Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 232, Ed. 1 Monday, May 11, 1936 Page: 6 of 6
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--
=T
DAILY MARKET QUOTATIONS
F2
Extra Special
" i'
—
AFRICA.
i
10 2GB
10.28B-
I
2 of milk in cooking means more flavorful foods,
■ better health, every time!
go
I
I
h
e miles in area.
s
HERE TO SERVE YOU!
M4
for the sole
unl
that the Pates who watch
(Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation)
C
TODAY ONLY
BARGAIN DAY
p‘
THE SAFEST WAY
VOICE”
FIRST STATE BANK OF DENTON
q
DREAMLAND
*
i
Lait Timet Todae
J
1 ’
SHOW NO MERCY
i
December was ruling
h the
Phone 130—For‘Ice
showing net losses of
PENRY BROS.
LOOK
SHERWIN-WILLIAMS
plies.
r
&
Denton Typewriter Exchange
Phone 321
East Side Squar^
8
YOUNG’S SHOE SHOP
Phone 286
218 W. Oak
TUESDAY Only
Cucumbers, long and green, lb. ...
...........7‘/«c
“BIG NITE”
1
VA
I
And on the Screen!
: 1i11
14c
A
0.
VI.
M SYSTEM GROCERY
Phone 31
C. W Woods
IE
JOEL MeCREA
with Jack HALEY
USED CAR
>
Grace BRADLEY
BARGAINS!
You ever made!
K
The New
1935 Ford Coupe
£
39.50 to 79.50
ALWAYS AT YOUR COMMAND
1931 Buick Sedan
1929 Chevrolet Coupe
X
I
?
Phone 440
i
I
“ , ■
. , .r. ,
. McCLURKAN BLOG.
PHONE 423
"TEXAS
'Sp/ld
S. I. Reynolds’1 91st
Birthday Reached
Auto
Loans-
Paint Up Now!
For Beauty and
Protection Use
1933 Chevrolet
Town Sedan
1933 Ploymouth
Sport Coupe
Miriam HOPKINS
MERLE OBERON
Electricity is an ever obedient servant, it is economi-
cal and convenient. Use it freely.
(Get price on bushel)
Sunbrite Cleanser, special, 3 for
t
r
PAINTS
Morris & McClendon
219 West Hickory
h
2
t
CHILDREN
10c
larger than
France iUelt
The stamp
shown here
pictures a form
1
1
RE-ROOF WITH
Johns-Manville
Roofing
FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK
FORT WORTH, May 11.—(AP)—
P. Lipscomb, M. D.
Southeast Comer Square
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Glasaes Correctly Fitted
Phones: Office 296; Residence 643
OUR GANG COMEDY
* COLOR TRAVELTALk
. ‘eather
SV MAAGARIT MU HOUSTON
Wm. FRAWLEY
Adrienne Marden, Onslow Stevens
On the Same Program
Green Beans, round and tender,.special price today,
per lh. .............. 5c
M. A. GAY
Roofing & Sheet
Metal Co.
5% Loan! Easy Terms!
3 Years to Pay!
—THE-
Denton County National Bank
OF DENTON
Bell Roofing & Sheet
Metal Co.
TIN SHOP
Back of Postoffice.
Phone 796
11 18 11.18 11.13 11.17—18
10 25 10 35 10 17 1033
1030 10 20 10.18 10.34
10.30 10 20 1034 10.84
New Chevrolet—Big
Discount
Wall Paper
Now Showing
New
Spring Patterns
H. H. Hardin Lbr. Co.
Sole oa
■as, Paymenta
HANDY MOTOR
COMPANY
DENTON DAIRY PRODUCTS CO.
Telephone 292
"F-MAN"
A PARAMOUNT PICTURE with
GLAD TO KEEP YOUR MONEY UNTIL NEEDED.
CONSIDER YOUR LOANS CAREFULLY.
SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES FOR YOUR
VALUABLES.
“HER MASTER’S
ADULTS
15«
‘W.1.. "'j'W
1
c
11
NEW YORK FUTURES
NEW YORK. May 11.—(API—Cot-
ton futures closed steady, unchanged
to 3 lower.
INDIAN _
OCEAN
r V j
For Battery Service
PHONE 242
>
Sparkman Battery
& Electric
402 W. Hickory
general market
3 to 3 potnta.
DKNTON. TRXAS, RECORD-CHRONICLE, MONDAY, MAY 11, IMS
TUESDAY—BARGAIN
D AY—10c
LET US TAKE YOUR ORDER FOR A
NEW SPRING OR SUMMER SUIT
CUSTOM MADE, NEW STYLES AND PATTERNS
CAMP CLEANERS
A
"Vitaphone Billboard”
BIG TIME VAUDE
15 years in Denton with
Southwestern Life Insurance Company
Consult me about your insurance problems
ELI P. COX
A polley far every need. Phone 4-.
Ing. At mid-day
around 10.26 witl
O. D. BELL
Back of Port Office
(how? S. CampbelUCo.
J COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE
let any
the fact
f
in cook Ing means better and healthier meals.
Ask the best of eall the cooking experts, the
women who always serve the finest meals,
mothers whose children are always healthier!
They all agree on one Important point—Plenty
—
® ■ -
Open High Low Last
11.60 11.60 11.67 11.58
1126 1126 11.21 11 26—26
10.29 1029 10.21 10.27
10.30 10.30 10.21 1029
10 29 10 29 10 22 10.29N
10.32 10.33 10.25 10.3 IN
I
purpose of meeting him.
invited guardian accept
k> alone The car in which she
-a olack-and -green taxi, a pir-
taxi—was flying toward the
LTDirk w ailently after it.
May
July
Oct
Dec
Kan
Call 1133 and 1153 for groceries and fresh meats.
Plas
“CREW RACING”
PETE SMITH SPORT
tnfougb the empty streets.
Ths green tax entered Broadway
new through Yonkers into r: ..—
'SRn.' fer, at Dyckman Street. It
turuert into Riverside Drive whare all
KlXnd opLMng
—Gh
•QCWNKE
m
“THRILL FOR THELMA”
CRIME SERIES
*
ao"
yQe
-oet
oo"•edba
p
Home Experts Agree That More Milk
tame algnaja were suspended at this
hour. At Sewnty-aeoond Street II
assunted the weedway, racing like
BM to wiity-seventh, aha there NeE-
pentinea eastward, avoiding paubes
2 mea iighta.
la the west Porties, near Sixth
Avnu, it drew o the curb before a
brownstone dwelling that still hous-
ed a fashionabl speak-easy For th'1
EL BRENDEL
in “OKAY JONES”
fourth largest on earth. The land
from which it sprang has been
named Lemuria, from the native
word for “ghost," an appropriate
name for these catlike lemurs
with bright, round, penetrating
eyes that shine in the dark.
Although this island was "dis-
covered” by Portuguese in the
16th century, it was not until
1884 that France was able to con-
K “THESE
B THREE”
with
I'
Al
“,c io g-
75c, $1 and $1.50 boxes of Stationery to reduce our
stationery stock, per box ........................-........... 295
Some odds and ends of Face Powder, popular $1.o0to
$2.00 boxes, choice ........... 256
is such a fine washer, so well
built and at such a low price, that
it wins the praise of every user.
7ake drudgery out of washday with a SPEED-QUEEN
fully guaranteed and up to the Evers’ standard of quality.
Easy to operate many fine points; sold on easy terms.
Evers Hardware Co.
CITY OF DENTON
Water & Light Department
STOCKs
NEW YORK, May IL— (AP>—The
stuck market slipped back into an r- ’
regularly lower rut today after mak-
lug a half-hearted attempt to
straighten up during forenoon trad-
ing Losses of minor fractions to
around two points were in the ma-
jority at the close. Transfers approx-
imated 650,000 shares, the smallest
for a 5-hour session since July 3.
1935.
ft.c
its inhabitants. Today,
fractiop of a second it paused while
a man who had been waiting in the
Spot quiet; middling 1163
TEX AM SPOrS
DALLAS, May 11— (AP)—Cotton
11.20, Houston 11.60. Galveston 11.53
Kwa-
EddAMEaMuhEk
zana" C)
Winners Picked
in T. C. Audition
1
g
Invisible amid the wainscoting, and
one had to know where to feel along
the ridgts for .the hidden spring
Dirk found Sand pressed it. Th
panel slid back, revealing the small quer — -------------
dark aperture. Something was inside. France is making it a highly prof-
haPhdilow"appeqpnyuqonecpara ue I itable colony, »is 241,000 square
wrapped the puckag. It was no more I '
than a brush and comb, a nail-buffer.
next room might not hear. There was \
no sound, and he turned the knob V
changed to four points down.
Open High Low Clos 4
May,.,.. 11.51 11.51 11 50 11.61
July
Oct
Dec
Jan
Mar
thing, he supposed, had called her
out—something she could not tel
Rupert. and he. himscif, had not
been there to tell. Wearing Ruperts
jewels. she was not safe withuut a
protector. a body-guard of some sort.
Now that she had chosen her pro-
tector. having come forth no doubt
Sam I. Reynolds, Denton County
pioneer 69 years, was honored on
his 81st birthday Sunday with a
basket dinner at his home in the
- Dixon community, east of Denton,
by a large number or relatives and
fritnds: The dinner was spread un-
der the trees at his home picnic
style. Reynolds is the father of Mrs.
F. M Adair of Denton. Mrs. Hilie
Rose of Lillie Elm and 3. T. Rey-
. nolds, who makes his home with
‛ his father. He has besides 27 grand-
children. 33 great-grandchndren
and four great-great-grandchildren
and numerous other relatives in the
county. He is a retired cattleman.
Reynolds came to Texas from
Missouri in 1856, settling in Col-
lin County. He came to Denton
County in 1866 and has lived in
the Dixon community since Hk
wife died four years ago. Approxi-
mately 75 attended the celebration
Here’s A Real ‘
BARGAIN!
The process of DRY CLEANING
is quick death to all insects
and especialiy to MOTHS,
MOTH LARVAE, and MOTH
EGGS—-plus a good heavy-
weight MOTH PROOF and
dust proof bag for storing your
elothes during the summer.
NO CHARGE FOR THE BAG.
East Side Tailors
313 Ash Hl—Back of Postomee
of transporta-
tion that is fast
being replaced
by modem con-
veyances. It is
called a "flan-
Leading Stocks
NEW YORK. Muy U -L (AP) -Sales,
closing price and net change of the
16 most active stock# today.
Hupp 35,600 3 No.
Q M 28 100 63 1/4 off 1.
US SU 19 200 55 off 1 1/4.
Chrysler 15,800 92 3/4 off 2 1/R
Radio 16,700 9 7/8 No.
Mother Lode 10.400 1 off 3/8.
Anaconda 7,700 33 off 5/8.
Socony 7,300 12 7/8 off 1/4.
Oom 6ou 7,300 2 5/8 No.
Budd Mfg 7.100 14 3/4 off 1/4.
NYC 6,700 32 7/8 off 1/3.
Col G El 6,600 16 7/8 off 3/8.
Beth Stl 6.500 48 1/3 off 5/8.
US Rub 6.300 28 1/4 off 1 1/8.
Yell TrE C 8,100 17 7/8 off 1/4.
KNIGHT LIFE OF EUROPE’
‘MIXED POLlCIEr
Barry and Whitledge*
At your shoes, everyone else
does. We can rebuild and fin-
tah them like new. Consult us
on your shoe problems. Shoe
corrections and corrective
shoes.
TYPEWRITERS. We sell, rent,
repair typewriters. Also typewriting sup-
la, valuel " E
Gives you roof insulation in addition to
o long -wearing root—both for roof cost
done. It's the only shingle that gives
you this double value.
(agegusuuyu
SHINGLES
The famous patented shingle that
is built with long-lesting weather
surface of slet ond insulating
under--surface of cork. Insures
cooler homo ia summer; wormer
m winter. Seves fuel. Get free
somple ond prices on this better
shingle before you build or re-roof.
Made only by Carey,
With
EDWARD EVERETT HORTON
pEGGY CONKLIN
-LAURA HOPECREwS
LAST
A, DAY!
over clandestine lqvers had been on
her aide. AA 4
Yet acceptance was not easy, he
told himself, as he rode toward home.
He had made himself responsible
for this girl, for what she might be.
for what she might do. If he had
not vouched for her. pleaded and
schemed and lied for her, she would
not have remained in the house.
Now that he had intrenqhd her
there, he must protect the hmbe and
Rupert. Again. the man might not
be her lover, or even as had natural-
ly suggested itself to Dirk--her con-
federate in crime. She might herself
be a victim. going to her death. ।
He put the thought from him. She
had moved with a sureness, a confi-
dence born of familiarity with the
thing she did. To put out a drag-net
for the taxi. to track her down, would
expose and compromise her. The es-
capade might be innocent enough
The time might come when she
NEW ORLEANS FUTURES
NEW ORLEANS, May 11__(AP)—
Cotton futures closed steady, un-
CHKAGO POULTRY
CHICAGO, May 11.— (AP)—Poul-
try, live, 1 car, 11 trucks, steady; hens
5 lbs and less 21; more than 5 lbs
19 Leghorn hens 18; Plymouth and
White Rock springs 27, colored 25.
Plymouth and White Rock fryers 25
colored 24; Piymouth and White Rock
and colored broilers 24. barebacks 20-
32. Leghorn 22. roosters 14 1/3; hep
turkeys 33. young toms 2©. old toms
- 20, No. 2 turkeys 16; heavy old ducks
IS. heavy young 16 1/3, small white
■ ducks 14. small colored 13. geese 11.
Butter 12,917, easy; creamery-spe-
etale (93 score) 26 1/2-27; extras 892)
I 26. extra firsts 490-91) 26 1/8; flrote
• (88-89) 25-25 1/4;- standards (90 cen-
' tralized carlots) 25 1/2.
। Eggs 32,476; firm; extra firsts local
31 1/4, cars 21,3/4; fresh graded firsts
local 20 3 4; cars 21 14; current re-
, ceipts 30 l/4: storage packed extras
33 1/3. storage packed firsts 23 1/4.
Six Denton musicians will enter
the Centennial competition of the
Tr-State Music Festival in Dallas
this June, after making satisfactory
ratings of 90 or above in the Dis-
trict 4 audition held at the Teach-
ers College Saturday morning and
afternoon. * —__
edhe six are Miss Marjorle Hayme,
who tied with Dick Stead of Den-
ton for the highest grade made in
the piano division. Misses La Nell
Wright and Betty Ruth Pepry in
the same division, and Misses Mary
Jane Moore and Laura Beattie
Smith, organists.
Other victorious entrants includ-
ed Miss Laveta Foster. 8 C. W
student who made the highest
grade in the organ division, and
Miss Elizabeth Nell Gentry, Lew-
* isville, pianist.
Futures dosed steady, unchanged
to 3 lower. Spot quiet. Middling 11 63
Cash may be lost—it may be stolen.
Be wise—a bank account is the
safest way—especially so when
your deposit is insured, as it will be
when deposited here.
roadway, most deserted now. and along the
Mnat- water-front. There was no sign of the
green taxf.
His half-formed resolve to give up
following had been accomplished for
him There was othing to do nw
but return home It had been hardly
decent anyhow trailing her like this,
when her errand was patently a ee-
cret one. a -
His intentions Bi the beginning
hud been honorable enough Some-
sxnorats: napest aora has
mfries nope lhne an the re-
« bouna trom elimor Ptemang, who
nus jnute him because of kin
drinking. There seems to hr some
‘ hope that the marriage may even
• succeed; IMrk is attracted to the
hmuysterious Hope, and toy al to
his brother, and a little puzzied
as to his feelings toward each of
them. Rupert and Hope have
‛ gone to a play, and Dirk has been
there, but In another party, Now.
‘ nering home, he sees a woman's
y gre Standing in the shadow of
the big gates.
Chapter 17
NIGHT CHARE
J Dirk glanced at the watch on his
—wrintwasexactiy two o'clock He
was durious, and did not turn out
oT the intersecting street which nd-
ad opposite his gates, but. dimming
his lights, drew up to the curb, and
walted. Perhaps the woman would
see him Perhaps not. At any rate, it
was not in his direction she had sig-
C“8e appeared not to see him. A
car came presently past the gates,
and halted some twenty feet below.
The figure emerged from the shadow
ang went swiftly towards it. In the
light of the car-lamps Dirk saw
Hope's face, and. as the cape fell
back. her snow-white satin gown. She
kepped’int the car, and was gone
p Dirk, too, was gone. He could not
Esop her. perhaps. but he could fol-
aw. Whatever her errand, she should
Ruth Chatterton as the maid of
honor at a wedding that should
have been been hers is part of the
story of a gallant lady whose lips
were sealed by betrayal. Look for
your name in the Classified Direc-
tory Tuesday. You may receive a
guest ticket to see Lady of Se-
crete". with Ruth Chatterton, Ot-
to Kruger, Lionel Atwill, billed for
Tuesday and Wednesday at the
Palace. 233
MARKETS AT A GLANCE
NEW YORK, May 11-— (AP)—
Stocks irregular; industrials sag
following early rise.
Bonds steady; French obligations
awing widely both ways.
Curb uneven; oils and utilities lose ;
ground.
Foreign exchanges mixed; golds
rally while pound declines.
Gotten steady, favorable weather;
hedge selling
Sugar higher; abort covering in
May.
Coffee quiet; Brazilian buying.
CHICAGO:
Wheat weak; bearish crop figures.
Corn lower, Influenced by wheat.
Cattle sluggish, indications 25-50
cents lower. 6
Hogs mostly 25 cents lower; top
8980
NEW YORK COTTON-
NEW YORK May 11.—(AP)—Cot-
ton futures opened barely steady. 1
higher to 3 lower with steadier Liver-*
pool cables offset by rain in the wes-
tern and central belts. May 1160;
July 11 25; Oct 10 29; Dec. 10.30; Jan
10.29; March 10.32.
The market remained quiet and
moved within a range of 2 or 3 points
during early trading. There was fur-
UM covering by trade •horte in the
near months
The demand for May was supplied,
presumably by pool brokers, while
scattered selling of new crop months
developed on reports of rain in the
Southwest. At the end of the first
hour May was selling at 11.58 and
December at 1129, or about un-
shadow of the basement steps came
out and stepped aboard.
Dirk saw him as he came, slim and
dapper and quick The door of the
taxi closed behind him, and the driv-
er turned with the traffic into Fifth
Avenue. There he was forced to pause,
and Dirk, pausing too, drew his car
abreast at the taxi.
It had been his intention, If such
a situation occurred, to speak to
Hope, to take her aboard his own
car, and accompany her wherever she
might be bound Since the new pas-
senger had come aboard, however, he
had abandoned such an idea He had
even a feeling that he should cease
following her. Her errand was no
more than a rendevous, perhaps, and
he, himself, merely a spy.
He could see her now where a light
from the Avenue fell across her face
and that of the man beside her. Tne
man was dark, youthful, rather
handsome. He was talking rapidly. In-
audibly, with Hope, making quick
foreign gestures with his hands She
sat staring before her, catching the
cloak together at her throat, her
eyes wide and thoughtful, her face
pale.
The lights went green and they
darted forward, flew swiftly south-
ward. then at a red light, eastward
again They had reached Second Ave-
nue in the upper Twenties, a dismal
neighborhood. Beneath the elevated
tracks a traffic light biased suddenly,
permitting the green taxi by a hair's
breadth to fly ahead.
Dirk would have followed, but an
officer beside the red signal had an
eye on him. When he-was released to
follow, the gmsen taxi, having turned
east again, had disappeared.
Dirk flew along First Avenue. al-
The Best Trade
4
a hat-brush. They were mounted in 2
imitation ivory and marked with a •
single red initial. It looked like the
(USDA)—Hogs 1.200; truck hogi 40-
50 lower than Friday or 15-25 lower
than Saturday; good to choice 180-
““ 8.70-85; good under-
---175 Ibs. 8.00-
T Tuesday and wed.
NEW ORLEANS SPOTS
NEW ORLEANS, May 11--(AP)-
Spot cotton closed uiet at unchang-
ed quotations. Sales 580. Low mid-
dling 10.53; middling 11.63 good
middling 12 23 Receipts 1.618 Stock
380,274.
MIVERPOL COTTON
LIVERPOOL, May 11.—(AP)—Cot-
ton, no receipts Spot in fair demand;
prices four points higher: quotations
in pence; American strict good mid-
dling 1.23; good middling 6.93; strict
middling 6 73; middling 6.48: strict
low middling 6.23: low middling 5.98;
strict good ordinary 5.78; good ordi-
nary 6 48 Futures closed quiet and
steady. May 6.17; July 6.00; Oct 5.64;
Dec. 5 55; Jan 5.55; March 5 55.
11
1
d
P
f
Carey Cork If
sulated Shingl
is the "TOP"
in storm-proof
service! The
“TOP" in last-
ing quality. The
“ToP" ill roof
ter grade, vealers 7.00-8.00; package
213 lbs 825; choice 520 lb atockera
7 38
Sheep 7,000: spng lambs steady,
packers b dding steady on all other
classes compared with their market
Friday; medium to choice spring
lambs 8.00-9.25: packers bidding 8 00
for good shorn fed lambs and paying
7.00-75 for grass fat lambs, yearlings
scarce. shorn 2-year-old wethers 6.00,
biddling 450-500 for shorn aged
wethero; feeder lambs steady, 0 00
down, best corn fed lambs held con-
siderably above 84)0._______
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
NEW ORLEANS, May 11.—(AP)—
Cotton opened quiet and steady to-
day with first trades showing no
changes from Saturday's close on •
near months and 1 to 2 points off on
new crop months.
Liverpool cables came in about as
du? and trading was light during the
first hour. May and July remained I
unchanged from Saturday's close at (
11.51 for the former and 11.18 for the
latter.
New crop months eased off further
to 10.23 lor October and 10.25 for
December This slightly easier feeling
was du? to reported good rains in the
western belt over the week end
Prices on near months still remain-
cd unchanged while new crop months
were 2 points down from Saturday's
close
The market ruled comparatively
quiet all morning with prices a sHade
( aster July was influenced by a heavy
interest in that month held by gov-
* i nment agencies.
The naw crop months were a shade
easier because of good rhins In the
western part of the belt and in north
Louisiaha.
July showed the largest decline,
stropping to 11.13, or 5 points helow
aturday’s close. October dropped to
IC.23 and December to 10 24, or 2 to
3 points under the previous close.
In the middle of the morning the
market was quiet but steady and at
the lows.
would tell him all about it.
He had made a note at the taxi 3
number, and or the hour H aisap-
peered. Ite destination would not be
difficult to trace. A Manhattanataxi-
driver would certainly remember a
Wastebeater pick-up.
Reaching home, he instructed old
Davia, th; head gardener, who alept
In the lodge, mot to lock the gates,
and in his own room, near the stair,
he welted, still dresed in his eve*
ning clothes, his door ajar, listening
for Hope's return.
Wating, hs knew that it was neith-
er the house nor Rupert he desired
to protect. It was Hope. Whatever she
had done, he wished to shield her
from Its consequences, sven from
discovery.
Once it occurred to him that Hope
might already have returned, and he
crossed the hall, knocking on her
door—lghly. that Rupert in the
It yielded, and he went inside.
The room was in order for the
night, a lamp burning beside the
•moothly turned bed Something else
bad occurred to Dirk. There was a
chance that Hope had left the gems
behind when she slipped out. If so,
much of his anxiety as to her safety
on hF motiyes would be relieved.
The door leading to Rupert's room
was closed, but the bolt was no longer
drawn. Dirk moved softly to the
stand beneath the long gilt-framed
mirror. It was set now in orderly
fashion with pearl and silver toilet
accessories, all very new. He opened
the single drawer below the mirror.
Handkerchiefs neatly folded, veils,
gloves. . . He turned through them
without compunction. There was
nothing else.
Perhaps Rupert had acquainted her
with the safe in the paneled wall of
thia room, a small cache where their
grandfather had been accustomed to
keep a bottle of old Bourbon and a
few sacred mementoes. Ila door was
I ONG before the age of man,
- some scientists believe, a vast
continent stretched between what
is now Africa and India. Slowly,
with time, it sank, volcanoes
erupted and all that remains today
is an island on which living
"ghosts** wander in the dark.
This is Madagascar. France’s
largest island possession and
Neal & Lakey
DRUG STORE
East Side of Square. Phone 188. Free Delivery
changed to 3 pointe net lower
According to the New York Cotton '
Exchange Service sales by the Pro-!
ducers’ Pool last week were approxi- I
mately 5.000 bake of spots and 36.900 |
g -o--g: gpg-uuA-r 1 bales of May futures which left re-I
wriMht*ayerages.8 P-85:E0 nder_ maining stocks amounting to about’
« g if 7Mba-a8.00: 307,000 bale, ol .not. Aha Ml.000 |
SScxsesderuPi8: wsaK th.? Aown: bales or rtures, incfudin 139,100 Iori
P8Kng.50ws 1 ' than PdayMay driven |
‛c,C" ano. ,y. ano 41, ,1,g The total amount of cotton releas- ‘
.Catt 6.2400 ca 8,800; few 5a1es ed by th Commodity Credit Corpora- j
tion UP t “>e close of last Fday
ana weK UO 2> -ower O i 1105 classes was K5h aoq hales
calve. 3m; few sales fra steers and "2-- nt nuea n..ur ana I
yearling 6.60-1.60: good to choice fed • naThe merxet pntinuedmuetana
Lifer. 7.00-30: 6r0ows 3.78-5.00; bareiv.stendyateran.the.momng:’
few best above 6 00 bulb 3 75-4 65; . May,neld alll:88.on. some, coveninz
common and medium Elvee 6 00-50: bYastradaizhortturhtlelater.months
good 10 choice heaviee 675-7.60; bet- 1 saggea ■lightly under scattered hedg-
T
mms
,6
, Kimbrough-Tobin Drug Store •
ra-e - Fr-Dellvery
set that had been spilled from Hope's
bag the day before.
Dirk rewrapped them wondering.
They were certainly the art he had
seen on the mirror-sheif when Hope
had openee her door to say she would
drew and go lor a ride with him. Yet
they were.not marked with an "d."
but with an "L." Perhaps they had
belonged ty Senorita Leeonor, the
bareback-rider whose substitute Hope
had been Hope had no doubt fallen
hen to them. Intended to return
them.
Yet why hide them? They were- not
of sufficient value for that.
There was nothing else in the
cache. He touched the spring and the
panel closed. No use looking further
if she had left the jewels, they would
have been there.
At twenty minutes of five he heard
what was the almost noiseless clos-
ing of the front door, and presently
the faint stir of some one on the
stair He looked, and aaw Hope, a
shadowy figure in the dim hall, open
and close her door without a sound.
She was safe, at least, and she
must never know. He must have
either her voluntary explanation of
thia night, or else the opportunity
to watch her unobserved and unsus-
pected.
(Copyright, 1935
(Margaret Bell Houston)
Tomorrow Dirk tries, clumsily,
some detective work.
STORIES IN
STAMPS
By I. S Klein
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 232, Ed. 1 Monday, May 11, 1936, newspaper, May 11, 1936; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1539585/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.