Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 243, Ed. 1 Friday, May 24, 1929 Page: 3 of 10
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One 1925 Dodge Roadster
One Chevrolet Sedan
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office has
o’clock.
18 MB
18.81
IBM
1867—60
18 39--40
18.49—81
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hue over American prospect* ; for
1929
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was broken,’’
“It’s the same
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thee* Is championship lawn tennla
The Wimbledon standard usually
demands so much practice on the
best courts that only the leisured
can attain it. The appearance of
a working girl on the center court
thia summer will consequently bo
something of an event.
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crop
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Notes on Concentration
STOCKS **
ay Mir _
today nshecud
Uion and advances
Iona U> more tt™.
the majority of issues. .
. iboirt it f - >
1857T
18.89—70
1950
18.88—87
1654—46
1867—56
I... 1927 Chevrolet Cabriolet
Krape*
1926 Standard Buick Se-
Mfin
&1926 Standard Buick
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ed to please yau
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i hip when she was struck
automobile several weeks
ago. Is reported at the Denton Hm-
We wHU dj kiffds5
of bonds. ? •
W. T, BAILEY
Phone 76.
I Bill Klem. who admits
that he never called one wrong, paratlvely well-todo and one of
Phone 171. ’ ( ‘ We Deliver.
Take Acker’s Black Medicine and Stay Healthy.
'1 *•
♦
To Make
Room
For the New Marquette
the dacta
ner. mere » no np|«urm retwou
why he should not have at least _ .2^/
one more good y«. t ““21 i
fifth green.
, “His concentration
said Mr. Cuacaden.
way in trapshooting. You bust ’em
one target at a time, or you don’t
.’C
■9^
Av.
againn them but I haven’t, found
*ny of them to be nasty. They will
' say * lot of tough things it you
,. ---------- .. ■ ...... . !-—»
Edith Caoss, who Is over there with
Helen Wills, is hot stuff. They
slao have made the surprising dis-
covery that she la a wolking got).
The following 'dippings trpm a
London dally exposes H all*.
“Sport becomes daily more demo-
cratic,'’ the unsigned writer Wrote.
“But there are certain fields which
remain the preserve of the eom-
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| DENT
1 w
Cup Prospects ,,
Are Brightened
-—•
NEW YORK. May 24 —Recent <M-
velopments in the world of tennis
have tended to cast a mote' i'omtfi
MAN HELD FOR SIX-YEAR-OLD
CRIME
JEFFERSON. May 24.—Cuy H.
Needham, wanted for the robbery
of a Jefferson. Texas and Pacific
railroad agent and holdup of a poker
game at Marshall, was held in the
Marion County jail today, according
to Sheriff Tom Taylor. Needham
has been sought by Marshall auth-
orities six years.
Ute City Health Officer is again
“ging war on mosquita larvae All
I the stagnant pools of water are
r ng treated with a covering of oil
i d Dr. F. E. Piner wants any cll-
rn who knows of such a place to
hone him so that it will be taken
ire of.
Healthful
Delicious
r- hi
Tl-t ,TX-...
but ths umplrss know that it Is
• beat and that they don’t mean it.
“Th« worst ■manor I evnr worked
■Pound was Ken Wllllsms. He got
v himaeit In -ths mood where bo
•ought he couldn’t get n close de-
T, oislon I have seen him running
■> first base three big steps behind
the hall and although he knew he
was out by two yards he would
, «art ysUIng—'No! No! No!'—
“a "When he got near the bag.
k-. “He has something to say about
every strike that Is called on him
—- but he has been talking so long the
umpires don't give him a tumble.
one more noon year. . i,.
Critics have not, gone so far aa-tn SP “ ’
predict the failure of France in its rne 100
defense of the Davis Cup this year
but they do agree that a good year
for some of the younger American
stars .including Wilmer Allison, John
Hennessey. George Lott *i .'
Van Ryn would be a warn!
the French to watch out in
Aside from the Davis Cup a-----.
the first important tennis event for
the season will be the national in-
-— .. .. £
lanta and Charleston. and->-can't ,,
remember when he's missed a tar-
0»t M t 'Z 4* 1 jiia J1
tanking ’about h
- c*o.F-
was—|
Broke SOI faryets
In a row and then,*
^Vstrslzi df ’ ’
.about it /
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r By UNITED PRESS
Yestenday'u hero—Clarence Mitch-
ell. St. Louis pitcher, whose effective
»«*» —«■« w
liuwevci. WVU1U wwt, UM. In flu. >h«
ion Is based on the showing of the
No. 1 ranking star of this nation on
the basis of his play in but one
match—a first round doubles affair
jn which he was matched with Hun-
ter.
Hunter, however, showed excellent
form in his match with Tilden and
in the mixed doubles engagement he
played with Helen Wills as hie part-
ner. There is no apparent reason
Have a good
ids at all times.
Auto Polish
Top Finish
, 1 Nickel Polish
Duco No. 7 Touch Up
Black. __
All are made by makers
of Duco Paints.
U. e travelstead
TeL 1057. 216 E. Hickory St.
the summtrJ
supply,on ham!
Duco No* 7
Duco No. y
Duco No.f7
MEN!
YOU CAN! BllV
• 1 .
Razor blades in your bathroom. Better look at that
last package you bought and see how jnany, if any/
you have left. Also, belter see about
soap, cream, lotion ar powder,
Then phone us and we'll send I
lEEDOUaASS
Service Drug Store,
k
1-r-
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'SIWES
Henz3 i>nxnm
•y Ain’t Tough" :~ V
Men Held Here
Wanted in Cooke
1 1 ’ i i , -r . .... —
folk and started in another shoot.
He broke 25 straight at the first
trap. He broke 25 straight at the
second trap. He broke 25 straight at
the third trap. He broke the first
target at the fourth trap. Then the
trap broke denser
While it*^a»'L
Arthur hnd.t^e
stood arotlRW
he overheard
gallery say:
“I was
Cooke County officers came here
Thursday and took the two men ar-
rested Wednesday night by City Of-
ficer Carl Garrett to Gainesville
where they were to appear before
the Cooke County grand jury now
in session. A saddle and a tricycle
found in the automobile the two
men were driving was identified as
having been stolen there.' —•
Among the other articles in the
car were a steel tape and a dress
coat, identified as having been taken
from the automobile of 8 J. Hurt.
214 East Oak Street. Wednesday
night: a tire stolen from the Ben
Sullivan automobile, and sheets,
towels and other articles of laundry
stolen from the line in a home in
West Denton.
After the Cooke County grand Jury
acts on the cases the men will be
.brought back here and charges filed
ag^pst them. Garrett said.
Congress Today
BY UNITED PRESS
SENATE:
Continues debate on secret roll
call and census and reappor-
tionment bill.
Interstate commerce continues
hearings on bill to establish
communications commission.
Manufactures committee to
perfect and vote on resolution
authorizing investigation of tex-
tile labor. .
Military affairs confflMMe
meets on nominations
Privileges and elections com-
mittee continues to -hear final
arguments on contested Vare-
Wilon election.
HOUSE:
Takes up rule to vote on tariff
bill May 2«
' , Offen to D»«M«ey
Every few days, some promoter
bent upon obtaining a bit o( cheap
'publicity offers Jack Dempsey a
fabulous sum to return to the ring.
Sometimes the offer’s are drsssed
up with elaborate trimi ninga and jp-
garded in some circles its front page
news. Sometimes they nn^relegated
to the comic section, where they
are looked upon with no special fa-
vor by their neighbors runong the
time-worn jokes.
The fact that a promoted1 offers to
guarantee the former heavyweight
champion 81,000,000 or less to re-
turn to the ring doesn’t mean that
the promoter has that much money.
Or could get it. Or that Dempsey
a gate, although
only living heavy-
weight who could do so.
When Jack went to Montreal re-
cently. a local promoter telephoned
to ask his ptice for a bout with El-
rear Rioux, a coming Canadian
heavyweight contender.
Dempsey knew there was no ques-
tion of such a match being made,
but just for a'Mfh he replied:
“One million dollars.”
The head lines Claaoned the yam
all over town witljin an hour. And
before Jack reached New York the
following day. be was reported to
have agreed to fight in Chicago for
8500.000 and in Tio Juana for 8800,-
000.
Each time an offer is made, it is
the signal for a flood of others, the
promoters trying to outdo each oth-
er in the magnitude of their bids.
It does no real harm, if one does
not take it seriously. They don’t
say what they propose to use for
money, but what of it?
The Montreal Fight
I Dempsey’s actual Interest in Mon-
treal. Which the ex-champiot) re-
gards as a good place to stage a
heavyweight fight on July 4. is in
finding the most suitable opponents.
If he can decide upon a good
match, which will be popular with
jMcConnell delivers gradu- iNews of the Sick
Ray Hundley is reported to.be im-
proving nicely following an opera-
tion for appendicitis recently at the
lout.
I, ATING ADDRESS
I Dr. W. J. McConnell, dean of the
I. Teachers College, delivered the grad-
1. uatlng address at the Burkburnett -n-
E High School Thursday evening and ©*ntotr Hospital. -
f Friday he was to deliver the gradu- "*“* **
1 ating address at the Chico High
l.tlbpal' .-. . , ,
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...,121-2ci
-—
West Texai Growth
Substantial, Says
Head of Land Bank
LUBBOCK. May 24—H. M. Gos-
sett, president of the Federal Land
Bank of Houston, and 80 representa-
tives of the bank and the National
Farm Loan Association were guests
of Lubbock at a district conference
Thursday. ’*'< U**
The meeting was the1 sixth of a
series of 14 district meetings over
Texas. Today the visitors moved to
Pampa.
Commenting on the growth of
West Texas, Gossett declared that
the growth is not of the "boom tyqe ”
He said it was of the substantial
type that will not result in a slump.
Going to travel? C Fyffe first 248
NOTARYBOND
Let us make your notary
Sam Moans Also
--CAM RICE is another fellow who
thinks thgt he never gets a
XjZll t>reak on a clese decision. He’s an-
other great alibi artlat but he’s
k»ever offeaeive.
J "One of the worst moaners I ever
..worked with wan the late Urban
-Shocker. But the funny thing
aboutjbiai was that he never would
ear a Word. He’d juet walk down
' tward the plate and give you a
“>k and theq look up at the atands
•witli the attitude—What ean a fel
— ' . ............— . • , —— do hi.fi cum like thatf “
American Davii bi ???. *" R°“'
that he
I- this umpire confessed that he has
■tleeed s lot of halls sad strikes.
‘ 'There were two players who sl-
wsya made me feel I was wrong
1 when they kicked on a called
■Strike,'• he aaid. 'They wore Tris
Speaker and Joe Sewell. They
have the greatest eyes In baseball
and I don’t know which one eould
call a bail better. ‘
LZttVTJjU^HE Srt Who'Witt thus
Rn<* they turned eround nnd bb1<i \ I ... «F-iiaiB
Th. Am-rw.n rim Imm that it was outMde or low or high l “
The American Davis Cup team. M(, |h( feeJ,ni thgt they weTe
■ right. I have seen them judge a
ball by an eighth of an Inch and I
it ntrer saw Sewell cut at a bad ball
until thia aeaaon.’*
K
Heavy Penalties
t for Robbing Man
WALTERS. Ok . May 24—Two
Oklahoma desperadoes who “bump-
ed” a Burkburnett. Tex. officer off
the Red River bridge as they were
escaping from the acene of a robbery
today faced long prison terms.
The men, Ervin Hill and Howard
Jeffries, who admitted they slugged,
bound and robbed F. D. Stalford. a
dentist, were sentenced to 25 and 36
years, respectively in the peniten-
tiary,
In their hasty escape in an auto-
mobile they struck Bill Garland.
Burkburnett chief of police, knock-
ing him head-first from the bridge
to Red River quicksand 40 feet be-
low. where feUow officers found
him. his legs waging above the sur-
face/
ious injury, was still confined to the
hospital.
I The Boy Scouts will rule Denton
■u'urday They wiy assume the du-
Hks of the various city employees.
Drim Mayor on thru the list, even to
ibices on the City Plan Commission,
k t the boy Roundabout feels most
lecply for is the one who is to set
s City Health Officer. There is one
Use of pox in Denton and it
nil naturally be the duty of the
Icout Health Officer to visit this
use. It may be that Dr. Piner will
jo with him. however, as it is his
Intention of placing the 8cout-doc-
lor in detention after making the
rll. But such detention. Round-
about, understands, will be only for
I. The first two weeks of va-
don*t mean much to a Uoy, r-
r, as he has been confined
I mly for the past nine months.
I The latest catch of Ira Redding.
I pwernment' wolf trapper for Den-
I tn County, consists of an old fe-
I male and a litter of six pupa, the
I latter only a few weeks old. The
I Batch was made north of Dehton
Inn Milam Creek Reports of the
I1OM of sheep and poultry In that
fjacction to wolves caused Reding to
center his efforts there.
t’ The Western Union Telegraph of-
fice here will remain open each week
diy from 7:45 a. m. until 8 p. m.
'and from • a. m. until 10 a. m. and
jj4 p. m. until 6 p. m. on Sundays,
JR. E. Matthews, operator, announced
Thursday Heretofore the
closed each evening at 8
□ar-
V* •
I . “ ■ • .
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WiBNlCLE, FRIDAY, MAT M, 11 ' ? '
- ► *3
siL
minus those old time stars—Bill Til-
den and Francis Hunter ahtfiH IM
way through the first rouhd Davis
cup matches with Canada to a gres'
straight-match victory and now lod
to the contest with Japan for th
right to enter the finals of the Am
wrtean sone piay. -—...
From Europe comeq the word fibs
Tilden and Hunter have shown a ri
turn to rertr FtTncM’-le
court championship and will kb . |
available for Davis Cup play ahould
the United States tefm emerge vic-1
torious in its zone plsy.
Dispatches from Auteil, where the
French titles a re ’ being deci ded
would have you believe that Tilden
is back in top form
Another glance at those dispatches
being repaired,
rest of the squad
and talked. Then
some man in the
: I was telling Arthur Cuscaden a
IMtle story about concentration in
gulf. Sir Arthur Is a pretty good
golfer; but he is a much better
trapshooter; that is his profession;
and’ when be takes pains, he can
shoot with anybody.
I was telling 84r Arthur of Bobby
Jones’ match with Max Marston at
Flossmoor In the second round of
the national amateur championship
of 1923 Bobby was shooting great
golf. He was 4 up on Max as they
stood on the seventeenth tee of
the morning round. He was think-
ing about nothing at .all, which
sometimes is known in folf con-
centxattng. There was a small
iud< wait on Che fee. AST suddenly
Bobby heard somebody in the gal-
lery say: .
'That kid lias two 4’s for a 88
and a course record.”
Bobby had forgot all about the
card, and what he was scoring. He
was just Shooting golf, 'one hole at
a Ume. He got to thinking about
his score; took a couple of 5's to
finish; loet both holes to Mareton;
and saw Mhx start a great rally in
the afternoon round that ended tn
a Marstonian victory at the thirty-
appreciate youi
PiffKly WWJ
_
....$1.75
--—.
.......... .■liihii—
HO are tire’tartest gvs Wf DID YOU KNOW THAT—
L twhen dar fekwvnir
signed to moot Paulino
ho pyt all these names at the
bottom of the contract . . .
Max Siegfried A«oK JX1O
Frits Hans Schmeltng . . .
No foolin’ ... Wilfred
Rhodes, the Jack Quinn of
British erlcket, has been
playing 28 years , . < And
In that time ho has scored a
total of 37.248 runs and 3H4
wieketo . . . Whatever that
means . . . But it' la obvious-
ly a whole lot . . . Connie
Mack told the fellows In
Cleveland that Charlie Jamlo-
aon, tta Indian outfiaMer,
waa t,he only great ball
player he ever let gat away
from him . . . There used to
be come fellows on the A'a
named Collins. McInnis,
Bush. Pennock, ete. . , '.
And maybe old Mack has
forgotten them? . . . Ofirat-
the American League umpires
told Oaeton. the Boston
catcher, if he didn't quit be-
. Ing nasty the umpires would
run him back to the Associa-
tion . . . It's one of the
world’s greatest acts to see
Dempsey trying to smoke a
ceegar . . . They call Emile
Barnes, (he Washington out-
fielder. ''Lovely” ... Bo*
cause be doesn't look that
He
and broke
then went
Hot Stuff, Eh!
fpHE 'rents experts on the London
1 dfiUioh tavp discovered }hat
tv. * ‘ DI8THJBUTORS ‘
* How About Kitty McKano?
i make
— hiktory Is Mies Edith Cross,
who has been chosen to partner
Helen Wille In the women's
doubles. Miss Cross Is 25 years old
and good looking. Her job Is in
the counting house of a Ban Fran-
cisco sports goods manufacturer.
She waa known aa pretty 'hot stuff*
locally until last year, when she .
placed third among American w<r
. men tennla players." 1
.•* Morrta and Ddrtmm:
Cleveland staged a three lun rally
in the last at the 12th to win the
first game of a double header from
St Louis 5 to 4. The Browns came
back however, winning 7 to 5, and
keeping their hold on third place in
the league standing
M.8M JUDGMENT AGAINST
UTILITY COMPANY
TEXARKANA, May 24.—J, M. Eu-
banks of El Dorado, Ark., was given
a judgment of 86.000 against the ■
Dorado Public Utilities Corporation
for alleged personal injuries. He
sued for 835.000, alleging he fell into
a ditch the defendant had dug in
front of his house and of which -he a
was unaware. He claimed p
Injuries resulted from the
Si. . .
Babe Ruth hit his eighth
run of the year at Boston and the
New Ydrk Yanks won 7 to C. The
winners collected 12 hits off Gaston.
Bt ' .
Tom the Outside
Ustyug*— * The other day three men from three differ-
v, ent cities all much larger than Denton, were in
our Clothing Department at the same time. Each
‘ > bought a suit and seemed well pleased with our
BMortments and pfices ... In fRct, one of them—
7 “ ■’r
and he lived in a neighbor city of 250,000—said
he could be pleased better here than in the much
r ' larger stores of his own city.
W.e believe we offer the men of Denton a
clothing service unexecelled anywhere, and we
. <■ are anxious to prove it to you. L—.
New Summer Tropicals $25, $30, $35, $40
* With two pftirs pan^'
. - 1"' .... ■*. ■' . ■ ‘
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1 -"Ml
........
.
V • Th<,
- ttWi
SHe T* y««r l««gos to handle?” we
askrd a veteran American League
i empire a few days ago.
‘There aren't any hart gnya In
tar league,” he answered. ‘They
are the nicest bunch of fellows to
£work with that I over tare bqen
around. And I've been around
n?'| ln ■5r l,,M’
“There are some players In the
leaxue who will ery and squawk
that the close ones always go
Dallas Defeats
Waco in 32-Hit
Game Thursday
BY UNITED PRESS
Thirty-two hits ..were registered
in Dallas' 13 to 12 victory over
Waco the winners collecting 15 and
the league-tauMrs 17. Bischoff. Dal-
las catcher, and Blackerby. Waco
right fielder, both obtained four
hits tn four times at bat.
Shreveport maintained tts lead
over Dalias for second position by
defeating San Antonio I to I. The
Indians menaced Shreveport's lead
with a four run. rally tn the ninth
inning. The contest was the ninth
victory out of the last 11 games for
Shreveport.
Bqaumonh pulled itaeU tefeether
.and won a game. Wichita Falls
•ooo after the *?»,*«
mates *we be was assisted by
Petrie, Befiumont left fielder, wiw
knocked oqt two home nnw.'
Fort Worth scored Its fifth con-
secutive victory and the .second ov-
er Houston. 8 to 3. Lindsey. Houston
twirler. allowed four runs in both
the fourth and eighth inning. Jim-
my Walkup gave up ten hits, the
same number as Lindsey, but held
in the pinches.
Home Run Leaders
By UNITED PRESS
LEADERS:
Ott, Giants. 10
Qehrig. Yanks. 9.
Ruth, Yanks. 8.
Klein. Phillies. «.
Wilson, Cube. 7. *
O’DouL Phillies. 7.
Goslin, Senators, 7.
Jackson. Giants, 8.
Hafey, Cardinals. 6. -
Simmons. Athletics, fl ..
YESTERDAY'S HOMERS:
Bluege. Senators. 2.
Ruth. Yanks. 1.
Goslin, Senators. 1.
Miller. Athletics, 1.
Lary, Yanks, 1.
High, cardinals, 1.
Mellllo. Browns. 1.
TOTALS: I
American League 118.
' TOTALS -’277
—1«' < ;F-
■■
-H.-frr-H-
r ? re. j11 *
■' t' ,ri: ’ . *■
in the
BP (motions to"«rare^*taa ttao
■to in thi majority- c.___
■rtentlon of the 5 par oent redla-
lit rate at New York and Kansas
I. a decline of H8.ooo.ooo tn brok-
■e loons snd a favorable federal
Irve tank atatamvnt helped re-
|» sentiment. ,
F Sff, u? S!“ii ’Ki £n
I* OAOtfOlO per obi Pork dull
|> 3080 per bbl. Lard hrm: middle
L *PM 12W1210 par barrel. Tal-
I quiet; special to extra 107 1-4
U7 1-a per Jb. Petroleum steady;
I York refined 15 per gal. Penn-
lania crude 186«4.10 per gal.
Ipesitine 88 a-4«54 per gal Po-
ire steady; Long Island 1T8K800
| bbl. ■outhern 8.00« 7 00 par bbU
Ina fi.10o2.75 per bbl. Benni----
I a 700 per bbl Sweet potatoes
lay: southern >.76 per erate: Jer-
| 7S«>3.00 per basket.
.NEW YORK <’OTT<»N
FEW YORK Mar M - Market op.
H steady; ctoeed tteady,
lu»G ... lev.
1 ’i 1«-TO
■ 19.44
** '-• ,. 18.63
1883
«8 fa
qtfiH; middling 19 45.
■ NEW OKLEANM COTTON
■1KW ORLEANS. May 24—Market
■ ned steady; closed steady
■man 1883 -----
■rt!h • ..... 18.67
■ y ; 1888
I,-.......... I860
yober 18.83
Samper 18 67 ib.w—01
■•pots steady; middUng 18.77.
■ * chanae was shown In today's
■tie market except an advance of
■ cento on grass steers. 1.000 cattle
■l 300 calves arrived
■With only 800 here the hop mar-
■ was 18 to 30 cents higher
■fheep sales were on a strong to 25
■>t higher level.
fcattle: Beeves 9 80 to 1486; stock-
■ 850 to 13: stocker eowe 7 50 to
|’8; cutteta 878 to 678: cannere
M to 880; yearlings 10 to 14.60;
Ives 8 60 to 14 50; bulls 780 to 9
■Hogs Medium 10.76 to 1086; light
I to 10 SO; heavy 10 50 to 1086;
|vs 9 to 92S< pigs 7 60 to 985
IJbeep: I.smbs 18 to 14: feeders 9
■ 11.60: shorn wethers 7 to 8 80:
rxs 3 to 5. shorn lambs 10 to 11 50
CHICAGO GRAIN
[CHICAGO. May 34.—Wheat prices
ITered a severe break In the cioe-
I. hour today when attempts to
[ htan lines to those who were buy-
IX on unfavorable news ran the
[irket into stop lose selling and July
kat to a new low on the
fir at nsm In wheat caused
pish slightly lower Oats ’
l/nly lower. ,
||Wtaat: May 1 01; July 104 3-8:
fot. 1W 1-6; Dec 1 13 8-4
JCorn: Mays 84 1-3; July 88. Sept.
#3-8 Dee. 83 1-8.
■Oats: May 45. July 44 1-8. Sept
f t-fif Dec. 44
PRODtTC *
rr u».; dticks ioe per lb; sere He
n- dos- table butter 88c to 88c per
l; packing stock butter 30c per lb.;
.pm 36c to 41c.
found About Town
' bust 'em.”
Anfi he told me this story.
years ago. Sir Arthur com-
plet^a a shoot at the Atlanta gun
club with a straight run. unfinished,
of 375 targets. He went over to
Charleston and broke 50 more
stnRght He then went to Nor-
’ • '■ ■. ' -
j#F’ -----
■Mlc *"■" ■H. -4—'
------- , r j . V!
: a *M
■ ' v 1
get." .. . .,—x.
“Up to . that 1
Arthur, "I wasn’t thinkinfi
blamed thing, so far as I
member I was busting
When I heard that I got t<
Ing how many I’d busted’ 1
When the trap was fixed, I
the next three.” bvL'ji Io*
At that, Arthur had t»*erl ; fool
’ 4»i ,#O •**«
we will have on display June 1st,
we are going to sacrifice the following
/ I
One 1926 Hupmoble Club Sedan $550.00
One 1926 Buick Sedan $750.00
Y.J $165.00
t $ 50.00
One Ford Coupe 8 50.00
One 1924 Nash Touring $125.00
We trade and give terms. 1
• • t
Smith-Hamilton Mofor Co?
118 So. Locust St. | $ Phone
•" w
—
resulted in the ascendency of the
Cards to first place In the National
League Mitchell allowed the Cubs 11
hits but kept them scattered effec-
tively and the Cardinals won 6 to 3.
The. New York Giants ran their
winntog streak to two games by
trouncing the skidding Boston
Bravea. 11 to 4 at New York. Seven
hins in the eighth inning clinched
an for the McGrawmen.
gh strengthened its grip
>lace by defeating the Cin-
• to 3 at Pittsburgh
took an early lead, scoring
" a run in the first and second. The
Pirates tied the score In the fifth
and took a two-run lead in the sev-
^d*J^n enFW**<i*,lPh'l* increased its lead In
the American League to four games
wipia double victory over the Wash-
ington Senators. The score of both
eamre’was 9 to 8. Mhir pitchers
I for both teams in the first
alberg went the distance in
I bond^
home
IP...
\. FRANK GETTY
SPEAKING OF SPORTS
----------- ■■1 ■" n 11 i is
tath Canadians and the American .1
tourists who wUI’be on the island of
Montreal around, July 4, Jack wifi
go up in the role of promoter and
maMi-makqr. Me will be represent-
ing Fugasy and Cole, of course
The chances are that the new ali-
ance of Dempney, Fugazy and Cole
U hot destined to be long lived, The
ex-champion may be regretting his
bargain already,’ although he would
not say so. Z( i
Dempeey’a tremendous popularity
was ck-monstrated during the firing
trip to Montreal with the writer.
There was a crowd at the station,
and everywhere Jack went he va»
surrounded by cheering throngs and
autograph «eefters. The Canadians
like their English cousins, are great
on autographs.
Jack made a great hit at the Ki«
wants luncheon where he appeared
for a moment. •’
A speech waa in
obliged
“I feel like the Irishman at the
party," he said. "Everyone entertato*
ed tri turn, singing, dancing or phtya
Ing some musical instrument,
ally It came the Irishman's turn. Ht?
got up andtaid^ ; -r-
"Ladies and gentlemen, I cant
sing nor dknee nor play the pianny,
but just to be sociable 111 fight any-
body in the room.’" ;>
This brought down the housq. f
N UP
Brighten ip your car for
The condition ol Mrs. M. 0. Mc-
Whorter of Hebron, who has been
at the Denton Hospital for some
--------- .. , ,, . time with a broken hip suffered in
Dependable Used Cam ^£UTnt,y-to reported to * un’
I 1097 ctnv^int Mti D. P.'Beach, who received
— *-----» ■- — w _ • ----- 4 ----
W Droicen
by an ai
Ur-, U ----------------- .
pltal ta b* somewhat improved. I
1926 Dodge Sport Road-’ . WUTElDCOrl ‘
*^>24 Buick Toumig.
Trew Brothers Motor "to.
221 N. Locust Phone H59.
• 1
— 2.
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 243, Ed. 1 Friday, May 24, 1929, newspaper, May 24, 1929; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335712/m1/3/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.