Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 209, Ed. 1 Monday, April 15, 1929 Page: 4 of 8
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I Helen's f a tl
Kight colore
he jar screi
[here was a
which was i
lord, for atrln
I Helen was
lound the g
[on to screw
Although the
whole concen
me utmost t
hnsers. It wa
k few of the
ling sonic or
rhalr and sc
»<»■
I Her father
□nee or twia
•ou Id show 1
□cads, but si
Finally, aae o
nellying with
onger.
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E PJEBSJ
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HNSON
WALTER
re
Li
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re<
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IOAN
an
19 86
10 43
100
Sales
in as
fall
Annual Southwestern
Musical Festival
be
I
■ '
Lazzeri and
Tony
■ • < .
1«.
SPEAKING OF SPORTS
11 50.
<1114 (GO
a -
can
July 1 26
ccnvineed
May 50
July 48
1 -8
you
Round About Town
W.lson,
(
SAFE
IN
Hearquarters
I
entered
this | ornament Monday
-t
Fiesta San Jacinto
BOV
TANK
cult wallop.
And
I.'.
WHS
-1
I
April 22-J7.
I
40-inch Printed and
Tickets on sale AfirH
4
Plain Georgette
■ -
$1.69 Yard
■I'
■tom
1 ’’O -
.H.
0
»; a
_> jj
j
Grid Game With
T. C. U. Next Fall
King Radio Shop
Phone 851.
For radio set, parts, batter-
ies and tubes.
i
Atwater Kent and R. C.
A. Radiolas.
I have seen
grow from practically nothin*;
the present attractive city."
15- Market I
inches tall and weight 165 pounds,
; He bats and throws right handed
i His home is at Lake City, Fla.
1 o 62
10 61
10 51
76
S4
TWO HURT IN
RAIL WRECK
are behind him, waiting to make
but what dexs
J J. Rieger
Dry Goods Co.
r t r< i.:;t' i.
< 'n . ter.
■4 ejte r
k Joni
Jut »->•/.
i 'a ted
' th the
i
Battle of Flowers
SAN ANTONIO
c hftOl
I .,t>
Italy
Germany
19 83
10 93
.1979
ibs&
middling
< Ol TON
15—Market
In the <
keystone
I
ball
lx • n
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With
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nis putter
■ figures out his score,
ROUND 19th lo 24th inci.M.JMr
TRIP
19 72B
19 763
19 75
19 83—
19 66
19 73
19 52
I (IKK
April
steadv
20 01
20 12
20 60
20 01
19 99
20 04
mldi’.'ng 20 60
L NEW OKLEAXN COTTON
NEW ORLEANS. April
closed steady.
JTatiery
March
Mat
July
October
Paaaiar . .
Spots steady.
■ ’.’ws*
i
ington
I club without
By JAY R. VESSELS
NEW YORK. April 15 ''nil*
Vi£j
agamth
I mi ted
at the
their
thud ai’d i.i.oit
giving Huggins
anot her big
• i
'.V
the Mbt b-
is baf)(j fWiit h
' I
r.....• <1
]
. -..X
i ZfJ
JU
IF*! ----—
E i Will Pay Cash
good used
‘ Si
oBniWitiii
19 84 T
19 95T
20 46 47
19 86 88
19 84T
19 87T
■
BRIDGE AND 42 BENEFIT
‘ ifternoon and
ight. American Legion Hall. Tick-
ir 164 Miss
209
new outfield strength, buying Por-
ter and rtverill from the minora
F
Throw and Then Duck! '
i know what the big
stiff of a Huth did?" Demp-
the details. "He
He was trying to
I ■ J !
Bl
I!
Ir .
rm 3,35
1 75 per bbl Maine
bbl: Bermuda 4 00.. 5 00
Butter nmi, receipt* 4 300
extra* 45
«. 46,1-2
2’. 448. nearbv white
state whites 27 .. 34:
li
Ia
cos'll
MflRkfcJX 1
■■■■■■8k 1
W
Jrj
; jl
* some
(J.CTravdrtMa
1 Phon. 1067. •
■
on I looked for fn vain last year.
1 -b- • ri .......7'
• Eagles - Schedule •
Grid Game With
» opened irregular:
fno 4 85 1-8 France
I 7-8. Belgium
2370
1)1 W
town April 15-20
State Dental Swicty meeting
Beaumon.
I3J
]
I
' ' Jfr 1
STUFFY
SENATORS
■-■w W
turn limit to reach start-
ing point prior to rftid-
night, April 29th.
■ *' Jr
kSg'. 2
naaaiama ii —a
RRfc.—
■c
BL ■ •
!
J
J? r «
I®
o*
ii
1
F ■ -'i
I I
A -P
Vf
- The rest of the field in the Amer-
ican T ai’iic represents a wide va-
riety ol changes over last year,
with the exception of the Athletics
aqd Browns. Connie Mack has the
sapu squad that rallied brilliantly
to crowd the Yankees m the clos-
ing days of the 1928 race, and Dan
Hawley plans to use hU 1928 line-
up unless cne of a pair of rookie
third bast men beat Frank O'Rourke
lire third base post.
Th r- has been much more ac-
tivity m the way of trades and pur-
ch^s at Washington, Boston. Chi-
cago. Cleveland aifd petroit. Wash-
|ngi< n has a new manager in Wal-
ter Johnson, new third baseman
iir Luddy Mvbr ahd also has Stuffy
If wart, iorniBrly of Birmingham.
I econd' bfixo to replace Bucky
Igts. I ■
ppy^j^d j^‘as coq^ytrated
FRANK GfiTTY
BESPEAKS NEED
FOR BEAUTY IN
AIRPORT DESIGN
c
T'JUEiX
k’
^Mfl B
I
•t, |1.5d‘
w.,1.00. -
2 1-2 lb. packages for 25c.
Turner & Evans
Phon* 27 OF 12Tt*'“
jtjp'-
Jl
I -■.
F
iA ■
•'W
? 5^-
BY flARVEY WILEY CORBETT
Copyright. 1929 by United Press
NEY YORK. April 15—With 1,-
000 American communities plan-
ning to build airports within the
next yeai al a cost of $200,000,000,
too much emphasis cannot be plac-
ed on the intelligent planning of
these gateways to the modern city.
Tremendous sums of money and
much valuable time may be wasted
by these communities unless their
airports are designed with a view
to future as well as to present
needs, and combine beauty with
utility Jus' as civic pride rebelled
again<t*the ugly railroad stations
of a generation ago. so will it con-
demn unsightly air terminals that
have been haphazardly constructed
at a maximum of speed and a min-
imum of intelligent forethought.
Three pitfalls lace the communi-
ties that propses to build airports.
They are unwise choice of sites,
inadequate area and faulty location
of structures in their relation to the
effective landing spac". These prob-
lems require lor solut.on a great
deal more than local pride and en-
thusiasm. they are absolutely d3-
pendent upon technical skill
Prixe Contest Offers $10,003
There is grave doubt that even
one per cent of these towns and
cities appreciate the necessity for
expert guidance in the three factors
which distinguish an airport from a
mere Hying field Even where there
Is appreciation of these factors,
there is scant knowled ,e as to where
to turn for the essential leader-
Birmingham I sllJh
It is because cf this acute sit-
uation in the development of av a- !
tloii as a successful part of Aremi-
ca's great traffic system that the
Lehigh Airports Completion, which
I have the honor to serve as chair-
man, has been organized. For the
I. 3*
llr ■ « iff! ..
ter
The White Sox are counting on
Autrey, a young catcher obtained
from Cleveland in the Kamm deal,
for needed reserve strength behind
the bat, and have two recruit*—
Johnny Kerr and Art 8htres--at
second and first respectively
Boston, which received five-
Washington players for Buddy
Myer, has these and oth*r new
men to look to for help Bigelow,
w1k> batted around .400 for Birm-
ingham in the Southern league,
has been showing promlxe both at
bat and afield and may supply that
old punch which Bill Carrigan
j
A
in
al- I
I pcrlmcnttnc with
his infi'Jd the
clu‘ s
> 1.1 Mark I.
i r
' ■ ’"tx-' *
/ z ’ * f
fa.
ture into aviation holds i
that important progress will
made toward establishing princi-
ples ot airpoi' design adapted o
American conditions of climate and
travel.
Since the only hope for the re-
mainder of the junior loop teams
is ior the Yankee machine to crack,
some observers also have sought to
,pick on the throwing arms of Sec- J li
““-—min Tony I.a.'j'.erl and
When Bucky Hanis left Wash
Clark Griffith found his
a second baseman.
Griffith always thought well of
Stewart as a second baseman but
had little use for him during Har-
ris' regime Stuffy was up with the
Senators in 1925 and 1927 but each
time he "went back down for lack
| of a place to play.
| Stewart is a fast little man and
I stole 61 bases with 1_________
last year He hit .316
Stuffy Is 32 years old, 5 feet 8
■ky^aafl
' ‘hr i »j • L •
The pleasant expressions in this American Lea guc managerial gallery have no significance. They're
all worried. Miller IIuggfnB is afraid his Yaiikeea w ill succumb to the law of averages and not repeal, and
the other seven pilots arc afraid, th^y won’t
Pitcher Herb Pennock
parts Yet both players
[-
I '' I
NOTICE
H Hawley will be out ot
to attend the
at
209
| their approach shot
' he care?
Walk o!T the green before
mark your card!
Hits type golfer is on of the
most dtsagrreible to be found on
the golf courses today. It indi-
cates him a - a dub who knows no
better or an cxcccHinply thotiglit-
less play ci.
It mus' l>- remembered that the
foursome behind you possibly have
waited siveral minutes for you and
your assf.fiates to putt out If you
stand there on the green and whip
out a score card, fish through sev-
eral pod: t. for a )xncll. end then
count over all your shots, you are
stealing ihetr time and spilling
their pha urc
Wait until you get to the next
tec beferc you mark up the card
You can rt member vour score that
I long A> least, if you cen t, st^p
and daughter"*survive.
good team | his o’d ch:!>
j ager. Many
ash ington
for ba
to : tion's funs this year because Wal-
ter Johnson cne ol
loved of nail players,
in a new role as fiiim-
a tan who ncyi
Pool Tourney’ al
• Legion Tuesday
A pocket billiard tournament be-
twegh teams of the Knights of Pv-
'■*'«« rhe Arthur O MrNTt7k\
Post American Legion, will be lay-
| 'O' the Legion Club House start
' “Y Ing.at 7:30 Tuesday evening
• Li O McCray B E Drake Sam
We$t and S M Richardson Knights
|'L of Pythias, will be paired with Ar-
fa thur Wilktrson. Otis Fowler Mack
jA .PetmrU and Philip Coury, members
r*. of the Legion Post, respectively
xi «
NEW YORK
closed barely
January
March
May
July
October
Decfcjnbcr
Spot* qultt;
'ou
■k-e Hl j n „ -
aey started
leveled at me.
hit that funny iiomc of mine wfth
swings like he used to tine when,
he was a pitcher. It's a good thing
he wound up every time. I had to
block moat of them with my fore-
arm. And look at 'em’."
The great Dempsey's forearms
■were blue and swollen.
"I wish I knew something nbotit
that Babe's racket. I wonder if
he'd let *me pitch to 1ilm with
bricks instead of baseball," Demp-
4 ...... ♦. » ________________
Cold in Them Thar Elephants
■]VTR. ED STRANGLER LEWIS Is
1 no longer the world's heavy-
weight wrestling champion, but
tils life as a former champion isn't
so nard to take.
In a burst cf confidence recent-
ly. Lewis related that since he
—...J
8~pt 1 29 1-2
Corn May 94 5-8; July 97
Sept 1-8
Os U
Sept 45
Fight •hundred new chairs and
brioches hate been placed in the
City Park They are constructed of
metal frame with wood flats and
backs, painted green, and add
much to the convenience and at-
tractiveness of the park One hun-
dred of the benches are eight feet
lonfc. Most of the seats will be plac- |
cd around the Band Shell, so as to
provide for the large crowds which
will attend fix' summer concerts
Chairs, however, are placed in dif-
ferent places over the park
I 7
'iz
lena m£BURNE
$750 STOLEN FROM
HOUSTON
HOUSTON. April 15 Burglars
got $750 In money and checks from
a safe in the Sears-Roebuck Co
store here, it was discovered today.
The safe was opened by the use of
explosives. The burglary occurred
some time between yesterday noon
and tnis morning.
H.i< k
401) ri.i11; and ; cognizante of tl'.c season’s pjx'l
combined | and will tluow oul t“ *
....... SU'diuni.
the
m
with engineers, city planners and 1
aeronautic experts and have pooled |
their knowledge and experience in
a common effort to find practical
r ilulions of the airport problem of I
Cubs Given Big
Hand in Chicago
By BERT DEMBY
(Cniled Pre s Staff ( or -spondent) [
< TllCAGO, April 15 —The Chi-
cago Cubs, with their big artillery
of Hornsby. Wilson. Cyler and I
Stephen nn, <ame home today to | generally debited to the taming
ail ’'731 h I 1 U-ia K1 i/‘ r«'Z«r»»v» 3/-.VX $>.. i *,1 ... ‘'T' . .. .. .
a landom w hich h> <1 visions of the I
' city's flr.it national league pennant i
| since 191
• 8 pig!
TycKiNPAVcff BOCKY HARRIS
< >Hjyl *J j . <
*P« PRODVCE
T Poultry: Hens 30c to 23c per lb.;
(kyat* 30c to 4Oc per lb.; old rooster*
■e to #c per lb.; turkey* 13c to 33c
to lb ; duck* 10c per ib; egg* 31c
per doc.; table butter 25c to 35c per
lb . packing stock butter 30c per lb.;
cream 42c to 47c.
Lit F *1*001. COTTOX
1 IVERPOOI. April 15 Market op-
<ii»4i quiet 4 to 6 higher; closed quiet
4 to 8 higher
Jaitoary
Maith
Mat
Juil
October
Dcetoxbci
Spots steady,
”B*i.cb;.l'. Here. Tomorrow."
This is the day <,I thelyrar quin
! Ol
?.^hUS\aK\\G.rr.Ce?^":.5lv5.n.^y ! ftlibtt’aiMl to'topsuitaUons with the
weather man.
T' o ma (or league pennant race;
of more than ordinary interest
corunenc? tomorrow Many a fan
will rest uneasy tonight lest his ex
! ctisc to the boss prove unacceptab!
er t.ie w ather unpropitious. Thri'
i is nothing quite as sad as having i1
w as the ! ruin on I hr dav set. aside for a
grandmother s funeral, followed l>\
a w ■( k of perfect baseball weather
Ev< n President Hoover t.akbv/
IHUg
the ftYst. ball
where the
Athleiiwn • will
TSI.W"
>r< fmi«h-
' cd will hnve a soft ‘|x>t, in Ills Jicart
for the club this season, for Wal-
ter'; sake There will be a touch of
drama in the moment when the old
pitcher goes to the box himself
Make 1 some day, as he threatens to do,
The Babe
greater
■ 'v»yi making his presence felt.
Now "The Rajah'' is with a club
; Ito generally picket! to win the
l> nnant. rhere is great offensive
■ wer in this Chicago outfit. It re-
| u.aim to be seen wrteflier Hornsby
i ' an fit smoothly inti flag-winning
of • < ombinaUon.
c >
Agai^ Train Guns on Y;
tT'
-
DIO YOU KNOW THAT—
OLCKY HARRIB hai given
the Detroit Tigers'two
cots of signs . . , one for
Rending and one for receiv-
ing. ... And when the
«lgn goes for the hit and
run the play won't go unleu
the runner sigmi back that
he has ft. . . . The Bucky
apparently has another sign
for use off the field. . . .
It’s the thumb toward the
gate . . . like the umpires
use . . . and it meana-*-
"Waivers on you. big boy!"
. . . Jimmy McLarnln
wants to fight at 150 pounds
from now on—until he
weighs 170. . . . Shaute
and Fouseca, two awell
warblers of the Cleveland
Indians, were singing at a
dinner in New Orleans. . . .
Alva Bradley, the big dough
guy president <rf the club,
was there. . . . And they
looked at Alva . . . and
sang . , . "We ll Get By as
Long as We Have You."
. . . When Shires had to go
home ... he went to Italy
. . . which is also the name
of a spot in Texas.
'•—V.... .V ...«SCr25'
' A' leai.t,
awny f;,,i i the green and allow the
ones behind you to play up.
DROWNS IN
RANCH
AUSTIN. April 15-James
Cyo. eight years old. who
drowned in a tank on the Gracey
ranch, will be buried here Tuesday.
The tomily moved to the ranch re-
cently from Houston.
Benrgi x* ittrrm,
Th® Babe Is No Faker
TAUK DEMPSEY and Babe Ruth
•c were invited to put on. a
eparring match as the big feature
of a society charity show in Palm
Beach the week before the Shar-
key-Strlhiing fight.
Dempsey, or course. Was tn
^Haml Beach promoting Hie big
fight and the Babe was In St.
Petersburg with the advance
squad of the New York Yankees.
The Babe came io Miami Beach
accompanied by Marshall Hunt, a
New York newspaperman who has
traveled more miles with him than
Regis Which, a Pittsburgh scribe,
did with Hprry Greb.
"You'd better go with uh over
to,Palm Beach," Hunt suggested
to me. "There's going to be some
fuu there. The Babe Is going to
level at Dempsey. You know the
Babe always lias thought l;e could
have been the heavyweight cham-
pion if lie hadn’t gone into base-
ball In a big way."
We didn't go to Palm Beach
with the Battling Rabe and his
trainer. Mr. Hunt. And we had to
■watt tiutfl DempNcy returned the
next morning to get the detclls.
Ire
It' tr
Impossible to keep Gra-
ham Flour in sacks. We
have^the Sterilized Whole,
Wheat Graham, Flour in
troit, with Bucky Harris at the
helm, lias a rookie, Dale Alexander,
at first, Roy Johnson, another first-
year man in the outfield, and a
makeshift keystone arrangement
that may finally draw Harris into
service as player-manager.
•‘I’ve been taking the Record-
Chronicle regularly for over 30
years." said Chas Killer Monday
in renewing his shbscription tor
another year. "I came to Denton ,
County in 1896. moved to Denton in 1
1897. married tha year and sub- |
scribed to the Record-Chronicle,
then published weekly, and have
been subscribing ever since Tiiat
wax six years before the aDily was
established 1 have seen Denton
to
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
YORK. April 15—Foreign ex- |
nn.»»d irrMoiiiar- Demand i
0390 3-8: !
1388 1-4
NEW YORK.
muii, lias Keen urguniZAiu. roc uie ■ • ■ *- F-~r
ifiat Um# since aviation arenmed ] same, old target will be -in .poHitien then wings to ready for duty
importance, architects have joined I ready for the heavy flr.ng when
the American League season opens
April 16.
In other words, tire Yankees ap-
I parently arc the team the rest of
the junior loop clubs will hgve to
shoot at again this year
When Miller Huggirre began cx-
, th? lei t sK'e of
remainder o' the
had new hooes for a bre.rft
nig an! Leo Diuouv-4-M>l of
lo have r, usterec!
led by the type of provision ne v (xmeons at
ior airports. In view of this j respectively, thus
perfect rating for
OUR LOCAL "‘KATY” AGENT
.X '
DADI.I AS. April 15 Two |wr-
sons were in lured slightly when I tie
Foit Wottli Limited interurban No.
29 split a switch at Grund Prairie
Sum’ay afternoon and crashed In-
to a t< lepto’ne )x>!e
Tire- i> pa,, sent. thp |x,le flying
the cabin of the Dallas
No 30 which was waiting
witch, riomg considerable
damag t , the front section of the
ch r
,.W.—M VteXaKMIwa. -<*-—l.Buliuuau.
whs shgi.tly bruised and a pa.saen-
gi r i;tf< red a cut lip.
Spum’d by the great exhibition
'Jiowm.; <>f the Cui); the tsnis were
that Manager Joe Mc-
Carthy and In team, strengthened
by ’the addition of Rogers Hornsby, [
can battle their way to the top
Another on'unistic pom'
manner m which Hack
een'.cr-li 'drr. lias ben hitting the j
’.IV sj'r:n': game' Hack has J
well abeve tlic
hit; mi; re
that "I t'u.ler, . lepheiison
and Hornsby, gives l lie ( ubs one of
the greatest wre'kmg oii-vi.
game. Facing the.-c four in
ir> a task no pitcher will relish.
This .iprini' the Cubs won
games, lo; I live and tied one,
date, t!i"v have shown hitting, I
fielding pitching. base-ruiming 1
and everything else a g...-u !
needs. I
McCarthy lias worried for a time j a whoop where the Senatoi
‘7
I
If
. . It V "• o’ * >44«<C' S*'
I » in—>< 1 .in*.'..
WWW'
I ugo uui uiuk uir.Tii i u.can
I may not start right in tomorrow >
afternoon with his first official dr-1
| cult wallop.
The succors of the entire seaxbrl
Me- j depenkis in some measure upon j
how Ruth pprtomis. Xhc^gaine will I
be spoiled for many fans if he falls
down
On the other band, if the Babe
were definite]^ eliminated from the
scene, the American League pen-
Bug Time Is Here
College of Industrial Arts
Friday, Saturday, Sunday
April 19, 20 and 21_______
nant race would take on new intcr-
< st. At least seven ball clubs in the
Iriteue would have a chance to win
more games with Ruth out of the
■ ay.
Since Lie Yankees once more arc
'gical pennant choices, this would
mean a better race
but belter the Babe than a better
i >ce. say most of the fans, who
riiow wLat they like.
as weak
declare
rav'-\
I
I !
at ("frill it h
Seireli-rs and
ire. t
The op-'iimz of the
league ixmnant race at W;
26 ' lias unusual in'erest
The Teachers College Eagles next,
fall will take on T.C.U. Homed
| Frogs us a third Southwest Confer-
ence opponent in football. Theron
J. Fouts, physical education direc-
tor at tiie college announced Mon-
day.
The game will be played early in
November
Thk; contest will iound out the
Eagles 'schedule which includes
games with Southern Methodist
University and Baylor University.
10 47
10 50
10 64
10 61
10 49
10 47
demand
ft.OOpr American 3 800 Middling 10 85
FORT WORTH LB E NTO( K
FORT WORTH. April 15 —Fat cat-
tle and atockers sold on a generally i
steady market Monday. Receipts were !
5 700 cattle. 1,200 calves
Vglth 2 500 offered the hog market j
wks' atc*dy 10 16 cents lower
lt>e sheep receipt* were fairly lib-
eral about 6 200 arrlvzd. The mar-
ket ' wa* steady
Cattle! Beeves 9.50 to 13 50. cow*
7 to 9 50, Stocker cows 7.25 to 9 25;
calves 8A0 to 13 50: 8<*0_to
12 8b: cutters 6 to 6 50;"Hfflfris TT®
to $ 75; yearlings 9 50 to 14.25. bulls
7 to 8
1 to gs
10 2$
10AP
Sheep Lamb* 15 to
12 5(1 to 14.50. wethers 10 to
goat* 3 to 5
in In .
a row
I
♦ ' 1" ■■' |« ■■ • ■ I
was butted out of (he title by Gue
Bonnenberg, the former Dart-
mouth football player, he has been
through the busiest period of his
career.
Lewis has been wrestling her®
and there all over the country on
average of six times a week
and the law forced him (o keep
<IHiet on (he Sabbath.
He never works for less than
$1500 a night. Sometimes for a
lot more. And six ittghts a week
tor his minimum rate ot pay Is1
worth $9000 a week and he had
been making that average week-
ly salary foi* two months.
When Der Gus won the title
from the Strangler he (old his
folks that he was going to do a
Tunney. And that when he got his
second million he would quit the
racket.
H.lr&CL ..iJij.. .
t lie
dene
Guy usl. allowed the
singles in six innings
Cvengros. who corr.es
big league chance, entered the j Of even greater interest,
game in ; he seventh and struck out course, will be the opening perfor-
tlie side The Cubs won 3-0 | mai.ee of Babe Ruth.
Much has been written t*"'”
spring about the possibility that the |
mighty slugger is slipping, that his > . is 50c. Phone 102
legs will not carry him through: l,‘-nsa Skiles
anothr season, and that his batting, j *■—AY. , ■ ... ■
eye is dimmed ' r ■ .....
It is a fact that the Babe did (
not get around to hitting his first i
MILLER
XE« 3OKK I’ROIH « I
NEW YORK Apfti 15 - Produce
flour quiet and steady: spring pat-
ent* 8 10 .. 6 50 per bbl Pork quiet,
me** 32 50 per bbl Lard dull mid-
dle west spot 12 35... 12 45 jrer bbl |
Tallow quirt, sper lHl to extra 8 1-4 j
8 3 8 per lb Petroleum steady.
New York refined 15 per gal Penn-
sylvania crude 3 85 <<4 10 per, gal .
Turp< none 53 >.< 54 per gal Hides
(common i quiet. Bogota blank, :
Central America 23 per lb : t'ucutaa I
29 Orinoco* 23 1-2, Maracaibo* 22 J
Hides . tcity packer) dull native ;
stSers 15 per lb ; butt brands 14 per !
lb. Colorado* 13 1-2 per ib Potatoes .
steady. Long Island I 25<<2 25 per
bbl , Jersey 65 85 per basket; aoutii- I ’
““luiBSO per bbl : state 1 80 < .
r bbl . Maine 1 75 .2.25 ]>er
'rmuda 4 00 .<500 per bbl I
creamery I
1-4 special market 45 3-4
Eggs market firm, receipts 1
fancy 35 <36.
tresh firsts 27<..
28, Pacific Coast* 28 <37. white wes-
terns 29 <31. nearby browns 28 • 35. i
cur towns and cities.
With tlie jMisting of $10,000
prize money, the competition
ready has attracted more than
architects from coast to coast
There are mt>ny indications that
the commercial development of fly-
ing will be either stimulated or
strang:
mad?
situation, the entrance ot architec- i a
promise j test
By VERNE Wl( KHAM
No place other than within a few
feet of tlie cup would be a satisfac-
tory spot lo tills goat-gette to
write down his score.
He is not content unless he
prop nis putter against his hip
as he figures out his score, as
well as tlie scores of other players
in his party. And he must stand on
j the green. Of course, other players
1 ex FwsFs re A V* 1 >«<a >.
about the pitchin;: but in flic past
two week, file pitchers have turned
vony into optimism, as evi-
at /Kansas City yesterday.
Blues two
and
fcr another (
t he I
4
; . ■ - 4$
■ I
“J
[_____________ -fl
Henri Verbrugghen, Conductor
Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra
Opens Festival Friday, April 19th
Matinee and Night.
The standard of performance by the Minneapolis Symphony Orcheatr*
was we venture to aav. the highest so far attained in any orchestral con-
cert thia season, and here we do not except even the visit of the Boston
Orchestra—Pittsburgh "Gazette-Times "
The orchestra has technical brilliancy, finish of style, rhythmic •cc'‘*
racy and finely adjusted .tone and dynamics Other outstanding feature*
I were their freedom and fire, Intensely exhilarating in effect.—New York
I "American". ; .. «.•_ .jto ‘
A brilliant Orchestra under the direction of a man with ideas and tne
'skill to make them effective —Chicago "Bvenlng Poet". jt,
| Verbrugahen. in short, ha* placed hlm«elf tn the fropt rank of Bowl
favorite conductor* within one program—Lo* Angeles “KMpree*_, ________
Not many nights at the Bowl have equalled these that Verbrugghen
has made luminous The Orchestra ha* absolutely surrendered to him ann
I revere him as one of the gods of music, and the results are beyond tn*
diction of the ordinary review.—Los Angeles "Herald '.
Others appearing on program:
C. I. A. CHORAL AND COLLEGE CHOIR
CARL VENTH
Famous Texas Composer
Choral Mass in B Minor
DAVID GUION
In Songs and Piano Compositions that have made him in-
ternationally famous.
,, FRANKUf&OiMN
, Famotta OifttiM. i . . ”,1
Purchase Season Tickets at Garrison’s Drug Store or
G. I. A- Prices are as follows: ‘
Admission, Adults
Season Ticket, 12.00 t MMon
Single Admlielon Single Tic!
75c, |1.2S, 50c, 50c '
■
Medium. 10 75 to 11; light
IO 10 75; sow* 9 to 9 50; heavy
to 11; pigs 6 50 to 8 75
feeders'
<.H (IN
CHICAGO. April 15 — Pressure de-
veloped in the wheat market lute to-
day" and futures lost, most of early
gnlfis on report* ol farm relief devel-
opment* Corn was held strong Oats
matte excellent gains Wheat was 1 -8
to ^-Si1 higher; corn was up 12 cents
nud.oat* were 1-4 lo 1 l-8c higher at
the 'close
Wheat May 123.
PIONEER TEXAS LAWYER DIES
SUNDAY
RANGER. April l'> Arthur Ed-
wards Filmin. former district Judge
in Limestone County and a mem-
ber of the Texas Bar for 4 > years, j
died Sunday at his home he re. Fu- |
neral ervices will be held this al- homer of the year until ten days;
ternoon Hrrides^iis wife, two sons ago but that doesn't mean that Me i
I
ON
ColfA-
Uette^s
COPYRIGHT I02Q BY NEA SERVICE INC.
rgi T]
Hornsby and (he Cubs
Just as Babe Ruth is Inevitably
" centei ot attention in the Am-
ncan league, to will the interest of
I ms in .general (after the Home
c tn has Jwoii or lost i focus upon
' e performance of Rogers Horns-
thc stormy [xttrel of the Na-
t <11.11 League.
Hornsby has. been wiili four clubs
)i ar mfffiy'fears, having left St.
I. <uis alter leading tlie Cardinals
iheir first pennant and a world's
iriplonihip In 1928 Then he
orrtuddi . able excitement
Glints in 1927 and while
dropped partly from sight with
! .<• Traves in 1928. he was In there
1 (ding the league In hitting and
Admission
i. 50c, |1.r
i a
>
L- ■
• , ; *<*-■•'■, a -.a*rrn «•
. ______
I
1
All!
• i
F
• C
less tl
' ’ I
.
*
il "va
I
For a
time x
I
and II
j
Mrs. 5
I Dresses, $
buntl. Bai
< Bldg, W.
Corner of
YOOCHI
CLEAR
L If you xt
I complexion b
I i Jk». such xj
I infections, be
I char and attr
I. Go to you
and While Oi
> tag to di rec tie
highly benefit
For best re
• SI in Soap wi
Mint. All de*
Scruggs
GE
» OV1
iv dally exer
Onre <n and
MRS.
BEA
326
1
' New .
'V'
[of Hats a
models, la
right. Ph
Bldg., N.
Colum
Mer
Brollet
Apple
id Lettuce
Butte rmil
Bro
1 pound U.
I Cut tlie
[through so t
p’’ftce them
to "oil six inch
pff any fat
IT im the sau
bx>wn evenly
a fter<n uiinut
la'.ad cook the
If tlie sto
[tore iter, the s
slowly in a p
pouring off
when broilet
this manner
[flavored.
J C PENNEY CO.
Rayon Voile
Printed
Make* lovely afternoon
frock*—inexpensively. Yard
89c
i,
^1
mW
■ irumii—i iminm
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 209, Ed. 1 Monday, April 15, 1929, newspaper, April 15, 1929; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335678/m1/4/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.