Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 200, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 13, 1944 Page: 2 of 6
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Open 11:45 a. m. 9c 40c
rig
Last Doy! "PARDON MY RHYTHM"
fr March of Time—"Underground Report'
FRIDAY & SATURDAY!
]l
If
The Alotion Picture
So Different It
Defies Com-
parison!
Texan Killed
In Plane Crash
On Hudson Bay
WINNIPEG, Man. July 13—
(Canadian Press'—A United Sta- |
tes Army plane carrying medical j
supplies on a mercy flight to epi-
demic-strickcn Eskimos on Hud- j
Ison Bay crushed July 5, killing the j
pilot. Second Lt. Robert Hyde of
Editorials
pilot, bocono 1.. ..........■..... iVeekly
Sherman, Texas, the army forces ! -«-
THE BORGER DAILY HEHAIJ)
sff&ss snxaasn sarwas
Ympany, Ins.—Publiahura. Mltar and Manager
I. C. PliilUpa--- *9.00
On* Yaar ---------------------------------- *4.75
Six Month* ---------------- $2.58
Thxae Month* --------------------------------- *1.00
Month (S W**ka) ----------------------------------------- .20
Central Canada Command an-
nounced.
Lieut. Oliver Austin, Trenton,1
N. J., U. S. Medical Corps, was
listed as missing. The plane crash-
ed into a submerged jeef after ta-1
king off from Churchill, 1,000
miles north of here. The wreckage .
was found four days later.
The plane was carrying medical j
supplies to Eskimos and Indians
at Eskimo Point, 160 miles north
of the northern port of Church-
ill. J . ..
Hyde's body was found m the |
wrecked plane, but there was no
trace of Austin.
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the uwot epuou
■tion of all uews dispatches credited to lt or not ^therwlse.
Page 2
Thuriday, July 13. 1944
Borger, Texas
Edouard Herriot, Three
Times French Premier,
Dies At Age Of 72
D. Basil O'Connor
Named Infantile
Paralysis Chairman
WASHINGTON. July 13 —
President Roosevelt today appoint-
ed i). Basil O’Connor, bead of the
National Foundation for Infantile
Paralysis, as chairman of the Cen-1
tral Committee of the Red Cross,
to succeed tile lute Norman H.
Davis.
O’Connor, former New York law
partner of Mr. Roosevelt, will
orve the remainder of a term ex-
piring Dec. 11 this year. Davis
died several days ago.
i world may not be as easy a place
jus they like to dream it will be
i Now is the time tor them to be
I preparing themselves so that they
con get bv even if it proves to be
BEAT
“ THE ^ •**“
#■ m «*T medicated powder. Cools
Sprinkle your host rush
iniutod skin well with
MiKsans. the soothinn.
modieated powder. Cools
burn us it soothes i teluu*
tough going.
BUY war bonds
Open 1:45 9c 30c
• REX •
LAST DAY!
"Silent Partner"
Fri. Sat. Tex Ritter
"Oklahoma Raiders'
Open 5:45
Open 5:45 9c 25c
CROWN
-» . S, . -
LAST DAY!
'The Hidden Hand'
FRI. SAT.
"Gunsmoke Mesa"
9c 30c
LAST DAY! .
"Holy Matrimony"
FRI. SAT.
"Three Men In White'
LAST DAY!
'Phantom of Opera'
Fri Sal. G. Cooper
"Souls At Sea"
Former Texas
House Speaker
Commissioned
AUSTIN. July 13—(API—-Price
j Daniel, speaker of the House of
Representatives of the 48th Legis-
lature has been commissioned a
second lieutnant and has been as-
signed to teach at an officers can-
didate school at Washington, and
Lee University, friends here wcie
notified today.
Daniel entered the army as a
private and received his commis-
sion after completing the course
at -n officers candidate school. His
| home is at Liberty.
Local Color
NEW YORK—Property seized
| from a Bowery bar and grill up
for auction by a U. S. marshal:
Two empty suitcases, a stuffed
alligator, a pot-bellied stove, and
a violin—no tuning pegs, no
strings, no bow.
Stains, Dullness Vanishfrem
% FALSE TEETH
Kleenlte end* mossy, harmful
brushing. Just put your plate
k * * or hridgework in h glass of
> "M ?SS, "
^3
t-
HERALD CLASSIFIEDS GET RESULTS!
IfeWu... ... - ------
add a little Klecmte.
. Blackest stains, tar-
food film disappear,
teeth sparkle like ru»
Ask your druggist today for
k leenit*.
KLEENITI naedi no (*iiik
Get Kleenttr today at City Drug.
Cretney Drug Store or any good drug-
LONDON. July 13. — UP) -The
death of Edouard Herriot, three
times Premier of France, was an-
nounced today by the German
agency DNB. The Berlin broadcast
gave no details. (
The 72 year-old liberal and
champion of parliamentary gov-
ernment previously has been re
ported from time to time to be
dead, in sanatorium* oi- in concen-
tration camps.
iA French language broadcast
from the British radio recorded by
CBS said the German announce-
ment “seems to be a false report
purposely spread in France, i
Berlin announced early last
September that Herriot was sei
iouslv ill and subsequently, on
'Sept.' 6, a Vichy dispatch to
Swiss newspaper said he had been
placed in a sanitorium for treat-
ment for a mental disorder.
Herriot had been held in cus-
tody ,bv the Germans since the
fall of France. He was reported
without confirmation to have at
tempted to contact the Allies after
their landing in North Africa.
Long one of the outstanding fig
ures in
I at one time was president of his
party, was three times premier of
Frarice.and for many years mayor
of Lvun. In hit-early years he was
a colonel in the army.
When defeat came to France
in 1940 Herriot was president of
the Chamber of Deputies. Ho had
no use for the men of Vichy and
retired to his home in the Rhone
Valley.
Mexican Minister
Padilla And Hull
Reach Agreement
■ After Two Years
They Get Crack At
Japs Over Saipan
BY MORRIE LANDSBERG.
SAIPAN ISLAND, Marianas,
June 29 iDelayed' (IP)—'The Amer-
ican anti-aircraft battery that shot
down the first Japanese planes
over Saipan waited more than two
years for a crack at the enemy.
The unit, headed by Capt.
George E. Champion of Brown-
wood. Texan, and Kansas City,
Mo., was activated in April, 1941,
at Camp Davis, N. C. It wasn’t
■ until last night that the Japs gave
in I these gunners their first chance for
a action.
The AA crew blasted two Jap
planes out of the air in 10 minutes.
S. Sgt. Ctvvsy Garelis of Detroit,
Mich., said they were the first
Japanese planes he had ever seen.
He added, "It was just like in the
movies.”
C’pl. Joe Carvajal of San Diego,
v., U1„ ______________„ Calif, aircraft identification ex-
French politics, Hen c t j pert of the crew, reported the first
enemy plane sighted was a two-
engined “Nick.” The guns, roared
and the corporal said “we must
have hit the gas tank the way it
burst into flames.”
WASHINGTON. July 13 t/F*i —
Mexican Foreign Minister F.ze
quid Padilla was enroute home
today after reaching an agree-'
merit with Secretary ol State Hull
on transportation and economic]
problems.
The accord, disclosed in a joint |
statement last night, involves the!
furnishing of United States tech- ,
nlcal assistance, equipment and] cause any
• applies for the Mexican Railway
System.
'make every
i reduce ,hc
ion facilities
JAPS CLAIM TO HAVE
BURNED 51 YANK PLANES
NEW YORK. July 13.— UP) ......*
The Tokyo radio broadcast today _
an Imperial headquarters commu-
nique a. -citing that Japanese
plane? had destroyed or set ablaze
51 grounded tijmaft yesterday}
in a raid ' n Chingkiang airport in
Hunan province, described a? a
U. S. Air base.
There was no Allied confirma-
tion.
RIGHT JOB TRAINING
NEEDED BY GIRLS
WHO GO TO WORK
She is , yirc-.gh school and the |
boy she plans to marry some day i
is overseas, so she is cut job hunt-
ing. She doesn’t know what kind
of a job she wants. She isn't train-
ed for anything special, so she'll
just take whatever she is offered
—providing the hours and pay are
all right.
She isn’t giving it any real
thought, though. After all, she is
just marking time, just trying to
kill the months or years until her
young man comes home and mar-
ries her. But she shouldn’t be so
haphazard in her job hunting. Not
in these times.
For all she knows she may have I
to support herself for years, and
not always in years when jobs
are easy for an untrained, not too
interested person to track down.
Her young man muy not come
back, or he may come back dis-
abled so that he can’t assume the
whole responsibility for a family
support. And even if her young
man cr.mes back sound of body, it
mav be a while before he can get
started in his chosen work or pro-
fession. It may be that his wife
will have to earn a pay check, in
order to give them a rtart.
Prepare for the Future.
So that girl — and there arc-
thousands like her — should put
sc me thought into the job hunting
she is doing now. They should all
try to figure out just what kind
of work will give their best tal-
ents and abilities the best chance.
And if they need a little special
training it would be worth while
to get it before they start work,
even though they have to borrow
the money to pay for it. Or they
should try to get special training
in a,night course—it the. have to
take a mediocre job without any
future to it.
The trouble is, they see the
war's end as the end rf their
working days, And since jobs are
easy to get now they take what-
ever is available, without a worry
about the future, But the post-war
NEW ARRIVAL
of fine
Cotton
and
Rayon
Slips
$p
Four gore and bias
cut rayon crepes and
taffetas or fine
count broadcloths.
Faggot trimmed,
adjustable straps —
sizes 32 to 42
Others to
$1.69
St Joseph
L-TTrM aspihin_\
Vll-l»w(]RID s ujjGEST SELLER Al 101
Also Ran
LOS ANGELES — The Times
asked 100 men on the street what
individual is helping the Allied
war effort most. Eisenhower vas
tin t choice and GI Joe got votes
but one man answered:
“Hitler, with his screwy intui-
tions. hasn't been hurting our
.cfS / _wf •..-// / fcf its- P
pare 'lilt*, ~ £ /£-. >/£,’
Mex
IJ oil.
agreed t<
her part,
rain” on tr an spoil
this country.
Resumption of w
gular ship
pint
hichv
-interrupt*
*es to relie'
iv facihti
men
LINDBERGH COMPLETES
LECTURE PROGRAM
A L 1.1 E D HEADQUARTERS.
SOUTHWEST PACIFIC, July 13.
—i/}'.— Charles A. Lindbergh has
arrived at Southwest Pacific head
quarters aftei a tour of Southwest
ar.d South Pad t ic airfields as a
civilian technician during which
he demonstrated and lectured on
aasolinu conservation and care
Now She Shops
“Cash and Carry”
Without Painful Backache
poison us in *'*1 r to i jo pains,
m.Q cati5D ri.’t'1K _^ . e|K.n!Vt grain* up
•-J3
JENNY JERK
- who yanks appliance cords from outlets
Almost evert one but Je
may loosen connections,
haps cause a short circt
‘ * t i L,,
alwa\ s release tnem oy
follow these other tips €
• Don’t place cords t
that yanking on an appua
ine wires under insulation and p
heir cords to I
lovely Chenille Spreads
‘dbotdfe Bed Size in 3 ( ofori
14“
Here's more of those beautiful, heavily tufted
chenille spreads thot have sold out every time
we've offered them.
f.f | TELEPHONE
directory
goes to press
ULY 28
Flounced Cliiutz Spread
%lf Bed Size-UUudde
II j
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Phillips, J. C. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 200, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 13, 1944, newspaper, July 13, 1944; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth737403/m1/2/?rotate=0: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.