Borger-News Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 12, Ed. 1 Monday, December 9, 1946 Page: 1 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 24 x 19 in.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:
ri-
ld
in*
I *
1 *
H
r\f
<* <t
I
WEATHER
WEST TEXAS: Partly cloudy thi« after-
noon, tonight and Tuesday; a tew showers
In Dei Bio 4/10 £a<)i >-at.s ,wt a- iooi«-< io
night.
Stoffljc# Jfenrs-|l<M&
Borger News-Herald
Circulation Dept. Phone 82
Other Depts.: 6 and 7
THE CARBON BLACK CENTER OF THE WORLD
NEA Service
Associated Press
Borger, Texas, Monday, December 9, 1946
(Four Pages Today)
Vol.21 No. 12 NEA Service Associated Press Borger, Texas, Monday, December 9, 1946 (Four Pages Today ) Price 5c
Supreme Court Promises Quick Strike Decision
Blazing Gasoline Can
Blamed For Fire That
Gutted Canadian Hotel
'ATLANTA FIRE TAKES OVER HUNDRED LIVES
Fire Escapes
Required By
Texas Code
AUSTIN, Tex., Dec. 9—W—
Commenting on Atlanta's disas-
trous Winecoff hotel lire of last
Saturday morning, Gov. Coke
Stevenson today said Texas has a
strong fire code which would at
least give people a chance to es-
cape from fire.
He noted that the Georgia hotel
did not have fire escapes, and
said the Texas lire code requires
fire escapes for all buildings
where persons sleep above the
second floor.
"When you sift all the laws
passed for the protection ol ci-
izens in Texas, you find Texas is
just about the most progressive
state in the nation," Stevenson
said.
THE NATION
TODAY
LEWIS' TROUBLES
By JAMES MARLOW
WASHINGTON, Dec. 9—(/!'>—
John L. Lewis' troubles are just
beginning. But the trouble he
started may mean trouble for all
organized labor.
1. If the supreme court upholds
the lower court tn fining Lewis
and his union Ur contempt in
ieuftig the 8tniii i>'ii*i then—
Ho and the Uh.oh will have to
pay the fine: Lewis, $10,000; the
union, $3,500,000.
2. In the past Lewis always had
a big stick—the threat of a strike
—when he sat down to bargain
with the mine owners. And he
called strikes to get what he
wanted.
This lime—because he's told
the miners to work until March
31. 1947—he's given the owners
almost four months in which
to haggle with him and wear
him ragged without fear of a
strike. And—
3. Within those four months
tcngress may act to cripple Lewis.
Congress comes back Jan. 3, full
of talk about curbing labor.
Dy telling the miners to work
until March 31, Lewis has given
congress a deadline to shoot at
if it wants to pass laws intended
lo make another strike like this
one impossible.
If congress passes any law to
curb Lewis, it almost surely will
be a law to curb labor unions in
general. So all labor would be
affected.
4. In addition to passing on the
lower court judge's right to fine
Lewis for not obeying the judge's
no-strike order, the supreme court
also may decide whether the
judge had a right to issue the or-
der.
All labor might be affected if
the high court should decide
something like this: That the
government can get a court or-
der to provent a strike which
it says might hurt the public
interest.
The high-court may not do this.
It would be a startling and mom-
entous step for-.-
If the government got such an
okay, it.might think it bad the
right in the future to stop any kind]
of strike on the same grounds:
Protection of public interest.
Lewis gave some reasons for
ending the strike, but not these,
although he may have had them
in mind:
1. If he had waited longer, he
might have been ruined as a
leader.
2. If he'd waited longer, his
union might have been wrecked.
What Lewis told the miners—
bis reason for sending them back
to work—was this: He wanted to
leave the supreme court, while
reaching a decision, free from the
pressure of the "hysteria and
ironzy of an economic crisis "
But Lt*wi« left himself wide
open to i>tup question when, in
further explaining why he xrnt
them buck to work. Lewis told
Hie miner*
' In addition, public nec*Mty
riqullpk the qiiMMtitPllVv pHtdur
lion of CUM| ilmilitf sucli U period
• wiiii* tin Int*li i f <*** d***
IVfey 444*1 te* ib *k mi im
■Ml |ei M|| MIM C*lm4#y
be( lbs iti'H a
SASKATOON. Sask., Dec. 9—
,7p)—Gasoline flames which the
fire chief said "moved like a
solid wall" swiftly turned the
Bany hotel into an inferno be-
fore dawn Sunday, killing 11 per-
sons and injuring 18.
The fire was the worst in Sas-
katchewan history and the worst
in Cs.nada since the Queen's hotel
lire in Halifax in 1939 when 28
died.
A cun of gasoline beside the
kitchen range, appeared to have
causec' the holocaust. Fred Fries,
a waiter, said the cook called him
to the kitchen where he found tne
gas range blazing and the can of
gasoline shooting flames eight feet
high.
Fries grabbed the gasoline
can and tried to run into the
street with It but bumped Into
a frightened customer. The can
fell and rolled into the hotel
lobby. Someone else tried to
kick It out through the door,
but the draft from a large elec-
tric fan sent the flames spirall-
ing inward. Fries said within a
minute of the last fumble, "all
hell broke loose" and the fire
was beyond control.
Acting Fire Chief E. Clark or-
dered fighters to "forget the build-
ing: there are lives to be saved."
Firemen visited every one of
the 87 rooms while tiie blaze still
burned and found "four or five
people wandering around in dazed
conditions." Some guests jumped
safely from the second and top
third floors in scanty attire. The
weather was mild. Others made
escape ropes of sheets and blan-
kets. Some jumped through the
rotunds Skylight.
c,n* fWV-,akiA8 a bath on the
thirjHnoor, reached the bathroom
window and hung from it by his
hands until firemen reached him.
George Hunter, the night porter,
snid the 36-year-old hotel's fire
alarm system did not work and
that he shouted the alarm in the
upper halls.
The hotel was sold for $120,-
000 a week ago to a group In-
cluding Leon Asben of New
York.
w
■ - -
City Restricts
Parking, Speed
On Hedgecoke
To relieve the congestion of
traffic on Hedgecoke street and
to safeguard lives and pronerty.
ihe city commission has approved
an ordinance banning "angle
parking" and setting a Sunday
speed limit of 20 miles per hour.
Speeding vehicles in recent
weeks have caused several near
accidents and the increase of
traffic and parking in the vicin-
ity of the churches on Sunday has
created a serious problem.
In order to correct it, the com-
mission has ruled that vehicles
must be parked horizontal with
the curbing, that no vehicle with
a width of more than eight feet
may park on Hedgecoke and that
a speed limit of 20 miles per hour
be in effect on Sundays between
9 a. m. and 9 p. m.
The ordinance will become ef-
fective upon its nuhlieation in
The Borger News-Herald.
Moose To Give
Dance To Benefit
Children In Home
A benefit dance sponsored by
Women of The Moose will be
held following the regular meet-
ing of the lodge Tuesday night at
the Moose hall, it was announced
today. Mrs. Dale Lane, Moose-
heart chairman, and her commit-
tee arc in charge of arrangements'
Josh O'Neal and His Gentlemen
of Swing, colored orchestra of
Amarillo will furnish the music
for oancing, which will begin at
9 o'clock.
Proceeds from the nffnir will
be used to buy Christmas toys for
children at the children's home in
Mooseheart, Indiana.
TicketH will sell for II 20. In-
cluding tax.
Service Officer Sacks
Namei of Wor Veterom
Now Attending School*
Fire roared like a giant rocket blast through the packed Winecoff hotel in Atlanta, Georgia, and at
least 112 persons perished in the smoke and flames or by jumping to the street. Here, ambulances
line up in front of the fire-gutted structure in the early morning after the blaze was brought under
control. - (NEA Telepholo)
After Counting 120 Dead
In Greatest Hotel Fire,
Atlanta Is Asking "Why"
ATLANTA. De<\.9—(AP)— The Winecoff hotel fire deetjtl ru . i*-~
toll climbed to 120 today as multiple investigations were ord-j wir31CCjy LOinniillSG
ered into Saturday's disaster which was the nation's most
costly conflagration.
Three names were added to the death list. Mrs. George
D. Burch, 20, of Chattanooqa, died of injuries suffered when
she fell 10 floors to a canvas canopy when an improvised
rope of bed linen broke. Her husband, to whom she was
married last week, had descended three floors to reach fire
ladders.
Australia Cannot
Open Doors Wide
To Europe Refugees
CANBERRA, Dec. 9—(VP)—A. A.
Calwell, Australian minister of
immigration, declared today the
government would not "tolerate
wholesale dumping in Australia
of European migrants of any re-
ligion, race or region."
He made the assertion in a news
statement referring to the report-
ed formation in Melbourne of a
company to be known as Shelter
and Aid, Ltd., to assist immigra-
tion of European refugees and
others.
* Hospital Notes
Hospital reports today include
the following medical and surgi-
cal patients:
Phillips-Panlex: Medical, Jim-
mie Lou Randall; Surgical, Mrs.
G. H. Parncll, Tony Mitchell.
Two other names which had es-
caped the Red Cross were record-
ed. They were Charles (Bill) Berry
of Cedartown, Ga., southeastern
bowling champion, and Julia Hall
of Albany, Ga., a delegate to a
youth congress.
City, county and national
probes were ordered. They co-
incided with demands for more
stringent safeguards against such
tragedies.
Solicitor General E. E. Andrews
arranged conferences with the
city fire marshal, firemen, fire
underwriters and grand jury
foreman Henry Chandler. He
said a Fulton county (Atlanta)
grand jury would study Saturday's
pre-dawn fire to determine if
there had been any criminal negli-
gences. The jury will meet tomor-
row.
Mayor William B. Hartsfield
called an afternoon meeting of the
city council's fire committee to
question officials about the na-
tion's most deadly hotel fire. The
National Fire Prevention associa-
tion and the National Conference
of Building officers also planned
investigations.
The city's Grady hospital was
asked by Mayor Hartsfield for
a report on the burns and gas
poisoning among the casualties TEN CENTS OFFERED
in an effort to determine the j FOR NOVEMBER
fire's origin. The speed with
which the blaze spread also has
baffled officials, although one
said open stairwells were a
major contributing factor.
The executive committee of the
National Society of Professional
engineers and Mayor Hartsfield
called for better regulations de-
signed to prevent such loss of life
by fire. The engineers asked their >
state societies to assist in "review, \
correction and enforcement" of j
local construction safety stand-
ards.
City Fire Chief C. C. Styron,
A. C. Hutson, assistant chief en-
gineer of the National Board of
fire underwriters, and other offi-
cials studied the blackened
wreckage on busy Peachtree street
yesterday.
A state law requiring all
Georgia hotel* to install auto-
magic sprinkler systems was
asked bv Taylor T. Carstarphen,
chairman of the Macon (Ga) city
council's lire committee. The
Winecoff had neither sprinklers
nor fire escape*' The hotel pass
ed • city lire inspection onlv re.
cenfly.
Is *1111 flopimil
copy OF YOUR PAPER
The NEWS-HERALD needs
ten copies of its issue dated No-
vember 17th. Ten cents will be
paid for the first complete
copies of this Issue brought to
the News-Herald office.
Sam Duke,
Circulation Manager
To Meet Preceding
General Assembly
Strategy committee of Local
351, International Union of op-
erating Engineers will meet at 6
o'clock this evening in the union
hall before going to Borger high
school auditorium for a general
union assembly at 7:30 o'clock, it
was announced.
The union's general assembly
tonight will decide whether the
union employees prefer to ac-
cept final proposal of the Phillips
Petroleum company on wage in-
creases for the lower classifica-
tion. A written ballot will be cast.
For the benefit of shift workers
another such vote will be held
tomorrow morsing at 10 a. m.
Stock Prices
Spurt Upward
m—
stock
NEW YORK, Dec. 9-
Prices on the New York
exchange literally spurted upward
today immediately after the op-
ening gong on the strength of the
coai strike settlement and the
increase in railroad freight rates.
The ticker tape fell behind floor
transactions soon after trading
began.
Motors led the rise with Gen-
eral Motors up nearly $2.50 and
Chrysler up more than $3 a share
during the first 15 minutes. At
that time, Santa Fe showed a
rise of more than $2 a share, Allied
Chemical $2.25, and U. S. Steel
$2 on an initial sale of 3,500
shares. Bethlehem Steel opened
late, but was up more than $3 a
share.
Much of the trading was in big
blocks of $1,000 shares or more.
16 Violent
Deaths During
Texas Weekend
By The Associated Press
Sixteen persons lost their lives
in Texas week-end accidents.
Seven deaths resulted from traf-
fic mishaps and three from homi-
cides or suicides. Train collisions,
plane crashes, drownings and fires
were among other accidents re-
sulting in deaths.
Latest victim was O. R. Work-
man of Houston, fireman for the
Missouri and Pacific railroad, who
was fatally burned yesterday
when his passenger train crashed
into the rear of n freight train
near Refugio. He died last night,
several hours after the accident.
Ernest Brown 35, of Crawford,
died in a Waco hospital yesterday
of injuries received Friday in a
quarry near Crawford.
Charles Patterson Lankford. 16,
of Abilene, was kilted and Harry
Dillashaw Jr. of Houston were
injured yesterday when Lankford's
plane crushed 18 miles west of
Houston.
Also at Houston, W. L. Joyner,
47, of Houston received fatal in-
juries in an automobile accident.
Miss Anita Hernandez, 25, of
San Antonio received fatal
wounds when snot in the back with
a .25 caliber bullet. Police are
holding a 20-year-old yorth In
connection with the shooting.
Stanley Moon. 15, of San An-
tonio was killed Saturday when
his motorcycle overturned 11
mil. s north of there.
The body of Mrs. Georgia Erma
Fuller, 23, of Corslcana was found
Saturday In a Dallas tourist cabin.
The body was partly burned and
the bed was on fire. A verdict of
death by fire was returned by
Justice of the Peace W. E. Rich-
burg.
Two boys, Joe Harold Barnett,
8, and his brother, Kenneth Wayne
Barnett, 5, were killed Saturday
when their family automobile col-
lided with a Texas and Pacific
passenger "train near MlneoTa.
The fairer and another son, Billy
Frank Barnett, 12. were injured.
At Houston, the * nude, quilt-
covered body of a woman tenta-
tively Identified as Mrs. Percy
Landrenean of Houston, was found
Saturday in a tourist cabin. Jus-
tice of the Peace W. C. Ragan is
withholding an inquest verdict
pending further investigation.
Ernest L. Ansel, 35, of Fort
Worth, a garage owner, was killed
yesterday when his motorcycle col-
lided with an automobile one mile
southof Azle.
Red Habby, 55, a Lampasas fur
dealer, was killed Saturday night
when his pick-up truck collided
with an automobile ten miles south
of Llano. Two persons travelling
in the automobile were Injured.
A verdict of murder and sui-
cide lias been returned by Justice
of the peace W. B. Richburg of
Dallas tn the deaths of Cecil M.
Ashworth, 34, and his wife, Kath-
ryn Ashwortb, 39.
An accidental drowning verdict
has been given by Justice of the
Peace Thomas I. Decker of Hous-
ton in connection with the death
of Beverly H. Gaillard, 47, oil
tanker seaman. Gaillard's body
was found in the Houston ship
channel yesterday morning.
DOLLARS VS. LIVES
l to
npiU
At diet,
from upper
limoiiy <•( ii
ih« It,.I CM.
innuwtt ip n
ny Mttrmpi*
llll' ft
M
Ail
(An Editorial!
There can be no particular mysterv about the various hotel fires
that have taken an appalling toll of lives In recent years.
Regardless of how the fire* obtained their start, whether bv mere
accident or through malicious planning, the stark fact remains that
the fuel for the fire was in the hotel, itself. That is to My, the
hotel was built of sufficient combustible materials to give fuel to the
flame.
Someday there mav be built in Borger a new modern, ten or
twelve story hotel. Certainly it should be fireproof.
There should be the required fire escapes starting with the sec-
ond floor.
An automatic water sprinkler system should be installed —and
most important, the walls separating each room should be fireproof
metal lath and pUkfer.
No wood or comteusliM# material* should be used In any wall I
or Ileering, and certainly not in the tellings.
Floors should be of concrete supported bv Ihe usual elfwelursi
steel framework.
And thi# goes for the rest *1 Teaes *nd ihe entire Helton.
Tbe e tragic lire* will not helo tkr hotel business. r«gprdlppp el
flip feet tltpf at this time iievelpr k$f <« t hotel
gPttetniy 4 Hm must not be spvpn pf the ppgpaap of bumMiSvpp.
. PMfiMP MMP HM (MP befell me > wlU #e Hip M PMPQ M
;MMBjli)4) (smviw fell* |b-r ul ip .« t ! -•*. M Wt lf wbptp
'fiih ■' ►MM*eu< J b -e "«|pl wMfllf "Wf '*•) jwwp'iisTB
i'" 'II frtf otf |l)> >| fwdbtrlwut'i, ,u«;|t pi „*(«,.< Ik,,.- i,
WRHKM-wHth*'* iiitriif i <4 (•fcbwifWipMi iiilwUw ft*
mm •''* ' " k • •• !• n 4 li f||. (*>iiif
Ibti
flu
Santa Pleased
With End Of
Coal Strike
Old Santa Claus breathed a sieh
of relief today.
With the coal miners going back
to work it means those Christmas
i parcels can start pouring back into
the post office—the mail embargo
has been lifted.
Postmaster Claude S. Campbell
today urged early mailing of all
cards and packages. The Borger
postmaster said that he expects
heavy mailing through this week
and requested local residents to
get all Christmas mail on its way
this week.
He explained that in the middle
of the coal strike Christmas par
eels were temporarily tied up in
the east and other sectors and
said that it will take a week or
more to get the mail eituatlon
back to normal.
"We'd like to receive in the
Borger postoffice us many pack-
ages this week as possible if the
residents expect to get tliem to the
intended receivers by Christmas,"
he declared.
Scoggint Urges Votgrom,
To Contact him Regarding
Tlitfr Education Problem*
Hi-rper Htopginp, Hutchinson
«iutfjty v fc-ti i tiii.i M'lA jt'if Mfiiti,
mmwm v < rfi |£^« <***>
j<t M** pMHifldntJ wtOi
• fit I Mf tihuH iiij.fc'tif, i 1.1.Ill t
| ffftJRI Iff Ilia AA pt-'r4
j $ * W ii i v 4t u* > ;Ui <«||!} m«
I U .-ll.il . tl(<n .it
'"nlt iUm ^ aw
id >•* •' #**« • MH$t If
V MMi gMMMMMRP
Soft Coal Industry
Reports Most Miners
Returning To Work
WASHINGTON, Dec. 9—(AP)— The supreme court today
agreed to give a quick ruling on the validity of the contempt
conviction of John L. Lewis and his United Mine Workers,
in the soft coal strike. •
WASHINGTON. Dec. 9—(AP)— The administration, tri-
umphant in its bitter fiqht to smash the coal strike, counted
on a nod from the supreme court today signalling the next
grim round with John L. Lewis.
The high tribunal assembled at II a.m. (CST) with this
big question hanging: Whether it will by pass an intermediate
court to hear the appeal of Lewis and his United Mine Work-
ers from contempt fines totaling $3,510,000.
Jubilant over the utoek-end tft -*— _____
render of Lewis which ended the '__
17-day economy-wrecking walk- VemOIl Mail Shot
out. officials familiar with thej *C1UU" lia"' sJUUl
governments legal strategy ex- Hprp FriHav
pressed confidence that the top I IlUdy, odlu
courl of the land would take jur-
isdiction for an early showdown.
PITTSBURGH. Dee. 9—OP)—
The soft coal Industry resumed
production today after a para-
lyiinq 17-day work stoppage by
the United Mine Workers. Bad-
ly-needed fuel came from the
mines again for the nation's in-
dustries and homes.
Reports from the coal fields
showed the miners complying
with John L. Lewis' order to re-
turn to the pits but normal pro-
duction was not expected before
mid-week.
The return to work was sootty
in some sections but full produc-
tion apparently awaited only
spreading of the official back-to-
work order. Many miners who
received the word yesterday held
meetings approving Lewis' action,
and tot an. early, stflrt on dawn
shifts.
jJn the big Pennsylvania field,
employing 100,000 soft conl min-
ers, the solid fuels administration
reported a majority of mines re-
suming but that miners appeared,
at some pits, then returned home
to await the official word. The
SFA at Altoona, Pa., estimated
two-thirds of the 1,217 coal mines
in that area were operating.
In West Virginia, with 102,000
of the UMW's 400,000 members,
the swing back to production was
on except for locals which like-
wise awaited official notification.
These were expected to be back
at work by tonight or at least by
Wednesday.
Some idleness also was report-
ed in West Virginia at pits wh®re
rai|-oad sidings were clogged
with coal cars held in reserve
during the fuel emergency. In
Kentucky, another large pro-
ducing state, the return was vir-
tually complete in ihe Big
Sandy field.
Practically all mines worked in
the coal-rich Pittsburgh area, in-
cluding many steel-company own-
ed operations.
In Alabama about 10,000 of the
20,000 miners were already on the
job. Coal-dependent steel Indus-
tries there responded quickly by
blowing in three blast furnaces
idled during the strike.
Union officials in Virginia re-
ported "very few" miners re-
turned to work but they hoped all
of the 11,000 miners in the area
would> be back by Wednesday.
Illinois operators reported all
the idle UMW members there,
numbering more than 20,000, were
back at work.
Indiana's 8,500 miners were al-
so back.
Five Persons Injured
In Corsicana Collision
CORSICANA, Tex., Dec. 9—<JP)
—Five persons were treated at a
local hospital for injuries re-
ceived in an automobile collision
yesterday two miles south of here.
They were H. C. Davis of Rich-
land, driver of one of the cart;
Mrs. W. E. Langston, Miss Verne
Langston, Mrs. R. B. Bowman and
Mrs. Laura Pillow, all of Corsi-
cana. *
by
th
as
On Way io Recovery
Jcmes Dawson, 30-year-old Ver-
non, Tex. negro was reporte"
his attending physician at I
Plains hospital this mornin
"doing pretty well" followi..„
shooting affray in the negro dis-
trict northeast of Borger.
Tommy Lewis, 44, negro, was
nlaced in city jail Friday nisht
following the shooting in which
Dawson received a .38 calibre
pistol slug through the lower por-
tion of his abdomen.
Dawson was placed in the hos-
pital at 9:30 p. m. Friday imrredi-
atedly following the shoo*
bullet entered his left s
lodged behind his billfold or; the
hip.
Sheriff Dale Lane, to whom
Lewis has been turned over to
for further action, stated that
Lewis would be taken before ti e
aTrTrier pfiTirffTjirr^.
The am eip- Bflw in county l a 11
at Stinnett. Nd Charges nave
been filed, the sheriff said.
* Mackenzie Column
WHAT HAPPENS WHEN
STALIN QUITS?
Veterans are Reminded
Of January 1 Deadline
On Life Insurance
Veterans whe have let their
nettonpl service life insurance
Upsc were reminded today that
I hey have only until January I
! to re-Instate ii wltt,e**t "i4ipp
going a phytual ««pinination.
Alter thai date, each VetPfWI
will required pat* P PPW>
flui* }.lty u«l ••am >«'! •> hit
By DEWITT MACKENZIE
AP Foreign Affairs Analyst
Those rumors that Russia's
Premier Stalin ia a very ill man
certainly give pause for serious
consideration.
To be sure, they haven't been
substantiated in any way. On the
contrary, a Soviet embassy spokes-
man in London yesterday said
Stalin "is in the best of health."
Eddie Gilmore, AP chief of bu-
reau in Moscow, also stated three
days ago: "I am reliably informed
that there is no basis for reports
published in Turkey that General-
issimo Stalin is 'seriously ill'. Sta-
lin is taking a vacation just aj he
took a vacation at this time last
year."
StilL the very fact that these
reports are prevalent challenges
us to speculate on what their
significance would be to the
world if they were true.
What happens when Stalin com-
pletely relinquishes the reins, as
he must do some time? That's the
vital question for the rest of the
world We have no ordinary sit-
uation here. For more th; n a
score of years Stalin has been the
unchallenged head of a totalitar-
ian dictatorship. His word has
been law in a nation covdri ig a
sixth of the globe's land su. face
and having a population of almost
200,000,000.
Whether you admire him or dis-
like him, the fact remains that
Stalin is—or has been—one of the
most powerful leaders the world
ever has known. Whatever
strength Russia hap developed
since the revolution has been due
mainly to him. He gave -her in-
dustrial power; he created a huiie
army, end he himsolt was aitual
commander-in-chief of the Soviet
forces during the late war. He
har. dictated Soviet foreiK-i if-
! fairs, and he is given credit for
I having directed the uni' > ing
crusade to communist the world.
Who takes over' thet job?
i Those who have been worried
*nd fearful because Sielin was
in power, will find a btp<j«r
itnxiely In getting an answer to
that, or so it strikes me,
Of Miarpp there
Ifaoers in Russia, „
later Mwitow jv <M#
l. aapoip le M9fl.fl
Tin- I wf
have V
M*
I
i ilu>9 i'.o.iv* fyjpMfeH A
aumt'i I
H fff,' Hh I
l"'1 M 9
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.
Matching Search Results
View one place within this issue that match your search.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-News Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 12, Ed. 1 Monday, December 9, 1946, newspaper, December 9, 1946; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth293475/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.