Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 64, Ed. 1 Friday, February 5, 1943 Page: 5 of 6
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Classified
Advertising Page
i*)'
WANTHI)! Kxfii'nrmvii shirt lin-
ishei, good wages. no othin need
apply City Sietim Laundry
H.l-titp
Borqer. Texas Friday. February 5. 1943
BEDROOMS FOR RENT r~ ~
FOR RENT Front bedroom, ad
joining buth. Cull 419 W. Wil-un,
64-JJtp
Page 5
Femnle Help Wanted
WANTED Second cook
Norm Plains Hospital.
Apply
K2-;ni
GET CASH
For Your Clean
USED CAR
Finger Motor Co.
115 S Mein Phone 1 IB jj
FAMOUS AUTHOR
-i|
FOR RENT Bedroom with one
double bed. (51(1 East tith St
64-3tp
MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED: Three oi lour room
modern house. Neai Borger Steam
Laundry. Permanentlv See O. H.
Durant at laundry. Ii4-2tp
WANTED TO BUY: ~ Washing
machine. Maitag preferred. Also
AUTOMOBILE
LOANS
—Or—
Cash For Your Car
0. B. HUNT
MOTOR CO.
Auto Loans — Phone 43
WANTED: T.vo surgical nurse-
Apply North Plain; Hospital.
62-3U-
WANTED Kvpenonco ' d ■ ■ •
Hi st salary, go cl work ng condi-
tions. Big Hearted Cafe. 6fl-6tp
household coor
INCOME TAX
” Properly Si Carefully Prepared
j C. L>. WORKS
) Attorney-At-Law
! 51fe N. Weatherly Pho. 754
ftli SALE, tint o ii - l
$50.00. Boy’s bicycle, -on.I she,
**25.00. J. L. Milton, Sanfoi 1 Boy
57. 59-fitp
. INCOME TAX
PREPARED
extractor. Call (57-M
«4-2tp ;
WANTED: Lumber, 1000 It used
shouting. Call Phillips. 7EI2 alter i
7 p. tn. —730 Coble Lease. 64-2tp |
WANTED TO RENT: Four or live j
room unfutnushed house. To per :
manent family. Call 1052 W or j
317. 64-3tc I
Itoad, Borger.
62-3tp
FOR SALE: Eloctrir refrige rator,
radio, and furniture. 3410 John-
jonn n. wnite
, 118 A E. 6th Street Ph. 882
| Evenings 623 Coble St. Ph. 886
FOR SALE: Four room house,
son St., Phillips, or phupe 1340-R.
Noland St., 590 Sunset
I leights,
t,(.
------------------,
Phillips.
59-9tp
FOR SALE: 4 rooms of good fur- ,
_______ _____
111ii1111111ii111111111111111111111111111111; |
FOR SALE: Two brink" l 'TT7T
ies for raising chickens, one baby I
bed with inner-spring mattress, }
high chair, nursery chair, baby ,
gart. 812 W. Monroe (jl-5tp j
FOR SALE Hot -
unu blanket, ti mi ies east o: town.
Mellrov Lease. H. H. Allred.
59-8tp
FOli SALE: 1 houses located in
Iiorger at 704 to 707 Monroe St.
These houses are paying twenty
per cent on investment. Priced at
$7,000.00 cash or will sell separ-
ate Also perfect section irriga-
tion district at Hereford. Price
$20.00 per acre. Have numerous
tracts that one crop will pay for.
Phone Claud Higgins —- 024 J,
Hereford, Texas. 57-7tp
Ave A. House 22.
63-3tp
MIAMI BEACH CLUB
Open every night except Sun-
day for you* dancing pleasure
Free feed every Wednesday night.
55-26tc
SAVE ON PARTS: Wrecking 35
Ford and 34 Chevrolet Jack So-
Relle, 411 S. Mam. 62-6tc
WANTED TO BUY: Clean used
cars — will pay top prices Jack
SoRt-lle, 111 S. Main
(12-20,
NOTICE: To <11 customers el!t*et-
ive February loth, we will be
unable to extend credit and de-
livery service dui to government
price ceilings effective February
5th. Miller Ac Sons Feed Store
62-3tp
FOB SALE Three* room house.
Corner of Harvey and 11th St.
Call at 414 Harvey. 63-3tp
FOR SALE: Busy Bee Cafe. Good i
business. 509 N Main. 62-6tc ;
FOR SALE: Building and lot.
Ready to be made into 3 apart- !
mi nts now. Good business location
after the war. 715 N. Main, across
from McCartt’s. 63-6tp
LOST AND FOUND
LOST: Sugar Rationing Book.
Mrs. Wilma M. Sparks. 704 Let*
street. 62-3tp
LOST: Billfold containing papers. 1
Edward Delaney, c-o Manhattan
Construction Co. 62-3tp i
LOST: Rimless glasses in black
pio;ili> return to Borger Her-
ald. 62-2tc
Dr. GEO E BEAR |
—Chiropractor—
413 DEAHL
Borger
HORIZONTAL
1,5 Pictured
author.
'.4 Within.
' 4 Barter.
5 Close.
6 North Caro-
lina (abbr).
7 Girl's name.
9 Native nwtais
.'1 Toward.
22 Lock opener.
24 Conv ent
worker.
25 Clear.
26 Vitality
(colloq.).
27 Electrical
term.
39 Doctor of
Medicine
(abbr).
30 Street (abbr.).
31 Symbol for
samarium.
32 Unfasten
35 Locale of one
of his stories
is-.
38 Music note.
39 Erbium
(symbol).
40 Negative.
41 Rhode Island
(abbr.).
Answer to Previous I’uirle
T7UFMjf/
el
m
r Rf 71
«/■’< i_
l PE 'E N’-A fiE
R A Riejk JfTPi I E D
a'l tops
P S a'l~n
L J *r L e
lO-
pf[ "AT+
■
si ir'n;
D i D
c
L' prtt- oinA We
* 1 ..
42 Nullify.
45 Hi has writ-
ten many
4? Approve
(cant).
48 Parent.
49 Decline.
51 Within.
53 Light knock.
56 North Ameri-
ca (abbr.).
57 At any time.
59 Story theme.
62 Nickel
(symbol).
63 Drachm.
65 Cut.
67 Short jacket.
69 Feeling.
70 Showers.
VERTICAL
1 Cham part.
2 At one time.
3 Note in
Guido’s scale.
4 Electrified
particle.
5 Stigma.
6 Sun god.
7 Smells.
8 Deserve.
9 Inches (abbr.)
10 Ells English
(abbr.).
11 Tardy.
12 Let fall.
14 Old card
game.
18 Upon.
20 Editor (abbr.)
■23 Affirmative.
26 Tablet.
28 Creep
furtively.
31 Prying sneak.
32 Footed vase.
33 Born.
34 Skill.
jo Hostelry.
36 Anger.
37 Be >ick.
43 Sailor.
44 Man’s name.
46 Large tub.
49 Finishes.
50 N ude.
51 Four
(Roman)
52 Proceed.
54 Soon.
55 Metal
fasteners.
57 Printer’s
measures.
58 Portuguese
money of
account.
59 Writing tool.
60 Lawrence
(abbr.).
61 Beverage.
64 Any.
66 Verso (abbr.).
68 Palm lily.
RED tr BUFF
Brick Siding At
rOXWOKTH GALBRAITH
LUMBER CO.
Phone 105 100 S Main
LOST: Sugar rationing card be-
300745-266. Return Rationing
Board. 62-3tp
AUTOMOBILES
FOR RENT: Typewriters and
adding machines of any make.
The Office Supply House. Phone
5, ask for Mr. iillburn. 268-dh-tf.
WANTED: Riders t< Pantex. ev-
ening or swing --hift Mrs Guy
Dun, tun, Box 1358, Berger 62 3tp
Ft )ll SALE: Good usedl1934*Ford
coupe. Cash. Good tires — good
mechanical condition. 422 Coble
St. 58-fitp
EMPLOYMENT
WANTED: Lease job, 20 years ex-
pe: ionce in oil field. Over drat ,
age Post Office Box 323 or 1213
N Harvey. 59-6ti
WANTED Young lady would like
work as assistant in office, or
would consider house keeping.
311 East 4th. 62-3tdh
Male Help Wanted
HELP WANTED: Laborers want-
ed for house construction work,
LOST: Two-year-old paint pony.
H. W. Tevebaugh. Box 1203. Phil-
lips. 63-3tp
LOST: Set of keys in grey folder.
2 car. one postoffice. Mrs. R. H.
Watkins. Return to Borger Her-
ald. 64-Itc
LOST:* Gasoline rationing book.
Please return to Mrs. C. A. Ed-
monds. Gulf Burnett Canto, box
751. 64-3tp
Old-Timers Honored
With Large Banquet
CHICAGO. Feb. 5 < I’ Mori
than 1,100 baseball players, offi-
cials and fans attended the 25th
annual banquet of the old time
baseball players association last
night.
R. C. “Boo" Lewis, traveling
secretary of the Chicago Cubs,
was honored guest.
LOANS
$J00 to $7|j00
On Your Signature Only
Immediate, Confidential
Service
Let us pay you out of debt
and have only one place to
pay. Repayment plan for
each individual arranged to
j suit your income.
LARGER LOANS ON AUTO-
MOBILES. FURNITURE OR
HOUSEHOLD GOODS
Republic Loan Co.
604-B N. Main Street
Room L Keith Bldg. Ph. 884
i
z
3
4
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5
6
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10
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19
20
Wi
11
21
33
34
yV-'n'
25
I
76
17
29
29
P
30
I
31
.12
33
34
sgmmi
IS
37
38
Sv '7.'
B.*- '.\'V^!
3$
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'■'M
!
40
41
A2
43
44
? ft*' Mae
V V '•
Vk ■**>«*&*
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4S
46
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58
59
60
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65
66
n
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60
6,9
-„■■■■ in
nsatLAGR.
fat: smm
j
1 1
70
S
■j
Sonitone
Cleaning
'Known for quality work'
p j IJI y TAILORS &
CLEANERS
702 N MAIN
ATTENTION
Synthetic Rubber
Plant Employee*
Panhandle Trailway* But *
Service To Rubber Plant.
Leave* Bu* »tatton 7:30 a. m.
Leave* Plant at 5:15 p. nr».
Panhandle Trailways
Herald Classified's Pay Off Quick!
to pay last year's bills FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
LOANS
Sr TO Srn EASY TERMS
V JU Confidential Service
Industrial Finance Co.
418 A North Main—Phone 110
Across Street From Cretney Drug
BlCND Boy IS FrreCK MC GOOSEY — HIS father
IS AM ex-SAFE-CRACKER ! BlJT FPEOc WANTS To BF
a pickpocket./- amt icu’rv cook thc kip with
I ME GtAh rS. A •. . C iUY E’.'fc'N Ti lOOGH HC MAS
I BEEN ARRESTED SIXTEEN TIMES /
y IfH; —"tut
a-
nn
L
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
FOE SALE Six room, modern
house, located Gulf-Burnctt
Camp. Cecil Qualls. 60-6tp.
FOR SALE: 10x24 sheet iron
building. 500 rapacity electric
brooder. Two galvanized finish-
ing brooders. J. C. Tipton, 11 East
Jefferson 59-fitn
FOR SALE Six room house and
bath. $450.00. W. B. Jameson,
711 Coble Lease. 62-6tp
FOR SALE: Five room house. In-
quire 307 Brain St. 62-3tp
FOR SALE' Circulating heater
cheap Call 1126-M 516 Maple
NEEDED
IMMEDIATELY
Mcchonic, Body Mon,
Ports Man
Good working conditions. Top j,
» caUrv nr rnmm
Davis Chevrolet Co. !
• SERIAL STORY
1 AM A MURDERER'
BY MORRIS MARKEY
COPYRIGHT. 194*.
MCA SERVICE. INC.
PLUMBING
REPAIR WORK
OPENS
MONDAY, Feb. 8
418 W. 9th Phone 590 R
C. C. CHAMBLESS
In Plumbing Business Since '17
TIRE RECAPPING
AND VULCANIZING
Work Guaranteed For Life
Of Tire
24 Hour Service
0. K. Rubber Welding
1(102 N. Main Border
BUFF
BRICK SIDING
KNIGHT LUMBER CO.
CITY STEAM
LAUKDHY
OPEN FOR BUSINESS
CASH AND CARRY
707 N. MAIN
HOW IT WAS DONE
CHAPTER XXVII
rPHF preparations for Vaughan
* Dunbar’s first appearance at
Stone House were somewhat com-
plex.
Henry Prentiss had to be in-
jured. and for two reasons. First,
to avoid playing in the game. Had
1 played, people would have
wanted to discuss the game with
me at Cynthia’s party, to chide
me for missing a shot or con-
gratulate me for making one. In
such a case, several people at least
would have had their attention
drawn directly to the fact that 1
was not there. Not playing, if
they missed me at yll they would
probably assume that I was oil
taking treatment from my doctor.
As it was, only Cynthia could
be positive of my absence. Ann
my excuse to in i was de-.ibt.-i aleL
an annoying one. She was fund of
me. She would not be likely to
point out to our friends that I
was not there -that I had gone to
keep a rendezvous with another
woman.
The second reason? An aid to
the disguise. Everybody knew that
Henry Prentiss had an injured
hand—and the bandages which
covered that simulated hurt were
put on a« conspicuously as pos-
sible. The very absence of them,
in the person of Vaughan Dunbar,
would add to the conviction o£ Ins
character.
That first night, the grand en-
trance of Vaughan Dunbar upon
the scene, was the real test, of
course. But a failure at that time
would not have been disastrous.
If I had detected the slightest sus-
picion of my masquerade, the
faintest glance of puzzlement in
any face, I would simply have
dropped the disguise forthwith,
and laughed merrily at the pre-
mature discovery of my practical
joke.
The same escape from the situa-
tion was always available, of
course—rigid down to the last,
critical instant.
The minor mechanics of tele-
phone calls, messages and the rest
were simple enough to arrange.
I had three bad moments during
the whole time of Vaughan Dun-
bar’s existence. The first came on
my second visit to Stone House—
that time when I had to exert
every morsel of my ingenuity to
talk about Swedish mines. You
will recall that Norman Tinker
(or Colonel M< rriwethcr, if you
prefer) began the after-dinner
conversation with the remark that
I reminded him of someone he
had known, and asked me whether
my kinfolk had ever visited Cali-
fornia Of course he was not re-
membering California, though he
thought he was. He was remem- Prentiss would not fit well upon
bering Henry Prentiss. the person of Vaughan Dunbar!
The second anxious moment' 1 was'seized with fright as the
; came during the talk which Cyn- realization of my awful mistake
j thia and 1 had beside1 the pool. ! came over me. And thereafter, as
'To mv immense astonishment i you have s en, I avoided the
' saw that, driven by the vacancy - slightest chance of a mi hap.
j and lack of meaning in her daily 1 it will be obvious that on this
1 life, she war becoming much at- day of crisis I had quit the hotel
traded to one whom '-he believed :n ycw \ ,rk for i.
| a serious man of the world. She | The background of Vaughan
! was about to fall in love with a j Dunbar there war. filled in to the
I creature who did not even exist! ; extent which 1 thought necessary.
For a brief moment, I was 11 knew that his in posture would
[ tempted to abandon the whole | be discovered sooner or later, and
plan, and to take Henry Prentiss
and Vaughan Dunbar forthwith
out of Cynthia's life. Then the
memory of that day in the wilder-
ness floated back to me, and flood-
ed all my mina. and stilled my
instant of v> raknc x-.
that made no difference to me
whatever.
I only needed the delay of two
or three days—two or three clays
in which the hue and cry would
be up for Vaughan Dunbar, fugi-
tive, and attention drawn away
Again. I was digressed on the from Gull Point itself. Two or
th.-'e days in which it must nat-
urally be assumed that the fleeing
man, impostor or not, had ample
lime to get away and put many
miles between himself and the
scene of his actions.
The telephone calls I had made
to the United Press, the British
dav of the climax itself. T felt, it
necessary to appear at Stone
House at lunch time. Among other
reasons, I wished to satisfy my-
self, one la t time, that- the iden-
tity of Vaughan Dunbar was fully
accepted.
But, despite the rare which I
| had used in forwarding the tele- j Embassy and the others were sim-
1 gram to myself, so that I would | ply to serve this end of delay in
be able to leave before the meal j tracing Vaughan Dunbar. I had
itself, it was not until I was actu- called those places, asked to
ally in the library that I realized I speak to an unlikely name, and
I had made a mistake. j hung up. But the record of the
I had dared, for the first time,
to appear ns Vaughan Dunbar in
full daylight. Certainly, that ap-
pearance was in the shadowed
library. But outside the library,
where my car stood, there was
brilliant sunshine. Suddenly, after
rails at the hotel’s switchboard
meant that they must be tediously
followed up.
The fingerprints were useful to
the same purpose. They would
have to be checked at many
places, the while Vaughan Dunbar
showing Cynthia and Mitchell I was, presumably, running hard.
Grace the telegram, I realized that 'The apparatus I had contrived for
they would follow me out to the
car if I let them.
The risk was too great, So I
simply burst from them without
ceremony, and virtually ran to
take myself away.
* * *
T MAY be forgiven, I believe, a
A certain measure of excitement
on that day of days. And that
excitement came very near to
ruining the scheme entire. I had
to play in the polo game, though
certainly I did not want to. Merely
to take my mind off the critical
hours that lay ahead, I played to
the hilt—for those first three
ehukkers—md hardly heard at all
the admonitions of Cynthia.
But while we sat in the station
wagon, an utterly terrifying truth
came to me through her words.
Suppose I should get hurt? Sup-
pose even the most commonplace
accident might happen: a wildly
swung mallet hitting me in the
face and making a cut, or even
a noticeable bruise? Suppose my
making them was a product of my
long preparatory labors in Cali-
fornia.
In one of my practice roles
there—that of an artistic but
rather amusing freak—I had taken
paraffin casts of the hands of sev-
eral motion picture actors. From
these casts, it had not been diffi-
cult to mold their fingerprints in
tnin, transparent rubber.
Naturally, I did not wear the
fingerstalls when I called at Stone
House—save for that last time
when I left my prints on the pistol.
T used them in my hotel room and
a notieenblo bruise? Suppose my
on the car. being careful to leave
perfect impressions.
When I did not wear them, I
took care to leave no prints where
they might be preserved. Cocktail
glasses and highball tumblers
would not matter. They would be
washed clean very quickly after
they were used. And, of course,
the fingerprints of Henry Prentiss
would appear normally about a
house which he visited so fre-
i„ J
WASH TUBBS
/ ,
// ■'
m
I WAS „ J5T „
, Y THINKIU6, CAPTAIN
EASY, I STILL RSMEAA- \
,t33ER THE i?AY P-E LEFT THIS
" TOWN TO SAIL FOR
l AMERICA... ANl> HOtAt
V exciTEp
OWE WAS
1 AUNT KATIE'S FAMILY
WAS <301 NS WITH US,
BUT AT THE LAST MOMENT
HERMAN AMP OTTO...
HER. TWO 80Y5... BROKE
OUT WITH THE MEASLES.
THEY DIDN'T 60. FUNNY,
ISN'T IT? S'ROSE THESE
BOVS ARE IN THE GER-
MAN ARArfy ?
\ ); \( )
LjJ_
ALLEr OOP
'I’LL \ .* Lf. FOR6ET
. new POST n
I WE \<\cT /'T1"\ 1/
-ALU,
i . Apqgt
BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
fo1Y VHYb'b Y O
I A
:iOOA AV\
SCl'SlST 0>yr. OOP 6K VN6Y
rO,: A \ ■ ,
■;fr~ 1 TVMtCH iM
k ' . 00\K<<b TO Y\N<t \T
■
Ml.....
OW 1 ASSOR/t VOO
W/t.'RY GEYWte r^O OY
TWt. CbOWoY.A VxG'b AY
CT^Ct.A'^U'T .
,V06 f _H tAHMV'A
liorse should go down, and T
might sinTer a genuine 1 . in, or !quently.
break! The wounds of Henry (To Be Concluded)
A^T'D^isTp4TH* \ _
aavr'.ss. to ; IL /
/eUT, 5n ER'FF, 1'
NEVER, A-Eix ‘1
v \ ■ NE GULCH.'
CHECK n 'iOlR
ROffe-ED TAc
PiCiJlCN
■*
-S
A S^'-E. Oc
HOR6e.S.'
Iiom Lodqi' No 1242 AT and ATi.
Regular meeting* iir*l anc< third
Thursday of each month. 7-30 p m.
210 W. Grand
2 EA&IMM Degree 2 5 43
Reg. Meetings Cbnpt.
6t Council 2nd. Mon-
it Council 2nd. Mon-
; O days; Work or practice 1
' other Mondays. (
ENAMEL PAiNT
90c per qf.
WE GUARANTEE 1TI
Phone 305
The above advertisement ha-
been running 12 years. Not a
single quart ha* ever been re
turned.
KNIGHT LUMBER CO
^■CRTJL
■enson
orTomcTvusr
iffli
RAY S RADIO SHOP
Phore 868
Refrigeration Service
Domestic and Commercial
214 N. Hedgecoke Street
CASHSL
SEE JOHN PAFFORD
BORGER FINANCE CO.
109 East 6 th Phone 14S
WALLPAPER
Our New Spring
Patterns Have Arrived!
KNIGHT LUMBER CO.
Dr. C A STAEHLIN
Optometrist
Phone 346 420 A N. Mala
Borger. Texa*
uiiiimiMiiitiuitinMiurxiiuimmiUr
E ________ =
E
POWELL
Funeral Home
FLOWERS
PHONE 555
106 North Main
E 106 North Main E
niiiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiinihR
By BLOSSER
That otmfr kid
ALWAYS CARRES A
FOPTY- FlVt EVEN
The cops are ,
AFRAID OF HIM/
F. ■
1*' !>)
They'd pub we out if they ever /ound
Out I'M WORKING- SECRETLY With THE-
POLICE I
COP« 194J BY NEA bERVICF INC. T. M DEC U 3. P4T. Off. V
By CRANE
THANKS. JUST"tBU. MV M0THBR
i <:ame back to dinkelsburs.
TFLL ‘ER I COULD SEE AUNT
KATIE'S HOUSE. IT MI5HT SOftTA
MAKE THIN6S EASIER,SIR,
IF SHF KNEW X W<VS CLOSE
TO K'NFOLKS. TELL 'ER,
SIR, THAT XM MI6HTY PR01/D
TO BE AW AMERICAN 1
rJcO-H IW BY Nt* SEHVICE. INC. T. M, HtC. U. 3. PAT. Qfj!
By HAMLIN
'SAY, mother'; !1 THEN HOwY fOH. DON’T BE T NO 8EUSH-OFFsT*^
IS UNK YOUR / CAM ' 1 J SiLLV... RUN NOW, IT^g
aortrwpp ! why. 1 ur /a H ai amd jlkt a
> UNN YUUK / \ IwAIVJ I P'LLl... KU1N II ✓-uC /Y||l|*T >
BROTHER VVHY. I he YOl.R A AL0N6 AND ^7HEe
* ^ Uon'L / PLAV THAT WE
1 ^/¥>
mt
wf+iZ, >’
’t\TV\W V\VVN
OR
9\(b6\'c.‘b
CoOTTA -r
<30 -----• c
vh:bU^>
By MARTIN
m 1 Yv^c. )
'bYtV'i
i \ i
COFf "» t »» srt ■»
s.\ Plain)
ALL
T-fc-::.
&ILLS
FRO"
L'JLlH
A CHECK.. V jH . \
P-JT HC.nI CAW 1UH /
EXPLAIN)
By FRED HARMON
iihihiih!
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Phillips, J. C. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 64, Ed. 1 Friday, February 5, 1943, newspaper, February 5, 1943; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth772283/m1/5/?q=+date%3A1941-1945: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.