Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 255, Ed. 1 Friday, January 10, 1941 Page: 3 of 8
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THE HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JAN. 10, 1941
5
BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
ALL LADIES’
SUEDE SHOES
$
1
REGROUPED!
38
REPRICED!
AT ONLY
G
A
4
/-/D
and
Crystal Farm
SERIAL STORY
CONSCRIPT’S WIFE
4.98 pair
Those on the sick list are Mrs. i
couple of eggs tonight and stay
v
i
BY BETTY WALLACE
All Are $3.95 to
$7.75 Values
$
♦
REED’S
- MAR
-LV-- nr
hall. but whoever it was had al-
with him.
was awkward, too, for now Pau!
VISIT US DURING
NELLY DON’S
will
they said good night at the door.
knew.
I wagged, his little paw.; reached up
____i.i.. .c ........ .. u;.. A.,
3"7
u
nan
I
1941 FORD
it
4
The Big New Car!
j
N
-v
o•-
aa
c
Je,"'
4
Sunday afternoon.
W
33
a
Ford Rouge Plant is world-famous for doing big
HE
2;
i J
) ♦
mm+
Mremimi
»
SHEERS
BARK
{ 3
4
Nelly Don designs the dresses you've been asking
APEX
for! Dark sheers beautifully styled for flattery and
WASHING
jit . . . cued to smart, practical living. Top, Strato
Sheer* with tucking detail that simply narrows
MACHINES
Chapman
$
1
’ e
ing fabric with softly tucked bodice and gracefull
i
m
ap
PHONE 989
i
•he
*
TRADE AT
8
EAST TEXAS’ LARGEST AND FINEST FORD SERVICE
And Sara
l
(
)
--
—
■>
an
THEY’RE HALF
THE FUN OF
HAVING FEET
than I have any right!” Certainly
she could not be lonely, having
came by himself. And she simply
could not drown that feeling ol
eyes watching her as she left the
apartment with him: eyes again as
yed
ach
ake
gray-haired school teacher Who
I lived with the thin, spindly piano
i teacher.
3
Copyright, 1940
NE A Service, Inc.
a widow, I expect.”
“Nonsense," he said.
back to these reports.”
VWENwWWAT O
TEX WANT
*49
Ma
ball
rict
ions
day
end-
are
who
Luf-
thinks in a big way. Now it’s producing the biggest Ford
car ever built!
OH ,NolTEN
WJERENV AN AN
INSVERESTED IN
WSHN v CAME
TO TWM
COUNWRN ’. 28
The Great Ford Rouge Plant
provides the finest manufacturing
facilities in the world. Here the
genius and experience of Henry
Ford. plus the efficiency of Ford
- engineers, produce quality cars in
huge volume to sell at a low price
with small profit — so that when
you buy a lord, you get value far
above the price you pay I
re-
jek-
the
'red
•a rd
ick-
nts,
cun.
lost
-
4 1
s 1
SUZANNE PAYS A CALL
CHAPTER V
to write me how you’re getting
on.”
Reading that letter one morning
der-
ick-
i of
host
ons.
htly
9-26
’ is
toe- ■
over.”
She went to the bedroom, after
she hung up. and looked critically
into the mirror. Paul had said she
1
—
*
K
rson
rick
e
g
Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Langston
Saturday.
I
X“--s
.......
98^
Silver Anniversary
You'll find the smartest mid-season collection of Nelly Don’s
ever to be found in our store . . . and all are featured lower than
original prices!’
the
I on
ong
ver
wn-
ha
u
RED
Goose
SHOES I
Jewelry Store
WATCHES—Cash or Terms
MCWILLIAMS
Masonic Building
HENDERSON
ellyDon
1 BUT. the little incident stayed
— with her. For days, she could
ha
>
ij
9
%%
N
»
1
(2
,6
a
NOWS,TWEN •VOU WANT TO MNOW AEDV TAT
FEN’ WNO WSACKED Mt’. WJEML,WEK WERE
A BCW OF VENN VEVERANEV 8o4 WMO
$MOULONT BE •ED TOO WESWONGLE , IN
-
I left. I believe I'll fry myself a
sm
I
I
4
t
I
i
I
I
to wonder if she is secing Paul
too frequently. One night.. P’aul
nrrives fit the apartment without
23323233 382
the stout school teacher on the
stairs, and she avoided the sharp
eyes, holding her head high.
! night, seeing movies
I and going riding.
I
—#"w.
1
€ EXCLUSIVELY HEKE
“ HENDERSON
DRY GOODS CO.
A Good Store In A
Good Town
"‘TRYING to get you on the
- telephone is about as hard as
I getting Greta Garbo,” she said.
। "For heaven’s sake, where have
I you been?”
MddMMMG2 *
■■■■■ill
i If was curiou sly comforting. She
' closed the door, put the chain on.
wasn't looking so well. And Su-
zanne was always perfectly per-
•
J
afS
i
r
elyDon/
I PREENV XoU ROM
4 " C OOI WWAVENER
(- 9. -4 7 I____ KOS CAME WERE
X-€ “ 22 To A-omD" ’
him as much as she had been do-
ing. And alone. Not that there
was anything in it, but ...
The telephone rang. She had
asked Bill to call her long -dis-
tance. in her last letter. “Pull
place, , her makeup artful. She
couldn't ex p I a i n t p hersel f_ w h y
sudd e f 11 y .she'wa n ted to lookwell
for Suzanne. It had something to
do with the way the other girl
had asked, “Out with Paul?” but
she didn't want to think about
that.
Suzanne appeared, in soft black.
Silver foxes were slung across her
YESTERDAY: Martun fights
loneliness with Paul and fuzanne
helping. When n rrirl Im the ofice
remiarks thnt Mr. Elliott won’t let
Marthn set lonesome sho begiuN
} *
3 3
I । One night they'd stayed in and
played two-handed bridge. And
"No. I’m getting quite accus-
tomed to being a widow.” She
added, honestly. “Rather"'too gay
MEI
I DEpT. STORE
think you're lonely, or worrying
i about me. The camp is swell, bet-
ter than the Reception Station,
We’re in winterized tents, barracks
too, but I drew a tent. The first
13 weeks here are supposed. to
i toughen us up: maybe that’s the
Get the facts and you'D get a FORD!
■ 1 4UPPO6E TWEW
3 Mw.66 \ 4OM
0 ENEM OF XOUR
2 FRVNO TAE SULAN,
1 ANO AE WA-
I OETERMINEO TO
one night they had taken Butch
for a long walk. He was so piti-
fully cooped up. Paul said it
would be better, perhaps, to put (
him out to board on a farm he
N ,4
Ssd /
“TMM8MM _______ jimiu nil,,,—
; :.........
x ---- ... _ •
I ready gone. The shuffle of feet on around again, as she had expected .
: the stairs, going up, and the slam- The quarrel must have been more 1
ming of a door on the floor above, serious than she had realized,
however, told her a second ater
that it must have been the stout,
1 fold her how much he loved her. I you’re getting along. I hate to
I 43 ( \
9(
down to slenderizing lines. Navy, brown, black.
loose from ome change,” she had
QV told him. “You're rich on $21 a
a month. and I want to hear your
M voice.” She didn't know if he
■ could phone from camp. Perhaps
he had to wait until he got into
town. Now that he was in camp,
she wanted to drive up next week-
: end. It was about 100 miles but
! Peg could make it.
| She picked up the telephone.
। "Hello?”
She did not mention the Inci- her desk, she thought with sur-
dent to Paul. It was too "idieu prise, “I’m getting on even better
ITHA whirled in sick sur- । The only thing that troubled hei
prise. She peered out into the ; was that Suzanne did not tele- i dinner with Paul almost every
phone, and Paul did not bring hei i
pleated skirt. Navy, black. 14-44, $7.95.
• Rayon - -p-
j not shake it off. Once she passed . dea of the tent. D linm, be sure
Richest
Coughing
Colds
Ifthere’sirrita- mAg,
tion in upper .7
bronchial tubes, coughing, mus-
cular soreness or tightness--re-
lieve such misery. Mother, with
animproved“VapoRubMassage.’'
With this more thorough treat-
ment, the poultice-and-vapor
action of Vicks VapoRub more
effectively PENETRATES irritated air
passages with soothing medicinal
vapors... STIMULATES chest and
back like a warming poultice or
plaster...starts relieving misery
right away! Results delight even
old friends of VapoRub.
TO GET a "VapoRub Massage”
with all its benefits - massage
VapoRub for 3 minutes on im-
portant RIB-AREA OF BACK
as well as throat and chest -
spread a thick layer on chest,
cover with a warmed cloth. BE
sure to use genuine, time-tested
\ VICKS VAPORUB.
Hertha Dunlap and daughter,
n.„ — - ' Arleta, Riley Hightower, Jeff
11 m ’ . . . । Martin and Opal Gray:
“I suppose a girl has to have , , ' ■
some, time to herself,” he said., Mr:, and Mrs. P". I. Brothers
। “And there’s no danger of weeps l o. Hickey, visited in the home
' any more. is there?" °’ Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Langston
Bdls letters were short Shprtei r Bill’s letter again,
than she liked. He seemed very • Suddenly she decided, “Ii stay
cheerful even happy. He dull- l home tonight.” She could not
fully said he missed her sent hex j her finger what made
loads of love. "The only thing that , her decide that
—muddy, of course—and his eyes I worries me.’ he wrote, "is how ।
V/e
7/
shoulders. Her mouth was very
red, her voice very gay. But her
eyes were not happy. Martha saw
that at once. Saw that there was
purpose in the squared, slender
shoulders; something beneath th
l mannered way Suzanne divested
herself of hat, gloves, furs and sat
down on the sofa.
"I called you at least a dozen
times,” she said.
There was a silence. Suzanne
lighted a cigarct. Her fingers were
shaking.
“Martha,” she began. “Martha,
I‘m putting my no: c into some-
thing that’ none of my business,
maybe. But—well—"
“Don’t apologize," Martha said.
“What's the matter?"
“You’re . urc Paul didn't tell
you what we quarrelled about?”
“No, I haven't the least idea.”
Suzanne took a long, deep drag
on the cigarct. "We quarreled
about you," she said, very dis-
tinctly.
(To Be Continued)
“Let’s get । Gray has returned to her home
in Oak Hill.
The 1941 Ford has an entirely new body — longer and
wider. It has a longer wheelbase. Seating width has been
increased as much as seven inches! Larger windshield
H ll PI '(WWWWWi
After you see the beauty and size of this big cur, feel
its faster acceleration and soft new ride — a ride produced
by new, slower-action springs, improved shock absorbers,
and a newly designed stahtlizer that cases steering and
helps maintain balance on curves or in cross winds.
How is it done? How can such a big, comfortable
car have eight cylinders and this costly construction
at low price?
The answer goes back to the Ford way of doing busi.
ness — to the fact that Ford has built millions more cars
than any one else and is satisfied with a smaller profit
per car.
Get the full story from any Ford dealer. See how little
it costs to trade in your present car. A 1^41 Ford means
a good deal!
,1
Mrs. Hattie McFadden who
has been spending a few days j
with her daughter Mrs. Claude I
Mrs. Allie Wylie. Mrs. Bettie I
Wylie and Miss Frances Wylie I
spent Sunday afterneon with Mrs. I
Esther Smith and family at Oak 1
Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Wylie and
daughters. Rozelle and Patsy, ac-
companied by Mr. and Mrs. J. M.
Waldrop of Oakland, visited Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Berry at Compton -
-2*
Suznnne. They’ve quarreled. Paul
takes Martha to n hotel for din-
ner. to make Suzanne burn."
While she waits for Paul tn take
Buteh for an airing, she overhears
her neighhors. . . . • That man—
at thio time of night. • • • Imag-
ine!"
12-44, $10.95. Left. Woven Bar Sheer*, an interest-
’ N‘"78
AS MoCM AS THEK WERE ON OBEIN6
OROE4 ! THE FOLOWEO ME ALL TWE
WAN OER FROM TAE ORNEN __
.__Jg,
aumzaeammenme"
THL Rwe,t
OAR — TWE
L__ RIN r
V-
•469),
She washed the stockings, and
then stuck Butch in the bathtub
•and washed him. He whined and
moaned piteously, as he always
did. This had always been Bill’s
task.
After that, she straightened her
bureau drawers. It was still only
half past 8. “What's the matter
with me.’ One evening at home,
and I'm bored stiff."
The apartment seemed so
empty! SO quiet! She turned on
the radio. She remembered that
quiz program and Paul’s voice
saying that the Army didn't sep-
arate people quite as permanently,
as Reno. . . .
“What's the matter with me?”
Definitely, it wasn't good to see
RIEV
, ’dipt- STORE ===,
mVEr « s-- LU
‘umndanev“inet
--"h------O-----
Suicides by Blowing
I “I’ve been out a lot,” Martha Self to Bits in Hotel I
admitted guiltily. “I was just : .______
. thinking about it.” I BUFFALO, N. Y (UP) Wil-
“Out with Paul?” asked Su- liam D. Wright, 40, et Rochester
zanne. There was something tight I pommitted suicide today by blow!
in her voice. Something held back, i ing himself to bits with dynamite
waiting. ... in the lobby of a downtown
“Yes.” She hurried on, "What- , hotel.
ever happened between you two According to police Wright
idiots, anyway? Why don't you , had been evicted from'his room
come around any more? I asked ' la it night for non-payment and
Paul, but he told me exactly noth- I had spent the night sitting in
ing. What did you fight about, if 1 the Ford hotel lobby ' He had
you did fight?" registered at the hotel Dec 11
“Suppose I come over right Police said thev ' '
now? ‘ve wanted to talk to you. 10 determine how Wright h d
"Why, of course, come right but Wrighte ws"mily aNabqd
lobby was little damaged.
" '■ : 33333332
: • 33333.3
■ ■- 333222823:3
L —
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Wylie, Mr. i
and Mrs. Elmer Wylie and daugh-
ter, Patsy, spent Wednesday with
Mr, and Mrs. John Warren at
Grandview.
News has been received of the |
serious condition of John Bost of
Royce City.
Mack Wylie, Miss Margie, Ruth '
andMyrl Dean Wylie visited Mr.
and Mrs. John Bost at Royce City
last week. They wero accompan-
ied home by Miss Frances Wylie
who had been visiting there for A
fewunym-eT F
Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Pool and
children stopped with Mr. and
Mrs. W. A Bridges a short time
last week on their way to North
Carolina where Mr. Pool has a
position.
. Misses Joe Ruth Gossett. Mae
Garrison, Cleo Duran, Charleye
feet; her hair glossy, each curl in | Jones, Margie, Ruth, MyrI Dean
and Rozelle Wylie spent' Tuesday
with Miss Hays Bridges.
Mr. and Mrs. J. L, Patterson,
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Taylor visit-
ed Mr. and Mrs. Arch Brooks at
Marshall Thursday.
Elvie Dunlp of Antioch visit-
ed his mother, Mrs. Bertha Dun-
lap Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Suggs and
daughter, Rebecca, have return- i
ed here from Oak Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Conley and
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Kig of
Longview visited on Crystal
Farms’ Saturday night.
Mrs. D. ’ J. Langston has re-
turned to her home in Oak Hill
after spending several days with
her mother, Mrs. Jane Brothers,
who is ill.
Mr • Frank Fisher made a
business trip to Longview Tues-
day.
Mrs. Jim Russ has returned to
her home ... El Paso after spend-
ing several weeks with relatives
here.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Smith
and family of this community
have recently moved to Long-
view.
Rev. Ira Harper will preach
every first Saturday night at
the Crystal Farms Church.
Everyone is invited to attend.
Jim Kuykendall made a busi-
ness trip to Henderson Thursday.
M. A. Langston and Julian
Vincent made a business trip to
Dirgin Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Deaton were
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
J. W. Deaton.
William Cunningham and son,
W. A. made a business trip to
Carthage and Henderson Thurs-
day.
4 M
qe
‘A
kua.027 !
By EDGAR MARTIN ’
and thought, "The devil with
l hem.”
ALFORD BROS. MOTOR CO.
“Neighbors!” she thought, furi-
ously. “Dear, nosey, nasty-minded
neighbors!”
' A moment later, Butch came
bounding up the stairs. His tail
? W*
IBs
, -n
1 -
we1 *
: e -
I ne
k I . ■
sau M
। It wasn't Bill. It was Suzanne
Decker.
I CHE told Paul while she was in
' • his office going over some re-
, ports with him, “The round of
I gaiety is wearing me out. Paul.
And I have no clean stockings
.05715.0.4.
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 255, Ed. 1 Friday, January 10, 1941, newspaper, January 10, 1941; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1496787/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.