Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 246, Ed. 1 Friday, May 27, 1932 Page: 3 of 10
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DENTON. TEXAS, HECORD-
0
DAILY MARKET QUOTATIONS
PARTIESTALK
eaim 3.50 down
UNITED STAND
WWWT4 00-
n
ON PROHIBITION
)
r ’ :
July
E
‘e
<3
H
MBS. STELLA FLOYD
1
Teo
F
.3
ta
——.
Electric
I
E.S0"
gover-
American Veterans and the Uht-
cemtery. Is the recently completed
Solctier of the World
Unknown
War with its simple Jnscisptson,
Disabled I Carolina.
TEN WonDs SIX TINIES, 30 CENTS
WIRE BRIEFS
Dress SALE
R
Road:.
J
rates charged to consumers and the
the commission.
-=
I
3
2.95
G3
LARD
89c
T
2
WessenOil
Pint
24c
Coffee
F
3.95'
75c
Ean
MEAL
29c
Z
MILK
19c
4.95
Canova
25c
5
MARKET SPECIALS
4c
0
I
Tomatoes
39c
15c
a
5.95
a
CORN
No, 2 cans
258
’ — Service —=-
-—'LX-n-
with q
Fountain
25c
lc
DRINKS
accompunie d them home.
Apples
12‘c
. 12c
SPECIAL PRICE
Piggly Wiggly
On new Spring Wall Papera
C
Morris & McClendon
Store
. , PHONE 254
Brownbilt Shoe Store
EAST SIDE SQUARE '
« e -
rsfe
?.
—
..
8e
Any Type of Dress That You Want,
For Sport, For Evening’, For Street!
Lone Bandit Robs
. Seagraves Bank
Elegant—Better
rthan Maxwel..
House 3 lb. run
Cool, Comfortable Summer Dresses
That You Will Really Enjoy!
County, about 30 miles
exes-Nexico boundary.
Federal Church
Membership Up
in Gaine
from the
Three Tombs of Unknown War 'Dead Shrines for Memor-
ial Day Homage -
3 tall
6 small
Cans
Faney Crema
20 ib.
Rack
219 W. Hickory.
Phono 958. .
Dec
Jan
Mar
as killed today-in a fall over a 250-
foot cliff.
S
Lee Douglass
Service Drug.
Telephone 171,
Pure leaf
8 lb.
Pail
Denton's Leading, Food Store 1
We Deliver
A vacuum park
High grade cofee
l lb. ran
crop S
scarcer
v-
'1
k
Winesnps
extra Fancy
Doz
SALE STARTS SATURDAY;
AT 8 A. M.
"2
- u-.
„—.
West Coast Life
insurance Co.
Jim—Hundley—Ray*
Phone 82.
/
-
3
2
EAST SIDE TAILORS
Phone 31.
Mno COPIrS or.ccora enassineds are
distributed earn ay. Results prove
there's no better medium for. buying
•nd seilipg
00; shorn grass faew
latter price paid for
Spot cotton closed steady 9 points
down Sales 457; low, middling 0 14:
11
j 1
ir-
iker,
nd-
-
60
ib
3 cans
norinali
4
0
our
Try Home Folks
COMPARE^lTILSE GROCERY PRICES!
Piggly Wiggly always saves you money on your groceries and meats. We guar-
antee satisfaction on every item you purchase. We give you free delivery and
we appreciate your trade. ’
.
: 5000; spring lambs and old
orp lam5a Eteaj ------
1
-
Il -I
Tread Straight
Ne. 2 cans
2
For
• q -
■ J - ? - ■
BREAD Pouna
Hearing Set on
Gas Rate Hikes
and
the
The
fun-
and
man
y to
. , - J j ed Spanish War Veterans will join
white marble sarcophagus of the hands with the Grand Army of
Tnknaum —t--r 1 the Republic in seeing that no vet-
_-iie
3joj
rek 1.1 ", 4
"-af « -
s-a-- '
?
as
The Boston
-3
yesterday, good shorn fed lambs 3.75
and good shorn feeder lambs 1.75. ,
NEW ORLEANS FUTURES
NEW ORLEANS. May Tt— (API—
Cotton futures cloeed steady at net
declines of e to 10 points
PASADENA. Cal.. May 27—-
Dr Leonard Thompson Troland,
noted sctentist of Harvard Univer-
*
7
Entering the bank during the
noon hour, the man forced Miss
Lora Brown and Edwin Meridith,
employes, into a vault, scooped up
all available cash in sight and fled
in an automobile
The direction the robber took was
unknown, but officers over the south
plains of Texas and eastern New-
Mexico were immediately notified to
be on the lookout.
Aubrey visited Mr. and Mrs. John
Rodden
Mr. andMraeEdwerd Sullivan of
Fairview visited Mr and Mrs Alle
Hopper " *
Mr and Mrs. Win Graves of
Tioga visited Mrs. Nannie Turpin.
-as
sws,
nub
•on.
eers
her
but
Fqur Brice Ranges to Select From .
and Mrs. Terrell Beal of Delaplain,
Ky., and Mrs. Ela Hawkins of
Denton are visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Beale.
Mr and Mrs. R M. Parrish vis-
ited in Dallas County.
Mr and Mrs Raymond Gillette
of Ottawa, Kan., who taught in
Earrtzozo, ■ N M, visited Mr. and
Mrs. C. F Witt.
Rev. Roy Massengale of Tioga
visited Mr. and Mrs.C. H. Jackson.
Mr. and Mrs. Perman Smith at
Dallas visited MT. and Mr. Luther
Thorp.
Miss Ruby Lee Witt, student nurse
in Fort Worth visited Mr. and Mrs
C. F. Witt.
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Carruthers
and Mrs Alice Armstrong of Cross
Roads and Mrs. W A. Allen of Fort
Worth visited Mr. and Mrs O. H.
Jackson.
Mr. and Mrs. C. O Toomer of
Lloyd visited Mr. and Mrs. Wes
Harp.
Mrs Thelma Jenkins visited Mr.
and Mrs. J. H. Caruthers at Cross
brought July up to 5.66 and October
to 5.86. Later in the Oral hour price* Oct
loot the initial gain and dropped ~
back to the closing ngures of yesjer-
Ladies Coat or Man s Overcoat • distributing companlesjprotested to
j Cleaned and Pressed and packed in moth-proof bag—78c
—PPi—The bodies of three of the
four missing members of the steam-
er Grecain which sank off Block
Island after a collision with the
City ot Chattanooga were received
todaly, destryer force headquar-
ter* here announced.
AUSTpN, May 27—<AP)—Laten
Stanberry chief of the public utili-
ties division of the -Texas Railroad
commission, today announced date*
lor hearing on gas rate protests in
three communities.
Protests involviag rates at Hed-
ley and De Leon will be heard at
Clarendon and Eastland on June
r and 14, respectively. The Perryton
protest was set for June 1 at Per-
ryton.
Hedley is served by the City Gas
Company, Perryton by the Public
Service Coryoration, and De Leon
by the Southwest Gas Company. In
cach instance, the municipal au-
Uiuilties had arbitrarily towered
Sliced Bacon 5," 14c
The third also in Arlington
■------ _ medium 600 lb*, up 3.75-5. 75; hir-
NEW LONDON, Conn., May 27. era. good and choice 550-850 lb*. 400-
CHICAGO PRODUCE
" CHICAGO, May 27,—fAPI—butter
13,566, easy: creamery special* (03
score, 17 1-4-3-4: extra (02) 1# 3-4;
extra Arsts (90-01) 16-16 1-4: n-sta
(88-80) 15-15 1-2: seconds (86-87)
14-14 1-2: standards (90 centralised
carlots) 1« 3-4.
Egg*. 33,962, easy: extra nrsts 11
3-* fresh graded firsts it 1-2. cur-
rent receipts ie 1-2-11: storage
packed firsts 13; extras 13 1-4
An Unknown Soldier of the II evolution lies buried at Alexandra, Va.. beneath the monument pic-
tured at the lower left. Upper right is tomb in Arlington cemetery h enoring 2.111 unkpown Civil War
soldiers boded there. and below, the sarcophagus of the Unknown s oldier of the World War also in
Arlington. m
______ilggeneraity"epnincan
common. packer demand narrow
better fed yearlings practically Iack-
ing except one lord Bocer
MrS. Turpin and daughter, NIkey, 8n0d ra sCOs 4015; Aea8y°Slaughter
---------+ham HNme - ---- - ---------------------
KANSAS CITV LIVESTOCK
KANSAS CITY. May 27--(AP)---
(U 8 D Al- -Hogs 4,500; 70 direct; ,
fairly active, strong to 10 higher; top
9.86 on choice 180-398'lhs.T~gon<i and
choice 140-360 Iba 2 66-3 06; packing
sows 376-600 Iba. 2.10-50; stock pigs,
good and ehoice 70-130 lbs. 2.25-60
Cattle 700: calves 200; geneally
steady; bulk of run on through bill-
ing; good to choice 1191 lb fed
steers 8 60 steers, good and choice
600-1500 lbs 5.40-7.25; common and
GREEN VALLEY
GREEN VALLEY, May 25-Mr
and Mrs Dawson of Denton visited
Mr. and Mm.H A. Keen------
Homer Jackson visited in Dallas
Mr and Mrs. Troy Wicker have
moved from Denton into the house
with his father.
Mrs. D. E Holcomb of Denton
was here.
J. C Moore of Childress is visit-
ing Mrs. J. D Moore. "
. Mr and Mrs Roy Moore of Den-
ton visited Mrs. J. D Moore.
Mr. and Mr*. Jessie Bothwell
visited at Parvin.
Mr*. Hilldabrandt of Houston is
visiling Mr. and Mu 6.H.Bkites
Misses Velma and Ebla Maxwell
and Mr. and Mrs. Ezrum Massey
of Denton visited Mr. and Mrs. A.
T Massey.
Miss Betty Moore of Denton was
at home.
Mrs. Mildred Southerland and
Mri Myra Alice Southerland of
Parvin visited Mr. and Mrs W. T.
Bothwell.
Miss Edith Moore of Spring Hill
waa here.
L. E. Madden and Earl Love at
Aubrey were here
SAN ANGELO. May 27-W.T
Ponder of Fort. Worth. American
world war ace. was free under $1.-
500 ball today alter a customs of- l
fleer trailed him to San Angelo
Wednesday with a plane load of
beer from Mexico.
Have and always will
appeal'to the tired and
thirsty. You will like
our sandwiches, sodas
and courteous.service.
vonr WORTH LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH. May 37—(AF) —
See Piggly Wiggly for your Fruit
Jara, Jar Tops, Lids, Seating, Wax
and Canner’s Cans.
«
.. z
SPRINGFIELD, Ill, May 27 —(P)
-Submission to the states of a
proposal to repea 18th ’ amendment
was recommended at the Repubii-
ean state convention today by its
temporary, chairman and keynoter.
Frank L Smith of Dwight.
of Foreign Wars, the
day Thia wa due to some overnight
eelling orders and a rather irregular
opening of the stock market.
Neartbe end of the first hour the
market was Qutet and steady ana un-
changed from yesterday's elose
The market ruled quiet all morn-
ing with narrow price fluctuations.
Prices gradually eased off slightly
owing to irregularity in stocks snd
lack of sustained support July trad-
ed down to 5.61 and October to 5.80,
down 5 to 8 points from the early
highs and one to three points under
yesterday's close Near mid-session
prices rallied one to two points on
a little buying based on fear* of too
much rain.
WASHINGTON, May 27.—(.
Responsible leaders of the republi-
cans and democrats are canvassing
the possibility of both parties unit-
ing on identical prohibition plat-
form declzrations.
Two conference* have been held,
one in New York and another here,
but the movement admittedly has
not gotten very far. It la unsatis-
factory to the militant wet* and
drys of both parties.
Senator Reed of Pennsylvania,
high in republican councils, endors-
ed the proposal. Senator Robinson
of Arkansas, democratic leader also
concurred in the proposition.
Senator Dill of Washington, a
democratic prohibitionist and pro-
minent in the campaing of Gover-
nor Roosevelt of New York for the
presidential nomination, advocated
it as a means of fighting the 1932
cam pi ing in the economic issue.
Whether President Hoover or any
of the democratic presidential can-
didates have been approached or
taken a part in the prohibition eli-
mination conferences is not know.
Bennie Witt, who taught in
Hobbs.-N. M is visiting Mr. and
Mrs. C. r. Witt
- Mr. and Mrs J. J. Johnson at-
tended a birthday dinner and fam-
ily reunion at the home of "her
mother. Mrs. Jim Byrom. at Par-
vin. the occasion being Mrs By-
Tom's birthday.
Mr and' Mrs. Will Walker. Mr.
and Mrs. Arvell Chumbley of Lit-
tle Elm visited Mrs. Alice Taylor
and B. F Witt.
(V 8 Dept. Agri.)— Hogs: 300; truck
hog* stendy to 5 higher: no rail hog*,
truck top 3.00 paid by small killer*;
bulk Miter. 183-289 lb truck bog*
2.00-0,00; heavy butcher pigs 2.50;
packing sows 3 00-36 or ateady
Gattie: 1,000; 200 calves; mostiy
tnge lot clean up trade
PRAIRIE CHAPEL
PRAIRIE CHAPEL, May 25—
Farmers 'have begun cutting oats
and chopping cotton.
Mr. and Mrs Rodden. Mr. and
Mrs, Jack Rodden. Mr and Mm
Markey Rodden of Houston. Mr
and Mrs Arnel Rodden of Sprin-
field, Mo . Mrs. Emma Smith and
Mr. and .Mrs. Henry Coffee of
• NEW YORK FUTUHRES
NEW YORK, May 37—(API—Cot-
ton futures closed:
High Low Close
July ... 5.62 6 60 6412
Oct 5.90 6 75 5 78 , -
Dec 8 02 5 88 5 91
Jan Z _ 6 07 5 98 6 99
Mar 8 26 6 12 6 14
May 8 40 6.35 827
Futures closed steady. 7-8 lower.
Spot quiet; middling 6.60. •
---— srocks
NEW YORK, May 2.—( AP )—-Gen-
eral Electric* dividend cut was an-
other blow to an already tottering
sck market today The list weak-
ened emphatically in the late trad-
ing. and closed with numerous losses
of one to five pointe. The turnover
was about a million shares.
.u. ______Rnd in the• scientifie
Misses Bertha and Lorane world as the co-inventor of color-
ing processes for motion pictures.
Stock*: Weak. General
drops on dividend cut.
Bondi: Irregular. U 8.
crap’s grave in or near Washing-
is neglected.
Confederate Memorial Day will be
observed in Virginia May 30 and
in Tennessee on June 3. Southern
states which honored their soldier
dead on April 28 were Alabama,
Florida, Georgia and Mississsippi;
and on May 10, Kentucky and North
ARCH SHOES
i . .
Blond beauties were put to rout "
when Northwestem University Stu- -
dents took one admiring look at
Miss Margaret Black's ’long, dark_____
hair and elected her queen of the
university's May festival. Thetr
choice. smiling at you above. Is a
leader tn women’s athletics as well
as pulchritude.
‘ . NEW YORK COTTON
NEW YORK, May 37 — (AP) —Cot-
ton opened steady today, 3 points up
to 3 points off Near monitha were
ateady on trade buying and cove-ag
while later delivertes were easier, in-
fluenced by the easiness in cables
General business was quiet and
after the initial demand had been
supplied, moar months eased off with
the rest of the list under oompara-
uively small oTTerings. The reports of
Increasing Insect infestation in the
Southwest came in for some bulish
comment but evidently failed to
promote much buying and the mar-
ket at the end of the first half hour
was quiet and ateady with active
months showing net losses of about
3 to 3 points.
Liverpool cables said some local
buying on the aasler ruling of ateri-
ing had been supplied by liquida-
tion in that market and business in
cotton cloths and yarns was restrict-
The market steadied during the
middle of the morning on a renewal
of trade buying and covering, with
July advancing to 5.62 and Decem-
ber to 6.02 or about 3 and 3 points
above yesterday's closing quotations
Trading at midday was quiet and
steady within a point or two of these
prices. “ .
ter of Navo" vistted Mr*. Oliver
Strickland:
MONTREAT, N. C., May 27 —(IP)
—Petition# from nine Presbyteries
asking the Presbyterian Church in
the United States to reestablish re-
lations with the federal council of
Churches of Christ in America, were
presented to the denomination's
general assembly here today.
At the same time, seven other
Presbyteries made overtures to the
assembly to refuse to re-enter the
council from which the church
withdrew last year after the eounefl
had expressed itself in favor of
birth control.
COTTONSEED OIL
NEW ORLEANS, May 27—(API—
Cotton seed all closed steady Prims
summer yellow 3 08-15; prime crude
2 63 1-2-75 June 3.08. July 317;
Aug 3.18: Sept 3X3; Oct 3X8; Nov.
333: Dec 338: Jan 3 43
MARKETS AT A GLANCE
Mewokep)
A unique electric cooking school
will be conducted in Denton ext
week by Mis. Stella Foyd, well
known home economist, the dates
being June 1, 2, and 3. Lectures
and demonstrations will ba given
each of the three afternoons at 2:30
o clock in the municipal auditorium.
The school is under the ausuices
of the King Radio Shop, local Gen-
eral Electric agent.
Souvenirs are to be given the vis-
itors the opening day.
"Last year over 1,006 Demon
housewives attended our 'Cold
Cookery Schoot," said Cecil King,
“and our program was so enthusi-
astically received that we have gone
to considerable time and expense
to obtain Mrs Floyd to conduct Den-
ton’s first all-electric cooking school.
Mrs. Floyd win feature both ’hot’
and 'cold' cookery and the pre-
paration and preservation of food,
electrically she will use a General
Electric Hotpoint Range and a
General Electric Refrigerator. Mrs.
Floyd will especially feature in her
talk 'glorifying left overs,’ the use
of left over foods, a complex prob-
em for the most careful house-
wife. Few housewives appreciate,
how fast, economical and clean elec-
tric cookery la. Great progress has
been made the past few years and
perfection has been achieved."
"Here rests in honored glory an
American soldier known but to
God.” -
While flowers and wreaths are
placed on the graves of of soldier
dead in cemeteries the nation over.
District of Columbia members of
the American Legion, the Veterans
Across the Potomac from the na-
tion's capital, beneath three sep-
l ’ ar ate tombs. Ue the unknown dead
N of three wars—symbolic of the rev-
1] erence the country will pay on
Memorial Day. Monday, May 30. to
those who gave their lives on the
field of battle •
• . One, a nameless soldier of the
Revolution discovered in the course
of excavation several years ago, is
buried in the churchyard of the
Presbyterian meeting house in
, Alexandria. Va, beneath a white
marble monument erected by pa-
triotic societies.
Not far away, in Arlington Na-
tional Cemetery where generals and
__ t tvates, admirals and saOoni vest
w oh equal honor*, the bodies of 2,-
111 unknotwn Union soldiers fill a
common grave marked by a tomb
erected in 1866. '
0) Try as you may
'' You cannot protect yourselr
et all times. You can, how-
-Vever, provide for your de-
b< pendents. We represent the
emeaco POVLTRY - —
, CHICAGO, May 37.— (API— Poul-
try alive easy; fowl* 12 1-2-13; broil-
era 19-2L__JLMKfiMi broHeiw "45-TTr
roosters 7; turkeys 10-15; spring
ducks 10-12, old 10-11* geese 8.
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
NEW ORLEANS May 26— {AP)—-
The cotton market today opened
steady but quiet. Liverpool cables
came in better than due owing to
easier sterling and first trade* show-
ed gains of 3 to 4 pointe Thia
Oats-No 2 white 23-24. No.
white 22-23 1-2
5.75; cows, good and choice 3 50-5.00;
vealers, (milk-fed), medium to
Choice 3 00-6 00, a tock er and feeder
steers, good and choice 4.50-6.00.
Sheep 4,000. spring lamps flly
steady; clipped lambs steady to
weak sheep steady top native lambs
5 75: spring lambs, good and choice
5.35-6.00; lambs, good and choice 90
Iba down 4 25-76; ewes medium to
choice 160 1bs. down 1.00-50.
ft " IM
513
$.1p.
SALT BRANCH
SALT BRANCH, May 36—W.
SEAGRAVES May 27-(—A
long/robber this afte moon held up
the hank here and escaped with be-
tween1300 and 85,000. Seagraves is
' -NEA
,3.0
I
High Low Close
st is 292-8
600 584 5.87
.. 6.03 6 96 5 95
......6 20 6.10 6.10
KANSAS CITY GRAIN
• KANSAS CITY, May 27—(AP)—
Wheat—3-4 lower to 1-2 higher. Ne.
2 dart hard nom . 5414-78 1-2; .No
2 hard 54 3-4-62 No 2 red 54 1-2-
55; close: May 53 1-2; july 64 1-4;
Sept. 65 1-2; Dec 571-4.-
.Corn- - Unchanged No 2 whte 32:
No.2 yellow 33 3-4-34, Na 2 mixed
nom.. 31-32. close: May 30 5-8; July
32 1-4
Oata—Unchanged. Nb 2 white
nom . 23-26.__.__
.cmeAGO onm pntem-
CHICAGO, May 27.—(AFI — Whest
No 3 red 60 1-4; No. 3 hara 60
1-2; No 2 northern spring 81 1-|
Com—No 2 mixed 32 1-2; No 3
mixed 42 No 1 yellow 32 3-4; No
2 yellow 32 1-2-3-4; No 2 white 32
1-2-3-4; No. 8 white 32
ments firm.
Curb Heavy, leaders weaken
Foreign ©changes Steady, sterling
eases.
Cotton: Lwer, weak stock market,
local and Wall Street selling
Sugar: Higher; better spot mar-
ket
Coffee: Higher, steady Brasilian
market. _
CHICAGO:
Wheat: Easy, good northwest
weather, small export demand U 8.
Whystb •' ______________' •
Corn: Barely steady, favorable
southwest weather -
Cattle: Fairly active.
Hogs Active and strong to higher
TEXAS COTTON
DALLAS May 27<-(AP)—Cotton.
5.10; Houston, 5.45; Galveston, 520
i.0 l Z. - t —m.i
LIVERPOOL. COTTON
LIVERPOOL May 27—(AP)--Cot-
ton 13,000 bales including 6200
American Spot small businees done,
prices one point higher: quotations
in pence American strict good mid-
-HHng 5 00; good middling 4.60; strict
milig 4 80; middling 4 45, strict
low middling 4 40; low middling 4 -
28; strict good ordinary 4 06; good
ordinary 8 76 Futures closed steady
May 4 21; July 4.16; Oct 4 17; Dec
4 20; Jap 4 31; March 4 29
EHICAGO GRAIN REVIEw
CHICAGO. May 27 .t AF) — Btrength
developed in grain prices early to-
day after an irresolute start. France
waa reported bidding for United
States hard winter wheat afloat and
to be in need of considerable quan-
tities of foreign wheat the next two
months. Opening unchanged to 1-4
down Wheat later advanced all
around Corn started unchanged to
1-8 off and subsequently kept near
the initial figures
Wheat closed unstable. 3-8-3-4 un-
der yesterday’s finish, corn unchang-
ed to 1-4-3-8 lower, oata unchanged
to 1-4 up and provisions unchanged
to a rise of 5 cents.
Dressed Hens it
NEW ORLEANS SPOTS . middling 5.59: good middling
NEW ORLEANS. May 37—(AF)— receipts 1X16. stock 1084.707
_PAGETHRN
Long Tresses Win
Crown .
Snowdrift 'T-
3 lb. can
44
2363*
Hot Barbecue **
S*P«
O-CEDAR SHis 2 69c
Steak -
7 ‘T- 630 sheets ‘r
Lee l issue a for 25 )C
A These are
Granges pnen
Cp-
mJ
HnONIELE, FRIDAY, MAT 27, 1932
—------1---------- ”__-____I--' ----
Cooking School .
Here June 1 to 3
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 246, Ed. 1 Friday, May 27, 1932, newspaper, May 27, 1932; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538799/m1/3/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.