Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 75, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 14, 1939 Page: 8 of 10
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Finance
3
DIGESTION IN
HOT WEATHER
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United I’resb Staff Correspondent.
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FIRST NATIONAL
BANK
debate on
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THE NEW
TO YOUR
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BEACON
Motor
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HOTEL®
Ansari
SUPER LUBE
far
In Tamper Proof Tins
HEALTH IS HAPPINESS
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Rase
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NEW TIRES
CO.r 1»l» SV Nt A St.WCt. INC.
at SPECIAL PRICES
PASTEURIZED
HENDERSON DAILY NEWS
$4.35
MILK
4.40
NEWS AND REVIEWS OF PROGRESS AND DEVEUIl’.MLM
$4.84
4.50
AND BE SATISFIED
$4.98
4.75 x 19
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Phone 419 W
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IDEALLY LOCATED • PERFECTLY APPOINTED
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DALLAS
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Flickering, Burn-outs, Breaks,
Windstorm, Rainstorm Damage
GARTH GREEN
• NIGHTLY •
YOUR SIGN TROUBLES
CURED IN ONE JOB!
LIBERTY
COFFEE SHOP
NOTE: This is the second part of an article by
Booth Mooney on the new paper mill at Lufkin. The
article originally appeared in “The Texas Weekly,”
in which publication Mr. Mooney contributes highly
interesting articles as a member of the staff.
By William
Ferguson
WEBBS
SANITARY DAIRY
RUSK CO! STY’S
OLDEST BANK
HENDERSON FAINT
& WALLPAPER CO.
■ .
F
DAN MORAN
President Continental Oil Company
F J
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Dr. Bert E. Woods
OPTOMETRIST
(Eye Sight Only)
A most careful examination and
analysis of each patient.
113 North Marshall Street
Opposite Penney’s
TELEPHONE kl7
The Choice of East Texas
• WE NEVER CLOSE •
VOUR
l/ttj-e roe
HAS ONE MORE BONE
THAN YOUR.
0/<S TOC/
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Paraffin
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Buy
WEBB'S
GRADE A
NEU
AIRPORT NITE CLUB
At Kilgore Airport
_______ .....
“A GROWING STORE
in a
PROGRESSIVE TOWN”
DEVINE
HARDWARE COMPANY
108 N. Jackson Phone 6
CHIROPRACTOR
Crim Building
Phones 200 and 1037-J
HENDERSON, TEXAS
Husky Ruskco LiliX
RUSK COUNTY
HATCHERY
Jacksonville Hi-way
near P. O. Hughes
Phone 663-J
= (jt/ow oo
CATERPILLARS
STOP *
stud ;
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’Ms
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\'Ttte /
I I
I HEALTH
Leads Toward
Happiness
THIS CURIOUS WORLD
Business
Industry
Commerce.
Agriculture
Profession^
MORAN GAME UP
THE “HARD WAY”
Its rich flavor makes it the fav-
orite of young and old alike
Switch tb a better milk ,. . just
call—
MRS, BURNICE RIVES
School of Sueech
AND DRAMATIC ART
3031j West Main St.
TELEPHONE 605-W
J. L. DOWNING
Architect
Phone 451-W
tM First National Bank Bldg.
Hila page ia devoted primarily to the interest* of firm* wnose
advertising makes it possible. Responsibility for all articles ap-
pearing on this page i* assumed by the Advertising Department
of the Henderson Daily News. They do not, in any instance,
necessarily reflect the editorial opinion of the New*. All mater-
tai on the page clear* through the Advertising Department.
Information given on this page is gathered from source* believed
to be reliable. The Advertising Department of the News will
readily correct any error or mis-statement of fact Patronage
of the firms making possible this page, will facilitate the con-
tinuance of the service these firms are rendering their customers,
and they will appreciate your comments.
THE HENDERSON DAILY NEUS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14, 193d---
Ships Sail the Mighty Missouri Again
H
AH
Becan; c he allegedly made de-
rogatory remarks about British
king and queen, 18-ycar-old
Paul Carlcjimo, above, of Utica,
N. Y„ was seized on bridge at
Niagara Falls, held by police.
TYLER NEON <
Tyler—Call 4411
WRIGHT ELECTRIC
. Henderson—Call 15
PAGE EIGHT---—---------------------------
MILK ASSISTS newsprint from texas pine
IT is not likely that a new trans-
Atlantic 30-cent airmail stamp
will be issued at this time. At
least the U. S. Post Office Depart-
ment has not indicated such a
value.- It is recalled instead that
already there is a 10-cent, a 15-
cent and 20-cent airmail stamp in
addition to the 50-cent Pacific de-
nomination. Moreover, the reg-
ular 30-cent postage stamp could
be used on mail to Europe, pro-
vided the letter was designated
for airmail.
Once trans-Atlantic service is
regularly launched, it is likely,
however, that a 30-cent value will
be printed.
v.'S'-a
First, vessels leave Omaha, Neb., for St. Louis, Mo., as Missouri river is opened for commercial traffic
between two cities for first time in 70 years. Inset, Mayor MdCall, left, of Council Blulls, la., directly
across river from Omaha, and Mayor Butler of Omaha watch ceremonies. It took army cnginec£a_
12 years, required $140,000,000 of federal funds to dig 25-foot deep channel in river. /
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Air-Conditioned
Guest Rooms
Restaurant
Barber Shop
Lobby
berg, widely known Dallas attorney.
It is expected that the mill will be in operation by •
next January, which means that this time next year
more than a million subscribers of daily newspapers of
the South will be reading their news from pages pro-
duced from the wealth of pine growing all about the city
of Lufkin. The term “wealth of pine” is not used idly,
for within a radius of fifty miles of the millsite are 3,-
500,000 acres of pine lands containing nearly 20,000,000
cords of wood. The company itself owns 108,000 acres
of timberlands within twenty-five miles of the mill.
However, it will not draw upon this supply to the exclu-
sion of other sources. Present plans call for purchasing
much of the wood to be used from private landowners in
the section, which will add to the value of pine as a cash
crop and give the landowners around Lufkin a new mar-
ket and a new source of income. And the crop should
continue indefinitely to be valuable, for it has been
shown that the supply of pine will reproduce itself every
fifteen years if reforestation work is carried on with
reasonable consistency. . .
It’s a big thing, this newsprint plant—big in more
ways than one. The paper machine to be installed
weighs nearly 2,000 tons. Seventy freight cars will be
required to transport it. The maximum speed of this
. machine is 1,500 feet of paper per minute, which means
that it can turn out in a day more than 400 miles of pa-'
per eighteen and one-half feet wide. Running at max-
imum speed for sixty days, the machine would make
enough paper of this width to encircle the earth at the
equator. The productive capacity of the mill will be ap-
proximately 50,000 tons of newsprint annually. That
sounds to the layman like a lot of paper. And it is, of
course, quite a bit of paper—but it represents less than
half the annual newsprint consumption of the State of
Texas. It is less than one and one-half per cent of the
annual newsprint consumption of the United States.
The paper machie to be installed in the Southland plant
obviously won’t make enough newsprint to glut the
market.
Significantly, the millsite is so arranged that addi-
tions to the plant may be made at some time in the fu-
ture if conditions warrant. Mr. Dealey predicted in his
speech during the dedication ceremonies that from the
mill in Angelina County “a new industry will grow and
expand until it covers the entire Southland", and cer-
tainly there is reason to believe that successful oper-
ation of the mill will result in the construction of other
newsprint factories over the South. “We are making
history here," Mr. Dealey said, and continued: “And we
are making the right kind of history—not history that
has as its backbone war, death and destruction, but his-
tory that is bringing warmth and joy to human fire-
sides, a fighting chance to many whom formerly oppor-
tunity passed by with averted face, a chaiice for honest
toil and wet foreheads to those descendants of pur pio-
neers, who ask only the chance to bend their backs in
worthy endeavor.” It well may turn out that construc-
tion of this plant here in Texas will lead to construction
of other, similar plants throughout the South. The
movement has started. Who can say where it will end?
Rate*
Single Room*
from $2
I Double Room*
•» from $4
II
!
■----- >
ANSWER: Train locomotives sometimes run over armies of
caterpillars crossing the tracks, and the crushed bodies mak,e the
rails so greasy that traction is lost vd the train brought to a stop.
MTHIOM
1 X
(B | I
Sr J
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UNDER THE DOME AT AUSTIN Held for Remarks
by gorjdon k. shearer, Against Royalty
great redwood trees
ONCE. FLOURISHED ON
ST lawrenge island,
NOWAN ARCTIC TUNDRA./
(BETWEEN ASIA AND ALASKA)
The forthcoming basebait com-
memorative will be the first U. S.
issue devoted to this national
sport, but baseball was honored
on a set of 1934 stamps of the
Philippine Islands These were
issued in connection with the
Tenth Far Eastern Championship
games and one of them featured
home plate with the batter and
catcher ready for the pitch. The
others showed tennis and basket-
ball players. Philippine stamps
are not valid for postage out of
the islands.
The story of Continental Oil
Company and its rise to promi-
nence in the oil industry, is told
in the current issue of Fortune
Magazine. A striking feature of j
I the article is a thumb-nail sketch I
TnTz\Conoco’s president, Dan
> -
I
Cygnet, Ohio, he had
a.4» as an office boy
tejegraph operator,
through the Uni-
At the Refinery on Kilctore Highway
1 MoraiX.
i “Born at
i picked up <
and as a
earned his wa-
versity of Dafyton, and then had
gone South, (To Tulsa, where he
I saw the oil stiout from the Glenn
i’ool slrikn^Xhen to Port Arthur,
wher/ he signed up as an engi-
neae~4or the Texas Co. Front
there he was sent down to Pan-
ama and to South America, and
J from South America he had
j trekked north again into Mexico
and to the States. He had spent
seventeen days in a hurricane on
an oil barge. He had helped re-
pair the ravages of another hur-
ricane, which, ripping through
Tort Arthur, had floated away
the oil tanks of a refinery there
like so many toy ships. He had
built refineries, drilled for oil,
and had put up ocean terminals
at Charleston, at Savannah, Pen-
. sacola, Mobile, Key West, and in |
Cuba. And in the process he had |
'earned something of men and|
' somethin^ of the sweet-smelling
> tuff called crude.’’
--O'"
Typist Obtains
Civil Service Position
Nelson said.
Sen. Wsavcr Moore of Houston
was prompt with a correction.
■* ‘A little later Sen. GordonJJurr.s
I of Huntsville hinted that Nelson's
i legislative career did not lack in-
j consistencies.
"He who is not guilty should
cast the first stone.” retorted
I Nelson.
Burns decided Nelson was lack-
ing in familiarity with the Bible
also and corrected him. "He who
is without sin." is the quotation
Burns infotnted tnc Lubbock sen-
While no other claim dates back
that far, a majority of them arc
ones that are collectible only if the
statute of limitation is waived by
the state.
Most seek return of taxes or fees )
paid through error.
• STAMP NEWS
Beacon Oil & Refining Co.
At the Water Tower in Henderson
THIS BANK
Is ready and fully equipped
to serve firms and individ-
uals.
Grade A Pasteurized Milk, is
recognized as a real help t°
digestive processes in summer
weather, and the importance of
using Grade A Pasteurized Milk
in the home and demanding it at
public establishments is empha-
sized by admission of the state-
ment as a fact, it is pointed out
in studies of milk.
First of all, Grade A Pasteu-
rized Milk is as pure and safe as
man and science know how to
prepare milk and deliver to the
home or public eating establish-
ment. Grade A Milk is conceded
to be the best grade of milk so
far as its quality is concerned.
“But Grade A Milk Pasteurized
is not only the best grade in the
matter of quality; it is the best
in point of quality and safety.
It is best for safety because the
pasteurization process kills all
harmful bacteria and yet does
not take away any of the origi-
nal goodness of milk. Full flavor
of the fresh pure milk that is
produced from healthy cows, un-
der the most sanitary conditions
and under the watchful eye of
competent people who know how
to safeguard the purity of milk,
goes to the .home of Webb’s Dairy
customers every day," pointed
out a member of the Webb Dairy
personnel.
Grade,A Pasteurized Milk aids
tKe digestive processes in more
than one way, it is noted. Milk
serves to provide the body with
vitamins and food qualities that
easily build energy and thus raise
or increase resistance to the extra
strain of hot summer weather.
Milk, since it contains these high-
ly important food qualities, using
plenty of Grade A Pasteurized
Milk enables the average indi-
vidual to maintain full energy
and enjoy th* delicious foods
that ar* more palatable in sum-
mer and rearrange the diet to
call for less of the heavy fats
that prove both valuable and en-
joyable in the winter diet.
Webb’s Sanitary Dairy was the
first dairy in Rusk County to
adapt the pasteurization process
and te today “the only dairy in the
eounty that has Grade A Pas-
teurized Milk.
AUSTIN, Tex. (UPl — Ready-^ed that if he is a member of the
made platforms for the next poll- next legislature he will offer a bill
tiqal campaign in Texas ar? being to create a state court of claims,
furnished by recent happenings Such a body to ir estigate and
under the capitol dome. pass on claims, Heaa has become
That the sales tax will be an | convinced, is sorely needed.
issue already is apparent. Goy. W. The claims approved by the
Lee O’Daniel will have to discuss legislative committee totaled more
it in any campaign for re-elec^on. j than $250,000 and ranged from $1
Col. Ernest O. Thompson, runner- Jto $93,407. The biggest amount is
up in last summer’s race for the a claim for refund on franchise
nomination, already has announced taxes paid by National Biscuit
his opposition to the sales tax. Company and the dollar is due a
Attorney General Gerald C. federation of sewage works asso-
Mann is looked upon as another elation in New York,
potential candidate for governor ! An interesting group of items
since O’Daniel’s endorsement of lists claims for destruction of
Mann's rival failed to stopp Mann’s property by the director of the
successful campaign for the state’s safety department under gover-
chief law office. Mann has at hand nor's orders. One is a claim for
an issue of popular appeal in de- $61,946 by the Texas Hemp Cor-
manding a law under which opera- poration, for destroying a hemp
tions of "loan sharks" can be en.....— *-------- ---“------ 'ru-
joined.
Mann tried that method,
when the state supreme court de-
crop because of marihuana. The
drug can be obtained from hemp
and *»t a certain stage.
_________________ ______ ;' . A claim of historic Interest is
cided that the legislature had fail- that of Reynolds Lowry and Mrs.
ed to provide the means, it com- Nelson Lowry Nolan, as heirs of
mended Mann for his humanitar- Thomas F. McKinney, for money:
lan effort and condemned the prac-'! property and credit furnished to
tices against which he had launch- the Republic of Texas. The amount
ed his attack. ■ j sought is $16,942.
Incidentally, in preparation! to,
make his injunction efforts state-
wide Mann had gathered a mass
of evidence. While it is barred ,
from use in court now, it is a
powerful weapon for use from the
stump in a political race.
Former Attorney General Wil-
liam McCraw of Dallas has been
satirical in recent public comments
on "business in government.” This
indicates that he is ready to take
another whirl in the race for gov-
ernor and will stress that issue.
Harry Hines booms are being
started which do not displease the
Dallas-Wichita Falls member of
the state highway commission,
though he has made no statement
of his political plans.
After working long hours at the
tedious task of ferreting out nieri-
torius claims against the stair
government and preparing a bill poker player.
I
Senators displayed their
familiarity with the
with Hoyle when they engaged in
a road bond assump-
tion bill this week. j
Sen. G. H. Nelson of Lubbock;
was arguing that if county com-
missioner's courts were limited to j
expending state aid to pay off afor.
road bonds, warrants and debts, i ----
market prices of the securities |““
would be inflated. If the commis- I
sioners were given the option to I
pay debts or built new roads he |
said they would be like a
to permit their payment. Sen Man-I "They would have five cards
" - - showing and one in the hole,")
SYRACUSE, N. Y. { (UP).—
Miss Thomasina Donofrio, 24, is
the first blind person rn Xha» his-
tory of Syracuse to win a pro-
visional appointment as a dicto-
phone typist. She was appointed
by the State Civil Service Com-
mission to fill the position at. the
o(f^ces of the Onondaga county
public welfare department.
Miss Donofrio said she hoped
that the appointment would con-
vince Syracuse employers that
blind persons “are as competent
at some type nf work as people
with normal vision.’*
Miss Donofrio, who has been,
blind 10 years, learned typing at I
the New York State School for I
the Blind at Batavia, N. Y.
un-
Bible and
Pool Completed for
British Princesses
LONDON. (UP). — Princess
■ Elizabeth and Princess Margaret
will be able to have their swim-
ming lessons at Buckingham Pal-
ace in the future, instead of hav-
ing to go to the Bath Club.
A swimming pool has been
| constructed on the site of the
I hard tennis court where the King
used to practice years ago.
The palace pool is tiled, with
flower designs on the tiles, and
there is electric equipment for
' heating the water in cold weather.
Postmaster General James A. '
Farley announced that first-day
sales of the new 3-ccnt Washing-
ton Inaugural commemorative i
April 30 totaled $24,109.65. This
figure represents 803,955 stamps,
including 395.644 first-dav covers.
a a a
Interesting new issues.
' Liechtenstein: Seven values,
airmails, of which six portray
birds in flight New Zealand;
Series of 12 marking the 100th
anniversary of British rule The
low value will be printed in a
single color, the others in two. ,
The 100th anniversary is 1940. I
Designs portray immigration and
New Zealand scenes over a cen-
tury Germany One value mark-
ing Hitler's 50th birthday. Iran. |
Five values commemorating *ar-
I nage of crown prince.
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 75, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 14, 1939, newspaper, June 14, 1939; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1331647/m1/8/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.