Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 176, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 15, 1939 Page: 2 of 6
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PAGE TW
Í
THE BOEGER DAILY HERALD |
•t IOS North Main Street, Borgsr, Tiui. Ksary Wmlis!
Kicapt Saturday, nod on Sunday Morning by
PANHANDLE PUBLISHING, lac.
J. C. PHILLIPS Editor and Publisher ¡
— y
■ snfi: iS; |||l;
THB BORC.ER (TEXAS) DAILY HERALD
THl?K>Sl>AY, JUNE 15, 1939
PRICE FIXING
<Continued linn) f'age ONKi
JAPS SEARCHING
(foulIntied from I'age ONE
day took it mil of Us regular 01
dei on lili- caleudai und made
possible It fiuai vote
^
Par Waak
Ob* Taar
Om Taar
• ■rw
8UBSCRIPTON HATES
By Carrier In Bursar
By Hull
Months
Month*
I 16
$7.60
17.60
«4.00
«M0
V 'J
Entered as second-class matter November 23. l'J-ti at the Poat-
a at Borgor, Texas. under the Ad of March 8, 1807.
The Associated Praaa is exclusively entitled to the use of ra*
PUhlteatlóu oí all uowti dispatches "redil to it or uot otherwise.
All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters and pictures aant
Uui Harald are aent at the owner's rlsg, and the publisher* al-
ly repudiate and liability or raapogalblUy (or their custody or
um- The utmost care will be taken, however, to see that they are
I. loat or misplaced In this office.
"Any erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or r«pu-
> ot any Individual, firm, concern, or corporation that may ap-
to the columns of the Herald will be gladly corrected when
to the attention of the editor. It Is not the intention of this
per to wrongly use or Injure any individual, firm, concern, or
itlon, and corrections will be mude when warranted and
lnenlly as was wrongly published reference or article.
■
CRIME AND PUNISHMENT
Do a* it not seem strange Lhut after thousands of.
years of civilization, crim? is still cío prevalent? i
One of man's preoccupations during all those cimtur-1
ies ha Ueen to devine means of breaking up crime, and
yet his succesa ha been small indeed. There are still m^ny
who will kill and rob and injure.
Altogether, the record doesn't speak any too well
for the means taken to eliminate crime. That gives point
to a recent speech of Judge Atwell West wick before
the National Probation Association. Judge Westwiek is
on the bench of the Superior and Juveuile Court of Santa
Barabra, Calif. He delivered a *tirriiig indictment of "the
nonaense, sophistry, and cruelty which characterize our
traditional legal system."
He began with an interesting definition of crime:
"The expression in social life of the physical and social
environments playing upon a personality which is essen-
tially abnormal or uiiu«u l. by reason of heredity, disease,
or development."
Obviously, if that i« a good definition of crime, then
punishment in the sense of the state's revenge for an act
of willful hostility to society, it) of no use. In fact, it is
hard to get around Judge Westwick 's assertion that "how-
ever ingenious and' inhuman the penalties, the number
of offenders seems never to have decreased."
This humane judge, from long e*perien<ie in juvenile
work, believes that the concept of a j^dsnile court, where
medicine, biology, sociology, psycho!«!#¡ psychiatry, and
psycho-analysis can all work side by side to effect cure
Huillín the (III)' Hrltlsh III fan
trymeti with fixed bayonets were
ntbiioued al on*' entrance to
Those favoring tlii' proposal i lie 11 concession while tension
claimed li offered a protection ; increased in un crisis wht* li
to manufacturer, ret altar and ¡ brought on the Japanese block-
consumer by prohibiting unfair «de yesterday
trade practice*, described to in- j
elude ''lota-leader" sales aud oth-
er methods
Foes labelled It a device io
jin k up prices for "eastern man-
ufacturers'' and in eon I raven Hon
io the stati'' i auli-trusi law .
Providing Hit- iiouoe Maree le
M-uaie iiiiieiwliiieuih an>1 Hover.
nor H . I.«M- o'Diuilel due. not ve.
l«i lite bill if would become offer-
ilvi' In (HIoIm'í,
• SERIAL STORY
BRIDE ON A BUDGET
BY JANET DORAN
eosYntOHr. tasa. nba sksvicc. inc.
t l alrriln; i Itnrl'a trouble* «lib
Irlo bruin n« >kc bulk* lit rwilt-
iub nee wtlM. ! •• trull ™ uiin
thai lliime Ule J ke« iibuul Ibr
ill i ir winuna" sir nil tuo imr
tut. rsalt
CHAPTER VI
r 'OKTI'.ARY to Bart's
she vva. unreasoi
belief that
rather than punishment, might be extended into broader
flélds of crime work.
We are certainly tending in that direction. The state
now «euds a man to prison, not to "get back at fcim" for
something he hw done, but to try to straighten him qut
or at least to keep him out of contact with his fellow-men
during a period when it seems likely that he would repeat
the offense.
A civilization may be measured by the kind of anti-
critfie "measures it adopts. A crude state of society always
adopts crude and savage revenge methods with ruthless
punishment for the detected criminal. As it moves toward
«civilization, the aim must always be, not punishment, but
rent of a slate of rental and physical health in
re crime iStpatff less likely,
t " fh# Westwicks are pioneers in whose trail society
follows as fast as its stumbling steps permit.
Nearly a a#ore of American sailors asked permission
to marry Freitfh girls before their ship sailed for the
Ü. ¡S. American girls would like to know how the French
bailas accomplished it.
Ft Mure event at a Michigan community festival was
a pancalhfceating contest. That should have been easy
to win—with the right strategy. Just get rid of your
opponents' %rup
T
■
a&zrui
=fc
—
BRITISH STATESMAN.
1
HORIZONTAL
ifi Pictured
British
«talesman,
DfVW <—
U
12 Plant part.
13piua«e to
IdioStch
.. vmporarily.
SI* Befara,
fu suffice
ff
i
Answer to Previous Putnle
:glW.:WW2in >jB{Smffi|||'C.tc:
mdmiH ]|R S||a«« WftSi!*
pW .(liAilj mWi
sí i*|i:lia liaijfg If
■.ffl'.r.W;? \*m r|nn!atf
iaiSiWB ijlftl*14iri
s^*í*: lil'iiOl
jtfiai.*i..lflttMI||iii'* MM
(prefix).
40 Kind ot
Jettucc.
42 South
Carolina.
43 Existing in
name only,
46 Law.
48 Baseball
team.
4® Epoch.
Si New star.
62 Half.
«3 Yellow finch.
85 JLonf «delayed
57 He was
ioi
56 Degrades.
VERTICAL
2 Lion's home.
3 Shield wreath
4 Still.
Sport of a
churn.
6 To depart.
7 Digression.
3 English coin.
9 Remainder.
10 Shark.
13 This has
served in
politics SO
years
IS He gained
as a
liberal.
17 To disparase.
lONaUve metal.
21 Distinctive
theory
23 One that
poisons.
24 Anciont.
25 Oat grass.
26 To bend the
head. •
27 Ever.
28 Electrified
particle.
29 Renegade.
32 To scatter.
.35 Banner.
36 To lend.
39 Smallest.
41 Long outer
garment.
44 Buffoon.
45 Sinister gaze.
46 stated.
47 Pulpy fruits.
.10 Railroad.
52 Spain.
53 Southed At.
54 Northeast.
58 Electrical
term.
LEWIS
(Continued ffutn page ONK)
lust parch and i'xiiri'KnecI ¿i un-
animous view t«i <i' «un "¡i «:-
ondnry coiisldarutlun" to ('lO's
prime objective of enrollliiK un-
ofgunixnd workers into tudus-
Irlul unlottH
Of the rival federation*, he
Niiid the hoard' opinion was'
•Thnl tin API. i' h t i 11 utider
the control of n xmnll ki'oU|>
firmly entrenched and reaction-
ary In their iitlltudc ou public
(lUestloiiK and who are tolerant
of many evil condition eslstitiK
inside the AK1. "
Tin- report on the negotiations
he explained, was placed before
the hourd to show "how Impos-
«llil it was" to negotiate peace.
«¡reon's reply wes that the fed-
ernllon had done its utmost "to
effect a reasonable peace in the
Interest of labor and the coun-
try."
AFL ANNOUNCES
(Continued rrom Page ONE)
eat to Flint officials n riotous
situation was in the malting.
Windows m the CIO hall were
smashed Wednesday and retalia-
tion was feared.
Approximately 800 men wear-
lug CIO armbands, had as.
sembled, singing Union songs aud
shouting.
The crowd was broken up
swiftly und without argument
when the state police rushed to
the Hcene in iiulotnoblles.
LONDON. June 15 iJI'i -
Prime Minister Chamberlain to-
day Indicated possibility of seek-
iua Joint uctloii by lirltaln.
Prance and the Cnlted stuios if
J a pun used tiu- Tientsin Incl
dint ror more far reachlug de. I before her, it she yielded by so
inuudi* uguliiMt foreign Interests mucii us n fraction to the clamor
iuK'W only too well that lier pre-
1 curious position depended solely
upon cool, clear reusonlng. She
would crarh, with the deadliest
certainty, into the yawning pit
in China.
He told the house of coin*
iiious a Japanese spokesman at
Tientsin had Indicated iho object
of Japan's blockade of the Ilri-
tisli and French concessions was
to obtain "ii much wider form
of cooperation from Urltlsh au-
tliorltloN III Chlua.'•
"It Is clear." the Prime Mill-
iliter continued, ''titat If tills
statement represents the views
of authorities 111 Tokyo the
Japanese are usIiik the incident
' to make demands wider und
more fat'-reaching than the
huiidini: over of the four men."
Uhainberhiln referred to
Japan's earlier demand for de-
livery to Japanese authorities of
four Chinese accused of killing
a Tlei'tsln official aud now de-
tained In the Mi'lUsh concession
there licit islt rejection of this
demand led to Imposition of the
blockude early Wednesday.
SHANGHAI, June 1 (/P)
- The new struggle over occi- j
dental interests In China was
broadened today by a Japanese
naval blockade of the Interna- I
tionul settlement of Antoy. in
addition to the police blockade
of Urltlsh and Preach conces-
sions at Tientsin
Foreign advices from Amoy
said three Japanese warships
had isolated the Island of Kul-
augsti. whlrh Is the Amoy set-
tlement. halting all traffic and
preVenUiu landing of vegetables
and other supplies.
A Japanese spokesman was
■Itiotod as suyliiK the purpose
was to "bring the iKiilangsui thinking
ing urge lur emotions were in-
citing within her.
Loving Bart, knowing full well
that he had married her with the
budget idea iixed Urmly in his
methodical mind, she knew she
was breaking faith with him. But
she knew, with greater certainty,
that she owed $21 each and every
week oí her life for the coming
seven months, and it. was no time
to look back at earlier bargains.
Bail would have to make the
most of it. He'd have to get used
to thingt as they were. Because
if siie didn't make the payments
cbcli week, he would learn about
her debts. And if he learned about
the debts there'll be a riot.
Hart loathed installment buying
almost as much as he loathed the
peculiar system set up and made
legal by the budget plan sellers.
The "fines" indicted on the account
ll.;.i was delinquent, the carry-
ing charges—ten times moro than
any bookkeeping and financing
ti..ough legal channels required.
Tiif erafiy method of withholding
ultimatums; until cost oí merchan-
dise was completed, then cracking
down and taking the stuff back to
i c-ifll at almojt the same price
hud practically nothing. And yoii[pile of boxes, will you? Up tli ie
had to look well nowaday . or on tile top shelf of the closet. In
you'd be out of everything. j one of them I've an old linen eve-
So, little by little, she lulled uirig gown—one I wore lr.st year
her fears, und .sine;- Bart neve: several timi but didn't like. If
mentioned debt* again, it wasn't ¡it doMii't need pressing or clean-
long before she sow something] ing—-and I'm almost positive I h i
else she had to have. And could
only pay u small deposit down on.
It was an evening gown this
time. A gorgeous, heavy, printed
linen it was. v,. i a big splashy
gold und green maple leal' against
uway
an
ivory background. Really rhil,B h.:.'d 'r sotn hlw
«ninlv nlfnolU' o. i..,Uli'l
enormously effective in contrast
it cleaned before 1 put it
last ; umnier—I'm saved."
Bart was so proud of her in
the new, but allegedly "old" las'
year's gown. It was, he In.-lsU'd,
turHiinQ. It was the best-looking
li
with her glowing sun-tan. shining | a¡„ 7!'
blond hair and blue-violet eyes ° .7 '
knockout. She looked
But—$25!
"Marked
Miss . . , Mrs. VVnittnker," the
saleslady urged subtly, "it's really
he
down from S2U.05,!
You !l wow 'em, honey,"
ended up enthusiastically,
I Definitely, the 95 down had
been worth it. And, but diilnitel.
a buv Not anether «own like ,hc werkl>' wments compl-tin;
that in LlnwMd And you eS I
wear those linens. They Jook like ''"tliusi.i lie appioval ot the ilieu
Paris on you.'*
more than proved how accur.ite
Iris bought it. She bought gold | cr jud«m«,t !K,d bteti in buyin.;
linen sandals to match, and a tiny ' !u'^l . " '• , * L; '
beaten gold ornament to wear in now :,n .. .
her hair. And then faced the ¡U,u?!nf , , , "I
problem of gettlna her hoodie tc^.f 1 1
home so her husband wouldn't i'1 J V1 u v • :■
see it.
She took the dress home the
next noon, and hid it av/uy in
an older suit box. She had
wracked her brain for u suitable
fable to explain the dress with,
and hud finally decided on sotfte-
tinng that wou'd make doubly
dear the new dress. She would
make Bart think it was a last
year's dress. She knew h
wouldn't remembe ; ho i; ver íe-
mcmbe'ed her clothes from or.
season to the next. Men seldom
did, she believed.
Hiding the bo:; far back in her
clothes closet, deep Under ;i pile
over again.
' j re.nombcr, once, when 1 was of other boxes, she smiled a little,
ier. they taol; the piano away planning how she would spring it
from us," Bart told Iris, during the on him. t
first weeks of their marriage when rpHAT dressing to go to
he discovered n "rlin' she had run 1 tlu. m ,kly s.lUl,.day night
the Ynchf C'ub with
;.t the corner grocery for groceries
lor the week, and had argued
vigorously against it, insisting that
set. promise never to do it again.
. "I'll never forget how my moth-
er cried. And how mad I was. I
dance at
John und Ellen I'
tended to find a
pet dance dress.
"Goodness, Bn
to be so unrei'sonabic about im>-
ing new clothes a p.lrl had io u. J
strategy, didn't she?
At ti e dance, Bart got quite a
kle'c out of the others thinkin ;'
Iris' dress wr.. new, too. lie
beamed with pride, he own
bragged a litle.
"Not new at ah," lie ndmon-
islied Monica Bradon from the
eienc department at the univer-
sity, "just sotootftinc IvN put
away in a box !: t year ar.;l Urp:
over, hi bet she doe; the <snfte
ihir¡ again this year v.-ith it, to".
A dress doesn't wear oil', in sow-
r.il years."
Iris avoided Moaiea's clear,
direct glance. She e.void: d Ellen's
mirthful brown eyes, and the
hilarious ¡{rlii on John's face that
Ba'-t mistook for ripproeistlon.
Let them, the thought muti-
nously. They didn't h've tu
sehemi and figure '0 ways to
have so much as a decent dress
to wear to a dance, wb.tire therr*
this seam has | wcí ~ smart summer pco'de from
.. Iris pre-
i flaw in her
THOMPSON GETS
(Continued from Page ONE)
the reclamiiilnn service. He will
be taken to likely sites for re.
ohunnUon mid riood control pro-
jects.
Minion strongly hacked v
WiudiliiKton represan tutlve lor
the dam organization at Us re-
cent forming at Sun ford, report-
ed optimistically on prospects
for the Cuinidiaii dam after ti
day of eonfeioneeg with capital
officials.
LEADERS SEEK
(CoBtlnuid froiü Page ONE)
RswpS#
Two high udminiHtration offi-
cials spoke out /.iduy against rtt*
sirletious in federal relief spend-
ing proposed in the II 716.0110..
Otio house hill to finance ItMO
relief operations
S««cretury lekes s.ild a prohi-
bition against using future pub-
lic works administration funds
to hill 111 Industrial plants In
competition with existing private
t nterpvlso "dictates to munici-
palities what they should and
should not apply for und In that
It distinctly traverses the demo-
t rut ie principles of government "
Col. IT. C. Hnrlngton, works
progress administration chief,
i .ild after n conference with Pres-
ident Roosevelt that "some of the
things in the hill are going to
be awfully tough to try to udmln-
lster.
While declining to discuss de.
talis, he declared that us pres-
ently written the measure Im-
posed certain time limits on the
administrator.
WOMAN, .UJJ.; 7H,
Hl.AMK UOMK l I N
BRISTOL, Conn.. Juue .15
(¿P) •Crundma Martha Sítenle ?fl,
til Kust Mart fold stepped to the
plate, swung at u low. Inside
curve and slammed the ball for
a 150-foot home run in a wo.
man's soft-ball game at a church
picnic.
"They didn't think I could do
It." she said at her home to-
day bet wan telephone calls from
friends who had just heard of
her Hube Utithian wallop. "They
didn't know that I used to play
baseball us a girl and was bot.
ter than lots of boys. Too bud
the buses were empty!"
11
come cut! Whatever can I do? ' r-Tew York t nd Boston mid every-
where. They dii'n't have a hu.i-
I thread is indicated. l ntid who lived fey n sillv oil
answered, grinning, budget book, and raved hours on
municipal council to Its sense "
with regard to Japanese de-
mands for a greater hand in con-
trol of the settlement
Before negotiations were
was paying on, each week, shivers,
raced her spine us she contem-
plated the awful consequences,
should Burl ever learn her secret.
Only he wouldn't. She com-
hiilted last week by departure! ^hh that belief,
of the Japanese consul «eneraI ',r mi
from Amoy for Tokyo tin* coun-
cil announced its willingness t«
accept two of five Japanese de-
made i'p my mind then I'd never ¡
buy anything on time. Not if I
went without it forever." , ,, „
„ wife." Bart
ill must never know. And ' t,n'' svw !<n evenírifi avini; two dimes n day r-o he'd
s, when Iris lay awake. !l v<' 82000 year--. They
[ üboul ¿he accounts she Ueilnitely not. Bail, Its a job didn't havr tltt* nroscit and tho
CO—Bait
^ nights,
H0RGER DAILY HERALDCUSSF1ED ADS GET RESULTS! !|PJi«23SfflaaE
from lli# t ¡rt DrMtn'á MB .
muuds, holding complete accep- j never used budget plan buying [
tance would nlve Japan control
Of the Kulangsu government
Liuf. inonMl shput the thne the
United Stains. Britain and
France matched a Japanese Islld-
lltg party three-tn-one with their
own murines and blue-Jackets at
Kulangsu. the Japanese halted
shipping between Kulangsu and
the mainland. However, a few
duys ano a Shanghai spokesman
said the Japanese blockade had
been lifted.
The issue at Tientsin iva«
drawn along similar lines with
Japanese officers declaring the
cordon around the British and
French concessions would not he
lifted until "the British reverse
their policy and afford us com-
plete cooperation."
British shipping companies
announced they were discontin-
uity cargo service to Tientsin
und It was understood passeng-
ers bound for Tientsin would ho
landed at Tungku, 25 miles
from Tientsin.
Back of both blockades was
the Japanese effort, through tile
conquest of Chilla started July
7. 1 :t7, to establish a "new or-
der in Eastern Asia.''
for a tailor, and n mighty smart imnn die.te future hamstrung and
one. Unless y. a want to buy si made ugly and barren, just so
new dress." the fur future might be gilded.
Sitting down on the little gray "Aft. :• all," Iris told" herself
ennmd d bench before the match- ulkii.v, "whp knows If we'll live
ing gray dressing table, Iris was .that feme? In this day and age
. know. She'd a convincing study of a perplexed, you le ve to get what you can.
never tell him. und when they j frustrated bride. Until her faintly j while there's the chance, and
were nil oeid, she'd buy on a cash frowning gaze swept the close, never mind the far future."
bast:, tance he was so set on it. \,ind 8 puzzled, hopeful smile; And the linen gown wan doubly,
But it was ¡silly. People who] tugged at her mouth. 'trebly precious now.
Unless—oh, Bart, get me that: iTo Be Continued*
never
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiH:iiiiiiiiiiiiiii(iiui
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11:15 Vocal Valletta*.
7-till Itudy Vallee Hour
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(I:Of) Kusy Aces
C: 15 Mr K•«ii. Ti .leer of Lost
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(i Ift Coldinuu Hand Concert.
7:30 It's L'p To Von
10:05 Jun Suvltt's oreh.
¡ 1 o: :jo Tommy IJorsey oreh.
ll'.r.O Artie Shaw Oler
„ hi nil - i)i'i i' i - . }|W v'j
\V1LU)W8. Calif.. .Utile I r.
i <.¿P> Joint K. ; itizen.atid-tax-
psyer in coming into hi* own at
last In ihts town
Chairman .luirles lloyd of the
liigli school hoard of trustees an -
Itounced board Iuei.il.. rs lr.nl de-
cided to < till the new athletic
ground-. ' Taxpayers Field."
"Taxpayers have an invest-
ment of $ I:! 000 in thin field
1 ñd i I'p (line they got some sort
i i rn-o«nHlon." ho nutd
Dormer Dally Herald Classified
Ads «el resalís
BACKACHE,
LEG PAINS MAY
BE DANGER SIGN
Of Tired Kidney*
If biM'tifci'tii' - ti l t«f pun nf« ui4kin« ya
tnimrébh, don t i-i.ntplmn mI do
ábttul UiWn Nntnrf may you that
vour ktiltiftw fu«-J niMfldoin.
Th# kMri^v^ Niituríi'n wny . / Ukii^
4MNH8 vwitr unit ot tht
blor-i M«t fmNH a i >out S pint* • aiy or
ftbuitt 3 potimin pit ami*.
Fr^}U *i.1 « r -ctMiv wilb iin«nuif
•Ml htifnlj s ihnr hé noniAtNíns
wroitg t'í) voiir kitíiifyt or i>btM«r.
ff tho I;' lililí of pfiny tnb«a ond flttvn
dim'I «íaWi widU, *i«tr ni tu r nUiy
in ihe I'i •«! Tiiff.M- }. ¡s. t'iS ! •*> -ittirt H'ttiKtoM
bfirt^whe*. ritruf* ***! JMMW. Um <n
KM
Mm
■MBMnMA
mm
MB one eslrs-valua
ft
an pric«...baca,use
thin blKCter, finar
Dodge, packed with
feature after another,
costs even less than last yearl
on gait and oil...be-
cause the new Dodge
engine gives you ,11
the proven Dodge economy feature*,
plus even more sdvancememsfor 19391
'IRISH BROOKS'
(Continued from Pnge ONK)
Theatres To<l*y
*
Millie
-rltlti—
"ZtSNKUHA"
Hurlte - Hurry
LutiKdon
—-HIC.V—•
"TOHf'll Y \WÑB KOH MA YOU"
«lili i {leuda Fstiell and Dstton
MtÍLsur
with Fredrk Mwch and Joan
|>t U-W
MCf"
E'2_^
Kd of \Vetvoku. Virgil of Ft. Sill.
Qhla., Cephas of Hauls Valley.
Truiuan, Wilbur. Wallace and J.
D all of Phillips.
Active pallbearers were John
Moss, IToniei C.arroll. J I' llos-
enben, J 1) Miller. Tout Moss,
Henry Fields
Honorary pf? I bearers includ-
ed \V .1 flood win, C c ttoiM-
lon. .1. I). Miller Tom Moil.
Henry Fields,
Honorary pallliearers Imluddkl
I \V. J. Onodwln. c C. lionstop.
S K. Ncweomb, <; ibe Osrrew.
Frank Miller. II. A. Armstrong,
I' K. Honrton, John Tumor, O.
1. Hunt, Cliff Hagsiird. C. J.
Sweeney und odie O'Neal
Powell Funeral Home was in
iharge of arrangements
TANK WAOON UAH
iHtC'IO l.M 'WKAHKH
yilRKVBPOUT, La.. June 1ft
- (íÍ'i The Arkansas fuel oil
company lCities Service| effec-
live at noon toriuy. will ndvnttce
tunk «««ton prl'-e of irat-oHne 1-"
•: n in i He niat* o| Lddutsns
Arksntai t«* t ani MtiUtMpfil
A Sftmllar iBeraaa# */t!l tellow tn
th« rat ui tierMcc station >hc*
The increase • meets the
posting of 1-1 cent annoi .
yesterday hjr the Blnolalr Refin-
in, Co.. tb Tajas alld
orotan Oil CoSVany of Bbr
P crL
SMR
Wffr wheel, plus other t:
on new ideas...he-
cause the new gear-
shift m the steering
other ou (standing improve-
ments. are your for no extra coat I
Fon repair bills...be-
'cause you get Dodge's
world-famous De-
pendability.?.! ruggedness that can
endure hard usa^e without flinching!
mm
plenty «--hen you
el 1
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in
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lt{
All
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on future trade-in...
beraiiNe Dodge De*
pondabilily counts
get ready to trade In!
TI KFOKK you decide on any cur, read
D carefully all the important Dodge
aavmfiB listed above. Then see the
evidence with your own eyes. Qo to
your Dodge dealer and take a look
at the new Luxury Liner from every
vital' tnoney-saving standpoint.
When you've looked your fill, fake
a look af the price tag! You'll find this
big Luxury Liner sella for even toss
than laat year's Dodge!"
Tims la as Msler lam Hantaai Hew. OstssMs
"etwocli Ifcaradsia, a Is !• f. M„ I. a (. T.
TANI A LOOK!
New in vieibl
luKKítge l-1impsrl
ment, comptswl)
concealed beneath
windstreamed rear
ensamble, yet ac
tually 27* larger
|* lum
ndnr<|
l"i>rr t
^*tri
mff
Dodge economy for
yotirsslf with this free
"Gasometer" test which
shows, right before your
eyes,exactly how many
miles Dodge iravels on
an accurately measured
quantity of gas I
irevii-
7 ¡r imnrmrrrttnt
vwpiPmm mm mm •
Pppuriialif Motfin Clofgniiig
lítete
i
i
gr .;Bgj
'i'VWs
7TH # Wf AIMtfi v sis.
«OHOER. ILAA>
•an't Miss «at Big Oisplsy of
'WÚÉLD'S tÉM SKOAL" US£D ÉÉMSI
Mtctm or mi mm, m. mokls *t mil www*f wimtivct von mint m a
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Phillips, J. C. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 176, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 15, 1939, newspaper, June 15, 1939; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth167729/m1/2/: accessed May 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.