The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 92, Ed. 1 Friday, September 16, 1960 Page: 32 of 32
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Noted Appaloosa
Mares Winners
1, p THE ABILENE REPORTER-NEWS
1o-D Abilene, Texas, Friday Morning, September 16, 1960
INTERESTED IN ROUNDUP — Little David Hood, left, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dar-
rell Hood of 917 Blair, and Bob Hill, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Hill of 1346 San
Jose both patients at the West Texas Rehabilitation Center, are pictured looking
at calves at the Abilene Livestock Auction, where Cattlemen’s Roundup for Crip-
pled Children calves will sell Saturday afternoon. (Staff Photo)
AUCTION SATURDAY
Scores of Colves to Be
Sold to Aid Crippled
Reports from headquarters of
the first annual Cattlemen's
Roundup for Crippled Children in-
dicate scores of donated calves
will be sold Saturday afternoon
with proceeds going toward pur-
chase of a hydrotherapy pool need-
ed at the West Texas Rehabilita-
tion Center.
They will sell at 2:30 pm. dur-
ing the Hereford-Angus feeder sale
at the Abilene Livestock Auction
Commission.
their pens Thursday. Others from
counties throughout West Texas
were expected to arrive Fri-
day and before sale time Satur-
day. Several donations are com-
ing from other areas of the state,
according to Jim Skinner, chair-
man of the roundup arrangements
committee. Even a pony is among
the donations, as is several
pledges of money.
Officials noted that there is still
plenty of time for additional per-
Some roundup calves were in sons to join in the roundup
By HENRY WOLFF JR.
Reporter-News Farm Writer
Two noted Appaloosa mares.
Dominette and Udo, were named
grand and reserve champion, re-
spectively, of the West Texas Fair
Appaloosa more entries judged
Thursday evening.
Dominette, owned by Harmon
Scales of Lubbock, first led the
class for 1957 or before foals She
was followed by Udo, owned by
Jim and Jean Atkinson of Ken-
edy. Bill Woodson, Sacles' train,
er, exhibited the champ. Jim
Atkinson was at Udo's halter
in recent standings of the Tex-
as Appaloosa Horse Club's point
system, Udo was in the lead of
AF Jet ‘Booms’
To Be Heard
FORT WORTH (AP)—Carswell
Air Force Base officials said
Thursday thunderous booms may
be heard in several areas of the
state Friday when B-58 bustler
bombers fly over at supersonic
speeds.
Two training flights are sched-
uled for Friday between Freder-
icksburg and Wichita Falls be-
tween 12:32 p.m. and 6:35 p.m.
and between Phillips, N.D and
Amarillo, Tex., between 9:55 p.m.
and 4:40 a.m.
the top 10 halter horses, as she
was for 1957 mares and stallions
at halter. Dominette was in sec-
ond for the 1957 foals at halter and
tenth in the top ten halter horses,
all ages.
Elmo Faver of Sweetwater judg-
ed the entries. Dub Harvey of
Sweetwater, show secretary, said
about 60 of the spotted horses are
entered here. Carl Miles of Abi-
lene is show secretary. Betty Al-
lison of Clyde awarded trophies
and ribbons Thursday evening.
Friday's judging activity in the
horse division includes placing of
Appaloosa performance classes at
J p.m. and Appaloosa stallion hal-
ter classes at 7:30 p.m.
The mare classes were seen by
a good crowd of spectators.
Following is a list of winners
of the Appaloosa mare halter
classes.
IMS foals - 1 Eagles D
Lavender, Wichita Falls, 2. ■
Cee, Carl Miles, Abilene:
1 Mame's
ick Ryan.
t, E. A.
, GC ‘SPOTTED MARE — Dominette, owned by Harmon Scales of Lubbock, Bill
, Woodson at halter, won the grand champion Appaloosa mare halter title of the
a West Texas Fair Thursday evening, Mrs. Betty Allison of Carl Miles’ Cee Bar
MaP - vao. Horse Ranch, Clyde, presented the tro phy. (Staff Photo)
— Panola, Zimmerman
Be Sure to Visit Thornton’s Food Fasliions
Booth in the Display Building at the West
Texas Fair.... Featuring WESTINGHOUSE
Communities throughout West Tex-
as have roundup chairmen at
work. The headquarters address
Westinghouse Twins!
Laundromat
is 4601 Hartford, Abilene.
Many of the more than 300 pa-
tients of the center are in need
of the pool that roundup funds
will help build, according to Skin-
ner.
Lots of five or more calves will
be sold under the donor’s name
and credit will be given for each
individual calf. The brand of each
donor giving one or more calves
will be permanently recorded in
tile on the walls of the pool build-
ing By working together and giv-
ing a portion of this year's calf
crop, the cattlemen are helping
make it possible for those crip-
pled to walk again.
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EW YORK (AP)—Sales, close and
nge of the eight most active stocks
^ : is 2**
a Pack wi......34.300 11 up.%
o Corp ..........33.500 151 unch
Motors .......32.900 22′8 up. ‘
NEW YORK—.
Stocks — Lower; decline com
Bonds — Mixed: governments
Cotton — Irregular: trade IM
rts
tember 1
ents high
— Slaughter steers steady; to
== Makes Shar
- Drop Again
Frost-fretor
Retrigerctot
won eamse suRy—wmWestinghouse
Financial
NEW YORK STOCKS
By THE ASSOCIATED PRES
63 American Can 28.1, 27.7
63 American Can 281
St
44 '
6314
781
19012
n€%
Livestock
FORT WORTS
, FORT WORTH (AP)— Hogs 200; bar-
rows and gilts steady to strong: 1,2.3
200-230 lb butchers 16.25.
Sheep 100: choice slaughter spring
lambs 16.00, or 50 lower. Call slaughter
NEW YORK (AP)—The stock
market declined sharply again
Thursday but met some buying
support as it approached the 1960
lows.
An estimated $1.60 billion was
clipped from the quoted value of
stocks listed on the New York
0104
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2.0
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Stock Exchange, based on the de-
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Reg. 499.95......
.....399%.,
Tian
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Procter a Gamble
Pure Oil
Radio Corporation
Raytheon
Republic Steel
CM ImMi . ...
52
Southern Pacific
Standard Oil Cal
Standard Oil N.J.
Sun. On
8 78% SAN ANTONIO
at Bee ANTOTALZ to Cards, 7225 Wall Street wondered whether
W Wi ..Mesh bex, and foats Too few to the list would hold above a "triple
7 251 0 KANSAS CITY bottom” where rallies ensued aft-
- ateme 1 . WLCINP 00010206 er declines in March, May and
a an “1,22980, menoe t. s maw. sows July This is roughly at the level
j * 2#L7A DICE,72 of 600 in the Dow Jones industrial
1 --22/2 12 5 I MS average.
0 n 4o0d and chore %1 in spring ami. A flurry of buying, but not very
7 F de 1.2,"%% prime 17.00: convincing, did occur after the
With Cold Injector in the Freezer: 0
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o in
* butcher Dow industrials slipped 4.56 to
say with 601.14 at 2 p.m The ticker tape
' * was late briefly in two spurts as
1 “ the. losses were cut and some gains
2'4 Womie established.
nd 2-3 grades ■ the 200-300 The Dow indutrials closed with
g*. NEC Ene, some a loss of 3.00 at 602.69.
161 lb.
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, Pae
78 Thiokel
f Tidewater
Products 24
Sulphur •
€ CEO #4
These
"‘orerns. for the first four days of the This year the market has ral-
-ex..222npemcEfor lied for weeks after the Dow ip.
A Dew mixed choice and prime grace dustrials touched closing lows of
Ma TA d"A2 A mass, ‘MR 599.10 on March 8, 599.61 on May
the muhi a M ‘% 27 2 and 601.76 on July 27.
..... tnroeee S^!m SUS The Associated Press 60-stock
20.50 23.se for sood to average choice, average fell 1.20 to 214.70 with the
mere a sen: 77 31.2 com- industrials down 1.90, the rails
in a slow sheep market, spring slaash-
0 ter lambs were I lower at 17 50-18 for
0 most choice and prime and 14.50-17 for
. mixed good and choice. Ewes topped at
0006
AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
30 E Bond a $ 23% 23
NEW YORK BONDS
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Atchison 4s 95
So Pac 4% 60
Tex Corp 3s 65
75%
2346
down .30 to another new low for
the year and the utilities down
Volume was 2.87 million shares
compared with 2 53 million
Wednesday.
Of 1,221 "issues traded, 311 ad-
vanced and 650 declined. New
highs for the year totaled 9 and
the new lows 98
American Stock Exchange pric-
es were mostly lower. Volume
was 102 million shares compared
with 970,000 Wednesday.
Corporate bonds were mixed.
U.S government bonds made
their best gains in a month
Bond volume was $4.73 million,
the highest since 95 74 million
3 Bn 5» 3 A ^- A"*A AZenO’Towe.” detoner Aug 24 compared ith $3.8 mil-
NEW ON EN MAN TENPne -",, LPo Ms lion Wednesday.___
closed an cents a bale lower to five 1 A
cents higher, Grain 2 Officers Injured
Queer - — — #E FORT CONTAIN" CoWneat HARLINGEN (AP) - Two Air
= .:.. use am 357 maneedi % 1 #222*2** SIre Force officers were injured
G — __am lixr-im No i onts Wedesday when their T29 trainer
sror corros \ numb umemansee ‘ *"I NhW m IM crashlanded at the Harlingen Air
• THE AN IC’ALE EEATh. '"CHICAGO | Force Base. They were Lt Georre
p.n.s Nunen 20 00 7,780 cmicACONo wheat, oats or soy- Skubik of Vintondale, Pa., and
& are: #3 2# Soe 1 vl* 1194 Capt. John Miller, whose home-
""Orleans “ unch 20.00 — Barley; malting choice 1.05-1.23m; feed town not known
S* * : unch 32.45 -92- 1 03n. • " asA -" ‘
STOCK AVER AGES
Compiled by The Associated Press
Indus Rails I M se Stock
et change d 19 d J d 7 d 12
hursday 314.6 110.9L 107.3 214.7
Year ago
a has 111.2 100.0 215.9
318.2 112.9 107 .9 217 0
Si BN ‘8 FAX
Cotton
Produce
TEXAS POULTRY
AUSTIN (AP) PotiMry:
South Steady: supplies adequate: trad-
R moderate to heavy; slow demand
ices at the farm for 24 hours ending
a.m. today. 21-314 lbs 16
East; Unchanged: offerings and sup-
es adequate to fully adequate slow
mand: movement very light _ Ne sale
st Poultry Exchange
_ - - farm for 24 hours
ending 10 *m today, 27-34 ths 15.0-15.5;
uin NET TON EUT futures 210.00 9 per cent at 15.0,9 per cent
NEW YORK PAL mA a at 15.5. 21 per cent intra-company trans
deU l nisner to 4 fers 51 per cent undetermined.
cents lower Thursday CHICAGO
Nearby October was higher on short CHICAGO (AP) - Butter prices aw
covering prior to first notice day for changed to 1 higher; 93 score AA and
that delivery on Sept. 26 92_ A unquoted: 90 B 60%
Futures closed 15 cents a bale higher Egg prices I, lower to 3 hitheris
t lower per cent er better Grade A whites 4244
4 C * High Lew Close 44; medium extras 38-39; standards 32
October 31.32 31.29 31.30b 33%
p-eember 13 1m Wool
NEW YORK (AP)—Wen tops futures
10 to 1.8 cents lower October
20
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 92, Ed. 1 Friday, September 16, 1960, newspaper, September 16, 1960; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1671707/m1/32/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Public Library.