Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, April 24, 1942 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Rusk County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Rusk County Library.
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PR -
THE HENDERSON DAILY NI
1 Dr. Carnathan I*
3
s
a“
Danger Past
-
F ■
y
a
Go
Kd
b3)
ds
Chamberlin's position
I
ry
MacArthur’s
$ • ■
I
, -
the
1
today continued holding- hearings (
suggested
HOSPITAL NOTES
Mrs.
Mary E.
|
the
r
to
and six ounces.
the armed forces.
dis- I
made one requiring full time.
Train Kills Man
FORT WORTH GRAIN
Selected Stocks
Corn: 2 white 1054-061; 2 yellow ।
Oats: 2 red 65-66: 3 red 63-64.
MARKETS AT A GLANCE
MIDCONTINENT OIL
-
TULSA. (UP)—Tractor fuel in-
/
DIVIDEND DAY
9
tape on a
$
by the workers and held until po-
ket were steady and un hanged.
I unchanged to off 3-8 cents.
■ Warner Candidate
)
7
But Hqs Few Hopes
1
FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK
NEW YORK CURBS
p
NEW YORK COTTON
CHICAGO GRAIN
the training for peace.
surely
as
July 1952
W: • Texas Apco-
any kind of
mpaign in Texas.
Cotton I
7
2009
2000
—-S
t
"xa
.17 M '
38
gc
%
and Washington uncertainties.
NEW YORK, i UP) Cotton fu-
tures closed steady.
return of rationing officer Mark
McGee from Washington. McGee
Willkie Says Abandon
Isolationism Era
Douglas
Chief of
as Gen.
assistant
Marshall’s Confab
Approved by FDR
LONDON. (UP)—Prime Minis-
ter Winston Churchill has receiv-
United States deliveries to Russia
would be up with the Schedule by
the end of this month.
Close
1930
1949-50
1962
1972
1974- N
1986- N
conference,
sibility of
Indiaia
Mac-
n four
meet
litchell
- when
three
c New
High
1935
1957
1991
1997
must
the
Open
1929
Open
1930
1955
1988
1993
1997
2008
Low
1927
1946
1982
1990
Cities Service 2 1-4
Gulf Oil 25 3-8
Humble Oil 25 3-8
Humble Oil 49 1-2
l.one Star Gas 6 1-8
elected.”
For thia
in Peris.
Nenrly
have bhen
men3 in ocupied France during the
po-t 10 days in repri zals for acts
o' terrorirm and sabotage.
1965
1971
1975
1987
London stocks closed steady with
rails a new high for the year.
Cotton futures lower.
Wheat closed up 11 to 1}; corn
Oct.
Dec. .
Jan. .
discovered the
I
Stocks lower in moderate trad-
ing.
Bonds irregular.
Curb stocks irregularly lower.
Chicago stocks lower.
yards here and who was about to
bleed to death.
Am Rad & SS 3 7-8
AT&T 110 1-8
Anaconda 23 1-2
Avn Corp 3
Barnsdall 8 1-2
Bendix Avn 32 1-2
Beth Steel 54 a-8
Chrysler 52
Cons Oil 5
Curtiss Wright 7
Firestone 88 1-8
Gen Elec 22
Gen Mot 33
Goodrich 14 3-1
Houston Oil 2 1-4
Int Harv 49 3-8
Int T & T 2
Lockheed Air 17 3-8
Mont Ward 21 1-4
Am Avn 11 1-1
Ohio Oil 6 1-2
Penney J C 60
Phillips Pct 30 3-8
Pure Oil 87 3-8
Radio Corp 2 3-1
Sears Roc 44 1-2
Shell Un Oil 10 3-8
Socony Vac 6 7-8
Stand’Oil N J 30 5-8
Texe, Corp 30 1-4
Tex G Sul 28 5-8
Un Air Corn 27 3-4
U S Steel 46 3-8
West Elec 61
-
e-
No. 5
(Continued From Page 1)
Barley: No. 2, 69-70:; 3. 68-69
Milo:'2 yellow 117-124; 3 white1
114-121.
.0ON‘T LET IT
' BOTHER YoU-
SATURDAY IS
You would study about oil and
crops to become an agronomist.
GEN. MACARTHUR’S HEAD-
QUARTERS. Australia. (UP) —
j Brig. Gen. Stephen J. Chamber*
! lin, whose cluttered desk consti-
tutes the A ied operations control
board, said today that the danger
of a successful Japanese invasion
of Australia passed its peak six
weeks ago.
"We were in pretty pool shape
then,” he said, "but it looks like
we're ove the hump now. Win-
ning this war still is going to be
a day and night job, though, be-
cause the Japanese aren’t knock-
ing off when the sun goes down.”
ed is not possible and it is not
possible to maintain the present
level of production because the
entire vla ‘ at Dessau is worn out
and almost useless.”
Hitler then o-dered his arrest,
it was reported.
No. 3
(Continued From Page 1)
No. 2
(Continued From Page 1)
i <
/
n
No. 4
(Continued From Page 1)
No. 1
(Continued From Page 1)
the short-distance oil movement
formerly handled by railroad'.
More than 200 permits have
been approved, Kilday said.
-
I
r
vocates state payment of campaign
expenses for candidate-, but ad-
mits that “this probably is a
dream of Utopia."
"For the life of me,” he said,
“I can't figure any way for the
nvita-
d at
Air
o to
Gasoline Rationing
in Texas Not Needed
AUSTIN. Tex. (UP )— Gasoline
rationing in Texas is "wholly un-
necessary” Gov. Coke Stevenson
said today, taking sides with
affairs committee appeared toda
to be the first step in preparatio
for drafting men with dependent
in the armed forces.
Mays of New (an employment in the executive
d. ! branch of the federal govern-
J
J
an even greater pro-
4? I
200 French hostages
executed by the Ger-
Ellington Field, Texas where Aviation Cadets get their train-
ing in multi-motored ships. That bird in the middle is a
“Do-do” bird, an extinct bird that couldn’t fly, and is the
mental mascot of all cadets who haven’t soloed.
(AIR CORPS PHOTOS FROM NEA TELEPHOTO)
Kaffir: 2 yellow 113-117; 3 white ।
110-116.
I
\ PIV,
ickod
l inin
Staff in command of
K $, •4
E- k {
had captured a terrorist who al- j structions were heavy today on the
legedly shot a German sentry. midcontinent refinery market. Re-
The assailant attempted to es- finers predicted a fractional price
bicycle but was caught i increase for this product next
week. Other phases of the mar-
Mrs. Bernice Crain was
charged.
the er gine could rot back off his He talked in his office, where
right leg without crushing his left. the walls are lined with pin-stud-
Colgin apparently could not live ded maps of the entire Pacific op-
much longer without help. eration.
favors—can get
southwest is rolling now," he said.
“It only needs polishing in a few
roug i spots.
“There's an enormous amount
of work yet to be done if we want
to win this war, though, because
the Japs are driving all-out and
we must do the same. This war
is something you can't drop when
the whistle blows. You've got to
take it to bet with you at night
and get up with it in the morn-
ing.”
When the peace comes, Warner
believes a "christian peace" should
be established. And in this con-
inate a free-for-all. Perhaps we
could make it necezeary for can-
— In-
York
wo of
s-were
mpion-
ed into
two-
k and
annual
The spread of the violence to un-
occupied France occurred on the
s6th birthday of Marshal Henri
wmmmmes am > Jak • • •
on applications foi permits foi , wu Ag IN i NA NID, I: ,, ,
operation of trucks to move oil. j WHA. S IP A MAME — First there s Sgt. Clarence Lynns
Truck owners are being encour- of V inton. La., With P-39D a flying squirrel, (top left),
aged to take out permits. Diffi-then there s the pointer pup, "Private MacArthur” (top
cutties in the movement of oil right) with SgL. Charles Pannell, Gadsden, Ala., Next is Sgt
by tank steamers has led to । William McMillan of Philadelphia, Pa., with "Butch”, the
tlilis,iop shfpmilroad the north tough duck and last, but not least, is a billygoat named “Lily”
and enst. The motor trucks arc getting her (his) dinner from a bottle in the hands of Cpl.
being issued permits to take over William Baggett of Center, Texas. These mascots are all at
6
"Only the rich nr tho se who
He promised that
landing in Russian territory.
Lozovsky said he could not
answer a hypothetical question of
that sort, and added that there
had been no recent change in
Russo-Japanese relations.
"The best way to help Great
Britain is to help the Russians
no reason why its use in Texas
should be curtailed.
Stevenson declined to discuss
down and puts an arm around me.”
"No, ir. I don’t expect to be
elected unless a streak of light-
nine hits me.” Warner said and
added wit fully:
“But then it theoretically is
possible for the Trinity river to
ireeze in July—and it probably
will be if I’m elected.”
What’s he running for?
“Well, I’ll tell you. Few realize
She crawled under the locomo-
tive, stuck a flashlight between
her teeth and b gan operating
with a small scalpel she carried
in her kit. When the scalpel would
not serve a railroad worker offer-
ed his big pocketknife, which the
now smudgy doctor sterilized in
alcohol and used to ccmplete the
operation.
'he then brought Colgin back
to th riedical college of Virginia
Hospital, where she is an interne,
and he is expected to recover.
Dr. Diez, who will be 23 next
month, was 1 rn in Samtander,
Spain. She left Spain when she
was 12 to go to Puerto Rico,
where he parents still live. She
was graduated from the Universi-
6 ty of Puerto Rico Medical College,
and hopes to go to Bellevue Hos-
. ‛i —w- York next year as an
interne.
Oil Transportation
Hearing* Continue
AUSTIN (UP)—Director James
Kilday of the motor division of
the Texas Railroad Commission
lice arrived, it was reported. He
was dercrihed as the first terrorist
caught in an act of assazsination
tion, especially of Stukas.
Koppenbers was reported
have made this evsuse:
"I increased production ask-
suucceded, in a certain degree, in
skinging the British government
toward a more aggressive attitude.
But they added that just when it
would be feasible to make a full
scale attack on the continent was
still an extremely controversial
problem.
renson, Warner
amumdama.uktadaduukal
came next.
kill Germans," Standley
I “Russia is the vital front."
“The Allied machine In
FORT WO RTH. Tex. (UP)—
Livestock:
Cattle 3000; calves 200; steady:
steers and yarlings 10-12.75; fat
cows 7.50-8.75; cutters 5.50-7.50:
calves 7.50-13.50.
Hogs 1100; 10 cents higher; top
m butchers 14.10: good butchers 16-
“14.10; mixed grades 13.30-13.95;
packing sows 12.75 down.
Sheep 500. no sales reported.
operations makes him a key man.
She answered an ambulance call . He is one of the hardest working
in the early nours Monday and I officers in the complicated setup
found Colgin pinned beneath the | of the Australian, American and
giant wheels in such a way that Dutch mra-power pool.
lures would go after that. He
deserihed the war production as
an "aiming job.”
The bill, introducec by Rep. ‘
Andrew Edmiston, D., W. I- 1
at the request of the War Do- J
partment, se up a scale of allw- 8
ances for the dependents of men J
in the armed services. The House 9
military affairs committee prob- i
ably will go to work on it next 22
week.
Edmiston said the primary pur-
pose of the legislation was to 3
relieve hardships among men who
have volunteered or who may
volunteer in the future. He ad-
mitted that it also would be
applicable when and if draft
boards start putting men with ;
dependents in Class 1-A.
Edmiston’s bill sets up this A
scale of iamily allowances: wife
only, $20; wife and one child,
830, with $10 per month addi-
tional for each additional child; . ’
no wife but one child, $15; no
wife and two children, $25, with
S10 per month additional for
each additional child; a former i
wife divorced, to whom alimony
has bee: decreed, $20.
In the case ' of a man to a i
grandchild, a parent, brother or 3
sister: one parent, $15, two
parents, $25; and for each grand-
child, brother, sister and addi- ‘
tional parent, $5.
The enlisted man would match 2
was quoted there as saying he did
not wish to retain the’place if itwas
becomes a salaried one or if it is
came during the night, possibly
26 feet, or less than Monday's
high.
The East Fork at Rockwall was
at 13.6 feet and rising, spreading
over more farmlands. There had
been 2.20 inches of rain.
Lake Dallas where the water
was running 2.6 feet over the
spillway reported 1.60 inches of
rain. At Trinidad the river was
at 42.2 feet and rising, after 1.60
inches of rain. Seven stations re-
porting from the Mountain Creek
watershed had rainfall of from
1.75 to 3.40 inches McKinney re-
ported 2.25 inches.
Carrollton reported the river at
nine feet a * rising after 2.6
inches of rain. Gainesville had 1.43
inches; Palestine had 1.55 inches;
Lufkin 1.33; Mineral Wells 1.17;
Sulphur Springs .63; Eldorado .73;
Quanah 1.29: Wichita Falls 1.44;
Lubbock .34; San Antonio .41;
Austin 1.23; Houston 1.96; Galves-
ton 1.96; Corpus Christi a sprin-
kle; Brady 1.05; Waco 1.90; Abi-
lene .97; Fredericksburg 1.68.
' Mr. Roosevelt, in
seek becking and return
.2 U , .. , c . The government payroll reach-
M rs.H..D. Ham of Cushing ed $262,106,040, an increase of
admitted for treatment, $86,483,390 over February, 1941.
FORT WO RTH, Tex. (UP)—
said. , cash grain:
Wheat: 1 hard 1231-1264.
ROCHESTER, N. Y. (UP)- The
United States must abandon per-
manently its “long. comfortable
era" of isolationism and begin now
to educate itself “in the affairs of
peoples and nations thousands of
miles from our shores," Wendell L.
Willkie said last night.
In an address at Rochester Uni-
versity, the former Republican
presidential candidate blamed the
blindness of isolationism for failure
to perceive Japanese ambitions
year ago and development of a pol-
icy under which after apan at-
tacked China in 1937, "we render-
ed more aid to Japan than to Chi-
na, and thus furthered the ambi-
tions of the Japanese."
his press
the pos-
that he ' NEW ORLEANS COTTON
High Low
1935 1925
1954 1945
1968 1960
1978 1969
1975 1971
1990 1981
ment reached a new high of 1,-
805,186 persons in February, an
increase of 632,000 in the past
year, the Civil Service Commis-
sion reported today.
The futures do not include
UM""
, - ‛py ,
3* ' 2a3 88
h ■
2- W
*ewbsd
DALLAS. (UP) - An unidenti-
fied Mexican was struck and fa-
tally injured here today by the
streamliner Texas Rocket. He lived
but a few moments after being
taken to a hospital.
Sheat:Tmized1id22"2*mizd x 18S’,S’,37^1
Mr«. Mary Mays
Injured Seriously
Mrs. Mary E. Mays of New
Salem, Rusk County's only cen-
turian, who celebrated her one
hundredth birthday March 29.
was brought to the Henderson
Hospital at noon today following
serious injuries in s fall.
She received painful and ser-
ious injuries last night at her
home when she tripped aa she
was walking in her room. It waa
reported today that her hip
bone waa fractured and a part
of the bone splintered. Her con-
dition is reported to be serious.
I Pocket-Knife ’sayS Invasion
’ Used by Qirl
rise slowly from Logansport to
Orange.
At Waco at 8 a.m. the Brazos
was at 26.8 feet. The flood stage
is 27 feet and the Houston weath-
er forecaster estimated a crest
of 28 feet by evening at Waco.
Slowly rising stages for the mid-
dle and lower Brazos were predict-
ed.
Special flood warnings were
hoadeast by the Dallas weather
bureau on authority from Wash-
ington. In Dallas County alone,
county officials estimated dam-
age exceeding $1,000,000.
The Trinity stage at Dallas at
10 a.m. Friday was 38.1 feet and
rising at two-tenths a foot an
hour. It was expected to be past
the 40-foot mark by afternoon.
With rising waters on the Elm and
west forks of the Trinity, about
24 hours distant, the river at Dal-
las was due to rise until Satur-
day.
Elsewhere along the Trinity
plane landed in Maritime terri-
tory,” the communique said.
“According to the statement of
the plane's crew, on that day the
plane participated in an Amer-
ican air raid on the Japanese
islands and, having lost its bear-
ings, made a forced landing on
Soviet territory.
"In conformity with universally
accepted intei national rules Soviet
authorities interned the American
plane and its crew."
No details were given of the
landing of the plane and there
- nection he lays upon the shoulders Mar.
Warner and M- tor on pools of newspapers a challenge tn see Spots closed nominal at 20.97;
claims it takes 8100.000 to make that a “Christian peace" is estab- down 2 points.
lished. ------------
duction program than currently
contemplated. The two-year pro-
grant he set forth in January
called for 185,000 airplanes,
120,000 tanks, 50,000 anti-aircraft
guns and 8,000,000 deadweight
tons of merchant shipping.
Mr. Roosevelt told his press
conference that shortages of steel
plates and shapes were the prin-
cipal reasons for the merchant
thipbuilding program being be-
hind schedule.
/ Philippe Petain, who last week re- [
stored Pierre Laval to power as
Vichy chief of state. I I
Reports from Paris said that 1
two workers in a Paris subuurb
"It is an economic as well as
a humanitarian necessity for
every boy and girl in America 1
and the world to have a proper May .
education."
"ell qualified for entering the
themselves i Senate, Ry the time he was 20,
a sin tossed a bomb at the platform J He said the United States would
• of the municipal theater in Rennes, do everything to overcome ob-957-971.
Brittany, while he was delivering a stacles in supplying the Russian,
"collaboration" speech. I army.. The primary task of the.
There were no casualties and no United States, he said, was to
immediate arrests in the two bomb keeppis.fleet and . its forces in
explosions, according to advices the Pacific supplied, and Russia
' reaching Vichy.
reaches, the flood was falling
away.
The Fort Worth stage Friday
was 15.5 and falling. Rosser re- |
ported apparently falling waters,
although weather observer Frank
Dodson was driven from home by
the flood and couldn't see the
gauge. Seven or ei. ht neighbors'
houses had washed away.
Denton Cre- at Roanoke at 8
a.m. was 20.2 feet. The crest
' in Operation
Ah RICHMOND Va. (UP) — A
beautiful Puerto Rican girl who
became an interne at a hospital
here and was assigned to ride an
ambulance, crawled under a loco-
motive before dawn last Monday
and with a pocket-knife amputat-
ed the leg of a railroad brakeman,
hospital officials revealed here to-
day.
Dr. Mariana Diez-Rivas, who
goes by the name ’ Dr. Diez, w as
credited with saving the life of
21-year-old Bernard Jonathan Col-
gin. whose right leg had been
crushed by a locomotive in the
— . . . Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ballinger persons employed in either the
the possibility of a change in the of Tatum announce the birth of । legislative or judicial branches
state rationing officer., until.the a daughter, weighing nine pounds of the government, nor men in
the government’s allowance. A 3
second bill pending before the
military affairs committee would
raise the base pay of enlisted men
to 8 12 a month.
Edmiston’s bill—-and the War
Department’s recommendations—— "
are based on the assumption that j
the bill to increase base pay will
pass.
(or free vocational training or a i
college degree in the course for
which they are best fitted.
Warner, who bears some phy-
sical resemblance to Paul McNutt, i
advocates establishment of state-j NEW YORK IUPJ ,cotton fu-
men‛s,colleg‛ S as another plat- . tures closed 3 to 8 points net lower
“We have two colleges (Wosttoday in a dull session.
________ Point and Annapolis) for the I Liquidation was prompted by ap-
that one can fight for democracy | training for war. and none for proach of the first May notice day
Madagascar is Bill Poim
'Eyed' by Allies To Draft
JOHANNESBURG, South Af-
rica (UP)—Official reports of
extensive Japanese fifth column
operations on Madagascar, 750
miles off the South African coast,
today heightened speculation on
a possible Allied seizure of the
French island.
Official sources said that the
Union of South Africa might
soon recognize Gen. Charles De
Gaulle’s Free French movement,
which claims the sympathy of
Madagascar’s 4,000,000 people,
as the next step after yesterday’s
severance of relations with Vichy
France.
Madagascar lies astride the
vital Allied supply lines to the
Near East and there have been
fears that Japan, already pushing
her naval and air strength across
the Indian Ocean, might seize the
island without opposition from
the new Pierre Laval government
in Vichy.
Dispatches today from Pretoria,
capital of the Union of South
Africa, revealed that South Af-
rican officials were taking a
serious view of the Madagascar
situation, particularly the report-
ed Japanese fifth columnist activ-
ities there.
The Pretoria government was
raid to be keeping a “close watch
on the situation” although there
was no official indication as yet
that any military moves were
being planned against Madagas-
car’s small garrison. The garrison
is under Gov. Gen. Armand Annet,
who is loyal to Vichy.
In addition to the Japanese
fifth column activities the Vichy
authorities were said in official
reports to be carrying out strict
measures against Free French
sympathizers on Madagascar, many
of whom have been arrested.
Clone
1927-28
1947-48 1
1983 |
1991-92 |
2002-B
2002-03 1
. . to get in, but he couldn't pass Spots closed steady at 19.88, i
‘lidates tn have certain educational the physical, down 13 points.
Inunlifications or be nominated by. "I'm 18 and I feel like a HOUSTON. (UP) Middling
petition.” I hundred.” j cotton closed today at 19.85. I
Warner expects to spend less
than $100 in the July election.
Principal plank of Warner’s
platform is education.
Every soldier and sailor return- [
ing from the war, he declared,
should be granted an opportunity i
as our soldiers can
was no clue as to the landing
place.
Nor was any detail given of the
nature of the conference between
Standley and Stalin and Molotov.
Standley had arrived in Kuiby-
shev April 7 by plane to assume
his new post. He presented his
credentials to President Mikhail
I. Kalinin at Moscow April 14.
Only yesterday Vice Foreign
Commissar S. A. Lozovsky, chief
war spokesman, had been asked
here what attitude the govern-
ment would take if an American
bombing plane made a forced
ed a message from President
Roosevelt expressing complete ap-
proval of decisions reached during “
the visit to London of Gen. George „
C. Marshall, United States Army m
chief of staff, it was understood •
today. E
Well informed sources expressed E
belief that the decisions were con- H
cerned with opening a second front 109
in Europe as soon as possible. । Jr
They reported that Marshall had
DALLAS (UP) —Pudgy white-
hnired Monte Warner today was
a candidate for Senate from the
sovereign state of Texas but he
doesn’t expect to be elected un-
less “God or Roosevelt bends
he had visited every state in the NE WORLEANS (UP,
ad- union, taking an occasional whack I closed barely steady.
at newspapering.
When the last war broke out
he was one of the first American May
fliers to reach France and now is/ruy
“damn mad” because he wasn't | O.t
accepted for the air corps in this I DeC
war. He "darned near broke down Jan.
every door in Washington" trying Mai.
Deferred Mer
WASHINGTON (UP)—A b
pending before the House milita
Army’s winter counterattacks. At
that ne, Hitler was reported to
have dise eed with his high com-
mand’s desire to withdraw further
westward during the winter and
fired some of his top generals.
At the end of March, the heads
of the German arms industry were
ad-ised that production was it
nearly enough, according to Brit-
ish reports.
Koppenberg was cited as one of
those whose case was typical. He
was asked v the Junkers Works
had not increased plane produc-
Houston’s First Sea
Hero of War Returns
HOUSTON (UP)—Capt. G. H.
Hoy, Houston’s first sea hero of
the war, returned home to him 72
family today after a dangerous
journey including a 2,500-mile 2
trip ih an open lifeboat to save
11 of his crewmen from the 12
torpedoed S. S. Prusa in the J
Pacific.
The German-born skipper was 9
greeted at his train by his wife 125
and two sons, a score of neigh- ’
hors, officials of Lykes Brothers 2
Steamship Company and Mayor i
Neal Pickett.
Hoy walked with a limp, ex-
plaining that he suffered a leg
injury when a Japanese sub-
marine torpedoed his ship east
of the Hawaiian Islands last Dec. 3
19.
One of the Prusa’s .lifeboats
was picked up shortly after the
sinking, but Roy followed the
trade winds about 2,500 miles
to the Gilbert Islands.
Federal Payroll
Hit* All-Time High
WASHINGTON. (UP 1 Civ-
n the
eight
title.
, with
' al
etance"
Duke
uarter
Delude
i hur-
, two-
US.
urday
which
titlist ;
11 won
four-
, and
i rd le;,
ended.
. the
broad
jump,
favor-
o-mile
nding
souri.
state to pay expenses and elim-
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
FOR RENT: Nicely furnished
cottage, close in. Electric re-
frigeration. utilites paid. Cou-
ple. Available April 25th.
Apply 305 So. Main St.
131tf
12,),
A
battle for it with guns.
“I don't expel to be elected,
therefore I don't have to straddle
the fence. I don't have to pull my
punches. I can tell people the
truth."
The 48-year-old oil man who
Federal Petroleum Coordinator i Salem was admitted.
Harold L. Ickes.
The governor said observation Mr*. Lydia Doezendorf, Stai
convinced him that there is not route, was admitted.
shortage of gasoline in Texas and
- • - E. W. Grier of Price was ad-
mitted for a tonsillectomy.
The Gulf Stream is the bluent
body of water on the earth.
Corn: 1 yellow 83; 2 yellow 82-85
3 yellow 81-821; 5 yellow 75-81;
1 white 97: 3 white 964.
Oats: 1 mixed 57-571; 2 mixed
36; 1 white 572; 2 white 57J-57J;
3white 543-562; 4 white 553; 1
mixed heavy 57 J; 1 red special 57-
574.
CHICAGO. (UP) Wheat fu-
ture* recovered earlier losses to
close firmer, but other grain fu-
ture* were narrowly irregular on
the board of trade today.
Wheat closed 11 to 1J cents per
bushel higher: corn unchanged to
off 3-8; oats off 1-4 to up 5-8; rye
up 1-8 to 1-2; soy beans up 13-24.
1 Reports that Secretary of Ag-
riculture Claude Wickard would
tell wheat producers to reduce
acreage or accept lower price* led
to early easiness in wheat futures
but short covering operations later
in the session inspire d arally of
about 1 cent from the day’s low.
Named Health Officer
Dr. W. G. Carnath n yester-
day was appointed Rusk county
health officer, replacing Dr. Jesse
Ross who resigned to accept an
appointment in the U. S. Navy !
Reserve.
Dr. Carnathan took over his
new duties today. The appoint-
ment was made by the Rusk
county commissioners court.
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, April 24, 1942, newspaper, April 24, 1942; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1497184/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.