Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 149, Ed. 1 Monday, May 15, 1939 Page: 2 of 6
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C. Mill.MPS
DAILY HERALD
Btreot, Borger, Texas. K erjr E*ouIhk
d on Sunday Mornlug by
PUBLISHING, Inc.
Kditor and Publisher
TftE BOROER (TEXAS) DAILY HERALD
MONDAY. MAV 15, 1939
'Heave Ho!1
Par Waak
One Year
One Year
SUBSCRIPTOS' llATBB
By Carrier In Borger
By Mall
ed an second-class mutter Movant ber ¡13. 1ii2(1 at the Post-
at Borger, Texas, uuder the Act of March &, 1H! 7.
lie Associated Press la exdusltVly «ntitled to the nae of ra-;
publication of all news dispatches credit to It or uot otherwise.
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or repu- I
•at ion ot any Individual, firm, concern, or corporation that may ap-
ir in the column of lb< Herald will be giudly corrected when
Jad to the aiteotiou of the editor. it is nut the Intentlou of thia
paper to wrongly use or injure any individual, firm, concern, or
corporation, and corrections «til be made when warranted and
prominently ax waa wrongly published reference or article.
Ail unsolicited articles, manuscript*, letter* and plcturea aent
to the Herald are scut at Hut owner'* rials, uud the publishers ex-|
pressiy repudiate and liability or roiponsibllly for tliulr custody or
raturu. The utmost cure 'Mill be tufceu, bowover, to aee that the,y are
not lost or tnlspluoed in thla office.
THAT GREEN LAWN *AND FLOWERS
Planting time is here for the city dweller who enjoys
puttering around in his garden, working with hit* flowers
and watching a beautiful green carpel of grass develop
into a lovely netting fur his home.
Paved street and sidewalks are physical essentials
and are valued as an important contribution to the con-
tinued growth of Rorger, but, alone and without artrac-
i9 ene.ss that aatimfes the emotional requirements of the
individual, these improvement merely emphasize the
barrenneas of any human habitation devoid of growing
green things.
Natural love of beauty, especially the fresh loveliness
of a landscape of grass, of tree*. of flowers, and neat
little homes surrounded by all these outdoor wonders,
is inheritant in everyone.
Borger is rapidly changing from the drab collection
of oil field homes, into a city of many new homes, beau-
tiful lawns and flowers, and no small number of trees
are raising their green plumage into the local landscape
Now is the time to get that new lawn started. Sur-
round your home with the freshness of a blue grass and
clover or a bermuda carpet. Plant that garden of flowers.
With a little water. Borger soil will grow anything. Take
care of Bor¿ ¿r trees and plant more trees in tree planting
time. Do your part to make our city a more beautiful place
in which to live.
Borger can become one of the most beautiful cities
in the Texas Panhandle, with a little care. There is no
reason why an unbroken stretch of green cannot line
every foot of the new paving being laid in Borger at this
time. Add to this, a variety of flowers and a line of stately
trees and you have a beautiful picture that will be a
pleasing attraction for everyone to behold.
i
A potent Frsnch-perfumed bath oil is on the market.
Which will be just the opposite of an inducement in geet-
ting Junior into the tub on Saturday night.
In Des Moines, a teacher took a lamb to school so
her children could see it. They had been wonderi.ig what
thjtt thit^g, waw, following Mary around.
Wonder if this fellow who was recently elected
chairman of a celluloid corporation board is a celluloid
collar worker.
Mack Sennett is coming back into motion picture
production. There's a chance for a good custard pie
baker.
Oregon released 72 educational movies last year.
Wasted effort, unless the state runs cartoon comedies
with them.
A Lorain, ().. postman estimates he has walked more
than 110,000 miles. The pity of it is that most of it has
been to deliver statements and circulars.
«en.il
LEQENDARY VILLAIN
HORIZONTAL
1 Villainous
hero of a
famous opera.
6 He was a
legendary
or
impostor.
J4 Wild bufTalo,
16 Uncle.
IB Convex
molding.
17 To quote.
18 To Meal.
If Merchiindi.se.
20 Pasteboard
Picture frame
21 Gymnastic
apparatus.
24 Golf term.
25 Meat.
26 Thine.
30 Preposition
of place.
.11 Small fly.
,W Mortndin dye.
"Stt.
35 Star-shaped
sr.
91 \ vessel.
5Wfr to Previous Puttie
WILEY
POST
49'I>>miriccviitg
He sold his
soul to the
!>5>King of boosts
r «Rrtom reces*
57 Gounod
M wrote the
5ft'Blockliearl-.
59 Boat term.
00 Bewitching
woman.
VKRTICAI.
1 Fourtit note
in ratio.
2 Altar chest.
3 One.
4 Coterie.
5 Tu seesaw.
B Sea skeleton.
7 Barrel ring.
8 yellow re:-in.
!) Opposed to
highest.
lOKavu.
11 Any wrongful
act.
12 On the lee.
fS Snout
20 He made
love to .
22 Polynesian
chestnut.
23 Eagerness.
23 Chose by
ballot.
28 Being.
20 To make tace
33 Pertaining
to the side.
34 Grr.cn films
i in bionzes.
3fi ,\1 atui i .
3H k .
.11) Creed -.
41 Credit.
42 Bono.
44 Shaft port.
45 Boat part.
47 To assert.
4H Italian coins.
49 Project.
SI Folding bed.
54 Roof linlal.
Mexicans Given
Land On Return
SAN ANTONIO. May 15 t/I'i
Mexico's program of repatri-
ation will begin here early to-
morrow with the first shipment
of its national; home to Its first
colony.
Fifteen families, some 55 per-
sona. will he taken to Browns
vlllc by United States Inunigrn-
lion authorities, who are coop-
erating with the Mexican gov-
ernment.
At the international bridge
in Brownsville the repatriates
will he delivered to the Mexlcun
agricultural authorities who will
then transport thorn to au agri-
cultural colony near Mat autoras,
across the river from Browns,
ville.
Knelt family will he given 25
acres ol' land and funds with
which to sit t'slst. farm imple-
ments and need The tiuildlllK of
homes to house the repatriates
will he undertaken l>y the «ov-
ertimed! The agricultural colony
is the first of Its nature In
Mexico, according to Omar .los-
efe. Mexican consul here. Tin
group from San Antonio will he
the first repatriates' frdih the
United States, he shid Later col
on les will ho opened near TCI
I'aso. in the state of Hoiiora and
In lower California.
One hundred families will he
taken to Mexico within the next
two weeks. Josi'fe said, const!
tilling son " 500 persons. He
sold shipments val II be unmade
every two we&s iijnll wfr'those
who wish to be repatriated are
accommodated (¡roups are
awaiting shipment from Houston
and Keio-dy. if was reported. The
repatriation program instituted
some time ago liy the Cardenas
go\ ernment, seeks to succor
Mexican nationals in Strained cir-
cumstances living abroad.
íóíomftc Production company.
0 5. .1. J. Perkins. 0S feet
om the north and east lines of
heir lease, located in the most
asterly NK corner. McDant'ls
(U rvt-y.
C C. Kench ot al, No. t Erie
¡'hoinpKon et al, 1679 feel from
lie west and 1537 feel from the
South of Section 16. Block M 23.
jfOARB survey.
j ** '■ Mcllroy Oil company & Herr-
mann. No. 8 Halle. 330 feet from
he south and 600 feet cast of
o. 7, Section 4, Block M-21, TC
RR survey
Mcllroy Oil comiuny & Herr-
tnunn Bros., No 9 Halle, 330 feet
rom tile ronth and iHIO fe< t eust
•of No. S, Section 4. Block M-21.
J P. PhlliipH Employes, No. 2
Erie Thompson et al, 330 feet
fioin the west and "30 feet from
.lie north of Section 15, Block
M 23, TCftRR nurvey. Hutchln-
on county, (Lines of their lease),
Phillips Petroleum company,
N'o 41 Cockrell Ranch. S90 feet I
from the north and 1057 feet ;
from the ecst of Section C, Block
M-21. TC&RR survey.
Phillips Petroleum company [
No. 4 2 Cockrell, 890 feet from
the north and 330 feel from the
east of Section (I. Block M-21, TC
&RR survey
Philip Petroleum cer.-puny
No. 2 Lizzie, 330 feet from the
north and 2310 feet from the east
of NE 1-4 of Section 25, Block
M-23. TC&RR survey.
Phillips Petroleum company
No. 11 R. E. Thompson. 2310 feet
from the south «ltd 380 feet from
the feast of N 1-2 of Section 27,
Block M-23. TC&RR survey.
Power Petroleum company. No.
1 \V B. Halle et al. 270 feet from
•he south and 151 feet from the
<-ust of 40 acres In Section 5.
Block M-21, TC&RR aurvay.
Huunollnd Oil & lias company.,
No, 14 H. B. Terry. 990 feet front.
Lhe south and 2310 feet from the
west of N 1-2 of Section 772,
Block 55. HE&WT survey.
wmiW aw-..*
TI HNS \ VMK \ItOIMi
ISNÓLA. S. C„ May 15 (/Pi
Om Buess How did this town
Kel Its name'.'
Not frt>ttt the Indians. Not from
a famous personage: Not from
tin old World.
it was this way:
In liinv a railroad tons built
to this rommunity The railroad
men didn't like the Village's name,
Which Was spelled A-Lo-n-e.
.So iht'y turned It around and
spelled fi h«ckwards.
GET A POSITION
There Is one far you If
you «re <|iuilifieil lo bold It.
If mu. uluit are you doing
alitiin It?
Are win satisfied with
your | resent earnings and
pios|H<<ts lor the future; of
o(M >oil like m know that
hi a few ntoiiiliK you eon III
step into n (hiiI position In
I be business world?
liet us help mui. Write
•oda.v for catalogue untl lu.
foilUNllllU.
Name _
.VdtlK'*
Hot Oil Charge
WASHINOTON. May 15
i/!pi ■ Justice Dougtaji. deliver
I UK lus first opinion as a mem-
ber of the supreme court, held
today that the government had
a i'Íkíit to prosecute two men on
in charge of conspiracy to violate
the l!>:tii fv.nnnl'y "hot oil" net
even though the indictment luid
been returned after the legisla
lion was originally scheduled to
expire.
The measure prohibits Inter-
state shipment of oil in excess
of quotas fixed under slate con-
servation laws.
The decision reversed a rul-
i tftg by t hp Southern Texas Fed-
ore' district court dismissing an
indictment on the «round that
tile right of action had ei|1ed
with the expiration of the origin.
;'til statute. No Jftseut to Douk-
Stanollnd Oil & Gas company, |ttS' opinion xvas%nnouneed
No. 16 H. B. Terry. 9*0 feet from t1k, maietmnn, was agalosi
the south and 23J01 t*** Neal Powers and Reúne Allied,
charged with transporting
,, . — -!U 1 the Conroe field Mont-
Harry Stekoll. No, 2 ^ adien{oniery 0t)UUl), ,Vx , Ma,,,U8
Hook. Pa., lu violation of Texas
iw.
1"ie alleged offenses took
place (elate '.lie original expira-
tion dale of tin1 'egislatiou
June Hi. 13:17 Before it expired
the measure was extended to
J 30. IMP. The indictment
was rein rued September 17.
10 3 y
"One to the uniendmcnt, the
l)i 1 iiabis oplnii n snid. "the act
has no Ver ceased to be In effect.
No new lav.- w-s created; no old
one was repealed. Without hia-
tus of any kind, iiie original act
was given extended lift . There
was no first Connally act follow-
ed by a second Connally act.
Jnirltm the periods in question
there was but one act. No evi-
dence has been brought to our
attention, and we have round
none, that eenuress proposed to
w.iive or to pardon violations
which occurred prior to June 'C.
19117. but which were not pro-
secuted until subsequent there-
to."
north part of Sec-
47. H&TC survey
'nrwin
I h en.
Still unsolved was the ta\
problem. Members continued to
study 1111 omnibus bill reported
favorably by the house educa-
tion committee 'usl week. It
would hike natural resource
levies, increase the cigarette tax
a cent. Impose a I per cent tax
On automobile sales and levy a
selective sales and luxury tax.
The sales-natural resource tax
folutlon was still kicking around
In the house despite its fourth
defeat last week Proponents re.
fused to concede the proposal
definitely dead.
Chief interest in the senate
this week will be aciiuu on nomi-
nation of Brady I' (¡entry of
Tyler roi* the highway commis-
sion chairmanship, and consid-
eration of the road bond as-
sumption bill and the fair trade
act.
So far, foes of the latter have
successfully hlorked considera-
tion It has been set for special
order twice but opponents hnv;
on gaged In lenathy debate on
other Issues to prevent it com-
ing up
(«entry is the governors
fourth choice for the highway
post, two other selections have
been refused confirmation while
another asked his name be
withdrawn Some senntors said
they believed Oenlry assured ot
confirmation.
BVRXK
170*4
5 OOMMKIU
OOUGOS
1Ali
5-YEAR-OLD
(Continued trom page ONE)
TO SEEK
(Continued from
MORE
page ONE)
<?
a couple more I
to name ..«Utility
■ ■ :■ .
¿ ¡V .*■ * * ■■ ■ ■ *
Halla*, T
murder
"There win
wouldn't want
moment." McDevItt added.
He disclosed close relatives
as yet unidentified -- of flye
new suspected vlciims are i|i
custody. The bodies of tour ntdn
and two women will be exhumw(jl
next week.
Meanwhile, police studied the
possibility that an arson-bomb-
ing ring o pora led a« a. subsid-
iary of the slay fot pay syndi-
cate.
Impossible to determine who had
asiftulted the little girl.
Th" mother reported Linn sturt-
ed 10 menstruate when she was
only three months old. continu-
ing regularly until August. 1U3S
Told that the child was preg-
nant, the mother voiced Indian
superrtltlons.
"She believed that her daugh-
ter was a victim of the 'evil ejre'
or possessed by u snake called
'Tlrnclui which, according to the
Indians, Is able to Impregnate wo-
rn1 a sleeping in the open air,"
Or. Lnrrabure iwld.
The Indians also believe that
women nigy «et pregnant b tiioy
pass near some water spring when
menstruating, especially If a rain-
bow seems to lie coming from the
spring."
Lilia weighed :s2 kilograms
1 70 55 pounds*. The exact weight
or her ehlUI was 2,7 kilograms
<6,96 pounds). The mother Is
Just under 37 inches in helghi.
Attending physicians had given
the little girl a large doll to play
with while -ho wok in confine
mcut
STORMING
(Continued from Paga ONB)
w(|ere ulie in. 111 already has been
killed uud Ouoiher wounded, re
(used to sigu un agreement with
the United Mine Workers Satur-
day In New York when 15 other
sufl coal operating areus approv-f
ed u union shop.
Toduy wjib the first time most
of the minea had been open
since work stopped April I ut
the start of negotiations 011 the
eon tract.
Civil aud 1 iry authorities
said the killing and shooting
"had no connection" * ith labor
dlfflcu'ties bill orders were sign-
ed calling 800 additional Na-
tional guardsmen to duly.
Militiamen were sent to min-
es throughout the Country dur-
ing the night. Machine guns were
set up along the roadside and any
ffort of pickets to gather in
large number brought quick or-
ders to disperse.
Colonel Hoy W. Was ley of the
slate troops said:
"We will allow peaceful pick-
eting lu reasonable numbers but
will not permit massing of men
at any oue point."
The Colonel wurued if the
men continued "to loiter about
Hiirlun streets they will be given
mllitury escort out of town."
(¡•urge Tiller, secretary uud
treasurer of the Hurlan U. M
W. District declared:
"Instead of pence und 110 In-
timidation. Hie troops will not
let us go within sla mtlea of a
coal camp. They have a bridge
blocked a mile and n half Horn
Kills and are blocking state high-
ways"
Colonel Kasley said truop
thud been pes ted us guards along
J tile highways entering Harlan
County to prevent an influx ot
I in liters from other fields
MOST POWERFUL
(Contluued from page ONE)
llllllinillltlltHHIIllHHUIIIIIIIIIWIHIM
Mind Your Maimers
11111111111HI11111 timiiiiiiiiiiiiu
Test yitlir knowledge of correct
social usage by answering the fol-
lowing questions then cheuklug
against the untlioiiiutlve answers
; below:
member of the
give u shower for
new Willis, ammunitions, tuuks
and other war materials might go
15 pi-r cent further
A K.ivlng ot delivery time, they
explained, would result from mass
rut her than poaeemeal orders.
Although contracts for the first
571 war planes of the air corps'
expansion program were signed a
few hours after tile Initial .*60,-
iiuu.mm appropriation was an.
thorl/ed. major ordinance orders
are to lie withheld until June
Bids will In' sought, meantime,
from p r I v u t e manufacitirtng
plants.
Several hundred factories will
share in Hie contracts for about
75 per cent of the work. The re.
miUnder will be turned out iiy six
munufuct uring arsenals.
YOUTH KILLK1I BY « Alt
AKTKIf HONOR! N'O MOTHER
SEATTLE. May 15 (*>s Karl
Lnwroiiee, 17, had liis picture tali-
en to give to Ills mother 011 Moth-
er's liny
Mrs Lawrence got the picture
but not from Burl. Her liusliniid
gave It to her a few hours after
11 f hoy was killed in an auto ac-
cident.
1 Should a
! groom's family
11h< bride?
2. May the
bride
acudía
4. Should
s sister if
she Is her maid or bouor- give
the bride a shower?
.1 U you are Invited to u show.
01 and cannot attend, should you
gift?
usual equal atan ees
of a bride be Invited to a shower
given I'.ir her?
Wh.it would .von do If
You are u primpecllve bride.
u:;d a friend gives 11 shower for
you. Would you-
hi) Thauk each persuu for her
gift as yon open it. and consider
tba1 enough?
ilii Not open the gifts at the
party?
to)
gift us
Iter a
ward.
Answers
I No.
No.
Yes.
I. No.
lives.
Hi Sf
solution
! a.
Thank ouch guest for her
you open-It, uud then write
note it day or two 'after-
only friend* and relit-
tfhat Would You l)o"
<e 1
Borger Dally Herald Classified
Ads get results.
SERfAL STORY
DATE WITH DANGER
BY HELEN W0R0EN
COPYRIGHT, ttj . «tA StnVlCR. INC
VentrMUyi Mar jr
S He dente* Itm
nm*n fcrr oWrp n.
mikr na I* a
!■ no aaanrr.
c«T
100, tat
CHAP' :R HI
«TPHE sleet, whipped by a strong
wind, shrouded Lower New
York. Empty office buildings
loomed like gigantic tombstones in
the half-dusk ot early night, their
blackness strengthened by the
thousand l^hts which twinkled
from the New York Morning
Gaoette. An occasional late worker
hurried toward the building, his
head bent low to save himself
from the sharp prickle of the sleet
as it blew in his face. Otherwise
the streets were deserted.
The howling darkness made the
hustle and bustle of the big news-
paper seem doubly cheerful. Peo-
ple stood about in the lobby talk-
ing. Elevators shot up and down
the shafts. Messenger boys stalked
back and forth, their rubber
ponchos gleaming with melting
sleet and from the lower floors of
the paper came the rumbling of
the presses. On the 12th floor the
click of typewriters proclaimed the
location of the editorial offices. At
intervals the pounding of keys was
punctuated by cries of "Copy!" as
this reporter or that one hurried
to make n deadline. The first
edition was going to press in 10
minutes.
"Give me all the ad you've got
011 Janice French." Tom Ludd
stuck his head out froni the man-
aging editor's office and then drew
it back Just as suddenly.
He could d*. «inm .1 things at the
same time than any Juggler who'd
ever spun plates at rt circus side-
show. Here was a queet man with
11 singular career. It was inevita-
ble that he would eventutflly land
on n newspaper. In his IrtVe 30s
with something of the huwt. in
his handsome face, he had been
managing editor of the Gazette
five years. Before that he'd been
city editor und before that cable
editor. He seldom talked about
his early life, but it was known
that he'd gone to Harvard and that
Illustration by E. H. Guilder.
The voice on the line tapped suddenly, terminated by a shriek-
Ludd heard the rcccii'er crush to the floor.
ceiver, "What do these fool society
girls mean by playing around with
veneered hoodlums like Duke
Martin? Understand this, Mary!
Janice French's fumily have asked
I he police to make a secret search
for her. Maybe the Duke knows
where she is. Maybe he doesn't.
Somebody knows. Half tite town
may know, but the Gazette doesn't
know. Get the story!"
Jamming up the receiver, Lodd
began pounding the desk, "Bring
ine the clips on Janice French.
Pete," he yelled to a scurrying
office boy, "and make it snappy."
Then he settled back in his chair.
Half an hour later. I,add, still ex-
citedly puffing his pipe, pressed
a buzzer marked "City Editor."
"Come in, Crossie," he called,
as Padraic Croswell, the city
guy Ijkq Mallín,
him. But how arc we going to
Big money to
hed shipped as a sailor to the editor, looked inquiringly through
Orient the year he left college, i the door, "I want to talk to you
He d written for pulps, edited a I ubout Janice French."
housewife's magasine (he never 1 „ , „
mentioned this) and once, when, B
he was broke, composed menus for í «GSSlfc wat, thin with a long
u physical culture restaurant. He'd sallow face, nromincnt
also slept on park benches and
• stood in bread lines.
am
TVOW he lived in 0 bachelor
" apartment on Lower Fifth
avenue, drove a low-slung black
roadster, and smoked a pipe. The
newsoaper game suited his ad-
venturous philosophy. He inter-
ested himself in its functioning
sallow face, prominent nose,
large and bony, und great shaggy,
sandy eyebrows. When he first
appeared in the editorial rooms of
the Gaxetto 15 years before, it
prove It? Now she disappears. So
what?" He paced nervously up
and down. "This story isn't going
to keep."
CroNsie unwound his arms and
held out u hand. "Lei's have a
look at the clips." He began
shuffling through the newspaper
accounts of Janice's activities.
"Debut coot $50,000," he read in
a monotone. "She was busy as
the devil going to theater parties
und danc«k that winter. H'm,
now known as 'Plavgirl of Socie-
ty'. Got a home 00 Fifth Avenue.
Pilots her own plane. Drives like
the old Nick, according to the
number of times she's been ar-
retted for speeding. Some girl.
I'd say."
"Too wild," said Tom briofly.
"I've run into hot occasionally.
Darned pretty but. reckless. Al-
ways thought, she'd make n good
story some time. But that's not
Helping us now "
Hi walked to the window and
drummed his fingers on the pane.
"Some place in this town are all
the answers," He starod out over
had been rumored that he was ,,u" ''"y A rosy haze, pink even
an Irish radical. There were few 'trough the veil of mist, colored
in the office even now who re
membered his coming, but they
knew that he did speak Gaelic
and that he had an amazing
He never tired of listening to the1 ¡pPWtesdgc of the stars. Aside
fellows talk on the city desk. Ho 11 , ,u' lJ10Vt,<l himself
r.dmired their Irresponsible scntl- newspaper man, which was
all that really mattered.
"Janice is still missing," said
Crossie briefly, draping his lanky
form over the edge of Tom': teak
Th, t's why I want to talk to
A grand story here I we
estt pet it the bottom .<f it
Wlv tv's that i.liice boy wilh those
dies.''
Pete ducked in, ocopp, c an en-
velope marked \innici. rroiicn' on
the dim and sidled opt. He'd
worked
mentalism and he condoned their
gambling spirit. He liked their
good humor, their generosity, and
then sudden mania for cauaes. He
knew by instinct exactly how to
treat thorn. He hud 0 roitl tender-! -vou
nevs for them. He could smell
news. He also had a Ivqlthy
temper mid a strong voice. Good-
look inn In a dramatic way, h?
could be mu-a-noucd one moment
ar.d Chesterilstaum the next. Kv-
rryhody In the office but mmseif
knew he was fn love with Mary,
fchat is everybody execpt Mary.
This evening, returning to his
swivel cntir, ho pressed a t*ie-
phone to hi* ear and mouth with
bia left hand, okayed copy with
his right and shoved a nes*
draw*' shut wite h.s rignt iooi,
the while bellowing uito tlio re-
tbe sky. "While you ahd 1 stand
here. Crossie. anything may bo
happening and probably Is."
He began pacing the floor again,
puffing furiously on his pipe.
"God. man, you stand there Hku
•i stick!" He stopped abruptly in
front of Cross'e. "We've got to
Oct and act quick."
Croóle, unmoved, looked amia-
bly back at his temperamental
chief.
"There are reveral coursas to
pnri'tto in this : lory." he said
calmly. "I think the best ap-
nroueh lies through your soeiody
department. Where is iVlaiv
rinnklln?"
The phone bm/.jd on Tom'.:
desk. "This is Mary Franklin
to°know wtaTto 5gfa ,n* Rllti.ela^r V-73M?
clcar of the boss.
time Mary's agitated vole before
To.n could say "Hello,"
'Vow here's n society girl who's1 named Nipk Hnrt nns Inst
fallen for n killer,' continued Tort,' ¡'no tnic ntarwiMt, Send t
'orgpettlns, in his tronzy over theilicc—" Her vnltc stopped
^I—I|PP
toty tab sarctMtic MMarit nd was deniy, l( rmi!
ioou- 10 ding At Peto. "Sna'a easy! Udd n«a o
run and stie'n, im fle
10 looit at.
out lor illt'lll:
A natural toi
.1,
* A M +
* >. >
SW&i.
. a shriek,
MOCivei- «Mtíiv u
f'or.tlnurd)
v| # #*i :i -..ii
... j . ■: r,
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Phillips, J. C. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 149, Ed. 1 Monday, May 15, 1939, newspaper, May 15, 1939; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth167703/m1/2/: accessed May 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.