Yoakum Weekly Herald (Yoakum, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 7, 1938 Page: 3 of 8
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I
%
EASTER
SHOES
For the
Family
^W^WzzzzJ?
Simulated Patent Leather I
HANDBAGS I
An Easter
Necessity!
Beautifully made bags in
the latest styles and col-
ors! Fine details . . . Un-
usual shapes!
To nuke you a sparkling,
new person this spring!
Softly feminine and trim-
ly tailored styles for all
occasions. Sizes 12-44.
Easter
STYLE FLASH!
GLEN ROW
DRESSES
$2 9S
1
I
Smart Slide Fastener
Milanese
/jh"
GLOVES
QOa
Style!
Your favorite classic, slip-
on—now in this stunning
version I Rayon
in new colors!
Exceptional Quality!
CYNTHIA SLIPS
Perfect <r*
Fitting! «
98c &
Fine rayon ; ' '
crepe slips in
every popular /( \ r
style—with or \
without pan- .
els. They laun- 6
der beautiful-
ly!
A®
I o
1U1' ™ STYLE
IN VALUE
EASTER
STRAWS
98*
The careful workmanship,
the exceptional quality
and clever trimmings are
unusual in hats priced so
low! New spring colors!
/
c .
e
600yards
Printed Broadcloth 36 inches wide—
All new bright patterns and guaran-
teed fast color.
lOja
YOAKUM WEEKLY HERALD
THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 1938.
(HANNING,
Texas,
SPECIALS FRIDAY and SATURDAY
[- ■MMOMONV SMS
I
---TOM-TOM. JUNE 10-11---
-aw
2 Pounds
•5
Can
11
sev
MACARONI
3
’.z-Zi
THtit CA^rpQ
£
Moving tin* cumbersome
10c
io:
CATSUP
10c
25c
25c
2 lbs.
t‘ml
i
I
the
---1
State
(SCHOOL DAYS’
I
■>
<
I
I
<
%
I
3
6
/
I
-(<
V
jar
&
I
I
4
t
By DWIG
—■ 11
I
i
Mr ’1
x! J
25’
43‘
18’
4C
15c
4
J
I
i
I
WILD LIFE PRESERVE
BEING CREATED ON
CANADIAN RIVER
and
of
w in-
Bankers Ptg. Co.
Yoakum, Texas
Tell me about the Corona Adding
Machine, frxa trial offer, etc.
OLD STREET CABS USED
FOR LUMBER GAMP HOMES
I
• I
2 tall
Cans
rather
this
no reason for , L
if it does '
pick-and- I
the i
SPECIALS
Fridav
and
Saturday
rule,
small,
ami
Some
a
SPARKLE
All Flavors 3 pkgs
SHOP
at A. & P.
and
SAVE!
Drv Salt
JOWLS
Bell
2 lbs
I
I
I
i
I ---row TOM, H Ni: 10 11---
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
__________ WAR
• !<!
KIMS
l.
w
i?, W nx\
Fancy Pink
SALMON
Ann Page
SALAD DRESSING
l!
5C
10c
15c
5C
10c
15c
1
23c
10’
oFTrtfe)ViHo I
K>.
[he reverses
RUTHS TURNAROUND
won
steepleehase I
ami, on I
a daiigh- j
Many of the animals
lings.
Stieler said mohair is
light this year, attributing
to a wet winter and dry winds.
^treamlined^Dfsicn
OF!-! YEARS AGO. A
STREAM LIN 6 n hot ,
ALTOGETHER HEW
AS SHOWN ey THE
VALUE CAR PAHTOUl Lt
OF 1897.
Battleship, had
Nat ional
few day; previous
another i Man O’ War’s birthday.
| ter was born.
---TOM-TOM. JUNK 10 11---
14 OZ.
Bottle
Baloney
SAUSAGE—2 lbs.
, «if • he
I -IiO'. cl 1
55c
,.Jt* 3
five|chines.
is ........
WASHINGTON, (Al’)—House
[wives may like their cocoa che ip
African Gold Coast farmers
raised about 200 tons I"'10 *' “,e '"'”bty sor<‘
al thou ! uk°”t P>,'‘seat prices.
Cocoa has been the real “gold’’
LtkC i.i 4 * ........
I
II
I
I
| Name
| Sfraaf_______...
| City..............
J ---TOM TOM, JUNK 10-11---
SCATTERED RAINS FALL
IN TOMATO BELT FRIDAY
------♦------ ‘ j zen>.
SARDINESA™
Sliced. No. 2'.’
Del Monte
('an
GREEN BLACKEYED
2 Cans
CORONA
ADDING MACHINE
Yeo, air.,. pay for it as you
use it! And we’ll be sur-
prised if you don’t find it
pays for itself — in time
saved and mistakes avoid-
ed. Only $1.25 a week, for
this BRAND NEW factory
delivered mach ine — desk-
side, portable, strong,
handy. Anyone can oper-
ate it. Free trial offer!
teidfl
’-H
F. •■cS’
SYRUP slEAT£i.
BOKAR COFFEE
A-P PINEAPPLE
TOMATO SAUCE
PEAS
, BROOKLYN (AP) — Baseball
i has known many instances where
| hard-hitting pitchers have turned
'into outfielders but it is unusual
| to find an outfielder suddenlv
j blossom out as a twirler.
tomato belt re-
rains Friday,
receiving as
rain
cont raetor.
stripped of wheels
other equipment, loaded on flat )
ears and thence by log truck to,
perhaps, their last resting place.
Residents say, however, they will
move them when a new camp is
located.
by investing many thousands
dollars in goats. He probably I
runs and shears more goats to-
• > dav than any man in the coun-
-j — —• —- v * y v m • u aaMVV- ” 111 ” J * ' *
tired in the region where shoot-j-'j
ing is prohibited. Feed for the|. '
wild fowl always is
Belcher farms on a
The soil conservation
did about $20,000 worth of work |
on P ......
ing dams, spillways
gates, and planting
shrubbery in the
placing baffles across
prevent erosion. There is a pond I
on the kind well stocked with
fish. l1’"*
Belcher raisi <1 about 200 tons I"?10
of maize lauds and sex
sand bundles last year.
---TOM-TOM, JUNE 10-11---
SHEARING OF SHEEP AT
STIELER RANCH IS
BEING COMPLETED
RICHV
\ a,g»h$T *T! I
Brooklyn has one this year—-
Schoolboy (’then, oix years ago
he had a trial as an outfielder
with the Dodgers. This spring;
after a fine mound season for
Toledo, he turned up at Brook-
lyn’s Clearwater camp as a
pitching recruit.
---TOM TOM, JUNE 10-11---
The Yoakum
, eeived scattered
I with some parts
i much as half an inch. The
| did not fall closer than about six
miles of Yoakum to the east ami 1
'south, but fell at Terryville, Hop<‘,
Koerth and other communities of!
’DeWitt and Lavaca counties.
The winds of Saturday were be- j
(lieved to have done almost as
much damage to the tomatoes,
however, as the rain did good.
---TOM-TOM, .TUNE 10-11---
(RARE METAL FOUND
IN UVALDE SECTION
Stieler uses two shearing crews
and gets the work done at 4 cents
ja head because when the work
gets under way it is not neces-
(AP)—|sary to move the shearing ma-
Tom Belcher, living about
miles northeast of Channing,
creating a wild life preserve in
the brakes of the North Cana-
dian river on his farm. The land
is rough and thickly covered with
mesquite, wild plum, sage
skunkberry, and thousands
quail for many years have
AMERICA 6ETS !T$ F/R^T
CLOSED CAR$ -MANY OF THE CHANCES
CAME WITH THE CLOSED CARS ARE STILL US£D~
LEATHER SEATS WERE REPLACED WITH VELVET
UPHOLSTERY WHICH WAS -----,
the FORERUNNER OF LUXURIOUS j z?
EA$y-TO-CLfAH AAOHAIR ’\\ ft
VELVET SO WIDELY USED \\ r / ,
•t rut ARTijrf iN7-;KP^lT»T<0Mf 01 auto ni^rv^yQiefS ^vCahili
SAN ANGEIX), Texas, (AP)—
Adolf Stieler of Comfort, pro- j
bahly the leading goat raiser in I 9,<
the southwest, is completing'
shearing of 18,000 head with the |
average per animal clip being ab-1
out two and three-fourths pounds.
Many of the animals are year-
Ex. Fancj VVinesap
APPLES Dozen
Ixiuisiana
YAMS 3 pounds
PEPPERS
CABBAGE
3 pounds
NEW POTATOES
3 pounds
BANANAS
4 pounds
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) • M in
War, the famous race horse, ,
a bin 21st birthday a few i
| oosw' v1 11
Iumin’ oh n l i
I M- " rSL '
( STflONtf! / If
would
the golden beans of
from ' " oiid-burning
va|. 1ot her necessary
of the larger
a,r. ' lean-to for kitchen or
are | sl’a<‘e> kut most of the Iti
their chocolate crops |,y (one-ear dwellings.
le l!3l
| ATHENS, Ga. (AP) Jud-e
\ incent Matthews of [Hilice court i
had the stripes taken oft prison ; FOR MAN 0’
ers at the city stockade.
Now he is trying to see
many eases he can dismiss. If I
he can't dismiss the charge,
tiies to put the offender on
j bat ion.
*‘.My idea," he explains,
that the ehiei’ aim of fiolice court the Grand
I should be to make good eiti-I a few day;
I •/••ik. Give the fellow i
c Inni e if vi i. can.
"This ya liey spells the
/862A</f7wl
-QUT A FULL SIZED
CAR. OF ITS DAY
PROPELLER & STEAM
—rf
< ‘'l i
Z/
*V r L
under way it is not
move the shearing
Elsewhere the shearing
price is from 5 to 6 cents a head.
Stieler believes the mohair mar-
ket will go higher and has ex-
pressed his faith in the industry i
by investing many thousands of tt
in college," is heard in the
I households ot Martinville, a log-
ging village in Newton country.
Other ‘‘Johnnies” are sent on
kindred errands to ‘‘Calder ave-
nue," ‘‘Ball Park," “Fair-
grounds,” and most inviting of
to ‘‘Circus.’
Minus wheels and underpin-
ning, the ponderous vehicles that
I trans|>orted citizens of Beaumont
m (In*
business districts many years, are
unforeseen retirement.
whitewashed and
are housing
comprising
of the village
miles from Kirbyville.
Martinville was created in the
heart of a four year cut of tim-
ber. Men cut pine lo^s all day
for the sawmill at Bessnmy. while I
women of their families tidy
their one room, heavily const met-
ed apartment which as a
contain a bed or two, a
cookstove,
furniture.
families added
sleeping
are
JUDGE TRIES TO DISMISS
,i,,s ALL THE CASES HE CAN
Cocoa has been the real “gold"
I of the Gold Coast until recently,
isays the National Geographic So-
ciety. In the 1 It li century Por-
tuguese discoverers of the region
north of th.* eipiator, hoped real
| gold dust would be their re
I ward. But
cacao tree, introduced
the Americas, proved more
liable than gold itself.
Now with prices running
ainst them Gold Coasters
'burning
the ton. They expect it to make
a difference . in prices since al- ":,s n°t difficult, says Oscar Ba-
most 40 per cent of the world's k,‘B I’WJug contractor. They
chocolate comes from Gold Coast were stripped ot wheels and
beans.
Pkgs.
PICKLES
Dill or Sour QLe
2 quarts ..... dll
GRAPEFRUIT JUI( E
0 No. 2 4 Re
11 Cans 1J
OXYDOL
1 Giant Size
1 Med. Size ill for
rock ;•
i'll’ < online t I li'_!
CVALDE, Tex., April 5—De-
posits of molybdenum, a rare me-
tal used in the making of steel
alloys, have been discovered in a
cobalt mine north of here.
Ryerson Crane, owner of
mine, which is near Con-Can, be-
lieves it is the only deposit of
the metal ever found in Texas.
He said it was located about 50
feet below the surface.
Crane is seeking to determine
whether the vein of ore contain-
ing the molybdenum could lie
mim'd on a commercial basis.
KIRBYVILLE, Texas (All-
Street ears have jienetrated to
the depths of East Texas’ “pi-
ney woods."
‘‘Johnny run over and borrow
cup of sugar from Mrs. Smith
college," is beard i
of Martinville,
MATCHES Les 10K
the I About the cost of production,
plentiful as [kt* said, “It yosts 30 cents a
lar«'e scale I to produce mohair on an
service [av‘‘>»*-<’• 1 < «" s‘‘<‘
mohair not to go up
Belcher’s land last year, erect-I not> 111 hold ,nv kair. ”
spi ways and "sd,“' | {jhocoj^jj. BEAN8 BURNED a'"1 l>'”’ Arthur to ami froi
«a..vo.1S, a...liT° BA,SE THE PWCE i'
• , ) -----•----- serving an
r 11 Hs ”1 iviciiivnTnv /to. ii..... With windows
:seat rcino."d, they
lb of the 2”< families
the population
en
'2 Pint 10c Pint 17c
Quart 27c
how | I
•
had
pro i
idays ago.
“is Ane son,
-i
(
41
< Jr
■r
W’a;
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Morgan, Cena S. Yoakum Weekly Herald (Yoakum, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 7, 1938, newspaper, April 7, 1938; Yoakum, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1295423/m1/3/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carl and Mary Welhausen Library.