Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 303, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 2, 1933 Page: 6 of 6
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DENTON,
FAGE MX
SANGER NEWS
BUY IT IN DENTON
WE HAVE COMPLIED
b
PILOT POINT
. 2.—(AP)—Cot- day on renewed talk of inflation and
American. Spot
daughter, and check measurements to be sure
morning honoring her
Mrs. Glenn Donald. who is here
VACATION TIME
I
Put your
papers, jewi
deposit boxes when you leave on your vacation.
2ai
We issue American Express Travelers Cheques. '
s
10, No. 2,8;
3 3-8s, 41-43 Mar 108
8 spring
12 1-2 -
100
98.17 08.13 8814
SOME OF OUR SERVICES
T
DENTON COUNTY NATIONAL BANK
3 white 35 3-4 to 38.
KANSAS CITY LIVESTOCK
2-(AP)-
¥
11
DO YOU KNOW
Lewis-
Radio Features
Let us put you on ur loute today.
future# closed firm, 6-11
Lieber
Clone
Low
BROOKS DAIRY, Inc.
10.18 10.56-58
“A Complete Fairy Service”
400 N. Locust
Telephone 4 H
R. C. A- VICTOR CAR RADIO
Dresses
And
Roofing
Phone 710
Tin Shop
Shoes
aqwumouQkenar
Dresses Priced From
g
EadddY
Shorts
Phone 1133
We Deliver
BARGAINS IN USED CARS
Fall Gardens
165°
1X0
SMITH MOTOR CO.
plant gardens.
South Locust
Telephone 268.
6
z
Garden Seeds in Bulk
r; elean-
M
Nicholson’s Tested Seeds in bulk.
Phone 88
(
BETTER BE SAFE THAN SORRY
Evers Hdw.Co
A
»
1 “ N
■■
■
■i
■■■
aa
t
the correct
after which
101.28 102.28
99.30 9930
3 l-8s, 46-49
38,51-55
2.95 to 6.00
BOSTON STORE
Mrs. F W. Hayden made high score
and was presented a remembrance.
A three course menu was served
here to Buckley’s office. The certi-
ficates will then be checked and sent
to Washington, from where checks
for amounts due will be mailed.
Fourteen thousand banks affiliated
with the American Bankers' Asso-
elation today Joined the industrial
recovery movement united a modi-
fied presidential reemployment pro-
SPECIAL
ATTENTION
ie was destroyed,
will fill out cer-
ADMISSION
10c Afternoons
10c and 15c Nights
spend her vacation at her home in
Grinnell. la. Miss Ina Nelso, also
of the library science faculty, plans
to remain in Denton.
Mrs. Mattie Loyd Wooten. dean
of women and member of the so-
Safekeeping of your funds until needed. Loans for
your needs when properly secured. Safety deposit
boxes for your valuables. Travelers checks for your
convenience. Service cheerfully given.
Farmers Waiting
Dry Fields For
Plowing Cotton
"WRONG
GORILLA"
A €omedy
Modified Martial Law
Called In Nicaragua
HEADLEE
' TIRE CO, Inc. ,
That buttermilk corrects the effect of acid forming
foods in the body? That’s why it is often recom-
mended by physicians for those troubled with rheu-
matism, pimples, etc.
here believe, which will mean the
first checks should begin to come in
late in August.
324330—1 Elmer P. Brawder,
ville, Chevrolet coach.
Friday and Saturday
Tom Tyler
LET
CAMP
MANAGUA, Nicaragua. Aug. 2.-
—Modified martial law was de-
clared today after a series of ex-
plosions in the Campe de Marte ar-
senal caused considerable destruc-
tion and Injured tour members of
the national guard. The government
ordered an Investigation
Early reports were that 30 guards-
men had been killed or wounded,
but a subsequent official statement
said there had been no fatalities and
the injured totaled only four.
THURSDAY - FRIDAX
AUERUGGLE5-MARY BOLAN
ciology faculty, plans to attend the Penton.
C. I. A. Teachers
Plan Vacation
Trips Over V. S.
roosters 7; hen turkeys 11. tom*
). 2, 8; spring ducks 7 * 10, old
October
December
January
March
May .....
July ____
TODAY and TH URS
DREAMLAND
• ap
"odgs’d
tplus-
GRAhAM
MeNAMEE
Newsreel
Open High
1047 10.62
TIE A LA MODE"
A Comedy Blot -
RITZ
(Cool and Comfortable)
with the requirements of the National Recovery Act
and announce our full co-operation in the plan.
“RED DUST"
ing probit ms:
Quick and Efficient
Phone 1212
"5001005701
Wednesday & Thurs.
"THE LAST MILE”
with
HOWARD PHILLIPS
Round About Town
"Guess we doctors will be the only
folks that the N R A program does
not affect," said a Denton physician.
"Our hours will not be shortened or
made easier unless people will be
considerate enough to get sick only
on hours which we can get out dur-
ing the working time set."
Sating, Canton Crepes and
Korde Sheen
also 4
"Honeymoon Beach”
in
"THE FORTY-NINER
springs IS. colored 14; Rock broilers
13 1-3 - 13, colored 11 1-3, Leghorns
it.
1928 Dodge Sedan
1926 Dodge Coupe
1928 Buick Sedan '
•1926 BuUk Coach
N“MAMA
Company Reduces
Oil Price 13 Cent*
1929 Ford Roadster \
1929 Ford Sedan 3
1929 Ford Coupe
Model T Touring Car
low 49 1-3 - 51. No 3 mixed 48 1-3
- is 1-2n; close; Sept 53 3-d; Decem.
bar M 1-8.
Oats: 3-3 lower; No 3, White 37;
No 3. 37.
CHICAGO GRAIN PRICES
CHICAGO. Aug. 3—(AP>—Wheat
No 1 red 96-98: No 1 hard 95 1-3 -
M 1-4; No 3 yellow hard 94 - M.
No 3 mixed 94 - M 1-4; No. 3 hard
(smutty) M.
Corti: No 3 mixed 53 . 53 1-4; No
3 yellow 51 3-4 - M; No. 1 white
M.
Oats: No 3 white 38 - 38 1-3; Mo
Denton Dairy Products Co.
PHONE 292
A Complete
Showing Of New
Fall
■
calves around 4 00; culis 1.50 to 2.00.
Hoga MX); steady; top 425: bulk
175 - 350 Iba 330-4.30; packing sowa
300- 3.50
Sheep— 1,000; spring lambs #00. or
steady; few feeder lambs 4.75, steady
to 25c lip.
LIVERPOOL COTTON
to Mmes. Felix Byrd, J. W Peel, V.
Ji Peel, 8. H. Norrod, H. Dunn,
$39.95 Installed In Your Car
Drive Your Car By And Let Us Install One For
FREE DEMONSTRATION
G. W. MARTIN
Radio and Refrigerator Dept.
411 North Locust Phone 802
LOCAL GRAI
Wheat, No. 1. SOc bushel: oata. No.
1. 560 bushel; oata. No. 3 34c bushel;
barley. 48c bushel
LOCAL PRODUCE
Potatoes. No. 1, 3-4 lb; toma-
toes, 2 to 4c lb.: black eyed pees.
6 1-3c lb; okra. 7c lb; plums SI to
8136 bushel; cantaloupes 35c to SOc
bushel; watermelons, 1-2c to 3-4c lb;
cream peas. 4 to 6c Ur grapes 81 bu:
cucumbers 5c lb
' mind at ease by placing your valuable
velry and keepsakes in one of our safety
CHICAGO PRODVEE
CHICAGO Aug 3—(AP)—Butter,
steady, unchanged Eggs, steady, un-
changed.
Beans, Turnips, Mustard, Beets, Radish, Lettuce,
# Com, etc.
Is here! Most of our members prefers to pay their dues prompt-
> aate. Now and then one geta careless then baa a reanon to be
M. A. GAY
- Roofing and Sheet Metal Company
alac&
Telephone 75 •9
TODAY ONLY
The SCREEN’S MOST
THRILLING LOVERS
TOGETHER
October
. December .
The Fastest Thrill
Drama!
FALL SHOES
Suedes, Patenta; KideAna
Ambonia Calfs
Priced From
(USDA)—Hogs 3,000: strong to 1.
higner top 420 on choice 200-250
lbs. good and choice 140-180 lbs
SAO - 90; 160-350 ibs 380 - 430;
“ - ■ ..
■MM
~ with
GENE RAYMOND
MARY ASTOR
PEOPLES ICE CO.
Phone ......... t.
Dependable Year ’Round Ice Service
Maples, Earl Cassity, W W Har-
ris, Dee Elder, W. O Anderson, F.
W. Hayden. J. R. Windle. Detroy
Peters, G. K Light, Eugene Pet-
era, Walter Wilson, Misses Erwin
and Mary Norrod, the hostess and
the honoree.
Personale
Mrs. Felix Byrd and son are vis-
iting in Palestine
J. L Owens returned from Dal-
las.
Dr. and Mrs. J. W Durham and
E. B. Barnum returned to Dallas
after visiting H H Barnum.
Miss Virginia Keith is in Dallas.
William Worley of Quanah vis-
ited Mr and Mrs. Oscar Sitae
Misses Ruby and Jupanita Riney
and Loh Aultman were in Celina.
Miss Ruby Kemp returned from
Dallas,
Mrs. Tad Mayfield of El Paso is
here.
Miss Eva Garrison has gone on
an extensive Easter trip.
Mrs. George Basham. Mrs. Leslie
Hangar and Miss Ewing of Day-
ton. who were guests of Mrs. R
A. Chance, returned to Dallas.
First State Bank Of Denton
"The Bank For Everybody”
who expected to start work early
this week were able to get Into their
fields, and only a small part of the
country’s acreage is thought to be
plowed under at present. Work of
destroying the cotton will begin the
last of this week, unless more rain
falls, and next week will probably
see plowing general and the job
about done, Buckley estimates.
After the plowing is done, local
committees will inspect the fields
NEW YOBK FUTURES
NEW YORK. Aug. 1—(AP)—OotKm
, rr worth. Aug. a.—(APi—cat-
tle 1,800; steady; plain and common
steers 3.50 - 3 75; bulls sold up to
380; few cows 3.35; bulk canners and
—liters 1.40 - 85; butcher cows 3.00;
CITY OF DENTON \ A
WATER AND LIGHT DEPARTMENT " ‛
Dr. Freeman Rowell
Announces his return to his
omce for the practice of den-
tistry
. Phone 341
Over Russell's
ARKANSAS CONCERN REDUCES
PRICE FOR CRUDE
ARKANSAS CITY. Kas. Aug. 3
—I—The Kanotex Refining Com-
pany today announced a reduction
tn the price of crude oll from a
75 cent a barrel top to 83 cents
meeting a cut by the Sinclair Com-
pany.
TEXAS SPOTS
DALLAS, Aug. 3 — (AP)—Cotton
10 08: Houston 1036; Galveston 10,30.
Denton County farmers this week
only awaited dry fields to begin re-
moval of over 30,000 cotton acres
from production by plowing under
the rows agreed for destruction un-
der the Federal acreage reduction
plan. - .
About 500 farmers had received
emergency permits earler so that
they could begin immediately and
grow a feed crop on the former cot-
ton land, and this week County
Agent Frank Buckley mailed ac-
ceptances to the over 1,500 farmers
remainrug, under a blanket Federal
TULSA, Ok.. Aug. 2 —(-An-
other brief struggle of Independent
oil forces to achieve first rank as
crude oil price setters apparently
had ended today with announce-
ments from the Sinclair-Prairie Oil
Marketing and Empire Pipe Lines
Companies reducing schedules 13
cents a barrel to a 62-cent peak.
H F. Sinclair, president of Con-
solidated OU Corporation, of which
the Sinclair-Prairie is a unit, blam-
ed the recession by his company of
the failure of the Standard Oil
Companies of New Jersey and In-
diana to meet the advance that was
led my Sinclair and Continental OU
Company early in July
S’5
TO
NEW ORLEANS FUTUNES
NEW ORLEANS. Aug. 3—(AP)—
Cotton futures closed steady st net
advances of 4 points.
10M 1034 10.39 10 78-73
13.18 10.90 10.50 10.87-80
10.88 11.05 1081 11 03-83
11.05 11 13 10,80 ll.IS-n
11.23 1130 1038 11.35-n
geesg. Old 7; Rock fryers
13 1-3, colored 13; Rock
October advancing W 10 83 and De-
cember to 10 84, or 31 pointa up from
the early lows and 17 points above
yesterdan, close. Later in the morning
as the weekly weather report was gen-
erally tavorable, the market started to
ease off and the decline was later add-
ed to by a reaction in wheat and
stocks which caused selling by ring
traders. October dropped to 10 18 and
------------
to visit her from, Alabama. Five . . ...
tables were arranged for bridge, tificates to that fact and rend them
USE ELECTRICITY fh
Faithful servant that saves you-time, money and
effort. And is always dependable.
FOR ECONOMY, FOR CONVENIENCE, A
USE ELECTRICITY m
I Believe It or not! R. A. Nix, near
I Little Elm. is growing watermelons
I that have the appearance of a
I pumpkin. however, he says they have
" none of the pumpkin taste. He said,
a “I have just a few of the melons, as
I they did not do very well. They are
I Japanese watermelons and the rind
I is perfectly yellow when the melon
| is ripe.
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
NEW ORLEANS, Aug 3— (API—
Cotton had a very quiet opening to-
day. Although cables were about as
due. first trades showed I geese of one
to two pointe and the market eased
further in enticipation of e favorable
weekly weather and crop review. Octo,
ber traded at 10.41 and December
at 10.83, or four points down from
vesterday’s close
A little later the market rallied ow-
ing to a firmer opening in stocks and
October advanced to 10 54 and De-
cember to 10.77, up 18 to 14 points
from the opening low* and 9 to 10
points above yesterday’s cloee
Leter in the nra hour the market
January 10.45 10.45 10.45 10.79-
Mareh ... 10.98 1038 1030 1034-b
— May ......... 1133 11.13 1084 11.10-
10 July ........—1121 11.23-
m reel, o n. nuEEVa, 2. put. The making out and checking of
R L Massey Walter erimn, Mike ertification blanks probably will be
— finished week after next, officials
Special to Record-Chronicle
PILOT POINT. Aug. 3 —Mrs J.
M. Oracle entertained Tuesday
me-em-
KANSAS CITY, A)
Mra Bud Westbrook and chil-
dren visited Mrs. Morgan Gibbs
in Fort Worth
Mrs. wiam Martin of Gaines-
ville is visiting Mr. and Mrs Car-
ter. .
Solve your d
held steady at Um highs.
Ths market rallied rather sharply
later in ths first hour owing to 8 gram,
strong opening in the wheat market.
ea-
Open High Low Cloee
10.48 ion 1013 10.40-s0
1088 10.84 1038 1071-73
Vacations to be spent by C. I.
A. faculty members who are teach-
ing in the long term at the sum-
ner session, but who will not be
here the short term, vary in place
and activities. according to reports
from a number of them who have
already made vacation plans. The
majority plan to attend the Cen-
tury of Progress Exposition in
Ch Irsgn
Miss Mary S. Buffum, of the
library science faculty, plans to
make a trip to El Paso, the Caris-
bad Cavern. Taos, N. M Estes
Park. Colo., Brighton, la., and oth-
er points Miss Mary D. Tay-
lor, of the same department, will
ly and
LIVERPOOL Aug.
ton, 1,200 bales, an
gSILK
hpiiih
featuring a huge cast of
1 1 your favorite players in-
cluding
( NEIL HAMILTON
SHEILA TERRY
GUY KIBBEE
ARTHUR BREYON
Houses with Laverpool connections
were moderate tellers here at the op-
ening but offerings were light and the
market soon steadied on trade and
commiston house buying which came
partly through houses with New Or-
feans and western onnections. Buying
was stimulated by the steadier tone of
the stock market and the firm open-
In gof wheat. December contracts sola
up to 1034 by the end of the first half
hour or about 13 points net higher.
Two private crop reports appeared
during the morning, both making al-
lowances for acreage removal One
placed July 31 condition at 65.2 and
the Indicated crop at 11,207,000 bales
while the other made the condition 85
and the indicated crop 10.515.000
bales. These figures attracted some
consent but apparently bad little ef-
fect upon the market Offerings in-
creased following the decline from the
opening advance in the grain market,
however, and pries eased later in the
morning. December sold off to 10.48
ana the general list showed net loss-
es of about 10 to 34 points at mid-
day
The market was steadier late in the
AUTOMOBILE RRGISTAATIONS
334331—Arthur Heimann. Plymouth
coupe.
334333—R. L Hopper. Plymouth se-
dan
324325—1 Lev H. Vaughn. Lewisville.
Chevrolet coach
94
YrrurrsgrAudepen6.2 us at once. Get your receipt, then sleep
I BUY PAINT
I only from old reliable
firms who are going to
be here to back up their
own and the manufac-
turer’s guarantee.
Morris St McClendon
"Pittsburgh Paint Pro-
ducts"
219 West Hickory
Phone 958 —
SANGER, Aug. 2 —Miss Ruby
Lee Seal and Mrs. J. M Giles, who
attended the short course U A. A
M. College returned.
Mrs. Mary Hamill of Dallas vis-
ited Mrs. J. M Wilfong.
Miss Viola O’Neal! of Sherman
visited Mrs. R. L. Jones.
Miss Lola Lynch o Teachers
College visited Miss Cathleen Gen-
tie. . ........
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Cowley re-
turned from a tour of the Western
States.
George and Betty Hughes are
visiting in Dallas.
J. C. Miller of Salina, Kan., is
visiting his parents.
Robert and Milton Isbell return-
eOto Godley.
Carlos Jones is visiting in Law-
ton. Ok.
Hugh Wilfong, who attended the
Century of Progress Exposition, vis-
ited his parents en route to Hous-
ton.
Misses Elizabeth Hughes and
Marjorie Burroughs returned from
COURTHOUSE
DISTRICT COURT
New suits filed: -
O. J. Camp vs. American National
Insurance Co et al, for injunction.
Jimmie H Smith ve. B R Smith,
for divorce
George L Bryan vs. H B Lucas,
trustee, ex al, for injunction
PRORATE COURT
Estate of Emily J. Fry. deceased. ap-
plication to tell bond filed and or-
der given granting same
Estate of L J. beugherty. deceased.
Mrs. Annie B Daughterly appointed
administratrix. Inventory and ap-
praisement filed and approved. bond
set at $12,800.
Estate of William B Burroughs, de-
ceased. Nepple Lee Burroughs ap-
pointed temporary administratrix,
bond aet at 88,000, bond med and
approved
Estate of Olin Kay Carlton, minor,
Mim Charlie Smith appointed guar-
dian. bond art at $1,000, appratsers
approved.
AIARRIAGR INTENTIONS
Orville C Deeds and Thelma Joe
Hazlewood.
YOUR BATTERY
nay need attention Let
:heek it.
sparkman Battery A
Elecsne . . .
Telephone 343
■■■- ,im-rerrni* " " .
Spot quiet; middling 1048
- NEW ORLEANS SPOTS
NEW ORLEANS, Aug. 2.—(AP)—
Spot cotton closed steady. 4 pointe
up Salva 31* Low middling 9.80; good
miadlng 10*0. receipta 3.174: stock
723,793.
NEW YORK, Aug. 3—(AP)—Cotton
- opened steady, 1 to 8 lower in re-
>; spouse to disappointing cables and un-
i.; der scattered selling. October 10.47;
December 10 48; January 10.78, March
1038; May 113*; July 123.
order. On receiving those accept-
ances, the farmers may commence cutt
plowing. Fa
Because of the rain, few of those 5.00
SHIELDED
Infection, disease, many
accidents, aches, pains and a
thousand other of the mis-
fortunes that man is heir to
. , . from these, yes, and of-
ten death itseir, scientific
drug or medical preparation
is your shield. Trust in it at
all times. Rely upon us to
supply you with a scientific
safeguard as prescribed by
your own physician or our
varied experience. .
HOFFMAN & LAKEY
Phone 188. We Deliver in a Hurry.
BANKS JOIN RE-EMPLOYMENT
MOVEMENT
WASHINOTON, Aug 2—
stock pigs good and choice 70-130 15.
2.75 - 3 35
Cattie 5,000; calves 1.000; beet
steers and yearlings alow, tending
lower other killing clesees steady:
stockers and feeders weak, steers, good
and choice 550-1500 Iba 635 - .78;
heiters, good and choice 550-300 Iba
4,75 - 8 15; cows, good 1.00 - 75: yeal-
en (milk fed), medium to choice
300 - 550. etocker and feeder steers,
good and choice 4.00 - 5 88
Sheep 4.000; lambs steady; spots
atrongen yearlings weak; sheep steady;
lambs, good and choice (x) 90 lbs
down 7.00 - 85; yearling wethers, me-
dium to choice *0 -110 Iba 4 09 -
. 535; ews,. good and choice 90 - ISO
' Iba 13* - 326
(x)—quotations based on ewes and
> wethers
STOCK*
NEW YORK, Aug. 2-(AP)- The
stock market today just about dupll.
cased its performance of yesterday.
After loafing along sleepily through-
out most of an extremely dull ses-
sion mining and alcohol equities led
• fainly brix rally in the last hour
and other groups joined in the up-
ward flurry Many gains ranged from
1 to 3 or more points The cloee was
firm Transfers approximate 1,800,-
000 shares.
-Hy good fed hellers around 775 lbs
-00: medium to good yearlings 4.00-
75; plain yearlings 3.00; common
butcher yearlings 3.50.
Calves 800; a lit Us easy: South
Texas calves 3.65, best white laced
TEXAS, RECORD-CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAX, AUGDST 2 1933
DAILY MARKET QUOTATIONS
In better demand, improved business
done: prices fourteen points nigher
quotations in pence: American strict
good middling 7.04: good middlig
6.74; strict middling 4.44; middling
621; strict low middling 4 41; Iqw
middling 534. strict good ordinary
5.76; good ordinary 5 48 Futures
closed barely steady. October 6.03: De-
cembez 6.04; January 4.06; March
8.13; May 6.15; July 6.18.
CHICAGO POULTRY
CHICAGO. Aug. 2— (AP)—Poul-
try. steady; hens 10 - 11, Leghorns
KANSAS CITY GRAIN
KANSAS CITY, Aug 3—(AP)-
Whsat: 1-3 to 4 higher; No 3 dark
hard, 96 1-3 - 97; No. 3. bard 92 1-3 -
97; No 3 red M 1-4 - 95 1-4; cloee:
Sept. 90 1-8; Dec 97 1-3 . 5-6; May
1.00 5-8 to 100 3-4.
Corn: Unchanged to 1 1-3 high-
er No 3. white. 50 - Sin: No. 3. el-
Mexdcan tenor; 8:30— Burns and
Allen; 8—Waring's Pennsyivan-
tons: 10—Ted Lewis orchestra
wJz-NBC: 5 15— Reading, Eva
LaQallienne; 6—The nomads; T-
Goldman band: 9:15-The poet
prince
I P. M., c S. T — CHESTERFIELD
PROGRAM, Bing Crosby, Leonard
Hayton’s Orchestra.
\
r
V
With the fine season now in the ground it is time to
Century of Progress Exposition in
Chicago Before going there she
will make a trip to El Paso. .
Miss Olive Halbert, of the library
science faculty, is going to go to
Chicago on a conducted tour to at-
tend the Century of Progress Ex-
position. She will also visit at her
home in Waco before returning in
September. Misses Stella Lea Gas-
ley and Elizabeth Leake, of the ol-
lege music faculty, are going on a
motor trip to Colorado. 4
Dr. C. D. Judd, of the gov-,
ernment and economics faculty,
will go to Chicago to attend the
Century of Progress Exposition and
will make a tour of the Western
States. Fred W. Westcourt, of the
rural arts faculty, plans to spend
some of his vacation at Turner
Falls and the Wichita Mountains
in Oklahoma and perhaps make
a trip to South Texas.
Dr. Bertha K. Duncan and Miss
Oma Gosney, of the philosophy and
education faculty, will attend the
Century of Progress Exposition in
Chicago, and A. C. Walvoord, of the
same department, will spend his va-
cation in Cedar Grove, Wis. Miss
Ruth -ouglas, of the business ad-
miistration faculty, plans to spend
her vacation at her home in Pst-
ville, la.
NEW YORK, Aug. 2—Try these
tonight:
WEAP-NBC; 6—Fannie Brice .
6:45—Georgia Brown, songs: 7:30
Sketch, "One Man's Family"8:30
—Ship of Joy E ______
WABC-CBS: 6—Tito Gutoar, the
LOCAL POULTWY-
Hens 5c to 7c 1b.; rooster 3-3 1-26:
tyers 8 to 13c lb.; turkey hens 6-8c
1b.- toms 4-5c; ducks 4c lb : guineas
16-180 each; egge candled 13-13 1-20
dozen: egge No 1 white infertile* 160
dozen: cream (butterfat) 15c to 16c
lb - _________
FT. WORTH LIVESTOCK
December to 10 48, down 44 point*
from the higha and 27 pointe under
yesterday’s close.
Nar mia-ession prices rallied 9 to
13 points on covering by mtuned
shorts. -
NEW YORK COTTON *
MARKETS AT A GLANCE
Aug 3— (AP)
NEW YORK
Stocks firm: dullness contnues
Bond* irregular; utestiesfm
Curb firm; mining issues advance
Foreign exchanges firm; sterling
rallles.
Cotton steady; favorable weather,
lower cables.
Sugar quiet: poor spot demand
Coffee steady; trade buying
CHICAGO
Wheat higher; bulllab crop re-
port*.
Corn strong: closing of spreads
Cattle varied, beat grade* steady,
top 67.40.
Hogs 5 to 10 cent* higher top
64.75.
1
TIRE
SERVICE
CLARK
GABLE
JEAN
HARLOW
I* given your telephone
order for crocertes.
WHEN YOU NEED A
RUSH ORDER, CALL US!
Fruita. Vegetables and
Staple grocerles.
I ‘rancis M. Craddock,
Gro.
Telephone 71
in sympathy with the wheat and
stock markets. Future* closed rum.
6-11 higher. Spot quiet; middling
10 45
(n)—Nominal
GOVERNMENT BONDS
NEW YORK, Aug. 3.—(AP)—Gov-
ernment bonds:
High Low Close
L‛t‛y 3 1-2s, 32-47 102 21 102.13 102.19
1st. 4 1-4, 33-47 101 31 10120 10121
4th 4 l-4a, 33-38 102.27 10226 102 27
Tl'y 4 1 -4s. 47-63 100.28 10836 10028
4*. 44-64 106 10421 104
4s. 1-4* 46-56 104.15 104.13 104.13
3 3-B*. 40-43 Jun* 103 101.29 102
3 3-8s, 43-47 103 10 102.7 1029
1
8
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 303, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 2, 1933, newspaper, August 2, 1933; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1538890/m1/6/?rotate=270: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.