Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 196, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 11, 1928 Page: 2 of 6
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Borger Daily Herald
till ft j> ■ " ,1111- ;
■ ftkblMind t I.OS &>uik M*iu Street,. !
Mr,, Texas, every Bremen; E oept Sat-urqp?.
^^NdWyiJ&"fe'A*D J
COMPANY. Inc.
NI3AL. MMift M*no««r
ihank witten .1.:.-.^! Editor
J&nteri'A HH wcondota** muwr Nov^in
b«r -23, 1926. ttt the post office nt Bor
g#v, 'iV.xj >*, iiudejr tlie®Uk't of Mftivb 8,4W*
llEMBCR AgffcKHV&D PRESS
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.. PHONIC 13 FOIi. ALL ULPARTAlKNTS i
notice to the public
Any croneous reflect ion upon the char |
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VfArranted h pi'oruinently as was une wrorg
>y published reference to article.
BH BOKGEK DAlCTj HffRAEB
SHALT THOU COVET THY NEIGHBORS GOODS?
SECRET CORNERS
You never know about men. t
There are always secret |
places in their hearts which
are not revealed to all and j
sundry.
The late Lord Curzon, for1
instance, during his lifetime!
was recognized as an immen-
sely able, capable, industrious. I
scholarly statesman adminis-
trator and cabinet minister.
But he was deemed cold and
cynical and supercilious.
It was thought the job of!
viceroy of India suited him to .
a T, because of the glamour j
and glitter and oriental mag-
nificence that accompanied it
But now comes his official
I^EfcBE I
MIS MilOAJS
mm
UQokiwgJ
T—>-tf.
-• AU-M-U M-.
WAW'< MY CrtAjvICE
~io «Rbp- orr a.
F£W VOTE5
m
&™
■ ;~
TuianmiiimMEgffis
ever, the whirl wind blown over. The
ostrlth pulls Ills head out of (he
hole aud finds ttyat the world is
laughing instead or respecting ills In-
telligence. ,
Move of us should he like til-; r;>b-
in which sings and iwlurs chee.- to
all who pans that way. The robin
seemingly does not King nbout itsell,
hut about the beauty of the world
It does not attempt lo hide its weak-
nesses, hut Its'hearers learn Vrom
ihe beauty ol' its hour to feel the
beauty of Its soul
The contrast between the robin
:ui(| the ostrich is unfexample of Ui?
dlii'ei'ence in the way the world ac-
cepts egotism and service.
Prohibition agents at Malone, N.
V., raided a circus trait' just across
from Canada and found 4,000 bottles
who visited
liquor, yjistomers
firenfe
Mine dress su
fashion In Krife'l
gne is Krecn,'"Wi
ours out.
A
lied
BARBS
Ity NKA Service
roo m iuij, 'irt ^place
11 so is
A1 Sill it It'. M I W«'l Vf
paign s1'voi
recent "wei^' they
' bp six uf oni- a*iS:W'i Hfloze 11 of
r other. %
cont'orJJ%i|^e
CO.AI< WITH I COLOR
ciirreni
fountain
j You ttftU|olly can t#)J n Sf.oichninu
wasteboskots ' j)V wllHt roads, luil take a peek
Capitol News
i i
Something
l;v Crank
Human
Wit ten
i Harmonizing with the
\ vogue for color schemes in
pens, kitchen stoves,
land all. comes a dispatch from Pons | OV(,r |lis! Raider
ville announcing anthracite coal is to) v,.,.s^
i lie colored pinlt as a distinctive ad* j
vertislng feat tire. We suggest the I
trucks lined with baby-blilfe plush, | Obregon is president .Mexico
with green lace .curtains for the driv- ; again, having^ vvih. oiit _ in Ihe reg-
j er's seat Miners who delve for tills lular eliminatiiijC ^ontest.'^'Wch tak-
precious'anthracite should wear j er, iila.ee^being
| fawn colored spats and carry bamboo ! shot, obregon
! canes in appropriate pastels- Op-!
j port unities surely will lie overlooked ;
■ it Ihe locomotives that escort il.e|
j ornamental anthracite about the laud j
j are not tinted ultra-marine and giw
j landed with honeysuckle- I'robahly
they'll not.call this blushing anthra-
; cite "hard coal" but rename it the
(coal with a conscience." And don't
1 be surprised if some day you see
I a wisp of flesh-colored smoke curling
l'rom some fragrant factory chimney
and detect the faint aroma of attar
iof roses.
: " ••• *
Senator Charlie Curtis, on the
ticket with Herbert Hoover for our
1 chief offices, is of Indian descent
! and proud of it. He's an Indian, it
i seems, without reservation.
IIV HODNKY Dl'TCHKR
V K.I Service Writer
WASHINGTON. July II
| is probable unless the two empires
through mutual sacrifice, seek to
. . , , i reconcile their manv conflicting in-
btography, written by one ot•
his lifelong friends. And
what do we find? Well, for
on., thing, Curzon, the simple
human being, who fell head
over heels in love with Miss
I.eiter of Chicago and was her
ardent swain all her life. To
her he poured out his soul.
To her he indited beautiful I
love letters long years after
thfey were married and long
after most husbands begin to
be commonplace and worka-
day.
You see there was a secret
corner in his heart and in it
he burned candles to the love-
liness of the woman who shar-
ed his joys and his sorrows.
That's the report of an American
correspondent covering the great
international struggle for oil between
Britain and the lTnlted states.
Ludwell Denny, one of the best
informed writers in Washington, be-
comes the first American with an
American viewpoint and complete
awareness of American policy to pro-
a volume describing the fascin-
t-
ard Oil as a patriotic arm of nsition-
| al defense, run's smack up against
that, reminding one tnat the Brit-
War I's'' government is officially and di-
rectly involved in the oil grabbing
business while ours it not. Ours, in
.act, permits Royal Dutch to take
35 or in percent of its production
from American ffalds.
Britain is maneuvering now for
vast tracts close to the Panama
Canal. Perhaps these hold oil and
perhaps not. Anyway, they would be
valuable, strategic territory in case
of war.
Pointing out that petroleum has
been lately in bad odor among us.
Denny then offers these significant
paragraphs:
"The danger point will bo fuell-
ed when near-shortage driv; prices
ating. vital oil war which so tin
ens world peace and motivates so
many of the major acts of foreign
policy and yet nearly always keeps) upward and American auloinobil
itself ont of the newspapers.
ir-
VIOLENT DEATHS
Big Tim Murphy, one-time
labor czar in Chicago, is the
latest victim of Chicago's
gang war. Called to his door
by a knock late at night, he
Was riddled by machine gun
bullets when he responded.
Murphy died as he lived,
and no excess of sympathy
need be wasted. The shooting
is, of couffle- one more blot
on Chicago's record; but, af-
ter all, those that live violent-
ly generally die violently. Big
Tim Murphy, first
go's "racketeers,"
inevitable penalty.
of C
paid
hica-
the
"We fight for oil" is the name of
the book. Aside from the fact that
it comes from our side of the sea.
it is today the most valuable of con-
tributions to the oil-war literature
because it brings this constantly
changing situation virtually to the
present hour. Furthermore it is free
from propaganda and traces the
war's battles on all fronts Russ-
ian, Colombian, Persian. Venezuelan
Rumanian. Mexican and all the
ot hers.
journalistic career has
into the European and
zones, and subsequently
ears as a correspond-nt
Department here, where
WHERE WOMEN BATTLE
In the great ope>> spaces of
the west, according to the mo-
vies, "men are men"—which
means that they are virile and
husky, ready to fight at the
drop of the hat.
Now comes news from Mis-
soula, Mont., which indicates
1 hat in the open spaces wo-
men, too, may be spirited and
aggressive.
Two girls, one lf> and the
other 17, quarrelled over the
attention of a man. They
walked down Ihe road in the
darkness to "settle it" with
their "sts. They fought for it
while, then one girl drew a
revolver and shot ihe other
dead.
There is something for psy-
chologists and sociologists to
ponder on. A light over love
is usually an affair between
men. What are we to say.
when two voting girls Ho it'.'
I* the hardiness of the old
west more than a mere tradi-
tion, after all'.'
ACtBRMY ATTKU 'rs MANY
PARIS ItP)—lucreaslllg hostility
In French literary circles toward
the Academy has seemed only lo In-
crease the number of persons seek-
ing membership lu that robed body
Typuty-seven candidates have en-
tered their names for the seal va-
cated by the recent death of the
tlramatUt, Francois de Curel.
Denny's
taken him
Asiatic war
for three, y
in the Stale
he followed closely the. concealed
moves of this government to safe-
guard tin* Cnited States' future
against foreign monopoly of the
world's oil reserves.
To anyone who hasn't followed the
war as Denny has his well docu-
mented revelations are likely to be
astounding.
Here's a summary:
Britain, with the Royal DuiJIj
Shell company under .Sir lleuri Det-
erding and its government-control-
led Anglo-Persian company, is fight-
ing with our government and our
Standard Oil company lor the world's
reserves. A straggle for world mas-
tery is developing as we threaten
Britain's lout: commercial and naval
supremacy.
The fight centers on raw mater-
ials. principally oil because our own
reserves are being depleted and both
our Indus!rial and naval .-upreiiiacy
now depend on it, Naval men re-
gard actual war as Inevitable: his-
tory shows no two ,-rea. rival em
pi res which ever allowed them-
•elves. permanent peace.
Downing street saw first the. wis-
dom of helping British (onipa.ile.
grab the world oil and le d pev'-ap
nio.'t of it beor.- our government
woke up. But the continuing foreiga
policy of the Wilson. Harding and
Cootidge administration:: bus iuclud
bellbi rent urlheraie or the
Interests of our oil companies.
Today Standard and Royal
Dutch it re still fighting, ^onetime
in public, for a lion's share of Rus-
i star's great reserves. Our govern
j meut fought its way into a share in
Mle rich Mosul fields, but Britain,
appnrentlj still seek:- to edge it
ont.
! The surface of Anie.rlcan-Mexican
| relations is temporarily peaceful, but
j unless Mexico makes further eon-
cesslons I here probably will be Move
trouble. The most furious warfare
Colombia.
Is now in progress in Venezuela and
Meanwhile Britain's policy is oue ,
of conservation keeping oil in the j
ground Our companies, at home apd
aboard, see into be removing and
nelllng Ihe oil ,as fain ajs they cat ,.
get It out. One's conception of fcitund j
owners are told the Brtish hav
nered most of the world supply.
What will happen when the enraged
force of public opinion is added to
the commercial motives of the oil
companies and the defense incentives
of the government?
"Then the Ivu Kluxers and Mayor
Thompson may find a hate crusade
crying for their 'hundred percnl'
leadership. Then all the other An-
glo-American economic and poliiicla
conflicts real and imagined can
in brought out and magnified.
"The (lager cannot be removed by
denying its existence. Peace cannot
be maintained by repeating the lie
that "war between Great Britain
and the failed States is impossible *
An ostrich is an unusual bird. Its
I plumage is considered the most val-
' liable for adornment of any fowl, ft
| is the largest bird in the world and
I in proportion has the. smallest head.
One of the urticiue habits of this
; bird is the practice of sticking its
; head in a hole and imagining its
entire body is concealed from view.
Lots of people are like the ostrich
They try to hide their faults and
i vils behind a small mask. Yet. their
j every action shows that it is their
own eyes which are concealed and
. not the eyes of the world. The best
policy for each mail to fake is to do
his work in the open, keep it above
{ reproach and let service alj/l kind
deeds do the necessary advertising
j,t takes to put him over.
Some persons come into a com-
| munity and within week have sprea
; an opinion throughout the city that
in their own estimation they are ex
tremelv valuable citizen. Soon how-
FISHING
"\\« .ViiH'i'in
Jul} 24th.
Itiu T!ii?i 0'<\
iii;
nif
r-Pople oi Switzerland
from dwelling liouso.-
iit
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to apart-j
iiiiiiiiniiii niiiiiiiiuiit iiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiniiii
EYES EXAMINED
By the most modern methods.
GLASSES ground in our own
shop to meet your Special re-
quirements.
H Y D E N ' S
(Eye-Sight Specialist)
Es!. 1912 Amarillo, Tex.
111111! 1111111li1111111111'111111111111i111111111 < 11
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Dr. M. L Friedman
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and tunc Elizabeth Arden recommends
tions for your daily care of the skin:
Venetian Cleansing Cream: whitens Hie skin. Closes
Removes dust and impuri-
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Venetian Ardena Skin
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WEDNESDAY,
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Channel Caf Fish,
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Venetian Bleachine Cream:
Bleaching ant! nourishing
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White's Drug Store
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1301 R.'ooin Street
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Witten, Frank. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 196, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 11, 1928, newspaper, July 11, 1928; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth209493/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.