Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 181, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 16, 1934 Page: 4 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Rusk County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Rusk County Library.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
I
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1
I •
Qihi
Xcws
Financial
FOUR
TUESDAY AFTERNOON^. OCT. 16, 1931
NEW YORK STOCK MARKET QUOTATIONS
■
<
firsts (90-91
<•
New York Cotton
H
1230-31
1261);
HUE,
I
Fort Worth Produce
bulk
$eFoQc she Appealed on the screen
sales 1,775.
27;
Bond Price Indexes
I
2
I
Denver Livestock
3-4;
loose
11P
r
Fort Worth Grain
»
New York Curbs
Open
yel-
1-2;
lot
1.78-1.80;
3
of
M0RR9CASTLE
r1
ing
MAST-KENDRICK MOTOR CO.
R.I
,1
Phone 708
Dodge & Plymouth Dealers
PHONE 300
walked
' This Atwater Kent Radio
Model
IS MORE
Placed Right
559
tig *
THAN A
Price
..
MERE
a
RADIO
Ask for
Twenty-two years later
RECEIVING
Demon-
it
stration
SET
i
all-wave tuning,
Sales—OLDSMOBILE—Service
Phone 539
204 S. Main
Phone 6
,1
1
II
j
Fort Worth Livestock
I
/
«
Ms A
1
1
(UP) —
1933 CHEVROLET COACH
1930 CHRYSLER SEDAN
1933 CHEVROLET COUPE
1931 CHEVROLET SPECIAL SEDAN
1932 FORD V-8 DELUXE COUPE
1931 CHEVROLET SPORT COUPE
1932 CHEVROLET COUPE
TRADE US YOUR OLD CAR
J. E. RUMFIELD
AND CO.
JOHNSON PREDICTS
INCREASE IN PRICES
WITH 30-HOUR WEEK
slow,
steers
Mar
Dec
Mar.
Dec.
1230
1240
been
the
been
Henderson Motor Sales Co. Inc.
Formerly Parker Motor Co.
Close
8.03-10
8.18-25
8.32-40
8.00- B
8 03-10
•••
Close
10.46
10.46
among
high;.
LIBERTY HOTEL BLDG.
A 4XMHFLETE
BROKERAGE SERVICE
Member New Orleans Cotton
Exchanga
High
1 265
1265
1240
1248
*
tj,
<9
I
1
19; No. 2,
; No. 2, 14.
... Receipts
30'
9’.
Omaha Livestock
Open
7.96-80
8 05-12
8.2|-34
7.84- B
7.95-80
17
10
49„
8;
40j
20
29
so;
16!
7;
T.'S
19-;
$
fl
Low
12.38
1244
1250
1253
1226
1233
168
8
121
1'0.'.
O 1
93
27ft
93
Selected Stocks
I
New Orleans Cotton
92
27
92
28 ■
30;
91
IS!
298
O'»
*91
14 ’
31 i
2’ 1
17
O,7
41
471
3~»T
18
30
28i
a
9,
25
21.
138
22
81
164
3;
13;
23 g
31
38
6;
5 J
Chicago Produce
J
Stock Averages
.50
134
&
NEW YORK, Oct. 16 (IP) ...
-—.....1 .stock avail
High
1244
1254
1260
1262
1231
1237 1244
middling
It’s a real musical instrument with 9 tubes,
six-section gang condenser, 4 distinct tuning ranges, 540 kilo-
Close
53
28 j
103)1
130)
104 8
17) I
Open
.. 53
.. 29
. 1O2J
.. 129)
.. 1,041
.. 17)
61
... 64
. 188
. 16
.. 51
4J
. 36J
. 78|
. 4
.. 251
. 12)
.. 178
.. 16
.. 288
- Ill
.. 678
II. S £teel
; Woolworth
6) sure into any section of the list..
182’
68
110J
378
304
88
21
31
72J
14
103 J
120
318
288
32A
qol
<>■/ |
50
17
42',
1U
13g
211
393
Abe soundness of our
>0ay and for abiding
confidence in the future.” '
—— ---o---
Raw steel is being produced at
approximately 21 per cent of ca-
pacity ’
That’s a word worth see-
ing on anything you buy,
But on a new, Big Dodge,
it’s value grows be-
cause Dodge Has MORE
things worth guarantee-
Close
1242- T'
1250-51
1255-56 I
1257-T'
I Am T* T
1238-T I-— A
io<:h-
Close
53
■8 I
io; |
10)
117
34 J
288
311
331
498
Close
1.80
1.83-84 I
MEmE RaYmono was a
0RA.ME2 full OF MEDALS
won in fencing Tourna-
ments, ——
s
I
•J. 16 (IP)
s Company’s
I Orcr;
• 18 '. I
30 !.| ni.oiil l,
217
n,
33
I I
f ■
>• I
Jr ■
if*'
Chicago Grain
CHICAGO, Oct. 16
Cash grain:
ket; market steady. 1
round whites 85-90 cents; Idaho
russets 1.30 I. ",
1.20; Colo. McClures 1.77 1-2.
Arrivals 54, on track 239, thip-
ments 789.
I
K ”
■
NEW YORK, Oct. 16 (CP) —
Stocks, bonds and grains advanc-
ed today while the dollar declin-
ed. Volume on the stock ex-
change was double yesterday’s in
the .early trading, then slackened.
LateF'gnles for the day were well
under Rtet Thursday when they
crossed 1)300,000 shares.
Dealings appeared to . slacken
when tbe Dow-Jones averages ap-
proached the tops made 5 days
ago, although the subsequent
profit taking failed to bring pres-
I top *
I 4.65.
[ Sheep, 4,000 commercial; 500
f government; Commercial supply )
! included 750 direct saleable rup-
| plies 50 per cent feeders. Lambs
I slow early bids around 25 cents
lower, asking stronger. LTieep and
feeders steady and early bids
> sorted native and range lambs up
Ik’ tn ft.OO; best held above 6.25; ex-
tra weighty native.1 bid down to
I 6.00. Slaughter ewes up to 2.25;
j. food and choice feeding lamb..
E quoted 4.50-5.50; few loads short
term breeding ewes up to 2.50.
L ’ o—
E. J. TELLER & SON
Complete Electrical Service
Henderson
iNlkS COUNTRY. ELlZAB&T-l ALLAN RE-
CEIVED FAN MAILFfZoM AMEElCAM G12tS,
THEY THOUGHT SHE WAS 6’6 MCNTftrMgR.YS'
WIFE WHOSE MAIDEN NAME ALSO WAS
ELIZABETH ALLAN.
CHICAGO,. Oct. 16 (OP) —
Egg’, market firm. Receipts 2,-
187. Extra firsts 24; frerh grad-
ed firsts 23; currents rects 21-22
1-2; dirties No. 1,
16; checks No. 1, 17,
Butter market firm.
£10 § Ell IP M ItID V
4/ DAN THOMAS -- GEORGE SCARBO
Jan. ...
Mar. .
May ...
Oct. ...
Dec. ...
FORT WORTH,, Tex., Oct. 16—
(UP) — Western Feeders Supply
Company’s cottonseed quotations
(F.O.B. Texas mills):'
14.00-15.00.
Prime loose hulls, per ton —
Prime cold pressed seed, per ton
' - 33.00-35.00.
USED CARS
-7^
64
18 J .
16 I
51 I
41
38
79 J I
4
2% I
12', j
16.' |
28' 1
111
66',
85
865 [
j land turtles amttrng
1
M.. r k e t s 1
K, V DDNVER, Oct. 16. (UP) Live-
Keel::
Cu.to- 2800; market weak to
L. twang; bed ctccra 4.00-6.00; cow*|
f end heifera 3.00-4.75; calves 3.00-
C.CO; feeder# and stockers 2.00-
4.35: bulls 2.00-2.75.
H030 1000; market steady to 15c
; fowc:-; top 5.50; bulk 5.25-5.45;
packing sows 4 00-4.85; pigs 1.00-
r’ -4.50.
I Sheep 18,000, market steady; fat
I i iambs 5.00-6.25; feeders 5.25; ewes
[ 1.75.
low 1.00 1-2 to 1.01 1-2.
Oats 2 rod 61 1-2 to 62
3 red 60 1-2 to 61 1-2.
Barley—No. 2, 88-90; No. 3, 86-
88.
Milo—2 yellow 1.88-1.90; 3 yel-
low 1.86-1.88.
Kaffir 2 white
white 1.76-1.78.
Cottonseed Oil
if* — —■ ■■ «M». >«
The open and close of stock on New York Exchange are furnished daily to
- the Henderson Daily News by J. E. Rumfield & Company, local stock
brokers.
’ MARKET FLASH!
’ TULSA. Okla., Oct 16 (UP)—The Stanolind
Crude Oil Purchasing Co. here failed to cut
the posted price of crude oil today, as reports
in circulation tn the industry last week said
would be done. Executives of the company said
they considered the price situation better
here than It had been.
PAGE
COTTON NOTES
____
NEW YORK, Oct. 16 (UP) —
" 1 Improvement is reported by the
| cotton goods market, with sub-
stantial sales of print cloths and
carded broadclothes' recorded.
The cotton export movement is
j lipwing improvement, but toVd
for the season to date is only
1,001,....27 bales, against $1,811,-
417 bales a year ago at this time.
A better demand for spot cot-
ton is reported from the “south,
but the basis is very high and its
i.v difficult to do business abroad.
Weather in the cotton belt is
generally favorable in all sections,
hut right now is not a very in-
fluential factor on the market.
I
L
bond price indexes today:
20 industrials 82.4
20 railroads 82.5
20 utilities 88.2
60 bonds 84.3
Close
1260-
1262-
1234- B Byers, A M
1243-4 1
*NEW YORK, Oct. 16 (UP)
futurs closed steady.
Open
1240
1217
1254
1256
1226
40
SUGAR
Open
1.81-82
1 .",5
COFFEE
Open
10.45-58
10.46- B
yellow 79 1-4; 2 white I
sample 76.
Oats: none.
Barley: quotable 80-120.
Timothy: 16.50-17.00.
Cloverseed: 15.00-21.00.
Cash provisions lard 9 32,
9.17; leaf 9.25; bellies 13 37.
OMAHA, Oct. 16 (UP) —Hogs
10,000; market mostly steady to
5 cents lower. Top 5.40;
5.15-5.40.
Cattle 9,000; market
weak to 25c, lower. Hulk
5.75-7.65; heifers 5.50-6.75; veal
6.00; stokers and feeders 3
Wheat: No. 2 red 102 3-8;
hard 103; 3 hard 106.
Corn: 1 mixed 97 1-2; 1 yellow
79 1-2; 2 yellow 79 1-4 to 80;; 3
85 " ■
I
I
-•
FORT WORTH, Texas, Oct. 16.
(UP)—Produce:
Poultry: Spring chickens 12-15;
hens 9; turkey toms 7; turkey
hens 9.
Eggs: No. 1 candled 6,30.
Butter: Creamery butter
butter fat 19.
■-> Open
May .. . 1256
July .... 1259
Oct ...
I Dec .
| Spots steady;
1 Am Alum
I Cities Serv
El Bd & S
Ford of Can
Gulf Oil ...
Humble Oil
ciricd
41 [ taken.
47M I
.">n-; I
18' ’
’Si l I
30 I
X2 |
LUTTRELL
(Continued From Page One)
Luttrell was a resident of Dal-
las 2 years before going to Amar-
illo two years ago. He was a
salesman for a Chicago manufac-
turing firm. He is survived by his
widow, six children, his father
ana eight brothers and sisters, in-
cluding Mrs:. R. L. King and W.
Garrett Luttrell of Dallas.
NEW. ORLEANS, Oct. 16 (UP)
—Cotton futures closed steady.
Low
1254
1258
1230
1237
middling 1274;
Elec St Bat
Foster Wheel —
Fox Film ..
Liq Carb .
U S Gypsum ■
Cotton Rises oh Talk
of Better Silver Price
NEW YORK, Oct. 16 (UP) —
Outside buying increased on the
211
13.’,
31
6)
18
6S
uni
Tex G Sul 37J
Tmk Bl Br 29).
Tidewater 8)
Tex .Corp 21
United Corp. 3|
U nFrt Co 72$
Un Cs Imp 14
U P fly 101)
U S Smelt
Wen Union
Wes Oil & S Co .
Wcstg House
Wall Street Journal
age* todays
30 industrials 11 11 up f()9
20 railroads 36.36 up 0.38
20 utilities 20.12 up 0.07
WASHINGTON, Oct. 16 (UP)
—Gen. Hugh S. Johnson’s sharp
warning that a 30-hour week law
would send the nation into anoth-
er business collapse idicated to-
day that the retired NRA head
might lead industrial oppositioh to
the measure in the developing
legidative fight.
Janson’s statement, made in
his first press conference after
formally leaving NRA, was cou-
pled with a prediction that a 30-
nour week increase by 20 per
cent present prices.
"If consumer cost of all pro-
ducts were increased 30 per cent
by a general 30-hour week you’ll
stagnate consumption and get a
depression that’ll make your hair
turn gray,” Johnson said.
His attack on the 30-hour
week, sponsored by the American
Federation of Labor, was his fnst
outspoken discussion of the pro-
posal for putting more men to
work. He testified before con-
gressional committees-last year
that he favored lowering of the
work week but advocated a grad-
ual reduction of hours.
Efforts were made last spring
by the administration to have in-
dustries reduce hours where pos-
sible to 35, without weekly wage
reductions. Organized labor has
charged failure of industry to
cooperate in the move, and is
putting on an unparalleled drive
for 30-hour week legislation in
the next congress.
"How are you, going to reduce
hours when there is no business,”
Johnson said. "I don’t believe
reduction by statute can be made
to stick in the courts. Industries,
however, should absorb their 1929
normal percentage of workers and
some have already dond that,”
-------------------o .
During June, air mail operators
in the United States flew 1,909,984
miles, maintaining an operating
frequency which was 98.37 per
cent of the total miles scheduled.
(Outside buying increased on
cotton market today and prices
lose 75 cents a bale, closing 9 to
13 points higher, with December
futures at 12.38 cents.
A rise in silver and strength in
foreign exchange gave rise to re-
newed inflation talk and there was
general buying accelerated by
strength in grains and stocks.
Trade buying mounted with the
speculative purchases. Mill demand
■ was quickened by a heavier movc-
. rnent of cotton goods and firm
j.nrices in Worth Street textile cen-
ters.
Contracts were not plentiful!,
being supplied mostly by New Or-
leans and the south. Hedge selling I
was light. There was a heavy far
eastern demand early, stimulated
by reports the Chinese government
will devalue currency bcauso of the
rise in silver.
Volume and Prices Both Gain as Dollar Value Drops
£ SILVER SHOWING
1 GOOD IN REPORT
l-OF PRICE BOOST
38 I
294
32)
6l
13.)
49J
9
414
194
294
’8
23J
134
3)
(Continued F«om Pago Ono)
inspectors of the New York dis-
trict.
Although the report did not as-
sign a cause or fix responsibility
for the disaster because its powers
extended only to determining
whether the officers had
negligent, it definitely took
stand that had the vessel
stopped and the SOS sent when
the first first was discovered, Iocs
so
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
FOR K.1IT: 2 room furnished
apartmenl, private enrance
and private bath. 303 TVest
Street. . N181-83o
'Poultry market unsettled; re-
ceipts 43 trucks, one car. (.
9-11; turkeys 13-15; old roosters
ill; ducks i0-1,4; springers Jieavy
1 rock; hens, heavy 14 1-2; guina
I hens 4.00-7.00 per doz.
14 12
I miles, barefoot, to a farm house of lifc would not have been
I where they called officers. I
I The stolen ear was found today
I abandoned several miles south of
| the robbery scene.
..........——- 1— — o--—
Doubts Story of
Tortoise and Hare
Borrow Money on
Your Car
Notes re-financed - Payments
reduced. Money for any pur-
pose. '
KENNETH D MOORE
Phone 600
S20 First Nat’l Bank Bldf.
A T A S F
Aub Auto
Am Can
All C A D
Air Red «..
Am C A F
At O & Rf
Am A For Pow ....
Am Rlr Mis
Aik Jit Gift...........
Am Metal
Armr III
Am P A L
Am Smelt
Am Tob ,....
-AvI Corp
Bordens
Bend AvI
Briggs >Ifg ............
B A O Ry ..a----------
Beth Steel
Ana Cop
Corn Pro
Col O A E
Con Can
Con OH
Consl Oil
Can Pae Oil
Com Sol
Com A S
du Pont
Frp Tx Corp ........
Elec Auto Lite
Con Gas
Gen Foods
Goode ch 4.
Gen Elcc
Gen Mot
Gd Y T A R
Hud Mot
Hn Oil old
Int Harv
’n* C^ni
I C Ry
Tn* Tel .,.
S O N J
Johns Manv
Chrysler
Uen Con
1 •' • J
Mont Ward
MaWaoll Field
mallow
l9 NOT
NATLiQAllY A PLATINUM
BLOMD,GMEI$ANATu(2AL
gLOMDz 0uTA SPeQAu
bleaching Ptpcsss
w swings our twe platinum
FORT WORTH, Tex., Oct. 16—
(UP) Cash grain:
Wheat—1 hard 1.13-1.1'4.
Corn— 2 white 1.06-1.07; 2
HAUPTMANN
(Continued From Page One)
James M. Fawcett, counsel for
Hauptmann, forced the portly,
white-haired Osborne to make
minute explanations and compari-
sons to show why—in Osborne's
opinion, the ransom notes were the
came as Hauptmann’s handwrit-
ing.
Osborne, wearing an aparatus to
aid his hearing, exp’ incd the lines
and the errors in the writing which
he said made him "reasonably
certain."
Special
Special emphasis was placed on
the handwriting testimony because
the notes rcfcrcrd to the writer
having gone into the Lindbergh
nursery.
New Jersey’s greatest difficulty
in evidence against Hauptmann
has been in proving that he was
at or near the scene of the crime
on March 1, 1932.
By proving Hauptmann wrote
these notes New Jersey attorney
general David Wilentz seeks to
establish a "confession” that the
suspect was at the scene.
Fawcett had the expert attempt
to select from a sheaf of automo-
bile license applications, the six
he had utilized in his study on the
ransom notes.
MARKETS AT A GLANCE
(BY-UNITED PRESS)
Stocks gain 1 to 4 points; silver shares
make best gains. Bonds higher; speculative
Issues rally. Curb stocks hold fractional gains.
Dollar easier in major currencies. Wheat clos-
es 1 3-8 to 1 5-8 cent higher; corn up 1 3-4 to
1 7-8 cent; oats rise 5-8 to 7-8 cent.
----------------—-----;----
in de-
mand with the mail order shares
the leaders. Department store is-
sues moved higher under the load
of R. H. Macy. Recent better de-
mand for tvs das sof stock was
attributed to increased sales.
, Farm equipment , issues were
higher. Atchison led a rally in
carriers, re'/ hing 53 7-8 up 2
3-8 points, while the others were
up fractions to 2 points.
Oil shares were .‘till under the
influence of gasoline price euts
although that was offset some-
what by a statement, by Oil Ad-
ministrator Ickes that he would
tighten the curb on illegal oil
production in the East, Texas field.
bS. WHITNEY
(Continued From Page One)
witnesses have uttered sensational
charges that Mrs. Vanderbilt is an
unfit mother, one such accusation
naming Prince Hohenlohe, who
sped acres the Atlantic to protect
his name.
Mrs. Whitney marched into the
court room some minutes after the
prince and princess, Mrs. Vander-
bilt, her sisters, Mrs. Benjamin
Thaw, Jr., and Lady Furness and
her brother, Harry Hayes Morgan,
Jr., hkd entered.'
But if she saw them she gave no
sign. She went to her seat and
gave herself up to a studied ig-
norance <ff even the existence of
the opposing forces.
The testimony today was strict-
ly private. Justice Carew, who had
barred the press and public, an-
nounced the discontinuance of his
sketchy, put-of-court outlines
the testimony developed.
FREEPORT, O. (UP)- L. D. ( (U O I H j
Clary takes the story of the tor- I F Eli 111
| toise and the hare with several
wagonloads of salt — and he has {
reason.
In 1912 Clary, who dives on
farm at Piedmont, found one of the I
along no- j
where and carved his initials f#
its back. Twenty-two years later
he found the same tortoise amb'-
:ng nowhere, initials and all. It
was with n a quarter of a mile of
the_spot at which he first saw it.
o —
Bars
Ore.
(Continued From I. ■ One)
I tains of f inance and industry, In-
! sull on Dec. 3, 1929, announced a
$200,000,000 expansion program
for is vast utility empire.
The collapse of the Insull do-
main came before the program
i^uld be carried out, however, and
only $71,107,651 was spent. This
jwent for expansion of the Middle
West Utilities Company, key unit
of his holdings now in receivership.
| The Corporation Securities Com-
pany, he will testify, was organ-
ized (o raise funds for financing
the pYograWi.
"Business aS usual will be our
by-word.” Insull said in his address
Dec. 3. ‘ There must be adherence
to the faith which has sustained us
in the past if we are to have calm
assurance of
policies of toJay and for abiding
NEGRO FATALLY STABBED
IN DICE GAME ARGUMENT
1.
Brock- Booker, 30,, year-old ne-
gro, today faced charges of mur-
der following the stabbing of
Homer Harper, negro, last night
in the negro section at the" end
of South Marshall St. He is in
the Rusk county jail
Harper died at about, 8:45 P-
m., after his jugular vein had
been severed. Besides the long,
gaping wound in his throat, he
had knife w'ounds on the chest
and back.»
Witnesses told officers that the
affray followed an argument over
money in a dice game at the home,
of Bennie Hamilton. ‘ Hamilton is
now serving a prison,,, term at
Huntsville, but has a wife who
lives in the house where the stab-
bing occurred.
Witnesses said that Harper
walked a few steps and sat down
in a chair, where he died soon
afterwards from loss of blood.
Cotton
per doz. | Jan
Cheese': Twin.- 12 1-4 12 12;;Mat
'daisies 12 3-4-13; longhorns 12 May.
3'4-13. July ...
Potatoes: Suppy moderate; de- Oct
j mand and trading moderate; mar- pjcc
Wisconsin | spOts steady;
. fia|(-s 70.
.45, showing decay
rCluroM 1.77 1-2. i —•
I 9,673 ; extra
-a ;
! loads (86-87 1-2) 22 1-2; i.pcciaL
126-26 1-2; standards 24 3-4; cen- #
FORT WORTH, Texas. Oct. 16. tralized (89) 23 3 4; centralized, !
(UP)—Livestock. |(HH) 231 I
Hogs 1000; 5c lower; top butch- | 'Poultry market unsettled; re-1
era 5 65; bulk good butchers 5.50- ce'Pts 43 trucks- on« «ar’ I •
5.65; mixed grades 4.75-5.40; paeje-
irfg sows 5.00.
Cattle 2000, calves 1500; steady;
yearlings 5.25 down; no steers; fat
cowa 3.00; cutters 1.75; calves 4.00.
Sheep 110Q; steady; fat lambs
5.25.
Tomorrow's estimated receipts: I
Cattle 3000; hogs 900; sheep 3000.
I great
In this connection the board se-
verely criticized the conduct of
members of the crew, who, it
found, after lowering themselves
into the sea in lifeboats, failed to
heed the appeals of passengers
huddled on the stern.
---o—---
C9RPROSPECT
“,!A I (Continued From Pago One)
64 Ore's car. He then drove away.
Orr and Hughes walked two
on Town Bar# Barmaid#
ASTORIA, Ore. (UP) —Bar-
bu-oni or otherwise, are
| no' do. ire I bv nt Ion t one local
.[group. The A'toria Culinary Al-
lih’lco has petitioned the city
'co'.im j in king that barmaids be
> ; banned in beer p.nrfors. Thee oun-
cil, composed of men, is undo-
on what action should be
IQIIDV###
Fawcett then sought to have the
witness select characteristic mis-
takes or .handwriting signs of a
similar nature from any two of the
license applications.
Osborne testified that a typical
error made by Hauptmann in writ-
ing was confusion in placing of
“H” and “T” in a word.
"In this auto application,” the
witness said, "Hauptmann wrote
that he went past a red light. He
spelled "light" as "lihgt." He often
spelled "the" as "hte.”
Fawcett objected to Introduction
of further notes but gave way to
further direct examination by
Wilentz, who Introduced other
notes.
cycles to 18 megacycles . . . two speed tuning . . . new full vision
film r-. . improved 11-lnch dynamic speaker nejMy-devjJoped
tone -quality . , . selectivity . . . automatic volume control . . .
shadow tuning and silent tuning.
McClel! Sirs
Mck Trk
Int Nek .'.
Nth Am Co
Nat Dist .t
Nat 1’ A L
Nat Dairy
Olvr Fm rlqpl .
I’hip Hst ................
Penn Ry
PCX Mot
. , , , , Proc Gambl ..."
'3, extra firsts (90-91 1-2) | Prime cracked, screened meal : . . (.
1-2-25; extents (92) 25 1-2; and cake, 43 per cent protein, i’br 1
ts (88-89 1-2) 23 3-4; sec- ton 41.00-43.00. Radio..*....'.
Rep Steel
Rey Tob
Item Rami
Sears Rcb
Strid ifrniln ................
Stnd O Cal
Stnd G & I.
Sind () Ind
1 Soc Vac
I Studebaker
I Shell Un Oil —
I S P Ry .
Skelly
Am T X- T ................
Gains ranged to more than five
points at the highs,.
Silvera made the best showing
on the belief the United States
treasury soon would be forced to
rai.y-ltS^purchase price for newly
mined' domestic metal. U. S.
Smelting touched 120 1-2, up 5
1-4 points at its high; Cerro de
Pasco 40*1-8 up 2 1-8; Howe
Sound 53 7-8 up 17 5-8, and
American Smelting 38 up 1 1-4.
Tobaccos were conspicuous
issues making new 1934
Earnings wcer reported
higher with cigarette production
sharply almad of 1933.
Mercantile issues were
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 181, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 16, 1934, newspaper, October 16, 1934; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1301096/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.