Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 91, Ed. 1 Monday, July 3, 1939 Page: 4 of 8
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DITORIAL
COMMENT
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MEMBER
AUDIT
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HANDS ACROSS THE SEA
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CABINET OFFICIAL
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the ball game.
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Hold Everything!
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OUT OUR WAY
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C„ where he proved that
found in a haystack. 1
but heactually found it.
sionment!
BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
Entered second class matter P. 0. in Henderson, Texas, Act Congress, Mar. 8, 1879
15 cents per week, sixty-
i per month. Mail.
6
M
WE HAVE A CAREER SERVICE
For years, students of government have
59 A labor
organization.
VERTICAL
2 Long inlet.
3 Eucharist
chest
C
g
E
46 A soft-soled
shoe.
(III
_£2"_2i.’JL
CLUB?
A. CRIM
FVfrtRAJ, HOME
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• ----------——— — O—..........• ....~~
Sin I* any want of conformity unto, or
transgression of the law of God.—Shorter
Catechism.
___L.
SALE
6Ef\Ctt TCVS
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3 zZ
CflWItW SV WM umaw, IHC V M »IC U S »>T Off
"I can’t understand it—I just said lewas dated two weeks
ahead, but 1 was sure he would call me back I”
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Answer to Previous Pink
thWempe
~E AW'I N^E T
rMh o tMTne
victor!
Europe, and reaffirming the right to set up
a new government if ever this one should fail
serve that purpose of protecting men’s
JrF U/!‘
aSI
SBI
K1HI
SB
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I X
k
WOE NOTICING 'TMf
VM20NG FERDON--YOU
DON'T SFf TH'&IG PO&5
PATTING H'xA OKI TH' ftACU-
WHY ? EEC XUGE ME
KNOWS ‘AEU TOO WELL”
1OO ML1C - MEAT IK) IDO
YOUNG A SAUSAGE
SKIK) OF ’ EK) BREAKS \
CT--LEARM FROM EX-
PFRiFkic £, MOT IM /
X EXOFRIEMCE /
THE OLD M0SS
Responsibility
Wo know that the major-
ity of people have little
—if any—knowledge of
the problems which arise
when a loved one paisu
away.
We accept the responsi-
bility this enforced faith
in ua entails,* with a con-
fidence founded upon 26
years of eatlsfactory ser-
vice.
?
u A frain passed oner a South
Carolinian, asleep between, the
rails. It didn’t hurt him—didn't
even wake him. up. Sometime,
somewhere that guy must hone
lived on the elevated.
......, he has de-
Prescott’s famous or-
see the whiles of
Side Qlances—By Qeo. Clark
32 An essay ,
33 Sooner than.
34 Portuguese
money.
35 An indirect
tax.
38 Buildings
forming a
square.
40 Skin
41 Was mistaken
44 To relate.
45 Compass
point
DISILLUSIONED
Life these days, it seems,
disillusionment after another. .
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3 M B|C U • Ml 9t9 ''jlMlM
coH ■ pa t> m»via|Lj^
^§5^7
Oreens are very much in the
summer picture. To Mother, it's
. a dress. To Dad. It’s golf—nr
maybe a drink. To Junior, how-
ever, it's just vegetables.
w
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Frog Hunter la Shot
An Big One Jumps
sAn JOSE, Cat. (UP(.—While
numerous men have been shot
wk«h their hunting companions' dived into the pool with
mv.iook them for a deer, bear usually complacent
and even <. ' 2 .
belie es he is the first one to be I with
shot after being mistaken for a
frog.
He accompanied two
, J
i.M n< y rip w.
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....3
Henderson Daily News
Published Every Afternoon (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning By
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
n. M. HARRIS, President and General Manager T. N. McCARTY, Business Manager
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
^T" Z (JOSH, LOOK AT TH7
/3LORS' HE'S OSTTIM’/
. / I GUESS I’M A LITTLE
JEALOUS, BUT HE
DESERVES IT--HR
TH' GAME AGIN
V.ROWM SHOP MEM/
HIS SUCCESS IK)
LIFE IS SURE MOW >
Five cents per copy. Delivered on established city routes, f"
cents per month, $6.00 pei year. Motor routes fifty cents per month.
Rusk and adjoining counties, 3 months $1.25; 6 months $2.25; one year $4.25.
elsewhere tn Texas and in Louisiana, Oklahoma and Arkansas: 3 months $2.00;
months $3.50; one year $6.00. All other States: 3 months $2.50; 6 months $4.00;
one year $7.50.
O-
o-----
All loves should be simply stopping-
stoues to the love of God. So if was with me;
s name for his great good-
the ness and mercy.—Plato.
pAUC|N6
SCHqpL
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gJlOUHDS LIKE COMFETITIOM
FOR THE WORLD'S FAIRS ~
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'T'HE government has published
■ ■*• a biography of the shrimp.
Wonder if it’s about sehfood, or
that little fellow who pays the
government's bills.
« • •
In Waukegan, lit., at a pre-
view, Dorothy Lamour was
asked to kiss the mayor. She
merely went through the mo-
tions. The motions, however,
are good enmtgh for vs.
« s •
Bustles are supposed- tn be com-
ing back. A fashion, we can defl-
I nitely state, which the ladies will
sit on.
^FLAPPER FANNY ey syivia
*------ cess, ms tv st* srsviet.We T M str, V s r»r Mr.— .....——
By AHERN
T / THAT'S >
\ / RIGHT —
> \ HE'S SEEN
I—11 AAANVA
\ FELLER.
• I ( WHO
/ ) THOUGHT
Z / HR WAS
) / Sffit
1 BUT FOUND
I IT WASOM
\ A TIME -
pi ;
By .1. R. WILLIAMS i
‘JMVV'-,'*kuV'W' MV LAD, -THIS )
) * * naval MEADGEAR . AND
./ NOU MEED A MILITARY CAP
FDR THE GENERAL f)4AR-RU*UV f 2 1 <
WHY NOT TAKE THAT PANCAKE A
MiLLINERT YOUR AUNT MARTHA ]
WORE LAST EASTER? V
(4
[ UNCLE A-XtCS, WE'RE
PUTTING ON A PEMNV
EHOW IK) GOAT-FACE SCWULTiX
GARAGE . AN' CAN 1.
BORROW TWS SWELL HAT J
FOR BO ER-HEAD *>
CROCKER TO WEAR U.HEM
HE TAKES THE CART
OF GENERAL CUSTER? y
IT'S GOING TO BE A I
MASSACRE AN' BO LED.-
MEAD GETS SCALPED <
’ BY ME, 6l.IT I'LL TAKE L
GOOD CARE Oc THE hat y1
AMD SEE THAT IT ISN'T /
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RBolLjojGTl E^jirsi
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4 Poverty-
stricken.
5 Sownd of
Inquiry.
6 Dry
7 Seed bag.
8 Printer’s
measure.
9 Small deer.
10 Frosted.
11 Modern
14 Tolled.
. 16 She is the
first woman
----of the V
S. A. cabinet.
17 Disturbances
of peace.
"3Ae golfn do all our jivin' now. cat ns soon aa the in-
- t| ytruclor gets back we'll hafta wnlta.”
I United Riatea of America was set up. A
, is just one moment's reflection will show how different
As if enough ia that massive cornerstone from the foun-
of our traditional beliefs aren’t destroyed by dations of newer governments in Europe.
And then, after reciting the grievances
w
NIiMtaa.
99Sbe to .
•apectaBg^
inteeqay fc
22 Soap dMx
28 Long stapir
26 Poiaonosw I
ptomeina |
27New TortJ
(abbv.).
28 SoathOMtd
29 To borteok’
31 Skin
infecttosK,
>4 To
remoroA i
36 MmM.
37Clumnliil&h
89 Street.
42 To soaic Oast,
43 To piece <ma
46 Step of a
series.
47 Amber-
colored realh.
46 Back of foot.
49 Singer’s voiee
51 To gossip.
52 To suffice
53 Professional
athlete.
55 Musical note.
56 Chaos
57 Palm lily.
(LU
t \
High Flying Routs Cough
SYDNEY. Australia (UP) —
Aviation entered mi entirely new
field of science when it was adopt-
ed here as a therapy for treating
whooping cough cases. Ry flying
the patients at an altitude of 10,-
000 trot for 20 minutes each day,
highly satisfactory results have
been -iftaineg.
--- - n ---
An hour formerly was one-
twelfth of the time between sun-
set »nd sunrise, and one-twelfth
of tho time between sunrise and
antiaei. hence, It was nf different
lengths in different seasons.
hunters to ■ place where frog
hunting should have been good.
One of the men finally spotted
an unusually large frog, took
careful alm and fired. The frog
an un-
_ . . “ker-klunk”
quail, Joseph Castellans | mid Castellana fell to the ground
- | with a bullet in his right hip.
Paris, France, did not adopt a
Oakland | standard hour until 1816.
unavoidable causes, Jim Moran, a particu-
larly irrepressible Galveslon, Tex., salesman, which brought the decision to cut loose from
has to make a business of debunking.
First object of Moran's campaign was
the old idea that an ice hox can’t be sold to ho . ,
an eskimo. But it can be. Moran journeyed rights, the Declaration closes with this atir-
to Alaska andactually made the sale. ring pledge*
He next turned up in Washington, D.j
* 1 a needle can he ,
It took him 10 days, j
Another disillu-
HORIZONTAL
1,7 Pictured
U. S A.
cabinet
official.
12 Fury.
13 Egret.
15 One in cards.
16 Scottish
court official.
18 Lowbred
person
19 Squints.
21 Entrance.
23 The crappie
(fish).
24 Mountain
(abbr.).
26 Young person. ** Pronoun.
29 South 49 Preposition
Carolina. of place
30 Feather scarf 50 Ascot.
- 51 Pleased.
53 Postscript.
54 ExaHation.
57 Three
58 Her title,
Secretary of
the ceiling.
-O...........
DON’T FORGET THE FOURTH’S REALlsors, Arthur W. Macniahon and
MEANING
Why celebrate the Fourth of July?
That’s the day the United States de- !
glared its independence of Britain in 1776.
Well and good. Hang out the flags, march Cnme up
in or watch the parades, enjoy the picnic and | employes, attended
Independence of Britain was proclaim-
ed 168 years ago. The one-time colonial ata-......
tree of the United States has no reality to beginning of a
ct,
----------------O------7--
•EAT YOUR SPINACH’
What is this? Has somebody been
playing a colossal j<ikle on us all these years?
Here comes Dr. Clara M. Davis of Win-
netka. HI., with an experiment lhal seems
to prove that children, once weaned, can
piek their own diets just as well as grown-
I ups can choose for them.
Dr. Davis placed large trays of food be-
fore the children, let them eat what they
liked. They tried everything, soon develop-
ed strong likes and dislikes, ate what they
liked, and all thrived. All the children nat-
■ urally and unaided picked out diets for them-
' selves which stacked un in daily callories
'with the diets devised by specialists.
Just how far one would want tn go with
I this principle, it is hard to say. but it would
be interesting if the next development
would be a machine that would fead the
'mind of a 15-month youngster. What science
QUght to learn next is what Junior is think-
ing when daddy says. "Eat your spinach,
dear!"
EGAD? that is the germ Of 5/
a whacking idea? why not jyk
__ PROOllCF. A VARIETY KMOW 6m
—CAFTAIN TARR'S FINE BOAT ANID
NET A HAND- J
■'Se*U6OMe pRCClT A
— C ’ *> 7=0,51 “rMt °vVLS 1
, But mow his crowning achievement. In
a refought battle of Bunker Hill,
bunked Col. William I*.—.
der—“Don't fire until you
their eyes."
Moran assembled two “armies’—six
men on a side—at $4 per soldier. The colo-
nials comprised two nearsighted, two far-l
sighted and two normal visioned men. Giv- crying out for a permanent civil scre-
en the famous .’command, ihe farsighted j(.p jn t'nited States government, "some-
men opened hlank fire at 75 feet, the normal thing like the admirable British civil serv-
visioned pair waited until the enemy had jCP.” ( :
advanced 25 feet more, an the near sighted S|) niU(>h Rhoutiihg has been going on
men didn’t fire at all. - about federal jobs as patronage awards that,
Next thing you know Moran will helas in so many cases, the thing sought has
proving that you really can eat pickles and been gradually growing up and is well on
ice cream at the church picnic and not wake the way to accomplishment while reformers
Tv-b* tbe middle of the night seeing pink are still demanding it.
•lepftanta dancing on the ceiling. These facts about Ihe federal service
have been, revealed by two Columbia profes-
•John D.
'Milleft, after studying 62 units of 10 great
| government departments:
The average head of a government bu-
reau is 58, has served as a chief for 16 years,
through the ranks of government
an institution of higher
learning, and has made a life career of gov-
ernment service.
Which shows that much more than a
"Brit ish-type professional
civil service” Is already well established in
the United States government.
Independence,1
-----t ago, Is 1
“And for the support of this De-
claration, with a firm reliance on the
protection of Divine Providence, we mu-
tually pledge,Jo each other our Lives,
our Fortunes, and out Sacred Honor."
Are vie today prepared to pledge as
much to preserve the liberty these men
risked everything to win? That is the ques-
tion each of us ought to ask himself on the
Fourth of July, 1939.
1 m no judge of horseflesh. Let's ask the guy at th# tit#*
•bop to look him over before we buy."
i
1
men today. It is mere history, interesting
but not vital.
But the Declaration of 1
proclaimed by Congress 163 years
still a vital-part of American life.
Read it. as part of your Fourth of July
observance. It is as clearly a part of our ;
fundamental charter of liberty as the Consti- j
tutlon Itself. It contains the basic corner-
stone on which the Constitution and the
American Republic were built.
“We hold these truths to he self-ev-
ident. that all men art created equal.
that they are endowed by their Creator
with certain unalienable rights, that
among theseare Life. Liberty and Ihe
, - pursuit of Happiness . . .”
Note that the rights of man are con-1
ceived as natural, from God, attributes
which nobody can take away. They are not i
rights granted by a paternal government,!
or suffered by a tolerant majority. They are j
not rights that anybody or anything can
take away. They are conceived as being
part of the very blood and brain and soul of ,
man. - ,
“That to secure these rights. Gov-
ernments are Instituted among Men. de-
riving their just powers from the con-
sent of the governed."
Na4« the primary purpose of govern-
ment as the framers of our Declaration of
Independence saw it: not for glory of na-
tion or race, not for gaining a place among
the world’s powers—simple to secure to
man their natural rights. Thai, snul the Sand blessed be hi
Declaration, is the basic reason why
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 91, Ed. 1 Monday, July 3, 1939, newspaper, July 3, 1939; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1331663/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.