Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 97, Ed. 1 Friday, March 16, 1945 Page: 2 of 6
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Published at 205 North Main St-
except Saturday, and > n S . id;...
Company, Inc., Publishers.
J C Philhpa_______________
One Year__________
Six Months
Throe Months
llonth <6 Week*)
Weekly _______________ ___
spas it show gir\ Almost lour d*cad*s
H*r husband, Harry Konddll Thaw.
1 « multi millionaire shot «nd killed
7 , ,-v priAnlnu Stanford Whit* a famad a»rhlt*rf
, rv rninif wt Ml|d|#on Hqu„rv Carden whan »t
was located at Madison Square 24th
&tr<*«-t# Manhattan. Thaw was saved
from the ale trie chair when ha
was adjudged insane at lha t*m* of
thr killing. This Is the first time.
w« ball#.a, *ho has ever written to
a newspaperman about anv part of It.
\ $) i / /.o^'
Publishing
r and Malinger
-----------(9.00
$4 75
........... $2.50
________»1.00
------------20
Entered a second-class matter N .comber 23. 1020, at the Post
Office at Border, Texas, under the Ait of March l),97.
The Associated Press is excl . vely c* * tied to the use of republj
cation of all news dispatches credited to it «. not ..tin r wise.
Pups 2
Friday, March 16, 194&
Borgcr, Texas
WHO ARE PRIMA DONNAS?
<p< not tell r-nough
nil seemed to get i
loots himself with •
“Dear Walter WinchelT You
hti'.e always been one of th< news-
papermen v. ho have dc;.!t justly
1 w ith me. and that is why 1 am
writing you this letter.
“Yesterday another Thaw cn ■'
article app- .red In a N. Y. paper
and the terrible untruths It con
tains regarding me and my dead
mother are so monstrous that I am
jim about fiaritie.
“One man wrote a book about
Stanford White in which he trios
his bc-t to blame John Barrymore
for White's offense against me j
And in yesterday's Story it is j
strongly hinted James A. Garland
might In- the guilty party.
"The truth is I met Barrymore
Some congressmen and writers have Leon complaining
again, since President Roosevelt's report to Congress on the
Crimean Conference, that Mr. Roo . ve!
new*. They seem put out that Mr. Ch
nil the news beats while the President
recapitulation and comment.
We haven't vet figured ou tjust v/hat th< journalistic ac-
tion of a chief of state should be. The question never came
t.p until the Big Tbrct '-> irrival on the world scene-—or rath-
er two-thirds of the Big Three. -;nce Mr. Stalin doesn’t feel | long alter 1 know White and, aa
compelled to report personally to his people. So there is no Jack always told people, I was
precedent to guide us. | the only girl who refused to mar- j
Offhand we should say that the good solution might be to rv m |
leave reportorial functions to the press. The summaries of j The yachting party aboard Gar-
the Big Two. Three or Four n cetings might just as well in- ! ar“'s , T.h , ^
elude all the news instead of saving out some added items for „thtl ni(,.t< , aid no, ,fkt. Mr.
Mr. Churchill to surprise Us with afterwards. Then the state- Garland and only saw him a few
ment could fill in with background, feature material, and time-
editorial comment. The alfair with White did not
Vet since Mr. Churchill has consistently been reporter, as begin in the Madison Sq. Garden
Weil as commentator, it mat be that some source of agree- Tower It happened m on? of his
rfent on the division of honors has been reached. Perhaps j *•**•* hide-outs on W. 24th St.,
Mr. Roosevelt has taken the assignment of keeping up in- where be had =*ipcib!v decorated
teres! in future developments. of dropping a hint or crvptie ’„w“ 1'•''r *•* IfaI *
irk that gives a hint to.future policies, while Mr. Chur- j, te hl; fam‘OUi re., veivet
intents himself with a fill-in on what has already taken : swing thc room 0< mirrors
P;aCe- I “On my death bed—in my last
This conjecture is suggested bv Mr Roosevelt's interpo- moment on earth 1 could not tell
lated remark about 'prima donnas” in his report to Congress, (you any different, for this is the)
After announcing the agreement on Yugoslavia, he said:
“But it is not only that but in some other places we have
to remember there are a great many prima donnas in the
v. rid all who wish to be heard. Before anything will be
done, we may have a little delay while we listen to more
prima donnas.” What does the "that” refer to? Who are the
“prima donnas.” since the name obviously isn't meant as a
compliment? Dc
i * ■
chill
••
"Every reporter who covered
the Thaw trials—men like Irvin
S, C'obb, Frank O’Malley, Char-
lie Summerville, etc., heard the
D A. apologize to me in open j
WINGS OVER BORGER
FLIER’S FRIEND
The weathci man finally relent-
ed and let us have some pretty
flying weather—th< wish ol every
flying fan and pilot
There were several cro*a-coufl-
try Bights during the past week
G. N. McDaniel- flew Ins Lu
combe to Amarillo.
Others flying to Amarillo wen
Juek Alim, Jean Lyon, Geoipe
i With the long runways in g,.
. hflpe. more of the large ship, ....
probably be topping here
often. All out of town \ isH-a - ;.
j welcome at the local field, ev
* 11 lough tl*vy slop over fo<
la few minute- rest.
Mr and Mis Joe Lyon *o<:
and Mi Chas Gi/lfhei lun,
(based a Cub trainer.
J L Edward* has iMtrehas
Copeland, Fill* Tl-oale, Jack </„t>, fannerJy be.ougm to
Chandler, and Johnnie John- n
Tlio-e paying Canyon a if *
were George Copeland ami Bill
Gillman.
T. It Swfnford flew to <>kl
homa Cily.
Vernon Cornett lie ■. to I’arnp
L. V. liu>» ol Ponca City paid <■
a visit. He flew the twin < nglt <
Lockheed which belong- to u <
Continental Oil Company. K1'
Men Follow No Set Rule
In Selecting Their Wives
Gillman
Bryan Adkins solo*' ConerC
lotion*. liiyun, ye wish you m.
happy hours in the air.
We wish to welcome Al K>,
at tile field Al is a now ytuo<
who -tarted taking instruct sen tii
week
'Em Flying
' In Washmgion WAC Hospital Unit
By peter edeson Being Organized
NEA Washington Correspondent pQr Panhandle
WASHINGTON. — Henry Wal-
So They Say
By RUTH MILLETT
A “man in <*
told 0 ttroup of gir ls that t; t* <t .
/lifted girt ir Uie lyj»o men man
Now that sound* go**d. bit! i.
young worm r» who h< rtJ II *- m
tjiik probably won t be too mi
presort with it if they botlier to
look mound at tin* varioun t\;<
of women Unit i/Mfi ninny, h i
a little rvseio «*h on their own will
show than that r/u*n many
typpr
Plenty of coft pokr/i d.puifml
girls do find husbo/.dM, Hut so do
many of thc* “port littlo /niuxos’
men inKtiiuliveh wtuitk* at -
which the marriage .vjx't jaJist
say* aieii’t the iyp< nun many.
And So do many of the* bico/y,
out-dooi gi/it- find husband.v And
l 11IC trllTI. Wt>
hi) tyjx\ a well as Uu? gtau.
girls vs hostF man) interi sf m j
i> attracting ma u\nw at unites
'riu‘ jitn-il/-..; d<mi seem in
it /m|kfssibk* to find jittoibug
marry them.
VARIABLE TABTEh
E\«*n tfoh* hmd, inn U'ioou w
c*n m abU* to t muitn <i it tl.»
want to.
Tlu n d>A in't U'tiri t<j a
typt of girl w can t g#*i uluh .>
if she pub Ia; tin mi U* it. j
fiifn svvfTi to La** i* a» wttfh
t.»tet«*,- in vi• iiu*n as in ^vetyihh,
li {inn v.tu tt l fo, why
V*. I :-•> of $41*11 in XI itu' 4| ;]#•'>■ Uon If,
g< t a saiiflscUoy mm/.'
I wondci what iw seeu m tun ’
:
lace’s assumption at his new job as
Secretary of Commerce has stirred
up that moribund old institution
. » 10 out ».„h
A the Bier Three’’ Is the rather temperamental Genera! from a cleaning woman. i, a> moie rumors in the place than
De Gaulle- a prima donna, or Kin? Peter of Yugoslavia, or , White wa. a brilliant architect.
Premier Arctszewski of the Polich cabinet in London’.’ ! but like many a great man—there
There is much bait for speculation In the two sentences was another side to his character
•f never said I ‘drank a glass of j
lost
about the.prima donnas
future news m ther
Churchill.
Tit
>re is also
mavbe ai
a probable source of
oop for
STUMPING EXPERT
; cnampagne and immediat.ly
consciousness.’ I had never had
champagne before and a pint of it
made me dizzy and 1 passed out
1 as the saying goes. I’ve s.en people
, , , . not used to aicohol get quite tight
Miss Lillian Heilman, the playwright, has returned from cn t,vo c,x.ktails
four months in Rimma,.with a feeling of contempt, so she After my marriage Thaw ex-
<snysr.”for"thosn fTaTrieftTVho spend six weeks in tne Soviet acted a solemn promise from me
Union and then come home as self-styled authorities on that that any time I saw White I should
vast nation. teil him—and that is why I gave
him the note in Martin's.
“My much maligned mother
I tiling cabinets to hold them, and;
a hat comes out is going to be
| something to watch.
Reorganization of the staff is
oeing held up pending the return •
Battle experience has proved |
that instead of one blood trans- j
fusion for eve ry five wounded,
one is required for every two
wounded. — Maj.-Gen. Paul R |
Hawley, European Theater of Op-
erations surgeon.
Wayne Chatfield Taylor, who has
teen in Mexico City foi the con-
ference of American republics.
I Taylor was a Jesse Jor.es appoin-
tee and he practically ran the de-
partment while Jones spent most
Even if we are defeated in Ger-
many we shall eventually strike
such blows against the enemy that
we shall dictate the peace from
Norway.—High German naval of-
| ficer.
In the little village of Lovenic h.
! just outside Cologne . . . the
German army called up 121 Volks
1st
A lot of us will understand Miss Heilman’s impatience, for
we have feit the same way for several years. Throughout the
Thirties, whtjn the European pot was coming to a boil, the
woods were full of short-course experts.
But this war seems likely to put them out of business.
under Wallace if asked, but he may
not be asked Dr. Amos W. Tay-
lor, head of the Bureau of For-
never owned a diamond or jewels. eign and Domestic Commerce, has
I in all her life. She was a home n^en jn almost constant consulta-
J body—Incapable of the mercenary jti0fl with Wallace since he took
_, si** . , , , , , ■ machinations of which some law ■ 11 oath unci wnnld to hp
There will be thousand* of veterans who have had a longerjye„ thought tn accUM, her. lnl*L ... ' S.„.“t
and more intimate look at foreign life and
A WAC Medical Technician is
a courageous woman w ho is doing
war work with her heart ns well)
•a woman who helps
nurse back to health those men
who barely escaped death on the
buttlefront — the Purple Heart
men.
Help these men.—and help your-
self too by Joining a WAC Hospi-
, , , • , , it;,i Unit Learn a new skill,—a
1 profession which may be invalu-
able to you after the war.
Here's your importunity to do
your share for 'your country by
caring for those who have given I sturn troops — and only three
so much. I showed up—Lt.-Col. Mark I’lais
. , The field is open for Medical or ted of Springfield. Ill
ol his time running the Federal s ^ Teel,mean-. X-Ray, and
Loan Agency. Taylor has indicat-, Denla, Ub Technicians. Psychia-
ed he would be glad to stay on, trk. SocIal Worker#[ and many ()lh
under tv'lli'o.o if ncL-cot Rut a
Flashes
From Life
mu I
I t,tU‘,
i ( her
/ hi n thoouhi it ¥.
a hf>nuu km s* (<
in .'/al <■, it lit a /jaA‘‘
:ny« R'f only fni
t
MECHANICAL SHELTER
M O V N T A I N HOME. Mj
March 16—*/T>k Slot nuichuM b
Ihc Officers' Club *41 the Mo
tain Horne Army Air B oo air*
toppr/l by thi sum
‘ In case nt an a 1 ra:<!. . Unnt
it ir thu
which M-ndk
mixraUon to
he ini*inti.
Vs < (if M/’| ui
Sort
• i ty, 'uni
ht? t
•tU'd bird: &
t Lj'j
1 )/<'•■ nurUi
tut
1 r i*
he btf d tin il
0 #j/fi
breed n^ti gix
I near these maohi
been hit yt t '*
A reviewer must be blunt. J be-
lieve in violence in reviewing. On-
ers. Typists and stenographers areily with violence can you be of
•vers thought fit to accuse her. In’fixture. Dallas lawyer Harold
problem* -nan those days when I was between Young, who was Wallace’s secre- c‘,’ ,,
= m< so-called expert of past rears, and it al-.o seems nkely 15 and 16 year*—young girls knew |tary while he was Vice President,
t.nat faster and cheaper ; -xtwar travel will open foreign ! little or nothing about sex and we, has moved to Commerce a.-; hi-
needed by a Hospital Unit too
As a WAC remember you are en-
titled to deizendency allowances
land all other military benefits
A WAC Hospital Unit is forming
in the Panhandle. Get details at
nearest Army Recruiting
Station, Post Office Bldg., Amaril-
lo, Texas.
doors to otners than
ings of an expense a
OUT OR WAY
those with wealth, leisurt-
the ble:
even thought smoking a cigarette ! personal
I practically a crime
sislant.
Bv WILLIAMS
Budgeleer Smith A Caller
As to Thaw’s mental condition ‘ One of Wallace’s first luncheon
—one of their relative* told me ■ guests in his big new office was
that Mother Thaw—while carry- i Director of the Budget Harold D.
ing Thaw—had accidentally roll- Smith. That started Commerce
ed over on and smothered her < buzzing with a!! sorts of specula-
first child—in her sleep. Sne j tion. Smith being in charge of ail
thereafter suffered brain fever. If j executive age :■ y ic' 1 uni/ ition.
true—this might account for a
great deal.
• And I was never in the ’Flor-
adora Sextette.’
“Sincerely,
EVELYN' NESBIT.”
UUH BOARDING HOUbt with MAJOR HOOPLt
Scrambled Eggs The Pat Roon
ev, Jrs, expect their image in
May. If it’s a girl she ll be named
’Rosie O’Grady Rooney” ... Is
Baron Pierre De Gaiffier d History
of the Belgian Embassy going to
merge with Lucy Hsich-Chien Tou
ol China , . Nancy Walker, star
of On the Town,” shelved 15
lbs. in a few weeks via an injec-
tion diet . Jean Harrington, who
had the miseries, is slimmer and
lovelier since learning how to
j laugh again . . . Cootie Williams,
| who couldn’t get ex-bosses to Jet
mm have the necessary moot* to
start his own band 18 months ago,
will earn a hall-million in thea
tres and recordings this year . . .
Hilda Knight and an A. T. A T.
exec, will wed April 19th . . .
Common sense should warn us
that obviously all states cannot
remain supreme in ail they choose
to do unless we arc willing to
accept the cynical view that might
makes right.
—A'icc President Harry S. Tru-
man.
■— -—-1-
much use to your readers. Mi-
taken kindness to an author may
be betrayal of your readers.—Dr.
Joseph Wood, Kruteh. Columbia
U. literature professor.
America can no longer sit smug-
ly behind a mental Magi not Line.
Either America mu t be constant-
ly ready to rept-1 alone all and
any attacks from the rest of the
world, or we must be whiling to
cooperate with friendly states to
check the first sign of aggression
on the part of any member of the
family of nations.—Vice President
Harry S. Truman.
Most of the mothers who stray
Commerce already has a num-
ber of vacancies in top jobs, caused
by resignations of men going back
to private Industry at double the. r I f,ar*nient .
government salaries All sort* of;''"’m Like the appearance of the '-‘on their children.
into cocktail bars for just one
applied for desk space in the De- i drink, but return home several
of Commone prer‘ ; 'lays later, don’t start out to aban-
names have been bandied about as
candidates for these ;> Most of
them are long sho-- but this .-pec-
ulation adds to the fun of Wash-
ington's favorite pastime—reor-
ganizing a department under a
new boss.
What has particularly pepped up
the Commerce staff -ime trie ad-
vent of Wallace r !.-.. * they now
have a boss who is showing an
interest in what they’re doing and
is not preoccupied with RFC and
other Federal Loan Agency af-
fairs, as was Jesse Jones, In meet-
ings with his department heads,
Wallace has already given his di-
vision chiefs some new problems
to work on, ha-' speeded them up
on other projects already begun,
and they love it.
Wallace's particular domestic
pets are aid to small business
and the full employment program.
Hi* immediate problem is employ-
first robin: these are good indi
cations that things are going to
unfreeze and there wi 11 be worms
of information worth digging for
Wallace was similarly reticent
as Vice President holding less
than half a dozen press confer-
ences during his four years on
Capitol Hill. But as Secretary of
Commerce that will be changed.
We have every reason to hop
that the San Francisco Confer-
ence will mark one of thc really
great steps in mankind’s efforts
Wallace s press conference person- j j„ create for itself a world of law
aJlty hasn’t been trio hot. His re- ' iirid order. •
One drink
leads to another, and then usually
to a man, and finally to the Mu-
nicipal Court.
— Dr David B. Rotman, Chicago
Municipal Court psychiatrist.
SLIGHT ERROR
POPLAR BLUFF, Mo..March Jfl
—f/P)—A plutnbci received a call
to send a help’1 to 1 lean out a
clogged sewer at a residence
Six hours later the helper re-
turned, mopped hi* brow anrl com-
mented that th job was one of
the toughest he ever had tackled
—the sewer was badly clogged.
Then the plumber got a tele-
phone call—saying the helper had
gone to the wrong addres-.
“3INCING" DOG
HAVANNA, Mo,, March 16—</P>
—The script for the Junior rla -.
play called lor a collie dog Billy
Miller's dog, Wolf, wt-’ cast in tin
pari.
On the niffht of th«- performance
all went will until intermission.
Wolf, patiently waiting hi- third
act eve in the wings, turned Mrs
Evelyn Griffith’s saxophone solo
into a duct his mournful how)
| taking the lead.
Another Bltrh d Illusion
EVANSTON, HI., March 18-
AT LONG LALT
they havi n ’ ATLANTA, G. , March
Hum tin going to \a‘ j* .u h tr#'*
\ on Pc a< htree Street-—if tlw> :i
'glow amidst downtown tiafir
Then visitors, viewing Atlanta':
light mile long thoi<zughf»i
won't ask "Where are the peach-
: tree*?’’
A department s'ore which tak>
up a block of Peachtree bite: t is
planting the peachtrees in front of
its entrance
FLAME THROWERS
( HANUTF, KAH., March 15-hl'i
—A fire which sw< pt 27(1 g< re* ol
j tall grass near the Municipal An -
port was blamed on rabbits
Fnc Chief William Brennan so, !
\ invi .'ligation showed Die fnc aj>
patently was caused when the
| rabbits, their fur aflame, ra i
from .1 nearby field where a farm-
er war burning off weeds, crossed
a railroad right-of-way winch al-
ready had burned, and then ig-
nited the alr|krrt area.
Coast Guard helicopter pilot
, have put out fires icscued strand-
• i per ons and flown many mere »
•tH‘ flights
TY
P* CUdiL.
UPSTAIRS, Ot£*F,
DID JAKE SAY TK£C SO'Jn-DS LIKE A
' MkSS UOOPl** i I TUYE OUT Ot JAKE’S
VODLOOKTO ^ WORKi, MR, CHUNKS / A AMO I’LL
I AM MOOPLE, )\ iMTEttDUCEr {]
BUT IF VOU PARK. V / YOU TO THAT \
THE MAJOR'S
OAUEkriER.
THAM MtS
MERE YOU'LL GET TO
KKjOVJ ME SETTER
AS THE LADY WriO
KEEPS THE CASU
_UP/
/SOEt-rriFtC
( MARVEL,THE
\ CCMS/ >
Gloria Vanderbilt is angeling a
m . band fot $25,000 Instead 01 'merit prospects in the first year
the 4 1-2 million the papers sain after the war in Europe, gauging
tie would take possession of last the effect* of immediate cutbacks
week, Gloria actually got a check ,on war production,
fo vie oh" She’ll get the remaind- Plug* Foreign Trade
er in installment* over a period 1 He is equally hipped on the de-
nt several years . Clark Gable - jvelopment of foreign trade as a
j big interest 1 Virginia Grey, re-
gardless of the other items , . .
j Cole Porter, at Drs Hosp, will
j leave for the Coast to take it lots
j easier . . , They say a bus-girl at
| a rnidtown Automat has *22,000
] in the bank. Profits from stock
market tips via a patron.
means to aiding employment at
home. Gathering accurate infor-
mation on foreign demands and
foreign markets is one of the first
essentials here, and this raises
again the old problem of trans-
ferring back to Commerce the
commercial attache- now under
State Department.
Possible transfer to Commerce
City Hallers hear that 6th Avc of Interstate Commerce Commis-
nne may be rc-named Internatl- „ion, Federal Communications
nnal Ave. ... A swank hotel has Commission. Foreign Economic Ad-
becn giving mickey* to dLscour-! ministration and other more or less
age certain sinful persons from • independent agencies, is still in
cluttering up the bar . . . Nurses'the rumoi stage If FEA should
at Harkness Pavilion are prettying be moved from Commerce to State
themselves for the rumored at-j it would give Wallace much of
rival of Spencer Tracy, who will the work he formerly did a* head '
ports on jurike' to South America
arid China were publicity flops
Some of his advisers have there-
fore been fearful that the Secre-
tary of Commerce should go slow.
But if he is to do anything about
building himself up as a presiden-
tial possibility for 1948, he can't
remain a shrinking violet.
Wallace already has strong back-
ing in farm and labor elements.
If he can sell himself to business-
men os a great Secretary of Com-
merce, he's in a strong position,
politically. His .speeches to busi-
ness organizations will (rear par-
ticular watching. He certainly
isn't going to use hn Department
of Commerce post to ruin his chan-
ces.
-Undersecretary of State Joseph
C. Grew.
From where I sit .../y Joe Marsh
How Sober Hoskins
Got His Name
Thaf damn volcanic ash would
not let the vehicles move. T h e
only heavy equipment I saw mov-
ing were bulldozers and it was a
tug-of-war for them.
—Lt Pete Zurlleden of Cleve
land, O, at Iwo.
We must be constantly on the
alert for the flight to this hemi-
sphere of Nazi fund* and Nazi
underground leaders who will
seek to find a refuge here as a
base for an ultimate comeback
—Secretary of State Edward R
Stettiniu* jr.
rest there . , . Ben Maiden Is wait
ing for visas to go to Brazil where
he may open a casino . , . Mrs.
Edward Chodorov, wife of the
playwright, will file in Florida.
of Bureau of Economic Warfare,
before Ills big row with Jones.
Wallace is planning to Inaug-
urate weekly press conferences, [
and the wire new* service* have|
Something Always New and Pretty
at
IRENE S BABY SHOPPE
418-A North Main
Children * Panties—All Sizes
Wool Sweaters—All Sizes and Colors
Play Suits—Junior Sizes
New Spring Felt Hat Set»—All Colors
Everybody kids Sober 1I< kin.*
about his name. Of course, they
allow that It’s appropriate. Sober
never drinks anything stronger
than a glass of beer. And a
harder worker in the fields there
never was.
•’Hburk*," say* Holier'* dad.
“W'c named Holier 'Holier' ju*(
hreause he looked that way
when he «n* horn. I.Ike we
(ailed his fcl*trr ‘Gay,’ and hi*
other sinter ‘Prissy.1 And it's had
It* effect on all of 'em,” he uddx
with spirit. (Prissy is the old
maid in the Hoskins family.)
1 rom where f sit, there may
he something Jn what Sober’*
dad mu} Naming chit/Iren after
viriu«s is a fine old American
custom, lxeik at the nanu s of
our pioneer, and pitgrinw Faith,
Pious, Charity, Hope, Ernest.
Maybe Hr should u»e UUtll
names more often. And one I'd
like to add Is “Tolerance," If we
all had Tolerance for a middle
name, and lived up to It, we'd
have a better, happier world.
£)oc OKmjI
Au. Ill of a St ru t
Gjpyrigla, HU.,, I.nirrd HOtim lliruttt huuut.,li„n
All Your Beauty Requirement*
Permanenls, Manicures, Tints
Gifts of Costume Jewelry
Siaiionary, Cosmetics
Emma Cox
Gladys Stavanson
Louisa Nawhy
Jarry McElroy
RED BIRD BEAUTY SHOP
620-A N. Moin Telephone 687
1
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Phillips, J. C. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 97, Ed. 1 Friday, March 16, 1945, newspaper, March 16, 1945; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth737355/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.