red
and pink flowers later. There were
beds of tulips and hyacinths. Bridal
wreath and a dozen other lovely old-
fashioned and new-fashioned blos-
soming bushes crowded the grass.
Scarcely knowing what she did, she
threw out both hands and caught
Allan’s with them, drawing him clos-
er to her. He had made all this heav-
en possible. He had given her a
chance to have the freedom of this
hidden, exquisite garden, high-hedg-
ed and dreaming and beautiful.
“Allan, Allan, how shall I thank
you? You’ve brought me to live in
Paradise!” she breathed. “It’s the
place I’ve dreamed of all my life!”
Happy, rapt, innocently as a child
would, she p.ulled his head down and
kissed him.
He did not release her at once. She
had forgotten that he would kiss her,
too. When he did, he said breath-
lessly, not at all like the casual Allan
of every day:
“Good heavens, what sort of a girl
are you? A witch, or a devil, or an
ingenue, or an old-world lady, or all
of them together?”
“All of them together,” Iris said,
laughing, a little frightened at what
she had done, but still so enraptured
over the garden that she could think
of little else. “Aren’t you used to im-
pulsive gratitude?”
“Not that kind, but ! like it.”
“Allan, what really did happen
here? I’d rather hear the story from
you.”
Allan ’ looked a little annoyed, as
if he’d rather not think of it. **Yes,
I suppose you’ve heard all sorts of
tales. It was simple enough. Uncle
Frank was a bit of a bounder along
with his dynamism. It goes with the
type, I suppose. And his business
methods got old-fashioned. They’d
been all right for ten years ago, but.
they were a little slippery for these
times.
“So ah annoyed and mentally un-
sound depositor, who felt Uncle
Frank had ruined him in the nine-
teen-twenty-nine crisis, shot him one
fine day, about a year and a half ago.
My aunt, fortunately, had died some
years before. My cousin had. just be-
come engaged to Georgia Blair. He
was a quixotic sort of fellow. He in-
sisted on giving back everything his
father had obtained dishonestly, a6=
a plea of
,. J
NEW ORLEANS FUTURES
NEW ORLEANS. April 13.—(AP) —
Cotton futures closed steady at
advances of 5 to 8 points.
Open High Low
May .... 11.25 11.27 11.24 11.27
July .... 11.01 11.01 10.99 11.01
" ' 10.41 10.42 10.40 10.41
. 10.40 10.42 10.40 10.42
10.43 10.44 10.43 10.44
. 10.48 10.48 10.48 10.49B
NEW YORK FUTURES
NEW YORK, April 13.—(AP)—Cot-
ton futures closed steady, 5-9 higher.
Open High Low Last
May .... 11.33 11.35 11.32 11.35
July .... 11.06 11.08 11.04 11.07—08
~ ' 10.44 10.46 10.44 10.44
10.46 10.47 10.44 10.46
Jan .... 10.49 10.50 10.48 10.48
---- 10.53 10.57 10.53 10.56—57
Spot steady; middling 11.75,
NEW ORLEANS SPOTS
NEW ORLEANS, April 13.—(AP) —
SYNOPSIS: Iris Lanning has
b<< n taken into her Aunt Phina’s
rather speedy set in New York.
Sh enjoys the change from gen-
tee' poverty in a small Pennsyl-
vania town; she enjoys also the
triumph of having Allan Beck-
ley desert Georgia Blair for her,
Allan being the entirely eligible
young man he is. But Iris was a
little: perturbed when*, Allan ran
away with her the night before,
landing finally at a slightly
frowsy roadhouse far up the
Hudson.
CHICAGO PRODUCE
CHICAGO, April 13.—(AP)—But-
ter 9,091, firm; creamery-specials (93
score) 33 1/2-34; extras (92) 33; ex-
tra firsts (90-91) 32 3/4: firsts (88-
89) 32-32 1/2; standards (90 cen-
tralized carlots) ‘33 1/4.
Eggs 34,453, -firm; extra firsts cars
and local 19 1/2; fresh graded firsts
local 18 1/2, cars 19; current receipts
18 1/4; storage packed extras 20 1/2,
storage packed firsts 20 1/4.
, CHICAGO CASH GRAIN
CHICAGO, April 13.—(AP)—Cash
wheat, No. 3 hardl.01; corn No. 2
mixed 62- No. 3 mixed 60 No. 4 mixed
57-58 1/4; No. 5 mixed 55-55 1/2; No.
3 yellow 59 1/2-62; No. 4 yellow 57-
59; No. 5 yellow 55-56 1/2; No. 4 white
58 1/4-59; No. 5 white 56- sample
grade 23-53; oats, No. 2 white 25-29;
No. 4 white 24 3/4-27 1/2; sample
grade 19 3/4-24 1/4.
NEW YORK COTTON
NEW YORK, April 13.—(AP)—Cot-
ton futures opened very steady, 5 to
8 higher on trade price fixing and
the absence of rain Ih the western
belt. May 11.33, July 11.06, Oct. 10.44,
Dec. 10.46, Jan. 10.49, March 10.53.
There was a moderately active de-
mand from both foreign and domes-
tic trade sources for the near months,
attributed to price fixing.
. Very little hedging seemed to be
reaching here from the South while
buying of new crop months was en-
couraged by the reported absence of
rain of any importance in the South-
west over the holidays.
The market was fairly active and
while buyers seemed to find sufficient
offerings around the initial prices,
the tone was steady with prices show-
ing net gains of 3 to 9 points at the
end of the first hour.
The market became very quiet af->
ter the first hour and prices moved
within a range of 4 or 5 points dur-
ing the morning. At mid-day May
was selling around 11.33 and October
11.45 with the general list about 4 to
7 points net higher.
Futures closed steady, 5 to 9 high-
er. Spot steady; middling 11.75.
GOVERNMENT BONDS
NEW YORK, April 13.— (AP)—Gov-
ernment bonds:
High Low
4 l/4s 47-52 118.1 •
4s 44-54 112.25 112.22 112.25
3 3/8s 43-47 108.4
3 3/8s 41-43 Mar 108.28
3s 51-55
2 7/8s 55-60
7
M
w
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 208, Ed. 1 Monday, April 13, 1936, newspaper, April 13, 1936; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1310372/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.