Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 230, Ed. 1 Friday, May 8, 1936 Page: 2 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 23 x 18 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
PAGE TWO
1
West Palm Beach, Fla., recently
in
f
SPECIAL
I
8
39c
A
1:00,
i
i
i
V
a
f'
Drawn for HEADLEE TIRE CO.
MICKEY AND HIS MA
9c
/
*
23c
/l
fx
njj
&
5c
Pure Granulated
(U
ii
Sc
i
SUGAR
li'
A
48c
25c
n
sheers,
fi
ft -
railroad mileage—16.
Advance
10c
25c
“WE HURRY”
50
Goodyear, Sinclair, Vesta
Our Choice
3c
PEANUT
BUTTER
29c
20c
14c
JELL WELL, 3 pkgs.
SAFETY—
—ZONE
3c
LETTUCE
15c
Sc
Maximum
A
MILK
4c
19c
old box
5c
Example?
1
As All the Down
11.95
Payment
A
$107.5S
Balance
JUICE
Payable 24 payments of $4.81.
25c
15c
SLICED BACON
Maximum
FLOUR
Model 605, 6.1 cu. ft..$159.50
Model 455,4j cu. ft... $119.50
Model 505,5.1 cu. ft..... $139.50
10c
BOLOGNA
. FREE DEMONSTRATION!
CHUCK ROAST
55c
• DRESSED HENS AND FRYERS
I
SHEADLEES
/
s
This offer good for only ONE WEEK!
Take advantage of this opportunity!
Field Day Groups
Named by C. of C.
A. A. ILW. Hears
Visiting Speakers
City Commission
to Meet Tonight
Funeral Services
for J. JF. Boyles
Piano and Voice
Recital Tonight
SHORTENING
90c
We will allow you 10% of the purchase
price for your old ice box as down pay-
ment. No cash!
3 Medium
Cans
3 Tall or
6 Small
Iceburg,
Head
CARRYING CHARGE OF 4%—THE
LOWEST EVER OFFERED
IN DENTON!
Model 455 $119.50
Less 10% for ice box
12 Lb.
Sack ..
8 Lb.
Carton
24 Oz.
Jar ....
2 No. 2i/2
Cans ......
12 Lb.
Sack ..
: 45c
85c
Keokuk, lawa, was named after a
chief of the Sauk and Foxes who re-
mained peaceful during the Black
Hawk war and died in 1848.
Sleepy Hollow
SYRUP, pint jug
Van Camp
PORK AND BEANS, No. 2 can
P. & G. or C. W.
SOAP, 6 big bars
PaSlmolive
TOILET SOAP, bar
Hershey’s
COCOA, 2 lb. can
Sachet and Talc
Roger and Gallet spe-
cial combination pack-
age, $1.
Wednesday, May T1
Libby’s
PINEAPPLE
itesi rafed il
RDRtA tWEB in
GHTOEN Of
EDt.N|/ —-——
CANDY
Beautiful gift packages
in King’s and Adolphus
Chocolates.
HOSE
Newest shades in Air
Maid hosiery.
I
Our Spring Economy Festival
offers you many unusuall values!
GRAND LEADER COMPANY
[
Swift’s Brookfeld,
lb
Fresh,
lb
GIFT SETS
Palmer, Yardley, Cara
Nome and others at al-
most any price.
Favorite
MATCHES, box
4
10 Lbs.
Cloth Bag ...
Edward’s Dependable
COFFEE, lb
Rob Ross
PANCAKE FLOUR, pkg.
Airway
COFFEE, 2 lbs.
Refrigerator Special for Week of May 9-lbth
You’ll Be Amazed at So Much Value for So Little Money!
STEWART-WARNER
Fairway
VINEGAR, 12
Our Choice s
PEANUT BUTTER, quart
Special!
HOMINY
BEETS or
CARROTS, 2 bunches
G. W. Martin Radio and Gift Shop
Phone 302 Boston Store Building
GREEN BEANS or
NEW POTATOES, tb
DENTON, TEXAS, RECOUP CHRONICLE FRIDAY, MAY 8, 1936
185 Due to Get
£-K
CHEESE
Swans Down
CAKE FLOUR, regular pkg. ....fcJC
RUBE MARTIN
SHOE SHOP
310 North Locust Street
Specializing in Quality Shoe
Repairing, Dyeing and Tinting
Your visit invited
Swift’s 1£a
Branded, lb--
and you pay nothing for 30 days. Now
is your chance to have something you
have always wanted in your home.
VOvft fWCMAEdlC IS
Good-now i'lvi’Rn
yoi) ON GWWW j~
crn you give. iae.a
SENTENCE USING 1HE
FIRS! VERSON ?
Shaw, 76,
W. Shaw,
Lomco
Macaroni or Spaghetti, 3 pkgs. Ivv
1
If UNCLE OSCAR SRs
“Adam left the Garden of Ed.en a little while before
Headlee’s opened their first filling station in Den-
ton” but Headlee’s have been here seventeen -years
—making new friends every year.
And remain
“OPEN ’TILL MIDNIGHT”
CRISCO,
3 Lb. Can
IM
■ i
AS
TEXAS — “Modern Times”;
3:13, 5:26, 7:39, and 10:02.
Olive Whitten, L. A. Sharp, and
Walter Acker. The serving commit-
tee was made up from the young
graduate group and included Miss
Mary Frances Gardner, Florence
Cullin, and Ina Louise Thurman.
Out of town guests, in adaition to
the guest speakers, were: Mrs. Wil-
liam Dingus of Texas Tech, Lub-
bock, chairman of the Texas com-
mittee on international relations
and a member of the national com-
mittee; Mrs. Anna Witherspoon of
S. M. U.; Mrs. Eleanor D. Pace of
Wichita Falls, recording secretary
of the Texas division of A. A. U. W.;
Miss Edna Rowe of Dallas, chair-
man of the state fellowship com-
mittee; Miss Eleanor H. Benners,
Dallas; Miss Eugenie Terry, vice
president-elect of the Dallas branch;
Miss Sarah E. Meriwether, Dallas;
Miss Ruby Mixon, chairman of com-
mittee on internjational relations,
Fort Worth branch; Misses .Lacey
and Millel• of Fort Worth; and Mrs.
Charlton of San Antonio.
observed the 41st anniversary of its (
founding.
I
During the week of May 9th through
May 16th you can buy a STEWART-
WARNER Safety Zone Refrigerator
with no cash down. We will take your
w
Bi
5^0
The City Commission, in session
for its regular May meeting to-
night, so far has no matters aside
from routine business slated for
disposal, city officials said Friday
morning.
The matter of strict traffic regu-
lation, in which the commission re-
cently expressed deep interest and
on which Chairman Lee E. John-
son appointed a committee of Den-
' I
USED CAR VALUES
’34 Plymouth Sedan ’34 Studebaker Sedan
WALDRIP MOTOR COMPANY
Telephone 666 1706 N. Elm
VIACLE </
.osowj I.
—------------- I
Movie Timetable ■
Approximately 85 members of the
Denton branch of th| A. A. U. W.
attended the final meeting of the
year* which was held at Marquis
Hall yesterday afternoon. Dr. Anna
Powell, out-going president and
CAPITAL JIGSAW
By HOWARD C. MARSHALL
AUSTIN, May 8.—(.T)—The cen-
tennial has been tendered the ser-
ices of an interpreter.
A letter to Gov. Allred from
Brooklyn, N. Y., slaid:
“For 25 years I was a teacher
of languages and speak 16 of them
fluently. The tongues I (converse
in cover not only three-fourths of
the countries of Europei, but also
the continents of North and South
America.
“Would your excellency accept
my services (gratis) to be inter-
preter for any foreign delegation
that may visit the fair state of
Texas?’’
ton citizens to work out suggestions
for better street safety, is almost
certain to be before the council for
discussion.
member of the Teachers College his-
tory department, was hostess.
Dr. Evelyn Carrington, president
of the Texas Division of A. A. U.
W. and associate professor of edu-
cation at Sam Houston State
Teachers College, and Miss Dorothy
La Selle were guest speakers. The
subject of Dr. Carrington’s talk was
“Why We Should Know Modern
Art,” and Miss La Selle spoke on
“What the Texas Branches Are Do-
ing.”
At the business session of the
meeting the following officers were
elected: Dr. Ray Cooke Stoker,
president; Miss Anna Alford, vice
president; Miss Margaret Hays, sec-
retary; and Mmes. L. H. Mioore, H.
A. Wolsohn and Earl C. Bryan, di-
rectors. Mrs. O. M. Whitten is serv-
ing as delegate of the local branch
to the sectional conference of A.
A. U. W. in Little Rock, Ark., which
is now in session, and gave the re-
sponse to the welcome address to
the delegates. •
Received at Marquis Hall
The guests, upon arrival at Mar-
quis Hall, ^ere greeted at the door
by Misses Elizabeth Linscott, Anne
Bradley, Caroline Curry, Ruth
Moores, and Mrs. Mary Wesson. The
receiving line was composed of
Misses Anna Alford, Anna Powell,
Edith Clark, Jessie Humphries, An-
nabelle Pritchard, Dorothy La Selle,
and Mmes. W. J. McConnell, B. B.
Harris, Ray Cooke Stoker, Autrey
Nell Wylie, and Mattie Lloyd
Wooten.
Others who assisted in receiving
were Misses Mary C. Sweet, Muriel
Williams, and Sadie Kate Bass, and
Mmes. C. A. Montgomery, H. A.
Wolfsohn, L. H. Moore, Earl Bryan,
i
S
oo
fi
PALACE—“Alice Adams”; 1:00, 3:-
16, 5:32, 7:50, and 9:30.
DREAMLAND — O’Malley of the
Mounted”; 1:00, 2:29, 3:58, 5:27,
' 6:56, 8:25, and 9:54.
Machine Sliced,
Mrs. J. W. Shaw
Dies Late Thursday Degrees at T. C
oz, bottle
CUCUMBERS t’”. T““:
Two committees to work on
phases of the annual State Ex-
periment Station field day, held
here May 15 under joint sponsor-
ship Of the station and State Col-
lege for Women, were named
Thursday evening by the agricul-
tural bureau of the Denton Cham-
ber of Commerce. One committee
will work iouti plans for refresh-
ments, which are to be furnished
visitors at the station without cost
except for a 10-cent charge to
cover actual expenses of securing
and barbecuing the meat. The
other group will act as a wel-
coming committee; fop the groups
at the college. Will, Williianis St-,
chairman, presided over the bu-
reau meeting.
California and Oregon are the
only States in which English wal-
nuts are grown on a commercial
scale.
SAFEWJOLSTORES
Visit a Centennial of Romantic History-on Parade in Texas
PERFUME
The world’s finest per-
fumes. Priced from 39c
to $10.
COLOGNE
Lavender Cologne in'
decanters.
CURTIS DRUG STORE
Funeral services for J. W. Boyles,
who died in a hospital at San An-
tonio Wednesday, were held Thurs-
day afternoon in the Methodist
phurdh at Argyle, conduced by
Rev. M. C. Sooter, Methodist min-
ister of Krum. Flower girls were
Misses Louise, Pluma Lee and
Johnnie Mae Cogdell, Mary Cath-
erine Paradeaux, Vincintine Hor-
ton, Ilene Stuart and Frances
Boyles.
Burial was in the Argyle ceme-
tery, and pallbearers were Sam Fos-
ter Ray Crawford, L. B. Morris,
Ray Wallace, John Thompson and
Jim Brown, all of Argyle.
A shortage of horse and mule
colts was revealed by recent cen-
sus investigations in the State of
Washington.
BASEMENT
SPECIALS
Millinery
Grdup.ed on tables. Straws,
all shapes and colors.
19c 29c
Happy Home
Dresses
Organdy, batiste,
prints, broadcloth.
SI
SHOE SALE
On tables grouped for your
selection. White, blondes,
blacks, browns, sandals, ox-
fords, ties, straps, mostly
small sizes, 3 to 6. Shoe
values to $3.00 now
49e S8o
Boston Store
One hundred and eignty-five
degrees will be granted graduates
of the Teachers College in com-
mencement exercises at 8 p. m.
Wednesday, May 27. A group of
January graduates will also re-
ceive their degrees at that time.
Of the graduating seniors, 33 are
to receive bachelor of arts de-
grees, while 152 will be awarded
the degree; o+- bachelor of science.
One member of the class, James
Cunningham, will receive both de-
grees.
Members of the class heard Dr.
J. Thomas Davis of John Tarle-
ton Agricultural College deliver
their baccalaureate address on April
29 at the college. Plans are not
yet complete for the program of
the commencement exercises, to bet
held in the college auditorium.
Miss Anna Mary Bevill, pianist,
and Grady Whittle, tenor, will be
presented in recita l at the Teach-
eres College auditorium at 8:15
o’clock tonight.
Miss Bevill will open her pro-
gram with “Toccata and Fugue in
D Minor” (Bach-Busoni). She will
play two' preludes, “Opus 28, Nos.
15 and 22” (Chlopin), “The Gar-
den of Soul-Sympathy” (Cyri,lj
Scott), “The Sea” (Palmgren), and
“Con.cirto in C Minor, First Move-
ment” (Beethoven).
Whittle will sing “If With All
Your Hearts.” from “Elijah” (.Men-
delssohn), “Delizia” (Beethoven),
“The Wo Grenadiers” ((Schu-
mann), “The Lamp Lighter” (Man-
ning), and “Cossack Love Song”
(Kountz).
Miss Bevil is the pupil of Miss
Mary Anderson and Whittle is the
pupil of Miss Lillian M. Parrill.
SEVEN STEAK 15c
$2
Allowed for your old
battery
ONE
WEEK ONLY
STARMASTER
BATTERIES
now guaranteed 2 full
years. Any type of serv-
ice.
Trade in your old bat-
tery today. Use our easy
payment pilan.
39c , batteries
Recharged
Phone 1008
STAR TIRE
STORE
Opposite City Hall
FORYOUR
VWWi
Mrs. Leona Augusta
widow of the late J.
died at her home, 311 Ash Street,
Thursday at 8 p. m.
Funeral services are to be held
this afternoon at 4:30 o’clock
the Church of Christ, of which
she was a member, conducted by
the minister. Lyle Price. Burial
will be in the I. O. O. F. ceme-
tery, and active pallbearers will be
elders of the church, W. A. Talia-
ferro, C. P. Taliaferro, W. C. Orr,
H. J. Dyer, C. G. Yarbrough and
J. S. Darnall. Honorary pallbear-
ers, deacons of the church, will be
H. C. Taliaferro, Ray Anderson,
W. L. Yarbrough, E. L. Barneftt
and R. B. Escue.
Mrs. Shaw was born in Dick-
son. Tenn., March 30, 1860. She
was married there to Shaw Aug.
24, 1879, and came with him to
Denton in 18S7, where she had
lived since. Shaw died last Jan.
12. She is survived by three sis-
ters,’ Mrs. Harrie W. Harrington of
Dickson, Tenn., who has been mak-
ing her home with Mrs. Shaw
since Shaw’s death, Mrs. E. W.
Swank of Dickson and Mrs. Laura
E. Taylor of Pine Bluff, Ark.
A check by Austin police indi-
cates its not the female of the
species, necessarily, that is t0 be
feared insofar as automobile acci-
dents are concerned.
Reports show instead, that it’s
the aged drivers who should be
watched.
Reports show insteadw, that it’s
the aged drivers who should be
watched.
The number of women drivers in-
volved in collisions has, decreased
34 per cen-t thVS year, drivers un-
der 20 have dropped 26 per cent,
while those over 65 increased ®1
per cent..
Apparently there are fewer colli-
sions but they are more' serious,
resulting in more deaths and in-
juries. Police attribute this to an
increase in the numbers of speed-
sters and automobiles with me-
chanical defects.
> . --------------
The campaign card of George B.
Terrell, candidate dbr commfrj-
sioner of agriculttire, mentions a
number of “firsts.” It reads:
“Great is Texas.
“First in land area—262,398 sq.
miles.
“First in number of farms—495,-
489.
“First in cotton—5.600,000' bales
(1926).
“First in number of: cattle—6,-
602,703.
“First in
398 miles.
“First in highway mileage—20,-
498 miles..
“First in permanent school fund
—$80,000,000
“I want t'o be FIRST in. the
Primary.”
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 230, Ed. 1 Friday, May 8, 1936, newspaper, May 8, 1936; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1304376/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.