Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 139, Ed. 1 Monday, October 27, 1941 Page: 2 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 21 x 17 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:
• ; •
MONDAY, OCTOBER 27,
tangs Take On 'Qalloping Qus' At Sweetwater Friday
Team Is
Strong
* Local 11
Takes Louis' Measure
Whtte, Elusive Speed
Threat, Is Question
For Contest
Rolling onward and gather-
ing momentum as they go, the
unbeaten, untied Sweetwater
Mustangs clash with another
strong conference foe in the La-
mesa Golden Tornadoes hero
at 8 p. m. Friday in Mustang
Bowl.
The decision in this game
probably rests with Galloping
Gus White, the Tornado speed
threat. If the Mustangs can
hold this elusive lad, they will
win the game. If they can't—
then look for an upset.
Not only Is White one of
«4ie most dangerous ranners
in the Mtate, hut he can paw*
as well. It was White's m-
nhig that defeated mighty
Odessa, even after the
Krone* had out-played the
Tornadoes in every other
phase of the game.
Dangerous Gus had a field
day in out-stepping the Big j
Spring Steers' heavier but slow-
er team and Lamesa won that
1 tattle. 20 to 7. The lad has been
praised more than once as of;
all-state caliber.
While Sweetwater, perhaps.
has no single player who has
been praised as much as White. I
the Mustangs have a backfield _ __ ,
combination that hasn't been >tPPF< H '1VPI1 t
stopped this year in Marion > llOVl 11 L
Flanagan, Emmett Young. Vir-
gil Turner and Johnny Hedrick.
The first three carry the ball
with speed and efficiency, aid-
ed by the blocking of Hedrick
and protected by the, so far. j
west (jowerful line play in Dis-
trict 3AA.
lamesa has won four and
lost three this season. The rec-
ords: Lamesa 33. Tahoka 0; 20,
Thomas Edison of San Antonio,
0; 0, Plainview. 12; 14, Odessa,
13; 0, Abilene, 6: 20, Rig Spring.
7: 0, San Angelo, 12.
Sweetwater: 33, Mineral Wells
0; 28, Brownwood. 6: 29, Gra-
ham. tj; 45. Midland. 0; 43, Colo-
rado City, 0; 45, Abilene, 6.
Port
Joe
Custer,
Louis is
Midi., quartermaster will he ready for liiiu when
inducted into army shortly. Champion js fitted
following exhibition there.
Also leading contenders
for District 3AA honors, the
han Angelo Bobcats, unbeat-
i n and untied in conference
play, clash with their tough-
est foe to date in Odessa's
htavy and dangerous Bron-
chos who have lost only to
lamesa, IH to 14. The win-
mr of the San Angelo-Odes-
sa fray, should provide the
most seriotts threat to the
Sweetwater Mustangs, pro
v.tled the Mustangs elimin-
ate Ijitmcsa Friday night.
Alter beating Lamesa. 12 to
0. in the rain last week. San
Angelo apparently has the edge,
but Oflessa has improved since ]
losing an upset to Lamesa. The
1;rones nosed out Abilene. 7 to
• 'tereaied Colorado City, 30 to
i . ;*nd big Spring 21 to 6.
San Angelo edged out Mid-
land 13 to (i, Colorado City, 1!)
to t>, anrl then whipped Lamesa.
Abilene iackres Midlawl. the
much abused team of District
A, and is rated better than
1.n iven chance of winning over
ine Bulldogs, who have yet to
win a game this season.
Big Spring takes on a non
c< nteience toe in the Plainview
bulldogs from District 1AA, and
t i);(,ratio City should take Class
Loraine into camp without
much trouble.
3AA STANDING
. ..V .STANDINGS
IlPMktt.s l.ust Week
.Sweetwater 45. Abilene
San Angelo 12, Lamesa 0.
Big Spring 38. Midland 0.
lo.oijno City 57, Roscoe 0.
'I lie :u\ \ Stan
Kweetwater
Han Angelo"
I I' <t s.sil
Lamesa
Big Spring
Abilene
( i loiarlo City
Midland
I.W This Week
, Abilene at Midland.
Lamesa at Sweetwater.
San Angelo at Odessa.
1,< tame at Colorado City.
Plainview at Rig Spring.
What makes « Leadci
in Laxatives?
Adaptable BLACK DRAUGHT
I 'v l*een a be*t selling laxative
\ itb four generations in < the
Southwest. This spicy, aromatic
l.owrier is easy to take and you
i euiaw the strength to suit
your needs. Jt contains a tonic
laxative that-helps tone lazy in
U.Htinal muscles. That's impor
tant. So next time, try BLACK
DRAUGHT! Economical. too
JCi to 40 doses just 25.
I ill
Gone 'All Out'
In Single Game
c*
By I'nited Press
. What would happen if the
Texas Longhorns went "all out" j
for an entire game? ,
The Longhorns haven't yet!
—they haven't had to. In beat-
ing five opponents by top-hea
vy scores, Dana X. Bible has j
used his first string lineup less |
than half of any game, a total j
of 119 minutes, out of a possible
300.
The longest time the starters |
have played in a single game j
as against Oklahoma, an even j
minutes; the shortest 18
against Louisiana State Uni- j
ver.sity.
j
In the 119 minutes played, the ]
first stringers have scored 181
touchdowns for 108 points, or j
nearly a point a minute, not I
counting after touchdown tries.
Here's the record:
Against Colorado, 22 minutss, ,
four 'touchdowns.
Against LSU, 18 minutes, ;
three touchdowns.
Against Oklahoma, 30 mm-
utes, live touchdowns.
Against Arkansas, 28 minutes, ,
four touchdowns.
Against Rice. 21 minutes, two
touchdowns.
Texas' second and third teams
have scored the rest of the
Lcnghorns' 190 points.
Frankie Albert
Is Ferguson s
Pick For Hero
By H A BUY
United
FERGUSON
ess Sports Editor
NEW YORK—(UP) _ Mon-
day morning grid-irony:
Hero of the week — Erankie'
Albert, Stanford's ail-American
quarterback, who set up one
touchdown with a 47-yard run,
kicked a point after touchdown
and ran his team with great
daring and skill. He was the "dif-
ference between two good foot-
ball teams—Stanford and Wash-
ington—and most of the credit
for Stanford's 13 to 7 victory
goes to him. Albert defied all
the instructions of all the foot-
ball coaches who ever lived by
running on fourth down occa-
sionally when the ball was in
Stanford territory.
Lufkin-Corp us
Non-Conference
Game Is Preview
Two South Texas
Giants Rated fry
Some Best In State
By TOM W. MIIjLEB
United Press Correspondent
Lufkin and Corpus Christi
ranked by some the No. 1 and
No. 2 high school football teams
in Texas, meet this week, end
the game will send slamming
into each other the two highest-
powered offenses in the state.
The encounter will not mean
a thing in the standings—it is
strictly an inter-district scrap—
but it could be a preview of a
semi-final playoff in mid-Decem-
ber, for there are many who
look for these two unbeaten,
untied teams to sweep all dis-
trict and playoff opposition be-
fore them until they reach each
other weeks hence in a battle
that will count.
I.ufkin's Panthers, the fastest
scoring team in the state, has
rolled up 296 points in six
games. That is an average of 19
points a game—a point a min-
ute with an extra touchdown
thrown in. I.ufkin's opponents
have scored just once, the six
points Livingston counted last
week.
Not far behind are Corpus
Christi's Buccaneers. In six
games they have totalled 245
points to 19 for the opposition.
| That is 41 points a game.
The liUfkin-Corpils Chris-
ti struggle will ly Friday
at the East Texas city, and it
overshadows the nearly 30
j conference games which will
clarify further district races.
Already district standouts
are taking their places as
odds-on favorites to gain
the playoff round, and in
only three districts is the
situation still muddled.
An even dozen teams remain-
ed with perfect records. They
are: Lufkin. Corpus Christi,
Sweetwater, Paris. Goose Creek,
McAilen, Conroe, Amarillo, Dal-
las Sunset, Temple. Waco, and
Masonic Home.
These are Texas' 12 unbeaten
and untied schoolboy football
teams and their records:
Opp.
Pts.
6
Southwest Gets
Banner Billing
took command ofl
championship this
By JACK GUENTHER
I'nited I'iy'sn Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK—(UP)—The south and east
the race for the mythical national football
week.
Eight more major powers were among the missing after the
stormiest weekend of the season tumbled all but 12 case-hardened
elevens from the perfect record
ranks.
With four weeks of action
ahead, here are the survivors
of the first half of the season.
[X
W
. L.
T.
Pet.
3
'()
0
1.00(1
3
0
0
1.000
3
1
0
jfeo
2
2
0
.500;
1
2
1
.375 |
1
2
0
.333
0
•)
1
.12'.
0
3
0
.000
Parker Takes
Dodgers To Win
By CEORGE KIKKSEY
I nif .1 Press Correspondent
NEW YORK — (UP) — Those
]..ro football critics who've been
asking, "is Ace Parker through"
had tneir answer Sunday.
Picked as the national league's
most valuable player last sea
son, Parker has been something
less than a ball of fire this sea-
son. Hampered by the after ef-
fects of another of those brok
en ankles suffered in baseball,
Parker couldn't get going and
the Brooklyn Dodgers lost three
straight after winning their
litst two games.
Parker got started Sunday
and in one of the greatest on
man exhibitions ever staged in
the national league, the 108-
pound Dodger halfback led his
club to an astounding Hi 13 vic-
tory over the hitherto undefeat
ed New York Giants.
While the Giants went down
to the first loss, the Chicago
Bears continued as the scourge
t f the West with a 34 to 7 vic-
tory over the Pittsburgh Steel
crs. It was the Bears' fifth
straight triumph and gave
them a total of 209 points, an
average of almost 12 points per
game.
'I he Green Bay Packers rolled
up 438 yards and downed the
Detroit. Lions, 24 7.
Getting off to a 17 point lead
the Washington Redskins de-
fcatei' the Cleveland Rams. 17
13. for their third straight four-
point victory. Sammy Baugh's
passing and punting (52.9 yards
average on five punts) featured
the Redskin's fourth straight
win.
'Ih. Philadelphia Eagles roll-
er! lip a three touchdown lead
and beat, the Chicago Cardinals,
21 to 11.
Upset of the week—Oklaho-
ma's clean-cut 16 to (i victory
over Santa Clara. All the dope
so far this season has been
' that Santa Clara had a real pow-
! er house that could not be stop
| ped. Oklahoma, which usually
turns out a good team, was sup-
' posed to be below par. In lie-
half of Santa Clara, the alibi
j is offered that the game was
i played in a heavy rain and the
| west coast bovs set up Oklahoma
touchdowns by fumbling.
,The alibi is hereby disregard-
| ed. A communique from Nor-
j man, Okla.. states that the rain
' was falling on all parts of the
: gridiron, that the Oklahoma boys
| got just as wet as the warriors
I from Santa Clara and that the
1 ball was equally slippery for
1 both sides.
He may not kick up much of
a stir out in the country, but
here in the oast the man of the
hour is Dick Harlow, Harvard
coach. Harvard, as you may
have heard, is one of those
schools that goes in for over-
emphasis on education and the
football material is not all it
. Mild be. Mr, Harlow takes what
is available, waves a magic
wand, says "abracadabra" three
times before each game anrl
comes up with the team. Last
week he kicked the slats out of
highly favored Dartmouth
team. Saturday he held Navy
to a scoreless tie and ruined
the unbeaten, untied record of
the powerful middies. If it is
permissible to discuss such a
vulgar subject as betting in
connection with Harvard, let it
be known that the hoys who
backed thr- Crimson cashed in
at the juicy price of five to one
on Saturday evening.
There will he 15 minutes of
mourning throughout the state
of Oregon Monday. Seldom has
one section of the country suf-
fered the agony that came to
Oregon on Saturday. The smell
of roses from Pasadena was
floating over tlje state Fridav
evening, but Sat unlay night it
\ as graie. Washington State 7.
Oregon State 0. UCLA 14. Ore-
gon 7. Those weren't upsets,
they were earthquakes.
won
Personal
Minnesota,
ham. Notre
ranking of
Texas. Duke.
)ame, Navy
teams:
Ford-
Recommended this Saturday:
Pennsylvania versus Navy at
Philadelphia.
Team W Pts.
Lufkin B 296
Corpus Christi . 6 245 "19
Sweetwater ....... 6 223 18
Paris 6 201 19
Goose Creek 6 183 13
McAilen ... 6 133 12
Conroe <i 111 21
Amarillo 6 80 32
Dallas Sunset 5 160 32
Temple 5 135 26
Waco 5 131 25
Masonic Home 5 93 19
October has been, except for
two or three stunning upsets, a
great month for form in the
high school race. Two weeks'
campaigning has pared the per-
fect record list by only three.
On basis of form shown to
date, these are Texas' district
leaders: 1—Amarillo. 2—Wichita
Falls. :)—Sweetwater. 4 — Ysle-
ta. 5—Paris. 6—Denton or High-
yanw Park. 7—Masonic Home.
8'—Dallas Sunset. 9—Rrecken-
ridge and Mineral Wells. 10—
Waco and Temple. 11—Tyler,
with Kilgore a dark horse. 12—
Lufkin. 13—Houston-Jeff Da-
vis, with Lamar close behind.
14—Goose Creek anrl Conroe. 15
—Austin and San Antonio Breck-
enridge. 16—Corpus Christi, with
McAilen a contender.
Highlights of last week's play
was Amariilo's 3 to 0 victory ov-
er Lubbock, a triumph which
extender! the Sandies' two-year
winning streak to 20 games;" Ys-
leta's upset of El Paso and
Houston Austin's unexpected de-
feat of Houston Lamar; Sweet-
waters impressive <15-0 wallop-
ing of Abilene, anrl the gen-
erally fine showing of the un-
beaten teams.
This week, look for:
The personal duel be-
tween Marion Flanagan, tli •
Sweetwater speedster, anrl
(ius White, the Lamesa
breakaway artist. Flan-.gan
is high in the state with
113 |' 'Isoiiiilly tallied points;
White, with a so-so team,
has 62.
The important Houston dis-
trict game between Lamar ;ind
Jeff Davis. This one is vital
in the bayou city race.
The equally important district
15 game at Austin between the
hometown Maroons anrl San An*
tonio Brackenrirlge.
Also expect most of the un-
beaten teams to win again.
'Navy Blues" Is
Showing at Texas
Vor Navy Day
It'.- Navy Day anrl a good j
rlav for the "Navv Blues" show-1
ing at the Texas theatre.
Navy Blues is not the best j
picture you ever saw. two much I
Jack Oakie. but,it's entertaining;
and jumps you from San Diego I
to Hawaii In a flicker or two.
Texas Clara Lou (Ann) Sheridan I
See THEATRES Page 5
The south—Texas, Texas
A. & M., Texas Tech. Duke
and Yandcrbilt.
The East—FoWlham, Penn-
sylvania, TempV1, A r m y
and Duquesne.
The Midlands Minneso-
ta ami Notre Dame.
That's the complete list of
the major teams anrl the signs
of sectional strength are clear-
ly marked. Of the even dozen
Titans, five belong tTi Dixie anrl
five more to the Atlantic sea-
board. To make the case even
more complete, the only two
major teams which have not
been defeated but are tied also
belong in the same divisions-
Mississippi State in the south
anrl navy in the east.
The squads which joined the
hundreds of other hapless clubs
already cut down were Santa
Clara, Clemson, Ohio State,
Michigan, Detroit, Villanova,
Rutgers and Navv—the latter
losing its honor position through
a scoreless tie. In all but two
cases—those of Rutgers anrl
Michigan—the defeats were 24-
carat upsets.
Here are the developments by
sections:
The Southwest — This
r oiiferr nee gets banner bill-
ing for the might of its two
top teams, Texas Aggies and
Texas I'., who became the
nation's leading scorers by
crumpling Baylor and Bice,
48-0 and 40-0. They have scor-
ed 206 sind I Off points re-
spectively and are tied in
conference standings, with
two victories and no defeats.
Outside the conference, Tex-
as Tech retained its perfect
record, too, by whipping
New Mexico, while
thrice l> " a I c n Arkansas
knocked over unbeaten De-
troit. 9-6.
The Midlands—Minnesota took
a clear lead in the western con-
ference by shading Michigan, 7-0,
in the day's top game, anrl
thereby retained its position as
orte of the nation's foremost ele-
vens. Within the conference
Northwestern toppled Ohio State
14-7. Purdue shaded Iowa. 7-6.
and Wisconsin out-scored Indi
ana. 27-25. Notre Dame humili-
ated Illinois, 49-14, for its fifth
straight triumph, and Duquesne
upset Marquette. 31-1-1. In the
big six, Missouri whipped Ne-
braska. 6-0. and Kansas broke its
losing streak at the expense of
Iowa State. 130. Oklahoma top-
pled Santa Clara. 16-6. and Tulsa
defeated Oklahoma A. & M
16-0.
The East—Fordham continued
atop the independents anrl Penn
atop the Ivy league. The Rams
repelled Texas Christian. 18-14,'
and Penn whacked Maryland,
55-6. Army fashioned its long-
est winning streak in years by
upsetting Columbia, 13-0, while
Navy's guns were spiked, 0-0.
by Harvard. Penn now has a
wide lead in the Ivy league,
where Dartmouth defeated Yale
70. and Cornell topped Colgate,
21-2. In other games Temple
won its fifth straight, defeating
Bucknell, 41-1 I; Syracuse end-
ed Rutgers' brief spree, 19-7: Bos-
ton college defeated George-
town. 11-6: Manhattan unset Vil-
lanova, 9-0: anrl Duke humbled j
Pitt again. 27-7.
The South—In the southeast-;
ern conference .Alabama defeat-;
crl Georgia, 27-14: Georgia Tech
defeated Auburn. 28-11; Mis-is 1
sippi surprisingly whipped Tu
lane, 20-13: and L.S.U. topple! j
Florida. 10-7. Vanderbilt, tinriis |
puted leader of the conference,!
humbled Princeton, 16-7, in an j
interscetional go. In the south-
ern conference, William and
Marp went into a tic with Duke
for the lead by defeating George i
Washington. 48 0. and South Ca-
rolina upset Clemson. 18-1 I. Fur-
man. Wake Forest, VP1 anrl YMI
all advanced successfully an ! i
Relief At Last
For Your Cough
Creomulslon relieves promptly be-
cause It goes right to the seat of the
trouble to help loosen ana expel
germ laden phlegm, and aid nature
to soothe and heal raw, tender, In-
flamed bronchial mucous mem-
branes. Tell your druggist to sell you
a bottle of Creomulslon with the un-
derstanding you must like the way It
quickly allays the cough cr you are
to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
Kentucky anrl Tennessee
non-conference contests.
The Pacific Coast—Stanford
a wave of upsets, defeating
was the only team to survive
W'ashington. 13-7, to take the
lead in the coast conference and
Rose Bowl scramble. Both Ore-
gon teams had their hopes
smashed, Oregon by UCLA, 14-7.
anrl State by Washington State,"
14 0. California upset Southern
California, 14-0. In the Rock.
Mountain area, Denver, Colora
do State won conference games
anrl Montana and Idaho also
won without much trouble.
Merkel Further
Established As
District Leader
Meckel's Badgers ran over
Snyder, 40 to 6, last week and
further established themselves
as the leading contenders for
the District 6A championship
with the Roby Lions as their
most dangerous foes.
The Lions struck down the
Bairrl Bears, 6 0, using a razzle-
dazzle style of football. The
Lions play Merkel next in a
decisive battle for 6A honors.
The Rotan Yellowhammers
I trampled Loraine, 36 to 14, in
a game among the lower brack-
Two Gridiron
Giants Tower
Over Southwest
Only Dark Horse
Threat (Jets Test
Against Texas Team
By RICHARD M. MOREHBAD
I'nited I'llss Correspondent
Two gridiron . giants with
touchdowns in every pocket to-
wered Monday over the South-
west Conference race.
| The great ones are Texas ami
the Texas Aggies, and you can't
even buy a ticket tytr their
game next Thanksgiving Day.
The Southwest Conference cam-
paign is barely under way, but
only Southern Methodist re
tairjs its rating as a dark horse
threat to their supremacy.
. . . Anrl that dark horse sta-
tus may last no longer than
niA. Saturday, when the Meth
ot1 i.-1s pen their conference sea
son agi. nst Texas as Dallas.
For liv • games each this sea-
ii.n, the Texas anrl Aggie rec
rids show: Texas 196 points, op
pr.nents 27. Aggies 206, oppon-
>. nts 7.
Ii Matty Bell,
martcst defen-
n j lie football
Ros
et contenders in 6A. while
coe was losing to Colorado City
57 to 0, in a non conference bat-
tle.
Reuris Gives
r>
Rattlers Scare
DENVER -
rv's Rattlers
Texas, often
little football
erl States, had
. (UP) — St. Ma-
ri f San Antonio,
called the biggest
team in the Unit-
the wits scared
SMl 's ci
one of tin
sive fellow
business, will work out bis
strategy for tite Texas game
from notes lakt n personally
at (the Texas-Rice irngage-
iii< nt.
The Aggies this week will
play Arkansas at Little Rock;
while two A. and M. victims,
Texas Christian and Baylor,
meet at Waco. After losing to
Louisiana State and Texas, Rico
ought to have smoother sailing
against Centenary at Houston.
Texas and the Aggies, if you
will pardon the second refer-
ence, so far have displayed
plenty of everything. Pete Lay-
den, Jack Grain, and Spec San
out of them Sunday.
The Rattlers, having kept
their goal line uncrossed in five
games, punched over a quick
tirst period touchdown, but Re-
gis College of Denver came back
to take a 13 to 6 lead. Only two
desperate stands in the finali pe
i iod on the one and four yard
lines gave St. Mary's a 2:) to 13
victorv.
ders, a reserve halfback, led
Texas to a stunninfe 40 to 0 vie- |
tory Saturday over the Rice
team that upset Tulane. Texas
sUuck through the line and
through the air. and the only
dissatisfaction for the Texan
tans was that they only saw i
the first team perform for 20
| minutes. '
The Aggies' 18 to 0 triumph
over Baylor was just as con-
vincing. Four A. and M. teams
assailed Baylor with everything I
capitalizing on pass intercep
tions and recovered fumbles.
The Aggie offense moved pow-
erfully whenever it was needed,
either running or passing. Wil-
lie Zapalac and Slick Rogers, i i
couple of boys who played see
ono fiddle to 1940's nowgradu-
ated stars', each scored twice.
Sui prise-rif-last-wi ek awai :l
hi list r( to Arkansas, which
<'iii-pliiy< rl Detroit, previous-
ly mull t< ad d, for a I) to 6
victory. < hick Forte, Arkan-
sas hack \\ lio bus recovered
fiom injuries, led bis team's
attack. It nt the climactic
thrill was a last minute field
Kc.d which Dave Scarbrougli
boded lioin the 20 yard
line.
Crippled by injury, Texas
Christian gave Fordham a
great tussle before going down
28 to 14. Undefeated and untied
Fordham took an early 14-
point lead. After the half, TCU
roared back to tie the score
on a pass interception by half- ,
back Van Hall and a passing
attack directed by Emery Nix,
sophomore substitute for the
injured Kyle Gillespie. Fordham
had too much, however, and
added t.wo touchdowns in the
linal quarter.
Camcs I bis Week
Texas vs. Southern Method-
ist at Dallas.
Texas Aggies vs. Arkansas at
Little R6t*k.
Texas Christian vs. Baylor at
Waco. (
Rice v Centenary at Hous-
ton (night game, non confer-
ence).
Results Last Week
Texas It), Rico o.
Texas Aggies 18, Baylor 0.
Arkansas 9, Detroit 6.
TCU 11. Fordham 28.
Coitferenct Standings
Texas .
Texas A.
T C U
Baylor
Rice
Arkansas
(SMI! 1
enee gam:
md M.
W.
Pet.
1.000
1.000
.500
.500
.000
: .ooo
c infer-
You'll enjoy seeing
MARJORIE WOODWORTH
in the current Hal Roach hit
"All-AMERICAN CO-ED"
released through United Artists.
* • * *
t; # n
%r
%%\ AaA #Vvy /
jgttj
y- X
Sit.
;r
%
■ -
If,.. like the
All'American Girl...
you want a cigarette
#ha,'sG^Q[L®[3[rl
Its CliestOTield
Try a coupl* of packs. We feel sure
you'll be coming back for more... because
Chesterfield's right combination of the
world's leading cigarette tobaccos makes
them so much Mildor, Cooler and Better-
Tasting that more smokers are turning to
them every day.
Yet, the approval of smokers is the big thing that's
pushing Chesterfield ahead all over the country.
m'
EVERYWHERE
YOU GO
c
%
Wr'i|ii i «i. k Mum 1—-t— (.■
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.
Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 139, Ed. 1 Monday, October 27, 1941, newspaper, October 27, 1941; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth282415/m1/2/: accessed April 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.