Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 188, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 1, 1945 Page: 3 of 12
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Page 3
Sunday. July I. 1345
rinrycr, Texas
Number One
(Continued from PACK ONE)
ly conleslod the Chinese re-
covery of the city.
shu Is! md Japan, before mid-
night Friday obtained excellent
results.
All planes returned safely.
('hint' e troops have reoccupied
Linhui. on the China Coast 380
The broaden t t Kume 1 land,
aircraft sent ayainst the United j wlurh Amci ican units from Oki-
States forces la few days ago
were merely mit-of-dat( plant rht Chinese advanct up the Asi-
with Japan's best flying men and *<<•' ' ima-ion-' mart in the wake
equipment being retained for ihe ! '■ A ithdrawing Japanese put them
home battle. :>r Tientui, 145 miles south of
The enemy radio al:,o reported Shanghai
without eonfirn V. ■ the Japanc e were with-
American Superlorts voterda-. <n awing from Liuchow to Kweilin,
made the first 11 -11! I ,i|jpt-ai iinn ; t hint -r fnrre- also were ennverg-
over the southern seetion of tIt.K In. on the latter city. The Chi-
kaido, Japan’s northernmost liomt t» < cere last reported to be with-
island. Southern Hokkaitlo i .ev - 1 u 10 mile - of Kweilin, also a U. S.
era I hundred miles tort I the
I art lusst pencil ta-n of Manana- 1 Ilia Nippon' e offensive last
based 15-29 Nippon raider j all.
Uo-s ot the IJ. S Submai ine . Kev,ip:uri- of Lilichovv put the
Kete, overdue from patrol, v. a- Kv.eit hmv-Kwaiif -i railroad back
reported by tin.- Navy Department j in'o Chiot-.e bands- the Ur t par-
yesterilay. Hie Kete earr’ i-.: ti- ly e. totally Nipponese-held
crew ot from hi) to ; » p n. ,; i. a line to retell entirely to Chi-
the 44th once ea ! 11 - a aitr- I
toil in II ■ ■
I n e ....
dictions of ft tin i Am ricai twi K. ang i Indo China,
thru-ts northward from Okinawa, . i . iptured from the Japanese
ll”' ' 1. Fall of th< town elimi-
,rmo'ia mine-sweepers had mated one of the potential spring-
mad« " remotely possibh
ations in north China. He praised
lhe discipline and morale of
the Americans and Chinese co-
operation with the Yanks.
Today’s communique of Adm. (
Chester W. Nirnilz reported a Fri- [
day air strike by army Thunder- !
bolts at southern Kyushu. Four
; grounded enemy planes were des- !
j troyerl. Docks and other installa- 1
lions were damaged. Seven .-mall
i surface craft were set afire and a
steamer damaged. The same day,
( search planes operating off west-
ern Kyushu sank a small cargo
| ship and damaged five. A small j
coastal vessel was sunk and a sec-
( one! set afire in the Yellow Sea.
Nirnilz said Japanese planes I
made three small raids Saturday
! morning against Okinawa and lost j
one plane. No raid damage was
specified.
In Germany
JHfc
WPB Grants Approval
To 22 Roadway
Projects in Texas
Four New Cabinei
Officers Sworn In
Before the war Rome had a A 37 mm. gun ha.? an impact
h.-.her birthrate than any other equal to that of a five-ton tojck
!meiropoli in Europe or America, hitting a stone wall while tntvcV
22.4 per 1000 ol population. mg 41 miles per hour.
"«•
WASHINGTON, June 30—d-i— WASHING ION. June .,u- 1 J i
The War Production Hoard grant- -Truman appointee.- moved into
ed approval today to 22 roadway »*» cabinet in twee today, taking
. project applications summittod by ".'11' ! I1™ ,!.url\
- State Highway Depart- and Post Off
’ ment. With election of a new See!e-
Notiee will be sent immediately tarv ot State expected Monday,
to the Highway Department in tlu new president will have half
Austin. Texas, WPB officials said, the cabinet composed of men of his
but with the provision that before own choosing,
work can be started the War Man- Tho-e Inking ofiiec today
power Commission must certify Clinton P. Anderson, until now
iiSfe
Interperling
The War News
that sufficient labor is available
in the area of the various individ-
ual projects.
The projects approved, as ident-
ified by the WPB, include:
Llano to Mason county line, 18.3
miles, $450,000; east of Mason to
Llano county line, 8.8 miles, $215
a democratic emigres-man from
■New Mexico, succeeding Claude
Wickard as Secretary of Agricul-
ture.
Lewis B. Schwcllonbnch, ae-
time Washington State .senator and
j former district court judge, who
'became .Secretary of Labor as in
Okinoerabu Island. 10 mile noi ti
east of Okii ■ *
south of Kyi, hu, Nipjiou'; .south-
ern home island.
U. S. 20 th Air Forces head
quarters said Marianas-based
Superior!- which hit th*
Kuduniulsti oil refinery on Hon
Ni|9'ony-e invasion
iern Kv. am;
of soutllwest-
By KIRKE L. SIMPSON
Associated Press News Analyst
First American Fleet penetra-
tion of the Sea of Okhotsk. Japan’s
far northeastern water frontier
ha
PFC. TROYCE D. MURPHY
Troycc D. Murphy, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Mart M. Murphy of Bur-
ger. sent word to iris parents that
His
000: U. S, Highway 77, Cameron, Jcessor to Frances Perkins, long
bridge over Little River. $580,000; j lime incumbent under President
U, S. Highway 87, bridge near San (Roosevelt.
Angelo, $229,000.
U. S. Highway 81. Austin to
present road at Colorado River,
j $227,000; u. S. Highway 81, Hills-
; boro to Itasca, 8.8 miles, $445,000.
Robert E. Hannegan, of St,
Louis, Mo., chairman of the Na-
tional Democratic Committee, who
took over the loins of-the Posted'-
fice Department as Postmaster
^eiiilHdin (iMin.i v. ms Karnes-Bee county line to Three General, succeeding Frank Walker.
° “This T ''i* verv *’pretty place ’ Kivc,!i- 2(1 miles, $215,000; Four , Tom Clark, an assistant attorney
.......... n;
Lt. Gon. Albert C. Wedemey-
er. Commander of U. S. Fences
in China and Chief of Staff of
Generaliirimo Chianq Kai-Shek,
h s completed an inspection of
Chinese and American install -
Gary Cooper in “Along Came Jones"—Rig Now!
I ills ronuntu c , • ,u t ot I
by .m uinv.l,' i;u i. .. '•
i1' interrupted
Came Jones!
LET'S FINISH
7lh War Loan Drive has been exlenderi a lew
days to permit completion of quotas.
Hutchinson County is Lagging-Let's all
do our share----
BUY AN EXTRA BOND
that the invasion of the Home I
(lands when it comes will be from
the north as well as the south.
Other things being equal, that
i- sound strategy as a diversion-
; ary measure if nothing else. It
.'also is true that prevailing fogs
in north Pacific latitudes would
provide good cover for an am-
| phibious approach to desirable
■ ill : in the Kuriles for advance air
bases in the north to match Oki-
nawa's busy air strips in the south-
west.
j For the present, however, oper-
I ations in the Okhotsk Sea look
I more like the completion of i t-
; other segment of the blockade
ring being tightly woven around
I the Japanese home islands by air
land sea than an invasion prelimi-
! narv.
Actually none of the seas that
: wash the Japanese shores north,
south, east or west is now for-
I bidden to American Naval or Air
Forces.
Far to the south isolation of the
; great oil rich island of Borneo
! is iii progress. Official confirma-
tion from General MucArthur of
, the presence of an American Fleet
in Makassar Strait confirms simi-
lar Japanese reports of the last
: week or two. Borneo is being cut
of I hum by-passed Japanese gar-
risons in other Dutch islands as
well as mopped up in the north by
Australian elements of MacArth-
ur’s armies.
Obviouslv a tightening Allied
( net is being woven about the Ma-
lay Peninsula as about Japan’s
home islands in the north. Mean-
while British redeployment in the i finance all
Bay ot Bengal Theater of action i mong them
almost be called the outskirts of
town. The la t place we were in
was E-.glesburg. a town about 20
miles from Salsburg.
“Several of the fellows went to
Salsburg and saw Hitler's home.
1 received one swell package from
you this morning, and 1 hope to
recei' c more when 1 go to the Ha-
ck ic.
! 19.4 miles, $275,000; U. S. High- Attorney General, assuming the
way 83, Combes to San Benito, ; post vacated by Francis Biddle.
15 miles, $1,000,000; Petty to Paris.
14,(1 miles. $(172,000; Tyler to Hm-
derson county line, I! miles, $401,-
000; Bee county line to Refugio,
8.8 miles. $313,000.
The new cabinet members gave
the west and southwest a greater
hand in the national administra-
tion.
Taking the oath of office, Ander-
son promised to bring about an
improvement in tiro food situation
“as quickly as possible.”
The nation is faced with serious
.shortages of many important
Earthworms have no eyes and
no ears. They elude enemies by
Pic. Murphv i- a member of the i means of the sensitive skin, which
First Combat Division in Ger- I detects the presence of even a
many. Prior to his entrance in the tiny insect. j foods, he added. “Not on account
armed services lie was employed! Linen is made from flax. I of any failure of farmers, because
bv tia Phillips Petroleum Com-! Reptiles have existed on earth 'they have done their best, but be-
p.any. ti, entered the army at much longer than any other form cause demand has simply out-trip-
Fort Silt, Okla., January 20, 1943. j of life. 'ped tlie production program.”
PI- Mm-p'-y tla- husi-and ol............
Mrs. Troycc D. Murphy, the form- !
er Miss Margaret Louis Barnard,
daughter of Mrs. Martha Jane
I arnard. Fairfax. Okla.
Southern Democrats
Shout Objections
To FEPC Compromise
WASHINGTON, June 30—uPi-
Shouted objections from Southern
Democrats in the House tonight I
blocked the Senate-approved coin- j
promise which would have finan- I
ced the embattled fair employment !
practices committee for a year, i
As a consequence the $752,000,-
000 War Agencies Appropriation
Bill Was sidetracked for the week-
end, even though the fiscal year
expires at midnight.
A temporary arrangement will
the departments—a-
the OPA, War Pro-
55 Corns Removed In 3 Minutes
1 * No Pain—No Sore Feet
ONE FREE WITH CORN LIFTER $1
Held Over Another Week
« WM. POOL AT CITY DRUG
* ’ Private Office: Ladies Invited; Why Suffer?
SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY OF MISERY
>
r-1
o
CZJ
•—3
AT THE
BLACK COFFEE SHOP
will be a real treat for Mother these
hot days and for the whole family
EAT YOUR SUNDAY DINNER
AT THE
BLACK HOTEL COFFEE SHOP
M. I. EDWARDS, Prop
the end of the wet monsoon season
there will see the trap finally
, closed on Tokyo abandoned Jap-
anese garrisons in Malaya and
the great Dutch islands to the
south.
: 'I
proceeds with every indication that duction Board and other emergen-
cy agencies— except FEPC which
will be without funds at mid-
i night. The other are provided for;
’ in a deficiency appropriation but '
j it doesn't include FEPC.
; The Semite's Jour-day wrangle j
over funds for the MEPC—agency '
i set up by the bite President'
; Roosevelt to prevent racial or re-
| ligious discrimination by employ- *
cis—ended today when a com-
promise broke a filibuster and won
the agency $250,000 for next year
instead of the $448,200 originally
j asked.
The Bill was hurried across die i
Capital to the House, but when j
(Chairman Cannon 1D-M0* of the j
Appropriations Committee sought
permission to take it up the Sou- i
therners were on their feet im- '
\ mediately shouting their object-
ions.
The log-jam at lhe end of the I
disc at year caught other big money ;
(oil's loo
A $38,020,904,581 war depart- !
meat appropriation for the fight (
I against Japan in fiscal 1946 didn't
get through the Senate until well
(after noon, ton late to catch a spec- :
ial plane that flew to President
j Truman in Kansas City the bill
; extending price control for an-
! other year.
*'I know this town—I was here
once on a ftood will tour!
Lady Allendani...
Among the many advantages offered by
Biackburn-Shaw, are the services of Lady
attendants .
d
Women have an intuitive sense of the fit-
ness of things . the little details that need
the understanding care of a womans touch
you can depend on Blackbum-Shaw for
hnei service always
MRS ANITA I INDLEY
MRS VIOLET BROWN
Wac&ijJM- S/iaw
I UNLRAl DIRLCT0R5 ANDFL0RISTS
iAifty//
THERE'S NO SHORTAGE OF COMFORTS
FOR BABY, THANK GOODNESS!
" A>.
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Orderly sleeping quarlers wilh a place lor
everything and everything in iis place, it's
really a part ot the baby's basic education.
And surely a trip out doors, in a modern
buggy, provides marvelous opportunity for a
child's faculty ct observation.
s
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Bathinette, Combination Sulky, Play Yards,
Folding Carriage, Chiffarobe with hanging
space, Cribs, with Springs, Drop Side. Car
Seats, Nursery Seats, Chairs and Rockers,
Table Sets, Jumpers, Canvas Swings and
Frame.
See the Nationally advertised KANT W ET Crib and Youth Bed Mattress
They are universally recommended by the Medical Profession. ...
9, r*i FA'VTi' Otyjg "Q'f
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MiMJimzia/
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Phillips, J. C. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 188, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 1, 1945, newspaper, July 1, 1945; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth520515/m1/3/: accessed May 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.