Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 301, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 31, 1929 Page: 4 of 8
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DENTON, TEXAS, KE( ORD-CHBOR^E WEONKBDAY, JULY 31, 192»
SCOREBOARD
FRANK GETTY
SPEAKING OF SPORTS
£
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Brnuinonl 6
F’hH:,
1 1
McCar-
tjaii
•nd th»
AMI RH AN I i Y(.l I
(ten
T
country would prefer I
at
4 i
lead
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rallied while nth?!
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an
electrical
n
Mueller of
!
LI
except
Savo
iim.kx
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opei
the
ha:r
Cream
Sugar
Allan J
12 5-8 I
HOME RUNS
League
Hi ad I
I
BY
Peach
N
I tnetr contention is nut rreet-
I Ing deadens the ball and that heat
aga.n
with
Bead Classified ads for RosulU.
938
'A,
.. at
10 08
Mk
i tock-
i
41
I1
Had to Remain
/;
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42
Indoors Months
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EL
Hp<
&
1 Of) 14.
Dec
1 -4
Taste
cigarette it's
..in a
First Time
57.40
*•
I
29x4.40 All Weather Tread
Showing New Fall Prinlzess
8^
.1
Coats and Dresses
1 ■
“TASTE above everything
L
We invite yon to see them today.
Chesterfield
(See Our Windows.)
1
J. W. CRAY COMPANY
$7.50
not only BLENDED but CROSS-BLENDED
• .u.
J
• A
(■'
* *■*
- 1K
Fl
i
I
s
1
■■■
I
JO
German Leader
Dangerously Ill
Star
ust ng
The
delive
10 00
10 10
10 10
Chlcai
Neu 1
indiges-
tcrlblv nervous.
I wh-s so weak
care
lived
The Cubs record under
thy follows.
Pct.
532
558
.591
flammation of the gall blad-
der st Bad Mergenheim. He’s 53.
moot
ra n.
the
the
p«i lb.; eggs
ter 80«4(>c .
butter 20c per lb
and
Telegraph
01
22
The esti-
Markct
league as noted In the comment of
Milt Stock, manager of the Dallas
Steers who said, "He will help them
considerably. I think he1, the best
— I’ll say one of the beat pltclwir* In
the league ”
wi
Br
l
19 OH
19 14
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Eire
. UP 3-4.
Hudson
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■words
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321
566
531
516
500
4 19
323
2
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o
will pl
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oft
up
8.
Westinghouse
season
neai
ed to
i
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1 MILD and yet
THEY SATISFY
ft 1
5; ’
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I
33
14
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49
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14
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bio
do
All
44
48
584
574
53H
525
514
434
416
414
1
Kept
1 v>f 7-8
Sept 52
Joe n
mother I
evening
hU fed
their al
At al
: 1-44
Steef
F’et
37
39
W
IH
17
17
15
16
14
10
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59
58
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42
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51
60
58
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105
A
F'ourth
Fourth
I’hird
Lost
2
68
63
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fl 24
13-15.
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i 20-31
milk
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52
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fl
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w
62
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55
4H
12
4 1
t Goodyear
Wichita Hopes
to Win Pennant
WednAc
the h*>
ano hoo
STANDINGS
Ret ultt.
liHin 1
Rock 4
Mlanta 1
1
TueEday'.
Birming
Little
. 13. ______
ichedule^l
8tandin>:
lol
101
104
101
105
10L
101
99
third
with their highest percentage
irui., lliwreva jevj 14* V* J
25-48. chickens 27-48.
‘3-23; du. ’
poultry
10-25.
roosters
quiet,
r.peclal
22 • " ••
Athmo Storage Co.
, - 3 ZB Phone 99
i------------------------------------------
UJ S. Royal Cord
? 29x4.40
< rs
licult players to handle in baseball
Hornsbv. Cuyler and Wilson on his
team and keeps peace in the family.
more
i the
19 22
19 41
19 55
19 00
19 20-
19 16.
Club—
Wichit-
Houston
tor; worth
Shreveport
Waco
lira union l
Dalia;
Antonto
10 111
10 08
limited, re-
3.700.
IKMMHM
< «•!> > ri|t b tg * E-4 •LwbBwb
Chancellor Hermann
LOCAL
Green beans 15
lb . peas
FAV OKI I < OTTOS
OR1 EANS Jul\ 31 Market
stead v
U OK I H
J u 1 ■»
mu< h
onh
»'ff< red
most |\
is rd
1 ORE
Jul\ 31 —
market closed
1ft 25
19 4-*
1 ft 56
IH 98
19 32
middhnk 19 20
IV.
/A’l «V
C) wa tiw’ii S Mrr.i TostccaCo.
732
(141
42 I
I
gees<
30; lurke1
brotlnri
whole i
2V 1-2.
ducks Long
..j i.teady.
owls 'n-|
21-24.1
ut«te
1 cup 1
1-2 Cl
1-2 Cl
4 tab
1-2 U
1 trie,
1-3 ci
1 cup
1 egg
2 tab
MIX t
2 nunut
an
Cream
In
1-3 Cl
1-2 c
1 tab!
. V III' I I 11 III I '
I Philadelplii .
ned 6.000 shares
> rise oeiiiK due ’
covering
12 1
Club
B.i miughair
Neu Orlean..
Atlant •
Nashville
M< mphL.
I itth Rot k
Mobile
1 Chattanoog .
Pirates Losing
Pep As Result of
Series of Mishaps
Lead in"
San Antonion Indians. 7 to 2
feature of the dav whs
lent fielding and timely baiting ot
Turgeon, Spudder second baseman
Beaumont started out like a win
ner in yesterday s battle
Shreveport, but tiie Spirts grabbed
three runs in an.eighth inning ral-
ly and sacked the game. 8 to 6
I]>rt Worth and Waco battled
on almost even terms but the Cats
sneaked in an extra run in tiie last
and won. 3 to 2 The Cats got a
run each in the last thrre innings
Actions SPEAK lOUDFR than words;
what yon want to know about a cigarette is
how it Pastes.
And words can’t tell you much about
ChesterfielcFs taste. Tobacco quality, mild fra-
grance, character—r these are only words, until
you've tried Chesterfield; after that, three
words say it all:
c- i? ramen *As»*.
and utilities were
Se\ ei n! nade : en -
rl ••Lmmon oU i
irofit -Taking
M<
the plate cS^AtX
Hack Wilson
to keep any one
dfrfarkety
Club
Philadelphia'
New Yoik
frit 1A) U1 s
Cleveland
Detroit
Washington
Chnako
LIVtRPOO!
rlosrtl. 4»teadV
Jarman'
March
May
July
October
Dr^err* be /
SpolB.1 Meadv: demand
reipcs «J.OJO. American 3.700; nalrt
L.0O0. America!’ 1 200, ^middling 10 30
about I
that cd
There I
things
and pul
them c<
“Tell
father,
for mol
differed
“I dJ
to buy
otherwi
birthdiil
walked
J'
wori'd faithfully The blow was a
eevi'ie one, however, for Traynor
wa • probably without an equal at
third base.
The other major casualties oc-
curred here in New York on July
20 when Burleigh Grimes, leading
pitcher of the league at the time,
injured ills throwing hand while
win;; ng his sixteenth game of the
Grimes has been out for
■]y two weeks and is not expect-
,o raturn for another ten days.
Then there have been other in-
jurii s. minor ones for the most
part but serious enough to mar the
or
re-
a
Club
Chicago
. .vtsbuigl
Yoik
Brooklyn
Boston
, Cinrinniit i
"r-
• i
T'
Tjn
corn
carrots
25c bunch, peaches,
watei meloii. 1 1 2 -<
I l\ I> I 04 k
31 Receipts
nialhi than
i.6OO < at t ie
i'i ad mg
25
■ il> Hit 111
-t-1
iXilnts
f yrs- I
a point
Foreign ,
Interna-
..»su
I it bitroof, ( otton
Juiy 31
SAN ANTONIO. July 31—Hopes
of Wichita Falls baseball fans for
a pennant winning team in the
Texas league are running high to-
day as a result of the announce-
ment that Andy Messenger, Indian
hurler, has been transferred to the
Spudders in exchange for Pitcher
O’Neal and some extra money
MMarnger will wear the Wlohit*
Falls uniform today. He is consid-
ered one of the best pitchers in the
There have been other fanciful
claims made this year. Some of
the players say that certain horns
clubs put s crate of balls in an
Ice box and another crate In an
oven.
Their contention 1« that freei-
Medium 11 15 to 1130; light
1 1 how,. 0 50 to 9 75 pigs
lambs 12 to 13. shorn-weth-
H 50. trouts 2 50 to 5. shorn
io 11
I’MTEIi PRESS
Leaders
Klein. Phillies 32.
Ott. Giants 29
Wilson, Cubs 28
Gehrig. Yankees 2>
Ruth. Yankees 2-t
Simmons. Athletes 21.
Foxx. Athletics 23
Hafey.’ Cardinals 22
Bottomley. Cardinals 22.
Hornsby, Cubs 22
Yesterday's Homers
Klein, Whitney and Hurst, Phill-
ies; Orsatti and Sherdel, Cards;
Stephenson, Cubs; Cohen. Giants;
Hendrick. Dodgers; Foxx and Sim-
y mens. Athletics one each.
+4 Tolah
National League 551.
American League 387
Total
Yesterday's hero: Al Simmons
whose home run and single enabled
the Philadelphia Athletics to beat
Detrpit, 5 to 4, in 10 innings. Sim-
mons' homer with Cochrane on
base In the ninth started the three
run rally that tied the score. In the
tenth he singled to score Bishop
w’lth the winning run.
The New York Yankees pounded
out a 7 to 3 victory over Chicago,
reaching Alphonse Thomas for 14
Herb Pennock allowed the
Shith! A Scandal
TT’S being whispered around the
A circuit that there have been
too many home runs l.i the Na-
tional League. And that young
men, who ‘had no business to be
doing It, were hitting too many
home runs. The inference was
that Mel Ott of the Ciants and
Chuck Klein of the Phillies did
not have the natural talent to go
out and try to »how up Babe
Ruth.
A few days ago Papa IIeydl«r.
the president of the National
League, told his umpires to start
rubbing dirt on (he ball again
The limps rubbed dirt on the ball
last year, but before the current
^fasoq aturted they were told Io
apply no foreign substance to the
ball and they followed Instruc-
tions until the home run orgy be-
came such a Joke that the league
president revoked his order.
/-« to 2H7 7-8
Telephorr A
MERSINE, Turkey — Untouched
by archaeologists and viewed only
by occasional travelers, are some 20.-
000 marble sarcophagi in a region
north of this Anatolian town They
are relics of the time when this
Market' section constituted the Cilcia of the
Romans.
see tlie Cubs
521 I iep^sent the National League.
4;»o | The Cubs last appeared in
and , plteher the lee ball and throw In
ball 1 a hot one when their team Is bat*
I ting.
I'ROPI CE
(.i 20 10 . ( ubbage 6c
71-2c lb . onions. 6c lb ;
white grapes. 20c lb . Concord grapes.
10c per lb ; cherries, 30c lb okra, J5v
!b“ tomatoes 7 1-2 IO cantaloupe, Se-
to 15c e*ch; peppers. 15c lb , pota-
toes. 4c to 5c lb.; peanuts, 10c lb ;
lettuce 5m 15c a head, corn 30i,.40c
doz,. beets. 10c bunch; carrots. 10c
bunch: celery. 25c buneh;
25c to 30c gal .
2c lb.
LOCAL GRAIN
Oats (basis No 2) 42c, wheat (ba-
»U No. 1) »1 J5.
hits. Herb Pennock allowed the
White Sox 10 safe blows.
Washington overcame a five run
lead to beat St. Louis. 11 to 8, In a
free hitting ;;ame. The winners
scored nine runs In the fifth, sixth
and seventh Innings.
Cleveland took an early lead at
Boston and finished the first game
of the series with an easy 11 to 4
victory. Ferrell was reached for 13
hits by the Red Sox but kept them
well scattered. ’
The Chicago Cubs ran their win-
ning streak to nine games and in-
creased their lead in the National
League to four and a half games by
beating the Boston Braves, 4 to 0.
in the series opener. Sheriff Blakt
allowed Boston only five scattered
hits.
Seven runs in the third inning
and five in the seventh enabled
Philadelphia to take an easy vic-
tory from Pittsburgh The final
score was 13 to 5. Chuck Klein hit
his 32nd home run of the season
in the third inning
The New York Giants checked
the Cincinnati Reds, 3 to 0. in a
closely played game Fred Fitzsim-
mons beat Jake May in a mound
duel, althwuf.h he allowed six hits
to five for his opponent The Reds
were unable to bunch their blows.
Cohen hit a homer for the Giants
in the seventh
Dazzy Vance received another de-
feat when the Brooklyn Robins
lost an 11-inning game at St. Louis.
10 to 9 Manager Robinson sent
Vance to the mound in the 10th
with the score tied at nine runs. In
the eleventh Frisch slr^led ofT
Vance, stole second and came home
with the winning runs when Orsat-
ti singled
< IITTOX
Market op-
fl rm
1 ft 36 -
19 38 -
1 ft 75T
1894
19 40—
senes, but he is not likely to get in-
412; to this year’s classic except as a
4 IH
GREENVILLE. July 31 Th*
thermometer jumped to 105 de-
grees here tins morning A maxi-
mum temperance of 104 deg re s uas
registered yesterday
.-tree!
grncrHl
*ns 'argrlv
lOilUnuaDoii ol
rrett Tire Co.
15. 208 W. Hickory
K.....
f 4 (.;i
A t '• * * .p. A . •
EicAH,.jf ;•
who were making business so good
In the American League. And. |
although the balls that are used
In the two major leagues are man-
ufactured In the s»me factory,
there has been a
the National I-eague
some more gun
ball to help their
Ruths and Gehrigs
lilt iac< seven vvmiu sei rs lulu me
tuns outside of New York city are
rather tired of seeing tlie ratne old
crop
mid
Europe
on the
tb<
for
rails
New Ycri Centra’ op<
shares at 234 1-2 up 5 1-2 j
Vuiod Pacific
-1
Each elementary school for
white children In Charleston. 8. C„
is equipped with a motion picture
projector. , .....
figures in action every October j
As the Pirates were in the world
series in 1925 and 1927 the major- I
j ity ot baseball fans throughout the
clnnati
given that
pepped up. I
Immediately,
cular statement ...... ...^
facturers have for every
tlon on the subject, w
’’Since the war.” their state-
ment reads, "we have been able to
get a belter quality of rubber and
a better quality of wool."
They also, It is claimed, have I livens It and that the smart man-
Ncw Names and New Faces
What the world series need is new
heroes and that’s why the Phlladel-
j phia Athletics and Chicago Cubs are I leadership they finished in
I popular favorites to meet in the full place The Cubs finished fourth In
classic 1927 but improved their percentage,
| 'Die baseball public at large will I Last season they landed In third
I be particularly glad that tile New place
York Yankees will not be seen in since 1918 the season they won the
I this year’s world series that is. if pennant under Fred Mitchell. ’
you like to cross your bridges before ~ ~~"
you get to theni
’Die Yankees have been in five of
the last seven world series and the
Playtra Say Thay Know
fJ”IE executives of the two
- leagues and the manufaetnr-
era ot the ball used In the two
league* may inalat that the ball
has not been changed to make
It go farther and faster. When,
they say so the fan can't dispute
their statements.
- But (he managers
Hi appeared to be well on the
road to recovery wiien both he and
Paul Waner started after the
< ni< t(.n i.icaix
. 31 Bullish
export Male*
.truction in
ulv highei
chances of the Pirates foj two
three days George Grantham
ported a short time back with
tagie shoulder which handlcapprxi
him but didn’t quite keep him on
the bench
appeared to be well
•lull 31
market clotted barely,
38H
.495 (
P t
556 I
500 !
II irhita I ail s
Un’rad Press Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK. Julv 31 Lady
Luck seems to have turned her back
i on f.erv Dottie Bush and hi.s pep-
l. < perv Pittsburgh Pirates.
Th- Pirat s are floundering in
these days. striving
l both feet firmly on
so they may rc-
for the national
when the leak
the ball had
Mr. Heydler denied it I port their contention.
Hq quoted the clr- There have been o
nent that the manu-j claims made thia yea
quea-
Mobllc 5
Mem| io ■
New 'Yrieair.
Onl. game.
"Stomach trouble and
tlon had me in a
rundown condition
and worn out I would have to stay
in the house for month at a time
Constipation was
■ helping to make
i
whether
A good
mine
about
STOCK I
Julv 11 -
Allied Client
111 3-8 up
4 up 1-8. B St O
Beth Steel 122 3-8
231 5-8 UP I 5-8.
_ar ’ v’oti.TRY
ReM 17 a 10c per lb : fryers 20 a
23c. per . lb old ’ roosters 6 w 8c per
lb.;’turkeys 10wl8c per lb ; ducks 10c
per lb.; eggs 3S(027e doz.; table but-
ter 80«40c per lb ; packing stock
cream 34vt39c.
Houston was due for a comeback
yesterday from tile Dallas Steers |
and received it in the form of a i
12 to 2 defeat, which not only low- 1
vred the percctitr.ge of tile Bulls but ;
also knocked them out of the league
leadership Glazner allowed Houston |
only three hits.
Wichita Falls aga.n took
l<q,ue leadership by downing th - I
■■-- " ■ - ■i ii..
, ! di ep
the excel- i .
| players Insist that the ball la
I faster this year than H ever has
was j been And the number of homera
been I hit in half a season seems to aup-
1 4 ’___a . L. . 4 _ ________. a .. „
TueadHy’.i RrMiltb
Philadelphia 5. Detroit 1
Hings)
Cleveland
New Yoik
Washington 11
389 I
esen woi Id
I Hornsby with the Card.mils in j couldn’t handle,
1926, Art Neld with the Giants in
1921. 1922, 1923 and 1924. Kiki Cuy-
ler with the Pirates in 1925 and
I Hack Wilson With the Giants m 1924
Cuyler was ( ligtble for the 1927 world
I series but was kept on the bench by
Dome Busli
How Cubs Have Improved
Since Joe McCarthy came from the
Louisville American Association ilub
s»me factory, I
suspicion that :
would put I
powder in (heir,
boys become
•
Another Argument for Peace
T)UT. after the meeting In Cln-
/•IniYatl xa h 4* n f h»» huk wa*
10 08
10 13
io ie;
10 25| t<> boo bonds brought up to II 25 and
' the truck top was 10 75
Just n few sheep arrived
mate called for 450 head
condition, were unchanged
Cattle Bever. 7.50 to 13 50
ers 7 50 to 10 50. Stockers cows 5 to
25. fat cows 7 to 3 50. -utters 5 to
5 Sb. oanners 150 to 1 75; yearlings
10 to 1450. calves 8 to 13. bulls 6.50
to 8 50
Hogs
10 75 t
0 25 to 10
Sheep I
ers 7 to t
lamb'; 10
Year Finished.
1926
1927
1928
Won
82
85
91
He's the Boss
McCarthy lias no superior
i The Cubs last apjieared in the | handling tempermental ball play-
I world series against the Bosten Red | ( rs. He has three of the most dif-
Hox m the colorless classic of 1918.
'1 he Athletics have not won a pen-
nant since 1914 when Connie Mack
tore up ins famous $100 000 intield I Hornsby was shipped away by two
alter taking tour straight defeats' clubs tlw Cardinals and Gents.,
from the Boston Brayes | Cuyler was to much for the Pirates'Germany; Is reported critically ill
None of the Philadelphia regulars to handle Hack Wilson is enough 1 follow hig an emergency operation
have ever participated iti a world to keep any one manager’s hands for
j senes. Lcldie Collins was in the 1914 i full.
Mc-Carthy’s system is simple:
He's the boss and he lets 'em know
pinch-hitter ; it. When they learn this, every-
Four of the Cub's regulars have j body gets along line.
esen wo: id series service Rogers | There was one player McCarthy
Cardinals in J couldn’t handle, so he got rid of
him Grover Cleveland Alexander
liked to wet his whistle every now
and then--mostly then in the 1926
season and McCarthy didn't ap-
prove of tlie practice for members
of his pitching staff Rather than
grant Alex a special privilege which
lie didn t intend to permit among
his other players. McCarthy re-
leased Alex to the Cardinals.
to take charge of tlie Cubs they
have shown steady improvement.
The Cubs finished last in 1925 and
the next season under McCarthy’s
..... i fourth
\ v I lox u I i \<. i i
.go 4 Boston 0
YoiI 3 C’lnciiniHtl 0
i’liiladelphli. 13. Plrtsbuigli
St Iahu . 10. Brooklyn 9
Standin,;
1
’.>2
1)3
99
96
95
:>8
NEW YORK I’ROIH ( E
NEW- YORK Julv 31—Produce;
Flouv-duli iind lower, spring iraumls
nh-6 15 pe. obi . pork riteadv; ness
32 00'per bbl . lard weaker; nldtile-
wesv Spot 1245-1255 per lb.; tallow,
stri ngeu . specia' Vo extra .07 1-2-
■0.' 1-4. pctroleun: steady; aides (city
packf^ HtrtiaYt TintlW “ ,tWs riff Pet.
lb.; pothtoe-. firm; lioirtbern 125-5 50
per bbl.: r.wect potatoes i ready:
toutfiern 2 75 per basket; Southern
» uo-qn. pv> boi . _ dressed poultry]
cany, turkey:. Z'-, '.Z.
fowls 26-35 ducks 18-23
‘ - -- live
duck'
20-35;
18. cheese
______ fancy to
young America 22 1-2-28
NEW YORK July H - Stocks op-
ened strong Allied Cliein 310 u"
Knxt. Smelt 1113 8 up 1, >
Refg 6. 14 up 1-8. B A; O 132 5-8
up i*S; Beth Steel 122 3-8 up 1-8,
Can Pai 231 5-8 up I 5-8. Inryslei
73 1 2. up 7-8. Consolidated rias 145
up 1; Eric 82 7-8- no 7-8; Pox Elim
hv in> 1-4; Gen Elec 169 3-5. up 7-8.
Gcr iftrs 70 3-4 up 3-4; Gold Oust
■ .-IT up 3-8. Hudson Mtr 14 7-8
up 5-8; Inter Combustion 71. oti
1-2; later Nickel 47 1-4. off 1-8. Mont
Ward, ill up 1 1 4. N 5 C 234 1-2.
Up 11-2: New HaveE 112 1-2. up 1-4
Penn. 0‘ 1-2. up 7-8, Pub Svc 1153-4,
ur 3-A, Radio 86 1-8 up 5-8 Sinclair
24 8Up OU N Y 39 1-4; Un Carbide
115 1-4, off 1-4; Un Pae 268 1-4
1-4. U. 8 Ind Alcohol 180 3-8
. 8 Rubber 48. off 5-8 U
it 1-2 off 1
t 1 -2 up 1 l-‘
or died
friend of
told me
Sargon and how
much it helped
her so I decided
to try it
What a bless-
ed relief it is to
be free of the troubles that worried me
for 12 long years The Sargon treat-
ment has literally made me feel like
a new woman Mv stomach Is now
in perfect condition; my appetite is
fine and I eat Just anything I
want without any ill effects. My
nerves are back to normal and I
sleep sound and get up feeling Just
fine Sargon Soft Mass Pills ended
my constipation without ever grip-
ing or nauseating me
"I m so happy over regaining my
health that I'll lye glad to tell any-
one what Sargon has meant to me
Just have them 'phone 2-7783 if they
want to know what I think of this
wonderful treatment."- Mrs W H
Higgins, 50 W First St Fort Worth
Sargon represents the dawn of a
new era in the field of modern medi-
cine It Is turning old-fashioned
moss-grown health tlieorles upside
sandsdown and Is restoring countless
thousanda by methods undreamed of
only a few years ago
Bargnn may be obtained In Den-
ton from Hoffman it Lakey; in Jus-
tin from J. W Oolllns. in Banger
from Manger Pharmacy; in Krum
from Finley Drug Oo.; in Aubrey
from Aubre* Drug Store; in Lewis-
villa from Cnamben A Orr; in Roan-
oke from j. W Roark, and" in Pilot
Point from "McDobald Drug Store
x» w
NEW YORK
ener’ firm.
January
March
MhV
October
Decertfbcr
Hixh quiet
^N
NEW
open«
stead
Janugrv
mSv' -
Octot^r
Deceifix
SpCRR steady
CHfcArio""julv
reporta increased
news 301 crop dest
y aent J-hcat sharp,
board -of trade today
Cora advanced In sympathy with
wheafaand acting on news from the
westeflb oelt where aln * as iceded
Oat® followed the ma for trains
Whaat Julv I 43 1-2 Sept 1 46 7 8
« Dec feM 5-8 Mar 1 .59 1 4
CorR July 103 1-2
Dec IJB7-8 Mar
Oat*. Julv 51:
56 3-4rMar 59 3-4
PORT
WORTH
day were
rage supply
____J calves were
war duh with puces
flower “Buyers were
and did not go out
o’clock.
With* hog prices 'ilghet values we-
ft to 1W cents up Rceelpte W ere » lo
the L'cttom ait: in
turn t > the light
league h a dr; ship
Much of the lighting spirit th«t
marked thflr pity during th# fuftt
of th? season r,c-ms to have ebbed
as a result of the series of mishaps
that has robbed the Buccaneers of
some of their most valuable talent.
The first serious quirk of fate
vic the injury of Pie Traynor. thinY
baseman. In the game at Phila-
delphia July 11. Traynor. after
clouting a home run and a double
in that contest, hurt himself and
has been on the sidelines since.
He was replaced by Stewart I
Claikc, an adept rookie who has |
TtjebdRV’ •irwult’i
DnllAs 12 HoiiNtun ‘
Wichita FhIIh 7 Hhp
Fort Wort! 3 Waco 2
Hhreveporl b
btnndini
P
st(m ks i:
NEW YORK hd\ w stock* ad-
vanced from 1 to b jjoints in th»- early I
tiadiDk lodwN ir moderately largo
turnovi;
Railroad
KssuininK tin
htotlOHM1 I’hlll
point on profit-taking at the (»p<ning
but qui(*ki\ rail it'd while <»thei HteeiB ■ Boston
advanced Motors < ominunicatioi' is-
sueH chemical shares a^nd
etintpnirnr were in Remand
United State* Steel s hrbt half ear-
ning* set h new pva<M' time iecord at
SIL.45 pei ahaio. in line with • xpe< -
tation.* oi ih< .treet and mis nd;-
catlon oi th< general prosperity *»f
country was 'argelv responsible j
Lhc lOnUnnation of yesterday s i pj(*t
>cned LI 00
jMilnts Erie,
Ftnnsyivania. Union Pacific and fev-
ers’ jthei member*. -1 vhe farrier
group moved ahead a mint
or m< continuation »f nigh
in car loadings
Genera' Motors c
at 7l 3-4 up 3-4 1
partially to short
Feoplf/. Gas spurted
tr 375. a record high, on top of
trrday’s senaationnl rise of J
points Consolidate Gas rose
it- 145 and American &
Power rose i points to 13
American Telephone and Telegraph
4 z-x *>•<'.■ *7 U n •-> <■* Y »i 4 ov-vs a _
tiona’
moved forward
TEXAS IT M.i E
11, B<iston 4
7. Chicago 3
St <A)Ulb 'J
Standing
after
game bail and collided, aggravating
Grantham’s injury He njas unable
to play In yesterday’s game with
Philadelphia
Win■ .t of all Is the elect this se-
ries cl mishaps seems to be having
on the morale of the team. Such
i* land now with the necessity of |
forcing his men to forget hard
hick and play baseball. They look
like a team that is convinced it
is out of luck.
j? you have •pmething to sen.
wfiy not try a classified ad. T&ey
<rt quiet: results at small cost.
DID YOU KNOW THAT—
ri’HE Brooklyn* let a lot of
A school boy* into the
park for n recent game.
Free of charge. . . .
And the game was so bad
the kids went down under
the xtanda and tore up (he
joint. . . . Hack Wllaon,
who hitx plenty for
Cuba, Is also out after
Mrlke-out record.
Mouthy Duroeher hit
easy grounder to the pitcher
in a rerent game between
the Yankcea and the De-
trolta and threw Ills bat
away In disgust and went
bark to the bench. . . . But
the pitcher threw wild (o
first and Mouthy wasn’t
there. . . . And wh»t (he
Yanks said to Mouthy was
terrific Among the
spectator* at the super-
swell yacht rare* at Larch-
were Tammy Ixiugh-
the fighter and Joe
Humphries, the prixe flght
announcer. Paulino
still has hl* arm in a sling
And the arm In the
sling is the one that blocked
a punch from Herr Schmal-
Ing’a right hand. . . . Oh,
hum!
Talked Out of Turn
rpHE National league club own-
ers held a spring meeting in |
Cincinnati and after the meeting i
one of the magnates told a reput-
able newspaper man that Mr. |
Heydler had said that I
dynamite had been put in
ball used lit their league.
It 1* a well known fact that the I
National League magnates have |
been moaning lot a number of I
years that they didn’t have in
their league the home run hitters I
been able to get a better quality * agera of several clubs give lheir
of horse hide for the cover and j pitcher the Ice ball and throw ’-
all these things make the
faster—if it la faster.
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 301, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 31, 1929, newspaper, July 31, 1929; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335775/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.