Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 134, Ed. 1 Friday, August 22, 1941 Page: 4 of 10
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M
By Galbraitk
SIDE GLANCES
A CHANCE TO HIT THREE AT ONCE
/U5
D. R. HARRIS, President and General Manager
T. N. MeCARTY, Business Manager
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Meanwhile the Falange has spent heav-
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posals are made.
in the war, and has not the slightest right ;
HOLD EVERYTHING
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BARNYARD KING
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VERTICAL
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COPR 1941 BY MU SERVICE, IHC T M Mi U ! PAT OF
“Don't get nervous—that’s just Whifflesnoot’s hay fever I”
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FUNNY BUSINESS
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Funeral
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Home
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OH OUR WAY
By J. R. WILLIAMS
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
By AHERN
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OKAV, WIMPY _ ’
WHATCHA WANT2
The handwriting on the wall
is a pretty good indication that
the house is rented.
3 Fowl.
4 Sole.
5 Molecule
(abbr.).
I
53 Area (abbr.).
54 Dried grape.
compulsion. recognizing ill-gotten gains, 'rus
trating legitimate objectives.
_,5
48 Rule.
50 Nickname of
Babe Ruth.
51 Moccasin.
I SAID
GOOD
MORNING
HORIZONTAL
1 Air instru-
ment.
9 Repast.
14 Thrifty.
15 Coat.
16 Coral island.
17 Aspects.
19 Symbol for
nickel.
20 Nickname
for Susan.
21 Germinated.
22 Nominal
(abbr.).
23 Make lace.
13 Line of three
meters.
15 Employer.
18 Mountain
crest.
21 Thus.
22 New star.
24 Punctuatbor
mark.
25 Vegetable.
27 Dependent.
29 Prefix.
30 To condemn.
32 Weight
। 35 Made ready.
37 Morals.
40 Cheese.
42 Tropical
disease.
45 Title (pl.)
47 Lure.
49 Alcoholic
drinks.
51 Kitchen
utensils.
52 Give vent to.
54 Rodent.
55 Tenet.
56 Seize.
57 Manager.
t abbr.).
59 North Island
(abbr.).
61 Continent
(abbr.)
measure.
7 Drink
habitually.
8 Reflecting.
9 Ran away.
10 better S.
11 Near.
12 Unmarried
woman (Sp.).
E
' E
A
SOCk!!
BOP!
low mental
level.
58 Occupant.
60 Confident.
“Plumber Sues for Lost Love”—
headline. Maybe he left it at the
shop.
An optimist is anyone who
planted watermelons right along
the roadside.
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"Your girl friend has been going out with another fel-
low—but it’s nothing to worry about!*
HE HAS To, IF HE EVER.
EXPECTS TO FIND
OUT WHAT’S GOIM’
ON AROUND HERE--
ONE OF THEM
COVER MENT MEM •
MAY SAY A WORD \
TOO MUCH SOME 1
TIME AM’ GIVE HIM
A HIMT OF WHAT /
WERE DOIN': /
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is3h
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to dictate to either side what peace measures ’ ialists.
!
SO THEY SAY
American education must prepare men
for freedom, equip them to create and main-
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We refrain from comment on this curi-
2',,,
The United States is not convince our Good Neighbors that we are
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MAYBE more women would
take up golf if the men could
drive with one hand.
As for the instinct of liberty—that lives
always with us, proud and strong.—Marshal
Petain of France, announcing complete col-
laboration with Hitler.
--- o-------------
Thou shall also consider in thine heart,
that, as a man chasteneth his son, so the
Lord thy God chasteneth thee.— Deuteron-
omy 8:5.
a lot of uncouth boors and grasping imper-
3( EGAD, MARTHA! VOUR RESEMBLANCE
9 TO THE GLAMOROUS LILLIAN
7 RUSSELL IS ASTOUNOING AS NOU \
Lde.
“I’m dummy and I’m hiding until I see how your mother
enmec not on mv live no-trump bidi
24 More saintly. 46 Gem. 1 Animal.
25 Heart 47 Two (prefix). 2 Real.
26 Collect a tax.
28 Entomology
(abbr.).
29 Ship attach-
ment.
31 Transported.
33 Originate.
34 Upon (prefix)
36 Footwear.
38 Measure.
39 Give.
Cows,
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itfi ir hu mvici. inc t - in u ' n-
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good many peace proposals floating Nothing is simple. The American Red Cross
!
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’’■^y JRWILLANS
THEVAGBONDKIGew-u-xm.N
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I STAND there poised to WELCOME
P YOUR WEARY WANDERERS/-
2 HM’—I BROUGHT NOU THIS 1
6( RARE GEM OF PURPLE QUARTZ
1 THAT LAM FOR CENTURIES IN P
Lots of home gardeners by now
have lost faith in the old “As ye
sow, so shall ye reap.”
79
(•
Orphans to Isle of Man
RAMSEY, Isle of Man (UP)—
The Isle of Man has offered to
provide homes for several thous-
and babies orphanied by the blitz.
In most cases the Man people
will care for the babies in their
homes free of charge Those who
cannot afford to do this will get
a maintenance allowance from the
Man government.
TAPSEBALE
IDEAMSA III r
V E AWE ONETR EM OR
E RRIE RECH O RINE
5 SHF IATTiEiR SiSI
at one another whenever the chance looks I
. . . ... . . Today it has become clear that Hitler
good is no peace. A peace which assents to' , .
. e .. । was playing a perfidious game.— Fritz Thys-
any nation or system using the rest of the
world as a mere spawning place for its prop-
-qalhatk
CQFW1»41 BY NEA SEBVlCC INC T. M BEC U S
-
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The morale is lower (in Italy) than I
have ever seen in any country before.—John
Whitaker, American correspondent just re-
turned from Europe.
war does not preclude eager interest in the en onl yknows howm uch money in propa-
peace. It matters to the United States, and. Kanda against the United States throughout
it matters deeply, what kind of peace pro-i Central and South America, attempting to
1 V ij
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MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
Entered second class matter P. O. In Henderson, Texas, Act Congress, Mar. 3, 1879
Some of us lose our way
and need the guidance of
some one who can help us.
We extend that help to you
with the respectful, effi-
cient and economical ser-
vice.
WELL, it'll be SOMETHING^
ON THE MANTEL BESIDES V
NOUR SHINN ELBOW ! ■— T
; SUPPOSE YOU’RE ALL #4
CROUCHED FOR THE WHISTLE,
TO SCRIMMAGE THE ICEBOX /
1 - COME IM, T‘LL WARM A
\ up •OME ROAST BEEF ‘
U. S. INTEREST IN PEACE PROPOSALS I
Have the salt ready. There are going :
EL
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otis relationship. There is no reason to re-
gret having fed the hungry. After all, the
4! My.stic word. 62 Revises.
43 Part of a fort 63 Perplex.
States is in the world, and it is affected (as
every one of us knows now) by whether
Europe and Asia keep peace.
The reason for the salt is this: The just
and workable peace that is the only kind
AJAY
it might advance or accent. But the United
Five cents per copy. Delivered on established city routes, 15 cents per week, sixty-
cents per month, $6.00 per year. Motor routes fifty cents per month. Mail,
Rusk and adjoining counties, 3 months $1.25; 6 months $2.25; one year $4.25. Mail
elsewhere in Texas and in Louisiana, Oklahome and Arkansas; 3 months $2.00; 6
months $3.50; one year $6.00. All other States: 3 months $2.50; 6 months $4.00; one
vear $7.50.
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USER
LEDm
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Though the mills of God grind slowly, (
yet they grind exceeding small; though with I
patience He stands waiting, with exactness
grinds He all. Friedrich von Logan.
BERATE
in them. Even profound disinterest in the j
A peace, for instance, “legitimatizing”
the conquest of small peoples bv aggressive
warfare, is no peace. A peace leaving Eu-
rope and Asia in a precarious balance be-
tween vast miltaristic forces readv to spring
—RATE
ret'
*
*4/
aganda and intrigue is no peace. A peace
■which denies access to the world’s raw ma-
terials on equal terms to all is no peace. A
peace without an organized means whereby
all can restrain those who would break It is
no peace.
It is such pinches of salt that must be 1
taken with every peace proposal that may
be advanced.
It would me a moral crime against man-
kind for people of any country to refuse to
consider honestly and hopefully weigh every
proposal looking to the war's end: but peace
proposals are often gift horses requiring the
most minute oral inspection.
-------0---
Godliness is profitable unto all things.
—I Timothy 4:8.
cross deserves no I
A MOUNTAIN CANERN-
HAR-RUMPH!; IT WILL ADO
A TOUCH OF GLITTER. TO
THE MANTEL !
3M3>—v
[57
€ (—3-
F-?V
Henderson Daily News
Published Every Afternoon (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning By
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
--------------------0
He that hath no
crown.- Quarles.
tain freedom, so ground them in a sense of
value that they see in free men the ultimate
good.—Bishop G. Bromley Ovnam, Boston
area, Methodist Church.
122
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sen, German industrialist and "angel" of the
early National Socialist movement.
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- fill social cement known to man. Dr. Marion
R. Traube, Pennsylvania State College.
3 ©
of blues in front of him rises formidably.
But the other fellow insists on playing on,
hoping for a change of luck.
As Woodrow Wilson said, “Only a peace
between equals can last.” Until both sides
in this or any war see themselves as equal
in power or potential power, there is no “ne-
gotiated” peace; there is only a peace of
*-a.* "
■ 3
about, some advanced in good faith, some has just finished distributing almost 20,000
less disinterested. Each will need a pinchitons of food, worth $4,000,000, to at least
of salt. a million people in Spain who were hungry.
The United States is properly interested ■ This it has done through the Auxilio Social,
in these proposals. Some of them most vio-; the relief organization of the Falange, Spain's
lent of isolationi ats are actively interested ' official state (Fascist) party.
HUNGRY FALANGISTS
The world is full of cross-currents.
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(Soo Old I
, MARTHA! r
IF SHE, IN
ONLY KMEVN; J
WHOP!! 7
CRACK!!
POPEYE, ou SAVED LIFE!) \
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injunction, “therefore if thine enemy hunger,
feed him” comes from a sources for which all
good Falangists profess a certain veneration,
worth making is scarcely within sight at a We're satisfied with the exchange if the
time when one side in a war holds all the Falangists are.
chips. The big winner in a poker game is
usually willing to call quits when the stack i
ADESEE
Huill/ IT LOOKS LIKE THIS
\ / SPEEDY GOVERMENT
• I BUNJCH IS GOT THE
I QL PULL O' TH' WOODS
I INJOCULATED WITH
— TH' SPEED BUG/ IM
_ ALL MV YEARS HERE
TN I NEVER SAW HIM
— PADDLIN’THAT A
- —I- FAST/ Ji
—K
F• I
X, / WHAT
Tu ( WAS THAT
-•H YOU SAID
_ I
OH,MHGORSH!2--s5
^VER'LL HAFTA HOLD
THE 'PHONE A I
MINNIT, y '“.fj j . •
(WIMPYJ.., Oyj .
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 134, Ed. 1 Friday, August 22, 1941, newspaper, August 22, 1941; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1496979/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.