Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 220, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 23, 1941 Page: 2 of 6
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■jrpeum Quintet
pfarly Upsets
Implement Crew
Score 31 To 16 In Hard
Battle; Hartgraves Is
Beaten By 20 To 19 Count
Mustangs Will
Get Sweaters
At Grid Event
Jay Puts His Foe Away
BY UNITED PRESS'
Washington State 50, Oregon
■17.
Santa Clara 01, University of
San Francisco 41,
Georgetown 08, Navy 18.
George Washington 31, Army
27.
BY HENRI' MeliKMORE
UP Staff Correspondent
PHOENIX, Ariz. — (UP) —
There's only one sensible way
to learn cowpunching, and that’s
to enroll in a correspondence
school.
1 Don’t ever tackle the subject
! first hand. To do that is as near-
ly fatal as dating Typhoid Mary
or shooting Niagara’s rapids in a
pillow case.
I speak from experience. I
tried to master the subject Wed-
nesday afternoon, here where
the west begins, and you can’t
tell where the west begins and
I leave off. because I’m all over
it.
My 'utors were a horse nam-
ed Illue and a cowboy named
Slim. The scene of the lesson
was Deer Valley, hard by Clar-
ence Budington Kelland’s ranch
on the outskirts of Phoenix. It is
scarcely correct to limit the
sceen of activities to Deer Val-
ley, because before Blue finish-
ed with me he had traveled far
into Paradis Valley and needed
only a road map to make Newark
by nightfall.
My trouble started when I
mounted Blue in Mr. Kelland’s
corral. They didn't tell me that
only a season or so ago Blue was
working in the rodeos from Pres-
cott to Cheyenne to Madison
Square Garden. Neither did they
tell Blue that the cargo of sports-
writer which vaulted into his
saddle from atop a fence had
never ridden anything more live-
ly than a dapple grey on a merry-
go-round, and was the sort of
man who even had trouble slay-
ing in upper berths, on curves.
“Gentle its a cat,” Slim said as
I landed in I he saddle. “That
Blue wouldn’t hurt a fly.”
• (
“That’s a damn -interesting ob-
servation. but I ain’t a fly,” 1
called back as Blue and 1 whirl-
ed through the gate and headed c
for the valley with a recklessness
and speed that Gene Autrey
couldn’t achieve, oven with a
cocaine needle.
Wo made the valley in nothing ,
flat, divided by two, and as we ,
whipped past the sagebrush and
groasewood I called to Blue, with
even- word I had ever heard, in-
(licatjpg a desire If halti 1 guvtf'
He’s Grid Banquet Speaker
Frank Kimbrough Will
Serve As Speaker For
Annual Football Feed
International Harvester and
the M and teams opened the
City Basketball league season
with victories at the high school
gymnasium Wednesday night,
but the Harvesters had their
hands full aplenty against the
U. S. Gypsum team before com
ing out on top, 20 to 10.
M and M won its game handi-
ly 31 to 16, over Hartgraves, al-
though the Hartgraves team was
reported not at full strength,
i From the time the game start-
ed until the final whistle blew,
the IHC-Gyp contest was close
anil hard fought. First one, then
the other team took the lead,
and it was only a matter of who
would be fortunate enough to
be leading when the time was
up.
, Voss of IHC, anil Dub Land-
ers and L. Neeper of the Gyp-
sum team, each with six points,
It'd the scoring.
Paced hv Lewis anil ,T. Am-
See BASKETBALL Page 7
An address and showing of
moving pictures of grid games
hv Coach Frank Kimbrough, of
Hardin - Simmons university,
and the awarding of letters to
Sweetwater Mustang gridmen of
11)10 will ho features of the
annual gridiron banquet at 7:30
p. in. Thursday on the roof of
the Blue Bonnet hotel.
The banquet is open to the
public at 00 cents per plate and
such honored guests us Sammy
Baugh, Sweetwater’s All-Ameri-
can college and professional
halfback; Bulldog Turner, All-
Tired Kidneys
Often Bring
Sleepless Nights
Doctors say your kidneys contain 15 miles
of tiny tubes or filters which help to purify the
blood and keep you healthy. When they get
tired and don’t work right in the daytime,
many people have to fret up nights. Frequent
or scanty passages With smarting and burning
fonietirr.es shows there is something wrong
with your kidneys or bladder. Don’t neglect
this condition and lose valuable, restful sleep.
When disorder of kidney function permits
poisonous matter to remain in your blood, it
may also cause nagging backache, rheumatic
pains, log pains, loss of pep and energy,
twelling, puffineaa under tho eyes, headaches
and dizziness.
Don’t wait! Ask your druggist for Doan’s
Pills, used successfully by millions for over 40
years. They give happy relief and will help
the 15 miles of kidney tubes (lush opt poison-
ous waste from your Llood. Get Doau’s Pills.
Jay Tumor, Hwicqhvutor heavyweight, sent a crashing blow to
Mike Buffington's face in first round of their Golden Gloves
bout at the Jayooo card here Monday niglil and a split second
later Buffington hit the
can-
vass for the count. Buffington,
of Midland, is shown here
reeling from Ihe blow. II was
tile only linoekoiil on I lie card
and Turner’s first a|i|xaiamc
in the ring under sponsorship
of the .la,voces. Turner is a
top-heavy favorite to cop Ihe
district heavy weight and pos-
sibly state banner.
MMVMMW
:„wi
Coach Frank Kimbrough of Hardin-Sinimons University,
shown here with his small son Frank, will lie the principal
speaker at the Sweet wafer high school football banquet Thurs-
day night.
JANUARY BARGAIN DAYS
Continue this week! Drop in for a fe\v minutes and you'll
want to siti'.'iid several hours!
U(r|p
rs 1
Three outstanding member of
the Mustang football team, re-
ceived invitations to attend the
annual Aggie banquet Friday
night at Texas \ and ,\, college,
two of Ihe youths. Sparky Kh-
el'le and Harley Rogers, both
seniors, going Marion Flana-
gan, president of the senior
cla s and baeklield star, is un-
able to make the trip.
Sparky, ,son of Mrs A A. Eb
erie, and u valuable center on
the Mustang team, has another
year at his alma muter. Harley,
who was on-captain of the 11)10
squad and baekfield star, D
graduating in the spring das--.
He is son of Mr. and Mrs. J. W,
Rogers of the Lake Trammell
community.
Principal .1. IT. Williams is
to be toastmaster for the event,
which is expected to attract. 200
grid fans of Sweetwater.
New Blood Need
I Of Giants. Grown
Old Willi Hubbel
Size HIv’HI
NATION WIDE
SHEETS
STAN OAIIO
tjl AUITV
PERCALE
Third Starring
Vehicle For Jean
A not her Success
Hollywood has seen again
the almost infallible wisdom in
producer Joe Pasternak’s choic-
es for screen stardom.
Pasternak is best known as
the man who first, presented De-
anna Durbin and subsequently
starred her in eight -t might
hits
......0 _ ______ ......... Today the success of '12-year-
club has grown old with Carl | old Gloria Jean is further tes
ITubbell and Mel Ott and Terry timony to Pasternak’s ability to
hasn’t, (icon able to develop or piek potential stars,
find new blood to revive the Gloria was just one of several
glory of the MeGraw era. Once youthful singers who sought
the dominant club in New York, stardom last season. Site is the
Take advantage of low
January cn
prices! ... UI C
FAMOUS RONDO
PERCALE
Smooth finsh!
Fast colors!
(inly at I’enney’s! yd
:>li inches wide
him stop I tried whoa. 1 tried
whoa-Whoa. I babied him with
such things ns that’s-a-nice-ol’-
hoy and there-there-there-don’t-
be-scared. He evidently took
these remarks for flattery, and.
flattening out his ears, moved
into high £ear. We jumped a
jack rabbit and. scared as I was,
I noticed the look of admira-
tion on his rabbit face as we
passed him.
This pure, all-out speed was
bad enough, but after a mile or
so. Blue began to imagine he was
cutting calves. He started dip-
ping and darting and spinning
and twirling. From my position
Fast colors.
I’EAt IIBMIOM" RAYON
New Patterns.
• January feature
Crown tested for wear,
washability and •}Q _
seaming qualities. yd.Jizl.
Fasl < nine
Cretonne
< DARK’S O.N.T. RUG
I 111) I t'Uujjti, laiicou vuiu, tjj aiuu’ uiuu-
,,j chltis i.s lint, treated and you cannot
’ ~ afTord to take a chance with any m.di-
0 ay. cine less potca’ than Creotni ! inn
, oung which goes ri--*1*«. to the scat of the
1 trouble to help.'oosi n and expel i erm
I | laden phlegm and aid nature to
1 ‘ ! soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed
'he j bronchial mucous membranes,
styl-j Creomulsion blends beechwood
-ame creosote by special process with nth r
iiria’s i t'me tpsted medicines fur cough:..
‘ ' It contains no narcotics,
same; matter bow many medicines
Marly , you have tried, tell your enr, :i ! to
■adeii se'il you a bottle of Creomulsion wi'il
.1 .... the under: fmidim; you must like r-
. • wav it quickly allays the r nigh, per-
l'win. ; niitting rest and sleep, or you arc to
have your money back. <Ad v.)
irgcou
ITS REFRESHING
Make a shaggy or Pom
Pom rug! 100 IQ
yard balls. . IHC
* fry a < in of VV< »\ l 1*. It you don’t ugrrp that it
Qin iu in s your thirst longer t Kin any < tlior popular
in>tt drink, send the < an togcth<- with your n-asons
to WON -1 I’, Ktlinburg, lex.i , and you'll get hack
!.< ire the p'ir< hrisc pt: ■ ’_
wm
NO SQ. I N HI,EACH ED
'll) inches wide! Save on
tin premium H1 /
quality muslin, yd. •
Tech Coaching
A pplicants A re
Slashed To Nine
LUBBOCK, Tex. (UP)—Se-
lection of a couch to replace Pete
Cawthon at Texas Teehnological
colligc awaited Thursday final
inter, ieving nine applicants
and a meeting of the cbllcge
hoard of directors Tuesday.
W I. Stangel, chairman of
the Tech thletic council, said
that the original field of 103
applicants had Ih-cii narrowed
down to nine, four or whom
were -eeking tile assistant’s
jobs.
Iliiiiilrcils of remnants of desirable fabrics af prices (lint
mean definite savings lo you!
Under Auspices Junior Chamber of Commerce
Daintily Trimmed
Size NIK Ilia
CRINKLE
SPREADS
Rl W can be sure the old lady who
lived in a shoe, bought that shoe at Wards. We
have sizes as big as 14EEEE, and sizes for all
her children, too. The fact is, you will find com-
plete assortments of everything you need . . .
now at Wards! Besides all the merchandise on
display, you can choose from 100,000 different
items in the CATALOG ORDER department of
our store. The items you choose are rushed here
at once from our Warehouse. You pay only low
moil-order prices... no postage or money order
fees and as little as V4 the usual shipping cost.
To Pay 1940 City Taxes
Pity Now ;mrl \void lYn.ilfv, lnli*r«*sf and Costs
After
So k«mmI look ill” and
si\r you’ll want several!
The Man With X Ray Eyt*
Feat* of Mental Dcuteri! y
Mirth. Magic and lllunom
That '( hrill and Amaze
January 31,1941
Dial 2382
W. H. WHALEY
City Tax Collector
Friday. January 2fill
Kvcnirg-7:15 p. m.
RUMMAGE TABLES
MONTGOMERY WARD
O.lils .Hid mils at deep riif |»Hccs!
Sweelwaler Municipal Vudilorimn
\<i tuition—SfikIciiI- l-'.«. \•!n11 — Nh
Noriji Side Sijiiarr
PENNEY'S
LADIES' DRESS SHOES
\ ni« ?* assorfmriil «»l good stairs! IMil>
$1
LADIES' FELT HATS
Yom choice «*l tiny lair u infer haf
.... 25c
LADICS DRESSES
\ (’l* ir-;i\\ii> of choir,” winfei styles.
... $2
t
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Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 220, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 23, 1941, newspaper, January 23, 1941; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth710741/m1/2/: accessed May 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.