Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 155, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 23, 1945 Page: 2 of 8
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ditorials
THE BORGER DAILY HERALD
Published sit 205 Kuril M • s . • , .
except Saturday, and on Si.nd..;. m in r tv p.,;. • ,..j,
Company, Inc , I’jb . •!.< •
J. C. Phillips ____ Ed dm
One Year
Six Months
Three Months
Month '5 Weeks'
Weekly
Discovered a! Lasi—Perpetual Motion
Entered as second- i;. - n . t:<: X - n
Office at Burger, Tex under tt.• A •
The Associated Pi< t\ ■ •
cation of all news a. j .itcl.i : • • j
2 Wednesday. May 23, 1945
SILLY, BUT SINISTER
Borger, Texas
It is the Germans' silliness, not umir ami’ance and cruel-
ty, that makes them darn » toils. sa;. Richard K. Law. Bri-
tish Minister of State Their extreme quality of silliness
which made them accept as leaders the sweepings of the
slums and jails and asylums of Euioj ■
How silly the Germans were is shown by a e,lance back
at their late leaders:
Adolf Hitler—a bum and a sleeper in flop houses; too de-
void of talent to satisfy his ambition to be a painter, too i
lazy or uncoordinated to make a decent living through ht-.
meager abilities; a crackpot nobody until the war marie* I
him feel important; a sufferer from war-induced hysterical
neurosis; a flabby, undistinguished, uneducated, unbalanced, .
rabble-rouser.
Paul Joseph Goebbels— ridiculou little ne’er-do-well with
a head crammed full of book learning, like Hitler, a talent-]
less, thwarted, would-be aitist who wrote as badly as his
fuehrer painted.
Heinrich Himmler—weak of eve. chin and will; jobless,
colorless and purposeless until he caught up with the Nazis,
where his frustrations found relief in brutalities unpre- j
cedented in modern history,
Hermann Goering—vain, struttiiu spun; in: plundering,
porcine, former dope addict.
Karl Doenitz—once an inmate of an English insane asy-
lum.
A ridiculous lot certainly. But the Germans aren’t the
only people who ever took up with a pack of repulsive nonen-
tities. Our own history's shameful chapter of the Ku Klux
Klan was closed only 20 years ago. We can't forget the KIan's
broad political power, or the country’s tardiness in coming j
to its senses.
But this country did come to its senses. The Germans ]
didn’t. Their silliness might be explained as quantitative j
rather than qualitive. Yet there were many of Hitler's early
supporters who saw how ridiculous he and his gang really
were, and continued to support him because he served their and I'.-u.-t" -hips >■’ red hot* now‘in <’involve the* quest ion *«f how'tar
Peter Edson
IN SAN FRANCISCO
WARRENS BIG
POSTWAR JOB
SACRAMENTO, Cali f. — In a J
stale which goes in for the bigger j
j things of life the office of Cali- ]
lurniii '. Republican Governor Kail
i Warn n is typically tremendous. ,
] The Governor himself is big with
a b;g smile and big blue eyes and
1 tie sits behind one of the biggest
desk ever built. To his right are
!>ig windows letting in tin t’ali-
'orniu no-adjective sunshine Be
j hind him Ls a huge mural map of
| California and to his left hanging !
: high to overlook this lush office I
j landscape is a painting—big as life :
and twice a- natural as he used!
! to look 30 years ago—of Hiram j
i Warren Johnson.
That portrait is significant. The
firm of U. S. Senator Hiram John- j
on now 7!t years old, expires in
lanuary, 1947, and there is a mad i
a ramhle on for the senatorial seat I
he has held lo these last 29 years. I
Governor Warren rose in politics1
hrough the Johnson machine, and]
is almost reverent in his praise for j
the record of Hi Johnson made |
from 1910 to 1910 as one of the ■
most progressive reform governors I
any state ever had.
Today Governor Earl Warren
; laces problems that would proh-
j ably baffle Hi Johnson at his
School Equipment Drive Under Way
Waller Winchell
prime. Accurately speaking they
are not so much the problems of
reform as they are the problems
of a post-war reconversion]
amounting almost to revolution.
And Earl Warren, whose present ]
term in office will likewise expire !
in January. 1947, would obviously
like to be remembered as a great
governor in this difficult period. |
WANTS PARTIAL IN NEW YORK
RECONVERSION
California will have to continue Holl/wcod and Broadway
in the war effort until Japan falls Heartbeat
—possibly two years or more. In fans About rovvn K• *> ' r-r-
spite of this continued all-out war orson Roosevelt, boo!. i‘>ppm :
production Governor Warren bi- Bev.ily Hills about midnight -
lieves California industry should with the 2nd most publicized do;
be permitted to make partial re- jm the laud ( laire Windsor at
conversion beginning right now so Mocambo—-stealing the show from
THE SC HOOLS Ol Till. NATION are iluin- their part in the Seventh
War Lean Drive by rondurUng: an l.gui; mrnt < unpa1 ,m. \s each piece cf
rguipment is bought through the sale of War Ronds ils posture counterpart
is pasted on the board until the soldier is equipped. Il.ina Overt n, country
student, of Milwaukee High Setiocl, Oregon, si ms Miorl-.v Potter, rity
student of Lincoln Hij'i School, Portland, Orrg n, haw if., c! lie.
things he saw in th concentra-
tion camps '.md gas chambers!
where Germans tortured victims
. . Bill was h Ili ted in bombed-
out Hotel Excel ior at Munich.
Candles were the only illumina-
tion—and he knows how Mulcolm
Bingay ml the Dfruit Free Press'
himself was tortured. It was aw
tui, says Nichols, in agonized tone.
— Poor Malcolm . . The Detroit
editor d severed a typewriter in
room and, flushed with every-
that the industrial East does not the newcomers
TODAY
on the HOME FRONT
The War Today
BY DEWITT MACKENZIE
AP Foreign News Analyst
BY JAMES MARLOW
England’s forthcoming general
lection—the first in ten years—
SAN FRANCISCO, May 23—(T’i will be a momentous affair in sev-
The whole problem of mandates eral ways but especially becauf
TEXAS
TODAY
gain an unfair advantage. Fontaine's: "Oh. I am ulwuys b<
The Governor points to the cum big introduced to you -you old
of Detroit. Detroit made autos be- finger-snnppei V\
fore (he war and will return to at Larue's Whenever he encoun-
this manufacture after the war. No tors a certain colyutnist lie al-
Lovely Joan thing he hud se n, sat down and
by touch sy. tom 'unable to see the
paper in the machine1 typed stead
Pidgeon ily for lour hours -chasing Nich-
ols oat of the room w henever he
saunt led in f inally, Bingay
great problem there, savs Govern- ways sa.\ - on. word. "Iliank- ‘'ani'1 it. .\..\iiig roiled up sheet*
...------- »_ ---------•— -.i-j i xv.,..i, Uniiin........ ,i .i-.. of copy paper, and declared it was
BY JACK RUTLEDGE
Associated Press Staff
the United Nations Conference. John Bull has been affected by the
But here's a trick question. European swing to the "Left.
What happens to the mandates A lot can happen in a decade,
of the League of Nations when the and there has been a great change . v apv. v»eu
new world organization is set up in the political complexion of Brownsville
and the old league folds? many continental countries. This
various sinister purposes.
No, mobs have followed unworthy leaders in every land.
But the Germans’ arrogance and cruelty—those, we insist,
are unique and perpetually menacing.
CONGRESSIONAL JUNKETS
President Truman is reported to have given the green light
on the congressional junkets to Europe and while the “join
the Congress and see the world” excursions add another item
to the taxpayers’ war bill, we would say that they are a
good investment nevertheless.
The job of Congress today goes far beyond taking care of
constituents’ wants and doing a little reciprocal log-rolling.
Regional thinking and regional zeal are still an important All ..............
part of a congressman’s duties, but that shouldn't monopol- ™in! «»'*> ijit" teu-itory. commonwealth of Great" Britain”
Alter four
(ion—there
typewriter!
or Warren. In comparsion to find- • • • The Mark Heliin^eis and the
in* what California's war indus- Van Heflins in stitches over Joe the yn-iA t he had eve-
tries can produce in peace times. Everglades I>?vvis | arodies at ^inne l<> prove it. ii handed
The answer to that one the Gov- Ciro’> . J. Edgar Hoo er and the Nichols, who
j ernor says honestly he does not Clyde Tolton at Romanoffs giv- found not one word written down
know. Can the West produce steel ing couri-n*' to Jerry Wald ol War
Texans “somewhere in Ger- as cheap as it can be produced in n rs stall, whin he v.* ■
many" celebrated V-E Day by the East? Ii it can. there there what movies < ..ui-l do to help st"
playing cowbovs in jeeps. I may he a big future tor West juvenile delinquency . Al! Jol- --
r, „ p,,toor.it r,f Coast manufacture of civilian son. happier than ever, with hi. With Love and Kixxxxxxx! J
Lapt. aeo M K goods which can be sold to old and bride . . Louella Parsons sin: Carrol! NaishV suj erhumance ir,
. , _ new customers. juggling a typewriter with zing Paramount's "A Medal lor B «-
.■1..-- iwumiici- .u» “?ys had a tar and they sang The state now has an 8.500,000 —longer than all the others—n ar- ny. 'due at the Riv oh on the 23rd
The Allies in World War I took has been particularly marked in Mexua so g . '* population as against 6,000,00 be- ly 30 years . . A New Yorker Phil Baker's giad-ltb; on hi
a lot of territory from Germany recent months as the Germans w’!* a. . tj . , lore the war. About one-third of in the Blue's control room -mak Sunday-nightci . .lane Pick-
and Turkey. This included Syria, have been ev icted from occupied . 1 c . . ..2 . the war veterans discharged in ing faces at J. Fidler. ,-ns at Veisallies on E. Sotli
Iraq, Palestine, colonies in Africa, states. /■•Yi„Vi e- 2,j. u:„ h‘J ' , J h” California were born in other --- The Havsna-Madrid show . . .
islands in the Pacific, The main battle in England will i 1 U ' states but want to settle here if Sallies in Our Alley: Edit i “On the Town ' The wry Itlort
The big Allied powers in that |je between the Conservative parly t<Ua' __ j they can find jobs. Gwyun relays the one about Joan Downey tov; with "Mail Call" . . .
j war. United States, Britain. France, under leadci -hip of Prime Minis- i Governor Warren's Democratic Benn.lt, who said to her groom, Lany Dougla> vei sion of "Am
Italy and Japan—all had joint ier Winston Churchill, and the Five-year-old MUte, gwfndson of opposition in the State Legislature Walter Warner: "Darling, do ye,, vviicp T il Shopiio's new
title to each piece of seized tetri- Socialist <or Labor' partv. The Mrs.Aluste Cunningham of Brown- has introduced a full employment realize that any moment well "He > Horn a Util
tory. latter has come out flatfooted for wood, celebrated V-E Day too He bill modeled on the Murray Bill j have been married five years While The b.« "Don't Wat
ta.e together couldn’t ad- the establishment of "a Socialistic did a little liberating of his own. introduced in the U. S. Senate. - Said Waiter: By the way. Up For Spring.’ I,y Id Cha.
»ry. Commonwealth of Great Britain” Mrs. Cunningham said she re- Cagilv, the Governor has not swe t. what is the Utth wedding Mergendatil Jeanuie Harrison a
l'ze his time and attention as thev usuallv can do * Sll‘ *n ‘ i(l1 ,a'e t,H* Bve titleholu- which would call for sweeping na- turned home to hear Mike shout- Committed himself on this highly anniver.-.-uy . ’I" ' “■ *•
So we think it would he hiohlv henefieiol „ ;ei> ananged lor one to be admin- tionaiization of industrv and far ing, "Ely quick, before the Ger- revolutionary piece of state ltgis- what ' . Giggled ,,,..it. i di» •
, U beneficial if every con- istrat... ,caching public ownership, mans get you." Ution. But he points out that all no, d.olu:: ,J ve never v .ten thi-
grcSwinan could see just what war has done, could meet the Thus no nation took lull pf-ns- xhe Conservatives have a large He “liberated” more than 50 debate so far has been of minor I far belon* At ,» leritM
survivors of Nazi prison camps, examine the war’s awful ’;on ' • mi',:,lale ■' •’•!m;i!y ad- i .,.tv m the prese*t Hou-e of choice Cornish game chickens. At detail. Entirely neglected has of
ministered it. For example: The Commons but the cabinet is a co- last reports they were still miss* been ttu key question of, “How head
can any state guarantee lull cm- was brought to order ’Ari l id i
ployment to its citizens under any era Helburn quipjxu l,i*1MK • ■
big-lime dneitum of • Boston
iJiackie ’ via. the Mutual Network
C aro} hruee torching “SI jgh
Hide in July" . G "Doi-
iy S Mers ' <20th C entury-Fox , out
oi the top drawer.
..Lo** acting like a woman!’
............ .... ‘Foolish Notion.” Talu Bank-
aftermath of hunger and homelessness get reports on Eu- ^ln crc'(: 1,01 i xanii;i' The Commons but the cabinet is a co- last reports they were still miss
lns-
as OWI. | Another meeting of the old Churchill obviously will have at Pfc. Quentin C. Ulrich of Berg- COTTON, MAGNESIUM
__ , v stront assets as he *tr0R1 Beld figures he has enough PLASTICS Movietown Vignette: It happen*
SfORIMP pr ay deal up some ol the pro • V- ... e points 1 get out of the Army but A West Coast textile industry ed the .-trier mum at < iro
oucimnu rua i lletns involving the mandated terri- his great war leadership and the tor a whi,e be was worried. based on California’s new produc- jThe usual group of teeu-ag: rs wa
In the fabulous borough of Brooklyn, New York, a girl tory of World War I. other will lit in the tact that if he He became the father of a "12- tion of long staple cotton is hope- bunched at the entrance surround-
office worker tossed a bag containing $1050 to a feminine IJut ,ake Britain and Palestine 1S deteated now i; will mean point” baby boy on V-E Day—just ful but uncertain possibility tor ing the celebrated patrons, especi-
colleague The second girl mi-sod the toss and the hn< flew ogain an?thcr. examPle: Sup- •’changing horses in the middle of faur ,d®ys before the deadline for future employment. California's ally pretty Ann Miller the Mai .dent, and 4a minute later vv
. C . . * • "i'T? Ut 1 ASS a, 1 . DdL lle'’ pore the old league doesn't the stream" that is before the war f)sunng points on children in the big now magnesium industry, as!- ■ • Took h:r more than ten nave another President But
out me window. A passing bobby-soxer neatly intercepted ..traighUn out the mandate prub- i. ;ji( i'ar’iiie ha- peen ,, iuV'd adjusted service rating. j represented by Kaiser’s permanent 'minutes autographing and pos:ng ,(i >w.( ;..i qui- i . <«.!d during
the goal line. Not a tackier laid a hand on her. iem and suppose Britain doesn’t Then too his supporters will main- -
When last we heard the police we were still seeking her. want to Put Palestine under trus- tain that it will be unwise to re-
so we can’t end the story properly. But if the law lets her go '‘ p1 !h ,i i,,. , movc’ him from the ‘•ouncil., of the
Hollywood Gag A! Jols.cn re-
caie.t lot- crowd at Daves Blue
Room with it last night . . An
Italian restaurateur was wringing
his h.intis and groaning . . .
"What's the matt r? asked Jolson
. . . “Our Great America" almost
wept the man, "loser- a great l’res-
U months
she’s a cinch to get a scholarship offer from some freshwater
college. In this time of scarce talents, you don’t run into a
pass receiver like that every day.
Don’t lend to people who are
repay you.
negotiate with this country and
France since both countries have
equal title, with Britain, to Pales-
_ tine.
,i i , , ,, 1 I ills might give the diplomats a
so thankful they can never few gray hairs, trying to work it
“Big Three” at such a critical
juncture in world affairs.
Churchill may be expected to
wage a tough tight. Veteran of
many political battles, he is by
far the most colorful figure in
England's political life and has
out. Eventually it might be a prob- the rugged personality which to
--Iem for the new world court. But the average Briton typifies John
At least we don’t need any points to ret a cold shoulder a? :l;v m- likely that Bull. His move in torcim. a quick
from the butcher i!hv "ld, m"' ;,t‘ • nrc not Hb» go- election is shrewd, for the argu-
• ,mn "-‘'bled up by the man
metals development, offers more for the amateur hocus-focusc tush hour, and it tuk-
hope but uncertainty, as does the, • AH of whom paid no atten- m nnd another one."
But ( apt. Lyle Snader, also of p]asfj^ industry. tion to the one man, who perfect- Sounds in the At the
Bergstrom, isn’t as fortunate. Governor Warren faces squarely ed sound --which makes ii posst- stork Club: "Every time I meet
( apt. Spader, a training secre- what too many of the ballyhoo hie for Mi;-.- Miller -and the red cd I r< il!v !;k. ii eithc i rnar-
tur>, figured his points from every boys have been inclined to gloss o! usi to he s en o’i the screep. i u-d—or I am' At the Gam
angle, finally sighed and gave up. over—that California is primarily • and heard on the radio . . The H’ock "Hey ip' -rdoo-. e me to th>
"Just enough for one meat ball, ’ an ari(j Sf8te which won’t have 1 "Id-*inter wa I^e lh-For.-:-t, t!-< t, t: -. dame with tin Earl Wd-
”e fcaid- ; enough water to go around, or to, sound magician' -on ' At Topsv '• The dil-
: irrigate additional acreage unless ....... cn in c bet ween a pi ..(dent and
DIRECTIONS FOLLOWED
TO THE RED LETTER
lit saves every drop that falls from
I the skies.
Watch the traffic lights—even the best of motorists often
take a turn for the worse.
Giant Onions
California should have a single
WILSON, N. CL—A ration board ' "authority" of its own, says
merit that he i needed in office clerk returned an unsigned gaso-, “,e Governor flatly.
for war leadership is powerful. line pplication with the directions.! -—
"Please complete and sign your CONTENTS KNOWN-
Gone to Pot application in the place checked
with red pencil.” The form came I CHICAGO — A truck jolted
: down California Ave., and unseen
Cigaret makers say there’ll be more smokes for civilians I grow "from . . , ' ^ ___________
nuJkT’fI sUlh have t0 sta,nd,Fn line ,Now maybe thpre’11 be a : ,!r° ’1 ;m': n ^ withTnS^thTut a 64‘pound carton
pack left when you reach the counter. ,nrhps k • —• *♦— -....... - -
When you’re willing to argue with a fool that evens it.
inches iri diameter, and weigh on early
more than thr.ra pounds apiece.
Peace Harbinger
Cupid already has his orders for the month of June-
on sight!
-shoot
NEW
I ent Ch-
land ha
J the* Lot
A Colorado deputy jailer was charged with bootlegging .-htrd
Maybe he's been keeping bad company.
, ,, , - - --------------- --------- ... the pavement. A doz-
pottery Iragments tin- Back came the application, with en housewives and six men pounc-
« ,- j in new Canterbury excu- this note: "Please pardon mo, I ed on it like wolves on a fallen
can't find a red pencil here in Elm deer. A woman produced a knife
City. I borrowed this one from and started to divide the contents
Up In the Air the bank. That was why I couldn't Others, impatient, dug up the stufl
,, „„ 'write with red first. Thank you.” with their hands.
...HINGIG.V — Tiie Air The signature was in red. I It was butter
transport Association says the av-1--------------
< i: cc pa.- enger trip by air in 1943
wa.- 537 miles and the average trip
by rail was less than 50 miles.
OUT OUR WAY
By WILLIAMS
O’JR BOARDING HOUSE with MAJOR HOOPLE
[gpe/xtcaesa-r'
.LV
TYAS7AtgDL'i Diet
. O ALMObL 'jVCgASL T
CuBes vxtL BevOitc
— I'VE LOST <W2 /
LET'S CHAtCoE THE:
PA-STlWETO p-
k, blackjack: f JT
^ /
NAME VOUR.) /'THIS IS
Pfzem , )( THE Best
: i Bosixiess
• iCi- M'-V/ \ ' KYtGHT
I ?/ WOG'XJE BAD
- rTER-'M / ( SIWC& TBE-
1 A. CRWfc \ \ LAST
Oi Wt^ACVtCD ( BLACKOUT,
NVLOUSf / V. 3AVKE/
A
(3SVJlM£>
PactY-
Memos of a Midnighter: The i dictator is this: For 12 years we
USO-Camp Shows need hundreds -ad Roosevelt and for those same
of singrrs, ballet girls and tap- 12 years Germany had Hitler!"
dancer; lor overseas trouping in At the Bark ( entral Loung
II musicals. Top names needed Time mooches on' At Brad
also. Apply USO-Camp Shows at iey's "Is tie a wolf? Every time
8 East 40th St., N.Y.C. Form* he taki - a walk h< get’ a cinder-
er H. T. drama critic Dick Watts, el la in hi: eye" . At Ruban Bleu:
Jr., may start his own mag . . -Sn reminds me of somebody
The producers of the film “Oil- mothci My dachstind's." At the
linger” report that exhibitors, pa- Hotel Dixie Plantation Room:
trons and many critics enjoyed Our aimies have turned the
th picture and that it ha- hung ,oo. cstcii - nito goo: i-pimple1 . ■ .
up some hew records in N. Y.. Al Reuben's: "If she wei an\
Ciney anrl Detroit ... At a special !meaner, she would have been
meeting of Equity the other day j born in Germany,"
an aged character actress 'in j Broadway Confucius: A Lotta
making a point' spoke so dispar- Fellers Who Complain That Then
agingly of FDR tr,e audience al- I Boss i Dumb Would Be (Jut of a
most tor? her to shreds. She was .job if He W. re Smarter.
hissed and booed off. . . . Pilots - •—
at Miami Beach will betcha their n Thovi (Jm
prisoner the other flight was vo.i 50 1 Hey oily
Ribbentrop. G-man Hoover de- -phe archaic and obsolete triaty-
nies it . - . Suggestion: Put Her- making machinery ol the Senate
maim 'Mevei 1 Go ring in a monk- ls menace to the peace and se
ey cage with otner fat baboon-, ,,,, jty , t America,
senh him on a Coast-to-Coa: t tour _scn. C'laude I’epptr, Florida,
and charge Americans a $100 bond * • ~
for a gander at the superman. There will be time enough la-
-- ter to consider the long-range
Tribute: 'By Don Wahn). problems ot the cogeneration of
You re in my heart for many se tin German: Our stay in Germany
cret things . . Your laughtzr — is likely to be long
when the lane is dork and strange. —Lt.-Gen Lucius I). Clay, deputy
The warmth and glow your aim- military governor in American-
ple courage brings. The gay atm : occupied part of Germany,
charming way your moods can * * *
change . . You're in my heart— The Americans are employing a
lor taith that seems to shed. A new tank 'General Pershing'
radiance that lifts the twist d against which no available fire
I soul. And points the way to power is effective.
(brighter days ahead. When two |—Col. Joseph M Colby, Detroit
jean reach a mystic, cherished goal . Ordnance Department Office.
. . So, if at times the thunder' * * *
j crash is deep . . So, it at time;, We’ll take her, but the exist may
the s-ightning tints the sky . . . So, be high.
if at tim.s the very heavens weep. —Col. Merlin F. Schneider, 22nd
Here is a truth that time raum
deny . . . You're in my heart—
and down the years to be . . Y'ou
will be hope and trust — and
rest say!
Marines, about to cross Aside
river into main section ol Naha,
Okinawa.
We need to think in terms of
-— , I encouraging and rewarding the
Nevyspaperman Novelette: Bill i tremendous production, hard work
Nichols, on of the editor* invit'd and skill of the American famv-r
by Eisenhower to witness the sav- rather than paying him to supprt ’
agery ot the Nazis in Germany. |us ability and his skill
appetite So took up on those good | a heaping bowlful every morning. Not only becauu "o'tetribfe N*!’ * y!!! Tl ,,nin<' p n‘ u Pv 04
“Y ou can select the silverware and china.
I’ll take care of the Wheatfaa!”
You can take care of plenty of! whole wl eat flakes. Get lota of
Whaaties—when their “second help*, milk, fruit, and Wheati—, "Break-
ing” flavor gets to work on your fast of Champions.” Start off with
W~\
k
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Phillips, J. C. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 155, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 23, 1945, newspaper, May 23, 1945; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth736204/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.