Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 244, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 5, 1945 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
6
:oriais
We Kept the Faith, Buddy'
Walter Winchell
OUT OUR WAY
By WILLIAMS
THE BORGER DAILY HERALD
Publisher! at 205 Noiih M.:.
except Saturday, ; : 1 ■> .
Company, Inc., IV. • ■ ■ r-.
1. C. Phillips ___
One Year______
Six Months __
Three Months
Month (5 weeks!
Weekly
Entered ti sec • I
Office at Border, Tr
The Associated P> < f
cation of all nc> di-'n. :
.or, 11 x , every evening j
try Panhandle Publishing!
Editor and Manager
$9.00
:■ ( 7 5
______$2.90
$1,00
,2n
ovembe
t of A;
roll
i“26, at the Post-
, 1891
vrlusively enti
credited to it <
d to (lie use of republi-
not otherwise.
Page 2
Wednesday, September 5. 1915
Borger, Texas
bomb.
Ctrl’ not ;*oin;' to
Mnybt.* we ought
in ess on this earth which
M.. ! ;e we should shud-
v i.toil may come from the
. n can remove the threat
■ait the Japs at Hiroshima
LIVING WITH THE AT' M
It is already c. v,
be scared to death oy •
to be sitting in
has suddenly bee ,:: • a i .
der at the thought t
controlled creation of ..:
of worse destruction t
and Nagasaki
But American. . by so,: I... . are taking the atomic age
m their stride. V. i e acci pted
Coucism, technocracy, r .-.lac West and the Dionne
quintuplets. We are ! - .... to make jokes about it and
exploit its commercial possibilities.
Puns are putting ;n npi -ance—puns of such a na-
ture as to make any .- cli-re- peeling electron break loose
from us orbit am atoi Ev e the first
Atom-smasher, and so on t • the point where one has atomic
ache,
The atom will inevitably appear in a popular song, if it
hasn’t already. Equally inevitable will be a lot of pictures
of bathing beauties, pin-: to'girls and other curvy creatures,
captioned “Anatom: B
At least one cafe a m ot. r,t om the Atomic Bomb
Cocktail, price 75 cents. .... positively o.tlv one to ;i custo-
mer.
The sober fact that one atomic bomb is more than suffi-
cient for 50.000 customo b< : i<J<■ uu point. For today the
atom bomb is a catcl mystify-
ing result of man's wisd- ■ It !'aa c;mght the public fancy, j
and so long as it holds ti .' fa icy it will help sell merchan-
dise, from cocktails to nture .-'tone:-.
So what? It isn't that Americans, even the punsters and
the promoters, don’t real t n the hit.-nesting of atomic i
power is no joke. It that, vn- are compietely irres-j
ponsible and sensei* Rather it t ■■ be that we are show-j
ing realistic courage.
The bombing of Hire, i ima was one of the stiffest. most
sobering jot Is that the world of thinking men ever received.
Yet a couple of weeks later v.a Americans were making
jokes about it. And perhaps that is just, . well.
Atomic power is hen to :-ta i s better or worse, and
has got to be lived with. At its worst, it is only another
threat of death. And men live with that threat every day,
as they have since the b< inning of tone.
Men stand today on thi threshold of what they hope
will be a better world. To hiew it thi need hope and
courage as well as wM . And while wisecracks and pro-
motion may nut be the ideal men s of achieving those qual-
ities, they are certainly orefc!able > niter discouragement
ahe) paralyzing fear.
it ‘ 3rv.«*. ■
- . .v-4
■ -r
COLUMN
• In Washington
By DOUGLAS LARSEN
NEA Washington Correspondent
VETERAN'S JOB PROSPECTS
WASHINGTON. Sept. 4— Mil-
lions of returning veterans — the
estimated J!0 per cent of men in
, hie; Been willing to -et himself up
IN NEW YORK
Noes o' an Innocent Bystander
The Show Simps: Of the new-
| coiners in preparation "Polonaise,“
|with Chopin's music, appears to ho
ione of the entries of the click
: leparimcr.t. Horace Sclmiiilla yp
. i ' producing with K. Duruu Do'.' -
ling.’.' direction, Jan Kiepuin an i j
Marla Eggci'th arc the star;. la- |
s'ritrs repott that its D. Liehine
.ballet, will delight the town and
"for the first time in years every
ballet dancer in it is beautiful” . . .
i Jack Kirkland, the showman, i-
is enjoying a long and loud lest
: laugh. His "Tobacco Hoad," which
all critics blackmailed, will start
jits Kith year in December. . .“An-
na l.ucin it’s second season,
1 n as exciting as on the premiere,
eve. A thoroughly exciting plav '
: with every player in it omething
to bravo. . . . "Devils Galore” di e",,
.mixed notices in Boston and New
i! .oil, Lmi the backers have such
j confidence in its not el theme that
they insist that the producer bring
it to tiie B'way foxholes.
The Moom Pitchiz: The critic-'I
embraced 20th's "State Fair,” |
which Wra. Perlberg produced, j
The Rogers ar.d Hammerstein j
score g only one of its many do- j
lights. . . “Love Letters," the Hal ;
Wallis film (.starring J. Jones and j
J. Colton g set a new record at j
the Hivoli—an $80,000 week. . .
'l'lie documentary picture. "The
i True Glory," is a 5-star screen
smash. Gen. Eisenhower's thrilling
inside story of our victory in Eur-
ope. . . "The Southerner" at the
.Globe is fine drama. . . "Come Out
Fighting" offer.- a tough mu eg •
meots-moll inellerthnt lays a hard-
boiled egg. . . . ‘ Fatal Witness”
is duller than a rainy vacation.
The RadiorneU's: Eddie Cantor’
touching tribute to Gu- Edward..
• w.i : high spot oi tile week. . .
l’..ank- to 11 auk Liu dom < ,ub-
Linig for tiiis reporter via the nei-
: work» for not pulling any of his |
■punch-lines. . . Dorothy and Dick
in the early ante meridian hate
a nimble manner about them Si ■
/ uocd gosh;i
■ CAN’T BEAR TO SEE
HIM THISJIOM' AN’
ME DOIN’ NOTHIN' -
LE’S SEE NCW--DH-
. tVHUT’LL 1 DO-A
OH, YEH, A PAPER.
HAN6ER .’ NO-WO
, THAT TIRES ONE’S
ARMS.' SO-A-.V
LE’S SEE'-,
'
' • i«*
TAKE ME. NOW,
RUSH IN’ CrAYLV
OFF TO MY DOB
OF-UH- LB’S SEE, ’
OH, YEH, i’M A
COAL MINER/
YOU CAW TELL
I LOVE MY WORN
BY TH WAY I’M
KUSHIW’ OFF- - I
MEAN TO IT--
■ A ’ -J
im
K * •
■ ■ . - ' I ‘
/■
«£; ' j (
. m
BALkt-y
OUR BOARDING HOUSE with MAJOR HOOPLK
IT’6 60 CALM AROUND UECE-.V Ves, IT 15 PEACEFUL, ^
MRS. HOOPLE.THfYV WE )\ MRS. BAXTER, AMD! u
F16URED TUB. MA.30R WAS 1MUST ADMIT THE CHANGE ;
AWAY -v- YOU MUST BE .Y IS PLEASANT BUT T. 1
EWTOYlNG THE RELAXATION*
X SUPPOSE THE- ML 14-
MAN Misses His ■
COMPANY1 0Rll\JGIMG J
him home/ a-a-
t\ T
I b:Jl.
toe “bogeyman" tvho wouldn’t r D. Kilgallcn rod he is R. Ko :■
| give a veteran his job back. j mar, the show producer. . . . Drev.
Sloping back at the unions for Pearson me have a non musu
j their stand on new jobs for vets. One is raid to have ottered a big ;
I Hep. Harold Knutson (R. Minn.>: Ker salary. .. Johannes Steel, me.
'bar introduced a VFW bill \ ltich associated on 3 mt fs, may t t
hi own this year. . . . Galen Drake l
i\la WJZ at li a vein i fail-- ea-x
I would make it mandatory for an
employer to give service seniority
HERE OF CORREGIDOR
‘T have had little contact, with the outside world,” said
Lieut.-Gen. Jonathan M. Wainwngh! after hi., re-lease from
an enemy prison, “but what little I have had has caused me
to believe that the administration die War Department and
the American people have accepted r ,y dire disaster with a
forbearance and generosity great*: than any in the experi-
ence of any other defeated commander.”
Reading; those words will l-ring the surprising; realization
to most of us that General W, inv. right, in addition to suffer-
ing; the hardships of inipri nnment. al.-.o suffered a feeling of
personal responsibility for Ins "dire d! : -ter.”
That is' a tragedy for \ : > : tin dm it > nation, the War
Department and the American people can make belated
amends. They can at h e.t
wll remain the hero of O
ance cannot erase the tom
grace that rrni;t h: e i
should bring General Wait-
that to his follow eoi utv
alrendv one of the eier 1
iiim. that he has been and
re; ■ ior. And though that assur-
riru; tliiu'ght of failure and dis-
him during his prison years, it
vri ;h; the comforting knowledge
ent the defense of Corregidor is
jr military history.
it g' s even far- on the ears with u breezy luie :
. One network ev:c !
*7
i •
n
NEVER. NOTIceD TILL IT
, BECAME QUIET HOW
( LOUD AND ltd HOvN MANY
’•- F’FERciNT KEYS YOOR
l
/
^—M\/
&■)
\ s s
4-H
■pot
By HAL BOYLE
YOKOHAMA—T"—Business is j service who don’t have re-employ- j i"r new jobs
booming for 65-year-old Wakabay- ment rights—face bitter dissilluos- (the- For the five days of each phili -ophy
:i'4ii, who one had a rating roughly ionment when they try to get jobs week in service it would give the told us that "probably oak t -• * : ;i<i,n-. !’ .n',
equal to "Whirlaway” among Yo- j in industry during the reconver- man five days’ seniority. For the nationally known radio i i We j. .
sixth day it would give a man a ; will survive."
day and one-half and for the sev-
enth day it would give tiie vet
”rthat all rgy | ft
too Wished to InA ■ -u
bay, mss. b
kohamn rickshaw pilots.
This lean and leathery sage,
burned the color of a cowhide
suitcase by long years of pulling
hi: black rubber-tired buggy
through the streets under a hot
sun, has more customers now than
he can haul.
As a matter of fact, he usually I
sion period.
Most of industry is covered by
union contract-: which establish-
the seniority rights of workers.
The unions’ contention, upheld by
a regional War Labor Board rul-
, . ... The Giiti:rat.. ...................
two days. I in- h.l! is in tire House son won’t re: ime dim; -:,■ d
Military Affairs Committee.
ing in N( xx York till-
ing is that a veteran ran ot use ■ the veterans more rights for new
his: service seniority rights in get- j jobs, although rt is doubtful if
I'.mpb iyers art strong^ foi iivint , .during 1 .
his wife will cover Moscow. . . R
to plunge a kmi, M.. Link
In Al Spong of
(I:;. Mister Link'
j. . In an interview 'in The Hobo
New: 1 Hans von Kaltenborn i.
J. Brooks Atk.n- |C|uoied - -ay:.!.;: "Winetiell doe -
n’t count because he's net a rnern-
be:' of lire analystunion .. .
:■ uken like a true hobo.
r.'ist tWi
,. . . r -■ — i ,, , , - , , L»K'krid«e will not resume ai -1 < —
... ...... ,.v , tm« a new job. Once he gets a j the} would want to go ns far as the sittitug. . Jo n Ma-on Hi own. an
chooses to pull freight rather than j i0*/’ 'hey say, and passes a satis- Knutson Bill. Dur ng the war Crania ero.' -n-centl;.
humans, because tiie cargo never 17‘?ctor-V probationary period, then n',l!1.v inetfii cut wm tcers have , activated from the Naev
givfes him ordejS His favorite load g ve, hl"? seniority according to gotten on thi payroll, rhe cream LoCkridae'. will write t bt
is luggage of well to do air raid
letugci , now retmiring to their
home: from the hills.
Age has also made him inde-
pendent. He is like an old horse
—always looking tor the shortest
road back to the stable.
I talked to Wakabayashi with
the help of J. 11. Sargent, former
English teacher at the Japanese-
Naval Academy, who has just been
released after nearly four years
internment.
The rickshaw man wore the
garb of his profession—A wide,
his length of service in the arn
ed forces.
During the reconversion period
practically every factory or plant
will have laid oft some workers.
Result will be call-back lists of
varying lengths. How will it be
possible, then, for a vet to get a
job in one of these factories until
of the nation’s manpower has his chiidren
been in uniform. Its of dollar
sou! cents value to manufacturers wrote tne big ,!tov. iid, • Kb. an .
and employers to grab these mon.;TU|- jn„, t„ his
as there are •-» fc*\\
F. Herbert
EMPLOYERS WANT FREE
HAND IN HIRING
, ySSTSS 1 ; ;* vr ■ ■ ?>r‘
everyone who had a job during j the best available men and t L nse of the Wn
........... 1.....'- - '—best producers in each job but1 - n up ' 1 m,m e 1 in<- "m-
they are trending carefully so as
not to further strain
with the unions.
The auto industry, in the tight
grip of the CIO United Automo- The Funnies: Drew
the war goes back to work? It
won’t, AFL admits. In other
words, according to the wav the
unions look at it, theoretically em-
ployment will have a ri e above
The Story Tell, is: The War
Dep't may still ban Wm. Saroyan
from relen ing the story he wrote
about tiie vx .ii. They argue they
own every word of it os he was
ordered to write it. They refused
pei nu; ’; tu rele.ise d once before.
. , . Joe Aisop, who coly umetl about
, , , , Washington before going to war
.■■'.’ " ' ' ;
fu n <" ok. Dot risoner*.
ii.i- Hi- D...y one * let 15th slat. , , ,, ,,, ... .
with a 10,000 printing. . . . Georg; : ni, . . N.t j...
almost ; .rcainob, “unless God
fs y . . Ink. , nip ma<L" Vera C’a>
ij s„ Curleys at Ki t Ct ■ n, < oi n , .
relations akin« °J < ,a« 1 'l'’■ he 1 the S i the N Go. I
•'Jo r : < 1 Ko. 4
• in the Cub .sectit.o ;<*vcral night i
Pearson I to study the rn-t of character
" L - When Col Rex
Smith • ex-nesvy-weekly nianagin,.
etiitor* speaks of his ex-bruit
iic-s Jes. »> Hoyre I..andis>, tie says:
l < i \ j it n vile.” lb- mean
•h‘ wi.-eiv invested in such hits
H. • y Ks and Tv::” and
• » 1 . , Some items ‘ tat-
ed M FDR v. null I 140 on the
. • i t mncntr.tor "at $20,000
'•'< ' Ahr t J < some mistake.
1;i ii.’ m« a;, s200,000 weekly ’
i’- nest Hemi.u:\.a\'>• diversion
i. C i!)a When jo the mood he
- ' « hoitcv-t and touKhcftt
ho. .'‘!iui 1.1 H'H at fiis place vviipu
a titem si (mi omit ix>umi
»ht \ v n stay w :he rth^ ith him.
j.Y'- < ct furUii .^1 vet He flatten■«
them with the first punch.
So They Say
1). 4>’si'a 1 i> bettC I
... . 1 * 4>. * the wartime peak before there is - .
cloth-foveret. straw hat tnat loo - n cjiance . a wtera i to uet a! hile Workers’ Union, will be the V to tiie Id. i;.p Jdnb.-.ssy to | Be t • • *»: : tc i.i .«v r.ccorduu:
inverted bowl, black jjob< ’ ! hardest for the vetpran wh
ed like an
trousers and black split-toed shoes
OJM”! “,m 7, T y, iT-;! Lessening the severity of this
that ma,e h.s feet look oddly like; Mtu,ltiHn_ ,lowe wif, be thc
cloven hoofs.
In hi;- younger days. Wakabay-
ashi, could do 15 to 20 miles a
day on less than a gallon of rice
| hardest for the veteran who hasn't ; check a story. . While waiting to
' L (I «■» i.ili t rt t :., 4. , 'I’La 4..‘ Tim J-’.i < I . .t hp et I .G.
. Keep lookiru; down and you find the world is: the limit
—look tip and the sky' tl Jin :'!
With the removal < !. ■’ > • n-. 1r; •!>■ :s cumin: right on
fop of the oustin': of blue j>u:>.!•. ar.rl *.!.- r.-duetion in red
points—now for a belt ti. r . c ,1 !■» 1.0 up.
Butter drops from Hi to 12 p< :• Tu.a’s four more
points toward the kind of yi: w. .h your batcher
had.
The Japanese should ct to kn iv. Americans better, saws
a Tokyo newspaper We n al ■ ‘ : vy that v/e attree.
Everybody know.-, 1 .*1!how to , ; < children except
the people who live in >: do. r.
but now he prefers middle dis-
tance;. “About five miles a day.”
he said.
Wakabayashi plainly does not
w ant to drag heav v bodied Amer-
icans around. Ask him if he
speaks English and he replies at
once and positively—"No!”
Ask him to quote you rates for
an hour tour of the city and he
sets a ligure he hopes will scare
you off. "Ten yen,”
plies this i-kinnv war
who look: like the end of the
original four horsemen. He has
teeth that could eat corn through
a tennis racquet.
In prewar times ten yen would
have been almost two dollars and
a half—and Wakabayashi thinks
even a Rockefeller would pause
before paying that.
He grins apologetically and says:
Solly—ivla go up recently.” He
j old men. women and transplanted
j war workers going homo w h o
won’t answer when the call-back
list is read. But recent surveys
show a much smaller per cent of
; these workers expects to drop out
I of the labor market than was pre-
viously estimated by the war man-
power commission.
UNIONS APPEAR VICTOR
IN CONTROVERSY
For months this question of
veterans’ job rights lias been hot-
ly debated among unions, veter-
craftily re- ] ans* organizations and the govern-
profiteer, j ment. On the issue of veterans
getting new jobs tiie unions ap-
pear to have ended on top. The
“super-seniority” issue on re-em-
ployment is still up in the air.
Selective Service would give the
man back his job with no questions
asked. Unions would permit a vet
to bum]) a worker only if the v< t
had more seniority, plus service
seniority.
American Legion and Veteran
had a job before to get into. The ee The Big Shot .......
strength of the UAW would be : bing with a Soviet staffer,
threatened if they weren't able to
offer some guarantee of postwar
lie started gab-
!:•
it true,” asked Pearson, “that you
liii: 1:1ns an- cuing to make tiie
job to the thousands who became i Germans turn to Communism 1
new members because of their war
Jobs. Hi suit is the UAW exclusion
Heavens, no!
"Communism
gasoed the Russian,
is too good lor
manage-! -• Hilly Reardon, who -ay. .
"You , ; u uL.t see the ladies going
uostairs and dawn, and not an pc. t
to tie noticing them" . . . Gypscy
lie Lee . e\a .id Cun. Ia.li. ;.i
"Candida” for a mag and titled it
"Canada Dry."
of veterans from competition, j them! . . . FDR enjoyed telling thi
I Their argument is that seniority one. . A stranger approached
is a property right belonging to
tiie workmen who now have the
jobs.
Quotation Marksman-hip: Luke
McLuke; Sympathv i.- what one ,
Kipling's landlady and inquired: girl otfei another in exeeltan:
"Is Kipling working'.’” . . . "Oh,” lot . : d H. 15. Coheir si
ssii.o i> better (Iran silence,
" . belti: than violence. c»-
- ..i.un lu-ttei than anarchy and
Print'- r.'i iiuii : than tyranny,
lit;.; s, liitgitunan. professor
oi phii > uphy, lio- ton Univers-
ity.
The people have surrendered
limit" to wm the war: they did
ho’ ..111 inlet them in imitation
" liking fo; the totalitarian
nmcntali-ms against which
'I '.' too . t. They want wartime
1 imrol eudeti a -oop as possible.
-Danv■;I:< . \ a.. Register.
•RESTING PLACE
SPRINGFIELD, III., Sept. S—UP)
-A man walked into the city po-
(Hi political and economic sys-
t< in ,-veu the worid in two wars,
it w: 11 save- the peace it given a
she oh’fl. "that man never work-, look- tub ot Vint, Varga and Vu.d- i ham 1
ity. . . ii.va Ehren burg:: Switzer-
land: The land of cloaks—where
---- time stands still. . . Roqucplan:
The Obituaries: Senator Bilbo's There me different kinds love,
out they all have the same aim:
li Martin: You
He ju: sits there and scribble-
and scribble; and scribbles;''
-Bernard M. Baruch.
speeches 'even at such tare times ..... .....
nee station and started talking that thev are coherent' speak onl\ po-.-c.-.-oon
last to the desk sergeant.
“My wife,” lie explained as he i .............
planted, to a woman who followed poll > dei lan d he didn't : peak f-n sit . .
(them. His ridiculous attacks on
for himself. More than 75 per 1, n't keep trouble from cornin',
cent of the Southern editors' un but yon needn't give .1 a chair p
him into the station, "has been
nagging me. I want to be locked lour Negro citizens (as an-, iu-
UB c'an get some sleep. telligifit Mississippinn can tell
Sgt. James walker told the pro- hinu are pure white trash. , .Sc -
igii rv Smil' : Liunnr
makes a : ood pogo stick bid a po...
crutch.
A diplo.net a person who can
l d ■ " 1 to go to the devil so pieas-
that you're anxious tu get
!. 1 tc.l.
- LL ,’<. .. Neb.. Douglas Coun-
ty Gazette.
gives r» exploitation tor the rise of Foreign Wars have been trying
in oi ice and it is hard to imagine 'to get a test case before tiie courts
what changes there have been in
hi- overhead expenses.
W. kabayashi iias been a rick- ;
> I;.,'., man since la- was 30. “Be-
fore that.” he suvs, "I was in
bu im —but l faded.” He has
been trying to pull himself out of
the red for 35 years.
There was eonsiderable con- I
jecture as to wl; I " wore thi
p -u labrie-to;)')e:l ■ hex .
Sotnciiody ,unni:<d it wn: so he
could !>i-k up cieareltc bu" -
with out stooping.
Ailen Handles
32 Cases In
Week's Work
Judge Jack Allen belle' c- |i
lor :
been
clear-cut decision. It ha-
hard because no employer
Very Imprtant People Dep't:
Theociore Dreiser has finally 11n-
i.shcd hi.- new novel, "Tne Bul-
wark.” It took him 13 1-2 years. .
H. L. Mencken has taken all the
Every piece of equipment that ’croyoni:t among them attraect.- vaccii.'- but still ha his ha’
“ yvith the ex-' booing. . . Stanley Link, creator : fever
testing woman to go home,
put her husband in a cell
he was fast asleep.
‘ era! leading cartoonists and mug
®o°° | illustrators have been appearing
at Army hospital; to entertain'
j wounded y ets. One editorial page
moves on the B-211
( option of thc hydraulic breaking of "Citing Chovv," recently offered: :divoned
Paul Palmer, recent!;,
from DcWttt Wallace
system, is activated either by an|“Bewatc of he who slaps you on | famed digest, bought an O ct.,;.
electric motor or cable.
(he back lest lie be seeking a wean ranch v.:<■ he will e ... . urni
High oci..,.e gasoline is not a
'product, but a blend of a
' •!"<» with high quality syn-
i tiii 'ii hydrocarbons and te'ra-
(thyl lead.
The average U K. farm income
r.;nl. from S1380 in 1UHI to S4fi0
- in 11121.
Lav.ii.f ]■ and voilet is frequent-
1 u«ed in eatidics to strengthen
almond flavor.
THE STORY OF THE ATOM
NO. 2: THE SECRET OF ATOMIC POWER
■
NEUTRON
U-ttJS ATOM
KTVc
w
LIW^R
Ti
rt la
• ' 1«Al J'1«<
U * r
P.,
"tt in ti
Wl I
U ( a n in. im.t 1 it. 1 tali' that
Itn atoiijft un Hnu hiiiut
Ai / not too kli11* of tMr-ir own .-f« t>
at a viiy higi\ altjiuito thojr ptano
oijgnt 1 v« !<*« « n Liu. t**i out ot tiii f)ty
J u Ho u to tit* v* I ti
ail OiiiuiD* thi Loloif Will «|tt.nifi(i
I' 4 |f#iuU*oh |o K'l M iiiiWn
7 i*i< hollih V-J I#i 1 it;<4 t o M.rfl J
nmk* Ll**t iofoi. it ua<
• fct of me tub, with an atomic weight <>f
235. which moan* it is amjroxini.it' ly
2if) » h< avur than hynnjgrn In tin
t > llltjch of tlj»* ih.luio* iff (hi
jiutul Sufi,-tic(I Mattel a.i> tumid into
• ficigy Tin* 1 ti * * t-1 tzi atiJnio
. In iht Lon.L, n< ut 1 >>n n> hi. <i
up four atoms, n I. a jng eight n. ulioni.
Thi- proiis shown in thi* diagium
uliovt Th<- neutron* trav**l at a rat* of
ahopl 2U.00U nul< s a • t oial o thi
v*. Itnii* pioi. . 1 tik* an mhniti-ly shoit
him Fach utoino fiuguu nt l u.i .$ n, ».j
Ilf (lt(l
slowly
ut (In. hfcuit ut iuuinujn
uLtlii
* Ncu-
hi. un*
I wi/ui i
(i <n» ». (L J ifut>zi|, .1 Dq| (;
1*14 •
Vft Jlhngl
Id* j4!
iu i Ilk
1 iu|nr wl.uJfc Aft U In
hik #
||l * at 1
"Muuuni 11 iv pi fin 1,
i *M L ifivll1 lt'il - Oi) K .
jk Jin(j« / J.l .» I v. v h> >1
II uk
III |v.
If* two
into u
it Hw
<3* i
' • • 1
j. Ut 1
hU l
ju|In I
| hp ' tl t i ' f,l 1 1 it. a 1
n luu
l hi* 4
c*il> »•
: ui ouinl it 1
I h.l if,u ui
it *#» On m
1 y
1 ift*. (
\ li luting foi a gi • at
JOfiint.
,n i
H him
'‘Ki*'''! much more than tin), with its
I uinplic ..(i d im-ctuiniim tu set it nit
Il’/W the heinb iii tunlly wuiki-d m tin
All'll lll',l>l 1 ..I eful)y glimdut kuCr,|
li 11lie j 'ifiii't til a rtv,- ci,-
li ■ rtf ,It ill in.ije |||,i, ioy 0ul
Nlld 1 ti .|ilil|*l |l v. 44 (tie WeUpoli
II 1 bi I" tin i'41*0 of Iliu Jwputiu-<
'“"I tq <l> i.iiNttl, ilitt wo, ItJ ami
" « t I e w all. 1 II,a giy«l>i«| wai
' 1 •' f 0 Hieiezti wjuiii pi.
*.e .) i»(vt. I, ,j,, . at 1 Id • 411 vt to.»> 1
I " )1 • f il lhh.nl AI of 1*
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Phillips, J. C. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 244, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 5, 1945, newspaper, September 5, 1945; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth520895/m1/2/: accessed May 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.