Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 224, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 3, 1938 Page: 8 of 8
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I
8
1,
1
4
1ea*
Th:
ever.
quletly.
Judith.
whoameand went
at
is
her down
Do
shoulder. I don't care where
। you
All
the going.
me to explain
ing
Last
need you.
Your Judithr
Home Own Loan 105 14 106.10 106 13
can
Free Delivery
Phone 188
Whipping Cream
Cottage Cheese
“I
Wholesome! Delightful!
"and
Judith.
illogical,
make or
I
Creamery Butter
Bulgarian Buttermilk
%,
I
fell
AND TOMORROW
0
1
6)
oftheif nw».
flict--the tende
"The
I
- long remoin in your
the
price!
F
with
/
(•
A
First State Bank of Denton
C
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
• Added far xur Enjoyment •
r66c06 M
“THE
Novelty Treat
RADIO
•V
S
L
glc
RAMHLERS"
-U--4
Phone 130—For Ice
T
PENRY BROS. 1
$
USED CARS
-3
p.
L
GRAND LEADER CO.
TACKLE
FISHING
ahi
•)
Ion
I
4
QuCK
SEE M SYSTEM GROCERY .
* *
k
at Ever**
—EXTRA TREATS—
wouldn’t guarantee
said.
M SYSTEM GROCERY
MIMIf
2
V
1
v
p‘
I
BASEBALL - SOFTBALL
And TENNIS Supplies
2
c
“TEST PILOT’
Hardware Co
Evers
Lawn Mowers
*, Mme
f
«
Automobile Refinancing
a a
Tools and Cutlery
Fencing
f 2.2
I
-
AtT*
r .
I
»
A
I#
TEXAS
DREAMLAND
CuLuup
DREAMLAND
ROOFS
TIN WORK
imntmrrxom '
LLIIN I
Step in and see how nicely We can supply you
for these popular sports, in selection, quality
And price.
“THE
INVENTOR"
E
t.
for your maize, red top cane seed, sudan, all kinds
of field seeds.
aduLts ZSc TIL 6 P. m.
Children 10c at All Times
T ODA Y
sromucMr
SPECIAL
for a
men
C-C Head Flays
Class Antagonism
effectually and
than any other i
kind
if it
PETE
SMITH
Prewents
A LAVF RIOT
and uncertainty.
• whtmsical man
ed n
conv
here
adequately
has met the
Oct
Dec
Jan
and
wanl
Thu
will
bush
Mr
Miss
McC
ploye
Cryst
Hotel
in Ui
organ
in 1
Orou
two
the 1
accu
have
J
the
whi
eigh
has
The
was
Coming Saturday!
“WELLS FARGO”
L
is he
of M
going
habit I
3
NEW ORLEANS FUTUEES
NEW ORLEANS, May 3—(API—
Cotton futures closed steady net un-
What Obligations Does My Bank
have to me?
4 54-44
s 1/e 49-46
4 1/4 62-47
2 1/2 53-49
3 56-51 .......
2 7/6 60-55
High Low
1022
118.7
down
it‛s g
and 1
gBLAST TIMES TODAY
H-t-fVa
No. 1 Hg- Hd.
■ Botaledndsotdby
7-UP BOTTLING CO.
Denton. Texas ,
May
July
both
Safe
MARKETS AT A GLANCE
NEW YORK May 3.—(AP)—
Stocks strong; industrials lead ral-
YOUR BANK IS OBLIGATED TO-
—Safeguard your deposited funds, with all possible diligence, from
the dangers of fire, theft and forgery.
—Make your money available to you when you want it.
— Cash your checks upon the order of your signature when pre-
sented by yourself or other duly authorised persons.
— Return to you accurate statements of pour account with ean-
celled checks, which are legal receipts for expenditures.
ty k
year
1
to sa
esth
here
with
tracts traded at 8 63. July at 8 77.
Oct. 8.84, Dec 8 86 and March at 8.90.
or 1 to 9 points below the previous
close
highel
ag O
I
I
Bell Roofing &
Sheet Metal Co
Back of Postoffice
Denton
Mal
Mrs 1
for an
is in I
statlo
syiva
been
broth
State
some
PASTEURIZED MILK PRODUCTS
FOR HEALTH!
A HEART TO HEART TALK
about
Spot steady; middling 8.65.
GOVERNMENT BONDS
NEW YORK. May 8—(AP)—Oov-
ernment bonds:
We Re-string Tennis Racquets
Also have the only machine in town that meneures abuolute ear-
reel tensile strength. Bring your old raoqueta.
Cadenhead-Denman Hardware, Inc.
Denton County National Bank
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP.
wuSRua
oqh
dual beif ragged
ling her, wearing.
KING’S GROCERY
A MARKET
Phone 27 East of P. 0.
Free Delivery
MORE MERCHANDISE FOR
LESS MONEY
AT THE ECONOMY GROCERY A MARKET
Wateh far Thene Hits la May!
“JEZEBEL”
FOR LONG '
YEARS OF
SERVICE
At a moderate first cost
we recomend Johns-
Manville Roofing
M. A. GAY
Roofing and Sheet Metal
Company
Phone 710
points to-
here May
la ths NEW
Westinghonse
MARTIN RADIO a GIFT
SHOP
Phone tot
nup:
g‛ wera
go or how rough
that there is for
May
.July
Oct
Dec
Jan
Mar
E.
UNFORGETTABLE!!
The exditameat at the dity in which
they live—is. dvema ef their fire tor-
empl
rice;
dirfei
ing i
time
we 1
futu
ordinary a4d;
tures cioned a
466; Oct 4.7
Match 4M
Highest Quality
and
Lowest Prices
We Specialize in
Tender Steaks and
Roasts
Thl
cus i|
its kl
made
whii
live 1
woul
told
with
as w
saw
ance
___• would be casually kind to
her children—Gary was casually kind
to everyone eo long u they did not
threaten hie supremacy. It was the
easiest way and made for popularity
—but he would never rean fove bar
Call 1133 and 1153 for groceries and fresh meats.
HEsbmaY
Kels
J I
W I
$01S
er
lost
muc
we I
I
t
1
andA2
auz %tnazn
CLAIRE TREVOR
—Extra Added Treat—
JOAN ABBOTT
In
“Got A Match”
A Collete Jam Session -
9 1
s%
I
’ r
Me UlMLUels U A M.
*• chudren Ite at All Times
• Wants Quiet
"Nothig is more needed at the
present time than a prolonged pe-
riod of quiet," Aldrich said, "not a
three to six months’ breathmg spell,'
but a two or three yean', breath-
ing spell.”
During such a period, he said,
"government and business tan con-
solidate, modify and assimilate what
has already been done," and can
also "study quletly the basis of fur-
ther reform."
Davis, who is president of a Kan-
sas City, Mo. grain company, told
the meeting today that the "Amer-
ican system of business" has "met
the needs of a great nation more
IM; strict good
ordiawyaoe Pu:
rar May 4 M; July
e. 481; Jan 4.83;
N°009S8y
2 —wiu .
' MARTHA RAYE .
DOROTHY LAMOUR
DAILY MARKET QUOTATIONS
I
marty Cissy. She.
be Mrs Gary Brent.
The Idol crashes
then, by one of those
i contraaitons, which
'■> ■ ' 11—
E. ' '
GacatD&DK
t.
{
Mar . 8.85 8.90 8 85 8.93B——94A
101.19 101.14 101.17
1063 106 30 106 8
103 31 103.38 103 31
’ er
SAMUEL
GOLDWYN.
presents
MAD END
atarrina
SYLVIA SIDNEY
end JOEL MCCREA
with HUMPHREY BOGART
TODAY ONLY
BARGAIN DAY
Adults Children
10-. 10
We Solicit Your Account, Large or Small,
On a Business Basis
a ufe of strut
defense of a
AUR beauty consultant has just taken a specdl
U course Mt the Richard Hudnut Du Barry School
She has returned simply aglow with beauty secrets and
ideas .,. She’s eager to help you with them.
If you want to look younger, lovelier ... let her tell you
all about the new DuBarry Beauty-Augie Treatment t
it stimulates the circulation naturally and will do
wonders for your complexion. If you want to know
what make-up to wear with the season’s new colors. • •
she can help you achieve a new smartness and glamour.
* Come in and consult her. You’ll be so glad you did!
NEAL & LAKEY, DRUGS
and apologise for—my weakness,
my selfishness—I’m doing now.
I am your wife and I love youl .
If you care, Just a little bit,
will you send for me to come to
you? A tent under the stars, a
hut in the far North—any whereI
But let it be before Christmas--
please! Your Jimmy and Judy-
kins need you, but most of all I
BACK FROM Du BARRY SCHOOL
. Y
. I
th
a st
• ' I
Pa"
ub
plete
hand
says
am
PH lO
for
pede
*
livre, lb. vezy hum, bo
nted, became suadenly
loathapme to udith. She'd never be
Mr. Qary Brent I Why try to fool
herseir ahy longer?
She had arapea her idol ID » glam-
orous garment Now the garment was
suddenly. mysterioualy rended. she
saw Gary lust a handsome, blond
man who skipped along the piensant-
ret path of life regardless of there
whom he knockea into the ditches in
He loved her— next to him-
wadthee
opening declines Of 6 to 10
day in the cotton market
contraets opened at 8 66
Towards mid-session 1
Bonds higher, corporates pace rise.
I'Curb improved; light demand lifts
list.
Foreign exchange quiet; France
sharply lower.
Cotton easy; lower cables; liquida-
tion.
Sugar higher; trade buying.
Coffee firm; increased outside de-
mand
CHICAGO
Wheat higher, prospective Chicago
shpments
Corn lower, eastern interests sell
Cattle steady to 15 lower
Hogs steady to 10 lower.
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
NEW ORLEANS. May 3—4AP>—
Disappointing cables and liquidation
of new crop months because of favor-
able weather in the belt brought
1
$1
LIVERPOOL COTTON
LIVERPOOL MAy 3.—-(AP)—Cot-
ton 13,000 bales including 7,600
American Spot quiet; prices & points
tower Quotation* tn pence Amer-
ican strict good middling 5.51; good
oLIVEESC, NOS dooniots .
vang wide-eyed in the night, the
th who had clung stubbornly to
lthe’belief that ah that’was fine and
desirable lay here, who had lived
only to get buck to it and to the
man who embodied this enchanted
life /ought many scarring battles with
a strange new Judith, who had the --
habit of rising defiantly and girding passing,
her sword like a gladiator in defense self. He
changed to 3 points lower.
Open High Low Close
8.66 8.66 861 8.70B—73A
871 8.78 8.70 8 78
8.76 8.84 8 76 8.84
8.79 8 86 8 79 8.86
8 8 88 8.81 8.88
erim going crazy, I think I X belong
‘-^T^’n^G^y W.
old Judith went down to defeat at
Umi hands of Ute Judith who had
bought lard and beans in Fordney’s
Cutch. Who had tolled, rebelled, toll-
ed again through the heat, cold,
hunger. ainginess of casper street.
That Judith had watched a circle of
light growing dim and dimmer on
bare hospital walls. Had heard the
faint cry of her frst born—her son
and Reuben’s — A defiant cry. A
ngfte challenge to life.
What was that Judith doing here
ring, dancing, playing at uving
sdhue somewhere, out under the
Erees, a man worked-
•He hates you!” The old Judith
made a final struggle, "He wants to
bo Tree to marry Cissy. Have you
■ aa prider
-»ut a’dowen times a day, the torn
of Judykin’a leaf brown head, or a
crooked unite chasing across Jim-
mys whimsical little face would
shweme Judith's heart to pulp. How
cgd she ever hope to forget Reuben
so long as Jimmy and Judykin llv-
She must have been made to
have ever believed she could. And
then, cringing from her own scorn.
Juins eontcreed to Judith that she
great want to forget Reuben—ever,
rhe could see him once mon—
sy knew she would never be hap-
2 again unless she could share her
BJe with Reuben Oliver—the Man
from npwhere. Too late she knew
■Be bad muddled her life Reuben
middling 5.21; strict
middling 4.T1; strict
4 46; loir mkM
How many of yon have, at
sum time ar other, bought a
need ear with a -Quarintee"
on it only to find that the
dealer was Just toolin' or -the
palesman was mistaken" or
•Well. that deent mean we
are going to as n rtnr
How many of yen have, after
such an xperience, sworn by
all that was Holy that yen
would -Never buy another car
from htm if you had to walk
the rest of your ntef"
And yet many Gralers eentinue
year after year, to nornswoegle
the eustomer with all kinds nt
fake Guarantees. In your dic-
tionary GUARANT means
-an eingagement to futni an
agreement, to perform certain
stipulations, to warrant."
A new car guarantee means
free of ANY defret. And if a
used nr is guaranteed it
should mean the same thing.
BUT. apparently. IT DOESNF.
Wouldn't yen rather a dealer
W SMSUMMireCM UT X re
Special: 5 Quilts or Cotton Blankets
Hooks, Linas, Baits,
Poles, Seines, Etc.
—a fine assortment of Fish-
ing Tackle, at low, popular
prices.
■
F*
ME
needs of any other nation."
However, he continued, "instead
of being valued for what it has
done, it is denounced for what has
not been done.
"We can not cure our ills by Un-
I proving the lot of the workers and
shutting our eyes upon the con-
sumer and investor."
Davis asked business leaders to
carry into every community an edu-
cational campaign stressing these
points:
"Pint, that American business Is
an organized system the parts of
which are interdependent and
interrelated—not a particular class
or group
“Second, that the people are an
integral part of the system and op-
erate it as workers and investors
"Third, that the worker, the in-
vestor and the consumer are bene-
flclaries of this system and have a
common interest in maintathing it,
She was not sure of Reuben's
whereabouts. She addressed the lat-
ter to Pikes store. Underscored
"please forward," and added special
delivery postage, trusting to Pike’s
curiosity to speed delivery. Dressing
hastily she crept down stairs and
out to the barn
Never was Judith to forget that
nocturnal ride. The mare sensed he"
rider's mood Matched it with one of
her own. Tried to outrun it.
Judith leaned low along the
stretched black neck and let her
mount have her head Going on.
Clatter of hoofs. Clouds being driven
before a light wind. Ahead the wink-
ing guard light at the railroad track I
Judith dropped the letter into the
train mall box. Eight days until
Christmas!
Involuntarily Judiths hand tight-
ened Upon Biddy O'Hare's satiny
neck “If he doeant answer. Bid-
y-"
All thought was suddenly suspend-
ed.
(To Be Continued)
warp and woof—woven deep in-
to the fabric of my being—my
old home that you kept safe and
unchanged for me—but. let me
whisper it. Reuben. I have
changed. I no longer want safety.
I want struggi. I want, to
achieve. I want our children to
achieve I
For the first time in all the
years I get your viewpoint- We
have something fine and beau-
tiful bare, left to us by men and
women who fought a good fight.
The trouble is Jim and I have
shirked ours Lived on the glory
of others. Didn't reach out to
build for the future as did three
who have gone on.
I don't include Oran in this
She has ninned her mission as
ahe mw II. Her fight to keep our
false gods intact has been long
and hard. She would probably
call the change in me detertors-
ton. I know it is growth It hap-
pened to me somewhere between
a cold, heartbreaking winter and
a torrid, searing suounar in Cas-
per Street There la no going back
for me, I want to go forward.
Reuben, with you—shoulder to
Leading Stocks
NEW YORK, May 8—(AP)—Sales,
closing price and net change of the
15 most activ -stocks today:
Martin, Q L . 14,300 23 1/2 up 1 8/8.
Gen El 18,160 82 1/4 UR 678.
urtiss Wr A 11,500 19 1/4 up 1 1/8.
Chrysler 10,700 41 up 1 1/2.
Douglas Aire 10 200 44 1/8 up 1 7/8.
Unit Aire 9.700 36 7/8 up 1 1/2.
US Sti 8,900 44 up 1 3/4.
Int Nickel 8,700 46 1/8 up 2.
Gen Mtrs 8,600 80 1/4 up 1 378.
uytiss Wr 8,600 4 7/8 up 1/4.
Anaconc 8,300 37 1/2 up 1 1/2.
UB Rubb 7,500 36 1/2 Up 8/4.
Beth sti 7.600 47 up 1 8/4.
Nat Bisc 7,300 21 3/8 up 1 5/8.
Kenne 6,000 38 up 1 1/4.
NEW YOItK FUTURES
NEW YORK, May 3,—(AP)—Cot-
ton futures ciosed 1-4 lower
AVERAGE COTTON PRICE
NEW ORLEANS, May 30.—(AP) —
The average price of middling cotton
today at ten southern spot markets
were 8 66 cent* a pound; average for
the past thirty market days 8.75
cents a pound.
CHICAGO PRODUCE
CHICAGO, May 3 —(AP)— Butter
1,219,843 lbs., steady. Prices unchang-
ed Eggs 31,754, firm, prices unchang-
ed.
Poultry live, 34 trucks, hens steady,
chickens easy hens over 5 Iba 19;
Leghorn broilers 17-19, turkeys, hens
20. young toms 18. old 16; other
prices unchanged.
FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH, May 3—(AP)—
(USDA)--Cattle 2,500; calves 1.200;
market slow; few choice yearlings
8.25-75; medium and good lots 6.50-
7.75: most cows 4.25-5.00, very few
5 26 upward, cutter grades largely
3 25-4.00; bulls 4.00-5.25; few heavies
to 5 50; most slaughter calves 4 75-
7.00; culls down to 4 00. Stocker year-
lings and calves largely 5.50-7.00.
Hogs 1.300: mostly 10c lower than
Monday s average; top 735 paid by
shippers packer top 7 25; bulk good
to choice 175-260 lb averages 7 30-
35; good to chice 140-170 lb. aver-
ages 6.50-7.15.
Sheep 8,500; mostly steady on all
classes, medium to good spring
lambs 6.50-7.25; shorn lambs 5,50-
6 25; 2-year-old wethers 5 25 down;
aged wethers 3 75 down; shorn feeder
lambs 4 50-5 50
v 9
<L
May con-
CLARK ASKS ACTION AGAINST
“TRAMP CORPORATIONS"
AUSTIN, May J.—(— A request
for the attorney general’s depart-
ment to act against 40 "tramp cor-
porations" doing business in Texas
by authority at permits instead of
incorporation papers was made by
I Secretary of State Kd Clark today.
Reuben dear:
4 It la after midnight but I can't
sleep until I tell you many
things- Gran and Jim were so
*,1Bvei?lhmgn« just the same.
Reuben—all the precious things
—house, boxwood, stables, ser-
vants, even the good earth. More
than ever It la all part at me—
DENTON DAIRY PRODUCTS CO.
220 W. Oak Street. Phone 292
PHONE 8
DENTON LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
that used ear to get yon out
the bark door, butir you drive
it a week and dost like it
bring it back to me and I will
give you exnotiy what you paj4
fee it on anything we have in
the honseT" Wouldn't you
rather a dealer sala, “We won’t
guarantee the ear but are WILL,
guarantee SATisFACTiON out
of anytning you buy from usP
if you deal with that kind of
a business man you have no
ehance to get “8cK"
ANT transnetion . you have
wHh ihla houne le dAKAN-
TEED TO NE SATISFACTORY.
If you dual ret matistaction it
is your own fault for all yen
here to do la to come bark and
nak tat it.
NEW. OlEANS SPOTS
NEW ORLEANS, May 3— (API—
Epot cotton, cloned dull and unchang-
ed; 8alM 7854: low middling 7.4:
middling 8,81; good middling 9.36;
receipte 2,000; atocka 778,033.
sew VOBK COTTON
NEW YORK. May > — (AP—Cot-
ton futures opened a to 11 lower
with weak Lavrpool cables and for-
eign selting partly ortset by trade
and local buying. May MT; July
d.M; Oct. 8.66: Dec. 58.68; Jan. 8.70,
March 8.76. ‘ 4
Shortly after the first half hour
the market showed net lomses of 9
to 10 pointa. July fluctuated between
8.56 and 8.59:
Pressure let up after the Liverpool
market closed but recoveries were
-limited to a few pointe from the lows.
By around midday July was selling
at 8.61 and the market showed net
losses at 6 to 8 points.
WALL STREET
NEW YORK, May 3.—(AP)—
Stocks reversed their down trend in
today’s, market with favored iasues,
at the best, pushing up 1 to around
4 pointa.
There were frequent profit taking
interludes, however, and top prices
were reduced near the elose.
While activity was larger than in
yesterday’s sluggish proceedings, it
was still far from attaining runaway
proportions Transfers approximated
460.000 shares
Analysts, finding scant encourage-
ment in business news or Washing-
ton developmenta, attributed the
right-about-face principally to the
return of some speculative fortes to
the buying sides on the theory the
recent slow-motion sessions indicat-
ed exhaustion at selling and bright-
ened prospects for at least a tem-
porary rebound.
Bonds generally leaned forward af-
ter a poor getaway wheat was given
an upward push in the race of pri-
vate forecasts at the greatest crop
since 1031-
Aircraft, copper, utility and spe-
cialty stocks led the early sortie.
They were subsequently joined by
steels, motors, rubbers, mall orders
and farm Implements.
LEWISVILLE
WASHINGTON, May 3—=
President George H. Davis of the
United States Chamber of Commerce
declared today that class antagonism
is ths greatest menace to business
"Experience is bringing home the
realization that we can not get very
far by penaltaing the good in order
to restrain th< bad," Davis said
in a speech prepared for the cham-
ber’s annual convention.
Under the American system, or-
ganized as it la held together by
a mesh of reciprocal relationships,
we all sink or swim together.”
He criticized "the rerormera, the
theorists, the prophets of the new
day” on whom he placed the blame
for "the serious predicament we are
in today." He made no direct com-
ment, however, on govermental
measures to regulate business. ,
Davis' address followed one given
last night by Winthrop W. Aldrich,
chairman of the Chase National
Bank of New York, who declared
that President Roosevelt’s new
spending and credit expansion pol-
icies amount to "throwing away all
safegards, removing all brakes and
heading for disaster"
The speech by Aldrich, one of 16
business leaders who recently had
pledged the President their aid In
bringing government and business
closer together, sounded the note
of opposition to many government
measures which other speakers also
struck.
Aduits lie. cnnaren 100
MM44SeMSBBBSS4BVS4«BBWSfSB44BS4BeeMV4«BB4SBfS4f»BBf •VBVB4S4S‘
WEDNESDAY • THURS.
Flying thrills Jungle terrors?
Open High Low Last
8.67 8.66 8.55 6.65
866 8.65 8.56 8.65
8.66 8.74 8.64 6.73—74
8.68 8.75 8 67 8.73—75
870 870 8.69 8.76N
8.76 8 82 8.73 8 82
children enough to sacrifice lor them.
She was sure now that Reuben,
not Gary, had told the truth about
the timber. Even while they were
quarreling in the cabin ahe had been
sure, but anger and jealousy had
*^52 amomton was followed by
another. The thing she had deluded
herseir into calling love for Gary
during all these past months. had
really been jealousy of Ciany-the de-
sire to retaliate, to hurt, to show
Reuben she did not car.—
Well, She had shown him and
wrecked her life I She had a swift vi-
sion of herseir living along at Good-
los's Choice, a lonely woman, grow-
ing older. Struggling even as Gran
revere old traditions—
struggled Raising her children to
"My children are Olivers — not
Goodloes. They’re not going to stifle
and stagnate behind a boxwood
heave t" Judith was often reminded
of the truth at Reuben’s words. Al-
ready the young Olivers heard the
call of adventure. Already they were
peeping through the hedge curious
to see what lay behind.
Again she heard Clem Rogers say-
ins, “You’re getting a man with
spunk, ma’am, and honesty Can you
match thorn tralta?"
Could she? YmI She never had.
but she could now.
■I Have changed"
Quickly she arose from the rug be-
fore the fire and going straight to
her desk, switched on a light and
commenced to write:
nrc
oMahd
Special to Record-Chronicle.
LEWISVILLE, May 3—At a meet-
ing of the Garden Club Friday af-
ternoon the following officers were
elected: Mrs Bob Gentry, presi-
dent: Mrs Glenmore Savage, vice-
president; Mrs. H O Vick, record-
ing secretary; Mrs Grady Aaron,
corresponding secretary; Mrs D D
Barnes, treasurer; Mrs M D Pagg.
historian; Miss Bess Hendrix, re-
porter: Miss Imogene McNek. chair-
man of program commute Meetings
will be held the fourth Friday ar-
tefnoon in each month. Misses Ola l
Donald and Bess Hendrix will be
hostesses for the Mav meeting
Personals
Mrs. Clyde Vaughan of Dallas was
a guest of Miss Connie Hutfer.
Mrs Edna Archer of Trinidad
visited Mr and Mrs. Y S Ready
Mrs. E. R. Sherrill returned from
a vistt with Mr and Mrs, W R
Sherrm at College Station.
Mias Jewel Twitty visited friends
in Denton. ‘ - -
L. O. Donald at Dallas visited
Miss Ola Donald.
Mr and Mrs J N Neal visited
his mother in Songer
Mr and Mrs. Harold Brumley
and daughter ot Weatherford visit-
ed Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Brumley
and Mr and Mrs E. H Dixon
Mrs Bud Basket of Rio Vista,
Msr. Lee Chappell, Mrs Ed Thread-
gill and baby of Dallas were guests
of Mr and Mrs C W Orr
Mrs L. Le Degun of 'Dogu was
the guehtof Mrs. Joe Spear
Mrs Roy Oakley of Durant, is
visiting Mr and Mrs J. W Degan.
Miss Thelma Williard of Dallas
was the guets of Mr and Mrs Ed
Watson.
Dr and Mrs W N Rowell of Den-
ton visited friends here
Mr and Mrs. Lee Vaughan of
Dallas were gupests of Mr and
Mrs Y 8 Ready
Mrs Penelope Sullivan of Den-
ton visited friends here
Mr and Mrs Woodrow Bays and
son of Fort Worth visited Mr. and
Mrs. A Bays.
PATTERN BARGAINS
d-
20c and 25c Simplicity Patterns Now___________lie
NEWS DAY
; sde _n.
SADVENTURE iomonxow
8ETURNSI THURSDAY
Rocin with romance v.aT
u..in the most f
'surprising I I I
MM Ihrill- adSaK2- g
ing of °" AAkid
Arsene M .17K
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•a"IN OLD CHICAGO”
' E"GOLDWYN FOLLIES”
HANDY MOTOR
COMPANY
DapsMaMs FORD Dealers
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coipLer IHSURANCE SERVICE
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 224, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 3, 1938, newspaper, May 3, 1938; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1540197/m1/8/: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.