Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 137, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 26, 1942 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
■ *
REMINDER
a
uureg-
T. N. MeCARTY, Business Manager
D. B. HARRIS. President and General Marager
$
J
t8
1
7
C. E.
J
336,
L E
Q-Zl>
COHl. 1X2 BY MCA ggRVICC. WC. T. M. REO. U. S. P^T. OFF.
Farley, to whom Franklin Roosevelt owes his | curbs in par’ing, the fast turn that makes
FUNNY BUSINESS
888
the old
8
12
\
”3
HOLD EVERYTHING
BRITISH OFFICIAL
:•
5L
0
ANA
EAVE 5
$
N
II.
I IlI l
I
0>
OE
RAS
A
L
P
T
5
0
L dd
1(^1
1P
S I
4BST
J.
k. s
k
S
E
>
((4
T
M.
32 Having shoes. 53 Obscure.
SERVICE MEN'S SPECIAL
s
Mr. Bennett, in the opinion of many, is for hours with rubber hose and leather belt-
• BARBS
♦
One Month . .
.60
Full
IZ
10
3
5
&
9
n
4
8
2
7
I give the word to advance, but in the mean-
York does not enjoy high repute.
14
15
bert Lehman, New York.
23
21
28
26
32
36
34
33
♦
39
40
36
35
36
44
42
41
POPEYE
By SEGAR
SO
48
49
SI
47
46
2.
54
S3
E
26
4
A
Try a Daily News Want Ad for Quick Results
‘ /
),
C V
- \
0
By J. R. WILLIAMS
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
By AHERN
7
TAAT’S HOTSY, MAJOR!
X
VW
I
4*
A
THE HECK
IF HE ATTEMPTS TO
4
HES, I'M HIM
i
3,%
)y
tn
0)
"wt
*,
1
1
22
7 J
I
7
S
L
O
J
"r
“4,
1
13
7
J.R.wnUA*S
((
8-26
g* ■
(eA
/
ev
gki, ;
Mr
u
A=
l y
IL
ILall[e)=[»]
=[=[»[
I#
El=[•
EVAV[#m
Eg
I=
saiai
VVa
10
3Hi
1
7
Him
IIT
EGAD, BOSWELL!
WEVE LABORED
SUPPLIES
COMPANY E
) THE PILOT 1^^
SLEEPINGATTHE
, SUlTCH-HES,
INDEED, HE
DOZES ON
THE DOCKS
HORIZONTAL
I Pictured Brit-
ish official,
kiU.SU lii
=m=j=za
mkj
imw
It’s all right for a fellow to pro-
pose to a girl on his knees, if she
happens to be sitting there.
Rudy Vallee has joined the
Long Beach, Calif., Coast Guard
as a band master. From now on,
his time is their time.
7 Philippine
warrior.
8 Railroad
(abbr.).
9 Act again.
10 Wading bird.
11 Total.
12 On time
(abbr.).
15 Confusion.
°<
7
13 Absorb.
14 Repel.
16 Farm animal.
17 Exist.
19 Purpose.
21 Upward.
23 Science of
dialing.
25 Music note.
26 Speak.
28 Street (abbr.).
29 Three (prefix)
30 Throw.
“b
g)"
■
Mrs.
ToB
39 Inclination.
40 Vehicle on
runners.
43 Vegetable.
46 Harvest in
India.
47 Editor (abbr.)
48 Title of
respect.
49 Centimeter
(abbr.).
50 Sour.
52 Punch.
55 Etruscan title.
56 Exclamation
You can now send the Henderson Daily News to that son,
brother, or friend who is in the armed service of his country
anywhere in the U. S. A., Alaska, Iceland or Puerto Rico,
for what you yourself would pay here in Rusk County.
IR
T 7
1 HAMA HAMBASSADOR,
AN' THEH TREATS —1
ME LIKE THIS!- )\
UHERE‘< THE —
HARBOR PILOT J
54 Suffix.
56 Attire.
58 Inner meaning
60 He is in the
British----.
61 Outburst of
temper.
VERTICAL
2 Print measure.
3 Dress fabric.
4 Ship’s jail.
5 Egg and milk
drink.
6 Real estate
(abbr.). -
INGENUITY AT WORK
Gasoline companies, anxious for contin-
33 East Indies
(abbr.).
34 As.
35 Loud shout.
38 Sprites.
1 41 Unusual.
42 Toward.
44 Cloth measure
45 Doctor of
Medicine
(abbr.).
46 Growing
numb.
51 Biblical
pronoun.
R
I
A
MUST T
A SPEND j
, ALL M 43
3 DAVS V
9 NET TO )|
SUITS
ME!
0
9
'Pm
. ----
OUT OUR WAY
r
/--------------
4
IS
though we were not at war.
It is all very, very discouraging to those
anxious to win.
57
43
m
4
3
s
s9
v
r
SO THEY SAY
We must form here (in England) the
best army the United States has ever put
39
182
31
. It is not good for the public to feel that
all the glorious work toward winning this
war—and toward winning the peace which
will follow—is performed by the men in uni-
form.—Daniel L. Marsh, president Boston
University.
Ms
.28
I'M DRY Y
ENOUGH I /
TO 1 (
DROOL
TALCUM ]
POWDERJ
H—
c
57
T
I
42
of joy.
17 Form of “be.” 57 Symbol for
9
kg
’I }
\
7
/A
"La,
4
A}
“If you don’t mind, I’ll wear this—it looks more devas-
tating!”
L 64 1i
They will have to turn combat planes
out faster than I can use them. I must have
enough airplanes to win this war.— Lieut.-
Gen. Henry H. Arnold, commanding general,
U. S. Air Forces. <
si
323
2160
17
SIDE GLANCES
ARE POU THE PILOT
3,
24
Q.
43
<, 1042. kne peatire, shaer Inc., World rights reserved
• 8-26
COFW. 1X2 BY Mt A MWVlCt. INC. T. M. W«C. U. • PAT. OFF._
“The Army turned ’em down,
but they’ve cheered up since
they started selling stamps’.”
(d
VV ASHINGS may not be all
• wool, but they’re usually a j
yard wide.
There
in this
hundred
assets.
d£ 3
8PO
NE8
T E
2;
Miss
tained
with a
last nig
in danc
Refre:
Misses
Clenden
Evelyn
Neva N
Dorothy
than, J
Aileen 1
Ned 1
Cox, P
Ainswoi
Smith,
Trout, I
ahlen and
dent’s home state will be headed after next
Jan. 1 by an advocate of belligerent warfare ;
against totalitarianism.
fl
Ss
6
I K
4
“What if we can’t buy new parts for the washing ma-
chine? Didn’t I make our old flivver run for years with
haywire and tape?”
49 {
--3
ArHTHENEUE"edeKTic
hm CACTIONZ
n
7-
I’M SO FULL OF
GINGER FROM
THEGE
< WORKOUTS f
\ I SLEEP <
} ON A ,N
(trapeze: )
a
The dim-out of the west coast
for the duration won’t stop Holly-
wood stars from shining.
» • •
Most people can remember
what hotel they stopped at by
looking at the name on the soap.
d
I17
«K
E2.
7*,
1
I
W
HIM M
Aboldie
Club
2
3
PRH,azirNeskkvir;
33,
2
se
9)•
(oyX - -
33a
852
5CIEINES
5
I
S
Lt
8
3
q
..8
Xe88 ]
RINIB
52 Notch.
not a “liberal.” Certainly he is not a forth-
right supporter of everything New Dealish.
He is ambitious. He is generally regarded
as amenable to political discipline from the
organization—and the organization, in New
Mrs.
to the
Women
n 11 -
day ni
Ruth C
Those
Causey,
Skiles,
Mrs. C
Pearl <
• ' 11a
Miss F
Meet:
to all
women,
r, >.......
t 3% / ■ ■
scheme supposed to save 40 per cent of gas-
oline by cutting out half the cylinders. An-
other has a tire-saving method about ready
for publicizing. Neither may work, or both
may prove successful. That isn’t the point.
The point is that whenever we get into trou-
ble somebody, hoping to make an honest dol-
lar, gets busy and finds a way out.
That always has been the American
way. Incidentally, it is the capitalistic way.
It has done pretty well for this country.
out a
//.
4 2
((YOuMEANYOU
«"p-
S(MANG
L,.
THIS 5
CUCKOO 7
HATCHERY
3 E
Se 4 > V
Three Months . . . $1.50
Of all the things that you could send your soldier boy, ha
would probably be most pleased with his hometown daily
newspaper. This offer is for a limited time and a limited
number as it makes extra work in our mailing department,
and wtih our present setup we cannot handle too many of
this ciass of subscriptions.
Let’s remember the boys by giving them the news from home.
HENDERSON DAILY NEWS
-‘255
zm2
n
X -*458 322
% q3,E6Y.g 1
603
Bk8
ued sales, are demonstrating that
profit motive still has its virtues.
One corporation has worked
M‘
Y 6
' (V
426
11
Ke
/ e,P
■ 33,
>‘e*a c,"
C‘a®es G. •
,**5 Se,6*a
**3
4
BCA /
trator. I into the field if we are to perform our future
Whether observers are correct, and I tasks successfully.—Lieut.-Gen. Dwight D.
Dewey wine the governorship, or whether1 Eisenhower, commander U. S. Army forces
they Are wrong and Bennett wins, the Presi- in European theater.
20
_
When victory comes we shall stand
shoulder to shoulder in seeking to nourish
the great ideals for which we fight. It is a
worthwhile battle.—Prime Minister Win-
ston Church, to President Roosevelt. •
' 7 Mr. Dewey is avowedly against much of j time let us refrain from doing anything
the New Deal. He has been bitterly and which might force their hands.—Gov. Her-
I (e
•k
40>3
3
ing.—Dr. Edward Hughes Miller, American
citizen held by Japs.
• • •
When the proper time comes, I am sure
our President and England’s premier will
• • •
I was repeatedly forced to sit down Jap-
anese fashion on the floor and was beaten
STILL SPEEDING
There must be some way of impressing
upon motorists how close to treason it is to
ruin tires by speeding and needlessly slop-
py driving. Yet apparently none has been
T- :'
=4
KK
id
1 7
E NWIIN
g2. 14‘¥
T. Mass
Wright.
H. H. V
Un, Mr
l- rances
NEW YORK ELECTION
One thing about the gubernatorial elec-
I tion in New York state should be made clear
£ at the outset, to all Americans and to the
axis:
At no time has the philosophy underly-
ing President Roosevelt’s war program been
involved. At no time has there been the
K slightest question whether New York’s ad-
/ I HARDLY BLAME
( THOSE KIDS FOR
I LAUGHING AT OLD
) DENT OKI THAT AWFUL
PLUG? WI, HE'S
\ THE MOST AWFUL
\ LOOKING COWBOY
.I EVER SAW:
2
a
/3C.6
92225
25
22 Friend.
24 Insulate.
25 Away from.
27 Produce.
29 Topic.
31 Nothing.
32 Snow runner.
35 House.
S 36 Join.
E 37 Beginning.
5 I Buy
(SAR
r $MPs
( g
7,46
2—
5g
7
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
Entered -~cond class matter P. O in Henderson, Texas, Act Congress, Mar. 3, 1879
Kt - - - ------ ----
Five cents per copy. Delivered on established city routes, 15 cents per week, sixty-
cents per month, $6.50 per year. Motor routes, sixty cents per month. Mail, Rusk and
adjoining counties, one month 60c; 3 months $1.50; 6 months $2 75; one year $5.00.
Mail elsewhere in Texas and in Louisiana, Oklahoma 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
year $7.50.
discovered. Perhaps when the Baruch com-
mittee reports, its findings will shock the
populace into common sense.
A 10-state survey shows that more than
half the drivers still exceed 40 miles, the
ministration should support the war whole- speed limit recommended by the President,
„ , ... . . I which still is too fast in view of the emer-
hearte j an e icien y. . | gency we face. The most casual observa-
The President has been beaten, in is j tion demonst"ates that the jackrabbit start,
capacity as a political leader, by Genial Jim j the brake iamring stop, the scraping'of
As long as we have surface navies the
causes that brought about the battleship will
bring it back again. It may be a different
type, but it will still be a battleship.—Ad-
miral Arthur J. Hepburn, U. S. Navy.
7/719
24
) Answer to Previous Puzzle
political position today. Farley’s candidate tires squeal in protest—all continue just as
for the Democratic nomination defeated Mr.
Roosevelt’s.
E' bitingly critical of the President’s methods.
- He, too, is ambitious.
The President wanted a governor In
L New York who would be with him a hundred
E per cent politically, philosophically and eco-
£ nomically. He sought to get such a nominee
from his party, and failed.
But let Hitler and Hirohito note that
F this election is our own family row. We may
knock off a lot of blocks in the campaign,
but we’re united against the rest of the
K world.
L/3,
BUY
WAS
BONDS
_ —J
I CAPTAIN |H ,
SIR Ei
BEDE M
CLIFFORDAA
xasauoadzsuuusgizig
l
Twelve
odist So
last nig
1st chur<
per and
During
eral lett
were re
were st
several
social h
Those
Mrs. M.
e
LUSTIU AT OUR WAR-,
BUILDING EKERCISES:
-SUPPOSE WE
RELA TONIGHT WITH
A REFRESHING INTER-
LUDE-A SNACK OF
RAREBIT AND A r-P
FRIENDLY HAND J
OF- POKER ? J
-F2
lL- .,1,
9
PTHE TOP HAND
3,722/770
JAKE WILL Bring his
^COMMANDO DICE »
W/7,
1
gs ■ 2
(s)
. -172
.3 ly
26*
""be,
,2 m0
41- aa"
4e-.
jn
g c.
".L,.
NEA Service, Ipe
By Galb
115;
1
WELL, HE‘s VERY P
BEAUTIFUL TO ME,
WES, BECAUSE HE’LL
ALWAYS BE IN TH’
RIGHT PLACE AT
TH’ RIGHT TIME
WITHOUT A BIG
FUSS!
13
1 A
d/
""e". -
\ -#.t
“‘B
"D.) V
—)i
(ea
< --kigl
18 Half an em. tellurium.
20 He directs air 58 Mother.
---precau- 59 Symbol for
tions. lutecium.
TESAT
EATSiy
222150 ■ f WTF ' ■ ~ 00) .00
0ig 23 , _ a . 4
enderson Daily News
Published Every Afternoon (Except Saturday) and Sunday Horning By
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
But the President, as War Leader of the
United States and as spokesman for our un-
wavering intention of beating Hitler, has not
been defeated. He has not even been chal-
lenged. He is not going to be challenged.
It is difficult to find a good independent
political analyst who concedes the Demo-
cratic nominee, Attorney General John J.
Bennett, any chance of beating Thomas E.
I Dewey, who is unopposed for the Republican
nomination. This of course excludes Farley,
who is not disinterested.
But Dewey is not challenging the Roose-
I velt total war philosophy. He is challenging
Roosevelt the Democratic party leader. He
is challenging Roosevelt the New Dealer.
There is every reason to believe that he will
challenge what he may describe as Roose-
velt the Bungler—emphasizing errors he be-1
. lieves Roosevelt has made as a war adminis-
Miss
l loste
$
82b.
dbagcd
ddkdb6dep3e '
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 137, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 26, 1942, newspaper, August 26, 1942; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1497290/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.