Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.),, Vol. 1, No. [121], Ed. 1 Thursday, August 6, 1931 Page: 7 of 8
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All indication* are tor mor* «C th*
same Indefinitely.
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Which tribe of Indiana massacred
the garrison at Fort Dearborn, Chi-
cago, in 1812?
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Correctly Speaking-
Say “Either Jack or BIU forgot hia
lunch”, not “their”.
Today’s Horoscope
Persona born on thia day are re-
ligious and lovers of Justice.
By CHARLES P. STEWART
Central Press Staff Writer __
A S H l NGTON, nVltouT
AT 900,000 DBJREFS
‘■FAHRENHEIT OB.
90<mes
MORE hot
~~ *^iah ite
HHL Sun
MOU^E DEER (
NA-fTVE 1& -flit.
JUNGLES OF BORNEO
AND SUMATRA
• STRANGE to’ relate, few individ-
uals in high governmental posts ap-
pear to have grasped the Idea that
no such Improvement would follow,
but decidedly the contrary, if the
prices of these crops proved Insuffi-
cient to balance the amount of money
spent In producing them.
Vice President Charles Curtis was
an exception. He obviously could see
the peril and unmistakably has been
desperately worried tor weeks past.
Senator James E. Watson of Indiana,
who has spent most of his time In
the capital since congress adjourned,
also has given Indications of pro-
found anxiety. Others among the
national lawmakers, soa ttered
%
throughout the land, tor fro*
ington. doubtlessly have n
signa aright Assistant Beer
P -Xi
whom I discussed tom proof*
several weeks ago. likewise expra*
himself so dismally that ho refu
to permit his predictions to bo^atti
uted to him. and they therefore w
wasted.
Generally speaking, however, the
tone of recent, official comment ho*
been to the effect that the Eurot < a» J
moratorium had given a turn in the '
right direction to world economics. ;
including Americas— that the won* ’
of the depression was over. ’i
e o e
THE 8UDDCNNE88 with which
the news began to arrive of the dis-
astrous state of affairs (huge crop*
but less than bargain counter prices)
In Kansas especially, hut not much
better tn Nebraska. Oklahoma and
Texas, was astonishing.
Up to mld-July accounts from th*
early wheat belt, while not cheerful*
at least had Implied no actual agri-
cultural crisis.
The “story," as newspapermen ex-
press It. "broke” in the afternoon edi-
tions of July 18. On that data th*
press started fairly to overflow with
dispatches describing the dire strait*
of Sunflower State grain grower*
Prophecies of a Communist!* revolu-
tion. or the establishment of a Hitler-
ite dictatorship in Germany wer*
crowded from first page* by tel*- 1
grams telling of the clamor for a J
domestic agricultural moratorium, to
save thousands of fanner* from th*
loss of their acres under foreclosure,
Such Incidents as the dumping
surplus wheat by the truckload
prairie highways and th* plow
under of whole fields of IL to a*'
expenses of harvesting; wer* pub-
lished by the column.
This simply was the first day’*
output
at
on
D. C. — Offi-
cial Washington
has been stagu-
l a r 1 y uncon-
scious of what
was about to
happen as soon
as the south-
west’s farmers
began harvest-
ing wheat
Absorbed In Its
handling of the
European situa-
tion, the admin-
istration evident-
ly had no realiza-
tion of the com-
ing danger west
of the Mississippi.
Instead, the hope was expressed
In exalted quarters that with a start
on the task of getting in the season’s
bounteous crops, there would be an
appreciable lessening in the economic
tension throughout the homo coun-
try.
Copyright, 1981, by Central Press Association. Ips, 0%
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Dr. Clendenlng
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Tny t lTeed-
» DO THfif
"? MriS C.N.PICKEU
iwwrrw hop**.
PEAR. NCAH- IF- MY Bov
FRIEND ADMITS Hfe.5
KNEE DkBP IN LOVt
WITH MEX SHOULD I
PUT HIM ON MY WAD I NS
LIST? MRS H.O8RIWN
. CHRltTANA, TSNN.
DBAR. NOAH • IF MoTHRto
LOST HKK NBEFDlOC,
WOULD TMfil COOK
HAV« *n> DO THfif
BASTING? __
SfiND IN YOU* __
WSWimyiA less Narrow*
EDITOR** NOTE: fits pamphlets
by Dr. Clendenlng can now be ob-
tained by sending 10 cents tn coin, tor
each, and a self-addressed, stamped
envelope, to Dr. Logan Clendenlng.
In care of this paper, or Central Press
Association, 1438 East Twelfth street.
Cleveland. O. The pamphlets are:
"Indigestion and Constlp*tlon.'_“R*-
duclng and Gaining,’-
tag,” "Instruct!one io
of Diabetes," “Fem
I’
By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.
Septic Sore Throat
DOMESTIC ANIMALS suffer most
of the same chronlo diseases as man
—such as hardening of the arteries,
stones in the kid-
ney, eta These ■
are, however, for-
tunately not con-
tagion* There
are some con-
tagious diseases
that are abso-
lutely peculiar to
animals — d I s-
temper, for In- '
stance, which
seems to be much
like human In-
fluenza or mea-
sles. but which
Is never con-
tracted by man.
On the other
hand certain hu-
man Infections never afflict the do-
mestlo animals—the common cold
being the most conspicuous. When
experimenters tried to find an ani-
mal to study the common cold they
discovered that none but our blood
brothers, the apes, could bo inocu-
lated.
There are. however, many Infec-
tions which both man and beast can
have Within the year prominence
has been given in the prose to parrot
fever— psittacosis. Several epidemics
were reported, most of them being
traced to Infection of a human who
fondled a sick parrot or parakeet
These diseases may occur In man
and animals under several different
circumstance* The disease may bo
common in animals and without dif-
ficulty transmitted to man and vice
versa.
In septic sore throat ths animal to
hardly sick at alt but human beings
ar* very easily infected, become very
sick and death may occur. Th* dis-
ease to carried tn mfik-and to caused
*. ♦ ■ « -^r— a **ntaA*4d^tol*
Dy a «treptococcu«, ■
Shaped germ of which there afe
causes septic sore throat is strepto-
coccus epldemlcu*
The germ Is normally a human In-
fection and Is transmitted to the ud-
ders of the cow by human contact,
probably by the hands of a dairy
worker. A curious and baffling fea-
ture of these infections is that the
cow’s udders, or milk bag. may not
bi evidently diseased or sore at ali, -
but the germ may become Implanted
In the milk ducts and enter the milk
tn enormqps quantities
The disease appears in man usu-
ally In epidemics. It was first ob-
served In the United States In 1911,
In an epidemic studied by Winslow
In Boston. There were 1,400 cases,
of which 70 per cent got milk from
the same dairy. Many ether epi-
demics have since been studied, the
last In 1028 In Lee, Massachusetts,
where there were 1.000 cases with 40
deaths In a population of 4,080.
The symptoms in human* follow
shortly after drinking the infected
milk. There are severe headaches,
backaches and grlppy pains in the
muscles and Joint* The temperature
goes to 108 and 108. The throat la
sore and generally diffusely red. but
sometimes there is a localization in
the follicles of the tonsil* The dis-
ease lasts * week or ten day* with
groat weakness and prostration.
The only method of prevention to
pasteurization of the milk, which ap-
pears to be always successful. Health,
boards ar* alert to the danger of the
disease, and all of them Insist on
rigid precaution*
B«aow*d Intorert in ths baffling
murder of Charles Crawford,
. wealthy politician, and Herbert
Spencer, California newspaper-
moa, ha* gripp*d Ix>s Angel** and
the entire west coast with tfe*
opening of ths trial of David
Clark, above. Clark, formei
deputy district attorney, Whd
drew 70,000 votes when hr con-
tinued to ran for
following hi*
- ■’
By
o
Clark on Trial
ases Given to Man
^Animals Outlined
First intimation of the blasted
romance of Mae Murray, blond
screen actress, and. her husband,
Prince David Mdivani, has come
With the filing of divorce papers
at Los Angeles by Miss Murray,
alleging cruelty. Here they are
as happy lovers at the end of their
honeymoon trip to Europe in
1926.
An irresistible urge to sing pos-
sessed Christine Goff of Kansas
City, Mo., all the while she taught
school, and later while she worked
in the mayor's office, in Philadel-
phia. Now that urge is to be sat-
isfied. She has won the Louise
Homer scholarship and to already
undergoing coaching by the diva
at Lak* George, N. Y.
L
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Senator Stricken
MONSENSE
United States Senator Hubert D.
Stephens of Mississippi has been
dangerously ill, following an
emergency operation for appendi-
citis, in Memphis, Tenn.
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Homer's Protege
What was the first steamship oil
the Pacific?
Who abdicated ths Greek throne
in 1917?
Today'* Anniversary
On this date, tn 1777, the American
army, under General Herkimer, waa
surrounded by the British, at Oris-
kany. N. .X,
Answers to Foregoing Questions
1. Pottawatomy. >
L Beaver (1885),
L King CopjttintJn*.
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FH-M STAR’S ROYAL ROMANCE ENDS
contly by WD*y Post aitd Hart
Gatty. Dotted line Indt8fit>fi|
rout* of Colon*l and Mm Chart
Three long distance flight*, on*
an around-the world jaunty hold
th* c*nter of International atten-
tion, a* thr** fista of fly*r* aeak
to establtoh n*w air markk. Map
■hows th* route* bring followed
by th* thr** pairs of flyers. Heavy
What’s What in1
DID YOU KNOW? - - - By R. J. Scott
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HASTENING FALL BLOOMS
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iriments
Written for Central Press
Vp DR. KARL F. KELLERMAN
Bureau of Plant Industry
U. S. Department of Agriculture
ACROSS
1 German article
4 Biblical character
21 Suffix denoting
■ quality in adjectives'
22 Smearers, bad
painters
2 3 African
28 Heads of
monasteries
26 United States gen-
eral and senator
28 Number
19 Balance of part*
21 Pronoun
28 Printer'* measures
24 Large snake
25 Popular name for a
breed of dope
28 Prefix of falling
27 End, cessation
29 Strutting of «
Chinese rooster
80 Member of Asiatic
race (var.)
•1 Pertaining to amor
ou* sentiment
84 Chock, a* the roll-
ing-of * coak
88 Afternoon session
37 Frigid substance
38 That which stabs
. and make* • email
burning wfiUDfi
MANY FLOWER growers have an
ambition to do unusual things with
flowers. They seek exceptional re-
sults, the first blooms of the season
in their community or the finest and
largest
Recent studies of the Bureau of
Plant Industry of the effect of the
length of day on the blossoming and
fruiting of plants point the way for
Individual experimenting by curious
, flower growers. By artificial control
of the length of time each day a
plant is exposed to light remarkable
results have been achieved in forc-
ing the blooming of plants.
For some plants, a short day is
needed to produce flowers and they
normally blossom in the
the days are short The e:
indicate that some of the plants
which normally blossom in the fall
can be made to flower earlier In the
summer if they are kept in the dark
a sufficient time each day to give
the effect of short fall day*
In the experiments a plant given
only seven hours of light daily flow-
ered In 21 days while the same type
of plant required 62 days to bloom
when exposed to the light all day.
In another Instance, the correspond-
ing periods were 36 and 122 days.
While some types of plant experi-
ments require more than the ordi-
nary grower has in the way of equip-
ment, the reduction of light is a rela-
tively simple method. In some ex-
periments - with chrysanthemums
solid black cambric cloth was used
to shut off the light The cloth was
simply placed over the plants late
each afternoon. This is a method al-
most any gardener could use.
Some of the common fall flowering
plants upon which the reduced light
experiment mlfeht be tried are aster*
chrythanthemums and dahlia* t.
DOWN
1 Lowered
2 Soothing potion
3 Emits vapor
4 Era
5 Animal cry
6 Take away
7 Place of monks
8 Part of Spain
9 Refuse, scrap
So Literary papers
94 Circular edge
47 Reproaching
RO Eminence
Answer t* Previous Puzzle
21 Pictures or
decorations made of
bits of colored stone
22 Comes out
25 Fatherland (Lat.)
27 Fabric
28 Erode
29 French writer
31 Units
.82 Animal
33 Letter of the
alphabet
86 Hesitant sound
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RarloUrad U. 8. P»unt Office
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THE OLD HOME TOWN Rogtotorad U 8. Patent Office Stanley
f THAT T^AMP WAS ASLEEP BACK OF THE /
DEPOT AND THE PEDDLER JUST STUCK )
His Hook in him to toss him onto
THE WAGON WHEN THAT BUNDLE f
PASS CAME TO LIFE
THEISAG MAN from Hootstown
MADE A SERIOUS MISTAKE WHEN
HE ATTEMPTED TO LI FT A BUNCH
OF ATTfcA'CTlXZE RAGS AT THE
DEPOT TODAY
(Eyeii lfe w ■svxNLEy
tjMMTieAu. P«es»
THURSDAY, AUGUST 6. 1981
HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, HENDERSON, TEXAS
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.),, Vol. 1, No. [121], Ed. 1 Thursday, August 6, 1931, newspaper, August 6, 1931; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1330847/m1/7/: accessed June 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.