Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 70, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 17, 1943 Page: 4 of 6
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Ye cannot drink the nip of the Lord, and the cup
•t devils! ye cannot be partakers of the Lord's table,
and of the table of devils.—I Corinthians 10:21.
* * *
I hate inconstancy—1 loathe, detest,
Abhor, condemn, abjure the mortal made
Of such quicksilver clay thin in his breast
No permanent foundation can be laid.—Byron.
Wonted Manpower
Having a swelled head is a
a tight place.
fine way to get yourself in
FARM AND FACTORY WAGES
$23 o month
$44.50 a
$41 a month
plus board
month, 521 2-
plus board
70-hour week
hour week_| |
70-hour week
$133.50a |
month, 425 »-
hour week J
Problem of keeping ’em down on the farm is emphasized by fact
that farm wages have increased only 79 per cent in past 30 years
as compared with a 300 per cent boost in factory wages. Of this
79 per cent increase. 53 per cent was during the January, 1941-
June. 1913 period, while factory wages advanced only 23 per cent.
Oiec* ihowi vitomini
in Tood» listed
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Thiamine |
Riboflavin J
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: u
Chech shows vitamin*
in foods listed
a
0AI9Y P9O0UCTS, EGGS
i
i
| VEGCTAILES
Butter ....... ..
!✓
y jj Asp jragus, green ........
.........
✓
( Beans, hma.........
Oeam ................
' v/
y 1 Beans, navy..............
E95-, whole ............
v/
✓
a/
a/
| y Bears, snap ......... *
Ess yolk ......
%/
v/
y Beet greens.. ...........
Milk, whole
%/
✓
✓
✓
✓ 1 Broccoli...............
MEAT, POULTRY rtSH
j Brussels sprouls ..........
8cef, lean ..........
✓
✓
v/
Cabbage................
Chiclten
✓
✓
j Carrots..................(
Codfish . .
!✓
v/
; Cauliflower.............
fish-liver oils..........
✓
, Chard ......
Haddock
1
y
i Collards ........... j
Kidney
! x/
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v/
| Com, sweet..............■
liver................
i ✓
v/
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. Cowpeos ..........]
Mutton, !eo*
1 ^
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Dandelion greens,........
Port, iean
Is-
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j Dock...................|
Roe, fttfi
v/
%/
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Eggplant................!
Salmon
n/
x/
y
^ Erd,,e.................
Sordines
v/
,; Kale ...............
WUfT
j Lc.l,................
Apple!................
s'
✓
!i Lettuce, green
Apncotj ........
»/
x/
✓
Mushrooms
Avecadot
%/
*/
a/
Mustard 3teem...
Bananas .....
v'
✓
Blackberrst*
%/
Blueberries
%/
! D j
Contalo-jp
s/
a/
y
Cherries . .
y
Cranberries
y
Currents, block.....
y
Peppery, s^eet..........
Date;
✓
a/
Potatoes . ...........j
F,J!
v'
j
Gooseberries..... .. .
1
y
Grapefruit
✓
y
Rutabagas
Lemons
y
Soybeans.........
Oranges
v/
!
y\
Spinach .....
Olives, jrcen and upc
✓ 1
|
i
; Squall), ycllo-..........
rcochcs
✓ 1
✓
Swcetpotafoes........
Peon
v/
✓
Pineopplci
s
y\
Tumip greens
Plums
Water cress
Prjne-
!
Papbtine.
Cowberries
Cc»n yellow
lonferi.te* ....
»/
. WUI. grasrt
Yrcrtrrrtk*
✓ j
✓
1
$ j
il 1 j!
< £ <£ Z v.
J
✓ i v/
✓ | v/
✓ l v/
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✓l y
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Clip and save this chcck-li^f of vitamin valuer
World-Wide Sympathy
By 8. Burton Heath
Senator Green of Rhode Island, in his defense of the
Army’s decision to put 8,200,000 men into khaki, called
attention to a flaw which is hampering seriously this na-
tion’s war effort—the failure to make efficient use of
our available manpower.
Even as the semi-official spokesman for the War Depart-
ment, speaking a piece which the army had helped prepare,
he conceded that we can use and service 8,200,000 men only
if we do away with certain wasteful practices that no poli-
tician yet. including Senator Green, has dared attack iron-
tally.
* * *
These include absenteeism, featherbedding, slandard-of-
living workdays, labor hoarding, private and governmental:
excessive turnover in personnel, duplication of duties and
services, and many lesser evils which, in the aggregate, cost
hundreds of thousands of man-hours every day.
What Hitler does is no guide to what we should do.
Nevertheless, those professional Friends of Labor who
force us to retain some of these wasteful practices might
ponder how Hitler handlers “undutiful” Germans who
think a man still can loaf in the midst of total of war.
Over there they go to prison for from 10 weeks to six
months, the OWI says.
We are not prepared to adopt authoritan methods. Let’s
hope that we never are driven to it, either in order to win
the war or because we lose the war. But neither are we
obliged to tolerate permanently the irresponsibility of ship-
yard employes who walk out because of the presence of one
man, expelled front the union for working at his war job
on a holiday.
♦ * *
It would be much less than authoritan if our government
took firm measures to prevent shutdown of construction
on a synthetic rubber plant, because of a jurisdictional row
over the moving of a power pole a distance of 15 feet.
And how about the firm which had to use 18,000 man-
days last year answering questionnaires from a dozen
government departments and bureaus?
% There’ would lie no valid argument over the 8,200,000 ar-
my, if these and kindred evils were cured, so that, available
manpower could be used efficiently.
More and more people are making the tune in opportunity
a tune of success—thanks to war work.
* * *
If all the heated arguments in the world were placed end
to end they wouldn't reach any conclusion.
* * *
Every grocer now lias a hobby he doesn’t particularly
enjoy —.it a nip collect lug.
* * *
The sooner all of us are on our toes, the sooner we’ll
stomp all over Hitler’s Mussolini's and Tojo's.
THE STORY: T>> I’m Friday, should have understood that,
glider pilot, anil big 131 Bryan, ' And if she was so determined to
ll.vcr. Loraine Stuart's action in
i forging Captain Carr's name to
i an Army order offers a serious
problem. Pat is torn between
her sense of fair piny and hei-
st use of loyally to Jimmy t are.
She decides to say nothing
about Loeaiie. to spare Jimmy's
feelings. 1-31 Itrynn. on the oili-
er hand, feels (hat loyalty to his
country und to bis friend de-
mand action. He calls t liieago,
reports to ( apt. Carr. “I know,
says Jimmy. “Blit just sit tight
a little yvhile. I want to think"
* * *
I V I’T\l \ t \ Hit's OR DEBS
CHAPTER XV
Capt. James Carr needed j
sound sleep this night and he
didn’t get much. He was too eon- j
sumed with thinking, if lie had- |
n't been a healthy young ani- j
mal it might have told on him, j
"There’s something screwball j
about this whole deal,” he told j
himself, rigid after he left Lo- I
at midnight. They had
in the mezzanine for j
than an hour. "If she was- j
i ll a - well somebody-—”
never did finish what j
rainy
tai k i
inon
n’t .
He
would happen if she wasn’t such
.i well .somebody. He was sitt-
,ng on his bed, one Army dress
shec if and one on. He >1111
held the iff one in his hand and
he was staring at nothing.
Wham.
Ti e .-hot hit a wastepaper
baskei. kittered over and stop-
ped side t- chair. Thoyving it
gate Jimmy a kind of release,
but it was no way to treat a
d . shoe. He picked it up
again, inspected it, and rang for
■1
four bits, pal," he
the boy, also giving
Shoes. "See that these
mirrors in the morn-
| "Here’s
smiled at
him Ixitii
look like
| ing.”
"Yes sir. sure, Captain Carr."
Then lie sat with n ;s feet on
- tile back of a chair, body sprayy 1-
j ed on the be !. Hi envisioned Lo-
I raine Stuart.. Taffy hair in per-
fect order. Lips and rouge ami
eye business all perfect, as us-
j ual. A swell somebody. Only.
make that trip, why didn’t she
telephone him if she couldn't
make it'.' And most of all. wry
did she have to forge his name
in order to catch up?
Soon after his pilot friend, Ed
Bryan, telephoned him from El-
mira. Jimmy went to sleep. If
sleep it could be called. Me was
still upset about the whole sit-
uation.
He was still upset about it.
next morning at breakfast. He
felt better physically, but lie
felt somcbo\\r awkward about
starting with Pat and substitut-
ing Loraine as his passenger
going west.
“No ,that’s not fair.” lie argu-
ed. “Lorry got a dirty break at
the -tart.” •
* * *
He was trying valiantly to
stand up for his fiancee in his
own mind. Contrarii.v, though,
he kept thinking of Pat with fa-
vor too. He remembered how
Bat had been stricken w ith stage
fright as they approached Cle-
veland. and tried so hard to be
nnre ihint just talking about
the city. Making her speech, she
had still been like a school girl,
at first Then he had seen her
lift her chin, and her violet eyes
show a little anger, and Fat
had made a good speech after
all. In Chicago, she had wow-
ed 'em. Had as much poise as a
veteran trouper.
lie wondered what Pal Friday
had done for a living before he
found her. Or she found him.
He grinned, remembering the |
way she n.-i vily took over his 1
office that morning in New i
York City, bluffing a whole
string of other girls who want- i
e i jobs. And Pat had been the j
second fastest soaring pupil in
: i- experience, the other being j
u boy who already had studied ]
aviation. In barely nimf days
Bat had marie a sailplane salute
and say yes ma'am.
The waiter came to his table ]
with two morning newspapers,
the fiist Jim had seen since lea- !
viny Elmira.
"Sa-a-ay.” he beamed at the j
front pages.
picture was his fiancee,
Loraine Stuart. When it
really Pat.
“Oh, oil oh,” Jimmy
moaning and laughing at
was
the
sa-ine time The papers of course 1 et ^cl1 and students 871.o5.
had been told that Loraine! Sweetwater Hospital 100 Per-
would In- the passenger. Pictur-
es had been taken in a terrific
rush at Elmira, at Cleveland,
and here in Chicago, itself. Pub-
licity agent- all down the line
had been told that Jimmy and
his fiancee were coming, so of
course the error was natural, i Mae Lnvvorn 81. Claire
Jimmy was thinking fast. In i Sl-50, Marian High SI.
had-
Blam .82,
j damn it.
she'd been drinking. He
Bat Friday-
—loorcmg t(
50 cute
cc’Wn’t
figure that.
He ami
Uy
for anything
—smiled
at him
rail 10 hai
1 agreed the
jt flying
an 1
from three-column pictui
es, and
drinking
couldn't
who diets
don’t mix.
uiiderstaru
i t keep ngri
Jimmy (
;1 anyb
eements.
’ari j
f.o-
Bat l ad other pones, t<
.s'jaring flight had almost
the day's play front the
>0. The
stolen
war it-
truth, he was elated, and
n't stopped to analyze why.
Suddenly the personal import
of the error struck him, howev-
er. It, wasn't funny at all, it
was awftil. At least, with Pat
kicked back to Elmira now, and
with Loraine bound to hit the
roof when she saw the pictures
and the mistake. "Whe-c-w,”
! Jimmy breathed. .
And then, strangely perhaps,
for a young man engaged, Capt.
James Carr’s mind sought a way
to protect not his fiancee but
the other girl.
"This is not fair lo Put,” he
told himseib abrupty. "Why—
why hell's-to-Belsy, that kid is
tops. Look at the way site fitt-
| ed in. The way she took over
and saved my skin there at El-
mira . . . And another thing,
these picthres will be all over
the country, pictures of Pat,
-so . . -. ”
He had forgotten breakfast.
He sat there a moment more,
starring, thinking. Then on
! quick decision he went to a long
distance telephone and placed a
call for Elmira.
When his party had answer-
! ed, he said, "That you. Ed Bry-
; an? . . . This is Captain Carr
I again . Yep, in Chicago. Tak-
j ing off in about an hour, Lis-
I ten. Ed, here's another order,
! and hung it all this one isn’t
| forged. Ed. you’re my friend,
too. Now li.-ten—you go get Pat
I Friday, t• • Ii her I sent you, and
l you tuck her in an airplane and
; come chasing after me. Under-
; stand? Pat knows my route of
i travel. You help her catch up i
with
stop."
Viola Schmidt SI, Norma Sam-
ples $1, Rubj Barter 81. Mrs.
Frank Bowden 81. Mrs. Maud
! Sparks 81. Mrs. E. B. Pool SI.
.1. P. Toone 81. Mrs. W. C.
George 81.
Eloise Hollis 81. Maxine Bar-
nos 81. Elbertine Walker 81,
Bouiso Walton 81. Mrs. Gilbert
Sanders 81. Mrs. (Henna Rakes
50c. Mrs Annie Holder 81, Ma-
rie Ovalle 81. Estelle Ovulle 8t.
Make Warwick SI. Mrs. Daffern
81.
Money raised from sale of calf
at Sweetwater Livestock Auc-
tion SI 17.50 as follows
Sweetwater auction 825. Ben
Homes 825. Curlew Ashley 821,
Office Force, auction 810. Itoy
Chapman SO. Alva Headrick 85,
Gordon Headrick 85. Brooks
Packing Co. 85. Pace Pac king Co.
$5, J L. lie! is $5, w. I). Hardy
85. W. T. Bayfield 85. T. T. Me- j
Cord 85. A. Harvey 82.50. l-'red
Brooks 85, Menshaw Home-, 85, ’
and C. W. Ingleheart 85.
American National Insurance
Co.—Employes— C. ('. Tarver
S3, I. E. Nelson 82. C. A. Gibbs,
82 Dorothy Smith 8_>. .1. C.
Pen-son si. ti. F. Riddle 82, l). L.
Laughlin 81 and L. A Waddell
$2.
Mr. and Mrs. C. B Brantley
810, Bert Williams 81, A. C.
Brantley SI.
Sue's Hal Shop 's:;. Bunklev’s
Store 85. Mrs. Jack Zeigler 81.
OneitaV Tot Shop 81.50. L. M.
Hubbard S2. Mr. and Mrs. Bar-
field 85. Mr. and Mrs. L. D Gal-
braith 82.50, (’has. Stracener 82.
Wednesday, March 17, 1943 dfice m Sweetwater, Texas, Feb. 9, mt
First Baptist
Adults Give 566 0
Gospels For Kits
Response; to the call for need-
ed Gospels to go in the prose**
quota of soldier comfort kits has
resulted in 677 Gospels ordered
or turned into the production
room of the Red Cross, All Gos-
pels received over the amouSt
needed will tie placed in the
storeroom for future kit quotas,
which are expected soon.
The adult department of tlje
First Baptist church is givut-s
500 copies of Saint John. Circle
three of the First Presbyterian
church is giving another 150.
M, - II C. Young»gave nine Gos-
ih B when she returned 150 fin-
j-heri kits to the sewing root"#
;iIso three soap boxes. Mrs. N. (
Dtivi- donated four Gospels and
Mrs. A. C. Brantley gave 11.
I The County Council of Home
Demonstration clubs. Mrs. OlUe
Cox, president, accepted ti.e-
making of 38 blouses Saturday.
The Champion Home Demon-
stration dub-' by Mrs. C. Thorpe
gave one quilt.
Mrs. Ross Artiiijili of No-
lan, clininiioii of (hat conn-"/
ty unit returned 30 rompers
wliieli were made by the
Nolan Baptist ehureh wom-
en ;intl one wheelchair robe
donated by ties. F. J. Rich-
ardson. Members who parti-
cipated with number finish-
ed are: Jewell Lister, two,
Maggie Womack, three; lla
Livingston, one; Ruth Jones,
four; Jewell Kgger, four; 9
Minnie and Maudie Hyde,*
three; Ruby Kgger, three;
Flora le wis, two; Ora Lee
Hale, one: Mines. Mack Col-
lins, two; Hubert Chrislin,
two; I-. I*. Monroe, three;
John Storey, two: Jim Mol--®”
row, two; Lem Bay, two,
j Tim Hovqemaking depart-
ment of Blackwell, Mrs. Min-
ina- Fletcher, instructor, return-
ed Hi rompers, made by stu-
dents, Girls who gave this slw
vice were Pam Sanderson, Xula
B. Thorn, Mildred Walls, Mild-1
red Hipp, Verla Mae Jackson,
Sarah Etta Casey, Juanita Brice
Maudenu Waggoner and Bilik:
Ruth Ware. **
Tuesday was another well at-
; tended opening day for the
Rod Cross sewing. There were
I 27 worker.-- with six Kubekah
lodge members quilting all day
n the hope of finishing tin-it
patriotic quilt. Tile Baptist Wo-
1 men’s Missionary Union gave
another day with eight mem-
ber- registered. Members of the
American Legion Auxiliary w,ero
present also. » AI
Knitters are turning in their
work daily as the deadline of
Friday, March It), nears. Mrs.
Muse Newman, knitting chair-
! man. hopes to make a shipment
RED CROSS-
(Continued from page 1)
Rigsby $20. W AV. Stephens $5,
Dub Mitchell $2, YV. L. Tucker
P. R. Tucker $2, P. R. Stephens
82, Jack Wright $2, Charles Pitt-
man $1, Ruby Nell Gill $1 and
Murchison And Cramer Compa-
ny $25.
W. N. Weatherby $2, Bert
Lane $2, George Curtis $2, Al-
bert Phil 1 ips $1, Buck A. Mc-
Cormick $1. Jim Kinsey $1, E.
J. Connor 81. L. J. Vinarri $1,
Clyde Snow 81, G. C. Bromley
85, J. D. Spradlin $1, W. E,
Spradlin 81 and Paul Taylor
81.
Mrs. John Thornton $1, Mrs.
Wilma Landers 81, Mrs. Polly
Creswell $1, Mrs. Pauline Suiett
8i, Lillian Foster $1, Ernest
Foster 81. Larenzo Moreland 81,
and Starr's Sandwich Shop .$5.
Opal Joe George 81, Mrs. G. C.
Brooks $1, Lee Armstrong $2,
Horatio Bard well 82. Elizabeth
Key $5. Kenneth Winn 81, H. S.
Tomlinson 82.50, Bob Reynolds
$1, F. C. Ferrell 82, A. D. Cor-
ley 81, Troy Fox 81. John Hoff-
man 81 A. A. Formin' $1. Dencal
Cave 81, W. A. Glass 81, Roy
Prim 81. and M. C. May $2.50.
Edgar C. Gardner 81, Kenneth
C. Gardner 81, Kenneth Eades
81, T. C Nicholson $1, J. D.
Vaughan 81. Joe Jones $1.
Clyde Holliday 85, Mrs. OirTa
Coleman 810, Will Scott 85,
Vernon Carthran 81, E. B.
Dooley 81. J. T. Norman 81, L.
L. Sampson 81. Fred Gardner
810, Ellis McJenkins 82 and Mr.
and Mrs. E. S. Gordan 82. .
Students of J. P. Cowan school
—Miss Emma Joiner 82.50, V. E.
Barnes $2.50, Willie May McMil-
lan $2.50. Frances 1-awl is $1.25,
Miss Raegan $3.50, Ohio Chen-
oweth 82.tiO, and students $10.19.
Junior High School — Mack
Wait until the junior crowd j
! sees this basque jumper. Such j
| fun with contrasting weskit ef-
! feet front and back. A real j
j love.
I Pattern No. 8377 is in sizes li,
I 13. 15, 17 and 19. Size 13 jumper 1
takes 2 1-1 yards 39-inch mate-
.. ! rial, contrasting bodice 5-8 yard,
Alexander 82, Pearl Forester 81. j L„]inll)1, , ,vs yards, (i 1-2 yards
C. W. Tarter 85, Mrs.
Holland 81, George Stiles 85,
Mrs, D. It. Brown 82, Mrs. Over-
ton 81, Mrs. H. D. Reed $5, Mr.
and Mrs. R. J. Patterson 85. Ruth’
Burden $5, Mrs. .1. Frank Dav-
is $1, Mrs. Jewel C. Richeter $2.
Elmerine Barron 82. Jeanette
Wade 85, Mrs. Garland Vinson
85. G. J. Diehimann 85, Margar-
Odessa | f?ulmpe
ric-rac.
For this attractive pattern,
send 15 cents, plus i cent for
postage, in coins, with your
name, address, pattern number
and size to Sweetwater Report-
er oday's Pattern Servire, 100
7th Avenue, New York.
Cave fabric. See a dozen new
ways to re-make old garments
into useful new fashions in our
cent—John Hubbard 815, Maud j enlarged spring pattern took
W. Cooze $10. Donna Maekic $5. I and sewing guide, Fashion, just
Mamie L. Baker 85. Winifred j publi hed. It contain 98 new
Wright 81. Biennis Minos LeffJer ! patterns, has 52 pages. The price
Si. Margaret McMurray $2. j is 25c.
Dorothy Lackey SI. France K.
Evelyn Holliday 85.
Dyar
Simple Funeral
Held For Morgan
. Saturday.
NEW YORK. March 17 —
(CRi—Simple funeral services
were held Tuesday for J. P. Mor-
gan, international financier and
i.ne of the world's richest men
whose name was , synonymous
with most Americans with Wall
Street.
There were no flowers and no
pall bearers and only Morgan’s
family, friends, and business as-
sociates were in the pews of Old
St. George's Protestant Episco- |
pal church on Stuyvesanl Square
when the Reverend Rush U
Sloane read the funeral servict
oi the Episcopal Book of Com- j C[)ff(3e rationing will go back
iron Piu.i'i. _ i,) the one pound for five wee!,4
eginning .March 22, Marshall
Pier, county rationing chairman,
said today, thus bringing good
Coffee Ration
Won't Have To
Last So Long
Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Crane 85,
Agnes Fain $1, Mr. and Mrs. K.
M. Camp, 85. Roy Craft s>. Man-
se Wood $10, C. A. Milligan 50c,
Lt. and Mis. Don M. KilpatricK
$1, Lt. and Mrs. Albert D. Gal-
j latin 81, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Eblen
81, Mr- J. X. Harvey 50c, Mr.
and Mrs. J. E. Spruill SI, Mrs.
I diaries A. Ray 81. Mrs. C. M. W.
j Evans, $1, C. M. W. Evans $1.
and J. N. Best $1.
Mrs. Lela Ferguson 50c. Mr.
; and Mrs, !•:. W. Henington jr..
j 81. Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Allen
I 81, Mrs. W S. Turner $1, Mr.
j and Mrs. W. E. Lee $1, Mr. and
Mrs. Herman Wbatley 81. Mrs.
.1. L. Lawhon 50c.
li. L. 'Shaffer 81. Mrs. R. L.
Shaffer $1, Mrs. Floyd Stevens
81. Mrs. W L Connell $1. ami
Mr. and Mrs. Neil Gross SI and Mr. and M W T. Austin jr..
Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Manor $25. ,
Levy- Brothers Department '
us, at the earliest possible [ EmployeesJ 00 per cent- j
I-lovri Smith $1, Mrs. .1 V. ( OU-
ST Mrs. W
82.
pi
| as it. was, left him confused.
The trutjh was. lie couldn't see
Loraine as anything but the
lovely somebody she appeared to
be Undeniably she was iieauti-
ful. She had been beautiful
when he first met her at an av-
iation ball, and she still was.
Oh, she rnav have had some
: faults, but who hasn't? Offhand
i he couldn't remember any of I/>-
! rain) 1 mil — today , tnnighB
she had done a strange thing,
j “She never did explain how
j she came to be late for 1' •
: start of the trip," he said I
asked her. and site acted ma '
| Thai didn't make sens", enh
| er, Army life run. with clock-
: like precision. Eleven o'clock is
j ii o'clock exactly. Even
self. Jimmy -(tidied the pictures
like a pleased boy. He hadn’t
known bow photogenic Pat
was. She looked like a cross be-
tween Betty tirable and Judy
Garland, only more so. Cutest
of all was that, astonished, half-
frightened. half-happy pose
vvi ere Pat was just getting in-
to the sailplane at Elmira, after j
he had snatched her up on the j
run.
HEARTS IN THE CLOUDS,
a headline writer had effused,
over the pictures. And then ad- j
rini, lieiow. "Handsome young,
•oaring expert and hi- Ixramilul
:i.•)')'(■<■ Mis:
He’ Jimmy ex
Good jumping grief
_______ The papers had muffed it Or
Loraine ! somebody had. They said tins I
(To Be Continuedt
—--v---
Counly School
And Road Map
Goes To ODT
A map showing all county
roads, school districts, bus stops
and routes, completed this week Larrett"si" Mr'and Mr- \V
Mias been sent into the offito' shcridnn 82. Mr. and Mi -
of defense transportation by Ed Rej(ll S20 George Conlev
F. Nehnist. county superintend-! and Mrs u- A coriiett $2
ent- Mrs. Katherine Morgan
1). D. Dixon 85, W E. Horne
85. R J. Eomby 85. J. A. Fonjby
85. (' (’. Malay 8'5, Cecil Bru-
Wiliiams 82. Geor- j ner 85. W E Towson 85. J It,
gia Fay Williams 82. Mrs. Lloyd Eidson 85. II. A Burge 85. G .1
Keisev 82, Alary l.oe Glenn 50c,
Mrs. M. E. Mitchell SI. Mrs. Dec
Simmons 81. Mrs. Julia Rush 81
Ml Roy Smith si
Mrs. W R. Manroe $•'!. Althea
Nichols 81. Ann (Springer 81.
Mrs. F. I Shaw Sr.. 85. Mrs. T
R. Hal lev 81.50. D. M. Mizell 85.
Mrs. J. T. YVhorton 81 Mr. and
Mrs. R. T. Jolly 810. John Perry
85. Madeline Neblett 81. James
Mrs AV. H.
S.
$2,
85.
Bethany s: c r. Hawkins 85.
and J. J. Erwin 810.
|{, D. Gimi-’-uii 85. AV. E. Rich-
ardson 85. .'. E. Sl.uaI'd 85. D.
W. Bledsoe s.3. Silas Martin 85,
J. B. A skins 85. H. G. Kaiser 85.
W. C. Singer 85. I. W Townsend
$3. J. II Holley $3. and R. H.
Clark 8|.
i net' s to families who have mis-
! ed the aroma of coffee for
many mornings recently. i
The current plan of one jiound
j a person for six weeks was not
j . ufficic-nt to “stretch” over the
period so far a- cupsful are eon-
eerned. The next coffee stamp
No. 26. in ration book No. *14
which i- e!.-o used for sugar
! and shoes, will be valid March
j 22 to April 25.
Coffee imports for February
, have exceeded estimates ntorA
than 2n per cent, adding substar^
I tiai amounts to previously de-
I pleteri .January inventories, lie
cited.
—---- y-
Pre-School Children '
Examined At Clinic
Conducted Tuesday
Twenty-seven children of the
pre-school age who will uttelt*
elasses next school year were
examined ruesday in a sum-
mer roundup inspection at the
J. P. Cowell school.
Major Francis Dill health
unit director, and Maxine ML*
Cormick.. health nurse, supervis-
ed the examinations with assis-
tance of tile parent-teacher
I unit.
The outlay shows the direc-
tion In which children walk to
catch their bus. direction, time
of round trip, gasoline consum-
'd in the trip and number of
(aimed 1 traveled per year.
In colors it took several
wpeks to
data.
George H Sheppard 85 Your ex
change 8i. O. E. Davis 81. A\, K
Roberts si. Air-. AV K. RolMirts
Si. Mr. and Airs. U .1 Sellers 85.
Mr. and Alt- E lb Alexander
S3 ATt Muriel Reid 81 Myrtle
Cain SI, Mrs- Eula Lee Cox $2,
compile with certain jand George AAr. Outlaw 82
John H Cochran, jr $12,50,
CHIROPRACTIC ADJUSTMENTS
t
At ill coiTvct tlx- cause of Colds, Influenza and other Itodlly
Ailments. To Ik-Ip yon regain or retain good Health nr use:
Chiropractic Adjustments, Klectrie Treatments, Colon Ther-
apy, Diet and X-ra.V.
DR. EDWIN A. DANN, Chiropractor
207 1’ecan SI. 1’1i<jh<«c Office 3201 Km. 490
.1
4
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Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 70, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 17, 1943, newspaper, March 17, 1943; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth710169/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.