Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 310, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 25, 1939 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Texas Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.
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■Features
ny oTTfiel .
i cheerfully corrected
to ctuhtion of the
PAGE FOUR
[ as Motet lifted up the serpent in the wild'
even so mutt the Son of man he lifted
that whosoever betteveth in him thould not
„ frill have eternal lile.—John 3; 14, 15.
Naie but God can satisfy the longings of the
lUftmortal soul; as the heart was made for Him,
$|a only can fill it.—'Trenuh.
o —
YOUNG LIVESTOCK FEEDERS '
AID THE CATTLE INDUSTRY
That the unselfish work of those Hereford breeders
who have furnished club calves for 4-H and F-F.A.
boys to feed should bear fruit is only right. A case at
point is the interest manifested nn the West Coast by
the magnificent showing made by the Nolan county
entries at Treasure Island. It attracted the attention of
stockmen, who have already made inquiries regarding
cattle from this area.
This is an important side to livestock showing
and has a distinct value to the Hereford breeders.
Top cattle always get attention centered on them
and since the "proof of the pudding is in the eat-
ing thereof," the way cattle feed out demonstrates
their utility. When 4-H club boys from this area
take prizes in the big shows they reflect credit
on Sweetwater cattle. This builds up their prestige
from another angle that is certain to pay dividends.
The success during he past year of the feeding ac-
tivities of 4-H and F.F.A. boys should serve to inspire
all those who are now taking up another year's work
under the leadership of vocational agricultural teach-
ers and county agents. Good luck to all of them!
o
LARGE CITIES BREEDING
GROUND FOR THE "ISMS"
Congressman Martin Dies of Orange is no alarmist
but talks good horse sense that hould appeal to the
people who believe in the constitutional form of gov-
ernment of this country. He directs attention to the
slums and tenements of the large cities as being the
breeding ground for foreign "isms." In a talk at Beau-
mont before the East Texas chamber of commerce on un-
American activities he said the future of the republic
demanded the de-centralization of industries; fair prices
for farm products and economic justice for the South.
The centralization of industry has crowded huge
populations together in large cities, creating social
problems unknown in the smaller communities.
Here subversive activities find their breeding
ground and are fostered. It is far better to have in-
dustries scattered than to attempt to clean up the
tenement districts of the larger cities. American
industry will have to accept this challenge and do
something about it-
The Communist party. Dies affirms, is controlled di-
rect from Moscow. He should have seen the evidence
in his work as chairman of the congressional commit-
tee investigating un-American activities for the second
year.
One circus has a woman clown this year. She can't
be any funnier than those on the street with their spring
hats.
INDIAN LEADER
HORIZONTAL
1,8 Pictured
Indian leader.
13 Journey.
14 Uneven.
16 God of love.
1? Driving
command.
18 Force.
19 Small child.
20 Insane.
21 Promise.
22 Eucharist
vessel.
23 Feather quill.
25 Indefinite
article.
26 Russian
village.
28 Musical note.
29 He protests
against
wrongs by
32 Cavalry corps
33 Peasant.
34 Jumbled type.
3.7 Channels.
37 Southeastern.
3j To rot flax,
4® You and I.
*1 Behold.
Answer to Previous Puzzle
Hi
see.
43 Violent
disruption.
'47 Sun god.
48 Sleepers'
couches.
50 Pathway be-
tween seats.
51 Mythical tale.
53 Agreeable.
55 Bctroths.
57 This
leader lives a
simple life. w __t
58 He is the most 10 To let fall,
famous of 11 Large inn
present day
Indian .
VERTICAL
1 Mountain.
2 Large wind
instrument.
3 Run.
4 To i m i t ;
5 To exile,
(} In line.
7 To plant.
8 Microbe.
9 Fishing bag.
te.
12 Subsists.
15 The deep.
20 He works to
gain rights
for the .
21 Came to
24 Citizen by
birth.
2G Low caste in
Hindustan.
27 A liar.
29 To exhaust.
30 Pronoun.
31 To leave.
36 To rob.
38 Oleoresin.
40 Stake.
42 Norse deity.
44 Coffin frame.
45 Musical
character.
46 Cotton fabric
47 Wrath.
43 Sound of
contempt.
49 Sorrowful,
51 To soften
leather.
52 Kiang.
51 Bushel
(abbr.).
56 Grain (abbr.)
r
SWEETWATER, TEXAS,
TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1939
on Thuraday .
Inc. Entered at ——
office In Sweetwattr, «- . -~=~
George Bennitt and Russell Bennitt, Puna.
Behind The Scene In Washington
By BRUCE CATTON
WASHINGTON — Uncle
Sam is spending $75,000,000
on the National Youth Ad-
ministration in the current
fiscal year. Right now Con-
gress is being asked to make
it $125,000,000 for next year.
And if you want to know
why the increase is being
asked, Aubrey Williams will
be glad to tell you.
Mr. Williams is adminis-
trator of the NY A, and as
such", has charge of the pro-
gram by which the federal
government is extending a
helping hand to some 650,000
American young people.
Sometimes the helping hand
consists in keeping a boy
or girl in high school; some-
times, in enabling a bright
youngster to go on to col-
lege; sometimes, in giving
him a bit of a job, a little
money to put in his pocket,
and a chance to find out
what he wants to do in the
world and how he can fit
himself to do it.
But although this is be-
ing done for 650,000 young-
sters, Mr. Williams feels
that the NYA has hardly
scratched the surface.
"We have done no more
than take the most obvious
and desperate cases," he
says. "We take about one
out of four, or even one out
of six or seven, of the young-
sters who come to us. These
others whom we can't take
are just as much in need
of something in the way of
occupation, money in their
pockets, and a feeling that
they're going somewhere."
Altogether, Mr. Williams
figures there are between
four and five million Ameri-
cans between the ages of
16 and 24 who need that
sort of help.
"We have no hope of
reaching all those people,"
he admits. "If we get the
that extra $50,000,000, we
could add around 500,000
youngsters, and give them
some form of constructive
activity and a chance to
earn a small amount of
money."
A little money goes quite
a way in this business. NYA
is today keeping some 275,-
000 boys and girls in high
school, at an average cost of
about $5 a month apiece. It
is keeping 125,000 in college,
at an average cost of around
$13 a month apiece. And it is
spending about $250 a year
per capita to keep 250,000
youths busy on its work pro-
jects.
Is all of this worth what
it costs? Well, for one thing
it is enabling 400,000 young-
sters to continue their edu-
cation. It is giving a quar-
ter of a million more the
experience by which, later
on, they can get jobs and
become self-sustaining.
The material it is working
with is pretty high grade,
too. Currently, for instance,
8S per cent of the NYA stu-
dents are among the top-
ranking students in their
respective schools.
Perhaps it is a general
recognition of that fact that
has spared the NYA much
of the criticism that is vis-
ited on so many other New
Deal projects. Mr. Williams
likes to tell about a recent
visit to a big eastern uni-
versity. He asked the presi-
dent of the institution to
introduce him to "the crust-
iest reactionary on the facul-
ty."
The president took him
to a Vermont-born cattle-
man who taught in the col-
lege of agriculture, and Mr.
Williams asked the man
what he thought of the
NYA work as he had seen it.
"Well," said the cattleman,
"I've no used for you. I think
you're just another Wash-
ington crackpot. 1 don't like
Harry Hopkins, and every
time I think of Franklin
Roosevelt being trusted with
a $5 bill I think, 'God save
the republic!' But I hope you
keep on with the Youth Ad-
ministration program."
Incidentally, Mr. Williams
says that the country's edu-
cators are the stoutest de-
fenders the NYA has. Part-
ly, no doubt, this is because
the program has been kept
flexible and decentralized.
Some 1600 colleges and 24,-
000 high schools are co-op-
erating in it. In each case,
the local college are school
authorities are in complete
charge. They select the stu-
dents and provide the work
by which the students earn
the money which enables
them to keep in school; the
NYA simply pays the bills.
Franco Called Henderson Is
Figure In
Key
Europe's Affairs
WASHINGTON—(UP) — Gen.;
Franco, ruler of Spain, is the ,
key figure in Europe and has
power to upset the balance of
Kuropean states, Harold Peters, \
United Press correspondent in
republican Spain during the civil
war, said in a Speech before the ■
American Society of Newspaper
Editors.
The Pyrenees mountains, hej
said, slope from Spanish soil into j
France and constitute a potent!
threat which Franco can point
any way he chooses.
Doris Fleeson, Washington
correspondent of the New York
Daily News, said* President Roo-
sevelt's recent criticisms of the!
press have been caused by a re-1
alization newspapers do not tell
a unified story of an event. She
recommended newspapers round!
up isolated stories and incorpor-!
ate them into unified, single
stories relating what happened
and the significance of events
involved.
Frank C.ervnsl, Rome cor-
respondent of International
News service, predicted that
no war would break out in
Europe unless the totalitar-
ian powers seize property of
Fnglantl or France.
"Hitler can take everything in
Europe that doesn't beiong to
England and France and there
won't be any war," he said.
"England's policy is to kid the
smaller nations into believing
they will get aid from the dem-
ocracies, then wait until Hitler
and Mussolini weaken them-
selves in trying to get past the
Russian border."
D. A. Freeman,
2. Is Buried
Funeral services were held at
!) a. m., Sunday at the Flu-
vanna Presbyterian church for
I). A. Freeman, 82, a former resi-
dent of Sweetwater, who died at
the home of his nephew, Champ
Freeman in Brownfield, pneu-
monia proving fatal.
Born in 1857 in Alabama, Mr.
Freeman came to Texas when a
lad of 12, living here since. He
is survived by two daughters,
Mrs. Bob Gantt, Sweetwater, and
Mrs. Harry Winter of View,
Texas; a sister, Mrs. Lavane Mc-
Goehce, Merkel: two brothers,
Elk Freeman, Fluvanna, and C.
Freeman of Abilene. Six grand-
children, including ,T. E. Gantt,
Sweetwater, and seven great
grandchildren, survive.
Named To SEC
WASHINGTON — (UP) —
Leon Henderson, an economist!
long associated with the newT j
deal, was nominated today by
President, Roosevelt to be a|
member of the SEC for the re-
mainder of the term expiring I
June 5, 1939. Henderson will
fill the vacancy created by the
appointment of William Douglas
to the supreme court.
(j .
Germans Against
Hitler Regime,
LaFoIlette Says
j
WASHINGTON — (UP) —
Forrmr Gov. Phillip LaFoIlette
of Wisconsin told the senate im-
migration committee many Ger-
man families who are neither
Jews nor Catholics would like
to send their children to be
reared in foreign lands.
"In my judgment", he said,
"if a secret, free and untram-
meled vote were held in Ger
man, 75 per cent of the people
would vote against the present
regime."
LaFoIlette, who recently re-
turned from a tour of Germany,
headed a list of witnesses who
endorsed a bill by Sen. Robert
F. Wagner, democrat of N. Y.,
to allow 20,000 German child-
ren under 14 years of age to en-
ter the United States by the
end of 1941.
Others were New bold Morris,
president of the council of the
city of New York; Rev. Dr. Mau-
rice Sheehy, head of the depart-
ment of religious education of
the Catholic university of Am-
erica; Rep. Edith Nourse Rog-
ers, republican of Mass., and
Dr. Robert Yarnall, Philadelphia,
member of the friends service
committee in the relief of Ger-
man and Austrian children.
Mississippi Boy
Murders Father.
Burns Farm Home
WIGGINS, Miss. — (UP) —
A high school boy told how he
battered to death his 47-year-old
father, tried to kill his mother
; and then set fire to his farm
home to destroy evidence of the
! crime.
Sheriff Sam Hinton f id the
! youth, Hoyt Bond, If!, could not
! explain w hy he went berserk'
j after he returned from a coun-
try dance.
| When he reached home/ the
boy said, his parents were
asleep. He lit a kerosene lamp,
searched until he found a
heavy leg broken from an old-
fashioned chair and "wont to
work on them". Hoyt killed his
father, Luther O. Bond, before
he could awake, he told Hin-
ton. The boy's mother, aroused
by the thud of the cudgel, leap-
ed from the lied. The 11th grade
student hit his mother until she
fell. He fired the house, awoke
a neighbor and told him his
home was burning.
Mrs. Bond regained consciou-
ness in time to escape. Aftei
wandering in a daze in a nearby
woods for two hours, she went
to a friend to told what her sot
had done.
Coughlin Cites
How Money Drew
America Into War
DETROIT — (UP) — The Rev
Charles 10. Coughlin declared
the "factual story" of America's
entrance into the World War
was contained in a cablegram to
the U. S. Secretary of State
from Walter Page, ambassador
to England, on March 8, 1917.
"The document informs us
•.hat if we did not throw our
resources against Germany and
the central powers the gola of
the world j[which I may add was
held not by governments but by
private individuals) would fail
into German hands; the Euro-
j)ean financial system would
crash anil the money which we
had invested in England and
France would be lost." Coughlin
said.
"Referring directly and indi-
rectly to these things, Ambassa-
dor Page insisted we should go
to war to save the credit of Eng-
land and France; that we should
extend more loans to support an
unsound system of economy; and
as a result of our entrance into
the war we would reap untold
profits.
"Mr. Page insisted that he
should go to war to make pro-
fits and to save the gold capi-
talistic system."
The message from Page to
Wilson, Coughlin said, was:
"Great Britain and France
must have credit in the United
States which will be large en-
ough to prevent the collapse of
world trade and the whole fin-
ancial structure of Europe."
Coughlin said that in the past
ID years the "philosophic suc-
cessors of President Wilson have
cast to the winds the constitu-
tional decision of the people and
are endeavoring to force us into
a war for the same purpose that
Ambassador Page in the first in-
stance indicated to President
Wilson."
CLASSIFIED ADS
Automobiles, Lots, Houses and apartments
all find a way to the classified. Call b7&
Reporter
Classified
Advertising
ClannKird ©cepU«J until noon for
anhlicatinn w m«- until f p m Hat-
ftr.lav f<>< th. «itn<U> Rditlmi CbmifM
n-.it ' HTTfll*tlon mint b«
ultr.r —-
LINK, RATE
I linen n lioie* t-7™
> ,nm H time* (1 wfk) '_f'
lines 1 time*
fn timec ' 1 month i pet Hn<
! •«■ fnr more than no* u: r*"i*>rtto
r , ■ rnX' wf'M* «tv ' 1 -
• M.*flSIKIKI1 DISPLAY
, , 50c pi Inc.ti
as t&iM i .«««•■ • ,6 n"
Aii« ordered by telephone r.
• 'mm pntrims limed in the telephmt.
,-itv directory no memorandum
•lareo; to return tor thi. eoorte.y th'
udvertifler i« eipwt d t" remit prompt >
W \d«"ord-red foi uu.re lhau one im«
, on but . aneolled before .iptratior.
lite ore -tiargid it rate actually earned
'vriiriM.. „d. rouat b. reported at one-
ih" re port e I do<- ">l UMTOOW t«pw;:
! ility f i r'liirn than on; n'orrect
" "l?«tfn fr.r !1 f Store dtiyi are foi rcr
net utive insertions when not ron.ee,.
lire. Ibe one <iaj rr.te pT.u .
In answering Blind Box «ja, i
.1 bring your anawer to the Reporter
ifflee wher it be -.lied fnr b th.
dverliaer
To Plat* An Ad
Dial 678
And Auk For A*
Ad Taket
Announcement®
Stated meeting
Sweetwater Lodge
No. 571. AF&AM to-
night at 8 o'clock
Visitors welcome.
Wesley Frazier, W. M.,
J. S. Schooler, Sec.
Notice: I have changed the name
of my fried pies from Tip Top
to Will's Crispy Crust fried
pies. Try 'em. They're good.
Sold at grocery stores and
lunch counters. P. G. Wills.
House Approves
^ar Department
Approprh'*
I WASHINGTON — (OP) —
I The house today approved the
i conference report "on the S508.-
(7<S!'.S2I war department anpiv-
I priatit !i bill for !!)!(), which will
i give the army 58-"> new planes
'and will va tly increase its or-
dinance equipment.
As soon as the senate acts on
j the final draft, the appropria-
1 tion measure will be sent to the
! White House.
Crops Growing
In Lake District
Southwest Photo
Officers Named
MART. jx. — (TIP) — The
Southwestern association of
Camera flub elected it new of-
ficer at tbe "econd annual Texas
blucbonnet photo fte.-ta
Gill Dewitt of Lufkin was nam-
ed president; Roy Christian,
Oklahoma City, and Holt Mas-
sey, Waco, vice presidents; and
Adelle Herring, I) In, secretary-
treasurer. .
G. W. May, 87,
Buried In Rule
Funeral services were held
Monday afternoon from the First
Baptist church in Rule for G.
W. May, 87, veteran business
man and father of G. O. May of
Sweetwater.
The Rev. .1. W. Partin, pastor,
concluded the services.
Mr. May was born in Knox
county, Tenn., in 18.jl and in
1905 moved to Rule. He was en- ,
gaged in the hardware and gro-
cery business for many years, |
was one of the largest cotton
buyers in that area., lie served
as president of the Fir-t Nat-
ional Bank in Rule until he re-
tired.
Last fall he and Mrs. May
celebrated their fiOth wedding
anniversary, 300 friotuls tailing
for the. day.
Surviving him are his widow,
three sons and three daughters
including, John May of Knox
City, George May of Sweetwat-
er, Sam May of Rule; Mrs. C. E.
Lott, Mrs. Ora McCollough and
Mr° E. O. Morgan, all of Rule.
J. M.- Barnes, 61,
Is Buried Today
Funeral services were to have
been held at 1 o'clock this after
noon at the Liberty church in
Busby for J. M. Barnes, 61, whr
died at 6:30 p. m., Monday at hi
farm home.
Surviving him are his wif'
and two children; E. E. Barnes
of Busby, and Mrs. Oran Brown
ing of Sweetwater; one sister
and one brother, both of whom
live in Corpus Christi.
The Rev. P. D. O'Brine, Stam
ford minister, was to have of-
ficated with Yates Funeral home
in charge.
Burial was to follow in the
Sweetwater cemetery.
The Barnes family has lived
in the Fisher county community
north of town for 15 years.
2 Texas Youths
Drowned In Lake
OUNTER, Tex. — (UP) —Two
brothers, Travis Odell Neill, 9,
and Donald Lee Neill. 14, of Van
Alstyne were drowned when a
boat in which they were fish-
ing with their uncle, Herman
McDonald, overturned on Lake
Qunt'jr McDonald sank twice
while attempting to save the
boys, then swam ashore
o
The average person makes use
of between 8000 and 10,000
words. Doctors, on an average,
know 25,000 and lawyers 23,000.
By Mrs. J. W. Lynch
1 LAKE SWEETWATER —
1 Corn, sudan antl maize are com-
1 i'ig up on some farms in the
j community High winds are
I lamaging seed, which are slow
I o germinating.
Mrs. Ford Goetz and family
have returned to Odessa after
j u visit with her mother, Mrs. S.
' P. Boyd.
Wednesday night visitor of his
sister, Mrs. Hayden Puckett in
Sweetwater was Harley Rogers.
Saturday night guests of the
S. A. Driggers were Mr. and
Mrs. Mondel Rogers and little
daughter, Jerry Ann. Mrs. Rog-
rs lias had splendid results from
a frame garden, already serving
lettuce, radishes and other green
vegetables from the plot.
Elliott Rogers of Sweetwater
was a visitor recently with his
•larents, Mr. and Mrs. John Rog-
ers.
Miss Clara Bennett and Mrs.
Tom Miller were recent guests
of the J. W. Lynch family.
Bobbie Frank Boyd spent Fri-
day night in the Bittercreek
community with Clemen Lee
Montgomery.
A. B. Driggers of Whiteflat
was a visitor during the week
with his brother, Sherman Drig-
gers. The Driggers visited anoth-
er brother, Ike, during llie week.
Mrs. J. W. Lynch is having
dental work done in Sweetwat-
er.
Mike and Clay Trammell were
business visitors at the Lynch
farm last week.
Mr. antl Mrs. L. D. Favor, Jr.
of Moody were guests lately of
Mr. and Mrs. Irl Faver and L.
D. Faver, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wyatt
have returned to their home in
Mineral Wells after a visit with
her mother, Mr t! t, McRey-
nolfls
Mr.:. £. P Boyd ha purchased
a new tractor for her farm here.
Mrs. Earl Scott, Mrs. R. L. Mo-
Reynolds antl Mrs. Frank Wyatt
visited the White Church ceme-
tery in Mulberry Canyon Mon-
day.
Jews Strike
*n Palestine
HAIFA, Palestine — (CP) —
Jews proclaimed a general
strike in Haifa in protest against
the deportation of 270 Jewish
refugees, who had been refused
admission to Palestine because
they had no passports.
Police fired into the air to dis-
lieen sentenced to nine months
j after attempting to smuggle the
refugees into the Holy Land,
er Assimi, whose captain had
j the docks to watch the sailing
| of the refugees aboard the steam-
| perse crowds that gathered at
A few hours earlier 218 Jew-
! ish immigrants from Germany,
j Austria and Czechoslovakia, in-
■ I eluding 50 women and 10 child-
ren. had been arrested and plac-
i <1 in a lviiliu-i'.v camp at Sara-
, fand aftei they >virii found wan-
! dering along the coast between
Gaza and Jaffa.
o
Four Sentenced
In L1. S, Court
SAN ANGELO — (UP) — U.
S. Dist. Judge William H. At-
j well of Dallas sentenced four
: prisoners to federal prisons to-
day in clearing the criminal
docket in federal court.
William N. Ellisor, 51, Balling-
j er, was sentenced to a year and
' a day at the La Tuna peniten-
tiary, El Paso, for possession of
mash, whisky and a still; W. T.
Norriss, 33, San Angelo, 13
I months at Leavenworth, narcot-
ic traffic; Mrs. Josephine San-
| clicz Edwards, 45, San Angelo,
j 13 months in the Alderson, W.
! Va.. reformatory, narcotic sales:
Dewey Wright 2;?, Coleman,
three days in jail for deliberate-
ly knocking down a mail box
with a truck.
Wanted: Operator with city fol-
lowing. Jean's Beauty Shop.
Apartments For Kent
•w,
<*.
The Southwestern Life InsiH^
ance Company has assets Ot
over sixty million dollars. Joe
II. Bootlie, Representative.
Lest We Regret
Wo made and sold 20,OtX) pounds
of butter last month. Good?
You bet! Try it. Home Dairy.
Notice: I have changed the name
of my fried pies from Tip Top
to Wills' Crispy Crust fried
pies. Try 'em. They're good.
Sold at grocery stores and
lunch counters. P. G. Wills.
Employment
Wanted: Experienced girl to do
general housework. Must have
references. Apply 513 Elm St.
Laundry work wanted. Wet
wash. Rough dry. Finished
work. 406 Bradford St.
Wanted: Sewing to do. Reason-
able. Children a specialty. Mrs.
Floyd Nicholson. 006 Walnut
street.
For Rent: Nicely furnished two-
room house. Modern. Water
paid. Mechanical box. Dial
For Rent: Two-room furnished
apartment. Utilities paid. 308
Lamar.
For Rent: Two-room furnished
apartment Utilities paid.
Phone 745. 1200 Walnut street.
For Rent: Two-room furnished
apartment. Adults. Utilities
paid. Phone 2777. 106 West
Ave. C.
For Rent: Two-room unfurnished
duplex apartment. Modern and
convenient. Newly decorated.
■113 Orange. ^
Rooms For Rcih
For Rent: Bedroom, Next to
bath. Hot water, private en-
trance. Man preferred. 505
Bowie.
For Rent: Southeast and south-
west bedrooms for rent to
boys. With meals. Call 2598 or
50G Locust.
FOR ULXT: Southeast and
Southwest bedrooms for rent
to boys. With meals. Call 2598
or 506 Locust.
For Rent: Newly furnished East
front bedroom, garage. Mrs. C.
S. Boylcs. 205 Hickory.
For Sale
I
' Dahlia tubers, bedding plants,
canna roots and seeds. Plant
now. Sweetwater Floral
Phone 2621.
Co.
Pull the Trigger on
Lazy Bowe!s; and Also
Pepsin-ize Stomach!
When constipation brings on acid indi-
gestion, bloating, dizzy spells, gas, coated
tongue, sour taste, and bad breath, your
stomach is probably loaded tip with cer-
tain undigested food and your bowels don t
move. So you need both Pepsin to help
break up fast that rich undigested food in
yourstomnch, and Laxative Senna to pull
the trigger on those lazy bowels. So be
sure your laxative also contains Pepsin.
Take Dr. Caldwell's Laxative, because its
Syrup Pcjisin helps yon gain that won -
dcrlul stotnach-ruicf, while the Laxative
Senna moves your bowels. Tests prove the
power of Pepsin t o dissolve those lumps of
undigested protein lood which may linger
in yourstomach, tocause belching, gastric
acidity and nausea. This is how pepsin-
izing your stomach helps relieve it o( sucn
distress. At the same time this medicine
wakes up lazy nerves and muscles in your
bowels to relieve your constipation. ' s':c \
how much better you feel by taking tno i
laxative that al-o puts Pepsin to work on
that slotnach discomfort, too. Even lin-
icky children love to taste this pleasant
family laxative. Buy Dr. Caldwell s Lax-
ative—Senna with Syrup Peps'" at your
druggist today! (Adv.)
Two-room furnished apartment.
Call at 808 James street after
5 o'clock.
Nicely furnished apartment in
brick building. Close in. With
Frigidaire. -107 E. 3rd St. Dial
2164.
FOR RENT: Furnished apart-
ment. 100 Hickory.
V\;K KENT Kurniah-rt
vnentH Phone 48- .
French Lottery j
Is Continued '
PARIS — (UP) — The French
national lottery, condemned un«
der the finance decrees of Fi-
nance Minister Paul Reynaud
last October but given a new
lease on life by popular protests,
was continued until the end of
1911 by a new decree published
in the official journal.
i,
WHY GO OFT OF TOWN
FOR YOl ll GLASSES?
Sep rut. K. E. CLARK O. D.
Suectwater's newest Optome-
trist. He can save you mon-
ey on yntir gbe-srs. High fina-
lity service and glasses right
hen at home. More than 23
years as optomerlst. Call
and let's talk It over.
Office North Side Square
Ground Floor Dosfher llldg.
LEGAL
DIRECTORY
MAYS & PERKINS
Attorneys-nt-Law
522-25 Levy nitlg.
Sweetwater. Texas
BE ALL, RICA LI'
ft YONOK
Sweetwater, Texas
Attomeys-nt-Law
Ooseher llldg.
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Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 310, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 25, 1939, newspaper, April 25, 1939; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth282101/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.