Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 265, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 29, 1927 Page: 4 of 8
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TheBorger Daily Herald
raillkri >t 10a Bomtk MUs tr«rt, Col-
lar, lau, i7irj E*eiung Eictpt tuic *7,
im on Banter Morning, bj
■un-wmHx PTXBunmia
COMPANY, Inc.
asks those who will offer earn tc
see him at the high school Friday
noon-
King Gives "Y" Camp
an Old Roman Stone
RAI. D. HOBRIS.
T. B. CAPTMSID
. Msnager
-Mantglog Editor
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Entered as second-class matter
November 23, 1926, at the post of-
fice at Borger, Texas, under the act
of March 3. 1897.
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled
to th* use for republication of all news
dispatches credited to it or not otherwise
credited to this paper and also tha local
news published herein.
Pace, Overson and
Orrick Will Speak
Included on the program of
speakers tomorrow night at the
Odd Felow banquet at. the Jim-Jo
club will be City Attorney Ove
Overson, who will deliver the
opening address; Mayor Glen Pace,
v.ho speaks on the Odd Fellow or-
ganization and W. O. Orrick.
Readings and musical selections
will be intermingled. A five-piece
orchestra, male quartet, and other
song specialties are to be offered-
Odd Fellows will be Invited to-
morrow night to attend the laying
of the corner stone of the Old
Folks home at Enni.s. Texas, Oct.
18. and to attend Odd Fellow and
Rebekah day at the Dallas Fair,
Oct. 1!).
All Rebekahs are requested lo
meet with Mr. Reeves at the (!il-
lam store Friday noon.
Will Bury Victim
Mysterious Murder
FREDERICKSBURG, Sept. 29 —
( A1J)—All efforts at identification
! apparently have failed and the
j abused and battered body of the
'young girl found 10 days ago in a
Aa j erroneous refl cticn upon the character pj ^ w j J J buried here tomorrow,
ataudiug or reputation of any indi?idual, | ,. . , neoDle viewed the bodv
ftrm, concern or corporation that may ,P- j Hundreds or people v if fi ' "«
l,i|$ar in the coIubdb o." the Herald, will b« but no (:lU6 to its identity litis
fUiily corrected whf called to the attetion ' fftVftalffd.
of the editor. It jb not the intention of
Ihis newspaper to wrongly use or injure any
Individual, firm, concern or corporation and
corrections will be made when warranted
aa prominently as was one wrongly published
••ierence to article.
8CB8CK1PTIGN KATES BY MAIL H
ffc- AJUVANCK
—OSS TEAR—
RfnrB i l • a i
YEAR MO. MO. lfO.
Srenlag and Sr.a. 7.50 *4.00 (2.00 70c
KTeuiBg Only 6.00 2.65 1.50 50e
Sunday Only 2.50 1.S5 .70 SCe
BY CARRIKR IN CITY
Per Week Per Month 3y Yjar
20e 70c 8.00
LONDON (API—Through the
courtesy of King Gorge, the inter-
national Boy's Camp of the Y. M.
C. A. in Windsor Forest has a di-
rect link with the Roman Empire.
Its site was marked with a stone
given by His Majesty. The stonc-
i* from a collection of Roman and
Corinthian ruins brought from Trip-
oli in 1825 by King George IV and
exhibited at the British Museum.
All unsolicited article*, manuscripts, let-
tars and pictures sent to The Herald are
soul at owners risk, and the publishers ex-
prceaiy repudiatea any liability ur responsi-
bility for their itafe custody or return. The
utmust care will be taken, however, to *ee
tkat they are not lost or misplaced iu this
office.
PHONE 18 fOR ALL DEPARTMENTS j
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
Egypts Queen is
Veiled for Fishing
MISS BORGER BALLOT
My choice for the most popular and beautiful young
woman in Borger is
Who lives at
League
Standings
(Fill this out t$r the girl of your choice and file it in one
of the ballot-JjOkeji in the lobbies of Rex and Rig1 thea-
tres. The starufing of contestants will be announced
each day in The1 Herald. Final announcement of the
winner will be made at the Rt-x theatre Wednesday,
October 5, at a style show to be participated in by mer-
chants of Borger.
a,
National League
Clubs— Won I.ost Pet.
Pittsburgh 93 58 -tiir.
•St- Louis ft 1 60 ,00'f
New York SO lil .5ftfi
; Chicago I 85 07 .5r,9
Cincinatti _. ... 7 2 7 7 .4 X-i
Brooklyn j «:! 87 .4 2!
Boston _ -<•_ .57 ! 2 .3*3
American League
—. ■ T'i
(ANT DODfiE l!\D Ll'CK
VITTEL, France (API—Queen
Nazi! of Kgvpt. who is now taking
the cure here, hopes to fish for!
trout iu the Vosges mountain
streams.
Her Majesty is an accomplished
fresh water fisherwoman and|
keeps herself constantly supplied jn Afr|ra
with the best fishing tackle and | *~nlcI 8 111
rods available from British firms.
Even while casting flies for speck-
led beauties she wears the veil
vhich Egyptian custom and the
Moslem religion prescribe for wo-
Queen Nazil, whose great-grand-!a hard time of aCf,°r,ii"S to the) he turned and walked around the
father was a Fren !i armv officer! story books, but in this tropical 1 block *o approach the ferry from
who turned Mussulman.has modern j section of West Africa a man - a street th * cat hadn'i crossed Fen
ideas. But, according to a mem- hi, minutes later the salt-sman trudgec
Enslave Poor Kin
Clubs
New York
Philadelphia
Washington
Detroit
j; i Chicago
_>/'Cleveland
| St. Louis _
~ : Boston
( Won Lost Pet.
■ 712
.r.ft 3
.560
134
Where iney
Play Today
St Louis at Cincinatti.
Philadelphia at Boston,
iew York at Brooklyn.
(Only games scheduled.)
American league
Cleveland ai St. Louis.
Washington at New York.
Detroit at Chicago.
Boston at Philadelphia.
HAVEL ii.U. CLASPS
f
50 1(11 .331
PAIUS'(AP) Hand bags of ex—
I nubile workmanship with clasps
•44 'rf real gems are being displayed
ly Parisian jewelers. The design
" 1 and workmanship of the embroid-
FREETOWN, Sierra Leone (API!
Poor relations have always had
OCDENSBIRG, N Y A sales-
man laden with traveling cases was
(hurrying to catch a ferry when a
black cat dashed across the street
ahead of him. To avoid ill fortune
Yesterday s
ber of her suite who spoke to the
Associated Press for Her Majesty
|"the queen believes that she should
set an example in conservatism
to her countrywomen."
poor relations are his slaves.
Football
High school students of
Borger will parade tomorrow
night, to encourage their foot-
ball team in its first game Sat-
urday at Dumas.
It may seem unimportant, in
a way, whether the team wins j
or loses, or whether the stu-1
Eight Are Hurt In
Muskogee Tornado
BREAKFAST IV SIBWAY
back to his hotel, baggage and all
°* ' "Avoiding that cat," he lamented,
BOSTON—Tardy workers hasten-
ing to punch the time-clock may
Ml'SKOGEE, Sept. 2ft- (APi have a chance to gulp some Boston
Eight persons were injured today baked beans for breakfast while
in a small tornado which blew waiting for trolley or train, if a
down two farmers houses three p]an now proposed proves practi-
miles northwest of Checotah. The oafole. Small pots of beans at pop-
homes of William Conklin and. ujar prices would be vended at
Walter Berry were wrecked. ! subway newsstands by the conces-
Called 2,000 Miles
on $10 "Cold" Check
i sionaire.
Dr. G- W. Wright, bishop
Sierra Leone, de^'ares there are'"made me miss my boat."
219.000 slaves in the British pro-1 ———-—
tectorate of Sierra Leone, whom! HIV STATE TOBACCO
the British government, because of '
treaties with native chiefs, is un-;
able to release except bv pavment ; AMHLIt>T. Mass. Massachusetts,
of $20 each, whose population per square mile
"Slaves are inherited." the bis-' greater than that of an> state
hop says in a statement calling except Rhode Island, still has a
attention to the evil, "and in most little room left for tobacco farm-
cases are relatives of the family. The Massachusetts Agricultural
Last February my cook came to College points out that the yearly
me and wanted to borrow ilo to, crop now averages between 14 -
complete a sum of $40 with which ooo.OOo and 15.000.u0o pounds, vir-
to buy freedom for his step-brother tuallv all of which is grown in three
end sister who were slaves in the counties in the Connecticut Rivet-
National League
New York, 5; Philadelphia,
10 innings. ,
St. Loui.' at Cincinatti—rain,
i Only games scheduled.)
American League
Washington, 2-G; Boston, 1-i-
Detroit at Chicago—rain-
Cleveland at St. Louis—rain.
(Only games scheduled.;
4,
protectorate ar^a.
Valley.
AUSTIN. Sept. 2ft (APi—W. H.
dents and the town support • Let race, Jr . who is claimed to have
the team. In another way, it " a il<)
a
county,
bad check at Mor-
Oregon, apparently
• , , r | < | I / • • '. O U 11 1 / i ' oil , u IP -
is very imporant. Ihe sup- niust return more than 2.000 miles
port given the team is even j to establish his innocense or guilt,
more important than victory Gov. Moody today honored requisi-
I f tion to the governor of Oregon for
. .. , . the rendition of Letrace who is
School .spirit S66IT1S to CGnt€?l c^if] to he ill custody at Del Rio.
around football teams. If foot- i
hall enthusiasm works to the n V^,,^ Drier Tav
detriment of studies or of V^ J^our 1 J*
Other school activities, this is] at Unce, Jones Warns
wrong. But there is no reason ——
for it to do so. If students thiHaveeji:'0U f,ai" -vour dOK ,as: r"r
are proud of their team. the}. Special Officer Johnny Jones, in
should be proud of the school ; charge of the city pound, today
that produced it; thev should issued a warning to all dog own-
strive to advance this_ school - ^Ht^i^nimals^ustjiave
in ever} \\a\. not onij in ^he "jfJO had" for the dog world,
matter of athletics. Dog tax for th<- year is only S2.
And football games, being tut it must be paid, the officer
picturesque, are a- fine, means
>>i bringing the support or j
the town to the schools.
Borger people have given
every indication that they will j
support the schools here. They
have voted freely large sums 1 rome 'APi—Ten o'clock cur-
of money to build school radio broadcasting is the
1 , _ 1 * Ur.w-i Ta r.ewffHt plan in an effort to stamp
houses and equip them. J" 'out imported vi<*-. such as jazz and
morrow they will start pay- dancing.
ing taxes to furnish funds to • Its purpose is to prevent danc-
operate the schools. But a little ine ■" private homes which, made
I I ,1 ,4■ t.ntt.iBJuBm possible by broadcasting dance mu-
added Loucn )i en.hUhia.mi 1(I increased greatly since the
will not hurt at all. j police closed nearly all popular
It is to be hoped that hun- ciance halls. If the plan now being
dreds of the young folk turn ; "^ed upon the government by in-
* • 1 4. n v, 4i , llnentii'l eccelsiastn-s, headed by
out tomorrow night lot the pat|ler Paoloni of the famous Moll-
first snake dancej and that levcassino monastery, is adopted
plenty of Borger people are every radia station will be compel-
on the streets to cheer them. Itrl tennlnate its: program at an
jhour when dancing has scarcely
j bi-gun.
u/anlt Care fn Tal^e At ,he ,ime church re-
wams V_ars lO I aKe formem have pledged themselves to|
Grid Team to Dumas work ror thl' adoption of a simiiat
system for other countries. The 10
o'clock curfew is actually a com-
promise plan, since the reformers
really want to prohibit broadcast-
ing of all light or danceable music.
Italy Plans Curfew
on Radio at 10 p. m.
Fifteen cars, to carry the Bor-
der football team to Dumas for the
game Saturday, and also to trans-
port approximately 40 teachers who
wish to attend, are asked for by
superintendent J. A. Dickson on
the Horger public schools. H'-
Working men of England have
Invested $250,000,000 in houses in
the past vfar.
Here's Something
With Which to
The Appetite
Tempt
Sea foods purchased from this market where they
are received fresh daily and properly kept, offer a
welcome relief from the ordinary run of food you are
accustomed to serving.
Blue Channel Cat, Red Fish, Dressed Haddock,
Red Snap per, Large Fresh Water Cat, Dressed Fresh
Cod Fish, Frogs, Eels, Baltimore Oysters. These offer
a few suggestions that are different.
Also, the very best in live or dressed poultry and
fresh country eggs, twelve good eggs to the dozen.
Borger Fish Market
/ Across Sree from Postoffice
I
Moose Lodge Will
Initiate 35 Members
The Moose lodge of Borger will
initiate 35 candidates at a smoker
to be held in the Jim-Jo club to-
night at 8 o'clock. All Moose are
invited to attend. The present
membi eship is approxmalely 124.
lery is so due that nothing but
jewels makes an approplate mouh -
Aquamarines, topaz, amathystR
and ;iupphiies are frequently used
for tIn clasps. These bags, which
ihe most "xcluiive jewelers do not
I despise to display conspicuously,
are meant to last a life time, or
several life times.
Stomach Gas Drives
Man From Bed
"I had gas so bad I had to get
up nights on account of ihe pres-
sure on my heart. I used Adlcri-
k :i and have been entirely re-
lieved."—R. F. Krueger.
Even the FIRST spoonful of Ad-
lerika relieves gas and often re-
moves astonishing amount of old
waste matter from the system.
Makes you enjoy your meals and
sleep better. No matter what you
have tried lor your stomach and
bowels, Adlerika will surprise you.
Hatcher Drug Company, North
and South Borger. adv.
THE STORE WHERE YOU
FEEL AT HOME
H ILLS
• HVMAVJ" '
STORES «i '•
"JOE" wants you to
stop at the store this
week-end. He claims he
has more new fall
things to show than
ever before. All of them
at prices decidedly be-
low their value!
: . . . where you can clothe the
whole family for fewer dollars!
E
"HOP", in charge of
our men's furnishings
department, is one of
the best liked sales-
men in the whole state.
Simply because he
takes a friendly interest
in his customers, and
treats them right.
VERYONE who trades here seems to appreciate our "human"
viewpoint. The friendly spirit of HILL'S makes folks feel per-
fectly at home. There's a kindly social atmosphere about the place.
And what's more, it is the earnest purpose of this organization to
give you the most vaule for the least money. Are we doing it?
Read these low everyday prices below and then come in and make
your own comparison!
Note These Low Everyday Prices:-
TURKISH TOWELS, 13' ...x26 9c
36-IN. PERCALES, in light, dark and
print patterns 14c
FINE FEATHERS ALL SILK HOSE
at 95c, $1.45, $1.95
MEN'S BROADCLOTH DRESS
SHIRTS, color guaranteed $1.95
MEN'S WORK SHIRTS, popular and
serviceable 49c, 95c
MEN'S DRESS SUITS, all wool, hand
tailored $24.75, $27.50
Genuine BOSS WOLLOPER GLOVES
2 for 23c
NEW SILK DRESSES, beautifully
stvled $9.35
ELEGANTLY FUR TRIMMED
COATS, for smart women $'.8.85
WOMEN'S VELVET AND FELT
HATS, unusually chic $1.95, $4.95
CHILDREN'S HATS, in attractive
shapes and colors $1.95
36-IN. COTTON SUITINGS, in dark
shades, yd. 25c
NEW RAYON AND WOOL FAB-
RICS, 36-in. wide, yd. 89c
NOTIONS, all 10c items priced 8c
all 5c. items priced 4c
ETHYLE ENTERLINE, vl.o is
noted for Ihe friendly ;ul\i<e
which *he tfives all her custom
er . wants you to he *wre and
yop ihe ready—to—wear at
JI ITil/S and the umisaully low
prices which prevail in her de-
partment.
All who know "BILL"
like to do business with
him because his con-
stant aim is to give you
better service. "BILL"
is in charge of our
men's and women's
shoe departments.
We Sell Ladies Coats and Dresses on The Lay-a-way Plan
Hill's
{[ 'Humany* Department Store |
Borger, Texas
MARY WRIGHT i in charge of
our piece goods dept. Long
ago we (discovered that the word
"eii'V means easy except when
lined in connection with ihe
word "payments." That's
whj we Iniy our merchandise
for cash and sell it the same
wa> passing the Savings along
to You I
The Store Where You Feel At Home
•
.
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Caufield, T. E. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 265, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 29, 1927, newspaper, September 29, 1927; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth209267/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.