Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 301, Ed. 1 Friday, July 24, 1942 Page: 8 of 8
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HWfeWVWA'iiiiB HmiBTti, mCTTXTES, TEXS5
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o
mim, JTJEY 23, 1533
(Continued from page 1)
rf of this immense state for
nomination. All have been
governors of Texas and Moody
and Allred have served as the
state's attorney general.
Allred resigned a federal court
judgeship to make the race and
Moody returned to the politi-
cal wars after 12 years in pri-
vate law practice, both declar-
ing that Texas deserves better
representation in the senate
than that provided by O'Danlel.
They have pounded O'Daniei
Hungry For Farm-FResh Fru/ts amp Vegetables ?
safewAys own exptws pick our
ANT) Buy JUST THt FINEST VEGETABLES
AND FRUITS FARMERS &ROW---ANP
WERE ALL RUSHED STRAIGHT TO TOWN,
FARM FRESH!
ANP JAFtWAV POUND
PRlCINflrMtANS fVU.
VAlUf IOH *OUK
TOO/
Fresh
rider
Colorado
PEPPER
Bell
PEACHES
Elberta
NECTARINES
California
CABBAGE
Coloracli
ORANGES
Sunkist
LEMONS
Sunkist
LIMES
Fresh Mexican
POTATOES
U. S. No. 1 Cobbler
CANTALOUPES
Home
Grown
Fresh
Ripe
Enriched
Kitchen Craft
40C
Fresh
VINEGAR csr Quart 10C
0LE0 Guaranteed ....
Lb. 17c
PICKLES Crr„r or Dill Quart 19C
CIGARETTES Popular Brand Pkg.
16c
Same Low Prices Every Day In The Week
FLOUR
MEAL Acorn Cream
BUTTER Safewav Guaranteed
SHORTENING
Bob White
BREAD
Julia Lee Wrights
BREAD
Julia Lee Wrights
CRACKERS
Busy Baker
PEANUTS
Planters Cocktail
CRACKERS
Excell
POTTED MEAT
Good Lunch
CIGARETTES
Raleighs
DOG FOOD
Smarty
TISSUE
Silk
OLD DUTCH
Cleanser
RINSO
Washing Powder
OXYDOL
Washing Powder
SU-PURB
Granulated Soap
7c
10c
3
1 Lb.
Loaf
1 1-2 Lb.
Loaf
1 Lb- 15c
Box1JL
8 oz- 21c
Can u 1 u
2 Lb.
Box
No. %
Cans
3
Pgk.
No. 1
Cans
' Rolls
Reg.
Can
24 oz.
Pkg.
24 Oz.
Pkg.
24 Oz.
Pkg.
17c
14c
16c
25c
13c
8c
23c
23c
20c
AIRWAY COFFEE
1 Lb. package
JUICE 4fi oz'
Town House Grapefruit Can
PEARS
Harper House
CORN
Country Home
CORN
Libby
MAYDAY
Salad Oil
WESSON OIL
Pint
LUNCH BOX
Sandwich Spread
MIRACLE SPREAD
Quart
BEANS
Nancy Lee. Cutt, Green
SPINACH
Gardenside
BABY FOOD
Gerbers or Heinz
POTTED MEAT o
Good Lunch "
No. 1
Can
o No. 2
^ Cans
No. 2
Can
Pint
Quart
2
2
No. 2
Cans
No. 2
Cans
4 1-2 oz.
Can
1-4 Size
Cans
21c
18c
15c
25c
14c
25c
29c
42c
45c
25c
25c
7c
14c
MILK
Cherub
MILK
Carnation
JELL-WELL
Assorted Flavors
HEMO
Bordens
SYRUP
Blue Karo
POST TOASTIES
TOMATOES
Standard Pack
SALMON
Prince Leo Pink
BEANS
Heinz Baked
MACARONI
Target ■
SPAGHETTI
Target
WHEATIES
GRAPE JUICE
Royal Purple
3 Tall
Cans
3 Tall
Cans
Pkg.
1 lb.
Can
5 Lb-
° Can
*\ 11 oz.
" Pkgs.
No. 2
Can
No. 1
Can
17 1-2 oz.
Can
6 oz.
Pkgs.
6 oz.
Pkgs.
8 oz.
Pkgs.
3
3
Pint
23c
25c
5c
59c
39c
15c
10c
20c
14c
10c
10c
25c
17c
STEAK
ROAST
SEVEN
Quality
Beef
Quality
Beef
Quality
Beef
T,ar? ■ Konnd
BOLOGNA
lb.
is«
STEAK, round hone
Shoulder cuts. Lb.
SHORT RIBS
Beef Lb.
FRYERS Dressed
Drawn, Waste Free Lb.
32c
19c
39c
BACON, Sliced
Deckers Iowana
BACON, Sliced
Deckers English
FRANKFURTERS
Lb.
Cloverbloom
Longhorn
CHEEESE
Machine Sliced
Hormels
LIVER LOAF
,b 29c
SHOP THE SAFEWAY ... The Little Wife Gets Wise to Something New
HONEY, KEEP •
SMOR.DAY OPEN
FOR THE BIG
MILITARY fWDE
Vacuum Cooked
Spiced
LUNCHEON
Sliced
39c
YOU KMOW 1
wm To DO
IAY GROCERY
SHOPPING FOR
WEEK-END
SPECIALS
7^.
MARY, 1 CAN'T
MISS THE
SATURDAY
FOOD SPECIALS
I ALVJAYS
SHOP EKRLV
IN THE WEEK
TO AVOID THE
SATURDAY
I CROWD.
1 SAVE ON I RIGHT YOU
EVERYTHING . \ ARE, lK
SkFEMYS PRICES SAVING
ARE LOW ON
EVERY ITEN\
EVERY DAY
ON EVERY
ITEM.
SAFEWAY
OUR MEN
IN SERVICE
^ 1^ f % 1^ 1^ 1^
3 Enlist In Army
At City Station
Three men enlisted in the U.
S. army Wednesday at the local
recruiting station, according to
.Sgt. Leo Cawthron, recruiting
officer.
They are James L. TincUill,
Gulf Oil Corporation employe;
Thomas E. K.inerd, a former caa-
et of the air force, both of
Sweetwater, and George M. Lee
of Loraine.
\'OW IN COLORADO
Ernest Langley, jr., who left
Sweetwater recently for service
in the U. S. army, and who was
temporarily stationed in Fort
Sill, Okla., Wednesday was
transferred to Camp Carson. Col-
orado Springs, Colo., in the field
artillery. He is son of Mr. and
Mrs. E. L. Langley.
IN NEW YOKK CITY
Sgt. Leon Patton, son of Mrs.
A. J. Patton, has notified his
mother that he has been trans-
ferred from Fort Sam Houston
where he has been stationed for
two years in the army, to New
York City. He expects to he as-
signed overseas. Sgi. Pallon is
a brother of Mrs. G B Rich-
ards.
INSTRUCTOR BACK
Lieut. Dudley Faver and Mrs.
Faver of Sacramento, Calif.,
have arrived to visit his parents
Mr. and Mrs. L. I). Faver, who
live north of town. Lieut. Faver,
a graduate of Abilene Crristian
College, received his wings and
commission in the army air
corps last, year and is a flight
instructor in California.
BOB SIL.ER AIR STUDENT
Bob Siler, Harley Sadler's lead-
ing man and husband of the for-
mer Jean Fisher, one time
Sweetwater piano instructor, is
now in the army air force. Bob
is taking his primary training
at West Texas State Teachers'
college, Canyon. Following his
ground instruction he will enter
a flying field for his secondary
and then be commissioned as a
fight instructor after his advanc-
ed stage of flying. Mrs. Siler is
continuing with the Sadler
shows as pianist.
along somewhat similar lines.
Allred has directed little of
his oratorical fire against Moody
but the red-haired "boy govern-
or" of a dozen years ago has
turned his guns on Allred as
the campaign neared the ballot
box tape.
Allred and Moody attacked
O'Daniel's early campaign re-
marks that the war had no place
in the discussions on the hust-
ings, that the war is the presi-
dent's business. They pounded
him unceasingly on his vote
against extention of the selec-
tive service time.
Turning into the home stretch,
O'Daniei "fought back with a dec-
laration the war cannot be an
issue: to have an issue, he said,
there must be two sides and ev-
erybody agrees the war must be
won.
Hal Collins, gubernatorial can-
didate who has been making the
hustings with O'Daniei, has bas-
ed his ballot battle on a plea
to break a pension "ceiling," to
tighten liquor laws, to k«Tep
gambling out of the state with
a business administration.
Others in the race for the gub-
ernatorial nomination are Alex
M. Ferguson, Gene S. Porter and
Hope Wheeler.
v
LEAVES SAN DIEGO
Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Montgom-
ery, sr., have received word from
their son, Dalton, a marine, that
he is being transferred from
San Diego for service at an un-
known place. He has been in
San Diego for some time. His
brother, Bill, who recently re-
turned fro.-n cuty with the Ma-
rines in Haw; ii, still is bn'ed at
San Diego, after returning t0
the coast, following his leave
spent in Swctt water.
A third son, R. H. jr., c first
sergeant in the third army, is
serving overseas in England; J.
M., a fourth son. is await'ng
call to the marines. He lives in
Amarillo.
T ANSIL'S
WOMEN'S APPAREL
Comfortably Air-Conditioned
Are You Going To
Have To Have A Fall Coat?
W< have so many lovely new fall coats.
—Smartly Tailored
Fur-Trimmed
Black Dress Type
You can use our convenient lay-away
plan and make your payments as
vou desire.
•
u-
U
SUMMER HATS, 1.98 to 5.00
Closing Out At
1.
GERMANS
REDS-
(Continued from page 1)
of a military pincers.
(A special communique from
Adolf Hitler's headquarters said
Rostov had been captured in a
storming assault after "hard
fighting" and that German and
Slovak troops had crossed the
Don river into the Caucasus at
several points after establishing
bridgeheads. The Russians, al-
though acknowledging that the
situation at Rostov was acute,
did not confirm the German
claim that the city had fallen.)
Marshal Semyon Tiniosh-
ri'ko's Soviet forces, vastly
outnumbered lint fighting
savagely with new "tank
buster" iind air units, held
off German infantry and
tank assaults in the Novo-
rrerkassk and Tsimlyansk
areas on the Don northeast
of Rostov <md the press of
Moscow called a do or die
stand in Ruks'o's new hour
of peril.
The official press said that
Hitler had thrown all of his
reserves into the big southern
drive and that "the Hitlerite
enemy must be halted and an-
nihilated."
Almost 300 miles to the north
of. Rostov, a Soviet counter
drive was said to he rolling the
Germans back with heavy los-
ses. • ,
The Russian noon communi-
que said that in the Novocherk-
assk the attacks of numerically
superior German forces were
thrown back, with heavy enemy
losses, and that two attacks by
German 'anks and automatic rif-
lemen were repulsed in the
Tsimlyansk sector.
—v
JOIVS NAVAI. RESERVE
W. B. (Buck) Wetsel, son of
Mr. *nd Mrs. W. B. Wetsel,
sr., a student, of Southern Meth-
odist university, Dallas, has en-
listed in the naval reserve.
His contract allows him to re-
ceive Iii^ degree in August, lO-CI
lie is to renort for duty to the
Navy in Oct. 19-13
(Continued from page 1)
story was different. The Com-
munist party organ Pravda said
the Red army continually was
counter-attacking on the west
bank of the Don, had cleared
more ground on the east bank
and had improved its positions
on all sectors of that front.
A prolonged battle' in the cen-
tral sector forced the Germans
to retreat south and southwest-
ward. Strong enemy units still
were operating in this area, how-
ever, Pravda said.
Soviet tanks on (he west
bank of the Don broke
through German defenses
and penetrated lh,,em In
depth. Simultaneously, Sov-
iet infantry attacked from
the flanks.
Likewise, the Russians held
the main crossing on the south-
ern sector of the Voronezh front,
and continued to move troops
to the west bank, under a heavy
German bombardment. Three
German counter-attacks were
broken and more than 1,000 Ger-
mans killed. German prisoners
were quoted that their lines have
been over-extended, • and be-
cause of that fact and the op-
erations of Russian guerrillas,
the Germans were unable to
bring fuel and had to use their
tanks as pillboxes.
The communique revealed new
outbursts at Leningrad, a fairly
quiescent front lately. The Ger-
mans have lost more than 800
men killed and wounded on
that front in two days, it said,
as well as potentially offensive.
-TODAY'S
WAR
MOVES 1
By liouis P. Keemle
Of the UP War Desk
The German drive to Rostov,
which perhaps already has fal-
len, exposes the northern part
of the Caucasus and the oil
fields on the near side of the
mountains to grave danger of
German occupation.
It is true that the Germans
took Rostov once before, only to
be driven out in the Russian
counterattack late in 1941, but
the Russian positiort is not so
strong this year. For one thing,
the Germans are attacking in
far greater force than 1 last
year.
They are concentrating the j
mightiest army they have yet j
used in the war in the compara-
tively limited area between
Voronezh and the lower reaches |
of the Don, a stretch of less
than 300 miles. It seems prob-
able that Marshal Semyon Tim-
oshenko will be forced to with-
draw from Rostov and attempt
a stand on the south bank of
the Don.
If Timoshenko cannot hold
Rostov, there appears little chan-
mans out of the northwestern
ce that he can keep the Ger-
Caucasus. A German drive across
the Kerch Strait from the Cri-
mea is not unlikely. This force
would strike for Novorossick,
northernmost Black Sea port,
and Krasnodar, oil center. At
the same time, the Germans
would drive southward from
Rostov along the rail line in an
enveloping movement to pinch
off that corner of the Caucasus. '
CLAIMS
(Continued from page 1) _
imperial forces in Egypt were
reported holding gains made in
heavy fighting this week on all
three sectors west of El Alamein,
Dispatches from the desert
front said that the allied attacl^,
supported by heavy air bombing
of front and rear sectors, had
dented but not racked the Axis
lines and that the enemy's crack
88-millimeter cannon had prov-
ed effective against the advat#
ing British tanks. British losses
were not indicated except by a
statement that reinforcements
had made it possible to sustain
some losses without weakenir
defense of the Nile valley.
The RAF attacked the Ger-
man Ruhr and Rhine industrial
sectors but there still was no
new indication that the allij
were preparing for an early
if
second front in Europe to
the hard-pressed Russians.
aid
Today and Saturday
FLYING FISTS!
THUNDERING SIX-GUNS:
with
TIM
McCOY
BUCK
JONES
ijjfi ii
Chapter 5 of
"Gang Busters"
Cartoon: "Doing Their Bit"
YOUD LI\2 VO SAY ....
IT CAN'T HAPPEN HERE
BUT IT HAS
Here are actual FBI photos
of two of the Nazi Agents
just captured after they had
been landed in (lie l\ S. from
a submarine. They plotted
^leatli and destruction for
\merican people and Ameri-
can property. Tills is evidence
that scenes from Alfred Hit-
chcock's Dramatic SABO-
TEURS are not only timely
hut T It I E!
HOW IK)
OPERATE'
SHE .
Til EV
"SABOTEUR"
at the
TEXAS THEATRE
TOD A V
Robert
Starring
Oummmgs
I'rlscllln l.ane
—
•/
IJ
j{
11
tl
i'l
cf
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Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 301, Ed. 1 Friday, July 24, 1942, newspaper, July 24, 1942; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth310258/m1/8/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.