The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 111, Ed. 1 Monday, September 19, 1938 Page: 3 of 8
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19, 1938
PAGE TH REI
NCE
/
NERS
J
ames
YOU'LL SEE THIS AT WEST TEXAS FREE FAIR RODEO
Abilenian For
I
19 Years Dies
I
4
ntenary at Fort
■s. Texas A. Ar l.
lahoma A. & M
i
Private advices from Berlin in-
■f
1 •
as
4
a
(,
achaka
favored
slashed with the scarlet of his bat-
mountainside.
must see dimly against that glis-
JOHN STINK-
nomic might.
an
: steady to strong trading in nearly
At weeks end all
I HAD A
g
25 to 50 cents stronger Good choice
HEADACHE
ber
war-time
But if they fall wrong, one man
U
4
LITY
to dis-
NINC
h
That’s because Karloff is spend-
l0cand 25c sizes, at all drug stores.
3
73.
$
A
- Old
s
Photoqraphs
S
Restored
I
KRBC
h COLDS
F
U
f,
THURMAN'S
a
War Woodring.
Washington
and
IT
during
10
CES
IVAL
DE
I
1
• •
■ oo
FRIR
cH
4
V
V
Dieiuer -/ AMLNICas RADLATO& • STASDARP SaNrTaKx Cnromamoz '
J
4
/
y
4
4
0
Let up. L/GHri/PA
OlMEL
Jem
50c
50e
Only two of the cast display any
assurance of ability. Both of them ’
Doc, I bought these teeth at a bargain
but I want you to put them ini
chief of the United Press in Hol-
land and in contact with the for-
Prices were a broad 25 cents- higher
and spots saw 50 cehts improve-
k
»
The parallel carries only so far
The gamble has not yet been made
and, if it is no man can say which
, way the dice may fall this time
These prized but faded pho-
tographs can be given a new
term of life. _________
• is
• 00
If his radio rumbles with Hit-
ler’s denunciation of the Czechs,
RF \M PI FI S
STRIES
were busy over the weekend in Abi-
1 lenc
321 South Eleventh. reported that
two men with faces covered with
red hankerchiefs used a blue steel
automatic to get $13 from their bus-
iness house
1124 N 2nd St.
Phone 3703
, not been true until the last week
or ten days.
SHEEP STEADY
John Go-After-Fish. As a
young man he fell ill with
smallpox and medicine men
decided that he was dead.
Members- of-histribe took
N‘ a n
■
1.00
1.25
Police today were still investigat-
ing a theft burglary an da hijack-
ing Saturday night
F S Stewart, 1209 Amarillo, re-
which way the Ioser goe:
aster aryl to Doorn,
)
to $4 25..
Packers were decidedly more ac-
tive in the calf market and were
Mother's Standby in Treating
CHILDREN’S
S is
5 20
S 30-
5 45
styles of today will be eight
years hence—but they’re still
laughable.
And John Boles is in the picture I
Four Aces in Black Mazie TSN
Nov* kite* TSN
struggles eastward for her place
in the sun.' the world has almost dicate how important silence is at
PT-Tza
l'M FEELING
CHAND/
‘A
-3
Smokers find Camel's Costlier Tobaccos
well as the immediate parent.
If you saw it the first time,
you will be amazed—because it
isn't nearly so horrific as it was
are Soothing to the Nerves
— — »
-
।
!
sorts suffered little with fair qual-
ity from 55 up and the rahnies i
ranged down to $4 and $4.25.
ITS SO
EASY TO STOP
DRINKING
IN 48 HOURS
Samaritan Treatment
echo of the anger in his own
voice when he cried out against
the Serbian “bandit minority.*
If Der Fuehrer reveals that
God told him to seize Austria,
then the old man in his rose
garden at Doorn must remem-
LIVESTOCK NEWS—
Hog Strength Week's Feature
FORT WORTH. Sept 19—Out- 1 the old shelly cows under $3.
standing development on the Fort HEAVY BULLS STRONG
• Tune In On KRBC
looked 25 cents or more off for the
. week. The good kind were steady.
In latter portions of the week,
numerous choice fat cows, mostly
individuals sold to $6 and a tme
or two sold higher, but the bulk of
the good quality ranged from $5 to
Co.
os
25c
Cash A Carry
leaners
A Butternut
1
1 sE!
M‘
R L. Moore, 70, resident of Abi-
lene 19 years, died at the Hendrick
Memorial hospital at 4 a. m. to-
day following a week’s illness. He
was admitted to the hospital Sun-
day morning.
Born May 31, 1868. Mr. Moore
came to Abilene from Merkel 19
years ago. He had lived in Merkel
11 years prior to that time. Mr.
Moore was married to Nannie Lee
in Eastland county, December 1.
1889
Seven children were born to this
union, six of whom survive. They
are a daughter, Georgia Moore of
Abilene, and five sons, John M of
. Sweetwater, R. N of Fort Worth.
W. R. of Sweetwater, Ira of Sweet-
water, and Ottis M. Moore of Sin-
ton.
Mr. Moore had been a member
of the Methodist church since early
boyhood. He was a carpenter by
, trade
Funeral arrangements are incom-
plete pending word from out-of-
town relatives. Elliott Funeral home
is in charge.
in
IMAGINE the amazement of your dentist if
you went to him with a set of "store teeth”
you purchased at a bargain and asked him to
fit them in your mouth.
Your dentist knows that sour health, com-
fort anwell-being depend upon his ability to
select teeth which will exactly meet sour in-
dividual requirements—perfect matching of
the teeth to assure a natural appearance and
SHEESLEY
ITEST . . .
POCK SHOW
8
Log
1420 mKC8
MONDAY
2:00 GypsyanrA"tEneon-
expert fitting to afford satisfactor service for
many years.
Neither good teeth nor good plumbing can
be purchased economically "over rhe coun-
ter" Plumbing fiftures too. must be of assured
quality, carefully selected to meet your re-
quirements. harmoniously matched to enhance
the appearance of your home and installed by
experienced hands to assure health protection,
satisfactory service and real economy.
Good plumbing is vital to the health of
your family for it means the delivery of pure
water and the safe removal of dangerous waste
KEEPING VIGIL AT RADIO—
tn a Lit tie Spanish Town TSN
Sportscast with Jack Hurt TSN
Bob Crosby « Orehestra and Radio
Candid Camera MBS
Dance Orchestra MRP
Tf ESDAY
Mornine
News T8N
MorinFs Roundup TSN
brama
Buckeye Four MRS
But he is, and soon after the
। Stockers continue “hot” with
। plenty of unfilled orders apparently
still in the Northern' Eastern and
Reich shall profit by the fatal er-
rors of Imperial Germany.
Whatever word the kaiser might
say now is buried in the tangle of
swift events crowding Europe to-
ward another war H. Buurman.1
PIX and
SHUFFLES
BY CHARLIE ELLIS
once threw eastward—the Berlin-
then his ears must catch
' animals in all divisions suffered
4 30- Matinee Iylls TSN
5 00--Fuiton Lewis. J
NvWVV%TVV7
rodeo which will show six nights
during the West Texas Free
Fair. October 3 to 8.
Some of America’s greatest
• IS— Today's Top Tunes «Er»
a 30 -Sunsetland Hawaftan TSN
Choice steers and yearlings sold
from $8 to $9 with regularity, and
another lot of prime long fed year- l
lings topped the week at $10 00J
shipped here from Kress Other,
good quality ranged from $7 to.$7.50
Most grassers sold from $5 25 to
$6 25. with a few at $6 50. and the
common sorts ranging under $5
every dy Medium srts were un-
.■-creaming for mama when he cast
a glance their direction.
Mae Clark has long since slipped
from the pedesal of leading-lady
RTON 8
Y BAKERY
1915 s. Kt
mmesewamasaaa
case him in a series of
"gtandard
THE ABILENE REPORTER-NEWS
e
6*e' ,5,
EScmdebr--r?j '
KAISER WILHELM II at Doorn “Court”
' every session.
Ride ’em Cowhand.... About
to hit the dirt is Fritz Truan,
Long Beach, Cal., performer
with Beutler Brothers famous
Cnmmentator hrs t
Worid Rook Man
Eb and Zeb remedy (ET»
The Travet Hour with Tom Journ
WATCHES NEW THROW OF DICE
By JOE ALEX MORRIS
(Copyright, 1938, by the United Press)
The man who lost the world’s greatest military gamble watches
silentlv from the side lines today as Europe again shakes the dice of war.
Wilhelm II, sitting in exile at Doorn with his white head bent
toward a war-chattering radio, may well see striking parallels in
Adolf Hitler’s dream of dominating Central Europe and his own
imperialistic dream that died a quarter century ago in crimson
mud among the banks of the river Marne.
There was a day when the German kaiser wielded personal sway over
an incomparable goose-stepping military machine, over a nation shooting
upward into economic power and marching eastward toward imperial
domination of two continents. And ----------------------------------
Small Crime Wave
Hits Over Weekend
?
Thieves, burglars .nd hijackers
their ustal-element from Mto » «ruesome surelers.he rebelled Kids
a , • . "-3; | vert be.mnlng to Walk on the
o.: '2— y d other side of the street when he
. fat ewes at $3 passed by, and little girls ran
Hnd O‘ Day. Marshall
Orchestra
Samaritan Treatment
AAminitere pa Ethies!
Lieense Phrsieians and
Gradsate Rerist ered Nursee
rwat "PNk’Bookut
H8H°BAV°T.5"kP.
"5
35 50 Butcher sorts realized from
34 25 to 34 75 Canner and cutter
cows sold for the most part in the
S3 to 34 slot, with best cutters 10
or 15 cent, higher than that and
Arg
BORIS KARLOFF
of poet Percy Bysshe.
And you might as well see it
again, because you’ll probably
never get to see Karloff in the
role of a monster—at WHIPh he
excells—in any more movies.
He has sworn off. It gives
him the Wikkies.
Peter MacGregor
taunt: “Me und Gott!
highest" who, with spiked helmet
and fiercely upturned mustaches,
was oncea symbol of -ilitary ter-
ror.
The world has almost forgotten
—but Ado: Hitler has not.
Nor would Hitler want to for-
get. The nazi fuehrer a corporal
in the armies of Franz Jos ph when
Wilhelm’s dream collapsed, intends
that as history repeats itself, there
shall be this difference: The Third
-dazzlers chose a
in the Oklahoma
ble d
um Coach Fred
rked overtime to
g combination to
ast year.
ported the theft of a blanket, a sofa
pillow and an air ventilated cushion
I from his automobile parked at 1834
South Sixth.
Mrs Odessa Harris, 410 South
Fourth, reported the burglary of an
iron, valued at $7 95. from her home
Coaden service station operators.
Th* House of
I calves had moved to higher ground "Putting rn romet 2ss the trade
I and in many cases levels were fully ' and at times snappy movement
western at Waco
odist vs. Nort h
ihlat distorted
3 15 Midstream Drama MM
2 30 Girl Meets Bov, Vocal Duo MBS
2 45- The Hatter fields, skit MBS
3 00 -News TSN
3:05 Bluer Singer MBS
3:15 Reserve fficers Lncheon Ameri-
can Lesion Convention at Ls An-
John to
surrounded his body with
rocks, and there left him.
But John came back. He
demanded his ponies, al-
ready divided among other
members of the tribe. Fel-
low tribesmen thought John
wasaa ghost. They refused
to have anything to do with
film.
“John Stink.” they said The
name stayed with him for the
remainder of his life.
Other Indians didn’t want
John s dogs. They took them
and set out to live alone He
hated white men as much as
he did Indians. He slept in
tree tops, lived and ate with
his dogs, and seldom did any-
one see John.
Then oil was discovered on
Osage lands. As did hundreds
4
mv
s
1
L
403
7 00
There is a reason. His five
sons live in nazi Germany and
his income is derived from es-
tales, valued at probably $10,-
00C,C00, in Germany.
rodeo performers will be here
with the Beutler Brothers show.
The big rodeo is showing in
Amarillo at the Tri-Stat Fair
this week.
7 is Mornine D-votlona:
130-D and Mel, Sone:
met emperor since that rainy night
he fled into exile 20 year# ago.
reports that Doom was never so
e silent as it is today
Wilhelm, now 78. tends his
rose * garden, pores over docu-
ments relating to the once blaz-
ing question of “war guilt" and
keeps his lips sealed. He has
a given strict orders recently for
• his “court’' to do the same.
matter. It can mean much more than the good
health of your family alone, because water
contamination can endanger the health of an
entire community. Good plumbing is so vital
that you should be sure that your present
plumbing is good.
Entrust your plumbing only to Master
Plumbers. They have the know ledge, skill and
experience necessary to assure safe, healthful,
economical plumbing. Buy your fixtures from
them. Place upon them the entire responsibil-
ity, as you would upon your dentist.
Your Master Plumber can recommend the
'Standard" Plumbing Fixtures best suited
for your requirements, help you plan a new
bathroom, powder room or kitchen, and ar-
range the financing on low F.H.A. terms. And
remember, "Standar" Plumbing Fixtures,
sold through Master Plumbers, cost no more
than others. . .
blinding electrical
FOR COUGHIMG and trvttated throat dua
to colds, put VapoRub on the child's
tongue It melts, bathes th* throat with
comforting medication. Also massage
on throat and chest.
FOR HEAD-COLD "snimes" and misery,
melt a spoonful of VapoRub in a bowl
of boiling water Have the child breathe
In the steaming va-
port This loosens GAAAMe(
phlegm, clears air- \/lvr\O
passages. V VAPORUB
came incensed by the Nazi fight
against Catholicism. He wrote to
the Benedictine monks at Maria
I pach, in the Rhineland, saying:
• “I. pray that one day the i.uej
cross- will be raised again over
Germany
Hitler heard of the letter.
• FOR RELIEVING is-
_ 2K» comfoxts of chest
“n colds and night
nygMs mb Vieha VapoRub on throes. - der pressure mGet efthe tme and.
chest, and back at bedtime Its poul-
tire-vapor action relieves local conges-
tion and helps the youngster relax into
restful sleep.
wM O ’ 6 ria > sourdten ton er TIa WW «
wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwvwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwy
V eQ
Immediately reports circulated
that the nazis were considering
seizure of the former kaiser's
• estates.
Since ‘then, Wilhelm has fol-
low events by radio and news-
paper. But he has said nothing.
Nor does he need to speak. The
record of Europe’s yesterday is
(Continued From Page One)
happen again.
Altheugh his oil properties
were not as valuable as those
of some of the Osages. and al-
though he never was a chieftain
or even a medicine mar, old
John Stink was one pf the
most famous of moern Okla-
homa Indian figures '
Only the difficulties sur-
rounding th oil fortune of the
late * Jackson Barnett, whose
widow even now is involved in
litigatidn over his estate, are
comparable to those of Jdhn
Stink
John's tribal name was
of other Indians. o:d John be-
came wealthy almost overnight.
Officials said there was ap-
proximately $200,000 in his
name:---—----------
But old John didn’t want
money. The Indian agency
built him a cabin, hoping
he would accept a few of
the conveniences of the
white man’s civiliation. Old
John slept on the porch
sometimes, but often he was
gone for days at a time.
His dogs were his best
friends. They ate with him,
slept with him Y
A month ago John broke "his
leg His condition grew worse.
Friday night he died.
Today the Indians prepared
for a feast to be held after
John’s body is buried in Paw-
huska’s city cemetery, a white
man’s cemetery. The principal
food on the feast menu will be
canned fruit.
This was the favorite dish of
old John and his dogs.
Sheep and lambs suffered no se- I Southeastern feeding areas Choice
I rious difficulty with about steady i steer calves couid get « and many
trade in all sesstons Good to choice “ent substantially over that. The
quality was steady al the time, with : &00d ruality ranged from $7 to $7 50, -_____________
the most significant development with the heifers sharing the better tey buy yachts,
being a noticeable improvement in conditions more than in. the past That's because
packer sentiment in the latter days and better kinds setting from 87.50
inbetween graces and the poor down. More medium Stockers wore
quality had a slow time finding slower ranging from 37 down, and
homes most of the time, however the packers took many of this sort
Good and choice hogs in the 180 .Best fat lambs closed at 36 50 and
to 270 pound range closed from 56.75. with plainer grades to 36 Fed
38 90 to »10. with the lighter choice xeariings toppel at s5 »• but
weights selling from around 38 60 thez.bu k e the supply sold from i studios
and 38 75 on down according to 34.50 to Feeder lambs sold in
grade Choice light sows sold art ' . . . -----— -
37 50, with the bulk of the supply . Aged fat wethers drew from 33 50
cashing from 57 to 37 25 Some of don.. .. — — -
the extremely heavy sort sold under and the bulK from $2.75 down. A
87, however. Stocker pigs shared the tew two-year-old wethers sold from
' better tone and ranged mostly from ume to ume and scored around 34
' 37 50 dow n । :------------
bat Me prom- s
Ma, lu, Q. .
Y . Preridems I
Standard Sanitary TPfg.Co.
PITTSBURGH, PA. /
• 15-- Out of th# Past TSN
• 30 To Be Announced
• 45 Glonm Chasers MBS
It IS-Hl Flv Swine TAN
1© 30-- Stydles and Sketches in Black and
white MS x
1© 45 Tb Re Announced N x
11 00 A!vin Josephy Commentator MBS
11 15 Th* Trtt Blazers MB8
11 45 Mid-Day"Swine Bession TSN
Afteroon •>
It no Vagabondk of the Prairies (BTI r
12 15- Man On The Street '
। 12:30 Hymns You Know and Love
12 45- ©Win* Around tMe Worid with
Max Bent lev f
1:00- Jack Fre and His Orchestral
1 15- -Westex Ramblers
I 2R—To BA Anhouneed /
1 45- Tunes of UW Tropics TBN
t Dallas.-----------
as at Lawrence
10:15
1 to 30-
i 10 45
1 11 30-
3 45- W P A Musie Project <KT>
4 on News TSN
4 05- Organ Classics TSN
4 15 Penumbra, Harp and Accordion
-MRU
I TOOK
B.C.a
k.
are so. so British.
Colin Clive, as
Frankenstein, has
since departed the
ways of all Eng-1
lish movie actors
who depart Hol-
lywood,
Boris Karloff,
as the monster, I
| is living in hiber-
nation or Long
Beach or has
bought a yacht
and also departed
I for places that
people go when
geles, Het tv
Speaker MRU
'SAMARITAN'
TREATMENT U
k • DALLAS • 31
Ezz2kN22
fellewe by a »• in werte
trestment whteb ran be tskem
M heme eithest interteremer
mith nermal setivities
storm endows it with life? How
the monster kills the hunch-
back who tormented him in the
cellar, then slays the old dor tor
and starts looking far his
creator, Frankenstein?
It is a pretty good story it has
been pretty good for a long time
because it was written more thin
100 years ago by Mar Shelley, wife
—tee—Bolas—has—never__been Loo.
greatly at ease on the screen, and
one may suspect that it was his
profile which got him his part in
i "Frankenstein " A well-groomed
high school youngster could have
been as suave. •
Today you should take off a
couple of hours and go see the dad- ;
dy of Qj] hnrrnr pictures the retSSUt .
of “Frankenstein” which is show-1
ing at the Palace. It isn’t the I
granddaddy, because “Dracula
claims that distinction, but it does
ing much time and thought to eras-
ing the stigma of being a monster.
You couldn’t tell by looking at
Karloff in his makeup—the Lon
Chaney touch—that he was of good
' old drawing-room British stock
. GREATEST MILITARY GAMBLER
Remember the story? Remember
how the son of Baron Franken-
stein quits medical school to con-
duct studies, for himself in the
realm of electro-biology, steals bod-
ies from fresh graves at night and
takes them to his crag-top castle
laboratories? "
Remember how he creates the
monster out of these bodies and
est conference
comes up Sa-
rainst non-con- ,
I II
( favorite with, I
little but there was an obvious ment. Good to choice veal weights
weakness in .11 classes, of killing, and strong veal weights sold (n to
cattle that were on the.medium $7 50 to 57.85 range easity. Most of
quaIty order or of less than me- the good sort topped 37 easily and
dim quality Stockers continued to numerous transactions at 37 25 and 1
| su at they fan wrong, one man Eindcecorretthonereeneiwtdematnaj up were reported. The less desirable
who remembers hungry street mobs and the heifers also taking a much
and an army in revolt can say stronger petition, a fact that has,
pggy Don’t let tension “get”
your nerves!
‘ Kaiser Wilhelm Can Tell Hitler Path of Loser Leads to Disaste
forgotten the man called the “all Doorn Not long ago Wilhelm be- -
tie sword. _________ ____- . <____- — ___________
If the exile reads of nazi ex-TWorth market tastweek.was.thet A little oTthe'edge xvg.t
Panston to the east, his old eyes ’ dnthdy tthe "hgspresentedrA the bunl5 in rarly trading-but the
telling thread ’ of empire he, too, steady to strong appearance and ‘ serousn“mishaps,“Choicetsausage
0 „ / ... 7 deed the week with net gains.o 50 bulb topped at S5 50 in most cases,
Bagdad rahroad to challenge eco- centsa hundred The toP Saturday ' wit some getting higher and the
i was 89 10 to outsiders and $9 to the j bulk of the good kind from $5 to
PacKers. — .J . $5.25. Th© lighter weight and the
Most notable record set up in the । common quality ran the scale down
cattle yards was in the calf mar-1 . - —
ket. All classifications took-part in
before.
You will probably be perplexed by
the approach to amateur acting so
evident.
And you will laugh with glee at
the hats the heroine wears.
and if heard from at all is relegated
to the “othera in the cast" bill-
ing.
Styles of eight years ago or
so, worn by the heroine, couldn’t
possibly be as funny now aa the
there came a day when he was
• forced—by a minority crisis—to
gamble that Great Britain wouldn’t
fight
History answered him with the
. World war and with Doorn.
Today , as theThrdRelch again-
Evenine
• no News TFN
s 15 Studies in Contrast MRS
• an Famous First Facts Interview, ana
Music MRS
7 00- Geore * Sokolsky. Commentator
7 IB Jack Free and His Orchestra
7 30- Symphony Orchestra with Alfred
Wallenstein MES
s 00 Mitchell Ayer s Orchestra MBs
8:30-Henry Weber* Pazeant of Meloy
MRU
• IS le Sheley’s Orchestra MRS
• 30- -Adventures ot the Hawk Drama
(ET)
• 45 Lvinc Strings and Trio TBN
; 1© 00--News TBN
* Monday Evening, September 19, 1938
eveport to Win 10
ut this time ti@
king fo
id be harder to
nerica recognition 1
Texas.Am-
Lie* are given a
in the champion-
8 start for an.
those who have I
in action, but 11
Bibles Longhorns I •
t their offensiyg *
Haas fracturW 1
mmage Saturday I
s second year of 1 .
n. A similar in- I
i him last fall
pale back from
a
r and runner "
ch) MeversT C
face a real U ‘
mnary Gentlemen
12
W The quick-acting, prescription-type in-
gredients in the “BC” formula are also
f most effecti*e for relieving neuralgia,
muscular ahes and simple nervousness.
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 111, Ed. 1 Monday, September 19, 1938, newspaper, September 19, 1938; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1618036/m1/3/?q=%22~1~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Public Library.