Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 208, Ed. 1 Monday, April 13, 1936 Page: 2 of 6
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TWO
DENTON,. RECORD-CIRONICLE. MONDAY, APRIL 1936
Texas Season
Cats
Ope
S as
Defeat Steers
PHONE8
Ea*ter Frocks
laundry service
BURR’S
SPORTS ROUNDUP
REMODELING
Yi
morrow is the day, boys
, or,
(i
4
ASK FOR
(. w Woods
Phone 31
PURITY BREAD
and ROLLS
6
At Your Grocers’I
)
Always Frehf
Headline in s Southern paper:
Just Received
«
MOTHER’S F
STORES
CURTIS DRUG STORE
North Side Square
Phone 52
ther-
3
$1
S1.35
P
1
LOT in the 300
block on North Lo-
One lot of Suits and Coats. Swaggers,
4.95
cust.
e
$475
$395
S10.95
Various Models and Makes. Safety Tested
in
$265
S14.75
and Sold Under Written Guarantee.
$245
I
MILLINERY CLEARANCE
$225
The Boston Store^
THE WILLIAMS STORE
1
6,06)
New PATTERNS make
you
look and feel like SPRING
$19.50 values in
Coats and Suits
Henry Blankemeyer
Dies of Pneumonia
I laid
ma.
Denton Church to
Have Outstanding
Presbytery Report
the third time di
and Lee Prerost c
D
lutl
m
Sh
ha
fri
ins
fre
at
To Name Officers
By Ballot Tuesday
Major League
Baseball Season
To Open Tuesday
Lutheran Church, and had engag-
ed in farming all his life.
the contest
I 8*1 a-
DENTON LAUNDRY &
PRY CLEANERS
'1
s)
In
Ame
pr
I
ru,। J
dan
Ame
41
S (I
Talk and
For E?
■
day I
lookl
linq
uig I
' chai
the I
oil 1
' I
tira
will |
modi
aud
The
colle
open)
n
Willi
sion
even
lmproved LASTEX
Top HOLDS a
THEM UP 2
Puritan bath powder in new square boxes for only
50c. Sold only at Curtis’
The following cars are
priced to sell and all
registered.
OKLAHOMA'S SO0NERS H ANO
EAGLES FIRST NET DEFEAT
Meeting Slated
for Garden Club
HANDY MOTOR
COMPANY
Phone 440
After Easter
CLEARANCE
• SUITS COATS
Purity Bakery
Phone 106
Values to
$5.00
$1.95
By EDDIE BRIETZ
Associated Press Sports Writer
NEW YORK, April i3-(-To-
I
st
p
-I
h
111
League Opening
Day Forecasts
(By Associated Press)
National League:
Quality
Used Cars
. thrilling, heart warming saga of
young love, ancient tends, as real
and hue as the Ozas* foofhiis
that gave it birth. Ask for a guest
Mein to this production if your
name typers among the ads to the
Classified Director) Tuesday.
Henry Blankemeyer, 78, a resident
of the Krum community 43 years,
but a native of Germany, died at
his home Sunday at noon of pneu-
monia.
Funeral services were to be held
Monday at 3 p. m. in the Lutheran
Church on North Elm Street, con-
ducted by the pastor. Rev. W E.
Meyer. Burial was to be in the 1.
O. O. F. cemetery.
Blankemeyer was born Sept. 30.
1859. in Germany, and had lived in
Washable
Jacket Dresses
$3.95
spots that threatens to blow up its
chances as high as Coogan's Blurt
A consensus of the experts picks
the Cardinals, whose hopes rest on
the Dean brothers. Frankie Frisch
and Pitcher Bud Parmalee. Of the
four, Frisch undoubtedly is the dan-
ger spot Should the Cardinal boss
and second Baseman fall victim to
an injury or be unable to play 100
or more games, the chances of the
Gas House Gang would be reduced
considerably.
Several Model A
Coaches and Coupes
Ready to Gof
the hearing
gas company
For YOUR BUILDING,
REPAIRING,
"Make Pence With Your Purse”
Telephone 283. $1 Orders or More Delivered
210 Ash Street and Sherman Drive
City Seeks Gas
Rate Parley Soon
At the age of about 4 1-3 years
a youngster's eyes are as big as they
■will ever be.
Values to
$4.00
$1.00
1935 Ford V-8
Coupe ..............
1934 Ford V-8
Coach ...............
1931 Chevrolet
Coupe „...:........
1931 Chevrolet
Coach ................
1931 Chevrolet
Pickup ..............
ft
e
pPer
ling Circle
Latest 1936
Philco Radio*
Are In
and Louise Bagwill of Plano; the
associate editorship. Misses Verna
Brundrette of Rockport and Helen
Franc Gist of Amarillo; the bustt
ness - managership. Misses Ruby
Ruth Ratliff of cedar Lane and
Elouise Hawkins of Fort Worth
Miss Carol Peterman at Aubrey and
Miss Anne Simmons of Navasota are
candidates for circulation-manager'
of the Lass-O.
Nominated for editor of the Dae-
dalian Quarterly were Misses Grace
Butler of Terrell and Marjorie Lynn
Collier of Denton; for literary edi-
tor, Miss Edwardine Malley ot Pine
Bluff, Ark., and Miss Wilie Mary
Nunn of Amarillo; for art editor,
Misses Yvonne Hesser of Houston
and Erile Mead of Coleman.
Student-body yell leader candi-
dates arc Misses Lucile Blackbum
of Shamrock and Corinne Perkins
of Wichita Falls; song leader nom-
inees are Misses Marguerite Beard
of Dallas, Mary Eugenia Dunn of
Abilene, and Eileen Beck of Beau-
S. I. Self Motor Co.
Become "SELF’-Conscious
201 South Elm
Exquisite cabinet and
table models. World-
wide reception.
KING RADIO SHOP
Phone 351
Because of the improved LASTEX
bands woven right into the tops, these
new PHOENIX EV-R-UP self-support-
ing socks ere held up neatly, snugly,
without binding.
They give you e new
sense of comfort
and trimness . . .
snake you feel fit
• •• give greater
wear because of the
extra-mileage foot
construction end
other PHOENIX
features. Fresh new
patterns in harmony ,
with latest suit fab-
rics Got yurs now.
ther—Fair; attendance 55.000.
Boston at Philadelphia: Pitchers
-MacFayen vs. Davis; weather—
50c .Pair
Wright said Monday.
Commissioner Jack Johnson was
out of the city thda week-end to
connection with his Federal relief
supervision Wright said, but told
the mayor he would be here
Tuegday. On his return, date for
thehearing wi be sought if the
ials are available
fl
t
next spring . . . They would go
to San Antonio, but the Pirates
have a copyright.
Tony Canzoneri had better go
to work if he doesn't look
better against Jimmy McLarniu
than he did against Johnny Jadick,
it will be just too bad . . . Joe
Dimaggio was on the radio for
less than five minutes the other
night and picked up *300 . .’“How
long has this been going on?" Joe
wanted to know . . . You should
have seen Mickey Cochrane blush
when a bell bop in Winston Sa-
lsmy,M.G. paged him as "Hickey
Cachrane". . The other Tigers,
prked around the hotel lobby,
split their aides.
WEAR AIRMADE HOSIERY
We keep your size and color. Spring and Summer
shades: Moondusk, Rimba, Pago, Snappy, Smoke-
mist; Nure-Nees and long ones. Price—
Members of the Denton Garden
Club, and any other citizens inter-
ested In furthering gardening in
Denton and over the county, are
asked by Officials to be present at
a meeting to reorganize the local
group Tuesday morning, at 10:18
o'clock, In the municipal auditori-
um. Officers for 1936 will be elected
at that session, Mrs. R. J. Turren-
are the New York Giants and Pitts-
burgh Ptrates, who are expected to
be hot o nthe trail ot the flag None
of the circuit's other four-brooktyn,
Cincinnati, Philadelphia and Bos-
ton—Is granted even an outside
chance of winning.
Yet. as the teams near the bar-
Brooks Drug Store
Call 29 - 39
- ■
e.a
(Lecuona)
Bon" (Mendt
— of Mrs
Leverett's program she willplay
"Nocturne OP 55 No 1 «er
"Asalaguena”
Wings at boug we
LS26: “rhe Hurmonica .
(David Guion). "Concerto, to A Mi-
nor, First Movement" (MacDowell)
will be her final number.
MEN’S SUITS
Single or Double
Breasted
13c
.Fine Fabrics and
Patterns
J.CPENNEYCa
Cloudy; attendance—10,000
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati: Pitch-
ers—Blanton vs. Derringer; weather
—Partly cloudy; attendance—30,-
000
American League :
St. Louis at Chicago: Pitchehs.
Knott or Andrews vs. Whitehead;
weather—Possible showers; attend-
ance— 12,900 to 19,000.
Detroit at Cleveland: Pitchers-
Bridges vs Harder; weather— pos-
sibl?showers; attendance—37.000.
Philadelphia at Boston: Pitchers
— Dietrich vs. Wes Ferrell; weather
—Unsettled: attendance—35,000
New York at Washington: Pitch-
ers—Gomez vs. Newsom; weather-
Fair: attendance—18.900.
I
I
to 20.000
. Brooklyn at New York: Pitchers-
Earnshaw vs. Schumacher. wea-
(By Aasocdated Press)
Six Texas League teams champed
eagerly at the bit today as the pre-
aeson favorite, the Dallas steers,
shook off the effect of a 4 u> 1
thumping at the hands of the Fort
Worth Panthers at the 1930 pen-
nant hunt began yesterday.
The Steers journeyed to Fort
Worth with practicaky unanimous
selection as the team to beat be-
hind them. The veteran Fred John-
son of the Panthers, however, had
too much on the ball and kept
them fairly impotent through the
afternoon..
Tomorrow the other nines get
into action after a spring training
season made doubly valuable by
ever present warm weather.
Tulsa meets Oklahoma City on
the latter’s home diamond; Hous-
ton Plays at Galveston and Beau-
mont at San Antonio
Fort Worth and Dallas rest until
Wednesday, resuming the series at
Fort Worth. They play again in
Dallas Thursday in the first of a
three-game serles.
7,500 Attend Game
in the lid-lifter before 7,5000
fans. the cats staged two late
rallies to down Dallas.
Jim stroner, who collected three
of the six knocks th© steers got
off the 39-year-old Johnson, open-
ed the scoring with a homer to
the second. The Steers protected
the lead until the seventh. Singles
by Art Weis, the only batsman tp
win the league championship twice
in a row, Charlie Engel ant Brit-
tain tied the score. --
In the next, frame, Ernie Smith
walked, Lee Stebbins sacrificed for
Attractive Puritan bath salt in un-
usual containers, shown in three
odors, pine, lavender and bouquet,
at $1.00.
you find our materials
and service helpful.
Phone 57
atto, Dallas hurler, was relieved
by Curt Fullerton at this point
but Horner Pee contfuet the as-
sault with a double, scoring Pre-
rost. Another single brought in the
third run of the inning.
Defensive work fas featuret by
Dallas' sparkling three double plays.
Night play will rule to the league
again this year. with every park
except Beaumont equipped with
lights. The nocturnal sessions will
start upon a regular basig shortly
after tile season openers for the
teams. . , - “*-
We have one of
the best locations in
the city and the finest
selection of Used Cars
we have ever had. Our
new location will en-
able us to better serve
our customers and
friends and we are ex-
tending you this invita-
tion to drive by and.
look over selection of
Used Cars.
------ Chicago at St. Louis: Pitchers—
Une, present president. said today, warneke vs Dizzy Dean: weather-
The local body is entering its fourth Fair and warm; attendance—15,000
year ofexistence.
for quick, efficient
in the near future.
S. C, W. Senior^
Fund Drive On
Seniors at S. C. W are plan-
ning the seasonal campaign for
funds to finance their senior formal
dinner and dance, scheduled May
9. Jack Crawford. alias the "Clown
Prince of Jaz", and his orchestra
have been engaged to play tpr the
dance, and the eight college beat-
ties, selected by Mrs James V. All-
red. will be presented
The presentation of a 30-minute
surprise comic skit," “Future Wives
and Mothers of Texas”, is the first
fumna-fabing Venture of the class,
to be given at 1145 p. m. Saturday,
preceding the regular Saturday ■
night picture-show to the auditori-
um. Miss Ruth Folse is writing the ।
script for the program, which will
be the stage-show ta connection
with the motion picture attraction.
Piano Recital To Be
Given Tuesday Night
Mrs Maxine Leverett of Houston,
senior at 8. C W, will be presented
in senior piano recital Tuesday
night at 8:15 o'clock to the main
auditorium.
"Prelude from the English Suite
No. r (Bach) will open Mrs. Lev:
erett's program. “Sonata Op. 31 No.
X First Movement" Ceehoven
ememeg
Moth Protection
FREE!
Time tried ahd tested method
of protecting winter clothes
from moth damage.
Garments dry cleaned and
paeked In moth wealed bag* are
tale. NO CHARGE FOK THE
BG. : ••
East Side Tailors
J l • Ash st.—ack ot Postomce
One of the best reports in the
Fort Worth Presbytery is to be made
by the Central Presbyteran Church
of Denton at the meeting of the
Presbytery which opens in Fort
Worth Tuesday night, it was stated
Monday. V. W. Shepard and Rev.
L. P. Parker will represent the lo-
cal church. The women’s presbyten-
al meets in Gainesville Thursday
and Friday, and Mrs. J. R. Swenson
and Mrs. V. W Shepard will repre-
sent the Denton church.
The local church received 15
members by confession at the Eas-
ter morning service. This brings the
number received in recent months
to 53.
All bills have been paid and the
benevolance quota almost has-been
raised. An Indebtedness of $4,200
lacks only about 3200 of being paid
Plans have been completed for a
cantata to be given in the local
church Sunday night.
times out of the last 10 years
Ranking behind the two favorites | mont.
Present indications are that
Tuesday the city will seek 10 ***
a date, as soon as posssbje, for the
gas rate parley with Lone stax
Corporation and Community Qua
Company officials, asked by the
latter to consider a rewired domes-
tic rate for Denton, Mayor J. L
The Evening Circle of tht First
Presbyterian Church will meet
Wednesday at 5:30 p. m in the
church for a lecture by Miss Mc-
Queen Weir, teacher of the Bible
bi s C W- the subject of which
is “God’s Gift to Man." Afterward
supper will be served in the dining
room. Regular circles will meet for
the first time since reorganiza-
tion for the new church year
Tuesday afternoon at 3'30 o’clock.
Circle 1. of which Miss Milie
Herrick is chairman, with Mrs. D,
H Williams, and Circle 2 with its
chairman Mrs. P. M. Brickey.
Mother Advised
Ailing Daughter
To Take CARDUI
Many, many women have taken
Cardul on the advice of their moth-
ers who had been helped by it.
“I would have severe cramping
spells," writes Mrs. P. C. Allen, of
smithaale. Mias "I would get nau-
seated, and feel faint and would have
to go to bed. I would be very nervous
for two or three days I was afraid
to go away from home, for tear I "voud
faint and fall. My mother, having used
Cardul with good results, advised me
sto try it.
"I am so glad I took Carui and got
relief, for it has done wonders for me."
If you suffer this way. send to the
drug store foe a bottle of ©ardul and
begin taking it today. Of course, if
Cardul does not benefit YOU, con-
suit a physician. 21,1_______
EASY TERMS
No delays or embarass-
ment, no.red tape about
credit in buying GOOD-
RICH TIRES and BAT-
TERIES. If you need
tires investigate our
plan.
Hopper-Blackburn
1211 W. Hickory
Phone 16
ANNOUNCING
- -
The Opening of
our USED CAR
Record-Chronicle want ad
peprpogckk
shimmies
or steers hard, undue
tire wear is coating you
far more than we’ll
charge to stop the pull
and shimmy and pre-
vent wear.
DILLON SMITH
MOTOR CO.
Telephone 268
LgHSeHHBHHHSS
U"The Volee of Bugle Ann" with
Lone Barrymore, Maureen o’Sul-
uvan and other, and billed for Sat-
F urday, Sunday and Monday at the
Palace brings alive to the screen a
FOR SALE OR TRADE
1932 Chevrolet sedan 1929 Dodge sedan
1928 Solek ooupe 1931 Chevrolet sport coupe.
All registered for 1936
DICKSON-HAMILTON MOTOR CO.
Phone 248 Craddock Bldg.
rier lor the gruelling ISA-game race.
____,__,_________ the setup is ideal for one ot the
the United States 48 years. He was • league's greatest upsets. Lack of
married to Miss Dora Grabbe to .first class replacement material.
Krum Sept. 23, 1906 He is survived' Probably thegteatest void sirce the
by his wife, two children. Oscar league started, makes It so. Every
Blankemeyer of Krum and Miss Del- I contender has one or more danger
#
One lot of Suits and Coats. Swaggers,'
plaids, woolens, full lengths, 3-4
lengths, tans, grays, blues. Q7 00
Values to $12.50............. 3 E 1•V
.
Oklahoma University’s powerful
Sooner nutters, coming here after
manhandling Texas Christian Uni-
versity in a two-day series, swept
over Coach Pete Shands’ Eagle
squad for the locals' first defeat on
any court this season. Oklahoma
annexed honors by a 5 tb 1 count
Fred Barns, former Bronco and
now a brilliant sophomore singles
performer for the college varsity
team, trounced Carpenter of Okla-
homa 6-1 6-0 in the opening sin-
gles clash, but all other matches
went to the invaders in a smash-
bang type of game Barns smother-
ed the No. 1 Qklahoman by superior
accuracy in placing shots.
Oklahoma took the other matches
by the following scores: in singles,
Harlow defeated Dittrieh, 3-9, 8-4.
8-2; Clement defeated Phillips, 6-4,
8-3; Martin defeated Jones, 8-3,
8-1.
In doubles. Clement and Martin
defeated Barns and Dittrich, 3-6,
6-3, 8-6; Harlow and Carpenter de-
feated Phillipa and Jones, 6-1, 6-0.
It gave the Denton team a record
of five victories, two tie decisions
and one loss tor the season to date.
Junior Aggies Here
Though expecting tough opposi-
tion, the locals will be favored this
week as they enter two tourneys.
At the local courts this afternoon
the Eagles were pitted against the
North Texas Junior Aggies from Ar-
lington At Commerce Thursday
afternoon they meet the East Tex-
as Lions.
I
la Blankemeyer of Bellville, and a
brother, Frederick Blankemeyer of
.v...__ - -__ - ■ . Germany He was a member of the
Yankees go as Gomez goes; and - -.....
how he goes, nobody knows." . .1
the Giants may train at Havana
Drama, romance, heart throbs,
“The Voice of Bogie Ann” schedul-
ed lor Saturday, Sunday and Mon-
day at the Palace has them all.
Youll enjos thig outstanding saga
of the Ozark foothills with Lionel
Bar t y more. Maureen O'Sullivan
and others so watch for your name
In the Classified Directory Tues-
day.
FRYAR,
Motor Co.
CHRYSLER FLYMOUTH
Phone 401
"DWer Tag," a* they say in "Zin-
zinatt" . . . right now it looks
like old Jupe Pluvious wil be the
big winner . . Cant some-
body do something alsout that
guy? . . This corner stcks to the
Tigers and Cardinals . . . With
the Cube and Indians having .the
best chapce to upset the dope
last season the Cubs had to win
21 in a row to nose out the, Cards
. . . you can't ask them to do
that again . . . Even steve
O’Neill will admit his Indians are
studded with “ife.’-
Note* on Spring Daintiness
Puritan Cologne in hob nail bottles
at $1.00. —€
Larger sizes in lavender at d" —
naturelle scents priced at 52.00. . i
Student-boay election campaigns
at S. 0, W. wil be brought to a
climax with final voting on candi-
dates for offices of the 1936-37 stu-
dent body Tuesday morning at the
assembly hour.
Nominees for the various offices
were announced at a student mans
meeting Friday night, and cam-
pigns got immedlately underway
over the week-end.' Signs for fa-
vored candidates wer all over the
campus, in dormitory -windows, on
flagpoles, in every available spot, by
Saturday morning. One sign, a line
of poles covered with oil-soaked
clothes, pearing the letters th the
name of one presidential candidate,
was set alight Saturday uight; and
several dormitory windows bore
electric signs, student-devised, ad-
vertising candidates
MiSses Dora Tucker of Houston
and Dorothy Ehlinger at New
Braunfels are candidates for presi-
dent of the 1*36-37 student body of
8. C. W The two were nominated
with other officers by student vote
taken in assembly Thursday.
Receiving the nomination for vice
president of the student body were
Misses Margaret Calllet of Dallas,
Elizabeth Polsm of Taylor, and
Virginia Johnson of Seymour; and
for secretary. Misses Rivers Oliph-
ant of Houston, Mavis Clymer at
Denison, ana Mary Walker of T-
ler.
Seeking the editorship of the
Lass-O, college newspaper, are
Misses Amalese Gough of Beaumont
SPECIALS
SHOE SALE
On cables zrouped for your
wne, plondes,
rams, sandais, ox-
k straps, mostly
___ -__s, 3 to 6. SDo
values to $ to now
49c 98c
Happy Home
Dresses
Organdy. batiste, sheets,
prints, broadeloth.
. S1 •
Millinery
Grouped on tables, straws,
al Shapes and color*
19c 29c
Boston Store
) ( $22.50 values in
tt Coats and Suits
Seek Sixth Team
in Amateur League
i
With five teams signed for the
summer rounds, omiclals of the In-
dustrlal League Denton amateyr
gofeban organization, announced,
that a sixth team was needed to
make a complwete league, though
an eight-team league could be. con-
siderea it as many as three more
teams seek admission. A meeting
will be held this evening at the
Central Fire Station to complete
crganization and make out the
schedule, at 7;30 o'clock.
Teams now entered are: Little
Majors, poubie Dip, Mothers Food
Store, North End Firemen and
Central Firemen.
CHICAGO, April 13.—(—"Open
season" on those Tigers starts to-
morrow.
Tb the roar of dyed-in-wool fans
whose enthusiasm is seldom notice-
ably chilled by opening-day wea-
ther, and who may number upwards
of 80,000, eight American League
baseball clubs get another season
under way Tuesday afternoon. And
most ot them will be gunning for
the Detroit Tigers, champions of
Ilie world
Always a gala event, tomorrow’s
inaugural has been especlally await-
ed by the sport’s fan because it will
start solution of a few of the smok-
iest puzzles ever to get in the eyes
of the "hot stove league' fans will
the Tiger prowl proudly through the
league's jungle for a third straight
year, or will its talons be clipped by
the Indians from Cleveland, the
money-Jingling Boston Red Sox or
the once-powerful New York Yank-
ees?
Tigers Play Indians
The opening day bill sends the
Tigers against the Indians at Cleve-
land, with 35,000 fans expected to
see the game if favorable weather
prevails The Red Sox entertain the
little-regarded Philadelphia Ath-
letics in Boston, where 30,000 fans,
most of them hoping to gel a close-
up view of the Sox plush lining,
may click the turnstiles.
The trouble-making St. Louis
Browns travel to Chicago to take on
the White Sox before an expected
gathering of 15,000 and the Yankees
open in Washington against the
youthful Senators, with President
Roosevelt expected to be among a
crowd of about 30,000
if optimism of managers means
very mean,’ this year's race will be
so hot 'the smoke may blind the
batsmen in the American League,
mckey Cochrane sees an “excellent
chance” for his Tigers; Joe Cronin
wants only pitching support for his
Red Sox; Joe McCarthy says his
Yankees "have as good a chahce
as any club”: and Steve O’Neil says
flatly Cleveland “is the team to
beat."
Cardinats Favorites u
NEW YORK. April —(•—A
pennant race, so exciting and close
that one injury may decide its out-
come. opens tomorrow over the Na-
tional League baseball front with
the St. Louis Cardinals and Chi-
cago’s spectacular Cubs one-two fa-
vorites to capture the prize they
have held between them eight
j* plaids, woolens,
5 Values to $8.50 now
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 208, Ed. 1 Monday, April 13, 1936, newspaper, April 13, 1936; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1539561/m1/2/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.