Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 198, Ed. 1 Monday, July 12, 1943 Page: 4 of 6
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Cardinals And Yankees Sweep
Double Card From Sox, Braves
| Flashes
From Life
ero
ISLAND SUPPING STONE
By th
Dm
By TED MEU
Atkcrtalrd Fr»> S;< >r
\a‘u
ently i "!i th* a
Ug«*r <>l thi Hi < >. i . 1
the aftermath : the i<
his leadership that sta
baseball world Saturn..
While on the ml.
Field e|)i: ■ .( n .
day suspension < St
Bobo Newsom toi v !ia:
termed "insubonlm h ■
sentiment of the play ... : »
iiablv reported to be that they
are “sick of hemp second cue -
ed" and that tutm e ! Ian up m :
be expected unless Duruchci suc-
ceeds in restoring harmony New
York baseball writers agioed that
“there are strong reason, to be-
lieve Leo wil not last the seas n
as manager.
These developments overshad-
owed yesterday's furious action
on Ihe diamond that saw the St.
Louis Cardinals and the New
York Yankees sweep double-
headers from Ihe Boston Braves
and Chicago While Sox to wid
en their leads to 5 1-2 and 4 1-2
games, respectively.
The onrushing Cardinals chalk-
ed up their sixth in a row and
then 13th triumph in l.r> starts as
Harry Humbert blanked 1 h e
Braves, 3 to 0, on six hits in the
first garni- and W’hitey Kurowski
doubled with the bases lull in the
11th inning for a y to 6 conquest
in the nightcap.
The Yankees likewise wound up
their western invasion in fine
style by making it four straight
ovei the Whitt Sox anti their
ninth w in in 11 starts.
Spud Chandler won his 10th ,
game with a six-hit 9 to 0 shutout
in the opener. In the nightcap the
Yanks took a 6-0 lead, blew it j
when the Sox scored six in the ;
seventh inning, then won out, 6
to 6, in the ninth on Rookie Bud ■
Metheny’s first homer of the sea-
son.
Milo Candini suffered his first
defeat in eight starts for Wash- ,
ington when Cleveland knocked
him out in the first inning and
went on to a 5 to 1 victory be- (
hind A1 Smith’s five-hit twirling. |
The Senators, however, gained
Hopes Drink a Tea Toast
phonic reveal
way “to Nortl
Mrs Brad;
North Alma.
Conceded
'Guess I shot
it ed
t moth
jhan J Brady,
explained about
Muffin, gravely:
lo have taken youf
Rationing News
y*
mjfiL. , —______
Bop Hope, in Kngland to entertain American erviccmen, visits his
99-year-old grandfather, James Hope, at Hitchin, llerfordshire,
and is just in time for tea.
■1 to 2. Bobby Doerr, Red Sox
second baseman, ran his string of
emu less chances to 306.
The Chicago Cubs and New
York Giants divided their second
successive doubleheader. Ernie
Lombardi's 10th inning homer
won the first for the Giants, 4 to
3. Bill Nicholson's seventh inning
homer with one on gave the Cubs
the second by the same score. Mel
Ott, leading major league home
run eloutor, connected for hrs 14th
in the second game.
Aided by Elliott's sixth inning
triple that scored the tying and
winning run Max Butcher, Pitts-
split for the day by winning the j burgh right hander, beat Brook-
second game. 6 to 4, in
Feathered-Friends Dept.
KANSAS CITY Flo--pa- pre-
fers people.
A woman took a dove—that's
Fleogic to the zoo, asking that
I i pet be placed in the bird .
I'.;.a tei The woman was gurug
on a trip.
A curmus pouter pigeon am- !
bled t- ward the dove. Flooyie !
tlew frantically into the screen, J
kni eking herself cold.
' Guess I’ll take1 Floogie with
me." the woman told William T.
A. Cully, zoo director.
Hmmmf No Printing Press!
LOS ANGELES — Mrs. Rose
Radzinski was presented 520 V-
mail blanks by the navy. She
needs ’em.
The 62-vear-old widow has nine
sons and a daughter in the armed
services.
She also writes to three ne-
phews.
red
Hables
n i Q
10 inn-
ings. Gerald Priddy drove in the
winning run with a fly with the
bases loaded.
Detroit and the PI. ladolpl.i:.
Athletics also split a twin bill.
Rookie Don Black of the A s beat
the Tigers, 4 to 3, in the opener
when Pete Sutler tripled in the
ninth and scored after B o I)
Swift’s outfield fly. The Veteran
Tommy Bridges twirled a brilli-
ant three-hit shutout to gain a
.9-0 triumph for the Tigers in the
nightcap. He faced only 29 bat-
ters in hanging up his sixth win
against two defeats.
Behind the seven-hit pitching
of Bucky Walters and Ray Star
Cincinnati beat the slumping
Phillies twice, 7 to 4 and 14 to
2. Wallers helped win his first
triumph since May 26 by driv-
ing in three runs with as many
hits, one a homer.
The St. Louis Browns took both
ends of their bargain bill from
the Boston Red Sox. Chet Laabs'
11th homer of the year won the
first game, 8 to 7, in 12 innings
while Nelson Potter twirled a
five-hitter to take the afterpiece,
lyn for the first time, 3 to 2. The
Dodgers came back to win the
nightcap, 5 to 4, with a four-run
uprising in the eighth. Relief
Pitcher Xavie: Hi -eigne, who
made only otic pitch, was charged
with the defeat. The pitch was
hit for a single by Billy Herman
who later scored the winning run
on Mickey Owen's one-baser.
Arky Vaughan, third baseman
who asserted that Newsom's su-
spension was unjust and turned in
his uniform Saturday, then re-
lented after a conference with
President Branch Rickey, played
in both games, getting three hits
in seven times at bat.
RAF BLASTS JAPS
NEW DEI 1 LI, July 12 </P).—
Royal Air Force vengeance bomb-
ers unleashed new blows at Ja-
panese installations northeast of
Akvub and on the Chindwin riv-
er yesterday, while tighter pa-
trols damaged three enemy steam-
ers and other craft on the Irra-
waddy river, according to a joint
communique issued today. All
British aircraft returned safely.
SPORTS
ROUNDUP
By HUGH FULLERTON. JR.
NEW YORK, July 12 (#>). —
Shag Shaughnessy, the interna-
tional league president, blames
football for the decline of college
baseball, which was big-time
stuff when he went to Notre
Dame. . . . "And it isn’t good foot-
ball, either," he argues. "I don't
knew how many Armv-Notre
Dame games I’ve seen, but if
| they can't play any better than
! that I'll stick to the pros." ....
j If you think Tex Hughson is u
menace ic the Yankees ‘he's beat-
en them three out of four this
! season, how about Bernie Boland,
| old-time Detroit hurler, who did
| it a dozen times in a row? or
; Christy Mathewson, who took 22
j straight from the Reds? ....
j Joe Dey, the U. S. golf association
secretary, still churckles about
j the time he beat Earl Eby, the
great Penn half miler who settled j
down to sports writing, in a 100- j
yard dash. “The reason I won,” j
Joe admits, “was that we raced
on a cider street in Chapel Hill, j
N. C., and Earl slipped right af-
ter the start.”
It Bit Back
DENVER—Eight-year-old Ron-
ald Pass * i re 11 i t'-i.md an uLjc H
wrapped in paper.
He bit it.
The explosion burned his ton-
gue arid inflicted minor cuts. It
was u blank .22 caliber cartridge.
Symbolic of Jap defeat on
Attu is this motor from a
win kul Zero plane, at re.-t in
the sands with a wavering pro-
peller blade pointed skyward.
Sicily Ailack
Test Tube For
Second Front
Editor’s Note: The following
Sicily is written by J. Wes Gal-
appraisal of Ihe fighting in
higher. Associated .Press War
Correspondent and who landed
with the AEF in North Africa
and following the Tunisian cam-
paign through to Allied victory.
Gallagher, now on leave from
the Mediterranean front, was in-
jured in a jeep accident near
Eizerte alter being cut olf by
enemy fire. A native of San
Francisco, he has traveled
through 16 countries and watch-
ed the Germans enter the capi-
tals of two of them, Denmark
and Greece, since the war began.
By The A«»ociat«d Mr*
Meats, cheese, etc Bun!
stomps, p. ij and R valid 1
July 31.
Prove* ed fruits and vet
B .k 2 blue stamps N. P
valid through August 7.
• K.e Dm."* stamp 13 good
for 5 pounds through August 15;
stamps 15 and 16 good for 5
pounds each for home canning.
G< i,i-i -Bunk I stamp 21 w.ith
one pound through July 21; stamp
22 worth one pound July 22-Aug-
ust 11
Shoes—Book 1 stamp 1.8 good
through October 31
Gasoline No. 6 "A” coupons | 30 Child
worth four gallons throio n Julv 31 Nickname for
21.
HOftf/OMTAI
1 Depleted
island
7 Listen to
11 It Ik in the
Mediterrane-
an —■—
14 Street
15 Single
16 Measure of
cloth
17 Perishing
18 Verbal
19 Arrived
20 Left side
(abbr.)
21 Mohamme-
dan priest
22 Sun
23 Set of steps
24 Near
25 Behold!
27 Head cover
28 Plot of land
Answer In Freidotn Vunir
jrrnr-:;Ti
p a rit
op
NOB
T l. N _ _
i A T
D 14 L A M
He i l 4u
ZZTr t d
r^UA V
to r f » A
7TaVTTT7i7[
• t;aw i d, .i
o:rb £ W' iW'A
'nJ ‘h;a m
O b AG b.
5A LET
evbCZI
. ;o rtl,
STOOP
fID/T
CAVALDV
R E E k A SING- STOOP
f r'gHsi T-OL.fl n. ;tee
UE T l i AUriM A A; S O
T: TV 1‘U DTf I Ia PMV'i N
"Ts A GE NE si iMEl TESr
Army-Navy Game
May Be Cancelled
WASHINGTON, July 12—f/P)—
The army-navy game, annual sup-
erspectacle of the college football
season which was whittled down [
to small-town size lust year, I
stands a good chance of being |
whittled clown this year to no
game at all.
D. C. Speaker, the mythical
District of Columbia character
who represents authentic but un-
quotable sources, said today the
service game which has been
quietly scheduled tor Nov. 27 at
West oPint faces so much official
opposition it is more than likely
to be just another broken date.
“The navy wants the game
played, but the war departments
wants it cancelled,” said Speaker.
“It was the same tiling last
year. As a matter of fact, last
year’s game had actually been
cancelled by war department or-
der when the president heeded an
appeal from the sea-going service
and reinstated it.”
Camp-Hospiial
Group To Aiiend
Meeting Ai Pampa
Representatives of the local Red
Cross Chapter and members of j
i the newly formed Camp and Hos-
pital Council wiii attend a meet- !
i ing at the Red Cross recreation
i building at the Pampa Army Air
! Field tomorrow at 2 p. nr. accord-
ing to Rod Antrim, local council
| chairman.
Antrim requests that all expect- |
ing to attend call the Chamber of I
j Commerce not later than 11 a. m. |
| tomorrow so that he may call the j
air field for pas:e.“ to admit then;
to the field. The group will meet
at the corner of Third and Whit- j
j tenburg Streets at 1 p, m.
Members of the North Plains :
l Camp and Hospital Council and
representatives of 19 Panhandle i
Red Cross Chapters will attend the
meeting. Joe J. Moran, of Amaril- :
lo, is executive secretary of the ■
newly formed North Plains Coun-
1 Alfred
I .32 Chastise
j 33 Stain
35 Through
36 Born
.37 Grieves
40 Right rever-
end (abbr.)
41 Edict
43 Mt. - is its
highest peak
44 Type measure
46 Was observed
48 Talents
49 Aliment
52 Period of time
53 Impel
54 Attic
55 Marry
56 Nobleman
57 Fruit
VERTICAL
1 Unhappy
2 Plant
3 Furnish with
ceiling
4 Taverns '
5 Drag
6 Biblical
pronoun
7 Hourly
8 Paint
9 Everyone
10 Railway
(abbr.)
11 Stamp
12 Tree
13 flevrr >#r
18 I rave not
19 Folding bed
21 If is off the
const of ■
22 Planet
23 Reflected
imngc
25 One who lose*
26 Different
29 Musical
drama
30 Metal
34 Rise up
35 Jokes
38 Mamma!
.39 Appendage
41 Direct
42 Any
45 Morning
(poet.)
46 Unite with
thread
47 Before
48 Exist
49 Prohibit
50 Large (comb,
form)
51 Dined
53 Upward
54 Proceed
1
2
3
r-
7
A
4
10
n
IZ
li
14
15
16
17
1
8
j—
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23
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25
26
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36
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36
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43
a4
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46
47
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yffl
48
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SI
bi
bi
b*
55
Sb
57
12
By J. WES GALLAGHER
SANTA CRUZ, Calif., July 12-
(/Pi—On the success of the Allied cil John Hantz, Dalhart, is chair-
invasion of Sicily depends United man; Avery Rush. Amarillo, is
Nations hopes for a second front. : treasurer.
The attack on the key Italian j ______
island is a test tube bv which Gen. !
Dwight D. Eisenhower and his Roc‘k-v Mountain National Park
military advisors will be able to c,inlains *>•» peaks that aie mote
tell when and where to strike ■,kan TO,000 tcet high,
next.
BLAIR WEDS BUSH
HOLLYWOOD, July 12 (/Pi.—
Today was wedding day for Ja-
net Blair, brunette movie actress,
BAYLOR MEDICAL
SCHOOL UNDER WAY
HOUSTON, July 12—f/PV—Bay-
lor University College of Medicine
and Sgt. Louis Bush, band ntusic opens here today with a prosaic-
atiangei at the Santa Anna air tive enrollment of 320. The school
base, the actress' studio announc- 'was moved to Houston from Dal-
es. J las during the summer.
Russian Front Takes the Spotlight
Today's Guest Star
Burton Hawkins, Washington |
Star; "The Nationals lost their j
sense of humor when Lel’ty Go- I
mez packed his suitcase and head- I
ed home. Lefty’s brand of ban- j
ter was brilliant, but also expen-
sive. Clark Griffith was paying
SI 1,000 a year for what amount-
ed to considerable comedy but
virtually no pitching.”
Cleaning ihe Cuff
Tlie Giants, who have been tak-
ing a panning for not buying ball
players, haven’t said a word a-
bout trying to buy first baseman
Les Searsella who is hitting .340
for Oakland, Calif., and being
( turned clown because they could-
n't give two or more1 players for
him. . . . The Rev. Bertram llum-
Ph,”‘-S, who helped Albany win
the eastern league pennant last
year, will join the Rochester in-
ternations Aug. 1. He’ll only work
on week days. . . Mortie Dutra,
the Detroit golf pro, is more than
a little proud of the game played
by one of his twin sons, Maurice
.... When Orval Grove was rob-
bed of that no-hitter the other
night, did anyone have the nerve
lo suggest it mUst have been
Orvalyz?
THE STANDINGS
CHICAGO,
American league
TEAM—
New York
Detroit
Washington
Chicago
St. Louis
Cleveland
Boston
Philadelphia
July 12—i/T»)—
standings:
W. L.
43 30
Truman Probers
Begin Work On
Plane Crashes
WASHINGTON, July 12 (/Pi.—
The Truman committee started a
probe today of the large number
of military plane crashes in the
United States and disclosed it
also would investigate reports
that hundreds of airports built
abroad with American money will
be turned over to countries where
they are located.
The committee has turned over
to the justice department the evi-
dence on which it based a sensa-
tional overall report on 1he avia-
tion industry. The Senate group
charged the Wright Aeronautical
corporation of Lockland, Ohio,
had delivered defective planes to
the army and navy. The company
denied the charge.
Chairman Truman (D.-Mo.)
said the committee was concern-
ed over the number of military
plane crashes “particularly in
non-combatant operational flights
in this country.”
Senators Mead iD.-N. Y.) and
Brewster 'R.-Me.i were instructed
by the committee to investigate
the reports that airports built on
foreign soil with American money
would be given away six months
after the war.
While Sicily is important as an i
air base from which to strike Italy j
and as a stepping stone to an in- j
vasion of Italy, it is far more im- i
portant as a testing ground of
j Allied amphibious metlvds whirl;
some day may be hurled against
the continent.
Preliminary preparations for the
Sicily invasion started last March i
and gained impetus with the fall \
of Tunisia early in May. In se-
cret training quarters, picked !
troops were gathered and put on
12-hour a day amphibious drill |
schedule.
When the collapse of Axis op- ‘
position in Tunisia released battle-
wise British and American troops,
these soldiers were sprinkled j
among task forces training for the
Sicily attack. That took two months
from the time Tunisia fell to mount
the invasion of Sicily gives a rough
idea of the time and training re-
quired to land the hundreds of
thousands of troops necessary to ;
open a second front.
Offrica (Waits
by Achmed Abdullah
NBA BCR VIC
n
4
l-
AAjdb*
Til 1-2 vrnin ; I inroln lllllot,
n tl t*
of it Frntrh
»i»> in f>ntr;tl \frlrn. Lottie
:»uo Ik* h:id «*nli*frtl in tin* Koreimi
l.t*Ki<»ii follow ing n «|ii:irn*I
k i i li l»i* fntlirr o*«*r n n#**«*r-d<»-
hpII huii-nroth«*r. lUtonl, iitul ilii*
In iHi* oliniitv of hi* c*i»r«*«*r. Hut
:i* hr *ii* xilonr that mu in, rt-
llcrtinjc ovi tht* importnnf Jolt
.1 hr ntl of hint, I lir chit n I of (lit*
\fririin drum* a « a k t* »» * old
yrarniiiK*. lit* u*rd to di*»mii«tr
iiititwrlf a* Trrrk <*1-Mrd jiahlrl.
tx hen rou(in<* palled, anti ininj£lr
with the Aral)* a* our of them,
lit* would do no again for ihr
(ant time.
TEREK EL-MEDJAHTRI
CHAPTER III
"PEN minutes later, he found
himself in the heart of the
Arab quarter, passing through a
spider’s web of little white-
-her hus-
Sicilv is an important cog in' washed houses, oppressively se-
Allied plans, but only a cog. It is :r(!veiU "n,h 'hc'S windowless
... . . walls that faced the streets, but
revealmg tm mdrtary ^ secrets to: ,)loiBOrninft in thc inner patios
sa- p,a* ot uM task fonts are h.d rosebush and jasmine and
den in North Africa and m thc 0jjVe ancj tinkly fountain,
eastern Mediterranean preparing ‘ He walked on and on> ot ran.
for other blows against the Axis j dorrli no^ taring where he went,
even as the Sicily attack is being , Dellberatelyi he bumped into a
rough Touareg cameleer, drunk
carried out.
There are other key stepping
stones to be taken and it is more j
than likely that fighting in the |
Mediterranean will be continued
all summer.
Attacking mountainous Sicily i
against, determined German-lta- |
lian resistance is a far more <1 if- j
fa ult task than landing ill North-
ern Africa.
The speed and success of the
attack will give General Eisen-
hower an inkling of what may be
^faced on ; the continent and a
chance to make whatever chang-
es might be found necessary. It is
extremely unlikely that the Sici-
lian campaign will be a matter
of days. It is well to bear in mind
that it took the Germans and their
Luftwaffe three weeks to sieze
with hashish, just to hear the
man’s highly flavored abuse:
‘‘Wah! What manners be these,
O especially illegitimate son of a
noseless mother?”
To hear—nn. no' hr» hari not for-
gotten—his own coarse reply:
“Into your beard—and begone,
G wearer or a verminous robe!”
And, again, he felt it as, in front
of a coffee-shop, an unveiled
woman stopped him with the in-
vitation of crimson lips and
honeyed promises.
“Not tonight, O moon of the
world,” he replied. “I’m on my
way to most important busi-
ness . .
“Doubtless,” she interrupted, “to
kiss the wife of your best friend!”
“No one knoweth,” rejoined
Lincoln, “except Allah—and I . . .”
“And she? And
Prophet it be not so!
band?”
He pressed a gold coin into her
hand.
“Here—in gratitude for the be-
seeching, O heart of seven roses!”
She salaamed, touching the hem
of his burnoose with her lips.
“Sahitc, yah h’bibi—thanks, O
my friend!” she said.
“Sahite sahite’i, yah jaghzal—
thanks for the thanks, O my ga-
zelle!” was his courteous reply.
The moon came from behind the
clouds.
He saw, beneath its silver
gleam, the desert stretching eltin
arms. And he realized, suddenly,
' h: : fi et, if obeying some
hidden back-cell in his brains,
| were carrying Him toward the old
j house, or. the edge of the wilder-
T . ... j Hi ss, where, years ago, he had
I beseech^the j ta]u,n part jn the rites of the Bi
Hassanyieh dervishes.
Well—he reflected—they were
no more. They had paid the price
of their anti-European intrigues
and had been exiled or jailed . . .
which was just as good as, other-
wise, with all the world, includ-
ing Africa, in bloody travail, they
might have caused a great deal of
trouble.
Still, he wanted to take a look
at the house, for old-times’ sake.
SPURNING a corner, he entered
1 the quarter of the Negroes and
halfbreeds.
It was late. Yet were the alleys
still crowded; yet were there still
shrill sounds as the peddlers called
out their wares, cheaper now with
day at its close:
“Malah ouh bniti—salty and sa-
vorous!”
“Aiaoii rafur nrnui barroiidi
here is mint, only five centimes!”
"Aiaou aljaoui! Innfah mih ida-
oui- here is incense! It cures and
protects!”
“Hi chonffi—look, look! I am
the father and mother of cut-
rates!”
“Zcntdj armat hetkata—take both
for three francs!’’
He kept on walking at random.
The moon had vanished behind a
cloudbank. So dark it \v..» that,
presently, he was unable to see
either house or man or beast. Yet
life was everywhere; everywhere
he was conscious of eyes staring
at him through the darkness, used
to that same darkness. Every-
where he heard whispering voices,
bare feet pattering away on in-
credible and mysterious errands,
the shiver of garments brushing
post, a faint clashing of jewelry
and crackle of steel, high, guttural
laughter.
Then, after a while, the noise
vanished. The black alleys van-
ished. The town itself vanished.
\ FEW minutes later, he found
it, standing in loneliness and
desolation. There was hardly a
noise except the rustling of the
wind in the stiff palm fronds and,
high up, the melancholy, fluting
cry of a tired desert bird dropping
through the air like a spent bullet.
Even the tapping of the wooden
signal drums seemed very far
away, muffled — a memory of
sound.
He looked at the house.
Part of its roof had caved in.
Some of the walls were broken.
It was deserted, lifeless. And once,
not so very long ago, it had been
filled with eager life, with men
and—with women.
Chiefly one woman . . .
Hardly aware of what he was
doing, obeying a curious impulse,
h. knoi kud on ihe door with the
knuckles of his hand. He knocked
in a peculiar way liira f. telegraph
operator, with dots and dashes,
short pauses and long pauses.
Seven times he repeated the
knocking, laughing at himself fur
a sentimental, romantic jackass.
And then, all at once, his laugh-
ter broke off sharply. Ho gave i
start of surprise, almost of fear,
sucked in his breath, as, from the
inside of the house, he hoard his
knocking echoed, with dots and
dashes, short pauses and long
pauses—seven times!
(To Be Continued)
38
40
35
.35
35
35
.34
Pet.
.589
.528
.519
.493
.486
.479
.473
.436
Stimson To Meet
With Churchill On
New Allied Moves
OUR BOARDING HOUSE with MAJOR HOOPLE OUT OUR WAY
THE NEW HOOPLE THREE- ) \ POWERFUL ACTING <oT0FP.
WAN EM2TH EUSlR, V/ SPEC KG EP NO U DROP
AMATINS D\‘=>COVJERX/-~-'lT Y7 A CARA\NJAS <oEED INi
K.ILLE BUGS AND INJECTS,
DESTRONS 08N0YIOD& WEEDS,
AND IE THE MOST PRODUCT-
tNE FERTILISER. KNOVJNi
TO MAIN/
ANOTHER BALL DISAPPEARED?
WELL, BEFORE VOU START SEARCH-
ING ALL OVER THE. PLACE- FOR.
IT, LOOK THROUGH YOUR
__ CLOTHES.'
by WILLIAMS
IT. HiN WOO RAISE A
LOAE OB RNE-
0R.EAD ?
Germany’s long-delayed cmnn i offensive has put the Russian front
back in the war new but the? stiff stand of Soviet soldiers indi-
cates the Nazis mny Lave waited too long Map magnifies the
Orel-Kursk-Kharkov area when* Germans have opened their drive,,
NEW YORK, July 12—(/P)—Na-
tional league standings:
TEAM— W, L. Pet
St. Louis 48 24 .667
Brooklyn 47 34 .580
Pittsburgh 38 35 .52!
, Cincinnati 39 37 .513
Philadelphia 34 42 .447
Boston 32 40 .447
Chicago 33 43 .434
New York 30 46 .395
_ The averuge man shaves 20
square miles of face during his
lifetime.
LONDON, July 12—(/Pi— Sec-
retary of War Henry L. Stimson,
who arrived here yesterday by
plane from the United States,
spent a quiet day today “getting
acquainted with some of the
American army officers and seeing
a few other people," an announce- j
ment from his headquarters said, j
Stimson was scheduled to meet
later with Prime Minister Chur- i
chill for a conference on forth-
coming moves against the Axis |
and will also inspect American
troops based on the British Isles.
About 70 gallons of pure oil are
contained in the body of an ele-
phant.
VOOPiE'i
EUV.IR. FOR
exhausted
EARTH
CRors"cBX
FOR IT
1 ImMSifIkH
>
,
c'^. V :
w h
w
WOULD
PRODUCE:
ANi EAGLE -
T-CxC W
mz----
mm
I
*T
, JA
mm ww
^ ^ «
THE clothes hamper
f W.J ^0 Wil l 1**4
£5. I-*
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Phillips, J. C. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 198, Ed. 1 Monday, July 12, 1943, newspaper, July 12, 1943; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth771637/m1/4/?rotate=270: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.