The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 138, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 4, 1954 Page: 31 of 32
thirty two pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Ml
E!
1GI
NE
Lilius
OMES
STOM
CO.
S
-7267
ter bed-
. beauti-
111 sacri-
lose to
its, $55.
17 Small
Y
ne 4-9064
est. Sale
er 1042
n home,
Exclusive
RE!
K
VE
IR
N!
S
ets
2-8965
a th. Mak
total.
orner lot
40 paved
HA
m, large
3 rooms.
s. Pine,
40,000.
4 rooms
one mile
Buyers.
ELL
DAY!
ES
E??
a crack,
m homes
IS
11-B ....THE ABILENE REPORTER NEWS
Abilene, Texas, Thursday Morning, November 4, 1954
REAL ESTATE
HOUSES FOR SALE
M
M2
REAL ESTATE M
REAL ESTATE WANTED MT
3 BEDROOM. 2 baths, fenced yard. $1000
down. Owner parry balance, $75 monthly
Phone 2-8852.,
FOR Sale by owner 3 bedroom to Elm-
*ood West. Leaving town, must sell at
once. Low equity 26712 t
2073 SAYLES, owner. I bedrooms Lot
750. Consider trade for auto or house-
50x190, Cyclone fence, existing loan. $5.-
FAMr Apply 1801 Butternut Phone
BY OWNER
1550 North 1th Street. 3 bedroom price.
, $9,750. Loan $7,650.
233 Graham Street, • room house, living
room, dining room carpeted. Price. $8,750.
NATH WHITE
.....Phone 3-1363. 4-3Mf . 2 2454
LOTS FOR SA1 B M3
SEE us for Building Sites. Business or
residences. City or Hiway. Zuber 2-5653.
Bl stiSS iot red sn-N house on North
13th, $4800. Zuber 2-5653.3
FOR sale or trade lots 1434, 1442 Woodard."
% block south of Blue Sox Stadium $1 uixi
each. Size 507X180%. Call owner at 2/863.
LISTINGS
URGENTLY
NEEDED!
We ore now in a position to give
you immediate service when you
list your property with us. We es-
pecially need two and three bed-
room homes. We have the pros-
pects waiting. Don't delay. Call us
today and list your property.
FRANK BENNETT
& CO.
209 Pioneer Dr. Ph. 4.5209
AT A GLANCE
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
SUBURBAN
M4
CLYDE. 2 bedroom, 3 years old Corner,
double garage. Will G.I. $5500, Zuber.
1-5453. _
13 ACRES. 7 room house, 1.2 miles south rooms
Clyde. $4800 9214 Clyde, Wayne Smith, *1368.
2-3454, 8 - 5.
SOLD: SOLD OUT!
Need listing at once We sold Busines-
man’s home on North Side. He wants mice
home in Buffalo Gap Road area. Also need
homes with acreage
. KINCAID REALTY CO
1441 Cedar St. . ________Phone 3-3671
HAVE buyers for nice two and three bed.
rooms homes. Call Perry-Hunter-Hall al
WANTED to buy for eash-4 or 5 room
older home worth the money, 2-5579.
ACREAGE on Highway at Clyde Ideal ___________
building site, priced right, easy terms PARTY with cash wants 2 or 3 bedroom
Chie, Swofford. 3315 Clyde.___home, prefer some income Mrs. Wheeler.
X BEDROOM home. 3 lots, plenty of 2243___
*** W 2 * AN H F DO REAL ESTATE LOANS MS
at $4,200. Terms. Business building wit
living quarters Other listings Chic Swol
ford. 3315 or 3774
HIGHLAND. Beautiful lot, 78x150. ex-
cellent location Mrs Wheeler, 2-7243
ESTATE funds for will-secured Real
Estate Loans. No red tape, convient
terms, low cost. Hal McDavid, Tele-
phone 2-3682.
NICE lot in Clyde, Texas for sale or will FOR SALE OR TRADE Ml
trade for clean used car Phone 3715 Mrs 1 0
W. A. Honea._____________
140 by 70. Gas. water and sewer. 28th and
Orange. Apply 2850 Hickory
FARM & RANCHES
M5
IF You want to buy, tell or trade for
farm, ranch. Call Homer Sumrall. 3-2474.
22712 acres. 80 sheep proof fence, 100 in
cultivation, % mineral right, lease up this
month. FHA established loan. 2 bedroom
Semi-modern home. Payment $602 a year.
Call 4-9064for more information.
NEAR Abilene. 40 acres, a modern house,
plenty of water. $1800. down. Homer Sum-
rail 3-2474.
a Small stock farm $52 50 per A.
*80 A. imp. $7500, can grow eats
• 227 A imp. v. Minerals, water, $75 A.
grosses annually about $8,000 00.
* 3,000 A mostly prairie, runs 500 cows,
near town, priced $35.00 A.
* 750A runs 250 cows, small imps,
F to M read, good grass, $37 50 A.
• Farms, motels, hotels to trade.
Curry-Kirk Agency
3133-S-18th,Phone 29826___
WANT to lease % to 3 sections in Calla-
. has or nearby Counties. Reporter-News.
Box 76-C.
OIL LEASES
M6
/ WANTED-Oil leases, minerals, and roy-
alty. Licensed broker Box 42B, Report-
er-News.
REAL ESTATE WANTED M7
LISTINGS needed for 2. 3, and 4 bedroom
homes. Will list acreage, commercial, and
industrial property. For complete real es-
tate service - Eder Realy Company, 46526.
“SPOT CASH” for your equity. List with
W Willis Cox Real Estate. 4-7267._________
WHX pay cash for your equity. List
your property with us. N. R. Hailey.
Phone 2 9131._______________________
We’re Almost
Sold Out
Business has been wonderful ... the
only drawback is that we don’t have
enough listings. EVERY day ... and 1
mean every day ... we have people
call for homes we don’t have. With the
largest sales force in town, good listings
get sold quick Yesterday we couldn’t
fill these requests:
3 bedroom in Memorial Park
2 large bedroom, double garage. 1H
bathe if possible, around $14,000.00 price
range.
2 bedroom and den, $10,000 to $15,000
... we have three families looking
for this type home and only one for them
to inspect If your home is priced right,
we can sell it now.
Call 2-7835 for Safety and “Action”.
6 rooms, 5 acres, fruit, berries. Trade for
house in Abilene. Turner place, east Clyde.
Henderson.____
2 Bedroom, den, patio, fenced. Corner,
southside, sale or trade for 1 bedroom.
Zuber, 2-5653.._________________________
SHORT on cash? Short on space? Why
be dissatisfied? We will build your new
home in the location of your choice and
accept your house on trade. Call Hugh
Horn 46583 or 2-8303._________________
WHAT do you have to trade? Will con-
sider anything of value for down pay-
ment on new 3 bedroom, 2 bath home
4-8486.__
CAR, cash or what have you for large
home equity. Good location. Phone 3-2252.
RESORT PROPERTY M10
RESORT PROPERTY
720 acres near the new Table Rock Dam,
now under construction. Located 12 miles
Branson Missouri as White River. 300
acres will be under water. Finest cabin
sites on the lake will be on this land.
Paved road already through the place.
Priced at only $45. per acre with good
terms
J. L. Atteberry
765 East North 14th
________Phone 46173 _________
REAL ESTATE DISPLAY
1HOME
LOANS
• LOW INTEREST
• FAST CLOSING
• LONG TERM
• TITLE INSURANCE
NOT REQUIRED
CASSLE & CASSLE
INCORPORATED
1333 No 2nd Phone 2-3219
Aeviley 24%
no SAFER medium'
NE .. www. listings on clean 2 and
3 bedroom homes. Clarence Collins
Agency. Phone 4-8159.________
NEED listings. Homes, businesses or farms, 1
All cash or low equities. Zuber Real Es
tate. 2-5653.
REAL ESTATE DISPLAY
2 2
“Hello! Southwestern Lumber Comp-
any? I’ll need some ‘ more patching
plaster—my wife just hit the ceiling!"
Yes for all your building needs contact
Southwestern
Lumber & Supply
The Builders Department store
3110 N. 1st. Ph. 4-8127
CONVENTIONAL MORTGAGE LOANS F H.A
w. WILLIS COX AGENCY
318 CEDAR
PH 2 2805
CONVENTIONAL LOANS
UP TO $25,000 ON RESIDENCES
20 YEARS TO PAY
FOR INFORMATION CALL
2-2857
ACKLEN INVESTMENT CO.
302 Butternut
Phone 2-2857
CORATE
Do-It-Now” in Your Spare Time
HOUSE PAINT
Outside White
$2.99 up
PAINT BRUSHES
, 3 $1.25
31" $1.50
WALLPAPER
19c up
per roll
UN
SOUTHWESTERN
An :
• “The Builders Department Store”
3110 North 1st Phone 48127
NEW YORK un—Markets at • glance:
Stocks: Higher, stocks surged ahead on
Bonds: Mixed: governments easier.
Cotton: Steady; trade buying.
Wheat: Easy: noproved winter wheat
Corn: About steady; trading slow.
Oats: Steady: small price movement.
Hogs: Fairly active, strong to 25 higher;
p $19.40.
Cattle: Steady to 25 lower: top $31.25.
N EW YORK U Sales, closing price and
I change of the eight most active stocks
an Airlines 40.
an Cyanamid 32.1
1 Electric MJ
Prod.
Assoc
lane
letal
1:1
25.800 26’8 up.
. 23.100 60% off
11.100 Ch w -
Livestock
Financial .
FORT WORTH
FORT WORTH uh—Cattle
active to strong, calves sio
steady; some steers and bulls
Medium to good slaughter ste
lings 15.00-22.00; common to 1
lings 9.00-13.00; good and cho
calves 13.50-17.00; medium 1
12.001 medium to good stocks
.000; cattle
and about
15-50 higher.
1
TAG ALONG—Almost everyone at the State Fair in
Dallas stopped and stared at “Yankum,” a Southdown
lamb, following in the track of its master, Torn Parker.
The lamb became devoted to Tom, a 4-H Club member,
when he took over the job of raising it on a bottle after
its mother rejected it. Now Yankum won’t let the boy
get out of sight. *
THE WAGGIN' TONGUE
By BOB COOKE And DUANE HOWELL
Agents Pleased With Runnels 4-H
Showing in San Angelo Swine Show
Runnels County Agent John Bar-
ton and his assistant, Sterling
Lindsey, were well pleased with
the showing their 4-H clubbers
made at the San Angelo Sears
Store Area Swine Show Saturday
Franklyn O'Dell of Winters.
Runnels County's representative
in the area show, finished second
among keen competition from Me-
hard and Coke counties.
Kenneth Winks of Robert Lee
slipped by Franklyn for first
place, with J. W. Alexander of
Menard coming in third.
Representatives for each coun-
ty were determined in county
shows held immediately preceding
the area contest.
Following Franklyn in the Run-
nels County show were: Clyde
Halfmann of Rowena, 2nd; Ron-
nie Heathcott' of Wingate, 3rd;
James Eggemeyer of Miles, 4th;
and Nathan Wright of Miles, 5th.
"The boys did an exceptionally
good job in preparing their ani-
mals." said Lindsey. "The pro-
gram in 1955 should profit from
their efforts."
A total of $90 in prize money
was. distributed among the top
three exhibitors in the area show
and $30 was awarded to the top
five entries in the county shows.
M. B. Inman, head of the ag-
riculture department, San Angelo
Junior College, judged the show.
"The boys came away from the
contest happy with the results-
most of them — and with their
thoughts on the future breeding
program," said Lindsey.
Two meetings of interest to area
Stocks Surge
At Poll News
NEW YORK, Nov. S W—The-
stock market liked the election.
It shot ahead with the strong-
est surge since the outbreak of
World War II in September of 1939.
Prices on average were within
a shade of the highest peaks since
the days of the crash in October
1929.
Brokers said the stock market
has thrived in the business atmos-
phere created by the Republicans
in the past two years.
Wall Street feared a sweeping
430(1 9.00-
ers 12.00-
ows 7.00-
"29 25-54
e 190-260 lb
....._________15.00-18.00.
Sheep 1,500; slaughter lambs steady to
25 higher; other classes steady; good and
choice wooled slaughter lambs 17.50-19.00;
good and choice shorn slaughter lambs
17.00-18.50; feeder lambs 12.00-16.00.
Kansas City
KANSAS CITY i—Cattle 3.000; ealves
800; slaughter steers, and Leers steady
to 25 higher; cows uneven, y steady;
bulls and vealers firm. Ig calves
steady to 50 lower; stockel d feeders
slow, weak; majority ave good to
choice steers 21.00-25.00; u and com-
mercial cows 9.00-12.00; bu nners and
cutters 7.00-9.00; bulls 12.1 own; good
and choice vealers 15.00-1 good and
choice killing calves 14.00-
Hogs 1,500: active, uneve arrows and
gilts 15-35 higher: most. 1-35 higher
than Tuesday’s average: d 190-250 lbs
largely one price 19.00: i steady to
farmers and ranchers are sche-
duled at Munday and Eastland
Thursday.
A cotton improvement meeting
is to be held in the Munday Grade
School building (The present hay
program and other topics will be
discussed at the annual meeting
of the West Texas Ranchers As-
sociation in the Eastland High
School Auditorium.
The meeting at Munday will
start at 7 p.m. with a barbeque
dinner. The program at Eastland
will begin at 7:30 p.m.
Results of a one - variety cot-
ton test being sponsored by Mun-
day farmers, ginners and busi-
nessmen will be given at the cot-
ton improvement meeting.
Test plots of different varieties
of cotton have been planted in
the Munday community by coop-
erating farmers since 1951. Com-
bined data of the tests will be
disclosed Thursday.
At Eastland, Texas Commis-
sioner of Agriculture John C.
White will discuss, the controver-
sial problem of providing an ade-
quate and workable program of
relief to drought - stricken far-
mers "and ranchers.
Other speakers will include Wal-
ter Pfluger of San Angelo, presi-
dent of the Texas Sheep & Goat
Raisers Association, and Robert
J. Norrish, livestock division. Ar-
mour & Co., Chicago.
Pfluger, owner-operator of ex-
tensive farming and ranching in-
terests in West Texas, will tell of
ways to make more money from
ranching. -
Means of producing an animal
whose meat cuts will be more ac-
ceptable to the housewife through
a more stream - lined breeding
program will be discussed by
Norrish.
Everyone interested in livestock
is invited to attend.
Taylor County Agent H. C. Stan-
ley reports 'that area orchardists
are being plagued by invasions of
the peach tree borer, shot hole
borer and the lesser peach borer.
For control of the peach tree
borer, Stanley recommends the
use of ethylene dichloride emul-
sion or paradichlorobenzene crys-
tals.
Grass and weeds should be
cleared from around the tree
trunk and the ground level built |
Democratic victory might upset well above where the borers are
that situation. Consequently when working in the trunk, he said,
this did not develop, the rush to Directions for diluting the stock
solution are given on the manufac-
buy stocks started. L________•____
Buying orders poured in from turers’ containers.
all sections of the country and ________________
brokers with offices in principal lorobenzene crystals require
cities were hard pressed to keep
pace with the business.
Stanley said the use of paradich-
no
bulls
34 Ohio Oi
36 Panhand
• Penney,
48 Phillips
28 Pure OL
95 Radio C
35 Sears R
43 Sinclair
69 Socony
57 Southern
155 Standard
44 Texas C
19 Texas €
11 Texas G
• Texas P
288 Tide Wi
40 Union C
302 U.S. Ste
Flexible Supports
Survive Vote Test
WASHINGTON, Nov. 3 W—I may fane an even more significant
President Eisenhower’s flexible test in 1956 after its effects be-
price support program was come known But a spokesman for
sene S clE by observers the American Farm Bureau Fed.
here today with having survived eration, which favored a flexible
its first test of voter sentiment program even before Eisenhower
' your == proposed it, said he thought farm-
Despite Democratic efforts to ers had taken it fully into con-
make the farm program a major sideration in easting their votes
campaign issue in many places, this year
Republicans marked up significant
election victories in farm belt
! states where the new program
would have the most effect, and
NEW YORK STOCKS
y The Associated Press
Tel & Tel 172 171 173
Woolen . 187 18% MH
kSF 1174 116 116
Steel 82‘ 8044 82
..........6616 65% 66
.......146 140% 145
ectric . 43% 42% 434
tors 93% 2144 924
...... 584 57 58
or 34% 3346 MH
y Ward 734 71% 7244 wy*
on tn‘1:5 “ where
.. .85% 8534 8546 tat 4
troleum 62 5976
60% —-
34% 331
73% 729
Sulphur . 109 107% 109
fic C&O . 44% 44% 44%
: * #t “ #:
594 57% MH
Democrats who favored it were
generally successful.
Supporters of the plan were
heartened especially by Republi-
can Thomas E. Martin's victory
over Sen. Guy M. Gillette in Iowa
and Sen Andrew F. Schoeppel’s
re-election over former Democrat-
ic Sen George McGill in Kansas.
The farm issue was sharply drawn
in both states.
Eisenhower asked—and Congress
voted-a plan for lower price sup-
ports in times of plenty, to dis-
courage overproduction, and high-
er supports to spur production
when an increase was needed A
sliding scale of 82% to 90 per cent
Some Republicans who won else-
liffered with Eisenhower en
sum
acific..
il NJ-, 98
pany .... 80
f Prod.
that issue but the over-all results.
. observers felt, at least provided
E no repudiation of the program.
* astt Most Democratic gains were con-
4 46’ fined to urban areas.
Actually, the flexible support
plan is not yet in operation, and
of parity was substituted for the
rigid 90 per cent supports on five
basic crops. Parity is a price de-
signed by farm law to be fair to
farmers in relation to the cost of
things they must buy."
The Democrats and Republicans
who opposed the plan contended
it would cut support price just
when farmers needed them most-
in times of a falling market '
But supporters contended that a
price drop would increase con-
sumption of the products and per-
mit farmers to produce more with-
out feeding it into overstocked gov-
ernment warehouses.
The Associated Press average of
80 stocks gained $2.60, the most
for a single session since Sept. 1.
1939. It closed at $137.30, only a
dime under the high of 1954 which
was the best since Oct. 18, 1929.
Individual stocks made gains of
$1 to nearly 85 a share, and buoy-
ant prices were, found in the steels,
motors, rubber, mail order houses,
aircrafts, chemicals, coppers, oils,
airlines, railroads, and the utilities.
preparation of the soil except to
break the crust for 15 to 18 inches
LOCAL MARKETS
Sheep 1,500; generally steady; good and
choice tracked in. natives 18.50-20.00; roll
to choice slaughter ewes 4.00 5.50; medium
and good native feeder lambs 14.00-16.00.
CHICAGO in 082 5.000; active: strong
to 25 higher en butchers; 23 higher on
sows; choice No 1 and Fs 180-220 lbs
19.00-19.25; choice 220-280 lb 18.75-19.00;
400 lb and lighter 17.25-18.00; 420-600 lb
15.50-17.25
Cattle 17,400; slaughter steers moderat
ly active to slows steady to 25 lower;
mostly steady on high choice and prime
grades; heifers active; fully steady; cows
slow; steady to 25 lower: bulls sad vealers
steady; high choice to tow prime steers
2750-29.50; good to choice steers 21.00-
27.00; choice to low choice helfers 20.75-
24.25; good to prime vealers 19.00-24.00.
Sheep 3,000; active; slaughter lambs
strong to 25 or more higher; yearlings
and slaughter sheep steady; choice to
prim, wooled lambs 20.50-22.00; good to
choice 19.00-20.50; good to choice 85-90 Ib
elippe lambs No. 1 skins 19.00-20.50;
choice to prime 100 lb 21.25:r choice to
prime 104 lb yearlings with exceptionally
good skins 18.50; cull to choice slaughter
ewes 4.00-5.50.
San Antonio
SAN ANTONIO (—Cattle 700; slaughter
classes and feeder steers too scarce to
provide a test; cows about steady; slaugh-
ter calves about steady; scattered small
tote good 17.50; odd bead to 18.00: bulk
CTIHCICAR
choir und
weights u
Goats: 300; al
at 4.50; few sia
nothing offered
ws and gilts steady;
170-260 ib barrows and
arce, quotable steady;
Ite to 17.00; heavier
downward to 15.00.
ce fal Shorn lambs
17.50 and 19.00; other
to” test.
hter goats about steady
teruid: 4.00 per head:
Grains
CHICAGO CASH
CHICAGO (—Wheat: none. New corn:
No 3 yellow 144744-52%, Soybeans: No 1
yellow 2.88% track Chicago: No 2 2.8394-
86% track Chicago; No 3 2.78% track
Chicago. Oats No 1 point heavy 88-88%.
CHICAGO CASH
CHICAGO un-
High Low Close
2.23% 2.21% 2.2244
2.261s 2.23% 2.2446-44
2.22% 2.20% 2.214
2.10% 2.09* 2.09%
1.56% 1.55% 1.5644-44
1.604s 1.59% 1.60%
1.62% 1.614 1.62*64
1.63% 1.62% 1.62%
1.59% 1.59 1.59b
82% 8144 8296-1
8342 82%. 83%
may ............33H 8144 824—6
July ............77 76% 76%4b
LARD
November .... 15.05 14.80 14.90
December .....14.07 13.85 14.00
January ........13.70 13.57 13.65a
March 13.50 13 40 13.50
May . 13.471 13.37 13.42b
July —— 13.30b
KANSAS CITT CASH
KANSAS CITY un—Whent No. 2 hard and
dark hard 2.374-2.52; No 2 red 2.34.
Corn No 2 white 1.66-1.70n; No 2 yellow
& mixed 1.634-16444.
Oats No 2 white 814.-87%.
FORT WORTH CASH
FORT WORTH (—Wheat N
2.56-67.
Cora No 2 yellow 1.88%-89%n; No 2
white 1.90-91n.
Oats No 2 whito 1.01-02n.
Sorghums No 2 yellow milo 1.52-57.
WHEAT
December
March
May .
July
CORN
December
July
December
March
hard
around the tree and the remo-
val of grass and weeds. -
Application should be made be-
fore Nov. 15, he added.
Stanley said there is no satis-
factory method of controlling the
shot hole borer with insecticides. I
He added, however, that injury
from the- pest can be avoided by
proper cultivation and fertilization
of the trees to keep them healthy
and by controlling other insects
and diseases.
The shot hole borer, Stanley
pointed out, attacks chiefly trees
that have been devitalized by
some other pest or injured and
weakened by lack of fertility.
For control of the lesser peach
GRAINS
Per CWT - Bu.
Grain Sorghums ....22 25 75 ________
*****:1110e02HII 187 borer, Stanley recommends, the
Barley - FOVLTRY 1.101 use of one pound paradichloroben-
‘ = zene crystals dissolved in two
1 ■ quarts crude cottonseed oil. This
• should be applied to infested areas
with a paint brush, be said, be-
fore Nov. 15. ' -
Hens. 4 lbs and up ........
Hens, under 4 Ite........
Stags and Roosters ......
Broilers ....................
No. I Turkey heni
No 1 Tome
\ EGGS
Current Receipts ,
BUTTERFAT
Sour .......................
Sweet .....................
Per Lb.
: m
* s
Per Lb. BA.
As in the case of the shot hole
borer, <mly injured or diseased
trees are attacked by the lesser
peach borer.
Stock Averages
By The Associated Press
* Ind Rate Util 60 Stocks
Net change A4 2 A1.3 A1.1 A14
Wednesday 189.0 101.0 63.9 137.3
Previous ay 184.8 99.7 62.8 134 7
Week ago 185.8 100.1 62.9 135.3
Month age 190 2 99.2 64.4 137.4
Year ago . 142 4 79.1 54.5 107.4
New York Curb
By The Associated Press
4 Electric Bond & Sh 2546 2544 25%
27 Humble OU .....187% 86% 87%
New York Bonds
By The Associated Press
Atchison Topeka & Santa Fe is 95 , 122
St. Louis San Francisco 49s 2022F 92
Southern Pacific 4Hs 49.....107
Texas Corporation 3s 45 ....... 103%
Cotton
NEW YORK FUTURES
NEW YORK. Nov 3 un—Cotton closed
5 to 45 cents a bale higher today.
Most of the activity of today’s future
market centered in current crop deliver-
ies. Futures were steady with switching
active.
One private firm issued a crop survey,
placing the 1954 cotton production at 13,-
177,000 bales, compared with the govern-
ment October report of 12.511.000 bales.
Futures closed 5 to 45 cents a bale
higher than the previous close.
. High Low Close
December .........34.47 34.34 34.40
March .............34.84 34.71 34.79
,..............35.14 35.02 35.07-08
July ...............35.18 35.06 33.14
October 34.68 34.64 34.65b
December ...34.76 34.70 3471
March ---3480b
Middling spot 35.00 nominal, off 5.
New Orleans Futures
NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 3 un—Cotton was
unchanged to 40 cents a bale higher today.
High Low Close
December .........34.50 34.36 34.44
May .......
July ......
October .
December
3474 34.74
. 66
Spot cotton 25 cents higher, sales 10.443, 1
low middling 28.25, middling 33.95. good
middling 34.35, no receipts, stock 303.202.
TEXAS SPOT
DALLAS. Nov 3 un—Spot cotton 33.55;
Galveston 33.90: Horston 33 PO.
COTTONSEED OIL
NEW YORK. Nov. 3 W — Bleachable
rottonseed oil futures closed unchanged to
3, lower. Closing bids: Jan. 15.00m; Sept.
14.98a; Oct. 14.90m.
Produce
CHICAGO
CHICAGO —Butter steady: unchanged.
Eggs steady; unchanged,
NEW YORK
NEW YORK (—Butter steady: un- 1
changed."
were 5 to 35 cents a bale higher than
the previous closer Dec 34.43, March 34.80 *
and May 35 A°
TEXAS POULTRY
AUSTIN (—Poultry weak: South Texas, ;
21-22: East Texas 20-22; Waco 21; Corsi-
cam 22.
Turkeys: Steady; young toms 23-23%;
young hens, 28-30.
Suit Thrown Out
TEXARKANA, Nov 3 —Fed.
eral Judge Joe Sheehy of Tyler
has dismissed a segregation suit
against Texarkana Junior College
on the grounds that the Negro
plaintiffs failed to prove they met
with scholastic qualifications.
GENERAL INSURANCE • FIRE-AUTO -WINDSTOP M
CHES. MeGLOTHLIN AGENCY
Representing Old Line Capital Stock Companies
• Ask Us About Any Insurance Problem.
1831 Butternut , Phone 4-9671
RADIO TV CENTER E
Home Calls $3.50—Guaranteed Service
L R. YAW—1318 Pine Dial 4-7871
FOR BETTER HOMES-
GERALD G. LAWLER
1417 Barrow Phone 2 2868 Residence Phone 4-8252
TAKE THE FAST WAY
HOUSTON
3 hrs. 3 mins.
Lv 11:37 am, 3:45 pm.
ALBUQUERQUE
3 hrs. 5 mins.
Lv 10:15 am, 7:55 pm.
AUSTIN
1 hr. 55 mins.
I - Lv 3:45 pm.
Phone 3-2587 for reservotions and information
(PIONEER
A 4---------
AIR LINES
"—AND YOU CAN SAVE BY FINANCING
WHERE YOU BUY YOUR CAR"
ASK Your
Dealer
IN CHEVROLET • PONTIAC
OLDSMOBILE. BUICK • CADILLAC
You save expense, time, worry and trouble when
your General Motors Dealer uses the GMAC
Thrift-Guard Plan:
1. Your dealer gives you the greatest financing
value at low cost. 1
2. Your dealer gives you complete financing in
one flexible plan, at one time, at one place-
saving your valuable time.
3. If financial problems arise, you get considerate
treatment to help you reach ownership.
A. Emergency assistance is available through over
250 CMAC offices in the United States end
Canada. And you gain national credit standing.
TIME PAYMENT
PLAN
The Plan That Has Helped Millions Buy Cars ”On Time*
Offered only by dealers in CHEVROLET - PONTIAC . OLDSMOBILE - BUICK . CADILLAC new card,
, - and used cars of all makes; also FRIGIDAIRE • DELCO APPLIANCES • GM DIESELS
GENERAL MOTORS ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION V
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 138, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 4, 1954, newspaper, November 4, 1954; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1653395/m1/31/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Public Library.