Borger-News Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 270, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 10, 1946 Page: 1 of 28
twenty eight pages : ill. ; page 24 x 19 in.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Arkansas 7 Texas 22 Army 0 Tulsa 20 Hardin-Simmons 28 Kansas 16 Texas Tech .... 27 Texas A&M . . . . 14 LSU .
Rice 0 Baylor 7 Noire Dame ..... 0 Okla. A&M .... 18 W. Tex. Slale ... 7 Oklahoma 13 New Mexico .... 0 SMU 0 Alabama
WEATHER
WEST TEV '* Partly cloudy Sunday
Monday. >r in all exceot El "no
Sunday nei -> Mondi>v
fl*
L.
★ THE CARBON BLACK CENTER OF THE WORLD *
Borger Stores Will be Closed
Monday, Nov. 11, in Observ-
ance of Armistice Day.
Vol. 20— No. 270
NEA Service
Associated Press
Borger, Texas, Sunday, November 10, 1946
(Twenfy-Eight Pages Today)
Price 5c
*r
t '
Senator Wherry Wants
To Knoyv Whether U. S.
Meat Feeds Red Armies
By JACK BELL
WASHINGTON. Nov. 9—(AP)— Senator Wherry of Ne
braska fired the republicans' first post-election investigatioi
at the democrats today with announcement that he will g<
to Europe to scrutinize food shipments to Russia and othe
countries.
Wherry told a news conference he intends to find ou
whether part of 1.100.000.000 pounds of American meat hr
said was sent to Europe in the first six months of this yea-
had been used to feed Russian and Yugoslav troops.
■ ■ As he announced his inquiry
Surprise Raid on
Arms Cache Fatal
To Three British
Wage, Price Control Ends
Fulton Does It Again
JERUSALEM. Nov. 9 ——
Three British policemen were kill-
ed. one was .seriously wounded and
several Jewish civilians were hurt
early today when a booby trap ex-
ploded during a surprise raid on
a suspected arms dump in the
Bukharian quarter of Jerusalem.
An unofficial source said the
heavy explosion, which occurred
at <5:20 a.m. and was heard
throughout the city, was caused
by a booby trap connected to a
door behind which some time ago
an arms dump of Irgun Zvai Le-
umi, Jewish underground organi-
zation, was believed hidden.
Police said the surprise raid
was made as a result of myster-
ious information received by au-
thorities last night.
Material damage was small, ex-
cept at one nearby house, where
a part of the ceiling fell, injuring
several Jews sleeping there.
The booby trap, it was learned,
consisted of an explosive charge
of gelignite and umolite in a petrol
can. bricked up in the wall, and
a wire attached ty the door to
detonate the chflffje.
Police said one of their slain
officers was an expert on Jewish
affairs, "virtually irreplaceable on
the force."
Today's violence, one high Brit-
ish officer pointed out, was the
first to ocur on the Jewish sab-
bath.
Borger Rotary To
Entertain Ladies
Club Tuesday Night
Entertaining the lady Rotary or-
ganization. the Rotary-Anns, the
Borger Rotary club has arranged a
surprise program for the affair in
♦h« Weatherly school cafeteria at.
V p.m. Tuesday.
The Rotary club is holding the
program in connection with in-
stallation of officers of the newly
formed Rotary-Anns.
Officers to be installed include:
Mrs. A. A. Meredith, president:
Mrs. Robert R. Lindsey, first vice-
president; Mrs. M. S. Flegle, sec-
ond vice-president; Mrs. H. S.
Benjamin, third vice-president:
Mis. J. Byron Andress, secretary;
Mrs. J. Lawton Sunds, treasurer;
and Mrs. Wallis Ne«son, Historian.
President Ralph Johnson stated
that several dignitaries of the air
waves will appear on the program,
a radio broadcast over the Rotary
airline, KRAZ.
"Tuesday night will be ladies
night and Rotarians have worked
diligently on the program for sev-
eral weeks,'' said Johnson, in urg-
ing all member!, and their guests
to attend.
The club president said that the
regular noon meeting Tuesday will
not be held this week as the night
program has been substituted.
there were these other politica
developments.
1: The white house announce
that President Truman will issu*
a general policy statement at hi
first post-election news confer-
ence Monday morning. Intimate
reported he will pledge hiinsel;
to place the nation's welfare abovi
personal or party interest and ex
press his hope particularly for con-
tinued bipartisan support on for-
eign policy.
2. Senator Fulbright <D-Ark),
amplifying his suggestion that th<
president name a republican sec-
retary of state and then resign in
his favor, predicted that if dem-
ocrats attempt to hold on to pow-
er "in the face of obvious disap-
proval of the people," the party
would suffer 11 "disastrous" de-
Rat in the 1948 presidential race.
3. Siyns developed of a possi-
ble light over the senate majori-
to leadership, paralleling a sim-
ilar house contest, with Wherry's
assertion that Majority Leader
White of Maine must be consid-
ered if heh wants the new post.
Senatoi Taft <R-Ohio> previously
has been talked of as the likely
| choice. ^But Wherry did not re-
j move himself as a possible candi-
i date.
j Wherry left no doubt he thinks
I the people repudiated at the polls
last Tuesday the new deal phil-
osophy he contends Mr. Truma i
followed in attempting to carry
out the policies of the late Pres-
ident Roosevelt.
"I think the people voted to
throw out the New Deal and the
radicalism thai went with it,"
the Nebraska senator declared.
He "added he expects "coopera-
tion from the loyal opposition"—
presumably the democrats who
joined republicans in opposing
some Truman measures in the
last congress—in republican ef-
lorts to balance the budget, makd
such tax reductions as are possi-
ble, overhaul the sfle of surplus
properties and revise labor legis-
lation.
Wherry, senate minority whip
in the 79th congress, announced
he will leave Thursday on a self-
financed. 19-day trip to Europe
and report on his return to the
senate appropriations committee
of which he is a member.
"No one knows where this
meat is going when it is turned
over to the Russians end the
Yugoslavs." he declared.
"It it is being used to feed
armies, that :s iust as important
as if a loan were made. And
you remember Secretary of
State Byrnes said we aren't
going to make any loans to our
foes."
lie added he will look into oc-
cupation policies and attempt to
find out how long military leaders
believe this country should keep
forces in Europe.
Fulbright's .statement said his
suggestion for a full-blown change
in government through a presi-
dential resignation was not in-
tended as tiny reflection on Presi-
dent Truman.
Shown in Danbury. Connecticut, as its wings and fuselage are detached in one piece is the Airphib-
ian which can be converted from plane to car in seven minutes. Detaching the wings and fuselage
is Robert Fulton. Jr.. builder of the Airphibian and descendant of the inventor of the steamboat.
The plane had its flight test in Danbury on November 7. Plane will cruise at 125mph. and the car
will run at 45mph. (NEA Telephoto)
Attlee Warns Against
Misuse Of II. N. Body
By TOM WILLIAMS
LONDON, Nov. 9—(AP)— Prime Minister Attlee declared
tonight that "obstruction" and "propaqanda attacks" havo
marked the proceedings of the United Nations and predicted
that the U. N. would fail if it is used an a forum for "ideo-
logical differences."
His sharp criticism of the world peace organization was
accompanied by an assertion that the key to European pros-
perity and peace lies in reaching e settlement on the future
of Germany—a subject beinq considered by the Big Four
foreign ministers in New York.
In a speech at the annual Lord
United Nations
To Choose Site
In United States
in
Panhandle Weather
To Near Freezing
Point, Says Bureau
By The Associated Press
Near freezing temperatures
the Panhandle and South Plains
were forecast by the weather bur-
ToXitS and the gulf roast due to
oau for Sunday wit hextreme east
receive rain.
Fair weather was predicted for
south wist and central Texas.
Rainfall yesterday was widely
scattered, with Tyler receiving
2.17 inches, San Antonio and Hous-
ton I mi'i and Sulphur Springs
,43 inch.
Maximum temperature!, runued
in the UOs along the coast, 70b fur-
ther In the interior, with some
|W)trtt'itl'*«t Texus'fUit*-
miuiitk in the Ms
mayor's banquet, the prime min-
ister upheld British action in
India, Burma and elsewhere to
"Refute contentions that the Brit-
ish commonwealth and empire is
animated by imperialism."
He oledoed atso that Britain
would work for "our ideals of
peace and to lift the heavy bur-
den of armaments from the peo-
ple of the world," but added
that "I emphasize that disarma-
ment cannot be unilateral."
In apparent reference to Soviet
Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov's
proposal to the United Nations
general assembly for world dis-
armament, Attlee commented:
"The lesson of the inter-war
period was that disarmament
must march hand in hand with
Houston Police
Seek Rapist oi
Prominent Woman
HOUSTON, Nov. 9—(/P)—Police
were searching Hie city today for
a negro man who they said raped
a prominent 46-year-old Houston
woman early this morning at her
home in the exclusive River Oaks
section while her husband and one
ol her two sons slept in the house.
The woman, wife of a well-
known professional man, told
police her assailant entered her
•he establishment of a generai! j^droom a' about 3 a. m. and
system of securitv " 1 threatened to shoot her six-year-
* ^ -old son and her husband if she
raised an alarm.
She said he field a gun to her
head.
The husband and child were
asleep in separate bedrooms in
Local Veterans To
March in Armistice
Day Parade Monday
Local, veterans arc being asked
to participate in a memorial pa-
ir de to bo held Armistice day
honoring their fallen comrades.
The parade will assemble at
the Black Hotel Monday morning
at 10:30 and proceed to Sixth and
Main where it will pause brieflv
while the Phillips and Borger high
school bands render "Taps" and
a prayer is given for the dead. It
will continue to Tenth street and
disband.
The American Legion, Disabled
American Veterans ;md Veterans
oi Foreign Wars are especially
i rgod to have their memlMUs out
iit uniform tor the parade.
Reserve Officers Group
To Meet in Blue Room
•urity
"I know that we have all felt
disappointed 'n th« wav in
which the organization is beinq
used," said Attlee of the U. N.
''instead of i?s oroceedinqs be-
ing objective and businesslike
there ar« orooaganda attacks on
flimsy pretexts x x x."
"II is clear that the United Na-
tions organization is to be used as
a forum for debating ideological
differences, it will fail, x x x"
He ndded that the U. N. could
succeed only if it is to he used
"to secure to all nations the
freedom to preserve their own
ways of lift while contributing
to the common good of ihe
world." He cautioned, however,
against impatience with U. N.,
saying "This organisation can-
not h" bu<lt ®n a moment."
It is better to answer by deeds,
not words. Our action in India,
in Burma, iu the coloniul empire
and elsewhere refute the con-
tentions that the British common-
wealth and empire is animated
by imperialism.
In reference to the vanquished
enemy, the prime minister said:
"In Europe the key to prosper-
ity, peace and tranquility will bo
the settlement of Germany.
"Surelv if ever there was a
problem that merits the wise
cooperation of Allied statesmen
without bickering, without ideo-
logical considerations, excepting
that wo all agree Germany must
be democratic, this is the one."
BTAMI'b QUA HTM TO RE
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SherMf Commends
Fans for Conduct
At Saturday Game
hliciitl Utile |*iim- luiiunutuii m
r*r..f tmvit WTMJ si'ttnnteij •ffc-j
Dilir Amtirlllo garni Iiukw ,v "
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kpitl tin. iMvv-i'i
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"(M!>>' t '<««< <•! lob' tn^ft'il III.
• l (it'll iu
the house. A 17-year-old son is
attending college.
Four dollars was missing from
a pair ot trousers which hung on
a chair in the husband's room.
Police believed the man had en-
tered the house through a win-
dow of that room.
The husband did not awaken
until his distraught wife called
him after her attacker left. The
woman was taken to a hospital.
An attempt also was made to
break into a house a block away
shortly after the rape was report-
ed, police said. Because of sim-
ilar tactics and clues yolice be-
lieve the same person might have
been involved.
A dozen police officers were
immediately sent to the neighbor-
hood and today the entire homi-
cide stpiad was at work on tlu
case.
Bloodhounds were brought to
the scene from retrieve prison
farm but they failed to pick up a
trail.
Thompson Mentioned
For Highway Post
ABILENE. N ov. 0—Speaking
before a meeting of the directors
i ol the West, Texas chamber of
i commerce. Governor-Eleet Beau-
lord Jester revived speculation
| that he would appoint a West
: Texas resident to the state high-
' way cummiMiwii,
Among those most prufninently
mentioned for the po*' which wfli
I lit: vacant Feb. I f frills? Thomp-
tin, fiorgei resident ami member
of the Htt«'-b4t *«>n county ngMH*-
j :4on<' i court
■h ei • it tilt**. I ii hi o,id pen-
>n
of i ond
of 'I e*u>,
Ol
no
NEW YORK, Nov. 9—'The
United Nations today threw wide
open the question of permanent
headquarters site to take in the
entile United States after the So-
viet withdrew a request that Eu-
rope also be considered.
The assembly approved the pro-
posal over vigorous United States
opposition but left hanging a de-
mand by Soviet Foreign minister
V. M. Molotov and the Soviet
Ukraine th t the next awembly
session be held in Europe.
The site question went to de-
bate after delegates unanimously
approved the admission of Swe-
den, Iceland and Afghanistan to
membership. This unopposed de-
cision came after a compromise
move averted a threatened Russ-
ian fight over the wording of a
resolution admitting the three.
Five other countries—Alban-
ia, Outer Mongolia, Ireland,
Portugal and Trans-Jordan—
were turned down bv the secur-
ity council in membership bids
and efforts were atill being
made in committee to force
the council lo reconsider the
live.
The United States had pro-
posed that the site question be re-
opened to include only the Saa
Francisco and New York areas,
contending that the urgency of a
decision made it inadvisable to
take in the entire country. A pre-
vious assembly resolution had
limited the site to Westchester
county, N. Y., and Fairfield
county. Conn.
Reds Plague
CIO Now Facing
Wage Decisions
By MAX HALL
Associated Press Labor Reporter
WASHINGTON. Nov. 9—(#)—
The CIO headed today toward its
first convention in two years fac-
ing important wage decisions, dis-
turbed by struggles between its
right and left wings, and with the
future of President Philip Mur-
ray in doubt.
The 51 -man CIO executive
board will meet Wednesday and
some <>00 delegates will gather at
Atlantic City, N. J., for the con-
vention itself Nov. 18.
They will consider the situa-
tion in which organized factory
workers find themselves;
The workers want higher, wages
to offset rising prices. They are
preparing to press their demands, j
But if they strike, there is likely
to be support for severe labor leg-
islation in the republican-dom-
inated congress.
In addition to economic prob-
lems, the continuing argument
over communism is likely to
burst onto the convention floor.
1. It could emerge if there '•>
u movement for putting local and
regional CIO councils under tight-
er control of the CIO national
officers. Some of these local bod-
ies have been accused of left-wing
tendencies.
2. The issue could flare up if a
resolution on foreign policy reach-
es the floor for debate. Foreign
policy resolutions have started
lively battles in the conventions
of several CIO unions.
3. Any one of a number of
right-wing leaders who feel
strongly about the matter tould
bring it into the open in a speech.
Another point of interest is
the stream of rumors that Murray
may decline re-election. M.ura y
has neither confirmed nor denied
the reports.
All But Rents, Sugar
And Rice Return To Law
Of Supply And Demand
WASHINGTON, Nov. 9—(AP)—• President Truman to
night wiped out in one stroke all waae controls and all re
maining price ceillnqs except those on rents, sugar and rico
and indicatod that those on rents may be raised.
"The law of supply and demand operating in the mar
ket place will, from now on, serve the people better than
would continued regulation ol prices by the government." he
said in a statement.
In restoring the national economy to a control free basis
just four days after the elec- , —
tion, Mr. Truman took one {% . 1ST1H
more pok^at congress. UOmillUniSlS/ MRP
"The reartasis of our difficulty __B
is the unworkable price control yin fnt* Nnalc in
law which the congress gave us to ■ 1UI Ocdla 111
administer," he declared. "The
plain truth is that, under this In-
adequate law, price control has
lost the popular support needed
to make it work."
The office of price administra-
French Assembly
tion will be continued to super
vise sugar rationing and the ceil-
in" on nioar, rice and rent. But
Price Administrator Paul Porter,
who took over last June when
Chester Bowles resigned, is ex-
pected to step out.shortly.
A strong hint that some In-
crease may be granted to land-
lords seeking higher rents was
seen in the president's discus-
sion of the necessity for contin-
ued rent ceilings.
"It may be that some adjust-
ment of rents will be required,"
Death Follows
Improvements
Two Men Obtained
DUARTE, Calif, Nov. 9——
Several years ago C. V. H. Jones,
real estate man, jind his close
friend, Perry Byerly, led a sue-,
eessful plan for widening Hunting-
ton Drive, to bring increased traf-
fic through this little community.
Byerly, ironically, was killed la-
ter as he crossed the busier, widen-
ed thoroughfare.
Saddened, Jones proposed traf-
fic signals for the highway. Only
this week he went before the
county board of supervisors to
urge their installation, particular-
ly at Highland Ave., where Byerly
was killed.
Today Jones, too, was dead —
struck down by a motorist at the
same intersection.
Burns, Charged in
Stabbing, Released
Under $5,000 Bond
William Taylor Burns, indicted
by the llllh district giand )urv
Wednesday on charges of "unsuult
with intent to murder" in eon-
Big 4 To Talk
Peace Treaty
For Germany
By JOHN A. PARRIS, JR.
NEW YORK, Nov. 9—(/P>—'The
groundwork for big four talks on
a German peace treaty late this
month was being prepared to-
night as hopes rose that the long
deadlocked Trieste dispute might
be near a solution.
American military government
officials from Germany arrived
in Washington this afternoon to
begin British-American negotia-
tions on the further merging their
two zones. Secretary of State
James F. Byrnes was expected to
confer with them in New York
tomorrow.
The British-American negotia-
tions in Washington are aimed at
setting the stage for four-power
talks here on the German peace
problem.
The American military govern-
ment officials arriving today were
headed by Lt. Gen. Lucius D.
Clay, deputy military governor
of Germany, and Robert Murphy,
political adviser to Clay and U. S.
occupation forces in Germany.
Diplomatic sources believed that
if the Trieste dispute could be
settled within the next 10 days,
t.ie four-power ministers would
be able to tackle the German
i.-eace problem earlier than had
been expected.
Clay was expeeted to give
Byrnes a quick fill-in here on the
German situation, but sources
close to the secretary of state said
that Byrnes did not plan to parti-
cipate in the British-American
negotiations in Washington.
jLlluT c *!t" evlei;i "
continued."
The price control act
PARIS, Nov. 0—(>P)—France
and her colonies will vote tomor-
row for deputies of the first ]ev-
islature of the Fourth Republic In
an election primarily a battle be-
tween the communist and MJRP
parties. Each has promised ta
exclude the other from the new
cabinet If it gains sufficient sup-
port.
Despite the MRP's bid for votes
from the followers of Gen. Da
Gaulle and Its pledge to Jftve
trance a centrist governrfient.
French political experts said the
balloting is not likely to change
the present political balance of
power, hehd jointly by the com-
munists, MRP and socialists, mil
said, "but contfpl of rents and that the new government is utir-
Bl'Jrt b U>V to l Utlntil- to be a : oalition.
!«•* <"« W
Hm ley Ay
Moii|i'| |,||
'i om Hw
■■Her M
li.HI '
lilt
27,
ktabbl
in
4. was
Legion and V.F.W.
Open House To Be
Conducted Monday
Open house will be conducted
Monday by the local posts of the
American Legion and Veterans of
Foreign Wars, It ha* been an-
nounced.
Both the Legion and V. F. W.
halls will remain open all day,
and coffee and doughnuts will be
ei ved to visitors. The American
Legion auxiliary will assist iu
serving.
which rents are controlled is
.scheduled to expire June 30. Mr.
Truman has indicated previously
that he will ask its continuance,
but the attitude of the republican-
controlled 80th congress appeared
uncertain.
Mr. Truman talso said that the
removal of ceilings on lumbar
and building materials "will ob-
viously necessitate a change in
the approach to some of the
problems in the housing pro-
gram." He did not amplify, but
he added that he has asked
housing expediter Wilson Wyatt
t« *o me promptly In
this regard."
Wyatt announced that the $10,-
000 limit on new home prices will
remain in effect, along with all
'I other Housine controls despite
the removal of price ceilings on
building materials.
The president's announcement
said he is convinced that the time
has come when these controls can
serve no useful purpose.
See Number ONE Page 4
J In choo,ihg 618 depotie* from
under! 3,000 candidates for fi*
yeartterms in the national > . in
bly, the people probably will con-
centrate 76 percent of their voV
cn those three major parties which
have jointly governed the coun-
try for the last two years, the ex-
perts said.
Thus, it is unlikely that any
important change in French for-
eign policy or in the domestic pro-
gram will result.
Snow fell In Paris on the eve
of the election, and if the weather
turns bad throughout the provinc-
es it may cut the size of the vote.
President-Premier Georges Bid-
ault's MKP party, the powerful
communists and Leon Blum's so-
cialist party will the big winners
ana other observers agreed.
SMALL COTTON CROP
• AUSTIN, Tex., Nov. 9—«P.i—
The United States department of
Agriculture estimate of Texas'
expected cotton crdp for 194B to-
day tumbled 50,000 bales below
expectations a month ago.
The new forecast is for 1,70U,000
bales of 500 pounds gross weight,
the smallest crop harvested in
Texas since 1889.
U. S. Plans Conferences
With Eighteen Nations
To Lower Tariff Rates
DISTRICT JUDOC
visit# ooncen
Ui UM Judge in
Allen of parry!<>n.
NO I'AH H iOMOHItO
I li*. buiytr Mi i Hm
urnreli m uUiti m
ul III '*| i
4*t Will b* |
• 4 VI' I"', i I i t, l.i
WASHINGTON. Nov. 9—(/P)—
The United States announced its
intention tonight of seeking spe-
cific tariff-reducing agreements
with 18 key countries at a con-
ference next spring.
In an apparent post-election
move to reassure foreign countries
of the administration's determina-
tion to keep its trade pledget,
Undersecretary of State William
L. Clayton announced the move
at a news conference.
Clayton simultaneously ex-
pressed firm conviction that the
republicans formerly considered
exponents of hiah tariffs, will
support th* democratic admin-
istration's foreign trade pro-
grem.
4m
Ik
Senator Wherry "l
however toiain rep id
ably will want «U
posed tariff redurt
they pn< judgement.
The negotiation*
mo l cnUMi'ive «tv«r
leb.), said
an* prob-
President Truman released a
statement terming the projected
trade discussions "necessary to
achieve the objectives of the At-
lantic charter xxx."
Clayton emphasised his belief
that the United States reciprocei
trade program is an all-Ameri-
can policy which the American
people want continued un-
changed.
He Mid he does not ftiu .my
republican attempt to inierfet
with tht
whkM
uutho
|l gym*
lurthtr
The I
veiri ir
9*
ty
ciproca! tradf* act
the adniini>tration
blaxh tariff <iutk*
50 percent without
Itp 14 conKn - .
• (j foi three
f 194 hut many re-
i; reinert vote J
itti
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Phillips, J. C. Borger-News Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 270, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 10, 1946, newspaper, November 10, 1946; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth293452/m1/1/: accessed March 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.