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The Times from Shreveport, Louisiana • Page 24

Publication:
The Timesi
Location:
Shreveport, Louisiana
Issue Date:
Page:
24
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Sunday, January 291950 Weather News Forecasts TMt WCATHtft fOTDCA5T ACME TCICPMOTO RlGyo oil iltiG Iv3ciipIIsettD atVtlwaf WrtftTMfl 9VMaU.9tT. C08UMKI fWUatf HlaMtKMSt N4JMS1 Now Factories and Equipment by Years BILLIONS Expenditures for Ntw Fctory Plants And Equipment in the tnjJONS Of DOLLARS United States by Years, 1939-1949 of dollars 9 24 THI SHXEVEFORT TIMES 1 aT tv 1 A. 1 9r -71 :4 X- i I J- Mitt I if ryvjfS fP fi sot 4r Mm i 4) I Btl MM WMIML A Mn MHKU. Ov I fa v'-Vv I 4 Av ---A A 4 4 nl I I I I I I I .1 1-11 I I I I ri I''l I I a By EDW. L.

A. WAGNER 1939 1940 19 1942 1943 1944 J945 1946 1947 1948 1949 Seure ef Dt: Economic Roperf of ffi rVttidont should be in the 50s with the mercury dropping into the 40s in the inland sections of the' Gulf-states. Note the Freezing Line which is drawn through points where latest weather' bureau forecasts call" for 52 degree minimum temperatures. That small map affords a picture of where skies will be clear and cloudy. Dark shading means overcast and the light areas will be fair.

Some occasional rain Is indicated near the coast frjom the Caro-linas to Georgia. Snow in western New York and from Michigan through the Dakotas to the western slopes of the and showers in California and Oregon that's the stormy New York, Jan. 28. See that warm arrow pointing up from the bottom of your Fotocast. It highlights the air stream which will cause a warmer trend from Texas through the Ohio valley to New England.

During the coming 24 hours cold northerly winds coming from the deep freeze of central Canada will send the mercury down to 15 degrees below zero in North Dakota and Montana. Early Sunday morning government experts predict temperatures In the nation's cities will range from 15 at Great Falls. Montana and Bismarck, North Dakota to a mild 70 at Miami. Lowest temperatures along the Gulf coast Daily Cotton Table Cotton Mart Closes Firm Shmpta. Sales MdU.

Port movement New Orleans Galveston 4. 1.170 1.00 Rrpta. jQ.s;a 4.507 t.090 rro Houston Savannah Stock 56115B 873.711 72if 143 681 3.37? 140.S3S 31 75. S.742 71 400 31 90 NEWLY-ELECTED OFFICERS of the Caddo Parish 4-H club executive council pore over official business' after an installation meeting yesterday at the parish courthouse. Seated (left to right) are: Frances Haggard of Greenwood, secretary; Anne Brooks of Mooringsport, treasurer; Mary McKee of Keithville, delegate to the state council.

Standing (left to right) are: Tommy Sistrunk of Blanchard, president; Wayne Norton of Ida, vice-president; Richard Kavanaugh of Vivian, delegate to the state council. (Times photo- by Langston McEachern.) 32.: New York, Jan. 28 UP) Cotton Charleston futures closed firm today with I Boston trains of 20 to 35 cents a Minor Porta t.431 S.4S3J0O Pronounced firmness- was displayed by nearby contracts. Trade s.sas 2S.S5S 1S.6M 13.SM Total For week For season 5.43.300 S.Z37.73S Demos Urge About Feb. 21 Interior movement Memphis Aiiffxista Repts.

3.t54 73 1U Shrrpts. SOS The Weather THE FORECAST Shrevport and vicinity Cloudy early Sunday with occasional light drizzle. Partly cloudy Sunday afternoon with temperatures ranging from SO to TO. Mdlf. 3125 32 36 31 15 30 31.60 ass 280 3M .75 Woods, Bussie Will Debate Home Rule.

Charter Monday Little Rock Dallas Montgomery C7 Loyalty AVERAGE COTTOX PRICE New Orleann, Jan. 28 (AV The average price of middling 15iathn-im-h cotton today at 10 designated southern pot markets wan 25 cents a bale higher at 31.40 rents a pound; average for the past 30 mar ket days 30.00; middling ths-tnrh average 29.90. Party Louisiana Considerable cloudiness SSMlf 4.035 S.451 S8.03S Total ana warmer Sunday. Arkansas Considerable cloudiness and warmer in east and south. Cold in Windsors Will Visit New Orleans north.

i East Texas Cloudy and warmer In east and south Sunday. Colder in 1 From South Grain Mart Sinks, Then Is Recovered Radio Stocks Put on Own Mart Show 43 TEMPERATURES YESIEKDAY 6:30 a. m. Noon prices fixing against export sales disclosed a limited amount of of 49 5t 6:30 p. m.

New Orleans, Jan. 28 (JP). The Barometer, 6:30 p. m. 28.98 ferings.

Dealings in distant con tracts were mixed. A Year Ac Yesterday Maximum 46 Minimum 25 i Hiahest of record this daur 80 Activity during the short ses sion was held to a minimum as tne trade waited to be released on Lowest of record this date 17 TEMPERATURES YESTERDAY riign Low Free. against it at tomorrow's meeting. The debate was postponed from a week ago because of the illness of one of the participants. Each speaker will be allotted 10 minutes in which to present his arguments and five minutes in which to answer the other.

Members of the Shreveport Ad club will attend the meeting as a group and a number of visitors are expected. Other talks on the charter tomorrow and Tuesday will include: Val Irion at the Wranglers club, Y.M.C.A., 6 p.m. today; Irion at the Reserve Officers' association, Byrd high school, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, and Vernon Woods at the Knights of Columbus, 8:30 p.m. tomorrow.

Woods and Irion will speak for the Bussie also will speak at the Knights of Columbus meeting and will oppose the charter. Vernon Woods and Victor Bussie will debate the new home rule charter at a program sponsored by the Junior Chamber of Commerce at noon tomorrow at the Washington- Yougree hotel. The program will be open to the general public and reservations may be made by telephoning the Javcee office. Both speakers are members of the charter commmission which prepared the document to be submitted to voters of the city on Friday. Woods will speak for the charter.

He and the other seven members of the commission have endorsed it and seek its approval. Bussie is the single member of the commission, who opposes passage of the charter, and he will argue 30 40 48 New York, Jan. 28 (JPh-Radio stocks put on their own 6how today. The rest of the market along In slightly higher price ground. Radio stocks jumped as much as two points at one time.

Profit taking sales chipped away at top Amarillo 72 Atlanta 44 Baton Rouse 66 Boise 26 .15 Tuesday. In addition, traders were hoping to get some announcement on the CCC selling price on its 1948 cotton holdings. commission house traders were also desirous to watcji the market in nt that nipront narrow streets and shuttered old buildings of New Orleans' French quarter will be visited by the Duke and Duchess of Windsor on a trip that will take them to Georgia, Florida, Mexico City and, Houston. The ex-English monarch and his American-born duchess will be guests of honor at New Orleans and Houston, house guests of Mrs. George F.

Baker of New York City at her plantation near Tallahassee, and ranch guests in Mexico of Clinton Murchison, wealthy Dallas oil man. A representative of the Chpsa- Chicago 44 Dallas 69 Denver 54 68 El Paso .09 .04 quotations are only a few points 8 Havre. Mont. Houston IndianaDolis Marked up by a point, or more were Emerson Kanio at Jacksonville within seasonal nign icveis reached during the week. Kansas City laKe Charles Philco 37 and Motorola 32 Chrysler put on something of a atn.iM.icii norfnpmanro with A WP Little Rock Los Angeles SHREVEPORT COTTON Klasinc Spat 15I-Inca (Caartnr Fergasoa CaUaa Ca.) 16 25 33 38 30 -16 47 23 61 34 46 39 34 41 70 9 58 23 28 33 28 48 40 27 .14 iviempms Miami 4 68 40 81 55 II 48 53 77 33 75 40 65 68 52 a 45 29 75 1 Of tO 64 28.00, Paul peake and Ohio railroad, which ar-j ranged the journey, said at New! York the Windsors would leave I Tallahassee Feb.

1 and arrive in' Minneapolis-St. New Orleans New York Chicago. Jan. 28 UP) The graltt market sank a little early today, recovered and made both move on a minimum turnover. In all major cereals the price spread between high and low figures was less than a cent.

Wheat ended unchanged to 4 higher, higher, oats 4 higher, rye to 1 cent higher, soybeans unchanged to 1 cent higher and lard 1 to 10 cent higher. The' agriculture department overnight reported on grains held in store under the government loan program. The wheat total was 312.795.000 bushels on Dec. 31 against 343.350,000 bushels a year earlier, the first month the 1949 total ran behind 1948. Producers have until Jan.

31 ts put the 1949 crop under loan, while this privilege ran out on Dec. 31, 1948. for the 1948 crop. good deal more 1949 wheat may be under ioan when the final returns are computed, dealers said. FORT WORTH GRAIN Fort Worth.

Jan. 28 iV Wheat NtV 2400 22.00 21.00 UKiahoma City Phoenix St. Louis Deaths Strict middling Middling: Strict low middling Low middling Strict good ordinary Good ordinary Seven-eights 225 lower. Inch 50 higher. Inch 132 100 higher.

Inch 116 125 higher. RECEIPTS AND SHIPMENTS Receipts Rhinmnl San Antonio shliEV EPOHT .03 Washington HAZKL AXX WHITE DAILY RIVER BULLETIN RED RIVER SYSTEM Logansport, Jan. 28 (Special). 165 749 Name Groups Here to Aid Survey Team Subcommittees of the Caddo nsrish citizens' school aurvev com First column of fieures indicates flood 1 Total receipts 106.815 Total shipments stages; second colum stages day before Also active ana nigner were Niagara Mohawk Power at 22 Chicago corporation 14 i. Consolidated Edison 30, Swift International 12, West-inghouse Electric 31 and General Motors 73 Safewav Stores.

Tielped by a raised dividend, gained at 33 The Associated Press average advanced .3 of point to 72.9.! The industrial group scored, the largest gain, with rails a poor second. Utilities were unchanged. Sales were 740.000 shares. The market rounded out the latter half of the week on an up yesterday; third yesterday, lourth rain during last 24 hours. Raleigh, N.

Jan. 28 (JP). Democratic orators topped by Vice-President Barklev beat the drums for party loyalty today with honeyed words. The national party spokesmen mentioned nary a word of the controversial civil rights issue, but two of three southern governors who joined in the day and night pep rally were not so squeamish. They said they saw no reason for putting the soft pedal on discussion of civil rights.

Barkley, in a speech prepared for delivery tonight, expressed the hope that "the organization of Democratic forces in the nation will not fall apart merely because a victory has been won in a single lection." In the advocacy of their "immortal principles," he said. Democrats "are not afraid of controversy, we are not even frald of friction." "We do not shun discussion of disagreement. We welcome it. Because, out of the friction of intellectual processes, there finally comes a consensus of public opinion which has a right to control the deliberations of those who represent, or claim to represent, the people of our country." At the same time, the prepared' text had no mention of civil rights. Gov.

Sidney J. McMath of Arkansas told reporters he saw no reason for exclusion of the civil fights issue from the discussion. "If the time has come when we can't face the problems of the Democratic party and discuss them out In the open," he said, "I think would be time for us to fold up." Similarly, Gov. James E. (Big Jim) Folsom of Alabama declared he had no objection to discussion of "any subject relating to the Democratic party." And Gov.

Kerr Scott of North Carolina agreed with both of them that the states' rights movement Hazel Ann hite, 12-day-oId daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred White of Joaquin, Texas, died Thursday at the family home. Funeral services for Ihe infant were held Frl day at the Willow Texas, Baptist church. Burial was in the Willow Grove cemetery under the RED Arthur City Index Fulton Garland Houston the following day.

On the return leg of their journey, about Feb. 21. they'll make their New Orleans visit. Say Chinese Nationalists Shelled Ship Hong Kong. Jan.

28 (JP). It was a Chinese Nationalist gunboat, not Communist shore batteries, that shelled the little British coastal freighter Cloverlock, her master said today. The 300-ton vessel, owned hv mittee have been appointed to Shreveport lrand tcore StocK on nana m.kji NEW ORLEANS SPOT COTTOl New Orleans, Jan. 28 P. Soct cotton closed steady, 25 cents per bale higher.

Sales 1.170. Low middling 25.85 Middling 31 33 Good middling 32.10 Receipts 10.537. stock 561.155. Markets at a Glance Alexandria work with the protessionai organization currently examining the direction of the Caraway funeral 26 9.6 9.5 25 9.9 9.8 25 25" 1 39 19'5 33 30.2 28.3 32 31.8 31.0 25 16.5 14.3 38 29 9 22 20.3 17.8 18 14 0 13.1 LITTLE Whiteclifis narish educational svstem. it was 1 hara J3K-I13 Oats No.

2 white 94' 4-95. ward slant but despite its prog announced yesterday Paul F. St LPHI I Hagansport Naples CYPRESS fnrn No. 1 whit 1 -5i. O'Brien, citizens' committee Sorgnums No.

a yellow Milo per lbs. Z.30-33. Jefferson home, lhe tot is survived by her parents and a small sister. ALVIK Ii. TYLKR Logansport, Jan.

28 (Special). Funeral serv ices for Alvie L. Tyler, 49, were held at the Bethel Methodist church Friday at 11 a.m. with the Rev. Ben Joyner, the MISSISSIPPI SYSTEM Trfwal citizens on the subcommit CHICAGO GBAIN Jan.

28 iP). ress was unable to wipe out losses taken on Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday: principally Wednesday. NEW TORK STOCK EXCHANGE New York. Jan.

27 The loliowing is a selected list of transactions on the New. VorK stock exchange today. Chicago. "WHEAT Mar tees will work with the professional experts in order that the committee ran he kent fullv Informed of the Open High LowClos 2 17, 2 174 2 17'. 2 17'i 2 11'.

2 11'. 2 104 I 11 I 901. 1 91 1 9n, 1 90'4 194 19H, 1.904 1.91 '5 i May July Sep progress of the survey, O'Brien Sales in 100s Hun Lowj. iosa CORN said. 5 23 23 Z3', 2044 20b 2W Two subcommittees have already Kev.

b. A. Seegers and the Rev. B. H.

Dodd officiating. Burial was in the Bethel cemetery under the direction of' the Caraway funeral home. Mar May July Sen 2S'A 283 26 35. 35 3dU 1-29 .29, 1 28S 1 29'a 1 274 I 274 1 26', 1 2C' 1 25'4 I 254 1.25 1 25 I 20', 1.20H 1 19'4 1 20 1.13, 1 13'. 1 13, 1.13'g.

hepn fm-med and three others will 4 323 be formed as the survey progresses. NEW YORK Stocks: Higher, radio-televisions xtrong. Bonds: selective demand for rails. Cotton: Mixed, changes slight. CHICAGO Wheat: Steady in light trade.

Corn: Steady; rallied toward close. Oats: firm; rash grain prices firm. Hogs: Nominally steady. Cattle: Nominally steady. Dec OATS- Survivors include his father.

Rir Reduct Allied Chem Allied Mills Allied Strs Allis Chat Am Can Am Car Am ic For Pw Am Loco Am Metal Am Pw Si Lt Am Rad St Am Smell tfrien staiea. me proiessiunai organization makine the survev is .73 .73 .73 173 .68. .671. Flood Stations Stage Stage Change MISSISSIPPI St. Louis 30 9 5 0.1 Memphis 34 39.3 0.2 Helena 44 48.6 0.1 Arkansas City 42 39.4 0.1 Vicksburg 43 40.

0.2 Natchez 48 47.3 0.5 Baton Rouge 35 37.4 0.1 Donaldsonville 28 30.0 0.1 New Orleans 17 0.3 ATCHAFALAYA Melville ...37 X38.5 0.3 Morgan City 6 5.5 0.0 OlACHITA Camden S6 22 0 2.1 Monroe 40 X40.4 0.5 BLACK Jonesville 50 x48.0 0.3 OHIO Pittsburgh 25 pl6.7 01 Cincinnati 52 34 8 0.7 Eyansville 42 40.3 0.5 Cairo 40 54 2 0 0 TENNESSEE Chattanooga 30 17.0 3.4 CUMBERLAND Nashville 40 19.9 1.7 ARKANSAS I Little Rock 23 8.0 0.6 3 119 119 11 3 27 27 27 3'a 3Va 3 13 15. 13' 15W 2 32' o2m 32 77 16 16 16 8 14 137 14. 11 55 54. 54H 55: .62 .61 L. 62 George Tyler; three sisters.

Mrs. Sam Cox, Mrs. R. L. Gunter and Mrs.

K. Walker, and four brothers, J. J. Albert and Ernest Tvler. the division of surveys and field services of Peabody College for Teachers, Nashville, Tenn.

Slar May July Sep Dec LARD Mar May July Sep Am Sugar Am Tel St Tel 18 1481. 148a 143 3 8'. 8 8 14 29'a 23' 2' Tyler was fatallv injured in an 10 57 10 70 10 55 10.76) 10.37 10.67 10 55 10 67 1070 10.7S 10 80 10 75 10.S 5 lOS's 11M4 lua-s automobile accident while en route 5W 6a 3 from Houston to Logansport. He 145 4 22 12V 12 III, 11 5' 58 Am Wat wk Anacon Cop Atchison Avco Mlg Bald Loco Bait Ac O.iio Barnsd Oil Bendix Av Beth SU Boeing Airp Borden is "weaker" now man in 1948 Dow Jones Averages New York. Jan.

28 died in a hospital in Cleveland. Texas, where he had been taken Cottonseed Oil New York, Jan. 28 Bleachabfe cot-tonseed oil futures closed 10 to 14 higher. Sales 96 contracts. High Low Close 15 37'.

37, 31 33H 33'. 4 25'. 225', when it cost President Truman four southern states. New York. Jan.

27 U.P'. following the accident. 12 37 33'. 25' 49 20 13'i 14 4H Stage yesterday morning. 2 49U 49 fool stage.

Speaking at a Jefferson-Jackson 19's Mch 13 40 13 27 13 37 Stocks Open High Low Close Chg. 30 Inds -199 65 ZOO 31199 39 200 08 1 03 20 Rails 54.92 55.11 34.83 55 04-10 23 Wheelock Marden company, limped into Hong Kong bearing scars of 40-millimeter shell hits. Earlier the company said the vessel was fired on yesterday by Communist shore batteries 17 miles off Amoy, Red port on the Southeast China coast. Her skipper said the Clover-lock was intercepted by a Nationalist gunboat which ordered him to accompany it to Formosa, Nationalist bastion across the strait from Amoy. The Nationalists, who are attempting to blockade Communist mainland ports, have announced they would attack any foreign shipping going through Formosa strait.

He said he tried to ram the gunboat when first intercepted. "I lacked just about two knots in speed or the Nationalists would have had one of their gunboats missing," he added. The 3.50-ton British freighter Wingsang reported earlier she was fired on Wednesday by Communist shore batteries near Amoy. The Wingsang operates between Hong Kong and Nationalist 4 Phases of the survey to be covered by the subcommittees are buildings, schoolhouse planning and transportation, curriculum and teaching personnel-finance, and organiaztion and administration. Members of the building subcommittee are: Henry Weisman, chah--man: O.

D. Harrison, vice-chairman; H. H. Bain. John W.

Ballard, Marvin Bass. Ben C. Dawkins. Mrs. J.

S. Goff, Dr. Malcolm Kaffie and Jasper K. Smith. Members of the $50-a-plate dinner, Barkley re RIVER FORECASTS: The Red.

Sulnhur. Cvoress and Little 15 UtUs 41 87 41 94 41 83 41 914.004 13 14 4' 15 li osK'Budd Co Burr Add Win Calum Hec 12. iO. c5nlld ac minded his audience "if there are i u'ill tn fall fn. an injt.flMit.

63 Stocks 72 34 72.76 72 45 72 68 0.29 10 3 10 29 8 6 19 May 1336 13.31 July 13.29 1317 Sep 1320 13.09 Closing bids: Jan. 12.92. Dec Jan. Bid. Nominal.

Transactions in stocks used in averages: Z0 134 14'. 4H 13'. 33'. 19'. 16 19' 30 14'.

controversies now among honest period. Showers are again Indicated for the men and women concerning ques- UPPer Red late Sunday and over the tions of government; there were lo" ana mwdiebajin Monday I Denison Dam: Missing. 33' 337. 19', 19'a 16 16 191 30 '4 30' 14 14 23 23 62.306) 22.500 34.900 119.709 Industrials Railroads Utilities Totals Bonds likewise controversies in the dav B. P.

HUGHES, in charge Cottonseed Meal Celanese Celotex Cen Aguir Cer De Pas Ches Ohio Chi Grt West Chi Grt West Pf Chrysler Col Gas Coml Solv Cons Copper 23 11 10 8 25 55 12 64H 63 64- Ronsoii to Lead 12' 1Z' 1Z' curriculum and teaching personnel Memphis, Jan. 28 cV Cottonseed meal, future quotations prime 41 per cent protein basis. Tnflikv Pr.v Cnm 19 Close Chg. 101770 04 106 44 0 13 91500 04 106 05 103.10 19' 3'. 40 Bonds 10 First Rails 10 Second Rails 10 Vtils 10 Inds 1 19 384 Study Group Mch S-S-S-S Con't Mot 1'.

6 57. 69 18 R. W. REYNOLDS Jonesboro, Jan. 28 (Special).

Funeral rites for R. W. Reynolds, 72, will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at Jonesboro with burial in the Jonesboro cemetery. Nephews will serve as pallbearers.

Reynolds died at 6:30 p.m. Friday in the Shreveport Charity hospital, following a long illness. Survivors include a brother, Floyd E. Reynolds of Santa Rosa, Texas; three sisters, Mrs. J.

L. Leopard, of Shreveport, Mrs. Lillie McCullough of Shreveport and Miss Bessie Reynolds of Jonesboro, and a sister-in-law, Mrs. Harvey Reynolds of Shreveport. JAMES F.

MEHAX Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. todav at Rose-Neath funeral 3ls 38 69 '4 IS 12 6W 6 57'n 1 691-. aia.v i-'rs -S- Cont Oil 55.75-55 10 55.70-56 00 ygrn 5t.o0-4l.00 41.23-53.00 Am Sul An zn aar ai Aft vl, July Oct Dec 8 8 Snotlisht Sfock? New York. Jan. 28 of.

Sales, closing) price and net change of the 10 most active- stocks today: I all. A 21'4 I1H subcommittee are: James W. Hargrove, chairman; Miss Betty Goldstein, vice-chairman; the Rev. R. O.

Cawker, Jack P. Fullilove, Mrs. R. P. Lav, Mrs.

Viola Holmes, B. B. Romine and W. W. Teekell.

The building subcommittee will work with Dr. James W. Reynolds, professor of junior college education at the University of Texas, Austin. Texas. Dr.

Reynolds left 4Z'm 43 0'. 7T. 1 S3 4 4 6 of Jefferson and in the day of Jackson." And he added that "no organized political opposition, by whatever name it went, has dared to threaten to destroy" the Democratic party. Senators Graham and Hoey of North Carolina joined the celebrants at lunch time in the Carolina country club, where Secretary of the Treasury Snyder, onetime Arkansan, enlisted in the speaking corps. The whole "harmony" meeting was sponsored by Jonathan Daniels, Democratic national committeeman and editor of the Releigh News and Observer.

21Ji 43 71W 2a 46'. 43 SaJes Close Chg. 27.600 13'. LIVESTOCK REVIEW bre rt Worm DouK Fort Worth. Texas.

Jan. 28 JP. The tju Pont ueelj; trend pf livestock prices at Fort Eastman Kod Aorth: Slaughter cattie unevenly tesdy i Auto Lite to 50c lower, tat calves lower. 1 goat stacker cattle and calves steady, butcher Erie RR hoes and tows 50c higner. feeder pigs Firestone unchanged, yearling wetners strong to SOc i Free'port Gulf 62 56 32J, 16H 11.

61 43'i 73' rr 7v, Stocks Corp Emerson Rad Sr Ph Niag Moh Pow Avco Mfg Chi Coro Int Tel A- Tel Cons Edison Leh Val Coal Maimavnjc Swift Int i 22 000 22'4 17300 22H 14 ViO 6'4 13 700 11.700 30 ll.zno 2 11200 14' 10.600 12 1 45'. 32's 164 54' 604 42, 724 36 75 45H 43 11 14. higher, oiner sneeD ana umos aooui r-. 1 16'. 6 IP.

2 55 4 61 43 43' -100 73 Hi 14 37 6 TSli 8 46 Larry Ronson. prominent In local literary and radio circ les, will lead the study of current literature in informal evening classes that will begin Feb. at the Y.M.C.A. Known as "Trends in Current Literature," the course will deal with six of the books on best seller lists during the past few years. The study group will attempt to determine, through class analysis and discussion, the reasons for the popular acceptance of the books, and the trends they represent in contemporary literature.

Classes in the course will meet at the on alternate Thursdays Gen Motors Gillette Week's Slaughter steers and yearling 15 beef cows 14.50-17.00; chapel for James F. Mehan, 75, of Goodrich stocker yearlings 19.50-24.00; stocker cows i rvMvtvear 40 NEW TORK CI'RB MA Deadline Set To Apply for AAAA Exams 13.00-19.50; stocker calves 17.00.25.00; Gt or Pf butcher hogs topped late at 16 75: sows Grevhound 14.00 down; leeder As 14.00 down: gulf Mob Si 14 New York. Jan. 28 4. i RKETS Following is of the New 202 West 73rd street, wno oiea at noon Friday at his home following a long illness.

The Rev. Claude Spearman will 43 UMi 14H 62 22'. 49 6 38 15 6 7 4 Gulf Oil the close and net change York curb exchange today. wethers 11.00-20.50; leeder lambs 22 22S 49, 49S Gulf Ut i Here Pdr Close Chg 1144 officiate. Burial will be in Green 36 35s ISM 36 14 is 14 27.

7 4 Shreveport yesterday after spending two days in gathering data for his part of the survey. He will make several return visits to Shreveport in the coming two months. The curriculum and teaching personnel subcommittee will work with Dr. Ray Hamon, chief of school housing, office of education, Washington, D. Dr.

W. K. Mc-Charen, associate director of the division of surveys and field services; and N. L. Carney, superintendent of schools in Montgomery county, Tenn.

The three men will arrive here tomorrow. ft 3 27 wood cemetery. A resident of Shreveport for the past 39 vears, Mehan was a retired Three LSU Students Hurt In Car Crash Hudson Motor Chicac rn Central Chicago. Jan. 28 HOGS, compared llnpir Cop week ago: Barrows ana gilts 26-30 jnt Harv higher: sows jO-75 higner.

Late top int 17.3a. Good and choice 180-220 lb. butch- nt Tel Tel ers cI6i.ed at 16.73-17.2a; 230-250 lb. 18 00- Jnhns i Mn 18.65: 260-S00 lbs. 15.23-16.00: heavier Sou for a period of 12 weeks, beginning eo.

y. 2'. 28. 17. 12'i.

46'4 41'. 74 8't carman of the Cotton-Belt railroad. Saturday. Feb. 11.

is the deadline for filing applications to take the advertising examinations of the American Association of Ad weights aown to 14. io; sows under 4d0 Kan Sou Pf HO HO He was a member of the Brother hood of Railway Carmen. 5i 84 IDS. IO.OU-IV.31); 1US. Bk 41.13.10-43.

I KnneCOtt tAiLL comparea weeK ago: Dicers ana heifer Drlces closed sieady to 50 lower: ib Glass igg My Two Lutheran Groups to Unite He is survived bv a son, J. O. cows strong to 26 higher; Vealers steady Jan. 28 (JPl. Mehan of Dallas, Texas: a daugh to 1.00 lower: replacement steers steady 29 12 12'.

2 '6 15 48' 1 60 11 M' 12 7 S4 I 30'i. 4 17. 1 23. I 25 10 39', 6 sni ll'. M'i S3 17 5 3 to 50 higher; high-good to low-choice ter.

Mrs. Victor B. Vest of Alameda, Am Gas El Pf Am Maracaibo Superoow Ark Nat Gas Ark Nat Gas A A-k Gas Pf Cities Service Croft Brew Cuban Atl S' El Bond Sh Humble Oil Kaiser-Frai! Lake Shore Lionel Corp Long Is L'g T.ouis Nat Bellas Hess Nat fuel Niag Hud Pnw Pnntepec Oil Pitts Metallu Rio Gr Val Sonotme Sos Mfg S'etson 3 B) Tampa El Trans-Lux "nit Lt Rv Wth.n Wat Wright-Harg a sister, Mrs Maggie Wash St. Louis, Jan. 28 JF).

Repre fed steers and yearlings at 29.50-34. oo; bulk medium and good 22.00-29 00; good to choice 935-850 Tb. fed heifers 29.00 and 29.50. bulk medium and good heifers 12 12' 10' 81 3H 104 18'4- 9H 174- 33 S8J-1' 1', ington of LaBelle, Texas; two 4 4 3 21.30-28.00; common to good beef cows 15.50-18.50; medium to choice vealers 27.00-32.00: medium and good lb. Name Alexandrian Pest Control Head brothers, Andrew M.

Mehan of Shreveport and William H. Mehan of Mississippi: a granddaughter, Mrs. Phyllis Martin of Shreveport, Lion uti foct-h Aire Loew's Inr ton" Bel 1A Lo'UTart Lo" Sr Nash Math Chem Mendel Mont Ward Kah Kelv Nat 5isc Nat Can Nat rir fd Nat Distill Pw Lt Nat Sup Nehi Coro Vewpnrt tnd Centr-1 Amer Co Vnrth Pac Otis Evev "sckard "an Am -'-w "arum P'- 84, 30'. 2S 17i Mi 254 39, 11'. 35, 17, 38 22'.

16'. 11', 1'4 19. 184 384 44 1 56. 174 1 5f4 and two great-granddaughters. feeding steers ana yearlings zu.uu-z su.

SHEEP compared week ago: Slaughter lambs slow, steady to weak: sheep scarce, active, strong: choice kinds scaling 100 lbs down topped all week at 24.75: 103-110 lbs 24.00-24.50; 112-122 lbs. 22 50.23.50; top handy shorn lambs 23.25 80-87 lb. feeding and shearing lambs 24.00: top yearlings 21.00: common to choice native 614 8 30', 17', 2S4 50. 7'4 22'. 15'.

If. 1" 1'4 18. 38 1'i ITI4 in w. 15 5 10 19 1 43 Active pallbearers will be L. 22'.

16'. n1. Schlater. R. E.

Keith, E. L. Brew ster, O. D. McHalffey, O.

A. Reneau ewes 10.00-13.50. medium to good 11.00- t. 2S- 1R. 12.50.' 9 3t'.

and. Gus G. OLIVER J. SMITH, SR. Baton Rouge, Jan.

28 (JP). C. R. Blair of Alexandria is the new president of the Pest Control Operators association of Louisiana. He was elected, to succeed Joseph Mandelbaum of New Orleans, at the final session of the group's annual meeting here.

Other officers include Vice President W. A. Sharp of Shrevenort and Secretarv-Treasurer vertising Agencies. The tests will be given on Feb. 18 and Feb.

25 in 22 cities across the nation to attract young people of high caliber to advertising. The tests are open to anyone not now employed in advertising or below the senior year in college, according to Thomas F. Conroy, San Antonio Advertising agency president who is in charge of the AAAA examinations for this area. Conroy pointed out that the tests will provide candidates with an estimate of their abilities. The results may be shown to employers as a concrete indication of the individual's potentialities.

If the candidate wishes, he may also authorize the association to circulate his test scores among advertising agencies, advertisers, broadcasters, printers, research and public relations firms. Application blanks and a booklet containing facts on the tests and jobs in advertising may be secured from Monty Mann. 4357 Lorraine avenue, Dallas, Texas, or Lampton Building annex. Jackson, Miss. sentatives of the American Lutheran church and the Lutheran church Missouri synod have reached an agreement to unite the two groups, it was announced today.

The agreement is subject to approval by delegates at national conventions of the two church bodies this year. The American Lutheran church has a reported membership of The Lutheran church-Missouri synod estimated its membership at 1.690.000. The Missouri synod split from three other synods in the United States just before 1900 in a disagreement over doctrines of election and conversion. In 1930 the other synods united" to form the American Lutheran church. Three Louisiana State university students were Injured and four other persons shaken up in a traffic accident on highway 61 eleven miles south of Natcher this afternoon.

Hospitalized here was Francis C. Schaffer, 26, of Vicksburg, who suffered a fractured left leg, a fractured shoulder and cuts and bruises. Treated for bruises were O. D. Duncan, 19, and his sister, Miss Betty Jean Duncan, 18, both of Tal-lulah.

La. Other occupants of the car who were shaken up were Oscar Davis, 19, of Oak Grove, James Duncan. 10, and Patsy Duncan, 6, brother and sister of O. D. Duncan, and a negro chauffeur.

Adams county Sheriff Robert E. Burns said the car overturned, pinning Schaeffer underneath, after a near-collision with another automobile. The other machine, driven by Tom Pike of Ilosetta, had swerved after tire blowout, the sheriff Mid. Mrs. T.

H. Arnold Gets Beauty Post Minden, Jan. 28 (Special) Funeral services for. Oliver J. Smith, 49, of Haynesville.

will 12 42. 16 '66-1. IS 21'. 43 27 5 5A4 7 371, 15 604 6 71'. 4 24 4 J5 .3 II 43'.

"win i rpi thillir- 'i i J74 4 1i Mrs. Tressie Harris Arnold. 4312 be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Green-Kleinegger funeral home 16 .1 6 1 4 1 27' 8 1 7 6 2 I 1 Jk 1 Std Oil Ind S'd Oil Stone Web Studebaker Sun Oil Swift Co Texas Co Tex Gulf Sul Tide Wat As Trait Det Ax Temk Bear Un Ctrbide Un Oil Cal Unit Air Lin Unit Aire United Corp Unit Emit Unit Gas Cp Rubber Smelt rsui Aiiciuia or Alexandria. Fairfield avenue, was recently elected secretary and treasurer of chapel with the Rev.

N. N. Mar- 42 66 21'. 26. 354 37'.

9', 71V, 24 15. 34-, 43. 254 174 411. 39, 28 if 49' 42 'i 66 21 o5 37 j9' 71'a 24 154 34 2o' 14 'a 341 57 18 41 i 397 the Louisiana Beauty Culture r. 8 7 82 32 25 IT" 34 7 V.

18 414 40H 5H 3H 401', 40H 32, 32H 51', 42tJ 15 1Z Per Mo'ts Reot St' P- Toh Rirhfleld trhenle" 7nd Sears Roeb Shel' Oil Sinclair Oil Socony Vac South Pac 18 42'W Steel Smith of Haynesville; two daughters, Shirley and Bonnie Smith of Shreveport; his mother, Mrs. Ella Smith of Haynesville; one brother, Emory Smith of Haynesville, and four sisters, Mrs. Bessie Overholt, Mrs. Blanch Johnson, Mrs. Maudie Rushing and Mrs.

Verda Pullhj, all of Haynesvilla. snau otticiaiing. Smith was killed instantly Friday afternoon in a truck accident near Cotton Valley. Burial will be in the New Ranah cemetery, near Smith Is survived by three sons, J. Smith.

of Homer, R. L. Smith of Shreveport and Stanley 3 21' School association. Mrs. Evelyn Sloan of Lake Charles, president, presided at the meeting held week at the Washington-Youree hotel.

Beauty school owners and teachers throughout the-state attended the meeting. 13 17 26'4 21 anad 4 Warner Wesson ri rcfict OA 39H 7 28'. 2 21. 15', 25. 21'.

Ki 264 52'i S24 5tC 35' West Un Tel South Ry west Air Br 37 V4 22 tfc Thomas Edison, said to have been the most prolific of Inventors, had over 1,000 United States patents. West Elec 105 toerrr 27 27 afea I ft 62H Woolworti 1.

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