Graham Daily Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 295, Ed. 1 Monday, August 11, 1941 Page: 3 of 4
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OKA HAM DAILY MSPOMW, MONDAY. AVGUST it. 1*41
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GRAHAM MUSUDMINO CO.
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OBO T 8PBAJU9 ........... Ownor
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GIVEN UPON APPLICATION
Auy erroneous reflection upuu tho
chaructor of any parson or ttrw sp-
in those columns will ho
ant prampey ©orroctrt upon
a slug brotmht to tae atteaUoa at tho
management
L important sectors of the Leningrad
[front and the Ukraine,
f For the fftrut time the 8oriet com
! munique mentioned fighting hi tim
* Uman sector of the Ukrptoa, which
the Grnmsas aald last Friday they
had already passed.
On the Leningrad front, the Rus-
sians declared, the Rod army waa
resisting at Sella!. ISO miss Am smith
of leitogtod mad In the area where
the Germans last week claimed gains
On the old fronts—SmeUnek, in
the center, Bat Tanker, in the Uk-
raine, aad Khaim, an the northern*
—the Russians said they were P«t-
ting up a stubborn fight.
Official German reports failed to
J*1 Cards of Thanks, Obituaries,
ad like notices are charged for at
naif the regular rates
The liability of Tho Graham Daily
Reporter and of Its publishers for
any error in any advertisement is
limited to the cost of such adver-
tisement.
- -----Subscription Ratos
1 month .......—Mo
D months .................... tl Ti
l year ........ fS.M
stone, to the black plains of th^ Uk-
raine, the Russians reported n stead-
fast defense. The stones, it was
said, crushed two 'Finnish battalions.
trains, such aa those
by the raw Red Army to fight
eft the counter- revolution after the
rise of Lenin, appeared once more in
action. Another frontline story said
such a train supported by infantry
which kept in touch by rackets, was
used to recapture a village from the
Elsewhere on the front, a crack
German regiment was officially re-
ported routed on the Finnish front
and a Nasi
west of ■HI
Quito as important in the battle,
was a report by the railway transport
commissariat which said that despite
persistent German attempU to bomb
ZUS2, £.*=
flict, but other than the Russian cap-; Winning of the war.
Hal bombing, the Germans tell also
OIL AND THE
FARMER
The oil industry, strange as it may
teem, is one of the fanner’s best sad
most reliable customers.
You probably don’t know it—but
much of the grease that lubricates
America’s cars and other machines
contains tallow oil, which, in turn,
comes from sheep. About 101,Wh>,
000 pounds of tallow oil in one form
01 another are consumed annually by
the petroleum industry. That re-
quires 35,000,000 sheep.
—qPhia 4w-~inal one itym in the long
list of supplies the oil industry buys
each year directly from agriculture.
To it must be added land oil from
pigs, steanine from cattle and horses,
castor oil from the castor plant,
neat’s-loot oil made from horns and
hooves, milk, fireboard, hair, felt, lea-
ther, cotton fabrics, wood products—
and dosens of others.
The petroleum’s industry’s con-
sumption of farm products grows
steauiiy, as production of oil and
lubricants inc' sses. and as new tech-
itiques and processes are developed.
And millions of dollars thus find
their way into the farmers’ pockets.
So, in a very real sense, the corner
service station is a distributor of
farm crops; and the oil industry is
one of pgriculturt’s biggest cash cus-
tomers. This is an example of how
- Amrryan industry spreads its eco-
of demolishing several trains trans-
porting Red Army traapp, and of,
damaging hundreds of Soviet tanks,
trucks, and other mechanised forces
in all fighting sectors, but especially
in the Ukraine and in the Dnieper
area.
The Russian forces west of the
Knieper are now so disorganised that
they are unable to make a concerted
stand, these German source* said,
and added that the Russian civil pop-
ulation had been ordered to destroy
communications in the German
and burn houses
Such destruction was described by
the Germans as contrary to interns*
tional law and would be dealt with
“mo* severely,’' the Berlin sources
said. The burning of grain crops was
called suicidal for Russian civilians.
The Germans also say they will take
no mercy on un-uniformed men pro-
tecting their homes.
The German high command fixed
the number of Russian planes de-
stroyed since the war began June 22
at more than 10,000 including those
on the Finnish front. Russian tabu-
lations show 46 German aircraft were
shot down Sunday. ,
The German masses still on the of- r
fensive were meeting rtrange weap-
ons of the Russian civil war .aa wslLL
as the most modern Red equipment.
Steadily organizing' deeper de-
fenses in which to enmesh the Nazi
feffittUK
19 S*. if FAT.?
waliEs is 1ms yam
ilgMf sumach sad
AND
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Graham Daily Reporter Want Ads Get Results
i i !£
lem whk
to faee-
to pay
alkr
ormi
By DWIG
legions, the Russians faced the eighth J
week of trial by fire and declared •
themselves unafraid of the worst that
Hitler now could throw against them.
From the barren, rocky hills of
the north, where front line dispatches
said a Finnish infantry Charge UT
Soviet avalanche of '
smothered by
DAYS
Reporter WiM44i 4*
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DA. MILKS
Iflirisiaanl Nwvhi Tahlals
to* to quirt tho nerves and
panatt rafbmiilng skap,
^ to» to tha drag stoaa to>
toy and got a package.
any con.
he flrtsfc
soil-depli
Tho sol
earned i
Ing the
der this
the fam
payment
100 linei
of his a
ment go
setting 1
the troul
until set
la done.
Debrin
visions c
tee learn
an assig
ing cons
the soil-
expense
Anoth'
authorial
and pen
tract Ue
terracing
china. 1
county a
and puts
same els
A thin
al, of e
but few
toy Dr. Milea Nervina Tab-
fch far ffirwuMMi top-
dtih to Ntnxmamm,
M*p, Narvona Irritability.
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With '
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NERV!Nr "A
REG’LAR FELLERS
The Pup Goes To the, Dogs
By GENE BYRNES
rv
nomic benefits throughout the whole
ecOntiyStegTu nv[Ile„ Empire....
IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE
Scratching
FMitrt
Itch Fast
For h.ief butb iuiuer of«SrS^!^|
Wihlrtc-* foot, acabin. ri.hr* and Mhn «•
lar-illy cauard dun trnohlr*. uv world tafnou*
«nolin«. anuarptic. liquid D D. D Prracnplwn.
(.rrasrlm, Mamlra. Srnthca irritation and
U“*ckly (top* interne itchinf. 35c trial bottle
Tro*f, it. or your money back. A»k yotv
today lor D. D. D. PaucaimoN.
A LKA - SELTZER affords
J\ unusually prompt and ef-
fective relief in Headach*
beesnae H la to complete solu-
tion, randy to go to work as
aoon as you swallow it. Its
pamrelieving action is made
More positive by alkaline buf-
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breakdown in tho stomach.
OTARS ON PARADE
Bj TONI B068E1T
» »
Aiks-Seltzer being a combina-
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lizing ingredients has gained
wide usage and popularity
among those who occasionally
suffer from Acid Indigestion,
Cold Symptom, * “Morning
Aftar* misery, MuacuUtr Fo»
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Aiks-Seltzer is pleasant to
taka, non-laxative, prompt and
affective in action.
DAN DUNN—Secret Operative No. 48 — Keep Up With Hie Adventures Daily In This Paper
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Trout, H. I. Graham Daily Reporter (Graham, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 295, Ed. 1 Monday, August 11, 1941, newspaper, August 11, 1941; Graham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth888434/m1/3/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting The Library of Graham.