Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 110, Ed. 1 Friday, July 24, 1936 Page: 6 of 16
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NOVEL FEATURE OF THIS YEAR’S CAMPAIGN
4
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Telephone No. 1.
With
News
*■
COMM ENI) A BI ,E A CT ION
H
m
By RODNEY DUTCHER,
li-
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vacationing
thr
.'Illy
snappod
bit
WE MUST PLAN FAR AHEAD
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r
ii
es-
SINCERITY
/
Mi
A CRIM
NEW, ADVANCED SAILOR
TAKES HIS STATION
except
who got
D. R. Harris, President
Geo. W Bowman. General Manager
J. Lawrence Dean, Editor
he
while
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Bet I
l o
to
I h I :
!>'” fol
When
FUNERAL HOME
Day or Night
PHONE Ml
Ambulonco torviM
1
rijniitrtwti Satly Nnun Editorial $age
Published every afternoon (except Saturday) and Sunday morning
Office 105 South Marshall.
1
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A
K
BEHIND THE SCENES IN
WASHINGTON
0
b
Private Exchange Connections With Business,
Circulation and Mechanical Departments.
5!
j'
a total of more
A! any estimates
Five centa per copy, week days and Sunday. De-
livered by city carrier, 20 centa per week, BO
centa per month, $0.00 per year. By motor route.
16 cents per week, 50 cents per month. By mall
UtRusk and adjoining counties: 3 months $150
om"‘ ' _
in Texas and In Louisiana, Arkansas and Okla
homa—3 months $2.00, 6 months $3 50, one year
$0.00. AD other States: 3 months $2 50, 6 months
$4.00, one year $7.50.
I
»
A great many fishermen in
Nova Scotia lubricate their auto-
mobile, boat, and truck engines
with oil obtained from a small
species of whale.
Iiv the most spec-
<>f rabble-rousers
political party in
only the late
it. vital lead-
po'shdions now are
The Dally News carriers aro Instructed to place
papers on subscribers’ porches, regardless ol
weather. A report on failure to make porch de-
livery is appreciated by the circulation depart-
ment. Failure to recelvo the paper by 6:30 week
A Serve* Staff Correaipondant
IOLLYWOOD, July 24—This
the, heaviest production period
icreen history, yet the studios
tn Jess crowded than usual, be-
se so many companies are on
Ition. Ordinary technical dif-
llties have been pretty satis-
torily overcome, but other de-
lta provide plenty of headaches
the outdoor crew.
tourists are a
t|. ..
V T~~f
"The minute I laid eyes on him I knew he was going to fall
n^adly in love with me.”
-....... 1 ;
YD'
41
I ■' J
xs
vis**
((
M
m
a--’--
There Is perhaps no
element more Import-
ant In the last rites
than the element of
sincerity. And, under
the direction of an ex-
perienced staff, that
sincerity Is carefully
and perfectly maintain-
ed In all the services
we conduct.
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
Publishers
The 1935 output of automobile
trailers of the tourist type was
approximately 15,000
,
Hen la Village Pet.
DUART, Ont. (UP).—A hen
has become the village pet here
beer use of its ability to Imitate a
rooster. The hen often crows and
struts around like a proud cock.
In between times she acts like a
well-behaved hen.
IL,
EH
$
■ / ll
k.
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
Entered as second class matter at the Postoffice in Henderson. Tex., under Act of Congress, Mar. 3, '879
‘ i
J IF.* / .<■
* I wk-
A (<**•/ AF’ ' J
administration
bill providing
ihsit congressional committees
inic.lit take recalcitrant witnesses
io court on contempt charges in
I lie summer and fall as well as
when Congress was in session.
Tin- bill passed House and Son-
Late without amendment. But
. cmeonc on the Senate side wrote
• or ii "passed with amendments.”
There are plenty of commercial
Dp-followers who know enough
itay behnd the cameras and
keep quiet. These arc the pro-
moters of mobile hot dog and
j bqd* pop stands. They do very
i ,W$il soling their wares to per-
ftfrmers, laborers, and tourists.
Place* for Pickup*.
The tourists usually arrive in
Blito trailers, pitch camp as close
i to the company as possible, and
often remain throughout the
shooting. Occasionally they’re
hirid as extras, and none can say
, !’0o” to an assistant director's
f After of $5 a day.
“cores of less fortunate high-
hoboes are regularly kicked
of the lines to the chuckwag-
on^, A few film companies issue
" |1 tickets to their own people
that tramps and tourists can’t
N free meals.
ame groups of vacationing
, Ooragians in ancient cars made
thi/rounds of the locations. They
firtt appeared nt Yuma and had
a qouple of weeks’ work as Arabs.
' p, they popped up at Lone
, 1000 miles to the north,
earned a few dollars as la-
Then they sped down
■coast and helped with the
Players on
Location
Can’t Escape
Tourists
■f —
f U||w«lcoin« Visitors Shake Nerves
Directors by Wandering
•>’. B Into Camera Range, or
L Sneaking Into Food
Lines.
jx By PAUL HARRISON,
with electric refrigerator, kitchen-
et, and shower.
Everybody had fun
some ot the Indians,
painfully sunburned.
Melted Belle Replaced.
TIFFIN, O. (UP).—Bells to
. leplaco those which meltod in a
toung'and Kent Tay- church fire, were, blessed and in-,
prided with a special s tai lari in St. Jpseph'a Catholic
The recent action of the Henderson city council in tak-
ing the watermelon situation in hand should be commended
by the citizens who have a dislike for flies and mosquitoes
and that sad, sour smell that only a spoiled chunk of the
fruit can ooze off into the ethar.
It has been the habit in the past that every person
who could dig up the price of a nickel melon and find the
shade of a convenient tree or house has been privileged to
devour whatever his capacity might require and leave the
balance to rot and sour, which brought on a very unsavory
and unsanitary condition.
Watermelons are perfectly okay in their place, but
they should not be strewn over the streets to breed flies,
gnats and litter alleys and sidewalks.
City dads aver that offenders will be fined lightly for
first offenses, but a second call will bring sterner treat-
ment.
A new angle in the measure is the fact that the sellers
of the melons may also be hailed into court in case they do
not use proper precaution in seeing that the rinds are
hauled off the streets.
If that had been correct, the bill
couldn’t have become a law, as
the House had no time to- pass
on any Senate amendments.
The bill went on the wrong pile
and considerable inixup resulted.
Fi rally everything was straight-
ened out and the bill was saved
by the quick flight to Jasper and
Uvalde.
Significance of the episode is
that important Senate investigat-
ing committees will be able to
make things immediately hot for
witnesses who refuse to answer
their questions, instead of being
compelled to wait until after
election—and until Congress re-
convenes in January—to be able
to start prosecutions.
The committees to which this is
most important are. those investi-
gating campaign funds expendi-
tures, labor espionage and civil
liberties violations, railroad
nancing, and lobbying.
Lewi* “Quick On Draw.”
, If husky John L. Lewis, leader
of the mine workers and other in-
dustrial unionists, doesn't' look
look out, he will be getting a rep-
utation as a wisecracker.
'I he question came up as to how
William Green, whose meinber-
,,hip in the A. F. of L. derives
from membership in the miners’
union, could still be president of
the A. F. of L. if the United Mine
Workers were suspended.
it was pointed out that he
could be elected to another un-
ion Lewis suggested that Green
might get into the musicians’ un-
ion, because, he said, Bill was an
accomplished fiddler. Then
added, after a pause, “
Rome burns!”
“What’s the charge'.’” he was
asked after it was announced
that the Committee for Indus
tiial Organization unions would
t. o on trial.
“Exceptional activity!'
1.1'WIS.
♦---------------♦
|Side Qlances^By Qeo. Clark’
♦------—------- -----4
t-----— ------------
Vi
WASHING I ON, July 21 The
aniusinjr an<l exciting aspects of
the Townsend movement's con-
version in (’leveland still gave
little indication as to the size of
the vote the Lcinke ticket will
loll up this year.
Among politicians, hardly any
on • has heard of who is at the
moment guessing
than 1,500,000.
run below that.
Despite the fact that Dr. Town-
send himself and the Rev. Gerald
Smith have joined Father Cougii-
no particular boom in the Nortn
Dakota congressman’s stock.
One reason is that it appe
o be manifestly impossible
“deliver” the Town endites
presidential candidate
Townsend’s hold on
lowers is none too firm,
the impressively large crowd of
del .'gates cheered. Gomer Smith’s
pro Roosevelt speech almost as
hysterically as they did Couh-
lins vicious attack on the presi-
dent, it began to appear '.hat the
doctor’s dream of controlling mil-
lions of votes might bo slightly
cockeyed.
A further tip-off is that the
three states of the Pacific (’oast,
Politician* Study Townsend Con-
vention Activates to Guess Size
of Lemke Vote . . . 1,500,000
Seen as His Limit . . . John L.
Lewis Quick on Verbal Trig-
ger . . . Reason for All the
Rush on Bill Sent by Plane to
Bankhead and Garner is Re-
vealed.
11
K?? Wourists are a problem. Hun-
dreds of motoring nomads have
4 icotered that they can haunt
1 vorite location spots and see
n nerous stars and the shooting
exciting sequences.
t’s very trying on the frazzled
m* of location directors when
vsjnxed young women, clad in
si rta, wander into camera range
d ring the timing of a costly
MHWry charge.
months $2 75, ono year $5 00. By mall elsewhere
I days, 7:00 a, m. Sunday, should also bo reported
I to tho circulation department. A representative
la In tho office each evening until 6:30, and until
| 9:00 a. m. Sunday, to adjust complaints.
Advertising,
Out of the tragedy of the 1936 drouth conies talk of
abandoning vast stretches of the prairie states under a
wholesale re-settlement program. More sensible, how-
ever, is the proposal that a gigantic irrigation and conser-
vation program he launched to make such migration un-
necessary.
Which is to say that the current drouth, climaxing
many years of hardship and aridity for the farms, has
driven home a very vital lesson—that the drouth problem
essentially is a long-term proposition. "Dry farmers"
and agricultural experts alike are agreed that something
more than the spending of emergency millions for relief
of human beings and livestock must be worked out.
Just what such a program should involve may be
problematical. But in any case it is clear that a long-
range program looking far beyond the immediate crisis is
necessary.
The sailor in Uncle Sam’s fleet used to be a gnarled
and shaggy person who could lay out on an ice-coated yard
in a howling winter gale, spit dead to windward, and lick
any three waterfront tavern keepers single-handed.
He was rough and he was tough, and his officers ruled
him with brutal hands of iron because they knew that, if
they didn’t, he was apt to pitch them bodily out of the cab-
in windows.
This old-timer has gone off to oblivion along with the
square-rigged sailing ships that were his home, and the
modern generation of sailor is as unlike him as the air-
craft carrier Saratoga is unlike Old Ironsides. And in this
difference there is a great deal more tan a mere loss in
picturesqueness.,
An order went out the other day from the U. S.
Navys Bureau of Navigation, in Washington, announcing
that, due to a shortage of officers, a great, many battle
stations on the fighting ships traditionaly filled by com-
" ......men.
' ine intelligence and competence of the enlisted per-
missioned men. would hereafter be taken by enlisted m;
"The intelligence and competence of the enlisted
sonnel of the navy,” is higher today than it ever has been
before in the history of our navy, and it is confidently felt
that utilization of chigf petty officers . . . will permit the
navy to carry on without reduction in efficiency.”
All this would seem to leave the modern sailor about
three laps ahead of the fabulous old-timer.
Now the old-timer was just as good a man as t he color-
ful traditions of the sea say he was. He could reef an furl
knot and splice, pull his weight in a small boat, and take
50 lashes with the cat without uttering a whimper.
But he could have no more have filled one of the bai-
lie stations traditionally reserved for commissioned of-
ficers than he could have jumped over the moon.
For with all his seamanship and his sturdy self-re-
liance, the old-time sailor was usually pretty much of a
clod. The waterfront and the forecastle were his only
school, and the teachers in those institutions believed
firmly that to spare the rod was to spoil the child. He
was a marvelous fighter if properly led—but he had to be
led.
Now look at. the modern sailor. He has an education
better than that of the average officer of Decater’s day.
He is at home among intricate technical devices that would
have had the old-timer tugging his forelock in helpless be-
wilderment. At sea he is a skilled craftsman; ashore, lie
is a gentleman.
We often indulge in a great deal of silly talk about the
glory and romance of the sea in those old, departed days—
the days of iron men and wooden ships, as the old saying
has it.
It’s about time we realized that the modern sailor is
actually a better man than his predecessor. The Navy
Department knows it, and is trusting our national defense
to a reliance on the fact.
/I J
Lirthplaco and chief stronghold
of the Townsend movement, arc
generally considered certain to
go for Roosevelt this year by big
majorities.
Nevertheless, the Union Party
’.vi 11 be backed I
tacular group
gathered into a
our time - lacking
Huey Long to giv
el’s hip- and
likely to fall wide of the mark,
(ither way.
I'he ticket will get min h or
m >.J, of what 'ynical noldicians
cal' the “nu: vote” and nobody
really I’.n-avs 1 ow big thi'.t vote *s.
Rush Flight Explained.
You may have noticed an in-
ter. . ting story about the night
IbL’ht of an army transport plane
to Jasper, Ala., to get a bill pass-
ed in the closing days of Con-
gress to Speaker William Bank-
supporting Lemke, then* i ; I hmid for signature.
Then the plane took off to
IA aide, Tex., where Vice Presi-
dent Garner also .signed the meas-
ure. 'I'he bill was supposed to b<*
a rather inconsequential one, ov-
erlooked in tin* In. tminute rush
on Capitol Hill
Tin' inside story is this: In the
closing days the
t»u.l’ed through a
that congressional
SoS
\ / Y 7^ Y J A AN .
Saar
W
Ne
Pine,
botara”
Inf of “Ramona.”
80 P.raonnl Appearance*.
tar* with theater operators at
iby towns invariably occur
loon as a location company
ta down for shooting. The
jtor men always want the
1 to tnake personal uppear-
B in their tiny show houses.
$ unwritten Hollywood luw
(bita this—because the play-
I are working hard enough,
; anjffay—but it makes for gruinb-
j lingfand threats of boycott. Feel-
rail are soothed by having the
act^asses invite ! the exhibitors to
I dinner, and "to watch the evening
1 rushes shown at the camp.
<h Sat Bad Example*.
Movie folks aro not always
I Welcomed by the townspeople,
aithar. Extras and bit players,
, taken along on location trips, us-
| ually Btrut into the towns of an
I OTefflnc and assume roles of
I freqt Importance.
Some of them misbehave in an
I effort to live up to the traditions
of Bollywood gaiety. All this up-
aeta bdvic aplomb, makes the lo-
cal young folks unmanageable
. for Weeks, and causes talk.
One location company was
tabliahed near a quiet hamlet
fiuntd for its hot-springs switn-
i mini pool. After work, the movie
I players, dressed in no more than
[ what liberal Hollywood allows,
Bwarmed to the pool.
They enjoyed several such dips,
hut one day found their entrance
’to tho baths barred by a commit
tee of grim and indignant local
I matrons. The latter had decided
that,, their menfolks had seen
| anoufh.
1 £ Fun In Camping.
BJf location job brings plenty
>w>rt, but, fun, too. A troupe
800 players lived several weeks
the San Jacinto mountains
"Ramona” was filmed.
cabins housed the ma- i
everybody received exact*
MB same food, and everybody
M^t 4:30 a. m. to begin work
B^Bjgra to batch the white
light, favorable for
■7# |
1
Your Baby's Health
I WILL PAY CASH
k
i
1
F
Better Heat...
Better Health ..
PHILADELPHIA (UP)
UNITED GAS SYSTEM
STERLING MOTOR OILS
YOUR SHRRf
in the JOYof IIVIDG
USE NATURAL GAS FOR HAPPINESS’ SAKE
r
YOUR
ELECTRICITY
IS THE
BIGGEST BARGAIN
YOU BUY,
tin IT ED GDS
SV STF 111
t/s* Fv^ry matchlrii ronvtnlenM
Natural Gat afordi!
Nertl you drrad winter'* Ills bo*
Onuae of the healing In your home?
• not with Automatic Gaa Heat aa
near a« the neareat telephone!
Henderson, Jolnerville
and Wright City
irabla advara
dlsplavo—
also
to be
mum in suilta
checks
MALARIA
In 3 days
COLDS
first day
HEADACHE,
30 minutes
FOR GOOD USED CARS
A. H. GARDNER, Dealer
200 N. Main St.
At Texaco Station
GIVE US A
TRIAL
SPUNKEY’S
SERVICE STATIONS
666
Liquid, Tablet*
Salve, nose drops
Need you throw away left-over
foods, or auffer over a hot stova In
•ummrr? Not with Modern Caa Re-
frigeration and Modern Gaa Cooking
available.
Try "Rub-My-Tism” - World’s
Best Liniment
Install an Automatic
Gas Floor Furnace
now!
range to open the
promptly, particularly
bulging as a sign
A’-.
WINTON, Minn. (UP)—Min-
nesota’s north lake country has
yielded a white teaver.
Exhausted and gasping, the al-
bino was found floundering along
the Sioux river by a CCC worker,
who brought it into Winton.
Game Wardens Joseph Krall
and Joseph Rozman, who viewed
the beavor, reported it was suf-
fering from numerous cuts and
bruises. It was believed to have
been ousted from the colony by
other members who regarded the
white beavtfr as an “outcast.’’
The animal will be transferred
to a state park for permanent
displays after a short stay at Win-
ton.
~ ’ -TL—---------------
_
HAKE WHITE BEAVER
FOUND IN MINNESOTA
SEE TOII BEALES! Vour Sealer ran fell you of lha Incom pan
tag** of Modern Caa Appllaneea. Go to hit Bloro* 4o< him thow you hit
aak hit ads lee!
.' cti'i! r t'BT.'^M
relieve the pain immediately and
will also help prevent the likeli-
hood of infection spreading from
the ear to the mastoid.
Sometimes the pain of an eat-
ache may be relieved in an early
stage by dropping into the ear
some warm eardrops, composed
usually of glycerin with a small
percentage of boric acid or phe-
nol. Such a solution should not
be used without advice of the doc-
tor, who will determine
strength of the mixture
used in each case.
When the condition spreads
from the car to the mastoid, a
much more serious infection,
called mastoiditis, develops. In
this condition, great pain and ten-
derness are noted behind the ear,
over the region of the mastoid.
From the very first, the mastoid
bone may be sensitive to pressure
because of the swelling inside.
Puncture of the eardrum is not
dangerous. If it is done suffi-
ciently early, there will be no in-
terference with hearing, because
the eardrum will heal promptly
and hearing will be just as good
as it was before.
It is far less dangerous to punc-
ture the eardrum than it is to
postpone the operation too long.
L*l no on« tell yon that -omnn wn made for houtehold
drudgery! Your grandmother* struggled under the hurden
of that Idea—and aome of them tiled under II. But YOU have
a Great Servant they couldn’t have—Natural Caa, the mor*
modern, rhtnptu ol ALL Modern fuel*!
Need you carry water and fuel up back breaking (lain! No. You Ma
ti*ve an Automatic Caa Waler Heater
almost (or ptn-money.’
follow infectious
nose or
tlous diseases.
When a doctor is called to see
a child suspected of having an
infected ear, he will take its tem-
perature, which usually is high in
these cases. He will also look di-
rectly at the eardrum, using a
magnifying device and a light.
This apparatus is called an oto-
scope. which merely means a de-
vice for seeing the ear.
If the doctor finds that the ear
is infected severely, he will ar-
eardrum
if it is
of pressure
within. Opening the eardrum will
NATIONAL BANK CHARTER
ISNIED MKH1 LN l»t>3
EBlHj
_____ . •••••Il (bSS Aatnauilc D«dr*lrai
l*M* h Ik* try M V.t*r H*M»r Cm Heaiinf lira My rvIrlfaratM W-
*«i«b|«|» bHebM In mfflMMB» bShbiMMMl (bi> Um
Mdfomftv. Bl<l«r«d irwl, aUerra Md 4mm h ikifh < •MtaMtaf. Me!
The
first national bank charter grant-
ed by the federal government was
issued to a Philadelphia institu-
tion.
Records displayed In conjunc-
tion with the annual Philadelphia
Exposition showed that National
Bank Charter No. 1 was granted
to the First National Bank of
Philadelphia on June 20, 1863.
One of the leading figures In
the bank’s organization was Jay
Cboke, financial aide to the gov-
ernment at the time of the Civil
War.
BY DR. MORRIS FISHBE1N
Editor, Journal of the American
Medical Association, and of
Hygela, the Health Magazine
WHEN a small child has a pain
in the ear, it usually will indi-
cate the condition by putting its
hand to the car, or crying when-
ever the ear is touched.
The pain of earache generally
is severe, prolonged, ano continu-
ous. Immediate relief may i>e
given in such cases by application
of heat.' This may be done in va-
rious ways.
You may cover the ear with a
piece of cotton and then put a
small hot water bag, or a hot ap-
plication, over the cotton The
child may lie with its head on the
hot water bag, or on an electric
pad.
It is not advisable to drop any
medicine Into the ear. unless the
doctor has presc ribed it.
Infections of the ear frequently
conditions in
throat, and acute infec-
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 24, 1938
FAGE SIX
HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, HENDERSON, TEXAS
DANCE
Nightly Except Sunday
MATTIE’S BALL ROOM
Ixtngvlew-Kllgoro Hiway
s’2?
L
CX) II 3
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Dean, J. Lawrence. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 110, Ed. 1 Friday, July 24, 1936, newspaper, July 24, 1936; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1310180/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.