Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 43, Ed. 1 Monday, January 14, 1946 Page: 1 of 6
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THE WEATHBtt
WEST TEXAS: CtouSy. rain U>U ilurnoon, tonight,
>«4 Tumdiy MCtpl ion* mow nm with rain El
Paso mm and (men upper Ptcot villvy northward
colder Panhaadl*. South Plain* and Upper paeon
Vallay Tuesday and In Panhandle late tonight. Wind*
becoming strong northerly Panhandle and South
Plains Tuesday.
Pofjjef $aib HrraliT
BUY VICTORY BORDS
FOR SECDBITY
THE CARBON BLACK CENTER OF THE 'VORLD
Vol. 20—No. 43
NEA Service
Associated Press
Borger, Texas, Monday, January 14, 1946
SIX PAGES TODAY
Pric« 5«
NATION'S STRIKE PICTURE BRIGHTER TODAY
f**
Debate
Begins
In UNO
Charges Plot
f-
% V
I.ONDON, Jan. 14—(IP)—The
United Nations general assembly
broke a deadlock over the 18th
seat on its economic and social
council today and moved toward a
broad-scale debate on policy, led
off by U. S. Secretary of State
James F. Byrnes in a speech ex-
pected to raise the issue of atomic
energy control.
Yugoslavia was clected to the
final vacancy on the economic and
social council after New Zealand
withdrew.
British sources said Britain pro
bably would offer to place Bri
tain's mandated territories from
the first World War—Including
Palestine—under a new United
i) Nations trusteeship system.
The question of trusteeship
which is urgent for Britain, is not
at the moment so important to the
United States, whose chief aim is
| to make sure it keeps control over
; strategic base areas captured in
the Pacific.
U. S. Secretary of State James
F. Byrnes said he would open a
v.eneral discussion on internatio
nal issues, including atomic
^ energy.
'If ™ Debate on atomic controls may
continue through Friday or Satur-
day. Other speakers are expected
to include British Foreign Secre-
tnry Ernest Bevin, French Foreign
Minister Georges Bidault and And
ici J. Vishinsky, Russian vice
commissar for foreign affairs.
The steering committee also
placed on the assembly agenda a
British proposal to facilitate the
work of the United Nations Re-
lief and Rehabilitation Adminis-
dJVV tration.
Girl Scout Leaders
To Hold Conference
Mrs. Norma Ewlng, Regional
Staff Worker, Girl Scouts of
America, will meet with the Brow-
nie troop leaders tomorrow after-
noon at the Borger Methodist
. church from 2 until 4 p. m, Mrs.
f)| w Ewing will confer with Interme-
diate leaders and assistant leaders
I tomorrow night at 7:30 p. m. at the
J Federated club rooms.
U P
fljft
* Hospital Notes
CASA SERENA
Surgical Patients
Faye Williams.
PANTEX
Medical Patients
Edward Giles.
Surgical Patients
Mrs. Joseph Huber.
NORTH PLAINS
Medical Patients
Jimmy Rov Weatherford, Mrs.
Anna Mae Kimmins. Lorene Hel-
ton. Mary Lou East. Warren Alex-
ander. Mary Jo Asher. Mrs. Bill
Barkley, S. B. Hedgecoke.
Surgical Patients
Jerry Harbour. Mrs. George
Bawden. John Franklin Lamm. Jr.
*
*
Doc Massie, Local Attorney,
Slugged Here Early Sunday
mm
Lt.-Gen. Sir Frederick E. Mor-
gan, above, UNRRA chief in
Germany, declared at a press
conference in Frankfurt that
J^ws in Europe apparently have
an organized plan for a mass ex-
odus from the continent to Pales-
tine. The British officer said he
is becoming convinced that re-
ports of atrocities against Jews
in Polknd are exaggerated and
are part of a plan to force the
United Nations to give the Jews
a homeland.
Probers See
February End
Of Sessions
—lf—
WASHINGTON, Jan. 14—
An end to the Pearl Harbor investi-
gation in February was envisioned
by members today with the possi-
bility Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of
NewYork may not be called.
Dfe^ey was one of 48 prospec-
tive witnesses listed when hear-
ings .began November 15, Of this
group, only nine have testified
thus far.
During the 1944 presidential
campaign Dewey received letters
from Gen. George C. Marshall,
then army chief of staff, urging
him not reveal that the United
States had broken the Japanese
code.
Sen. Lucas (D-Ill) has said he
wants to know who told Dewey
about this highly important mili-
tary sccret.
Lucas and Senator Ferguson
<R-Mich> agreed that the commit-
tee must clear up evidence about
the "Winds" message.
Before Dec. 7, 1941, the Japa-
nese set up arrangements, in mes-
sages that were intercepted and
decoded by this country, to let
their diplomatic consuls know
when relations with the United
States, Great Britain or Russia
were at the breaking point.
In the case of a break wiih the
United States, the Tokyo radio was
to broadcast in its noon news re-
port the words "East wind rain."
The senate-house inquiry thus fax-
has received conflicting evidence
about whether the signal ever was
broadcast, although Mitchell de-
clared his investigation showed
there was no such implementing
message.
*r
Tokyo Correspondents Club
Boasts Legendary Qualities
By WALT MASON
TOKYO, Jan. 14—(AP)—The Correspondents club at No.
1 Shimbun (Newspaper) Alley is a little young yet to be
legendary, but give it time.
Regardless of how historians later may look at it, the
five-story structure housing 80-odd correspondents already
is famous in Tokyo for three
Congress Eyes
Election Votes,
Resumes Session
WASHINGTON, Jan. 14—(/Fl-
its ears to the ground, its eyes on
the approaching elections, the 78th
Congress returns today for its
second session.
The first, full peacetime session
since 1941 finds Congress some-
what "on the spot"—with a moun-
tain of work ahead, its White
House relations strained and vo-
ters displaying a keener-than-us-
ual interest ih Capitol Hill.
This is a Congressional election
yer. All 435 House and 32 of the
96 Senate seats will be filled in
November.
The cleavage between Capitol
Hill and the White House—al-
ready wide when Congress went
home last month—took on larger
proportions after President Tru-
man's January' 3 radio address
complaining of inaction on post-
war domestic legislation.
The shape of early congression-
al action likelv will be formed bv
reaction to Mr. Truman's plea.
Already the mail has started to
flow into the offices of Senators
and Representatives—some of it
supporting the President, some
defending Congress.
Because major public interest
has centered in the labor situation
and the armed services' demobili-
zation programs, those subjects
will receive prompt attention.
Tomorrow Senate and House
members will hear in person from
Gen. Dwight D, Eisenhower and
Adm. Chester W. Nimitz an ex-
planation of demobilisation pol-
icy.
Committees of both branches
have arranged to resume hear-
ings shortly on legislation asKed
by Mr. Truman to set up fact-
finding boards Oaciced by law to
handle major laoor controversies.
' * If Mr. Yrumafirhas any Ideas on
the labor situation, they prooably
will be transmitted to Congress
in the annual state-of-the-union
message scneduled to be delivered
Thursday.
A second Presidential utterance,
the annual budget message ex-
pected next Monday, will go far
toward shaping Congressional fis-
cal policies. There have been
mounting demands for economy.
Coupled with the budget will
be the 1946 tax program. There is
growing clamor for reduction or
elimination of war-levied excise
and luxury levies. N'o further cuts
in income taxes are sighted im-
mediately.
Other matters awaiting consid-
eration are atomic energy, loans
to Britain and other foreign gov-
ernments. unemployment compen-
sation, employment services and
full employment.* fair employment
practice committee, minimum wa-
ges, universal military training
and merger of the Army and Na-
vy, rationing and price control,
compulsory health Insurance, bon-
uses for service men and pensions
lor Congressmen.
Doc H. Massie, local attorney,
; was hit on the head by an uniden-
j tified man early Sunday morning
! in an alley here and lost $25 from
, his billfold.
The attorney had been visiting
a relative In a local apartment
house, he said, and was walking
to his home nearby when hit on
the head in the alley between
Fourth and Fifth streets, at ap-
proximately 12:30 n. m. Sunday.
"All I know is I saw a flash,
like someone had shined a light
in my face," Mr. Massie said in an
interview this morning, "but na-
turally, I suppose a fellow would
imagine he saw a li^ht or stars
when hit on the head?'
"I came to later to find that my
glasses and hat hud been knocked
off and had a slight stab wound
in my side," he coniinued. "My
billfold was lying about eight or
ten feet away and although I did
have a little more money in it,
only $25 was missing."
He said that a local physician
had told him that the wound
his head looked like a blackjack
had been used. Massie stated that
apparently the alleged robber had
become frightened and dropped the
billfold and the remainder of the
money in it.
The source of the stab wound
was unknown by the victim, who
returned to his office this morn-
ing.
Both Sides In
China Accused
Of Truce Break
It's Cruel
CHUNGKING, Jan. 14—</P) —
The Chinese Nationalist govern-
ment and the Communists each
charged the other today with vio-
lations of the truce in their unde-
clared civil war, which was sup-
posed to have ended at last mid-
night.
A spokesman for the Central
government national military
council asserted that despite the
"cease fire" deadlino at Sunday
mid.iight, the Communists today
increased rather than ceased their
military operations.
The Yenan Red forces wore
charged with burning villages ell
along the eastern section of the
Lunghai railway, which cuts
through northern Kiangr.u prov-
ince to the Yellow sea and with at-
tacking Nationalist-held Anyang
on the Peiping-Hankow railroad
in northern Honan.
Meanwhile, C o m m unists in
Chungking were reported actively
interested in the government's
proposal to enlarge the state
Council, making it an all-party and
nonpartisan body and investing
it with supreme policy making and
directive authority.
Phone And Steel Unions
Postpone Walkouts, GM
Pressed For Settlement
liu i,«./ \vt.fcj Siuoii—..c.,>n
Board, under Chairman W. Wil-
lard T. Wirtz, fbove, is expccted
to outline shortly how a com-
pany can get official permission
to cut wages of its employes.
Procedure for granting raises is
already established.
Appropriation
Repeal Urged
By President
WASHINGTON. Jan. 14—UP)—
President Truman today recom-
mended to Congress the repeal of
appropriations aggregating $5.-
751,428,483 and of contract au-
tttortzaUons of $*20.07 ,©fl0. . -
A White House statement said
these amounts are in addition to
net recessions aggregating $50,345,-
409,169 approved by Congress
near the close of the last session.
The statement said:
"While the $50.3 billion recis-
sion bill ($51.8 billions less dupli-
cations between cash and contract
authority of $15 billion) was ve-
toed because of a legislative rider,
its objectives were accomplished
by a Presidential directive to the
budget director, placing in reserve
the sums contained in the bill."
The statement said that the ac-
tual reduction in authority to ob-
ligate the government in today's
recommendations is $5,021,887,483
because $1,149,620,000 of the ap- j
propriations not needed during the !
current fiscal year and now rec- j
ommended for repeal "will have to >
be appropriated in subsequent
years to liquidate contract au-1
thority still on the books.
Casualties Said
To Be Heavy In
Manila Explosion
„ MANILA, Jan. 14—(IP)—A tank-
er blew upp in Manila harbor to-
nijiht anc{ waterfront observers
feart;d loss of life was heavy.
The explosion occurred at 9:45
m. and threw a brilliant glare
er the entire harbor.
A military policeman aboard
jknother vessel, the Robert D. Ca-
frey, said the tanker was anchor-
about 2,000 yards out in the
-bar. V
"I saw a bright flame silhouett-
ing. another vessel nearby," said
the M. P., Pvt. Archie D, Geddes,
"and witbin a fraction of a second
the tanker was completely envelop-
ed in flames.
"Then a column of smoke and
debris shot Up a thousand feet.
"Then I heard very loud ex-
plosions which lasted for five
minutes.
"I am sure that many of those
aboard must have been killed."
A fire boat rushed to the scene,
and an hour later it appeared that
the remaining fire was being
brought under control.
Directors Of Chamber
Of Commerce To Meet
Argentina
Firms Close
In Protest
BUENOS AIRES. Jan. 14— (/IV-
A virtual blackout of commerce
and industry covered Argentina
todav at the start of a 72-hour
closedown called bv the nation's
business leaders.
The shutdown was in protest to
the military government's refusal
to modify a decree ordering wage
increases and year end bonuses
for workers.
There were no deliveries of
bread or groceries. The butchers
association annnounced shops were
open today but would close to-
morrow.
one would be deprived of "articles
of prime necessity,''
Representatives of the manu-
facturers. industrialists and busi-
ness expressed satisfaction of first
reports of the lockout.
Only factories where 24-hour
processing was necessary permit-
ted workers to enter and these
limited staffs to skeleton main-
tenance crews. The great pack-
ing houses Were idle.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 14—(AP)—The threat of a nation-
wide telephone strike was put off for at least 30 days today
and striking communications equipment workers, which
went on strike last week against the Western Electric com-
pany, was directed by telegraph today to get all members
back on the job by 1 p. m., local time, at each place they
have been on strike. i-
This action was announced by ■
association officials after a tel-1
ephone poll of their locals on a I
request of the executive board of'
the National Federation of Tele-1
phone workers that they defer I
their strike.
The federation, an Independent
organization, yesterday ordered a
national telephone strike but I
quickly postponed it for at least!
3" days to permit its locals to file
strike notices as required under
the Smith-Connally Act.
Telephone operators and other
members of the independent fed-
eration have in many instances re-
fused to cross picket lines estab-
lished by the ACEW last week.
causing a partial tieup Jn tele-
phone service throughout the
country.
Postponement of the threaten-
ed nation-wide strike of all tele-
phone workers plus CIO accept-
ance of the government-sponsored
compromise for General Motors
workers had served earlier to
brighten the labor picture.
•: Full Year 01
Price Control
May Be Asked
Behind this hope was the feel-
ing that a "breather" in tele-
phones and steel and further
pressure on General Motors
Corporation for settlement of
the 55-day old strike would im-
prove chances for settling all
three disputes. A steel settle-
ment particularly, could provide
a wage pattern for other indus-
tries.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 14—</P)—
Word went out to the reconven-
ing Congress today that President
Truman will ask a full year's ex-
tension of price control. That
would carry the act to June 30,
1947, and first reaction among re-
turning senators is that Mr. Tru-
man will get his request, possibly
in modified form
In his fireside chat January 3.
the President declared price and
rent controls will have to be main-
tained "for many months to come."
A senator with white house con-
tacts said a full year's extension
would be asked, possibly in Mr.
Truman's state of the union mes-
sage which is to be read next
Thursday.
Senator O <D-La) com-
mented: Jm
"I will supports full year's ex-
tension. Actually, it may have to
be retained two or three years."
Senator MtoCtellai. 'U-Aik> said
he was "not unalterably opposed"
to continuing the controls in modi-
fied form for Brother yeur, but he
added:! ,~1:iJt - " ,
"•*1* (9o "think ■"■Cengffess has -flot
to modify the overall powers in
the act/'
SWPC Provided Aid
To 5,412 Business
Firms In 3 Years
A meeting of the board of di-
rectors of the Borger Chamber of
In addition'to"the" othw recom- i Commerce will be conducted in the
mendations, the President pro- Chamber of Commerce office
posed the return to the treasury Wednesday afternoon at 4 o clock,
George Finger, president, an-
nounced today.
Quite a number of business mat-
ters will be discussed and Mr.
Finger urges all board members
to be present at the meeting.
of $346,890 in corporate funds.
Simmons Baby Girl
Buried Today Wiih
Graveside Service
reasons:
It is consistently steamheated-
ly warm in a city where biting
cold is the rule inside and out;
it has the best food outside of the
Imperial hotel and it's a place
where anything might happen—
and sometimes does.
Imagine having a 14-piece
Columbia recording orchestra play
for a dance without any compen-
sation excepting a dinner; or hav-
ing a bar where you can buy a
martini, manhattan, beer of what
have you; not to mention com-
fortable beds, plentv of service
and a bunch of good guys.
The correspondents were quar-
tered in the Dai Iti Hotel, but
the space got scarce, and the
correspondents corps got busy.
Alter considerable dickering
they finally obtained a bui'd-
ing complete with furniture but
minus its central heating sys-
tem.
to pay for reinstalling it. Nothing
doing." The Japanese replaced the
radiators.
Hospital beds and mattresses
were flown from Manila. Dishes
and silverware were scrounged
from Japanese warehouses. Food
was purchased from the army. A
staff of 80 servants was hired
from 2,000 applicants.
Then the stories started ac-
cumulating, including literacy
hundreds about the fabulous
Yonkai on the fourth floor,
where live most of the camera-
men. For entertainment they
grow beards, and the fir«t one
to shave must throw a geisha
party for the others and kick in
$100 besides. Needless to say,
no fourth-floor Yonkai has yet
shaven.
They also tell one about Christ-
mas eve when an over-exuberant
correspondent let loose with a .45
into the steel doors of the elevator.
Or the time they rigged a re-
—UP)
WASHINGTON, Jan. 14
—Chairman Maury Maverick said
today the Smaller War Plants
Corporation provided 5,412 small 'grandfather, C. W. Simmons, and |
businesses with $510,396,233 in as
sistance since September, 1942.
The corporation goes out of ex-
istence January 28, its functions
transferred by executive order to
the Department of Commerce and
Reconstruction Finance Corpor-
ation. Maverick will retire to a
private law practice.
He expressed hope in a state-
ment that the government will
continue to meet needs of small
plants. Loan applications last
month totaled 415, largest in
SWPC's history, Maverick said.
"The real little fellows, who
needed help the most, were the
ones who got the money," he re-
marked.
50-YEAR OCCUPATION
ADVOCATED FOR JAPS
TOKYO, Jan. 14—(/P)-
-Allied
Infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. | occupation of Japan for as long as
Karl Simmons of Bunavista died 50 vears was advocated today bv
last night at a local hospital. j Tomas Confesur. chief Philippines
Survivors, in addition to the j delegate to the Far Eastern corn-
parents, include the paternal! mission.
maternal grandparents, Mr. a n d
Mrs. Aubrey McMahon, all of Pea-
cock, Texas.
Graveside rites were held this
afternoon at 4 p. m. in Highland
Park cemetery. Interment was
under the direction of Blackburn-
Shaw funeral home.
EDINBURG NAMES
CITY MANAGER
EDINBURGH. Texas. Jan. 14—
(A1)—B. H. Cruce, formerly of
Georgetown, has been named City
Manager and Superintendent of
the municipal water system. May-
or W. D. Woodruff announced.
American Soldier
Condemned To Die
For Japs' Murder
OSAKA, Jan. 24—(IP) — Pfc.
Joseph E. Hicswa, 20, of Walling-
ton, N. J., has been condemned to
death by an army court-martial
for the murder of two Japanese,
98th division officers disclosed to-
day.
Hicswa's death sentencp, be-
lieved the first to be imposed on a
American soldier for a crime
against Japanese, must be re-
viewed by two higher authorities
before it can be carried out.
Witnesses testified the soldier
killed the Japanese after he had
drunk whiskey, beer, and sake at
the ancient temple city of Nara.
They said he was walking in a
park with two friends when he
observed two Japanese men stroll-
ing there. He shouted to his
companions, "Come on, let's get
'em."
One Japanese escaped but the
other was fatallv stabbed in the
head, neck and shoulders. A few
minutes later another Japanese
was slain in identical fashion.
Legion Guests Of Honor, Tonight
Tb -rvfceels ot ike nation's etoe;
industry Kept turning today as
CIO United Steelworkers re-
ported for work, their Scheduled
walKout postponed a week for
further wage negotiations. _ — i re-
production at "basic" steel i r OUr DBBu, i 1V6
plants—those which convert ore
to pig iron and the iron and scrap
to steel—was below normal as
tne companies sougnt to restore the
output of blast furnaces and open
hearths banked and cooled in
anticipation of a shutdown.
Reports from the steel centers
of the continent said workers
were obeying the order of CIO-
USYV chief fhuip Murray to go
to work as usual. Murray, at the
request of President Truman fol-
lowing an eleventh-hour parley
with president B. F. Fairless of
U. S. Steel Corporation, had de-
layed strike until next Sunday
midnight.
Murray and Fairless arranged
to resume Wednesday, again at
the White House, discussion of
the latest wage offer by the
Steel firm and a counter-pro-
See Number ONE Page 3
Injured In Auio
Accident Sunday
EL PASO, Texas, Jan. 14 — (IP)
—Four persons were killed and
five others injured in a head-on
automobile accident SO miles east
of here last night.
All of those killed and two of
the injured were members of a
family en route from Highland
Park. Mich., to San Diego, Calif.,
to visit the ensign husband of one
of the victims.
Dead were Cecil C. Youngblood,
48; Emilee Youngblood, 14, his
daughter; Dewey Youngblood, 47;
and Jamie Jay Burton, 2 1-2.
The injured were Mrs. Curtis C.
Youngblood, her daughter, Mrs,
James K. Burton, and the three
youths from Fort Hancock, Texas,
who were in the second car.
Unofficial Tally Shows Four
To Seven Opposition To Plan
(Editor's Note: This is the first in a series of five stories
on President Truman's proposal for a national system of
compulsory pre-paid "health inrurance" to cover the costs
of medical, dental, surgical and hospital care.)
NAZI'S SENTENCE
COMMUTED TO LIFE
BAD ZWISCHENAHN. Ger-
many. Jan. 14—(/P>—Canadian
Third Division headquarters an-
nounced todav that the death sen-
tence pronounced Dec. 28 on Nazi
Maj.-Gen. Kurt Meyer, convicted
of responsibility for the killing of
Canadian prisoner* of war, had
been commuted to life imprison-
ment.
Don Starr of the Chicago Tri- corder to the women's powder
bune berated the Japanese agent room for a dance, intendin
on that one with an indignant, play it back during the party,
"you take it out to make bullets was a disappointment. It didn't
ti shoot us and now you want us I work.
ig to
That
* Births
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Penland are
the parents of a 6 pound 2 ounce
daughter, born at 9:29 p.m. Jan-
uary 12 at Northwest Hospital,
Amarillo. The girl has been named
Pennye Carole.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Brucker arc
the parents of a daughter born
at 9:30 a.m. Jan. 14. The baby
weighed 6 pounds 13 ounces.
fi"
By FRANK CAREY
(Associated Press Science Reporter)
WASHINGTON, Jan. 14—((AP)—An unofficial tally of
one-fourth of congress on President Truman's proposal for
a national compulsory pre-paid "health insurance" system
today showed an approximate seven-to-four opposition.
The Associated Press conducted—■■ ■ ".im .
an informal poll among members! effects of sickness. The
of the house and senate just be- hasi arrived for action to help
fore the Christmas recess on the them attain that opportunity and
question: , thf protection.
1 Legislative bills based on the
president's proposal—but making
no provisions as to the manner in
'MONK" FOWLER
CALVIN SHAW
GARTH MASSINGILL
Lieut. W. S. "Monk" Fowler, nationally known sub-buiter, on leave from the U. S. Navy, will address
Legionnaires tonight at the Legion Hall. Also speaking on tonight's program are T. Sergeant Calvin
Shaw, Borger Marine who was wounded in action on Guadalcaral, and Corporal Garth Maisingil
recently discharged from tervlce with the Tenth Air Forcc in China, Burma and India.
1
"Do you favor President Tru-
man's proposal (or a national pre-
paid "health insurance" plan to be
financed by additional social se-
curity taxes and by general gov-
ernment revenues?"
One hundred and forty one bal-
lots were returned. Of these, 72
voted "no" and 43 voted "yes."
Seventeen were "undecided,"
three were "non-committal," and
six others gave qualified answers.
Of th« 141 ballots returned.
75 were from republicans, 63
from democrats, one from an
American labor party member,
and two by congressmen who
did not give their party designa.
tion. (Many of the ballots were
returned by mail.)
The ballots returned represent,
geographically, large sections of
the country.
President Truman made his
proposal in a message to conrgess
Oh Nov. 19, 1945, when he said
millions do not now have protec-
tion or security against the eco- i
which the health insurance pro-
gram would be financed— have
been introduced by Seantors Wag-
ner 'D-NY> and Murray fD-Mont)
and by Rep. Dingell (D-Mich.) the
bills were referred to committees
for study.
Of the 75 designated repub-
licans who returned ballots in
the Associated Press poll, only
four expressed themselves in
favor of the Truman proposal.
Of the 63 designated demo-
crats, 38 were for the proposal
and 12 were opposed.
At the time he recommended n
national compulsory pre- paid
"health insurance" system, t ho
president also recommended these
other four points in a national
health program:
Increai ed federal aid for hos-
pital construction; federal aid for
medicai education and research;
expansion of maternal health, pub-
lic health and child health serv-
ices: and disability insurance.
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Phillips, J. C. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 43, Ed. 1 Monday, January 14, 1946, newspaper, January 14, 1946; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth293405/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.