Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 237, Ed. 1 Monday, December 21, 1936 Page: 4 of 12
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.HENDERSON DAILY NEWS. HENDERSON. TEXA&
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[The Family Doctor
CHRISTMAS CHEER
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BY PAUL HARRISON.
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UNITED GAS SYSTEM
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A LEADER SHOWS THE WAY
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Texas Youngster Gets
Head Start in Life
Deadly Horse Malady
Baffles Utah Expert
PHONE 262
AMBULANCE
ABDICATION DID NOT END
COLORFUL BRITISH STORY'
crease of 65
same jset u»i <
Air transport companies, oner-
ating in the gold region of Brit-
ish New Guienea. carrying 9000
tons of freight during 1935, al-
though there are only 36 air-
planes in that country.
STEAM LAUNDRY
ONE DAY SERVICE
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BEHIND THE SCENES IN
HOLLYWOOD
MONDAY AFTERNOON, DEC 21, 198«
i 1 ...........
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to work and in short order the
i out In the
From Day
To Day In
New York
Xmas Eve Dance and Tree
Dec. 2 4
Santa Will visit Everyone
All Night
MATTIES BALL ROOM
$5.00 Cash Prize Xmas Night
To The Beet Waltzers
LEWIE CLANCY
10 Piece Nightly
On***
a
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The low price you pay us each week, is Net. We
pay for our own Water, Washing Materials,
Electricity, and the food we eat!
Also, the chemicals and
darkrooms must be kept at
exact 67 degrees, winter
summer. A man goes around
the
an
and
with
a thermometer, taking tempera-
tures.
Front the film tanks, the chemi-
cals go through more rubber
pipes to reclamation tanks on the
first floor. The emulsion on raw
film contains silver. Most of this
silver is dropped in the develop-
ing process so the movie-makers
have installed outfits to recover
it. From every million feet of
mm, they get back 1300 ounces
of silver, which is sold to the
Government.
--“W®
y
medical Journals do not record as
artistic insomnia, often rising be-
fore dawn and prowling the
apartment In contemplation of
the latest Invention.
She makes her designs on sheets
of brown paper and often they arc
not clear to a most mechanically
minded colleague. Indeed, Miss
Beulah is not conversant with
many mechanical terms herself;
she leaves these bothersome tech-
nicalities to the model-makers.
Temperance in Eating Urged
TORONTO, Ont (UP)-Justice
William Renwick Riddell, veteran
Canadian Jurist, who celebrated
his 30th anniversary on the On-
tario supreme court bench recent-
ly, believes temperance tn eating
is the secret of his good health at
84. “Always remember,” he says,
“that the teeth dig more graves
than spades.”
•
NEA Service Staff Correspondent, day. On the top floor are five
reservoirs holding 3400 gallons
of chemicals. These are mixed by
electrically-driven, under-surface
propellers. All the plumbing is of
hard rubber. It carries the fluids
down to the second-floor develop-
ing tanks. There are four of
these, 20 feet long and 5 feet
deep, in a cool, darkroom manned
by 15 workers.'
The film is hooked together and
slithers through these tanks at the
rate of 90 feet a minute. It is
pulled along at a precise speed on
cogwheel tracks through different
chemicals, in and out of pure
wn'er baths and into the driers.
Breaks seldom occur, but when
they do there’s the devil to pay.
If film is allowed to pile up in a
tank, it is overedeveloped and
ruined. Workmen have to patch
it on the fly, hooking the ends
together with metal fasteners.
Perpetual Motion.
When a negative is developed
and dried, it is used in making
a second, film, which is a posi-
tive and the kind that is project-
ed in theaters. Printing machines
are intricate, high-speed contrap-
tions which expose the positive
film by shining a light through
the negative one.
The positive strip goes through
the same sequence of Chemical
and water baths, is dried, wound
on a reel, and then is all ready
to cheer or depress the harassed
gents who watch the rushes.
The chain of film going through
the tanks must never stop, so,
when the laboratory gets ahead
of pie cameras, it hooks on “lead-
er films” which is1 dyed blue and
has no pictures on it. Continuous
laboratory has two power nlants
which can be switched on if elec-
trical trouble occurrs.
^7
T
Ot
rate as a gargle or as a mouth,
wash and, In addition, apply it
frequently in proper concentration
directly to the Infected gums and
tissue.
The dentist or physician will
treat the condition by direct ap-
plication of proper medication, in-
cluding not only sodium perborate
but also other antiseptics, which
are applied directly to the spaces
between the teeth and held in
contact with the infected areas
to destroy the germs.
There occasionally are severe
cases which require vigorous
treatment over long periods bf.
time, and the use not only of so-
dium perborate and hydrogen di-
oxide but occasionally of drugs
that have to be injected into the
body for their systemic reaction.
© 1UIV Nt* tMC. ▼,». RIG- V. t. Of g |
“Now, aren’t you glad I went ahead and put up these
pickled peaches? I told you one of our boys would be
home for Christmas.**
fcfc-- -- 7 ■-
>’ij
SALT LAKE CITY (UP)—Baf
fling all efforts at control, ence
phalomeyelitis, a deadly hor.-i
malady, killed approximately 10
horses in northern Utah in 1936
Dr. W. H. -Hendricks, chief veter
narian of the State department oi
agriculture, said.
Although attempts of veterina
ria ns to control the disease, coir
monly called brain fever, hav
failed, Dr. Hendricks said Uta’
horses may be developing immu
nity to the disease. Three years
ago 4,000 horses died of the mal-
ady and 800 in 1934. There was
no epidemic in 1935, he said.
/ >
Money
Puts
“American industry and trade are recovering with
expected speed, and are now being swept al°ng on a pron-
ounced prosperity wave. .
“The American foreign trade outlook is reassuring . .
the home Industrial outlook is favorable .. . U. S. agricul-
ture has to a great extent recovered. . . . Unemployment
may be expected now to sink rapidly to a normal level.”
These pleasing comments are the gist of a study of
American economic conditions issued in Berlin by the gov-
ernment-controlled Reich Credit Association, which has a
reputation abroad for its statistical surveys, ,
Liberty-loving Americans these days may not agree
with many Nazi pronouncements, but this report undoubt-
edly will prove an exception. For its truth seems borne out
by the rising tide °f prosperity evidenced all about us.
A leader of men, whether he be an elected governor or
a ruler by divine right, can do no greater thing for them
than t° lift them out of themselves and show them an ideal
which they can attain and, by attaining, make a better
world.
It is for that reason that President Roosevelt’s Latin
American visit is of vast importance to everyone in the
new world. For he is showing us such an ideal—the ideal
of peace, of international friendship and co-operation—and
is persuading us that we actually can translate it to reality.
, It may be too soon to tell just what sort of treaties
will come out of the Buenos Aires conference. What is cer-
tain is that a great goal has been set. We have been com-
pelled to look ahead and see the way in which we can pro-
mote the happiness and the well-being of half the world.
In the end, the fact that he showed us this thing may be
Mr. Roosevelt’s greatest claim to a place in history.
Tiger Crosses Soviet*
Persia Frontier
The Dally Newa carriers are Instructed to place
papers on subscribers’ porches, regardless ot
weather. A report on failure to make porch de-
livery is appreciated by the circulation depart-
ment. Failure to receive the paper by 6:00 p. m.
week days, 7 00 a. m. Sunday, should also be re-
ported to the circulation department. A repre-
sentative is in the office each evening until 6:30,
and until 9:00 a. m Sunday, to adjust compalnta.
Advertising, News,
_________________________________ I
A new roof .... Certainly your homo
deserves it Let us loan the money NOW,
fastest ...
cheapest . . .
most modern...
ALL MODERN FUELS1
CITIZEN’S NAE'1
“The Appreciative and Dependable Bank”
mouth was
troops in France,
years have passed
United States entered the
Today, the condition is found fre-
quently among Americans. It no
longer Is called trench mouth, how-
ever, but is described as Vin-
cent’s Infection, because the or-
ganism which causes it first was
discovered by a French doctor
named Vincent.
In this condition, the mem-
uranes of the mouth are red, in-
fected, and swollen, .and some-
times are covered by a yellowish-
gray material which is adherent.
When this material is removed, a
bleeding surface is revealed. The
material will be found alsb in the
.spaces between the teeth, and, as
a result, the gums bleed easily.
There is a foul, putrescent odor
associated with this material.
Since the mouth and gums also
are infected and irritated in cases
of scurvy, diabetes, lead or bis-
muth poisoning, or occasionally in
syphilis, the doctor must deter-
mine definitely that the condition
is Vincent’s infection, or Vincent's
angina, before undertaking treat-
ment.
The victim of this Infection
may spread it to other people
by kissing, or by contaminating
eating utensils and drinking cups.
The disease sometimes is con-
tracted in the offices of careless
or poorly trained dentists.
To avoid if, one must take con-
stant care of the mouth, teeth,
and gums. The first signs are per-
sistent bleeding of the gums and
unpleasant odor. Whenever these
symptoms appear, consult a com-
petent dentist at once, because
control of the infection is much
easier in the early stages than
when it has become chronic.
Incidentally, Vincent’s infection,
as well as other infections of the
mouth, affects those with bad
teeth and neglected mouths much
more frequently than it does
those who keep their mouths in a
good, hygienic condition.
Regular, competent attention to
the teeth and gums prevents such
infections. Removal of deposits
around the teeth and proper at-
tention to the cavities and crevices
make it difficult for the gferms to
grow around the teeth and in the
gums.
It has been found that a drug
called sodium perborate has a
definite effect in destroying the
germs of Vincent’s Infection, and
other mouth ailments. A victim
of Vincent's infection, therefore,
may use a preparation of perbo-
rfbltors, that will keep the paper
in alignment during the rolling
proceoa. Miss Henry ventures
that she might eave them three
million and a half.
Veteran Inventor
The title. Lady Edison, is not a
recent appendage to Miss Beu-
lah’s name for it was conferred
upon her a little less than two
decades back.
While the wizard of Menlo was
at work at his great experiments,
Miss Beulah was at work on her’s
making the world a happier place
with such contrivances as a snap-
on umbrella to match the shade
of a tody’s dress, a doll easily
transformed from stark blonde to
dark brunette, a portable k itchen-
ette, a pneumatic hair-curler and
a comic sponge, with a baby-doll
to tn&ke th* bath mor* in-
vitlng for kid*. I
Not Khat these are .the most
epochal areaUons of the facile Hn-
venttve head- of Mbs Beulah’s.
Among 63 patents accredited to
her, there are also a lady’s hand-
w with changeable covers, a
vacuum Ice cream f reezer that
will keep ice cream frozen for
seventy-two hours, and the ever-
memorable Kitty-Koo, the W hlte
House cat that 1 ater found its way
into a successful musical comedy.
The cat la one of the numerous
dolls Miss Beulah has created in
leisurely moments.
I Before thertrabble burst in 1929,
she brought out the most impor-
tant boon to stenographers in pre-
depression years. This w as the
“Photograph,” a typewriter that
& Editorial $agt
Published every afternoon (except Saturday) and Sunday morning.
! NEWS PUBLISHING CO
Publishers - j. Lawrence Dean, Editor.
fc' ’• MEMBElR AUDIT B~U RE AU OF CIRCULATIONS
Entered as second class matter at the Poatofflce tn Henderson, Tex., under Act of Congress, Mar 3, 1879 j
8PECIAL“BAROAIN DAY" RATES
Five cents per copy, week days and Sunday. De-
livered by city carrier. 20 cents per week, 60
cento per month. »4 95 per year. By motor route.
15 cents per week, 60 cento per month: By mall
In Rusk and adjoining counties: 3 months 81.50,
6 months 82.75. one yesr »3.95. By mall elsewhere
tn Texas and in Louisiana. Arkansas and Okla-
noma—3 months 82.00 6 months 83 50. ons year
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Telephone No. 1. PrivMte Exchange Connections With Business,
BY DR. MORRIS FISHBE1N
Editor, Journal of the American
Medical Association, snd of
Hygela, the Health Magazine
During the World War, trench
common among the
Nearly 20
since the
war.
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UP)—
John Douglas Jackson, year-old
son of Mrs. Georgia White Jack-
son, will be grown before he
knows it. ’ T
When 26 days old. the young-
ster’s hair was so long he needed
the attention of a barber. At 11
months, John Douglas chewed his
food with 26 teeth, and now he
has four new ones—enough for
the average 2 1-2-year-old.
The mother said all the teeth
were cut without the usual fret-
ting.
King Edward VIII has abdicated, and quit his native
land; a new king is in power, ana the British Empire once
more is sailing along as majestically as it ever has. The
tumultuous events which amazed the world have passed
into history. »
But the story by no means is over. Before is has
ended, questions that are still whirling comusediy in peo-
ple’s minus will have been answered; and only time can
give those answers.
Most oi the conjecture, naturally, centers about the
ex-king who, in his H'mce of Wales nays, won the love of
his subjects and the affectionate interest of the rest of
the wond.
Where will he spend the remaining years of his life?
In Denmark? Austria? America. Or win he try to escape
aching, nostralgic longings in some remote part of the
world? j , -;-
Will he be content to resume his ondrtimo role of peri-
patetic playboy or, perhaps, lead the life ofti geritleriTah
farmer ?
Or is it possible that some day, using the influence he
still has with Empire subjects, he will again serve Great
Britain? Remember the words in his abdication address—
“If, at any time in the future, 1 can be found of service
to his majesty in a private station, I shall not fail.” Cer-
tainly, if British affairs become ruffled under his succes-
sor, the young man who sailed the seven seas to “sell” his
empire will be remeipbered longingly by his former
subjects.
After he has married “the woman I love,” will his
cup of happiness always be so brimmingly full as to make
up, in great measure, for his tremendous sacrifice?
And, as for Mrs. Simpson, will she live up to one of
the greatest resposibilities that any woman ever has had
to assume ? Is she prepared, as she should be, to do more
than her part to guide their marital bark through shoals
of unhappiness? Or will this marriage end as did her
gthers ?
If necessary, is she willing to be, for the rest of her
life, either the Duchess of Windsor—or just Mrs. David
Windsor—wife of a gentleman farmer; and give up for-
ever the fascinating glamour of continental society ?
Will she long retain the beauty of face and figure that
fascinates one of the greatest “catches” in history? Or, if
her charms soon fade, can she, by dint of love and woman-
ly graces, hold the affection of her husband?
And, finally ,can the new king, George VI, symbolize
the crown so effectively as to strengthen the slender
bonds between Great Britain and her dominions beyond
the seas.
No, the abdication of Edward and the proclaiming of
George as new king have not closed the story which rock-
ed the world in the last few weeks. That was only the
anti-climax. From now on, pebple the world over will
eagerly follow the fortunes of the royal brothers, to see
how it all comes out.
BY UEOBGE rtOHS
NEW YORK, Dec. 21. — Miss
Beulah Louise Henry, a Memphis,
Tenn., belle who made good in the
big town, patented her 52nd in-
vention the other day and added
another Item to her busy Hfe as
America's Lady Edison.
At the Victoria suite where
Miss Henry, plumpish, smiling
and vividly blonde, works on her
labor-saving plans, she described
her latest device as a revoluUon-
ary sewing machine. It will, she
stya, be out on the market soon.
In the meantime, there is a little
problem she has consented to
I eolve for a paper syndicate. They
have asked for a machine to cost
L something less than four million
d L
made 3 clear c opies without car-
bon paper. The notion for this
device occurred to her one day
HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 21—The
movie business is so permeated
by human and artistic fallibility
that it is pleasant now and then
to watch the technicians who nev-
er make a mistake.
At least, they're supposed never
to make mistakes, and they pretty
well bear up t expectations. An
81800-a-week actress can fumble
a simple line 20 times with no
more of a reprimand than “We’ll
have to try it again, darling,"
from the director. But let an as-
sistant cameraman run out of film
ih the middle of one of those
takes and he is the target for all
the maledictions in the book.
When a director approves a
scene and says ‘‘Okay—print that
one,” he doesn’t give a thought to
what subsequently may happen
to the precious strip of film. He
just assumes that it will be per-
fectly developed and properly
printed in the laboratory. And it
is.
Every studio has its own film
laboratory where the reels shot by
companies working on the lot are
brought for developing and print-
ing. There usually are several
takes of each scene, sometimes as
many as 10 or 12.
A few hours later, a positive
film is ready to be shown to the
director and other executives in a
projection room. They look at
these “rushes,” and pick out the
scenes they want to keep for cut-
ting and patching into the final
master film.
Darkroom Technique.
Biggest and newest of studio
plahts is the one at Twentieth
Century-Fox. It occupies a large
three-story building, has $1,000,-
000 worth of equipment, and em-
ploys 88 technicians, most of
ar ptAce
*■>
wlille she watched a haraaeed
etono In the outer offices of a
business executive. She was
shocked to see the sweet young
thing getting her well-manicured
fingers smudged and her nerves
. tangled u p in a jumble of type-
written duplicates. So she went
ft “T. L". — ••
’ "Frotograph’’ was
Most of her inventions have
come about through such personal
observation. Noticing a little' lady
self-conscious in her stocking feet
on the beach one summer after-
noon. Miss Beulah set about to
create a pair of high-heeled bath-
ing shoes. Once she was saddened
to see a group of shavers in a
sandlot thwarted at the height of
the game when the oxygen sud-
denly departed from the football.
So she went home and developed
a new football valve with a glove
snap and a balsa wood bolt.
■roadway Denison
In fact, she began her career
as Lady Edison after witnessing
a fellowman in distress. She was
Sitting on the porch one afternoon
back in Memphis and noticed a
man reading a pc ■ on <’
in the square. When a woman
acqiiatntaucO CSniu ..< ... ...
hello but didn't tip his lint. Miss
Beulah took to turning the prob-1
lem over in her mind and emerg-
ed, a few days later, with a device
whereby a man could go on read-
ing his paper and Up hto hat at
the same time.
But those were the kindergar-
ten days of Lady Edison’s life and
Since then she has been preoccu-
P<ed with finer boons to human-
She has not been back to
Memphis in eighteen years for, hr
she explains it, "lack of time.”
Her residence and workship is in
g tbs lofty apartment of a thronged
hotel in the midst of the hurley-
buriey of Broadway.
She declines to live anywhere
etas because she likes the no se,
tMtansluckenlng tension of Man-
hattan’s central artery. As soon
as her paper alignment machine
is perfected, she hopes to revisit
the old Memphis homestead.
^IVhlle she draws her Inventions
from her everyday observat ons.
^'■XAdy Edison ponders them in the
dead of night. She has whst the
Ik
ERIVAN, Soviet Armenia (UP)
— The Soviet-Persian frontier,
normally quiet, has suffered a
“border Incident” which will not
lead to diplomatic protest. The
frontier violator was a huge
striped tiger, which attacked a
flock of sheep after bounding
across the frontier
Shepherds surrounded the ti-
ger, wounding it. With a great
roar the beast fled Into a cave
where it remained five days be-
fore hunters dared to enter. They
found it dead.
11'■ ——o—————
Aeronautical exports by United
States manufacturers for’the first
eight months of 1936 were val-
ued at abput $14,000,000, an in-
------ ..<r cent ovej.
1935.
Marlin Attack* Boat
— HONOLULU (UP)—The
of the sampan Kasuga Maru hook-
ed a 700 pound marlin off Oahu
SJ and then the monster hooked the
sampan. The marlin plunged his
_ ; sabre-like snout through the side
■». of the craft. Literally the boat
S'- was impaled on the fish. The
» crew finally beat the marlin to
k death.
F
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Dean, J. Lawrence. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 237, Ed. 1 Monday, December 21, 1936, newspaper, December 21, 1936; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1331059/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.