Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 1, 1942 Page: 6 of 10
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TREAT YOUR COLD
t ± *.
rail. ~
Before It Becomes Severe
■
STARCH
NEAL DRUG STORE ■
HARVEST TIME
L>ast
• SAVE AND HAVE
A'*
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R
Satu
’ ***
A
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AUTO, RADIO
L-
AERIALS
$1.50 up
uSIan .UrtT
Fo
) tant.
•••
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carriers
I
LET US REPAIR YOUR RADIO
Make Our
GROCERY & MARKET
BEST SERVICE IN TOWN
Electrex Heat Pads
MATINEE
25c
25c
35c
QUIZ KIDS
n
N E ,V S
WAR
Denton Transfer &
Phone 130—For Ice
TODAY Thru SAT
BUY
PENRY BROS.
Belle of Wichita
Flour
CURTIS DRUG STORE
at the
1
x
Automobile Refinancing
Phone 52
Your Complete Drug Store
North Side
11c Today Only 11c
■
1
to.
ON
-
Starts FRIDAY
, Charlie’s Food
Double Action
Store
208 West Oak Street .
•J
. 't We Deliver.
I
S'.
ABLE
'4
or tn
Y
■ ,
I
iri>X<A§
DREAMLAND
Don Red BARRY ' Alon CURTIS I
3
ROOFING‘SHEET MM
PHON J:796
’ fe
NITE
gimaraa
feme hu nr
■
~..... ...........
i
J
Cars Washed and
and Lubricated
Atlantic Sinkings
Mount to 481
—is the time to store up
for a hard winter.
mantled to
•gtW froi
uBom6 Every Hour
On Hour" Slogan
In New Guinea
mh mops
ROOF KEPfiiRINO
Paw Kams
School Supplies
Scissors; Knives
Sporting Goods
It’«
Ph. 156 228 W, Hickory
_________________________________________________’
Pay Your Bill the Easy
Way
WHEN YOU NEED A PLUMBER
IN A HURRY ( ALL 1111
PHILIP COURY PLUMBING CO.
SAM LANEY TIRE CO.
Phone 87
Denton County National Bank
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Serving Denton County For Fifty Years
Subject to Federal Tax
and Service Charge
ECONOMY FOOD
STORE
CUT RATE AUTO
SUPPLY CO.
Phone 323
Storage
Blount SL
PHONE 1745
*
CARTOON
“BULLDOG AND
THE BABY -
GUESTS
’Today or Tomorrow
it air and
j city.
of the Soviets which i» I
steel for the
X- ' : .
AUSTIN. Oct. 1.—(A*)— An opinion
given today by the attorney gener-
al's department gives local prose-
cutors an opportunity to seek pad-
lock action against night clubs and
other public places serving beer if
they furnish ice and mixers for
persons who consume hard liquor
on the premises
The attorney general said in ef-
fect that such a place can be en-
joined as a common nuisance under
Article 4664.
Hemstitching, Buttons and Buckles Covered,
Machine Button Holes
Singer Sewing Machines
H. C. TALIAFERRO, Distributor
RY
NCR
for groceries, meats, veg-
etables and fruits.
Oct
Dec
Jan
Mar
May
Jiy
First State Bank of Denton
■ Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
BUW BONDS’ BUY BONDS! BUY BONDS!
<
Hen
mad
mod
Ttt
until
limit
ing
Boarl
thosl
refrl
that
1
BARBER-
SHOP J
FRANCIS M. CRADDOCK
GROCERY & MARKET
Phone 71-212 ■
MERCHANTS
FINANCE CO
Back of Postoffice
Dentun
EVERY DAY is BARGAIN
DAY AT PIGGLY-
WIGGLY
Your friendly Grocery Store
QUALITY DRY CLEANING
that guarantees satisfaction for your finest clothes.
DENTON LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS *
PHONE 8
Keep Your Credit
Good!
JOE'S STEAK HOUSE
“On the Highway”
your headquarters for
FINE FUUUS
I
B ■
NEWCOMERS
We know you’ll enjoy
living in Denton and we
welcome you.
When you have meals
out, we suggest,
STORAGE
OF ALL KINDS
HAULING
r '
4
t
Itoti mJw tn dioefat •rening. Unto
NEAL DRUG STORE
Phone 188 Denton, Tex.
rl ■-
• ■ - *
' DENTON, TEXAS, ■known.
£<■ -
Li
I 81 1 2, 5 lbs and down 21, Leghorn
I hens 18 1/2; broilers. 2 1/2 lbs.
and down, colored 26, Plymouth
Rock 28. white Rock 27; springs
4 lbs. up, colored 23. Plymouth Rock
23. white Rock 22 12. under 4 lbs.,
colored 21 1/2, Plymouth Rock 25
1 2, white Rock 24; bareback chick-
ens 19-20; roosters 16 1 2. Leghorn
roosters 16; ducks, 4 1/2 lbs up.
colored 17, white 19. small, colored
15, white 15; geese, olds 13, young
17; turkeys, toms, old 23. young 26.
hens, old 26. young 30
[
fSuk >-
ovwrdO
rill help
h out poison*
Doan's Pilh.
r
able cover,
stats,
year.
3 heat controls. Remov-
4
Guaranteed
Repairs at
Rexall Store.
thermo-
one
any
New Ruling on
Liquor Serving
Cooking Ware
Steves; Dishes
Electrical Things
'EXTRA \
ramrooN
. BW.«
Something New
Firestone Inside Tire
Protector
Made from specially woven
tire cord material, these pro-
tectors enable you to get the I
last mile out of your tire We
have a supply now in stock.
A
« ■
MARKETS AT A GLANCE
NEW YORK. Oct. 1.—(API— X.
Stocks firm; rails lead recovery _
Bonds steady; carriers resume
advance
Cotton lower; trade selling.
CHICAGO:
Wheat about steady; early ad-
vance lost
Com firm; fair Shipping business
Hogs active; 10-20 higher on re-
duced run; top 115.40. ~
Cattle 15-25 higher on small sup-
ply
SWINDLE’S
PHARMACY
Phone 49 W. Square
Oct
Dec
Jan
Mar
May
Jiy
Oct 43
E
Chapte
THE VALLEY
Julie reached the
the ambulance drl
derly were wheel!
through the door
gency. She caught
in the wide, cool I
side.
"Pete.” she said
The dark head
turned slightly. He
recognized her. n
half-smile “Hello.
Then the eyea
again. He closed
Her heart weepl
was steady, her e;
said. “We won't 1
Steve.*' And she to
that aly inert on t
a moment
She could nt be
or that she hadn
answering pressure
gers But she was
was hurt seriously
Dr. Tom confirm
a little later Scrul
in sterile linen. Ji
ther outside the 1
instant she met tfi
CHICAGO CASH GRAIN •
CHICAGO, Oct. I—,!API—Wheat
No. 1 hard 131; No. 2 mixed wee-
vUy 131.
Oom No. 2 yellow 84 1/4-86; No.
<3. 83 1/2-84 1/2; No 4, 81 3/4-83
1/2; sample grade yellow 79 1/2-80;
No. 9: white 1.10.
Oats No. 1 mixed 83-83 1/4; sam-
ple grade mixed SO; No. 2 white 53;
No. 4, 49 3/4-50; No 3 white tough
49; No. 1 special red heavy 53 1/4.
ROY ROGERS
IN
. - U , e
EVERS’
DEPE
uarbSare
I
Mistol, Musterole, Mentholatum, and many other.chest
robs and nose drops. Also cold capsules, cough syrup,
Pine, Creomulsion and Pine Tar and Honey, Cold
Serum, Vitamins. If your cold continues, see your
doctor. Phone 188. '
■ I
OURB Year RUPTURE
l^wra “’I*- —'— “
cooked with steam in our
WASHATERIA
cuts ironing half into.
35c per hour
Free parking... Phone 31
East Side Tailors
worth
fighting
I for!
gr
NEW YORK FUTURES
NEW YORK, Oct. 1— (API —
Cotton futures closed 15 to 35 cents
a bale lower.
High Lajw
, 18 06 17 96 17.96'
1841 18.23 18.23—24
-- 1833N
1865 1847 18.47—48
1878 18.60 1860
18 91) 18 77 18 71N
Middling spot 19 62N
i “ICELAND” -
............... ............... tor/:i
of the
F-'.> -
W H Madewvll
H. M MtlU
Mr, M B Mowly
W B Peters
U J Ramaey
Wilburn Yarbrough. Ponder
J. R Cade. Juatln
Onetar Hardy. Krum
Con Clement. Krum
Mn Fred Walter*. Lewiaville
W H. Oeorge, Irving
Mrs. John Rochelle
CALL 1133 OR 1153 FOR GROCERIES ANDV
FRESH MEATS
HELPY SELFY GROCERY
(By Associated Press!
The reported number of Western
Atlantic sinkings since Pearl Har-
bor stood at 481 today, according to
an Associated Press tabulation, fol-
lowing Navy announcement yester-
day of the sinking of two more
merchant ships in the Atlantic with
the loss of at least 73 seamen
BACKACHE,
LEG PAIHS MAY
BE DANGER SIGN
Of Tired Kidneys
If backirhe and leg pains ars making you
misarable, don't just complain and do nothing
about them. Nature may be warning you that
your kidneys need attention.
The kidneys are Nature's chief way of taking
excess acids and pmaonoua waste out of the
blood. They help most people pees about 3
pinto a day.
If the 1& miles of kidnoy tubes and filters
don't work well, poisonous waste matter stays
in the blood. These nomons may start nagging
backaches, rheumatic pains, leg pains, lose
pep and energy, getting up nights, swelling,
puffinees under the eyes, headaches and disst-
noaa. Frequent or scanty passages with smart-
ing and burning aometimes show ■ there is some-
thing wrong with your kidneys or bladder.
’Don't wait! Ask v<>ur druggist for Doan's
Fills, used suerraafuDy by miDaons fur <
years. They give bappy rebef and wi
the 15 miles of kidney tubes flush out j
oue waste from the blood. Get
Keep Your Appliances in Good Order I
There is no “shortage” of old electrical appliances ||
. . . but there is a “shortage” of time for doing all the I
things you want to do to help win the war! Keep y-->ur I
appliances in working order sc tney can keep right on I
saving time for you right now when time is so impor- I
i Call your electrical dealer promptly when your I
appliances need repairs. . 1<
City of Denton Water and Light Dept.
S1.25 .
Bring ub your ear and let
our experienced employes ser-
vice it for you.
J ----- -
A Poromaufit Picfwa with
BRIAHDONIEVY
MACDONALD AOttlU
CAREY * PRESTON
'AND •
Albert, Dekker • William Beodix
Walter Abel''
**5**»ta»-/
-ft the tofw*/
For Belter Cleanlnf and Pre»-
in(, call American Cleanfra A Dy-
etv. Tel. 260.
■
■
■
■to
temrato! Love Italy, Hate
Enemy-MuMolini..
HOME (From Italian Broadoasta)
Oct. 1—VPj-Promler Muaaolini told
Italian Blackahlrt battalions today
that “to love Italy more than any-,
thing else and to hate her enemies
more than anything else” was the
watchword for the 20th annivers-
ary of the foundation of the PMclst
movement.
The occasion of his address was
the first anniversary of the found-
ing of the Blackshirt battalions. He
distributed decorations to members
cited for bravery and reviewed
some units newly assigned to front-
line duty.
h '
I
R
I
I .
He Todv Only He
■ PK'~~ -----
fe b
r ■ ■ *
SOMEWHERE IN NEV GUINEA,
Sept. 30.—(Delayed!—(A5— Ameri-
can pilots led by Capt-J H Smith
of Fort Wayne, Ind., cruised up and
down the Japanese supply track
through the Owen Stanley Moun-
tains today, blasting and machine-
gunning every thing that looked
useful to the enemy.
The regularity of these expedi-
tions has given rise to a slogan
among the men: "Bomb every hour
on the hour”
Flying with Smith in the first
wave of medium bombers were
Lieut. Francis Pruitt of Baton
Rolige. la., and Finlay MacOllllv-
ray of Santa Fe. N M
Although belittling their slash-
ing exploits., these pilots conceded
that flying over the two mile high
mountains and then dipping down
through cloud-filled valleys, over
the Japanese supply trail, was “not
really aa easy."
KUMPHRIV
□k fiOGRRT
B BIG SHOT
(iiou'7 (.unipbell Co.
/ (OMPitTI INSURANCE SERVICi
<4
lU&AuUn.
SERVICf
i
a
CHICAGO POULTRY
CHICAGO, Oct 1—(AP>—Poul-
I try live, 5 trucks hens, over 5 lbs.
CO-OP SERVICE
STATION
210 E. McKinney
//”■ ‘
* '
[•
layinSmash
DAIRY
COOPERATI
■
[ ' x • ■ *"
.....
ON OUR STAGE IN
J PERSON
ROUI^JCE
When Johnnie Comes Marching Home
When that tiay dawns, and it is the constant prayer of
j every jierson that it be as soon as possible, our fight-
ing sons will find that the banks, like other American
institutions that symlmlize peace, opportunity and
democracy, will lie performing a full measure of that
service on which rests so much of the sound economy
I necessary for the post-war advancement of the peoples
i of this and all other countries.
CHICAGO PRODUCE
CHICAGO, Oct 1—(API—But-
ter. receipts 420 728; firm; prices as
quoted by the Chicago Price Cur-
rent; creamery 89 score 43 1/2, 88,
43 1'4; other prices unchanged.
Eggs, receipts 6,731; firm; mar-
ket unchanged
Government graded eggs, white
extras, loose 52: carton 54
■ I '
cxAitua xx, riLirxiliac ajaaix nxica x
Southern Railway Preferred which -
reached best levels since 1937
Among others in the “new high"
division fof 1942 or longer were
Southern Pacific, Union Pacific,
Gulf Mobile & Ohio Preferred.
Goodrich. U. 8. Rubber. Pan Amer-
ican Airways and Eastern Air
Lines.
Support was given American
Airlines, Douglas Aircraft, U. 8.
Steel, Bethlehem. Chrysler, General
Motors. Kennecott, Sears Roebuck.
Boeing. Southern Railway Common,
Great Northern, N. Y Central and
Allied Chemical
Secondary carrier loans were in
front of the bond section. At Chi-
cago wheat was unchanged to up
1 4 of a cent a bushel and corn
unchanged to up 1 2 Cotton, in
late trades, was 20 to 35 cents a
bale Improved.
A kind-hearted citizen is 72-year-
old Julius Lotfenbein of Asheville,
N C-. who spends all of each Bun-
day, 52 times a year, visiting pa-
tients in the city's hospitals—and
bringing along modest gifts for
them. He has dropped in on as
many as 150 in a single Sabbath
Eighty-eight per cent of all
American truck operators own only
one vehicle.
FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH. Oct 1— (API —
All classes of cattle • ruled steady
today but calves were weak to 25c
lower
Hogs sold steady to packers at a
top of 14 75
( Slaughter ewes were weak. Good
I to choice fed yearlings ranged from
j 13.25-14 65; one load of steer year-
I lings at 13.50..and one load of hei-
’ fers at 13.25 Good beef cows held
i at 9.50-10.25; good to choice fat
calves ranged from 11.25-12.50 with
common to medium butcher Calves
at 850-11.00.
In the hog yards mast of the
good and choice 180-300 lb. butch-
er8 cashed at 14 75 with good and
■SC choice l80’3®0 lb butchers cashed
tadMlM at wlth 8<xxt and choice 150-
aarunmaluL H175 lb averages at 14.25-65
Sales in the sheep yards included
medium grade spring lambs at 12 -
80; cull and common to medium
grade ewes at 450-5.00 with good
ewes scarce Several decks of.spring
lambs were due to arrive late by
NEW ORLEANS FUTURES
NEW ORLEANS. Oct. 1— (API —
Trading was mixed In cotton fu- |
tures here today with hedge selling |
trade buying. The market closed
steady 5 to 8 points net lower
High Low Close
18 30 1820 18 17B
18 60 18 45 18 45—46
---- ---- 18 .51B
18 85 18 67 18 67—68
1887 1879 1879
1895 1895 18.89B
--- —- 19 07B
to . . .
J
TEMPLE
LUMRER COMPANY
Standard Building
. MatarU.
“therrt a MATERIAL
I difference”
■' - * > : ‘ /a *
----- “ Ph. 170
TEXAS SPOTS
DALLAS. Oct 1— (API—Spot
cotton, 18.63 Galveston, 18.43;
Houston, 18.45
YMM^NMing Close to the capital.
Znatead they are piled toga, to
be used aa fuel against the cold of
the coming winter.
__________ ’ * ••
LOklCLE. THURSDAY, OCTOBK* X IMt
DAILY MARKET (NOTATIONS
Leading Stocks J
NEW YORK. Oct. 1.—(AP)—
Bales, closing price and net change
of the 18 most active stocks today:
Sou Pac 28.200 18 7/8 Up 1 1/4.
Northern Pac 20100 7 up 6/8.
NY Central 14300 9 3/4 up 6/8.
Atl Coast L 12,700 33 1/4 up 2 7/8.
Atch TAcSF 12.100 61 1/4 up 1 7/8.
Illinois Cent 10.600 8 1/8 up 3/4.
Sou Ry Pf 8.000 38 1/8 up 1 7/8.
Sou Rv 7.900 16 5 8 up 1 1/8.
Pan Am Airw 7,800 20 3 8 up 6/8.
Gt Nor Pf 7,700 24 up 7/8.
Erie RR Ct 7,400 8 7/8 up 1/8.
Aviation Corp 7.000 3 3'8 up 3'8
Penn Rfl 6,400 23 1/8 up 1/2.
Am Radiator 5,700 5 1/8 No
Homestake Mng 4,800 25 up 1/2.
I
a
F
FORT WORTH GRAIN
FORT WORTH. Oct. 1.—(API-
Poor demand for wheat but gotxi
demand for other grain was report-'
ed on the market today.
Wheat No. 1 hard winter, accord-
ing to protein and billing 1.33 1/2-
38 1/2.’fe
Barley No. 2 nom 78-79.
Sorghums No. 2 yellow milo per
100 lbs. nom 1.17-22; No. 2 white
kafir nom 1.19-24.
Com, shelled, No. 2 white 1.15-
17; No 2 yellow 98-99
Oats No. 2 red 62-63
CHICAGO GRAIN REVIEW
CHICAGO. Oct. 1—(API—A
grain market advance based on
senate passage of anti-inflation
legislation which would raise com- |
modlty loans granted by the gov- j
eminent to producers was short-
lived today and late profit taking
reduced or erased the gains
Wheat touched highest prices
since early summer before the re-
action occurred. Late selling was —
blamed partly on uncertainty as to T1
whether higher loan rates for basic j|
crops were mandatory and whether
they will apply to 1942 production.
WALL STREET REVIEW J
NEW YORK. Oct. 1.—(API-
Bullish travelers bought one-way
tickets on the rails In today's stock
market and steam-road Issues, on
average, speeded up to new high
territory for the year to date.
Buying seeped into air lines and
other selected Industrials, with ac-
tivity expanding on the swing
Transfers for the full proceedings
were in the neighborhood of 600,000
shares.
Prominent advancers included
Santa Fe, Atlantic Coast Line and
, ' I
VMM YM8
5 ...
vimb auu
£
>
L L-’-iJii- ■
gnr ' -------------- '
Moscow Residents
Provide Fuel
■ For Cold Winter
-W—A
' W BRNRY C. CASSIDY
--WOW, Oct lz—(A>-Banl-
oC * new kind are rising in
nets of Moscow.
y are not the steel rails and
rortu which were put up a
against a German ad-
* I
HI Ml Al
MiiailiV Tweto '
>ha toan Vwto
IMNMb mi
__________y ■
Huge wo&ipUea are being ataedt- to stacked in front of the
ad in toe streets and squares by * “ - * —
workere-mostly women- who are
busy on the capital's “labor front”
They are none tod early; already
there U frost In the night air and
winter soon will be on the city.
The labor front was recruited uw-
der a decree last Feb 13 authoriz-
ing toe government to mobilize
able-bodied men and women, with
no children less than eight years
old for war industry services.
These Include supplying fuel.
Another Kremlin edict last April
17 called up man between toe ages
of 14 and 58 and women from 14 to
50 for farm work. Thousands more
were mobilized to cut and haul
wood.
As a result there was a tremend-
ous exodus to the country of city
residents carrying knapsacks, saws
and axes.
Tn forests for 200 miles about
Moscow these recruits were assign-
ed to cut two cubic meters of wood
a day during the periods of mobili-
zation, running up to four months
A cord of wood is 3.6 cubic meters.
Although perhaps 100,000 house-
wives, students and others not en-
gaged In war work joined the labor
front.
Street cars, busses and trucks
carried logs through the city to
the growing piles. One of the larg-
est of these, more than 50 feet long.
I., -a
. Starts FRIDAY
I A Screen Epic of Danger
z I Mid cminwe Be,<md
< Han SCHENCK'S
HBEYOND
A I™
NEW ORLEANS SPOTS
NEW ORLEANS. Oct. 1.—(API—
| Spot cotton closed steady 4 points
I lower Sales 8,478 Low middling
15 36, middling 18 61, good middling
I 19 06, receipts none, stock 154.276
ECONOMY AUTO STORES, INC. I
114 E. Hickory SL Phone 17?5 J
—- _
IKMflEM^EatoRf(toiHBMMPftBA - . <».■.>jKsjjtoa.'
* i
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Edwards, Robert J. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 1, 1942, newspaper, October 1, 1942; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1312805/m1/6/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.