Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 190, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 27, 1932 Page: 4 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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New Hampshire Gubernatorial
Candidates
John G. Winant
Republican
Henry T. Ledeua '
Democrat
^ELECTION PERfONALITIEf
I -------------------- - ........... - -
/
«•
WEAKNESS AND FATIGUE
HEALTH
TALKS
-------------o-------------
The handset “French telephone”, made
familiar to Americans in motion picture* with
European settings, is not French at all; it
was patented by Alexander G. Bell and used
in the United States as early as 1878.
. '■ ..Q . .........
The longest telephone cal) yet recorded
from Connecticut emanated In New Haven.
Conn., and reached to Lyrup, South Australia
<—a distance of 15.000 mile*.
force to take care of either muscular or in-
tellectual effort.
In such a condition the least movement
or expenditure of energy brings on an over-
whelming fatigue. Sometimes rest and sleep
do not help; changes in the dipt and the giv-
ing of drugs seem to be usefess.
The person so afflicted becomes dull.
His voice drops to a’point where it is almost
inaudible and his eyeballs' seem to sink back
simply because the muscles that should sus-
tain them are relaxed.
There is no confusion of the mind, but a
person who is asthenic may be unable to read
or write or engage in conversation or follow
a direct line of thought, simply because he
just feels that it is not worth while. ,
When a patient gets into such a state he
may even be completely unconcerned with se-
rious affairs affecting other members of h!a
■ family.
Investigators who have discussed this
subject emphasize particularly the type of as-
thenia that followed the great influenza epi-
demic of 1918. Some of the people who had
the disease at that time have never recovered
their normal state.
By DR. MORRIS FI8HBEIN
Editor, Journal of the Amer-
ican Medical Aaaodatlon,
and of Hygeia, the
Health Magazine
-r—1
Worry, shock and prolonged nerve strain
may produce weakness and depression and a
feeling of inadequacy as well as can the pois-
ons of certain infectious diseases, it now is
realized.
So there is now a general understand-
ing of the significance of such terms as
“neurasthenia” and “psychasthenia” and oth-
er conditions in which the terminal phrase
“asthenia” is prominent. All of the conditions
are essentially those in which there is weak-
ness and easy fatigue.
In a review of this subject, Drs. E. L.
Bortz and G. M. Piersol find that asthenia
represents really a diminution of potential.
The individual simply does not develop
enough power to carry on, and therefore fa-
tigues more easily and rapidly than the nor-
mal person. He lacks dynamic force.
The same person may be full of vim,
vigor and vitality on one day and utterly
without “go” a few weeks later. Asthen a
, ^i* therefore defined as a condition in which
there is insufficient development of nervous
I
*
I
to
!. white
I
convert him into a lessee of the State,
stead of a lessee from an individual.”
------------------o--.
S. G. KOLD WAITE, PUBLISHER OF THE
BOONE (IOWA) NEWS-REPUBLICAN,
SAYS:
By W. H. LANDER
United Press Staff Correspondent
MADRID (UP) — The failure of the
Agrarian Reform recently voted by the Cor-
tes Constituyentes, freely is predicted by Don
Tomas Dominguez Arevalo, Count of Rodez-
no, a deputy from the province of Navarre,
who was one of the minority members of the
Parliamentary Committee which handled the
question.
Count Rodezno is a Monarchist, but is of
the Carlist line. He has been active both in
and out of parliament, making speeches in
support of the Traditionalist principles!
“The government is bound to meet with
great difficulties in carrying out the provis-
ions of the Agrarian Law,” according to the
Count. “There is only an appropriation of
50,000,000 pesetas (about 4,000,000 U. S. dol-
lars) per year for the distribution of the
lands among the peasants. On the other
hahd, the peasants have been thinking that
the measure is a veritable Utopia, and when
they finally realize how small an area of land
can be divided up in the first year, the hopes
on which they have been living will vanish
all of a sudden, causing them profound dis-
appointment.
Furthermore, since nearly all the land in
Spain is arid, the government not only will
have to give land to the peasants, but for
many years will have to furnish them with
everything else they need to produce a crop.
“The fact that there is to be an agrarian
reform is bound to produce disastrous effects
on the national economy, for all rural proper-
ty in Spain now has lost its value as some-
thing that may be bought and sold, complete-
ly closing up the land market.
“And in the long run, the peasant will
find out that the socialistic principles which
are the basis of the Agrarian Reform will
in-
“Advertising, like all other forms of bus-
iness activity has suffered a deflation. News-
paper advertising has been the last to suc-
cumb, because it is recognized as the most
potent pulling power of all forms of advertis-
ing-
“When you walk into a well appointed
. Store with well filled shelves of attractive
goods—not nearly so well filled as you used
to see them—and see no customers, you real-
ise why advertsng has taken a slump. Mer-
chants hung on to the use of newspaper space
as long as it produced any results whatever,
and that is why the newspapers were the last
to feel the depression.
“Of course, newspaper advertising has
not been discarded altogether. Many sales are
put over successfully by the generous use of
space advertising. Manufacturers of many
articles of national repute have not let lip at
all and in fact have increased their appropri-
ations for newspaper publicty. Local adver-
tising, it must be admitted, is now mostly
„ confined to ‘sales.’
“But advertising will come back to nor-
mal in time. Newspaper advertising will
come first. In fact it is already started.
Brisk fall trade is reported in many cities.
The advertising campaign is being resumed.
“Newspaper advertising has proved its
necessity with the merchants. It is the
most potent salesman and the surest path to
success. In the general advertising renais-
sance it will be newspaper advertising that
will be the most popular, because it is the
medium of quicker results. Newspaper space
does not have to be sold to merchants or
manufacturers any longer. It sells itself. It
is the first on the upturn.”
..... o
The nation’s capital, Washington, was
one of the few cities to show a gain In tele-
phone service during 1981.
HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, HENDERSON, TEXAS
■o
The result, of course, was that Carnegie be-
came the world’s greatest steel master—and,
in the end, was able to die rich after giving
8325,000,000. And the young men who
found places with him during those bygone
years of depression are not going hungry to-
day. Mr. Schwab, incidentally, is one of
them.
PAGE FOUR
Managing Editor
,.»1.50
_.9S.ov
...*oao
Publlaaed every week-day afternoon (Except
Sunday) and Sunday morning by
NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY
D. R. Harrla. President
107 South Marehall Street
Henderson, Texas
Entered at the poet office at Henderson, Te*a%
as second class matter under Act of Congress March
a, is7»
Geo.<e Bowman
$7.50
44.UU
|2.W
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Delivered by carrier in Henderson
1 nonth* (In advance) --------------------
4 nonths (in advance) --------------------
J year (in advance) — ----------..-——-—
BY MAIL
In Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas and Oklahoma
J year (in advance) ................................................W.W
* months (in advance) .................... $3.50
8 months (in advance) ...... _..$2.00
IN ALL OTHER STATES
J year (In advance) .....
* months (in advance)
8 months (In advance) .
NOTICE
Any erroneous reflection upon the character,
■tanding or reputation of any person, firm or cor-
poration which may appear tn the columns of The
Henderson Dally Nows will be gladly corrected upon
Ito being brought to the attention of the manage-
In case of errors or omissions occurring tn local
or other advertisements’ or of omissions on sched-
uled data the publisher do not hold themselves
• liable for damages further than the amount received
by them for such advertisements.
- .
£
• I
o
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J
/
VuRHACE
-
1
wr
tftflSTRATlObl I
AND THE V
elections
Pl
J8f
jo!
h
Ex-Governor, Senator, Kingfish Huey
Long in addressing an audience in Kansas
this week charged the Hoover administra-
tion as being responsible for the size of the
Government’s deficit. He blamed it on the
tax refund policy which he said was sanc-
tioned by the President himself ... The Sen-
ator who has been carrying the Democratic
campaign to Kansas voters with his sound
truck charged the President was agreeable
to returning three billion dollars in tax re-
fpnd| to certain corporations ... If Senator
Long is correct in his charges, is there any
wonder Why the deficit is so large ... It
would have been far better if instead of re-
funding such enormous amounts, had the
government either kept that money in the
treasury to keep the deficit down or else dis-
tributed it to those who actually were in
want... Some more of the impractical oper-
ations of our government heads ... Then we
hear every day that this or that thing should
be taken over by the government... Only
yesterday we heard a remark on the streets
Of Henderson that the Federal government
should take over the oil situation and stop all
f big wrangling about proration, the price and
’conservation of the oil .. . For our part we
would not favor the government taking over
any branch of private business ... It is in too
many now (for our own good ... The poli-
ticians who are continually harping that the
Government should engage more and more in
private business do not voice the sentiments
Of America ... How can we expect the Gov-
ernment to make a success of any branch of
' private business when it hasn’t made too
great a success at running the governmental
affairs, if we are to judge by the operations
Of th* Farm Board and the postal department
apd. others that could be mentioned ... Nope,-
politfea and business don’t mix and never will.
LA ... O----
Th* young chap who is just starting out
to make his way in the world these days faces
a pretty tough prospect. But before he gets
through he is likely to find that he couldn’t
have picked a better time to make a begin-
ning. So, at any rate, says Charles M.
Schwab, who seems to feel that since there
Isn't any place for things to go but up, the
lad who begins at the bottom now will find
al! kinds of opportunities opening in front of
him in the near future. Writing in the cur-
rent issue of the Pictorial Review, Mr.
Schwab points out that even though the de-
pression has been long and hard, the world
Isn't going to come to an end day after to-
morrow, after all. America is not suffering
from a shortage of food and supplies; p».en-
tially it is just as rich as ever. Sooner or la-
ter, American energy and Intelligence will
bring us back to times even better than any
| we have had before. Thia little song, to be
’ I sure, has been sung before. But Mr. Schwab
learned about the opportunities that exist in
a depression from one of the greatest indus-
frigUsts that ever lived—Andrew Carnegie;
far it Was always Carnegie’s custom to u»e
,'r a depression as a time for expansion, a time
. for getting ready for a future boom. In the
panic Of the ’70s, when most industrialists
were busy at the wailing wall, Carnegie kept
r hard at work building new plants and getting
ready to do a bigger business than ever be-
fore. It was the same when the depression
of the '90s came along. Always Carnegie
knew that there would be an upswing; always
he used hard times as a period of preparation.
* «
THURSDAY AFTERNOON, OCT. 27,1932
1
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Another Wallace Mystery
At the opening of “Criminal at Large,”
was Johnny Weaver, creator of “Poems in
America,” trying to get the London fog out
of his lungs. It is a mystery play, one of the
late Edgar Wallace, who died suddenly out
in Hollywood .. . “What a neat idea it would
be to build a mystery around the death of
Wallace,” suggests Johnny ... Why not ? .. .
The most versatile detective story writer in
the world dies mysteriously—for the purpose
of the plot. And far from his native land .. .
Who killed him ? .. . Maybe a reader! . . . Or,
—oh well, write your own!
■
Going Places—Seeing Things
NEW YORK — Merely another Broad-
way floor show opening at the Paramount
Grill, to all intents and purposes—but with
a bit of human interest, for Eddie Jackson
was to go on alone “in songs.” Maybe you
don’t get the plot... But just around the cor-
ner, in the biggest of bright lights, the name
of Jimmy “Schnozzle” Durante is emblazoned
. .. And time was, way back when Broadway
was more fun, when Clayton, Jackson and
Durante ran their own club and formed a
team the like of which has never been equal-
ed for popularity . . . But they broke up and >
"Schnozzle” went out to Hollywood and rang
up a reputation that got him in'the big mon-
ey. Folb began to forget that there was a
Jackson and a Clayton. *
So Eddie Jackson came on “in songs.”
And for six minutes, the cheer leaders greet-
ed him. So he got back on “the map.” And
will doubtless stay there all winter.
Broadway Sidelight
About noon time on a recent day, a
young man named Barton MacLean walked
into the offices of Arthur Hopkins and toss-
ed a play manuscript on the desk.
“Wish you’d find time to read this. Think
you’ll like.” And the young man walked out.
So unusual had been the procedure that Hop-
kins began to read at once. At 5 o’clock a
purchase order had been given. Just the
other night, Hopkins brought to the street
a melodrama called "Rendezvous.” And still
they say Broadway is a hard street to crack.
Night Scene
So to the opening of the Barney Gallant
Greenwich Village spot, where everyone you
ever met shows up . .. But Barney is not his
own master of ceremonies this year ... Wal-
ter O’Keefe was doing his stuff there just
two seasons ago . . . Helen Morgan dancing
by, exotic—but plump I Well, she can afford
to be ... Writers, artists, players ...
Funny, you see the same gang where-
ever you go, night after night. .. Don’t they
ever go home? ... I get paid for it. I have to
. go . .. But they jqst go. ...
A Fellow Can’t Rest!
They’re all out again at the new and
very swanky Montparnasse Club, with Char-
ley Lucas, who has entrepreneured all over
the world, in charge ... But there’s Fay Mar-
be, the most shapely character player, pip-
tean artist and actress, who whispers that
she’ll have a house-warmnig Sunday in her
new .Ambassador Hotel apartment. Oh, well,
you can’t even have Sundays to yourself at
this season!
And that quietest fellow, and unassum-
ing, you’ll see at any of the spots just now—
Adolph Menjou. He works at flirting only
on the screen.
----------o—. ..........
Applying the Word
A little girl was out walking with her
aunt when a man passing them raised his hat.
“Who was that, auntie?” she inquired.
“That’s Mr. Brown, dear,” was the re-
ply ; “he’s the village undertaker.”
“Oh, yes, I remember him now,” eaid the
child; "he undertook granny.”-—Ex.
——--------—io - . - —...
Always a Night Owl
The young bride was asked what
thought of married life.
"Oh, there’s not much difference,” she
replied. "I used to wait up half the night for
George to go, and now I wait up half the night
for him to come home.”—Ex.
IN
Tte w ~
YORK
until Gilbert S'* io
Trophonius was an ancient god of th*
earth, worshiped at Livadh In Boeoti'*, where
he had a famous oracle in a subterranean
cavern. ,
WATCHFUL WAITING!
MADRID LETTER
so
■i IWIILL mi_____
' 1 .
11U1IOW
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Bowman, George. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 190, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 27, 1932, newspaper, October 27, 1932; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1314711/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.