Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 1, Ed. 1 Monday, November 26, 1945 Page: 1 of 6
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* THE CARBON BLACK CENTER OF THE WORLD *
THE WEATHER
WEST TEXAS: Parity cloudy this afternoon,
tonight, and Tuesday: slightly colder tonight
and Tuesday.
Vol. 20— No. 1
NEA Service
Associated Press
Borger, Texas, Monday, November 26, 1945
Six Pages Today
Price 5c
Japanese Diet
Opens Second
Session Today
TOKYO, Nov. 26—(/Pi—The
Diet opened its second extraordi-
nary session of the occupation to-
day with an agenda of several re-
form measures, but there were im-
mediate indications that some pro-
posed legislation would be attack-
ed.
Tomorrow's plenary session
will be highlighted bv Emperor
Hirohiio't reading oi an im-
perial rescript outlininq iho
scope of the session and order-
ing the Diet t« abolish repres-
sive laws. Today's meotinq was
limited to selection o( working
committees by the houses of
peers and representatives.
Premier Kijuro Shidehara is ex- j
pccted to emphasize "close rela-
tionship between the emperor and
the people" us a plea for unity or <
important domestic measures when
he addresses the diet Wednesday, i
The Japanese government, on
an order by General MacArthur,
furnished him a list of all legisla- !
lion to be submitted.
The list included measures to 1
"liberalize” the government, to i
aid occupation forces, to repeal j
war-time restrictive measures, and •
to dissolve llngolstic associations
already forbidden by MacArthui s
orders.
Social democrats said they
would attack the government
land reformation bill because the
expropriation measure, as
amendfd, is "to mild." It would
take much of Japan's agricultu-
ral lands from the wealthy and |
redistribute them among small
farmers, with repayment to bo
made by long time installments.
Other Japanese sources said it
was doubtful if the commerce and
industry ministry could complete
its anti-trust legislation in time
tor presentation at this session,
scheduled for 18 days.
Manchuria Is Rich War Prize for China
U. S. S. R.
GOLD from placer
mines reaches
$2,000,000 o year
E%s«Halin
SOYBEANS, big cash crop,
arc 60 per cent of world's
total at 5,000,000 tons an-
nually, used for fodder,
fertilizer, socp, plastics,
dyestuffs, food: vegetable,
cheese, pickle, salad oil,
butter, flour._
ANSHAN is center of
iron and steel production
of up to 2,000,000 tons
a year, but ore is low-
KARAF
CHINA
HOKKAIDO
Vladivostok
Sco of Japan
Nazis Plotted Prague
Assassination of Own
Ambassadorto Czechs
FUSHUN coal oreo
produces 6.600,000|
of Monchuria's an I
nual 9,500,000 Ions I
Manchuria
Texas
446,000 %q. mi.
265,896 sq mi.
a
r
\
Yellow Sea
3
JAPAN
^Shanghai
vpftjsd«
> \/sHI
Rioters Storm
Coast Guards
In Jerusalem
Document Reveals Plan
To Vindicate Invasion
r/
'SHIKOKU
KYUSHU
fast China Sea
Pacific Ocean
Miles
300
Map above shows some of the rich resources of Manchuria, to which China fell heir after the
Japanese capitulation and the signing of the Sino-Soviet pact. In addition to its natural wealth,
Manchuria holds a Jap-built industrial empire—including steel, machine tool, synthetic oil and
chemical plants—that represents billions of dollars invested by the enemv.
J Eli USA LEM, Nov. 26—(Ah—
; Police battered with batons and
| tear gas today into the surround-
ed Jewish settlement of Shefayim, j
one of three localities surrounded I
yesterday after armed Jews i
| wounded 14 officers in attacks on |
i Coast Guard stations.
Curfew prevailed along a large
section ol the Palestine coast,
where the British were trying to documents, American prosecutors
Stop illegal immigration. 1 he Brit-, , detailed plans for
i lsh .s,xl 1 Airborne Division had , u * nvasion Czechoslovakia
; cordoned off Shelayim. G.vath wm. made on Aprjl ,93«_just
Haim and Rishbon. one month after Hitler overran
Large crowds manned the barn-t Austria and assured the wor,d he
| cades at Shefayim, Police advised j had no further p]ans for ,t.rritor-
NUERNBERG, Nov. 26 —(AP)—American prosecutors
disclosed at the war crimes trial of 20 top Nazis today that
Adolf Hitler and Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel plotted in
1938 to assassinate their own German ambassador in Prague
to create an "incident" leading to the invasion of tiny
Czechoslovakia.
The plot was just one step in Hitler's lawless plans to
subjugate Germany's neighbors that were outlined in detail
before the international military tribunal.
Reading from captured German i
7rh Fleet Head
r
Hull Says Japs 'Hell-Bent'
For War In November, 1941
WASHINGTON, Nov. 26
Local 351 To Meet
In Union Hall Here
Shidehara'; plea- fur unity were t0(^ay that the Japanese were
not expected to inject new life m- ,
to his cabinet, which undoubtedly Der‘ 13,1
will tall after the diet adjourns
Sharp criticism is certain on the
troublesome food BTWJ housing pro
blcms, and sharp questioning may
fol.ow as a result of the reported
coal shortage.
Covered Dish Supper,
Bingo Portv Tonight
American Legion Post and Le-
gion Auxiliary will have a covered
dish supper and bingo party at the
Legion Hall tonight at 7 o'clock,
it was announced today.
Families of members nre in-
vited and each lady is requested
to bring a covered dish, the an-
nouncement said.
them to disperse* and attacked
j when they refused.
A usually well-informed Jewish
i informant said 15 settlers of She-
iayim were wounded when troops
1 penetrated the village, wielding
j the butt ends of their rifles. The
report was not officially con-
firmed immediately.
Presumably Maj. Gen. A. L.
Beds, British military commander
of the civil district of Lvdda, or-
dered the restrictions to prevent
further landings of illegal Jewish
! ial expansion.
All employees of the Phillips
Petroleum Co., both union and
(AP) Cordell Hull declared i non-union, under the jurisdiction
hell-bent" for war in Novem-i1’1 kocal No. 351> Operating En-
.„d . 10-point American no,, h. ,.,d ,„y ]
peace-seeking nation would have been delighted to accept." to attend a general mass meeting1 'Tg . :.
Tk*J*-year old former secretary of state, testifying be j **» the Union Hall. Wednesday * ..p*(v J{-"nn(.d aaacled
fore a senate-house committee investigating the Pearl Harbor j n,*7;.>
disaster, said the Nov. 26 note he handed the Japanese had
been "ignorantly mlsrepre-
Truman Commends
DAY Program For
Ex-Service Men
WITHDRAWS RESIGNATION
ATHENS, Nov. 26 —*4*)—Arch-
bishop Damaskinos withdrew his
resignation as regent of Greece
last night after both the United
States and British ambassadors
urgently requested him to remain
in office.
Shiralori Surrenders
TOKYO, Nov. 26 —(/Pi— Toshio
Shiratori, 1939-40 ambassador to
Italy who asserted in 1941 Japan's j
true aim was to drive the white
man out of Asia, surrendered at
Sugamo prison today.
medical
* Hospital Notes
NORTH PLAINS
Mrs, ina Coss is a surgical pa-
tient.
Clyde Lehenbnur is
patient. '
Doyle Howard is a surgical pa-
tient.
Leon Morton is a medical pa-
tient.
Mrs. Grace Huicv is a medical
patient.
Miss Jean Gibson is a medical
patient. muc
Bob Earnest is a medical patient. I df,nt
Mrs. Garland James is a medi-1
cal patient.
Kermit Cotton is a medical pa-
tient.
Mrs. Violet Brown is a medical
patient.
Jean Thompson is a medical
patient.
Don A. Potts is a medical pa-
tient.
Sandra Sue Damron is a medi-
cal patient,
Mrs. D. W. Page is n medical
patient.
PANTEX
Mrs. Bettie Smith is a medical
patient.
Tommy Zion is a medical pa-
tient.
President Harry Truman recent-
ly wrote a letter to the National
Disabled American Veterans Com-
mander. Milton D. Cohn, who re-
layed the message to the local
Jackson Tietz Chapter No. 30,
DAV. The letter reads as follows:
"I have learned that the Dis-
abled American Veterans has
been endeavorinq to exoand re-
habilitation program on behalf
of all handicapped ex-service-
men. I am sure that all Ameri-
cans. particularlv families and
relatives of the war disabled, will
approve of this step.
"I am glad to learn of this
effort, and vou and vour com-
mittee e.re to >v> complimented
on vour leadership and patriot-
ism in placinq vour organization
in position to render adequate
service to those men who have
so well served the nation. You
have my best wishes for the suc-
cess of the endeavor."
The DAV was founded in Cinci-
nnati in the early 1920's by a
group of disabled World War I
veterans who were taking part in
government vocational training
programs. Judge Robert H. Marx
of Cincinnati is credited with be-
ing the organizing genius of the
DAV: and in 1920 when he was
sented."
Japanese propagandists later
I called it an American “ultima-
tum.'' The army Pearl Harbor
board said in its report Hu’I’s de-
livery of the note may have start-
ed the war.
"There has been more misin-
formation and more ignorant
misrepresentation — unintentio-
nal. no doubt—about the signifi-
cance of this last proposal of ours
than of anv move we made,"
Hull testified.
"There was nothing in there
that anv peaceful nation would
not have been delighted to ac-
cept."
Hull said the 10-point note mere-
ly brought together the general
principles on which the United
States had been insisting since
diplomatic talks began with the
Japanese six months earlier. He
added that five of the ten points
offered direct benefits to Japan.
"The only trouble with this note
was that the Japanese were bent
—if I hadn't noticed the presence
of ladies here I'd say hell bent—
on carrying ahead their military
policy,” the former cabinet mem-
ber said grimly.
Earlier thr ailing secretary had
testified he believed the State
Department was "thoroughly
justified in wanting the fleet
kept at Pearl Harbor in the cri-
tical days of late 1941."
The former cabinet officer took
Mr. Rigdon states that ques- n, .
11 ions of vital importance and in- j 8a an“
j terest to all will be explained I
! and discussed at the meeting.
the Coast Guard stations at Givat
Plans for the proposed assas-
sination cf a German diplomat
and a subsequent blitz invasion
of the little country were known
by the code name "Case Green"
and were revealed in a file care-
fully kept by Hitler's adjutant
who was captured by American
airborne troops, Assistant Prose-
cutor Sidney S. Alderman told
the court.
Negrin Blasts Giral
In Farewell Speech
MEXICO CITY, Nov. 26—UP)—
added that
wrecked.
Six of the wounded police were
Britons and eight were Palestin-
ians. There were indications that
the Jewish attackers had suffered
heavy casualties.
The disorders were believed
to be connected with the capture
Former Spanish Premier Juan of the Greek motor schooner Dem-
Negrin, who in a farewell speech etrois which brought 200 illegal
yesterday blasted the Jose Giral Jewish immigrants to the coast,
government as lacking in "resist- j Twenty of the immigrant party,
ance,” enplanes this afternoon for i including two girls, were captured,
New York, en route to Europe, but the rest managed to land and
where he plans to direct pro-re- disperse before the police inter-
publican activities in cooperation j vened.
with the underground movement
inside Spain.
Negrin said he considered his
mission to America ended, and
that his future activities will be
closer to the Spanish frontier— in
England and France.
He came here last summer with
the announced intention of unit-
ing the widely split republicans.
San Antonio Artist's
Painting Wins Award
Ghost Corps Commander
Citizen of Thionville
lampaign manager of the late Ule stand before a senate-house
Franklin D. Roosevelt, who at that
tune was running for Vice Presi-
it is said that Judge Marx
made more speeches on a cross-
country tour organizing the DAV
that did Mr. Roosevelt for his
oitice, according to an announce-
ment from the DAV headquarters.
Jackson Tietz Chapter No. 30 of
the Disabled American Veterans
meets at the VFW hall on the
second and fourth Tuesdays of
each month at Ihe Veterans of
Foreign Wars Hall, T, J. Davis,
commander, announced.
All veterans who wer e medicaly
discharged from the service or who
meet other eligibility requirements
are invited to attend the meet-
ings, he concluded.
committee investigating the Pearl
Harbor disaster for an hour’s
questioning.
In response to a question from
Gerhard Gesell, committee coun-
sel about the State Department’s
altitude on keeping the fleet in
Hawaiian waters, Hull said:
"We (elt that it would be more
or less useful, especially after
the fleet was based at Pearl
Harbor, that it rrmain there
during the critical state of rela-
tions with certain other nations
—Japan especially."
“We were dealing with one of
the worst international despera-
METZ, France, Nov. 26—(A*) —
Lt. Gen. Walton H. Walker, who
commanded the famed XX 'Ghost
Corps during the battles in France
and Germany, yesterday was made
an honorary citizen of Thionville.
Now commanding the Eighth
Service Command at Dallas,
Texas, General Walker headed the
XX Corps when it took Metz from
the Germans Nov. 22, 1944.
AUSTIN, Nov. 26—(4*)—The
Texas Fine Arts Association an-
nounced that first prize in oil
paintings at the current exhibits
at the Laguna Gloria and Ney
museums was won by Amelia Ur-
bach of San Antonio.
First prize in the water color
section went to Emily Guthrie
Smith of Fort Worth and honorable
mention to Edith Brisac, Denton.
First prize in graphic arts was
won by Coreen Mary Spellman of
Denton.
New York Police Busy
In City's Crime Wove
NEW
YORK, Nov. 26-
General George S. Patton jr„ Police offensive against
Third army commander when York City's rising crime
Metz was liberated, received the reached across the nation
-(/Pi-
New
wave
today
Medal of Verdun. The honor has with authorities in Mobile, Ala.,
been accorded to only one other and Kansas City, Mo., holding
American, General of the Armies three persons in connection with
John J. Pershing. two recent slayings here.
The mayor of Metz was pre- Meanwhile, the city’s total of
sented a cowboy hat by General killings rose to 68 in 76 days, as
Walker in
Texas.
the name of Dallas,
British Reds Demand
Removal of E. Bevin
police yesterday found Edward V.
Corrigan, an entertainer, strangled
and stabbed to death. His body
had been left in the driveway of
a policeman’s home.
LONDON, Nov. 26—(4b—The
British communist party’s 18th
convention yesterday demanded
BRITISH SUGGEST CHANGE
IN DARDANELLES CONTROL
I/INDON, Nov. 26—(.Pi— A
foreign office spokesman said to-
does within the memory of man Soviet Union, the "new peoples’
He was at huge, on a rampage, governments of Europe" and coin
* Births
Mr. and Mi* Leo Green are
the parent* of a 6 pound 8 1-2
ounce boy born «i 16 49 pm. Nov
24 at the North Plain* hospital
Mr. and Mr*. F W. Sheet* are
the parent* of a 7 pound 4 3-4
ounce uni burn at I 54 u in No
25 at the North Plain* hospital
Mi and Mi* . G W Swtlihev ale
Ilia parent* ol a 7 pound I oun >
boy la mi at 1 63 o in Nov 25 at
Hie Nm tii Plain* hospital
Ml and Mi* II W Mi ill i urn
Mi* patrols gl a I pound 16 i 4
•nun.* boy bom at 4 pin Nov Ji
at tii* ft/oiip Plain* hoypjiyl
SWISS FIND
AXIS FUNDS
BERN, Switzerland, Nov. 26-
(4’i The Swiss government un
nnunced today that Axi*
thus lar found in Switzerland
amounted to 7,052,006 -Swi*
fiuiie* 'approximately $1,750 (ton
AUSTRALIANS LIST
400 JAP CRIMINALS
MELBOURNE Australia, N
uP Four bundled Jap
busr brio |ikied a> wui no
ifiaia
dangeious, treacherous and unde-
I pendable in every way.
"It was a little more wholesome
ii* the many matter* under dis-
cussion for our navy to be sland-
funisj mg there "
Hull ud that "from ull tangible
and intangible reaction*" lie had
received he win convinced the
Stale Department was "thoroughly
justified" in that viewpoint
Gated reminded lh« gray h*ir
ad wilnas* lh*l Admiral J. O.
Riehsrdton then commander in
• Pul ol ila Heel bad (ratified
earlier hi Mia invatllgalion Dial
tie wam*d Washington official*
(lie mu. uiiiy ol Mi* live! was an
dartgeifd ty il# lemaming in
Hawaiian waiaif-
the removal of Foreign Secretary Jav that Britain has sent a note
Ernest Bevin in a resolution cri-1 to Turkey suggesting an early
ticizing the labor government’s revision of the Montrenux con-
policy toward Greece. Spain, the vention which fixes control of the
" * ‘ ’ -**-•• - oaldanei|eS
The British memorandum fol-
\
Counsel for Hjalmar Schacht , „...
disclosed that tile funner Jleichi*-1 Pi i
bank president will seek to prove ■ \
that he participated In the bomb •
Sidna Saturday and pibt to kill Hitler on July 20,
both stations were! 1944, and tried to overthrow the
Nazi government in 1938.
In a document described by
American prosecutors as "Hitler’s
last will and testament,” the
fuehrer fatefully predicted he
would “solve the German space
problem no later than 1943-45.”
Hitler was quoted as describ-
ing England and France as t h e
Reich’s “two hateful enemies,” and
saying on Nov. 5, 1937, that “the
question for Germany is where
the greatest possible conquest
could be made at the lowest cost.”
\
V*
Vice Adml Daniel E. Barbey,
above, formerly commander of
Amphibious Forces, U. S. Sev-
enth Fiei t, succeeds Adml.
Thomas C. Kincaid as com-
mander of the fleet.
As the trial entered its second
week another case of shattered
nerves developd among the
once-powerful "supermen” who
stood behind Hitler. Former
Foreign Minister Joachim von
Ribbentrop's "memory has suf-
fered," his defense counsel de-
clared, asking the help of two
former German diplomats in de-
fending the man who had guid-
ed ihe Reich's foreign policy.
His counsel said he had been
taking “sleeping drops.
12 Out of 22 Planes
Lost In Shanghai Trip
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 26—(451
—NBC in a broadcast from Shang-
hai said today at least nine Ameri-
can fliers lost their lives and at
least 12 planes were lost out of a
flight cf 22 Mustangs when they
encountered bad weather on a rou-
tine flight to Shanghai.
NBC’s Cal Hirsch, reporting
from Shanghai, said the crews of
only two of the planes had been
rescued and a wide search was on
.....0 ____... . for the missing planes, which were
The former foreign minister has I forced far off their course and
nial peoples. lowed by two weeks a communi-
The resolution Asserted that cation from the United States,
laborite Bevin had continued the -----
foreign policy of
government.
tile conservativi
26
MISTAKE
SPOKANE, Wash., Nov 26 ol’
-G M lank wood, only repuhll
can member of the Spokane ' oun
ty election commission, pulled I In
to l&'frt u iu'Va voting lily*
thin*
( oini))0»t>ioiUM Wltev Uiown i *
VOLUME SELLS
FOR $13,600.00
LONDON, Nov. 26—~<AV The
first illustrated edition of Boc-
caccio’* Decameron sold tixluv at
Sotheliy’-
600
auction house foi 113
LONDON GAS STRIKES
ENTER THIRD DAY
IjiNDON Nm 26 cl'
aged noticeably since the trial be-
gan last Tuesday.
Hiller was so confident that
England and France would not
fight that he declared that "Aus- |
tria and Czechoslovakia can be! former
acquired by phone”—a prediction !
that was practically true in the
case of Austria. Records at the
trial include the transcript of
telephone conversations by which i
Goering directed the Anschluss of’
Austria.
"What the actual position |
would be in the years 1943-45
no one knows today," Hitler de-
clared. "It is certain however
that we can wait no longer. On
one side, large armed forces
with the necessity of securing
the upkeep ard aging of the
Nazi movement and of its lead-
ers and on the other side the
prospect of lower standards of
living and a drop in the birth
rate leaves us with no choice
but to act.
“If the fuehrer is still living
then it will be his irrevocable de-
cision to solve the German space
problem no later than 1943-45 ”
The ‘‘Case Green’ plan for tin-
invasion of Czechoslovakia as
read by Prosecutor Alderman said
the conquest must be “brutal and
ruthless,”
With other documents. Prosecu-
tor Alderman answered the ques-
tions of many military and politi-
cal experts a* to why Hitler did
not delay his actual outbreak of
win and continue hi* plan fur
gradual acquisition of territory
German record* reveal, AI
dermen tetd, liiel Hiller aienled
Is tlrlbt while he we* still corn
perellveiy yewng end physically
ill Is guide Ihe wer elfort. <J*i
miny we* •I«ii6»l fully ermed
by 1017. Aldermen »eid end
Hillei we* •Held Ihe* turihei
be* N umbei 6Nt beg* 4
crashed or landed at inland points
last Thursday.
He said American officials re-
fused to reveal details. The planes
were reported on a flight from a
U. S. air base in China.
New Deal For
China Sought
CHUNGKING, Nov. 26—(A*)—
Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek
proposed a New Deal for China
today, created a supreme economic
council to tackle it and promised
to “spare no effort to bring in-
ternal order and security.”
“We must not allow internal dis-
turbances to make us lose sight
of the basic need of the Chinese
people for a far higher standard
of living," he said in a statement
announcing appointment of the
council.
While hi* troops drove more
than 100 miles into Manchuria
—about half way to the greet
city ol Mukden where Chinese
Communists were reporter!
masring- - he asserted that his
government was "acting to cor-
rect" those disturbances.
Premier T. V. Soong was mao :
chairman of t tie new council,
which was told to seek at once
economic projects considered of
prime importance to be carried
out in the next five years, but the
Generalissimo said he himself
would retain full resonsibility.
“It is my intention,” his state-
ment said, “to assume personally
the direction of China's economic
reconstruction and development.
Chiang said farmers would b»
among ih» first ban<rllci&ri«s of
a 'New Deal' program."
The council also was told to
I study methods for helping
China's industry, tor expanding
foreign trade and for improv-
ing heaiih standards.
'Chinese Communists bid for
popular support by distributing
iand to peasants in their areas of
occupation to ease the suffer-
ings born of years of war with
Japan'.
Nationalist press reports, mean-
while, said Chiang’s troops had
captured without resistance the
railway city of Chinhsien, 100
miles inside Manchuria beyond
j their jumping off point Nov. 23.
These accounts said the Nation-
; alist forces—whose march into
I Manchuria so fah has been al-
most unchallenged by Chinese
Communists—were pressing on to-
ward Mukden.
The Communist* said their
troop*—some Manchurian irreg-
ulars who fought the Japanese
and oihers from the crack
Eighth Route Army—were mas-
sing in Mukden and were pre-
paring for battle.
DUTCH NAZI
TO BE TRIED
AMSTERDAM, The Netherlands
Nov. 26—UP) — Anton Mussert,
plump Dutch Nazi leader, will go
on trial tomorrow before a special
tribunal at the Hague on charg-
es of being a traitor to the Neth-
erlands.
Union Repeats Request
To GM For Negotiation
DETROIT, Nov, 26—14’)—
Asserting the need "is more
acute now" in view of the far-
reaching strike, the CIO United
Automobile Workers today re-
peated its request to General
Motors Corp. for negotiation of
the wage dispute before fed-
eral conciliators and the public.
While awaiting the corpora-
tion's reply, the union's inter
national executive board open-
ed a two-day meeiing here at
which the General Motors strike
was certain to receive consid-
erable attention.
Walter P Reuther,
president, said the l
further negotiations
withheld pending the
formal rejection of
tion proposal that cam
uni to C
L. and Ha
III a
tele*
GM pit
’fcidtfi
Her son,
noted 0
lUt u
(hat lift.1
prei
tint 11 lit
troveibv
Hot 1'
Th.
GM
UAW-CIO
equest for
had been
company's
in arbitra-
e Friday.
E Wilson,
in W An-
>*n*g*manl.
iwii tha UA
iators several weeks before the
strike was called last Wednes-
day.
"The public interest," Reuther
declared, "can best be served by
free and fuir public discussion
of the crisis.”
Union officials predicted nearly
a quarter of a million workers in
20 ,-tates would be idle before
another day is over, including
some 175,000 production workers
and 73,000 sularied employes pre-
vented bv pickets from entering
GM offices.
Reuther hud asserted Saturday
that the GM strike would evince
"the greatest demonstration of
labor’s solidarity ever seen in th a
country.”
A spokesman for the automo-
tive parts industry said all car
production eventually would be
heltad because of the ramifica-
tion* oi tha Genaral Motor*
strike.
A* the effect* of the strike be-
cuibe inoie widespread, iMith aide*
uwaiU-it government inter ventiou
I he union ha* ei • cpUnt en pi.
Idllon •! b*bl ct»» y Oi Utef
hi i nip n loi u iiitcitiig !<•
Wasi.inglop. pi oLehi* Wednesday,
' Mijliif 9 0 iht 1,1 I r 4*ft til
iL* < *4n.|r#f»y
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Phillips, J. C. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 1, Ed. 1 Monday, November 26, 1945, newspaper, November 26, 1945; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth520901/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.