Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 302, Ed. 1 Monday, November 7, 1938 Page: 2 of 6
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Ü3L
TWO
7.
THE BORGER DAILY HERALD
at 101 North Main Btr—t. Boner. T«xa*. Etery Evening
it Saturday, and on Sunday Morning by
PANilAttObH PURbltlHINU. Inc.
■ C. PHILLIPS
•ILL BVKCOMR
Ci en oral
_ Editor
9m Waak
Ox Yaar
Om Yaar .
Six Matitte
Three Moat
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier In Borger
By Matt
Üu
$ .15
7.60
(7.60
4.00
1'. 10
ON a
Storm-Swept
Night . .
THE BORGER (TEXAS) DAILY HERALD
NOW IS THE TIME TO FIND OUT
, '
MONDAY. NOV. 7. 1988
Any em ww tta raflaetlon upon tltr Minrmettir, Miinamg or repu-
tatioa of aop individual, firm, concern, or ooriiniallon that may ap-
pear In the columna of the Hornld will !>e gladly mi reeled wae
called to the attention of the editor II in not ilie iiiteullon of ffitu
newspaper to wrongly use oi Injure any Individual, firm, concern, or
corporation, and corructloui will I *? mude wtieti whi ranted and
prominently a* Wat wrongly miblialiod reference or article.
The Aaaociatfcd Prca la exclusively entitled to the uac of, re-
publication of all new* diapaiche* credit to it or not otherwise.
Entered aa aacoud.tlaaa matter November 23, 1H28 at the I'ont-
offloe at Borger. Texaa, under the A< I ot March n, 1897.
All unsolicited «Hiele . tnnnuS'ilpt , letter utul pic tu rea sent
to the Herald are aent nt tbe owner's tinK. and the iuiIiIIiiIiim'h ex-
pressly repudiate and liability or reepoiiH Utility for their euatodv or
return. The utmost care will be taken, however, to ace that they are
■ot loat or misplaced in this office.
THEY DID NOT DIE IN VAIN
Not in vain did they «rive their lives in the "war to
end ail wars," jimt twenty years ago. if we who live today j
will carry on.
They did not die to make us soft nor did they make
the supreme sacrifice in order that miirht alone should
rule.
What these American soldiers did on foreign fields,
a full twenty years ago, was done in the firm belief thai
right and justice, and an enduring peace, would ble.* the
world at large.
They did not fight for glory, nor reward. They did
not wotahip and blindly follow an exalted leader of just
caliber. They fought for an ideal, that people
i free, free to govern themselves, free to enjoy a
peace.
merely had a job to do . . . and they did ii . .
Flashing through the
cold icy night had come
the first word of the die-
aster, of a naval plane
lost in maneuvers,
crashed in cruel waters.
Ships had rushed to the
spot, but they had found
only floating wreckage,
only part of the crew,
clinging to each other in
the darkness. And back
on shore waited the
women who loved theae
men. That story, and the
story of these women, is
told in a thrilling new
serial of the navy
And . . . ta
£&& a
twenty years later, on Friday of this week,
we eeltttumte the signing of the Armistice ... an Armis-
tice designed for peace, yet now proven to be the begin
ning of a twenty years armed truce.
The peace fought for on Flanders field does not
exist. Today, we see the same forces at work that started
amies marching in 1914. "Defeated Germany," if Ger-
many was defeated, again challenges the peace of the
world, in order that German culture and trade might
have a greater place in the sun.
The issues that existed twenty years ago are the is-
sues of today, except that the stage is changed.
A debt exhausted world, a world desiring peace and
economic stability assuring labor and the rewards of
labor for its increasing millions of people, must melt and
mold' their plowshares into cannon . . . because of the um-
bition of a small gfoup of men "who think they know j
what is best for men" and who strut their stuff in the
hope that history will mark them as another Ceasar, an-
other Alexander* another Bismark, another Napoleon.
cee!
I WISH I
KN|W SOMfcTH IMC
ABOUT ALL TMeSfc
OTHER CANDIDATE/
O *'*< Q
L.
3S83S?S.
' " * . rJ>'* ' . " " ,
*•
CupyNSK 1W •' A
Haney Named As
llrnivnci' Uanadar
Divwllo Inaliagri
ST Ull'IK. Nov 7 (/!') I'V <1
little y, iitloini the Toledo Mud-;
liens ni' tile Amerita.I Ai- iocImiIoii '
I he lacl Itto yelil i ami a ííM'lll* !'
innjoi Icmkuc player, wna tiitiinil
iii.t11:< ti'i loilav nl ill, HI Ui'iuai
Ml m* le fui I lie I HUH Hen nil
Honey, who I'layil iniield wilb
tiui iMMi'oit Tinera ami v\¡«h !
member uf llie St I,mil* ('ai'dlu-
alH í i III 311, Mlmtod ¡i one-year
i olí.' .id
tie ui ■ i•'•<!( i ¡bin i<- i t;*iii i
.S11'1'''t, who wji til .tut-« d tile la 1
wkK ni i In j.: .'{Honaon The
lliuwith Iiulxlieil tin- season ill
at ven th plací .
liaiiey. who I* I o yearn old,
«a amt'lIK a lenre U< pOi'MOIXS rtt
Nltlcred fot the post Ituludlti"
itlll'e Itlltll the totmer SlHltt Ol
•Swat
lit'll Blil'lievi. |tfl'«tt|i lit in till1
clMh. and Jíuahiett hii,.iuk<i Bill
|i \V i * i tlccliii'd to diaciose term*
or Hurley's contract.
IIKHHM KW'IW bl TOWN
HKNDAYK, Frunce, (at the
| Spanlali frontier I Nov. 7 <A>)—
Siimili.li inaurxoui diapalchea le-
IMtried today tlou i'uilaal o Pruti-
ciaco Ki iHico'a forces huí «n-
linled Mora D> Wbiv. the kov-
eniuieii!' silliinl oil the weal
la.uk Ol i lio Hbr i river, itud that
tlie tow.i III end; liiM been re-
dtti*ed •" a heap o;' imukliid ru-
tan
tint, i linen' I |ioi t • Illlmilied
utily that til" encMO rtllceeetled
ii: niiiklii. nil: hi advance oil a
very ieduc< 'I iro'ti."
KM
Ilea vera were extinct In illiiiola
,iltd wild lurkeya III Wlacoliain.
■ tin I S Koitairy Service en
KÍiieeled a Hade; a truckload of
lurkeya for a iruckload of lieiiv
era.
SCHOOLS MOT CLOSE
if ITCH and IMi'KTKJO spread
among the pupil-1*. Stop llt-ll or
imi'ktico CONTAGI Ot JS' SOKE8
at once with BROWN'8 l^)TION
You can't lo:<e; this liquid-anti-
scotic if «old and KuaruMecd by
u n l>ltl K'ftmn, INC.
ipii
A Three Days' Cough
Is Your Danger Signal
st a common couch, a chest imircdlonts that iiokmb Crcomul-
ll'fftgl?
Beginning—
TODAY
CIO IS
(Contiuaea from puse ON1S)
self
shoes!
What price they pay, in human lives, that they, the
exalted: few, might strut their stuff in dead men's
Daniel Caney. Police t'ltlef Harry
Wttlrh and the lity cominimfon
"from placlns any provloun re-
ktt'tlttit upera or lit any other man-
iter whatsoever InlerfurlnK with
When a handful! of selfish and ambitious men rule "n piatnuir m reapwi to nte
ItoldltH: ol nteetiiij-N or tiaaenlbllo*
In i he open oil a.ttl In park* dedi-
cated for the purpoai a of the «eu-
c ra I leeri ,'lion of the public."
II made t h - pi in itio that "an
appllcailou for a txuiuit to hold
Htlflit meeliUKK hat. Iieen made
thiee tlaytt in ad\aiice and pro-
vided further thai Ktich perinil
may be refiiMcd only for ihe rea*
Hon I hut ill' pa it |cula i time or
place denl«t!aled III the applica-
tion Ih in renHonahle eonfilcl with
the public recrentiwual pttrpoues
of Maid park* "
t- X
wl
the destinf Of great nations, taxing their peoples beyond
human endurance in order to maintain huge war mach-
ines* and like thieves that come in the night, confiscate
the wealth of their own citizens who do not see eye to
eye with them on their brutal policies, nations of people
desiring to maintain their liberties and their democratic
forms, had best look to their flint locks . . . and keep
their powder dry.
As we now approach the twentieth anniversary of
that eventful day, it is with saddened hearts that we real-
ize that these is no peace nor promise of security for those
democratic nations who most want to do away with war
as an instrument of national policy and diplomatic deal-
ings.
Now is no time to be soft. If we are to best honor
those who died these twenty years ago that men might
be free and live in peace one with another, we must
carry on, holding ourselves equal to any emergency that
might threaten the peace of our western hemisphere.
Our means of national defenne should be equal to
any occasion that might arise. Ii is just as important na-
tionally for our army and navy together with our air
forces to be strong and capable as It is for the individual
to be able and health;. ,
We do not know what threat the triple alliance of
Germany, Italy and Japan holds for the future peace of
the world. Each of these nations, ruled by ambitious
leaders, are busy at this time consolidating their recent
military, political and diplomatic gains. Into What new
fields to conquer will their ambitions lead them?
Some day, there will be the firr>t time; there will be
an attempt to invade the shores of North America . . .
unless human nature and the ways of men change. It
may not be anytime soon. It is not likely to happen as
long as the United States, secure in its democratic ad-
ministration of public policy, maintains at full strength
ii* armed forces for defense.
Politically divided China, a nation too frequently at
the merey of selfish political gangs and military lords,
with millions of men under arms, men experienced in
guerilla and civil warfare, falls an easy prey to the high-
ly modernized army of Japan.
We *ee this before our eyes . . . through the medium
of the newsreel. We do not doubt it.
H*ve we any reason to doubt the possibility that at
thia very minute our own nation has not been singled out
M the next victim? The same greed that moves mighty
armies into foreign territory, deaf to the desiras of the
mMS of itfe own people, is not likely to stop at the water
line; not If modfem aviation and modern ships offer them
áb Opportunity to extend their power beyond the seas.
If suffering humanity cannot stop them; if the torn
bleedfng bodies of little children cannot niter th?ir
march; If helpless and starving women, children,
old men cannot excite their sympathy; if they raise
and' demand more room in the sun . . . what
«troagtiÉ'my, navy and air force, can stop the
taace at the world's war lords.
hsfo dead and to adequately show our
ii to those veterans of 1918, let us carry on
listice Day. Nov. 11. 1988, find the American
to shoulder, allied with the president
to maintain at full strength our ria-
I'ollOII. lilt C Ilia, IIIOlUHWCH,
aluminum, iron, rubber, and a
mixture of surface oil are used
i In Home parts of Hie world ¡ta a
foundation for hiKhwxya.
wrilln* b>
— "«III t"r 11 lilr-limr! llnnrt-
untnnly flnlnlurt in <<n«m«l und
chromium. A lr«it to tha uym
•. • • thrill to ' hi fingers!
Borger Daily Herald Want Ada Pay Off
.fust a common cough,
rold, or a bronchial irritation of to
day may lead to seriou trouble to-
morrow. They may be relieved now
with Creomulsion. an emulsified
Creosote that is pleasant to take.
Creomulsion ta a medicinal com-
bination designed to aid nature in
.soothing and healing Infected mu-
cous membranes by allaying irrita-
tion and Inflammation and by
aiding in loosening and expelling
germ-laden phlegm.
The Medical Profession has for
generations reedgnized the benefi-
cial effect of Beechwood Creosote in
! he treatment of coughs, chest colds,
and bronchial irrltntions. A .special
orocesü was worked out by a clicm-
Mon you get a good dose of genuine
Beechwood Creosote which is palnt-
uble and may be taken froqtiontly
by both adults and ohlldrcn.
Creomulsion is one preparation
that goes to the very sent oí the trou-
ble to help looser, and expel germ-
laden phlegm. When coughs, chest
colds and bronchial ¡•.•oubtwudue to
common colds-hang on. net a bottle
ot Creomulsion from your druggist,
use it as directed and It you are not
satisfied with the relief obtained,
the druggist is authorized to refund
your money Creomulsion is one
word, aak for it plainly, see that tlv
name on the bottle is Creomulsion.
and vott'll get the genuine product
m ■
ist. for blending Creosote with other and the relief you want. <' Adv.)
POPEYE
JÜST IMAGINE GOiMG
THROUGH UFE LOOK IMG
THE WAN T w£V LOOK
I A*. • '
AFRA.>
I C ID
WIMPy DlDJA
SEE THE
DE-MlMG?
✓E-MIMGS CERTIWGLY
LOOK ACFUL, DON'T
THEV? -«
WELL
wimpv
WOULDM'T
V/IM ANV
8EA0TV
PRIZE
THAT
ONEEVED
RAT WAS
POPEVE,
AIN'T HE
A SIGHT?
i YAM
GLAD
WE A NOT
DE-MINGS
-^SL
DEMONS
OKAV,
BILL
•THAT
WOULD
BE TOUGH
SILL
f.
DICKIE PAR
COULTON
mrMA/n
LOQiON'
WAUG
• MO NO* M OLD TgAPPe* /5
VS1N& THBM TO 4TARI HIÍ FIRE
LhAST THAT*
irne
POT IN A l
"S-r-
Sr*H>
WHAT I
X
THAT M
BEAR CUBi
STOP
OIL
TUT Ml FMM ¡USOM JIIHII!
ELASTIC "STEEL FlEX" HSTON RINGS
RoberéuiwlÍMefStafloa « parage
1018 S. MAIN ST. DISTRIBUTORS PH^Te 3ft
Have Your Gar
Equipped With—
Get Them In
Borger From- -
OAKY DOKES
■•• —
^?EDRl£
RETURNED
THE
MAGIC
LAMP
(AND JENNY)
Torri
OWNER...
NOW OUR
HEROES ARE
FLEEING
THE
COUNTRY...
THINK OF IT/FOUR HOURS )
WITH A BLONDE, AND ,
I DON'T REMEMBLff A )
I H0PF. YOU
HOT A ^ NEVER GET
thinc// MIXED UP
'WiTH A MACK-
LAMP AGAIN
ABOUT FOUR
HOURS
DON'T V0U
REMEMBER
ANYTHING?
YEH I
THOUGHT YOU
WERE '.05T
FOREVER
HOW
LONG
WAS I
GONE/9
THAT
JENNY
THINC/
m
By R. B. PULLER
/
THAT GIVES v
MBACHANCE
TO MAKE UP
A WONDERFUL
STORY/
Mawr Mcliurtv* fectuna Incluí-
Ins Touch Control*, rtoyol'i Mu-
tational Improwimmt. Tumo-
du*iv* mo<Mii. ISimmM liduca-
UomJ Budgut lion.
ROYAl
vm
Office Supply
INfitlm-Hvo Pri
Mrrvlri i s
K# <¡ 9 :
M«'r lil llldg.
SCOTTY RESCUES
THE RL/M6 FMMf
THff HALf~8UR\60
CAMB«A, ®UT 16
MWKffLY gURNGD
ABOUT TME ANKUK
WUUCKJ tic Hi
• HP r*
FORCED TO RUN
"WHDUOM A FLOW
01 MO I LAVA
IN RWURNJN®
TO TMff EA^TY
OP TMS
•CUTTY.'
-MS FLOW MA6
STOPPED'
DID TOÜ
THAT,
SCOTTY?
TH« ADVENTURES OF PATSY
, SAFE POT
tms tm*6, BUT
WE' «TITAN060 —
AND THAT LAVA WON'T
Ofif FOB (
Mf CUT
WHAT ARE WE
GOING TODO?
4
NOTH1N6 TO PO BUT WAIT.
AND HOPS THAT WR CAN
H0W3 OUT,
„. ...
ft rtk
I •
émum
,;iy:
s 0/tat 'ifw/iiiii
[4i:
Ü1 ÜlvM s>..
J
mmá
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Sercomb, William A. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 302, Ed. 1 Monday, November 7, 1938, newspaper, November 7, 1938; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth167552/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.