Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 170, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 1, 1938 Page: 2 of 10
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MONDAY, nOMWAMT M. Uli
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A
5
PHONE
7
188
I •
it of that." Christine
to
We should have
on
in
Ily
sick
are
NEAL & LAKEY
nYou’ve heard Ren
1
■I'
Whipping Cream
2 -3
Cottage Cheese
E
advances of 3 to 4 points.
Wholesome! Delightful!
>
9.25 9.34
0 38
/
9.45 * 9.38
Creamery Butter
Bulgarian Buttermilk
I
1
2
£
very-
make
the emergencies of tomorrow
3
1934
on
to
i
We Solicit Your Account, Large or Small,
g .
t
On a Business Basis
5,
F]
$
First State Bank of Denton
NOW! |
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
9:30
M-G-M’e
■
. 8
2-5
f
, .2m
M.
in
Phone 130—For Ice
LEAKY ROOFS
PENRYBROS.
*
JOHNS-MANVILLE
4
M SYSTEM GROCERY AND MARKET
•1
44 Broad st.
New York
1
umphs, Minnesota Cobblers and Triumphs. Get price.
TRUCKS
M SYSTEM GROCERY AND MARKET
-
(
V
AT THE ECONOMY GROCERY * MARKET
-2
'J
•/
L
Plant Nicholson’s Seeds
FALLACE
RD
32x6 ten-ply tires. newly
I
h
at $245
—They are fresh
4
9
—good assortment
The New
6365
one at onl
—sold in bulk. You get more
A
Sensational
seed, at less cost.
Drink
Aute
K
truck.
12 oz
FUSES
Automobile Refinancing
5C
a
#
Evers Hardware Co
Co.
Dealers
—
—
V
(
1
$
; WILLIAM HALL
7
f
IN DEBT?
ROOFS
TEXAS
TIN WORK
DOUBLE
COLA
S ((unpbell (o.
SERVICE
See M System for your Cabbage Plants, Onion Plants,
Onion Sets, Seed Potatoes, Maine Cobbler and Tri-
That account you should open today at this
bank will provide the necessary supply for
will not be your trouble
if you have
MERCHANTS
FINANCE CO
■
: 11.15
........15c
100% Pure Pennsylvania
2 gallon (factory sealed)
W. C. Brown
Funeral Services
cans________
Quart___
CITY OF DENTON
Water ana Lght Department
. 7
10”
No Wonder
You Are Constipated!
9.21
9.27
9.37
9.38
9.34
CHARLES
BOYER
[DDUBin
s COLA A
PEN DURANCE *
MOTOR OIL
Mar
May
July
Oct
Dec
Jan
Barn Dance for
Legion Post Tonight
The local American Legion Post
will entertain members of the post
and invited guests tonight with a
barn dance
The men are to dress in overalls
GRETA
GARBO
conditioned motor in
dition all over—a ste
d tires,
.... $225
"You know how
re heard him at
Back of Postoffice
Denton
I
9.23
9.25
0.30
At I
8:33
5:30
9.34
9.41
ciose
8 28 B—31A
0.33—3
038
9.45
9.45
9.45
Spot steady: middling 9.27.
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
NEW ORLEANS, Feb 23 —< AP)—
Cotton futures closed steady at net
and the women in aprons. The Le-
gion Hall, where the dance is to
be held. Will be decorated as a barn
with hay, harnesses and other items
typical of the average barn used in
the decorations. Floyd Graham's
orchestra will play for dancing
Hosts and hostesses for the eve-
ning are Mr and Mrs. Arthur Wil-
kerson. Dr. and Mrs. C. L. Oliver.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Mars. Mr and
Mrs Guy Turner and Mr and Mrs
Mark Waldrip.
e
Call 1133 and 1153 for groceries and fresh meats.
HEdMduY
Bell Roofing &
Sheet Metal Co
Back of Postoffice
Denton
!
MORE MERCHANDISE FOR
LESS MONEY!
CUT RATE AUTO
SUPPLY CO.
Phone 323
PASTEURIZED MILK PRODUCTS
FOR HEALTH!
7-Up Bottling Co.
E.D. Schroeder, Mgr.
■ ■
KATZJAMMER
KIDS
CARTOON
with
re-
con-
dhs al death to bring back
news alive.
thought or it often,
heard from Baremba
“PATHS PARADE”
Novelty 1 -
JURE TRAVIS
DIAN JAGGER
KKTA to—
7, Musie and Comedy
«VrrAPONE FROLICS*
1935 Chevrolet Panel delivery
In Perfect condition Uulde and
when you need a prescription
in a hurry. We fill them ac-
curately and with the fresh-
est and purest drugs available.
Free Delivery. . --------
EMPIRE FOR fl lap;
pi4.BL.BLGN,LEMBY,g3
—----- TODAY ... ■
£ BARGAIN DAY
Adults 15c, Children 10c
1935 Chevrolet truck absolute-
ly perfect all ov.r good tires
—good paint. You don't want
a truck if you don't buy this
BROOKS DAIRY, INC.
PHONE 467
—suggested from
DENTON COUNTY NATIONAL BANK
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
NOTHING BUT THE BEST WILL DO
FOR YOUR YOUNGSTER!
And the best is Brooks Dairy Milk . . . best in flavor,
nourishment and vitamins ... best for that perfect
glow of health that means so much! Be sure your en-
tire family enjoys the benefits of a better, richer milk.
FOR HEALTH’S SAKE MAKE IT A FAMILY
AFFAIR . .. DRINK MILK!
-- LAST DAY —
“DANGER LOVE
AT WORK”
With *
I know what I think it I*. Something
has happenea to Mantusen. We
haven’t heard from Mantunen, or 84-
remba, since Mantusen sallea. I think
Mantuaen't deal with Clyde angered
his suitan. It's Rentongen now who
representa Massin All—and I thik
he has his orders."
Twi- pl
UM4W
. a......• s .
COMING WED.-THURS.
“CONQUEST"
M. A. GAY
ROOFING A SHEET
METAL co.
Gets Eight Years
In Slaying Trial
Balingong. I had already done all I
could, and perhaps more than was
appropriate; it was hardly my place
to try to send away the girl with
whom my uncle was in love And
Clyde, although he agreed, that she
be named
With elmina
Bernhardin a
Armgatd. Al-
ways tremen-
dously popu-
lar wtilr her
peeple.bui
ever more so
now, Juliana
is shown hete
(ddedltiacton
Jospehine Huston
"CANDID KID"
Comedy
Cecilla "Parker
"STROKE OF GENIUS"
Novelty .
1
spy RIN
JANE WYMAN
The dewervea popularity at the
new Ford truck has awamped
us with used trucks which we
MUST SSU. Every one of these
trucks will give excellent satis-
faction.
2 1933 Chevrolet trucks with
bodies in excellent condition
all over—take your choice st
.......................................... $195
A LAUNDRY SERVICE THAT COSTS YOU LESS
(1) Than you pay a washwoman. (1) Than when your wonsa does
the washing, (l) Than when you do year own washing. Cal Ha. «.
DENTON LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS
?
The nerve center of your electric service to your fuse box. A fuse
"blows" to eut off the current when there to an overload or the
wiring is faulty. Fuses are inexpensive. They should never be re-
paired with a coin or other makeshift reploement. Yen risk the
loss of year home by fire, ...
1937 G M C truck like new. cab
perfect, cushions like new. 6.50
front tires and 32x5 10-ply rear
duals. overtona springs, point
like naw. ANY man can make
tot 2
i 4
2
think we’re going to hear: from
, in h wav tht we won’t l1ke"
od paint,
cheap at
....... was
Ei
43 TUESDAY - WEDNES.
2 Fun at its maddest ..as they
5 spend their wedding night on a
«DAILY MARKET QUOTATIONS
J
“I've though!
admitted “I’ve
“Yes," she said slowly, “that is
true This will be the greatest thing
that has ever happened in the is-
lands, when it is done."
“Clyde.” 1 agreed, “will have a nice
■
4
1937 DeLuxe Coach,
like new inside and out--get
this one quick betore it pee
at only .........a................. MM
A taut, hard strain came upon
both Clyde and me. In spite of ev---
thing Christine could do to i
- I marts ne farther. per-
, suede Christine that she must leave
-I
II
itongen talk." I
’ bitter he's be-
2 1904 Chevrolet trucks, one
has a bed, both in A-l condi-
t»l) 29 1/2; extra Nrsta (80-911 28
#/-20; ants (08- 28-28 1/2; se0-
bmas (84-87 1/2) 23-27; standards
(90 centralized carlots) 29.
Rggs 13 577 unsettled; fresh grad-
Sd. extra firsts, local 16 1/2 cars 15
374; firsts local 16. cars 16 1/2; cur-
rent receipts 16 1/2.
—=-----
J STAMPS.
Funeral services for W c. Brown
who died Friday, were held Sun-
day'at 2 p. m in the Schmitz Fun-
eral Home, conducted by Rev. J.
Frank Weedon, pastor of the First
Baptist Church. A quartet composed
of Mioses Mary and Francos Jo
Nelms. Fred Parker and R B
Neale Jr sang two hymns, "The Old
Rugged Cross," and "Abide with
Me," accompanied by Mrs. R M
Barns.
Burial was in the I. O. O. F.
cemetery and pallbearers were Leon
Hannah, Roy Moore, B. F. ORear,
Gilbert ORear, J. L. Wikirson and
J. 8. Nelms.
living running this
---------------•0s
out. good tires,
runs like new. I
pie would have eaten the seed. They
knew better than that, and it was
against custom, but these people
were at the end of thetr string. Game
was scarce, and the ashing bad. Th*
situation could hardly have been any
worse
METROTONE
—-NEWSTODAY
I knew that toto waa not so: 1 had
neiped Clyde to draft his will I
knew toat ah Clyde's claim on Ba-
Iingong raj. and everything in it.
was deeded to toe Ranee Christine.
"The hell with it,” I said
"You—you don't want l«f"
"No."
"But. Paul, you've given so much
of yourself- ”
"What I want is to sit on a tool
Open High Low
0 23 0 25
ceed. But-lately- 4t- hhas seemed-
me that we have heard very little
an him pehape I've been foolish
hope; but I've been hoping that
I Malays were becoming reoncil-
it’s weeks since we've had a really
orous complaint from Rentongen."
“That’s just what worries ms," I
her. "Something is happening
the background I see evidences
IE, but I cant And out what It is
9.41. 9 45 9.39
9:41 9.45 9.41
gu1
.. 4."
| ’ IN THE NEWS |
Averrveryrwreek
WABuETHRD
NEW YORK FUTURES
NEW YORK, Feb. M— (AP)—Cot-
Dutch stamp.
(Copyright, 1911. NBA Servie, Inc.)
tion, dual wheels, food
good paint, your choice
1035 Ford truck 157"
CHICAGO CASH GRAIN
CHICAGO, Feb 28—(AP)—Cash
wheat No 4 hard 91 1 /2; No. 3 mixed
03
Com No. 3 mixed 55 1 2-58 1/4;
No. 3 white 57 1/4; oats No. 1 white
83 3/4-34; No 2. 33 1/2-2/4
’ Rye No. 2 . 78-80 1/4
18 roosters 14 1/2; turkeys hens 24.
toms 18; ducks 4 1/2 lbs. up colored ‘
21; capons less than 7 lbs. 25.
Butter 472,251, steady. creamery-
specials (08 score) 30-30 1/2; extras
Kimbrough-Tobin Drug Store
phone 47 Ffm Deliemy
___________ “And all this is whatyou‘re mak-
this fever-ridden spot. ing.me run aay. trom." chrtstine
Why not invest your
money at home? The
Denton Federal Havings
and Loan Association is
paying current dividends
of 4 per cent and invest-
ments are insured. Get
further information
about this way of mak-
ing your funds earn an
income.
Money accepted In
lump sums or in month-
ly payments.
W. E. MANN
Sec.-Treas.
Telephone 26
What do you eat for breakfast?
Coffee, toast, maybe some eggs?
What do you eat for lunch and
dinner? Bread, meat, potatoes?
No wonder you’re constipated-
due to lack of “bulk.'' And "bulk"
doesn't mean the amount you
eat It means the kind of food
that forms a soft, bulky mass in
the bowels. It's this mass that
helps your bowels move.
The common sense thing to do
about it is to eat a natural
laxative food Kellogg's Ail-Bran
for breakfast will give you just
the "bulk" you need And it gives
you. In addition, Nature’s great
intestinal -tonic, vitamin B, Kat. "
this crunchy toasted cered every
day. drink plenty of water, and
life will be brighter for you! All-
Bran is made by Kellogg in
Battle Creek.Bold by every grocer.
_ mhem‘mn"wnshheuenEe20....."arstantinhiacarsthomiag hfngatde
-'sYNOMUI: our tow ter •
THE birth to Princess Juliana of
- The Netherlands of a blue-
eyed, fair-haired daughter may
some day bring the little land its
third consecutive woman ruler.
Queen Wilhelmina rules now
with a vast popularity. Princess
Juliana is certain to succeed her
mother and unless a male eir is
born, the new baby will also in
time follow to the Netherlands
throne.
Nor is the parallel ended there.
Princess Juliana's child was born
on the last day of the month, as
was her grandmother and Juliana
herself. Queen Wilhelmina was
born Aug. 31, Juliana April 30
and the new princess Jan. 31.
By royal decree the new baby is
entitled from birth. Princess of the
Netherlands, Princess of Orange-
Nassau and Duchess of Mecklen-
burg. From her father she inher-
its the title of Princess of Lippe-
Biesterteld. The baby will likely
NEW ORLEANS sPors
NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 38—(AP)—
Boot cotton closed quiet. 5 poliats
higher Sales 981: low middling 8 03
middling 9.43: good middling 998;
receipts 14,222; stocks 329. 243'
9 12 9.21
9.21 937
8.27 9.36—37
9.28 9.36—38
9.31 9.39N
gagonlus the snlton's repreaen-
Plant Nicholson's Fresh, Bulk Seeds, and have an abundance
of fine, fresh vegetables at very small cost.
FREE OFFER
Cut out this and bring it to us and receive a free package of
The Jungle was stripped at mrf-
thing fit to eat, and it was strange
-- .
-- Eh—‘ - * —
■
m.
-
‘M
ri
thing hees eeswe der?1------—
I was watching her pronle, dimly
seen by the torchlight, but very near:
I was unwilling to lose one moment
at memory nt her Bhe turned now.
and looked at me very straight, but
with a curious expression In her eyes
"Of course, some day all of this
win be yours."
FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH, Feb. 28.—(AP)—
(U8DA1—Cattle 2,500; calves 2,300;
most cattle and caives about steady,
meat matured steers 6.25-7.00; load
choice 920 lb. weights 9.75; most
killing calves 5.80-7.50; few choice
yealer 9 00 and above: several loads
Stock heifer calves 6 00-86
Hogs 1600, steady with Friday's
average; top 8 35 paid by small kill-
era: good to choice grades of 180-250
lb, averages 8 20-35 butcher pigs
6.00-75.
Sheep 2.600; packers bidding strong
to 25c higher on rat lambs; good
wooled lambs bid 7.25 and shorn
lambs 6 50
Leading Stocks
NEW YORK, Feb. 82.(AP)-Sales,
losing price and net change of the
15 most active stocks today
US Rubber 16200 33 1/g dn 1 1/8.
US Steel- 14400 54 5/8 dn 1 5/8.
Int TAT 13000 8 dn 1/2.
Anaconda 12000 32 3/4 dn 1 1/8.
Int Nickel 12000 50 3/8 dn 1 1/8.
Chrysler 10300 53 5/8 dn 1 1/8.
NYC 10800 18 1/4 dn 1/3.
Deere & Co MOO 33 7/3 dn 3/8.
Yelo Ttk 9800 14 3/8 dn 3/8.
Goodyear TAR MOO 33 1/2 dn 3/4.
Gen Elec 7600 40 1/8 dn l
Beth Steet-7300 58 dn 1 3/8.
Armour Ill 8900 8 1/8 dn 1/3.
Kenecott 6800 38 3 4 dn 12
Gen Motors 6300 34 1/2 dn 1 1/8.
Radio 6300 6 7/8 dn 1/6.
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
NEW ORLEANS,- Feb.-a8,—4AP>—-
Cotton futures opened 1 to 4 points
down on indifferent cables and cir-
culation of additional March notices.
Tenders for 700 bales were issued
at the start and. brought the total
number since first notice day to 11,-
500 bales March opened at 9.23, May
at 9.25, July 9.34, Oct. 9.41, Dec 9 41
and Jan. at 9 41.
The impending Mar di Gras holiday
tended to restrict trading
Liverpool cables said speculative
enterprise was lacking there.
The market fluctuated narrowly
during the morning and toward mid-
ession active positions sold at levels
1 to 3 points below the previous close.
Hedge selling was augmented by
1qudation from to* long Ma.
March contracts solda 0.26, May
at 0.28. July 932, Oct. 939 and Dec.
at IM .
Domestie cotton gooda markete
war* steady. Manobaater cables snid
inquiry improved in cloth and yarns
and that orders showed a «btntil
increase. h
The turnover Saturday was 24,250
bales and open commitments 417,000
bales, a decrease of 2,350 bales from
the previous day.
NEW YORK COTTON
NEW YORK. Feb. 28—-(AP)-Cot-
ton futures opened 4 lower to 1 high-
er on near month liquidation and ex-
changing to later positions. March
0^8May lift Oct. 9.28;
Dec. 9.30; Jan. 9Jl.
The market remained quiet later
in the morning with fuctuations still
narrow but with the tone steady. By
midday prices were unchanged to 2
point* net higher and at the best
levels for the day thus far, owing
more to absence of selling pressure
than any special demand.
May was selling at 9.17.
Liverpool cables were indifferent
and Bombay was observing a holiday.
When selling proved to be light,
prices recovered to around Saturday s
closing levels on a little trade, Liver-
pool and scattered buying.
May recovered from 9.12 to 9.16 and
shortly after the first half hour was
selling at 9.16. when the list was net
unchanged to 1 point lower.
MARKETS AT A GLANCE
NEW YORK, Feb. 28.—-(AP)—-
Stocks lower; leaders dip on light
selling. "
Bonds easy; secondary rails lead
mild decline.
Curb down; metals, oils in supply.
Foreign exchange steady; pound
slips, —--e —
Cotton quiet; trade buying, hedge
selling.
Sugar improved: trade buying.
Coffee uneven; Brazilian buying.
CHICAGO:
Wheat lower; improved crop pros-
pects.
Corn easy; Chicago receipts large
Cattle steady to weak.
Hogs 15-35 higher.
Chapter 36 "
WHANGING NERVE STRAIN
2aggrxtszazhcu60- I Flower Seed ( or Vegeta ble Seed
veranaa overlooking to* m,' and, - -2 ■
ConsecunveQuse
than Clyde will have in yean."
She turned her face away from
me and she was very atm: Far up
ahead we could ae* the lighte at
Robert Forrester’s bankong. already
well out on th* bay.
Dyaki had delayed planting until It
was all but too late—in ten case of
some villages too late altogether—
for no better reason than that the
magic auguries ware unfavorable.
Throw against the poor crop the
waste and spoilage of war. and it la
hard to see why they expected any-
thing but famine.
When a one-crop food supply runs
out it runs out suddenly: moat vu-
lagea had come to th* end of their
rice long ago, and it was very dim-
cult to see how they lived at all. It
waa a fortunate thing that whatever
rice was going to be planted was al-
ready in the ground, for I am cer-
tain that in their extremity the peo-
DREAMLAND
should not be here, seemed strangely I - Dally the Siderong before the
bamied. t .wsa. .2.. .. | bamboo palace was banked with the
Eu=Es4
Portanaenasothenfamins.hadamnew couid no ionger expect u’ do any-
reacned proportions of real calamity, thine more
in the previous yesr most of the -8- --------———- — —--
things smooth After we had got over
the first shock of the idea that she
was going to stay with us we had
the feeling that Balingong must
somehow be pulled and hauled and
hammered into a fit place for Chris-
tine. It must be done immediately—
and it was impossible. Clyde and I
fought our work harder than ever
before, harassed by an unsleeping
desperatioh. That whanging nerve-
strain, in itself, later accounted for
many things.
to see so much vegetation and yet
so little food. The people were eating
weeds, and soup made of boiled
grasses and scraped moss. They ate
the bark of trees, and even weight-
ed their poor fiat stomachs with a
kind of day found on the river banks
It was a temptation to send our
vessels to distant islands with our
precious store of rifles, to trade for
food where and howevef we could
But we knew this would have been
fatal. It would not only have fnish-
ed us, but would have finished Balin-
gong. We had to sit there and endure
it while we watched the people die.
(Copyright, 1936, Alan LeMay)
DENTON DAIRY PRODUCTS CO.
220 W. Oak Street. Phone 292
BEAUMONT, Feb 28.-(P—A
jury here yesterday returned a ver-
dict of guilty and gave A Joubert,
convicted a second time for the
hoe slaying of his Port Arthur
neighbor, T A. Cheshire, eight years
in the penitentiary-
After a trial a year ago Joubert
was sentenced to three years, but
appealed and the case was revers-
ed by the State Court at Criminal
Appeals
the other boat."
I called out an order, and my pad.
dim picked up their beat. The ban-
kong began to ur and drive over th*
water. We were nearly at the end of
it now. In • little while more what
magic there was in Balingong was
going out of It. and nothing would
be Ml of the thing this girl had
bewitchea us into except war and
fever, and a struggle against going
broke There were years of It ahead
without anything In them that a
reasonable person would want. Yet
I knew that Clyde could not quit,
and neither could I. And I knew that
we were fools.
We were alongside Robert Forres-
ter's bankong; we were under the
Avon’s black hulk. Clyde and Marvin
Stocker were calling back and forth
Christine groped for my hand, end
for a moment pressed It against her
cheek; her face was wet, but it was
impossible to tell now whether with
rain or tears Then abruptly she
threw my hand away
"I can't do it," she said. "It's too
much to Mk."
"You can't—what are you talking
about?"
Bhe was silent for a long moment-
rhe!! she called out across the nar-
row strip of black water.
"‘Goodby, Bob. . . . I’m going back/*
I would have supposed that our
life here would now go on as before.
Unaffected by the fact that Christine
had made a false start at departure,
but balked. But it was not the same
as before—nothing could have been
more different.
Harassed by Desperation
WALL STREET
NEW YORK, Feb. 28.—(AP)—Light
selling side-swiped the stock market
today and leading issues fell back
fractions to 3 or moire points at the
worst.
Offerings, on the whole, were small
from the start. The ticker tape fre-
quently was at. a standstill. A little
buying support appeared from time
to time and at the close extreme
losses, were cut down substantially in
many cases Transfers were around
550,000 shares
For COMPLETE Markets
and Financial News
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Relied upon by business men
and I n vesters. everywhere.
Send for free sample copy.
and Fencing a =eet Electric Appliances
*rF* "" - AN
- m* goat hunt: Side-splitting.
LIVERPOOL COTTON
LIVERPOOL, Peb. 28—(API—Cot-
ton 8.000 bales, no American Spot
quiet; prices unchanged. Quotations
in pence: American strict good mid-
dling 5.97; good middling 5 67. strict
middling 5.42; middling 5.17. strict
low middling 4.92; low middling 4 -
43; strict good ordinary 3.92; good
ordinary '3.52 Futures closed un-
changed to 1 lower.
Official noon value Feb. (1938) 5 -
02; March 5 03
"Well handle it a whole lot better
without you here."
Her voice lashed at me hysterically,
like a whip across the face "You've
got to atop talking to me like that I"
"I'm softy."
We were coming to the mouth of
the siderong, and I could smel salt
water. For a moment some trick of
the torches showed us the Jungle
wall, a blsck lacquer palisade web-
bed over by giant creepers. Our roof
waa beginning to soak through, put-
ting an occasional drop of luke-
warm water down our necks.
Perhaps that cramped shelter of
matting over our heads waa what had
given me the sense of being near to
Christine for a while; whatever it
was, that feeling dropped away as we
now crossed Siderong bar. There waa
open sea ahead, and Christine would
soon be beyond it: trot she would
hardly be farther away from me than
she was already.
I said, “We’re going to pull this
thing through. I promise you that. I
admit I don’t know how we’re going
to do it. But it will be done."
Her face was as lovely as I had
ever seen it, but it was no longer
close to me. For a little while It had
seemed to me that I could have
reached out and touched it. Not with
my hands alone, for that would have
been easy enough, there in the ban-
kong—but with a feeling of posses-
sion and a knowledge that her face
was held between my fingers because
she wanted it to be. That was all gone
now; this was Anthony Forrester'a
daughter again, with her grave clear
eyes set on a future in which I could
see no part for myself.
"Clyde will win this.” I said. "That
is a hard man to stop."
Christine faltered. “There is so
much danger ahead—”
•That's what makes a victory out
of it. Otherwise it would be Just a
trade."
Change of Mind
CHICAGO PRODUCE
CHICAGO, Feb 28.—(AP)—Poul-
try live, 12 trucks, steady; hens over
5 lbs. 19. 5 lbs and less 22 1/3:
broilers under 2 lbs 20; springs over
3 lbs. colored 22; Leghorn chickens
tative, Rentongen, by 1
and the traditional dep
of the Malays. War thre
the pouring rain we are
.. . . with your d2 ”
Quees the KWo!
53". Soreeni 82
f mi LOY )
HANIHOTIONE ■
Fnd/RUSSEII .
lan-ptodb
WALTER PIDGEON
J 8taM to meme hep
l Petnmdttms.umtas
4%
N SOTHERN - JACK HALEY 1-
JESDAY ONLY, —
IRGAIN DAY IU1 -
actlon-packea yamn about to*
u it love that keese Chrtine
theref Continued tomorfow.
There 8 an epidemle at iness
on right now and will likely be
with us rest at the winter. Bet-
ter C Fyffe about that poliey at
once, and if you have a premium
due. pay it promptly. Take no
chances at a time like this. "Nuf
ton future* closed 3-8 higher.
Open High Lew Last
Mar 6.08 9.16 9.08 -9.14= 18
May . 8.18 ‘ “
July 9.31
Oct 9.28
Dec .. 0.30
Jan 931
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 170, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 1, 1938, newspaper, March 1, 1938; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1540144/m1/2/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.