The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 127, Ed. 2 Wednesday, October 5, 1938 Page: 9 of 12
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• A,
FHE ABILENE REPORTER-NEWS
.--
5
nent
Livestock
I
Cotton
government gives iu
NW ORLEAN8
- ■ -
d
-The
*u-
Wool
5 25: few head to 5 75; bulla mainly 4.25-
Groin
CHIC AGO
1
Hollywood Shop
Drastic
Creditors' Loss Your Cain!
1052 North Second Street
x
1
te with
actually
Starts Thursday Morning 9:00 A. M. Sharp
you new.
stantly.
rn range
i
Now
mmm
Is The Timet
PURSES
SUPS
REGULAR S1 95
Our Closeout
Price
4 Pair
88
47c
100
THURMAN’S
Costume
blouses
1333 Ambler
Tartl a Bons
■
suns
DRESSES
CoatS and Suits
VaL
1.95
Special Group
00
Drastic
99°
HOUSE
Reductions
New Falla
Coats
HATS
1
38c And 88c
l
J
\
7
I
i
P
4
.y
IlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
iIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII_____________
IIIIIIIIlililiISIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
nothing
c Range!
ewish congregation of
urrounding towns at-
IF YOU Buy part of your
insurance here,. and part
somewhere else, it is diffi-
Swagger Buits,
Mannish Suita
Larry Stewart. featured vo-
calist with Joe Reichman’s or-
chestra. will wield the baton
tonight in the place of the in-
jured leader. for a concert and
pageant at the Fair Park au-
ditorium. the Royal Cotton fes-
cult to study your problem-
as a whole. Avoid the con-
pur Riles
Today
COTTON
dresses
Britain Asks Nazis
To Release Czechs
preme court today in effect upheld
a law passed by the 45th legisla-
ture regulating dental advertising.
In a case from San Antonio the
supreme court refused petition for
writ of error by O W Sherman
and others who had attacked con-
stitutionality of the law.
The action allowed the Judgment
of San Antonio district and appeals
approval
formal announcement of the ap-
pointment was withheld until the •
formalities of seeking Washington a
agreement are completed.
The foreign office said Ambassa-
dor Salto, who has held the Wash-
inton post since 1934. was being re-
called because of poor health.
The license holder was instructed
to appear for hearing in Austin on
Oct. 28.
Every boat
and SUIT
Must Be
Disposed of
At Dragtie
Deductions
During this
• Sweetwater Beer
Permit Suspended
fusion esulting from scat- ‘
tered policies.
Values To
$19.95
s 44
hment scrolls bearing
Moses, were given to
ion by Mrs. Benny
1 ark has been built
ing.
BANKRUPT
SALE
VAL.
TO
$16.95
-t-i
were up 1 to more than a points to
near their highs for the year.
Dental Advertising
Ban Law Upheld
TEST-
•Continued from Page OND
% ‘
-o ..
-* tee -
F 1
1062
N. Second
Values to $895
EUNDREDS or GARMENTS to
BELECT FROM--
79«
KNEE LENGTH
ONLY
REGULAR 1100
NINE/
Ig will
you
ficient
r even
nightl
Every Sale
Final
COTTON PRODUCTS
FORT WORTH. Oct. 5 —Western Feed
SATIN and
kEPE
P, .
FABRIC
gloves
$1.00 VALUE
39;,
2.0
HiA
closing of the gates,
1 begin in the late
as the sun disappears
Hzon the sounding of
rams horn, will end
s697
Tune In On KRBC 3
Nothing Reserved-Entire Stock Must Be Sold To
The Bare Walls—Fixtures For Sale Cheap!
We bought this stock under the hammer from the bankrupt court for less than 1-3 of Its original value, and we are
passing this buy on to you. We have only a limited time to sell this stock—So come expecting the biggest values
ever offered In Abilene. This sale will Jar the whole town—so come early!
MOTZ & CURTIS
Citizens Bank Bldg.c, ‘
< Phone 5244 .
tober 5, 1933^
- .
_
99c
Wednesday Evening, October 5, 1938
TAKES REICHMAN’S PLACE AT BATON
iliUl'JIUlMllIiHtlHl.lhiiUlitItlHiMWHIHiHUkillililHiMKi'UdWililllllliulliluilili
knit
SUITS
’ tn «««»’*
si .99
others $2 99
a $3.99
the paper asserted
It added: "After the capitula-
tion of Munich • where Frence, Italy
and Great Britain reached an ac-
cord Sept 30 granting Chancellor
| Hitler Sudeten German areas of
Czechoslovakia, a French ally), who
will believe again the word of ,
France Who will remain her alf
"Rumania or Yugoslavia (with
Czechoslovakia, French alltes in the
Little Entente i will not hesitate
any longer to swing over to the
side of German fasciam
"And as for Poland—Poland cer-
tainly is lost to France"
The Journal did not state spectfi-
• eally that Moscow intended to can-
cel the French-Soviet pact of May.
1935 but asked "wha is It worth
now that France has torn up its
treaty of alliance with Cuechoslo-
vakia?-
Germans. many impoveriahed \ foreign observers following a cool-
Dr Paul Joseph’ Goebbels min- l ing of Soviet-French relations.
ister of propaganda, wm open the The semi-official newspaper Le
• meeting Journal De Moscou, often the mir-
l ror of foreign office views, said em-
phatically that. ui result of the
four - power Munich agreement.
France had lost all her European
1 allies but ‘England and demanded.
VALVES To
I $2.95
44°
FM"". •
Mvu- '
ssesejrn
ia --' A
: A «6
— 7456
MODERN
CLEANERS
against enforcement of the law, to
stand.
Others who attacked the law. In
addition to Sherman, were O. K
BAR SILVER
NEW YORK, Oct. 5 --Bar silver 42%,
unchanged. *u
WV ....... a4a
V
arW
- '
" 3 I
Verdict In Liquor
Case Due Today
Verdict in the Bill Riley and G.
W Holmes. Abilene negroes charged
with violation of the liquor laws
in federal court, will be returned
this afternoon by a jury.
Riley pleaded guilty to the charge
Holmes pleaded guilty but Judge T.
Whitfield Davidson would not ac-
cept the plea on Holmes state-
ment. A jury was selected
Riley who 1s 66 years old pleaded
guilty and asked the mercy of the
court.
Sheep J, 200 including 950 through: fat
lambs mostly 5.50-6.25: few to small kill-
ers 6.50; yearlings 4.00-5.00; nmixed grade
aged wethers 2 25 and 2.50; ood feeder
lambs up to 5.25.
Financial
r •
-
Hekc ""
c > 7
r -
Beg $1.95 Value
Sizes 32x44,
of Yom Kippur, day
and last day of the
Year ceremontals, ia
undown today at ths
h more the- ’ mem-
FAIR--
(Continued from Page ONE)
crowds tonight will be the corona-
tion of the kind and queen of the
second annual Texas Cotton Festi-
val. That comes at 8 p. m. in the
Fair Park auditorium. In conjunc-,
tion with a Joe Reichman orchestra’
concert The royal ball follows.
Exhibit buildings saw steady mov-
ing crowds all during the fleet
days and nights—the crowds were
expected to be Jams today. In any
field, the exhibitions ere tailed the
best this year Jud ing is complete
in almost all departments, with the
textile building blooming with rib-
bons, the 4-H and home demon-
stration booth sporting their rib-
bons, the poultry winners designat-
ed, and the Herefords all Judged.
This morning, the dairy cattle
show was held. Tomorrow livestock
Judging will be completed with the
staging of the horse and mule
show
There was no one willing to guess
today what the fair crowds might
number Monday s attendance has
been guessed at 20,000; Tuesday‘%,
at 35.000.
The attendance was swelled yes-
terday by the bands and pep squads
here for the annual parade. They
hailed from Sweetwater, Merkel.
Loraine Coleman. Ranger, Santa
Anna. Roby. Hamlin and Cisco.
NEW YORK
NEW YORK, Oct. S. -Cottos futures op-
•tied 601 AlKher on ateaay Liverpool
cable*, a reduced crop estiggate by a
leading trade paper and trac and for-
eign buying Open Oct 8.16b: Doc 8 20;
Jan 8 18 Meh 8.17 May 8 11: July 810
A little more hedge selling and realizing
was attracted by the initial advance but
following reactions of a few points, the 85,.’on
market again turned steadier on continued scked
NEW ORLEANB, Oct 5—Cotton futures, white 474-48 oats No. 1 wnite 274.
opened 3 to points not _ higher today - - ------------
scattered buying wfilch was induced by Produce
steady foreign markets and a bullish vri
vate crop estimate.
A private authority forecast production
at 11.366,000 bales against 12,189,000 bales
estimated by the same source a mnth
ago and compared with the last officially-
indicated crop of 11,825.000 bales
21 0012887
• 1 [
tival, and also fo the corona-
tion ball at 10 o'clock tonight at
the Hilton hotel.
Reichman's boys, without
their leader, have doubled their
efforts to fire a good show.
roustabouts, swiveinecka, jar heads I "who can rely on England?"
and others "isolation is the price France win
Bond was set at 850 000 Todas pay for Munich where she recetved
R T Dockrey. president of the not even a scrap of paper' but only
Promising Oil company wired from an oral promise from Adolf Hitler,"
1 5.00.
Hogs. 1,100: top 8.80 paid by city butch-
ers. packer top 8 20: good to choice 175- and J E Mayo L M Hamman and
270 lb mostly 815-20 good to choice 150- ,*5-°’ --muan “ld
170 lb 7.50-8.10: packing sows mostly 6.75 J. V Robinson.
and 7.00, few 7.25-50. --------------------------------
: .*! HOLLYWOOD SHOP
Plug Levee Break
BROWNSVILLE, Oct. 5—(—
Flood waters of the Rio Grande
were receding here today after
county workers plugged a 300-foot
levee break that inundated an es-
timated 13,000 acres.
ODORLESS
CLEANING—
Our filtering system
keep, solvent clean
and fresh leaves
-.0 odor in your
clothes You see he
superior results
when you send your
apparel to us
AUSTIN, Oct 5.—(P,
CHICAGO, Oct. 5—wheat pries ayer-
Age4 * little lower in Cnjcaz early oday. |
_____ ____________ __________influenced by moderate downturns of quo- i
ers Supply company's cottonseed quotations tations at Liverpool. Reports of bright ,
(fob Texas maille) prospec ta for crops in Argenttna continued
Prime loose hulls, per ton—6.00-7.00 Opening unchanged to 4 cent off, Dec i
Prime cold-pressed seed, per too- 19.00- 63-62%, May 634-%. Chicago wheat fu-
21.00. Prime cracked, screened meal and tures held near then to these figures. Corn
cake, 43 per cent protein, per ton—25.00- started }-% down, Dec 44%-4. May 47
26 00. 13-4.
: "T
na.,i -Tcan-
wvodne: "' - * V- “
-d ‘ "F
- pd-~-e
KiB -t .
E
"=*
-ah w®
i0‘
Colorado
"Injunetlon bond is W aman
and we have been dealing In
such larze promises that wr ar,
. just going to let our janitor
Frank MeCarver, colored, sign
as principal and both surettea
And If this is not suffielent,
we will get out a habeas Corpus-
Christi. I shall dellver thia
bond in person tomorrow."
October contracts . opened at 8.27 bid,
Dec at 8.29, Jan 8.37. Mch 8 25 bid. May
8.30, July 8.19. and Oct (new) at 8-08.
trade and foreign buying
December recovered from 8.17 to 8.21,
leaving prices at net advances of 7 to 10
points shortly alter the first half hour.
A private estimate reduced the crop to
11 366 000 bales from its indication of
12.186,000 a month ago owing to sharp
deterioration, in condition.
A little more hedge nailing and realizing
was attracted by the initial advance but
following reactions of a few points, the
market again turned steadier on continued
trade and foreign buying
December recovered from 8.17 to 821.
leaving prices at net advances of 7 to 10
points shortly attar the firs half hour.
A private estimate reduced the crop to
11 369.000 bales from its indication of 12.-
166.000 a month ago owing to sharp de-
terioration in condition.
LIVERPOOL SPOTS
LIVERPOOL. Oct. 5—Cotton 8,000 bales
including 1.500 American. Moderate busi-
ness in spot, prices 1 point higher quota-
tion in pence: American, strict good mid-
.dung 5.75; good middling 5 46: strict mid-
dling 5 20: middling 4 95. strict low mid
middling 4-70; low middling 4 20: strict
good ordinary 3.90: good ordinary 3.55
Futures closed unchanged to 2 higher. Oct
4.67: Dec 4 71. Jan 4 74: Mch 4 76, May
4.78: July 4.79.
F -
LONDON Oct 5.—(—Prime
Minister Chamberlain told the
house of commons today Britain
was seeking the release of "certain
Czech officials in frontier districts”
and Czech residents in Germany
who had been imprisoned in Ger-
many as "hostages."
Opening the third day of com-
mons debate on his four-power ac-
cord of Munich for the cession of
Czechoslovakia's 8udetenland to the'
reich, Chamberlain said the gov-
ernment had received reports such-
officials and residents were held
during the occupation of ceded ter-
ritory
vOnT WORTH
FORT WORTH. O« 3. -Rnxlu.. ------------- ---—. .
poultry r,,*r. 11-17; hena io-i3: tur iin,, 3.25: no other slaugnter claanes sold. American Radiator. Certain teed
xer"eRsd"atESFhn82a. ‘ candied '*• 60 • xaxsas city i Common and Preferred, Celotex,
KANSAS CITY, Oct 5.—-(UBDA)--Hoga Holland Furnace, Crane Co , Lone
. CHICAGQ 1 500: uneven; top 6 30. good to Choice Star Cement Masonite and Flint-
CHICAGO, Oct. g.—Poultry live, 21 150-158 Iba 763-8 00 sows 6.50-7.25. vewem, "-5 , \
truck*, firm springs under 4 lb* colored Cattle 5,000 calves 1 600 choice 1213 lb Kote made new highs Ior the year
and longer.. c
ored ducks 13: other pricea unchanged ola beer cowl up to 6 50 top Pivotal shares, including U. S:
Butter 1,311.656. steady, price, unchang- io oo Steel, enera Motors and Chrysler
ed .... . .. Sharp 7.000 no lamb* sold early; open
888 6,648, steady, prices unchanged Ing bids around 25 lower, but asking prices
... stronger; choice Colorado* held above 6 25
. POTATOE,e, * a sheep steady, range ewes 2 50-3 00
CHICAGO. Oct. 5— (USDA)—Potatoes
85, on track 442 total US shipmenu 443. CRM AGO
----id per cwt Idaho russet Burbanks CS cgicc A. - ulni, —
No 1. w .. . 1.38-608 1.35-40/Lo5"1e492,%n°amU:DA1-29016
North Dakota bliss triumphs 90 per cent 000 including 5.500 direct top 8.70: bulk
GH<>. i S* B8"xo1P26o-18."pbiera 2092241882193 210-309251:28286-98.024
»0 per cat vs No. 1 .nd US No. 1. 90- 1602000121. 8.2802%: ‘..I f?' .4105
eafiy.Nio SO per cedE US No. 1,12w5.:951x 8.00-10: 8anand
on , above most medium and neavy weight
90 1 7.25-90.
Cattle 9.500: calves 1.000: top 13.50.
new high on crop; several loads 13 25-46
with yearlings and light steers 11 50-12 76
beef cow* 5-75-7.00:. weighty sausage bulls
BOSTON e steady up to 6 65- selected vealers to 12.00
BOSTON, Oct 5—(USDA)—A fairly ac- I on eastern account.
tive demand was being received for fine , Sheep 12,000 including 3,500 direct; to-
domestic wools today in the .Boston mar- Say’s lamb trade around steady to 2 low-
ket at very firm prices. Graded average er. top natives 8.35: others 8.00-15 west-
French, combing fine territory wools have eras around 8.00-25: good to choice -year -
brought 64 to 66 cents. scourd basis. Fine Ungs 5.75-6.50: sheep steady
territory wools in original bags have FORT WORTH
brought 65 to 67 cents, scoured basis, for
good French combing lengths or 62 to 65 I FORT WORTH, Oct. 6.— (USDA)— Cat-
cents. scoured basis for abort French i tie 3.800; calves 2,200: fed steers and
lengtha. Graded staple combing lengths, yearlings 7 00-8 00: four loads of steers st
half-blood territory wool has been sold at 8.00; butcher and beef cows largely 4 00-
64 to 66. cents. Scoured b<»is Topmakers * *— ----- - ----------- • —
were doing some buying but the bulk of
recent purchases were by worsted manu-
facturers.
one of fasting and
He congregation and
group are preparing
for the breaking of
le close of the cere-
es are beinm conduct- ■
Valkov L. A. Walkow
Harry Goltx and W.
। 4 50: bulls 5.50-down; top-----
Hogs 700: 170 270 Iba 8.15-35:
*oo tbs 800 25: good sows 7.00-M one of the fastest levels of the year
sheep 25.50V slow; choice lambs held M.lAinc enrec ... —tetudinc
above 8 15 few natives 7,00-25; odd year Building shares were outstanding.
Ungs 5.25: no other slaughter classes sold. American
I. •
s"—n
a aA
■
Ls...
MS•
to have- • really
food photograph
made for holiday
mailing.
Hitler to Moke r i r ■ i
Speech Tonight rrench-oviet
BERLIN, Oct 5-(P—Adoir|"n-n-* -V‘I-1
Hitler will apeak at the Bporta pal-
Relations Cool
Hitler was expected to emphasise
the particular importance of the re- I MoecoW, Oct.. 5——A predic-
lief campaign this winter because of tion of sharp revival of Communist
the addition to Germany of 7,300 - I international activity, especially in
000 Austrians and 3,500,000 Sudeten France, was made today by some
moe to •ee
:• L s
-i- 4A
$99
$299
The Markets T oday Shsressu Pei suvsied Es
S .m2 ;.0. ics. bv Hn ambassador to the United States in
cnucaco. ccacocAS"acat » . Livestock NEw TOOK Oet .. »»> piae “ the
=s a 3 s:: dexveu. sr, sweetwater, ~ announced today
70BFM& X Ready;SDafu ii day and lifted the andustrial aver- by Bert Ford, state liquor admin-
raw, 1,68: cows 3.00-80 suture 3,00- age to the highest level since Oc- istrator. The suspension Tas a re-
-"ir",10 aro- tober 7 last year. Trading was at suit of a reported breach of peace
-so. " . one of the fastest levels of the year at the establishment.
courts. refusing an injunction
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 127, Ed. 2 Wednesday, October 5, 1938, newspaper, October 5, 1938; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1618052/m1/9/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Public Library.