Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 169, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 2, 1934 Page: 6 of 12
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON, OCT. 2, 1934
1IJESDAY AF
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The Next Industrial Shutdown Will Be in Detroit
IN NFW YORK
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President
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impts this win-
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HATTERS
CLEANERS
EVERYTHING
INSURED
RADICAL THEORIES WEAR
DOWN WITH TIME
LIF-O-BACK
They Have Their Life Back
Your Fall Hat...
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“For what glory it it, if, when ye be buffeted for your faults, ye shall take it patiently? but jf, when ye do well, and suffer for it, ye take it patiently.1 Peteri a 2°
Texts for the next few days will be selected by the editc-la! siaff o' the Daily News.
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yUITHIN three-quarters of an hour after he
returned to Washington from Hyde Park,
President Roosevelt was receiving a record
delegation of newspaper men and women—
nearly 100 crowded into his temporary office
in the Blue Room.
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OEQQGESCA^BO
OBERTHIERS’
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You'll take your hat off to
our brand new Hat Service
. . . We have a new ma-
chine and do a character
of hat cleaning and block-
ing that will prove a reve-
lation in value.
Too Much Money
QN GOVERNMENT paydays here the flood
of pay checks is so great that many em-
ployes find it hard to get them cashed at all
—banks and stores are swamped to convert
the $2,000,000 into cash. One store had to
send out for* $110,000 in cash the other day.
Questionnaires are being circulated in the de-
partments in an effort to find a way of pay-
ing off that will minimize the flood of checks.
. . . The Civil Service Commission is posting
in all departments its rules against political
activity, thus doing its bit to co-operate with
Treasury Secretary Morgenthau and other
New Dealers who are trying to soft-pedal
such . .. There are nearly 2300 lawyers in the
Washington telephone directoryt or one for
e ci y 2()0 persons in town.
44
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place to sit.”
The Tinies
the ground and,
looked around,
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BEHIND THE SCENES IN
WASHINGTON
WITH RODNEY DUTCHER
Many, despairing of getting close enough
to the presidential desk to see the president,
sat themselves down at the cabinet table
(which has been temporarily placed in the of-
fice) to make notes . . . The president, in a
double-breasted white linen suit, white, soft-
collared shirt and maron tie, is the picture ot
health ... A vase of yellow roses stood out
on his desk among the increasing number of
Democratic donkeys of every kind and ma-
Je/ial which are always in evidence . . . the
familiar ship models have been brought along
even in the tcmjwrarj' office . . . your corres-
pondent noted the name of a particularly
elaborate one: It was “Prosperity.”
* * *
♦ —------------------—-------------------•
SIDE GLANCES By George Clark
dll
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' jtny erroneoua reflection upon the character,
tending or reputation ,ot any peraon, firm or cor-
poration which may appear In the column, ot thle
> paper will bo gladly corrected upon due notice ot
being given to the editor personally at the ot-
r--- (Me. 108 South Marshall Street, Henderson, lexaa.
I you give, tako to yourself no credit for
I generosity, unless you deny yourself something
Lb order that you may give —Henry Taylor.
MEW YORK, Oct. 2 — Every now and then
your New York correspondent gels de-
depressed by the heavy suspicions and chron-
ic antagonisms of Manhattanites. The golden
rule hereabout seems to be, “Don’t do untr:
others, and others w’ill be less likely to d<
you.”
The other a'fternoon, at one entrance ot
a corner office building, I noticed a girl who
obviously was fretting out the final minutes
of a long period of waiting for somebody.
A 4-1, .. ............ ..4- 4L« z a 4 L> .. z\n(i'<inz>o n I
“It’s a Racket”
TN a subway entrance equipped with one of
those diabolical cage turnstiles, and no
change booth attendant, I found the mechan-
ism jammed. “That’s out of order,” I told
three girls rushing behind me. “You’ll just
lose your nickels, as I did.” One girl dropped
in a coin and vainly pushed’ at the heavy
gate. The others eyed me with hostility and
whispered: “It’s a racket . . . He’s got the
thing fixed so he can take the nickels out
again.”
On a downtown express I became aware
that the man next to me was engrossed in my
newspaper. Seemed excited about the new de-
velopments in the Hauptmann case. A little
near-sighted too; he leaned closer and closer
to the page I was trying to read. Ever sc
politely, I said he could have that section, for
I’d finished with it. He snorted, glared, and
asked what I thought he was—a junk man?
* * #
That Provincial Look
TN Times Square a brisk old lady in black
taffeta fixed me with a look. “Young man,”
she said, “where is ‘Dodsworth’?”
I rallied and thought quickly. She must
mean the show’ of that name. “Two blocks
this way and half a block right.”
“I understand it's well liked,” she said
then. “Docs it still have the orginial cast?”
“Same cast,” I responded. “Walter Hus-
ton, Fay Bainter, Nan Sunderland.
She looked at me and smiled frostily.
"Guess I’m not such an old fool, after all. 1
inquired of you because you were a visitor
here. These New Yorkers don’t know any-
thing.”
And then, God love her, she offered me
a peppermint.
VOUR body requires water, mineral salts,
protein, fat, carbohydrates and vitamins
in certain quantities. When these are taken
into the body they furnish materials for
growth and repair, and also the energy for
running the human machine in its daily
work.
The average man doing light work burns
up 2700 valories a day; whjm^he’B at rest,
about 1200 calories a day. When he is doing
medium work he burns up about 4000 calo-
ries; when doing hard work, from 4,000 to 6,-
000 calories a day.
Women and children need fewer caloric -
than do men. A woman needs about 2500
calories a day and a chili) of 10 abotrtr- the
same; a child 5 years old about 1’500, and a
one-year-old child about 600.
It is the difference in the size of the
body and the amount of activity in which the
person indulges that makes the difference
in the coloric requirements.
- - o---------------
Ek Upton Sinclair beat not only George
i ' Creel, Wall Street and the booze trust, but
•Iso Jefferson, Hamilton, Washington,
, Franklin, and the whole Adams family, not to
mention St. Thomas Aquinas, Duns Scotus,
i Plato, Aristotle, Socrates, and Solomon.—
f Henry L. Mencken. i
L \
•Published every week-day afternon (except 8at-
I today) and Bunday morning by tbo Newt Publish-
I ta* Company.
I — i 1 "
D. ft. Harrla —
George Bowman
Btotered at the Poetofflce at Hendereon. Texas, a.
I MCOBd class matter under the Act of Congrese
T March S, 1S7». ________
SVBHCKirTION HATES
I . XJellvered by carrier—1 month 6Oc; 1 months,
I |1.50; • months 43; 1 year. 45 00.
- By Mail—In Texas, Louisiana, ArHansas and Ok
I Whom*—1 year, 45.00; » months 42 75; 3 months
I fo all Other States— 1 year 47.50; 8 mouths |4 00,
I months, 42.50.
I’ 1 :
■ 2. . -
I JS the United States going radical? Is this
I country being ushered into Socialism
I through the back door?
I Every political discussion you hear these
■ days hinges around those questions. But
■ nobody knows the answer. And one of the
F reasons is that people forget to ask first,
j What is radical? What is Socialism?
1 That depends. Let’s dig into the dusty
files of the Library of Congress and retrieve
B-forgotten document. It is the Socialist
Party platform for 1912. The Socialist Party
p then was radicalism par excellence. Socialists
Ljrere then what “Rods” are today.
lThe Socialist platform of that pre-wai
■a campaign of 22 years ago starts out with the
I* (familiar Socialist thesis that there must be
■ fwar between the classes, and that Socialism
f must replace the present capitalist economic
I system in toto. But, in the meantime, here ,
I are some of the demands proposed pending
I the day:
■ : : * * *
I TTUBLIC ownership of railroads, telegraph
F’» and telephone lines, wireless telegraph
(sic), express and all transport lines, gr^jn
elevators, stockyards and distributing agi
rpiIE carbohydrates are sugars which yield
energy and tend to spare the proteins
from use as energy producers. On the other
hand, the desire for sugars tends to promote
overweight and, in children, takes away the
desire for other foods.
Of the salts most neerkid by the body,
iron, calcium, and phosphorus* should be most
carefully watched. They are absolutely ne-
cessary for proper growth of the bones and
for proper development of the blood.
Iron is found in lean red meat, especially
in liver, in the yolks of eggs, in carrots and
in most of the green vegetables, and in fruits.
Calcium is found abundantly in milk and, in
fair amounts, in fruits and vegetables. Pros-
phorus is found in eggs, milk, who'e wheat
oatmeal and many nuts.
Thus, a person who eats a variety of
foods, if in sufficient quantities, will’get the
things he needs for his growth and health. I
Doctors are learning more and more1
that a proper diet is essential to health. For
A
“How did a house like that
get here? It isn’t very
strong, I fear. I’d like to go in-
side of it and look around a bit.”
A wee man laughed aloud and
then said, “You can all explore it
when we’ve all put on our
clothes. Right now, please find a
nlnee to sit.”
flopped down on
as fair Goldy
she shouted,
"What a chimney! It’s a candle,
sure enough.
“And, look! The roof is frost-
ing. Say, I’d like to lick the roof
away. If that big cake wc(;e
mine, I’d simply stuff and stuff
and stuff!”
(A rain storm plays havoc in
the next story.)
WASHINGTON, Oct. 2—The Postoffice De-
partment is launching a new drive
against the handling of letter mail contrary
to law outside the postal system; that is, by
trucking companies, milk wagon drivers, or
private messengers.
Sometime ago it issued regulations to
prevent use of ma'il boxes for delivery of any
articles not sent by mail. It’s hard to calcu-
late the exact result of that drive, but it prob-
ably netted the government something l>y
bringing business back to the postoffice.
Now postmasters arc being urged by the
inspection department to look into possible
violations of the private express statutes in
their bailiwicks.
One inspector turned up a case in which
losses of revenue to thd Postoffice Depart-
ment reached a million and a half dollars in a
few years. The government's now trying to
collect.
It's all part of the rather determined ef-
fort to put the postoffice on the paying basis,
and there will be further atte;
ter to try to get it “out froml!
the heavy subsidies to water
which now come out of postal appropriations
and keep the department in the red.
J> _ A .0 J
O 1934 DY NEA SERVICE. INC T M REG U S PAT OFF
great, big cake!” “Why, ti.
our house,” one man replied,
it three layers high!
“There is a door that we go
through. It’s big enough for
you tots, too!” ‘‘Oh, gee, I’d like
to eat that cake,” said Dotty, with
a sigh.
Around the. corner, at the other entrance, a j
young man fidgeted, frowned and consulted;
his watch. Did I tell the young man that if I
he happened to be looking for a red-headed!
girl in a? green dress he’s find her just around !
the corner? No, because he wouldn’t have!
understood the friendly gesture.
On a Fifth Avenue bus, two elderly wo-'
men sat in front of me and made plans to at- j
tend a certain comedy. When one of them i
said she’d walk over to Broadway and buy.
tickets I couldn't resist intruding the infor-
mation that the show had closed the night
before. My reward for that was the sugges-
tion that if I was trying to peddle tickets to
some other show I’d better same my breath.
* * *
“He’s got it worse than any of them. He’s beginning to
look like a detective.”
I keep BALANCED DIET TO MAINTAIN HEALTH
children it means the difference between
strong bodies and weak ones.
DROTEINS vary, being divided roughly as
anim&l and vegetable proteins. Animal
protein, such as meat, eggs, fish and cheese,
is usually called first-class protein, because
it is of the greatest importance in maintain-
ing growth and repair of the body.
Vegetable protein is of less biological
value. Unless proteins are properly select-
ed, the bones and teeth will not develop suit-
ably.
Fats give a high yield of energy and are
the chief sources of vitamins A and D. But-
t erand cream are the most palatable forms of
fat. They are at the same time the ones
best used by the body, since they melt at the
tempera’ture of the body andare easily assim-
ilated.
It. is important to regulate the amount
of fat. If the amount taken is in excess of
the carbohydrates for balancing the diet,
there is a liability of acidosis.
--o---
Republican Floor Leader Bert Snell says
the Roosevelt administration is bluffing the
public. -We might call the bluff it we were
sure Mr. Snell isn’t bluffing us, too.
t. ’ -----------o——--------
A scientist reports that the universe is
six thousand million light years in diameter.
Some day one of these scientists will make a
statement that we can catch him on.
I ; '(sic), express and all transport lines, Krajn
I elevators, stockyards and distributing ageii-
1" cies, mines, quwrrries, oil wells, forests, and
II water power. Conservation of natural re-
| sources; reclamation; development of water
power projects. How much of that is com-
ing true today, every day’s newspaper wil
tell you.
- Collective ownership and democratic
I management of the banking and currency
| system wwa demanded. Government relief of
■ the unemployed “by the extension of all use-
■ fill public works” was proposed.
In industry, a shortened work day with a
’ day and a half of rest each week for every
workman (the 10-hour day, or at best the
eight, was standard in 1912). No child labor
under 16 years of age. Minimum wage scales
Unemployment, old age, accident and disease
insurance at employers’ expense.
* * #
JiHE political demands were even more.in-
teresting. They included a graduated in-
come tax, increase in the corporation tax and
| inheritance taxes. Equal suffrage for women.
Collective ownership of patents.
r Initiative, referendum, and recall, and
proportional representation. Abolition of the
| Senate (this was just before direct election
of senators) and no more presidential veto
Abolition of the “usurped” power of the su-
preme court to declare laws unconstitutional.
Easier amendments of the Constitution.
Creation of a Department of Labor (one
■ of Wilson’s first acts on being elected). A
Department of Education. Curbing of the in-
junction power, and calling of a convention
to revise the Constitution.
Those were the important planks of the
I1 most radical platform presented to the peo-
ple in 1912. You may judge how radical it
sounds today, and how far we have come
' along the road it points out.
; -----------------O-----------------
Kl-JBIHE Italian scientist who found vitamin M in an
J. onion ought to locate the rest of the alphabet in
garlic.
F ■ --------------o--------------
The day of the big beefy behemoths in
[ athletics is past.—“Pop” Warner, famous
football coach.
/C’ 0 SL’A. n
gwx*-.
_____J
thats
. “it
t--
It wasn’t very long until the
little men had had their fill
of diving. They flopped down on
the ground to tako a rest.
Then Doty said, “Well, good-
ness knows, you’d better run and
get some clothes. Don’t sit there
in your bathing suits. You know
that is not best.”
“You’re right,” replied one of
the men. ‘ We’ll go, but we’ll
come back again.” Then they all
rushed away, and Scouty cried,
“We’re coming, too.
“We all would gladly wait here,
but we’d like to see your little
hut.” One of the woe men shout-
ed back, “Come on, then, all of
you!”
♦ ♦ *
Soon Dtmcy wailed, “Don’t run
so fa:;., or 1 know I will nev-
er Ti:t.“ This made the Tinies
roav and one said, “What a lazy
lad!
“I am surprised, the way you
talk, that you arc even game to
walk. Whenever we must move
real fast, for you it is too bad!”
Then Goldy yelled, “For good-
ness .-nke! Just look ahead. A
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 169, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 2, 1934, newspaper, October 2, 1934; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1299135/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.