Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 270, Ed. 1 Friday, January 28, 1938 Page: 4 of 16
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.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
BUREAU 0 1 'CIRCULATIONS
MEMBER
A U D 1 I
<,
BY GEORGE ROSS
i
OH, YEAH?
<
r
7
the fight on every phase of this]
u,
U:
■»
f
&
j.
4
gj£W_g^z--cg_
en-
4
is
IN THE NATION'S CAPITAL
I
Side Qlances—By Qeo. Clark
Hold Everythingi
30
4
y
r
AAg>
•;
7
6
A
I
Y., .Ian. femes Attempted
removed
cd head w
from
X
*
a. ■
G<<
158St
dreamt.
•obad.”
la
/
✓
I
I
I
Honor System
Reduces Escapes
recent
confer-
MAYtdfc
THIS'LL
FIX ME
UP
much
Tin re
r
>.
* i
J
«l.ag
t/ /ZT
/ z/Dt
J
.■®
Entered second class matter I’. O. in Henderson. Texas. Act Congress Mar. 3, 1879
0 R. Harn.-. President Geo. \V. Bott man, General Manager
Family
Doctor
:by dr morris fishbein
!j.
V
7. /;
Ms,’1'1
« Teaching Record Set.
ELFOUNTAIN. Ont .(UP).--
n Drury, school teacher, was
ill to take classes, was absent
n school for the first time In
rears. He taught his first class
I ih 1902, and since that time
one of his pupils has failed to
I an examination.
A
re- and Mrs. W. M. Hoover,
duced about 10 per cent by a bad
spark plug.
Hoover Namesake
Errs on G. O. P.
ma\
IM
\ he
I tl’«
been
which
CLEVELAND
which
It would be a little easier to
work un some enthusiasm over
Soviet Russia’s streamlined dem-
ocratic constitution if that first
ballot held under its provisions
did not look so very much like
the ordinary rubber-stamp elec-
tion peculiar to dictatorships.
Both the Germans and the
Italians have shown that if you
run things skilfully it is quite
easy to have a “free” election
which will go exactly the way
you want it to. The Russians
seem to have followed suit. The
Russian masses went to the polls
quite as meekly and obediently
as have the Germans and the
Italians.
A constitution is to be known
concrete result
I 929, 1 White House
that ernes.
Roo. evelt’s plan for a new coun- f ■.
"represent all <t:p)
oriror life*’__. , • , ,
Lol ora du
‘':yu|
‘il
anything
right nwt
ret- both
•".i
1 h
Er,-. „ __________core, ismby au ttuviet tie. *>26
•*J don't mind telling you, Madam, vour future is noth-
EDITORIAL
’*"’^1^"’1 • 'W ’ fl
------—n C O M M E N r
J)
('Mi
<1
still the complete, unquestioned,
absolute boss of the land.
-------------o-------------
The China war has had 11 inci-
dents, more than enough for a
plot to make a long story short.
-------------o----------
Gasoline efficiency
Son Ties Knot for Father.
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo
(UP).—Rev. John Brownell of the
Colorado Springs St. Paul's Meth-
odist Episcopal church officiated
at the marriages of his father,
I Rev. James S. Brownell of Nor-
I wood, Colo. The father officiated
at the son's marriage two years
'ago.
'G
?-k
(U
IL I U
V
H/ \
'te-vily subsidized and the fed-
eral government in effort guaran-
tees to take'rare of those cast off
by industry when the
haa^
■
7l-l£
C-lzEATL..-
7l:LL^ I
~7V~-
I H>
III1
Br I •
lb;
7
I
by private industry is much soft-
er and more cautious this year
than it whj eight years ago.
At that time it was announced
with great flourish that the pub-
lic utility executives had come to
the White House and outlined a
$2,000,000,003 program for 11'30
re- About JOO prisoners are never in- ■
in side the walls, but live on the |
i prison tarin and another 150 are :
being taken outride each day to work.
"It Is the only honor system that j
--’cr worked so successfully so far
as I can learn," Best said.
The old-lme devices to detain
prisoners such as shackles have
been discontinued for the most
part at the Colorado prison. Pris- i
oners are whipped for serious of- ,
1 escape causes |
sentence witli no time off for good '
sickness.
It will make every effort to
ensure that every responsible re-
search agency in this country is
adequately financed to carry on
investigations into the cause of
infantile paralvsis and the meth-1
ods by which it may be prevent-
ed.
It will endeavor to eliminate i
much of the needless after-effect!
of this disease- wreckage caus-(
ed by the failure to make early
and accurate diagnosis of its
presence.
We all know that improper,
care during the acute stage of
the disease, and the use of anti-
quated treatment, or downright
neglect of any treatment, are the
cause of thousands of crippled,
twisted, powerless bodies now.
Much can be done along these
lines right now. The new founda-
tion will carry on a broad-gaug-
ed educational campaign, pre-
pared under expert medical su-
pervision, and this will be placed
within the reach of the doctors
and the hospitals of the country.
The practicing physician is in
reality the front line fighter of
the sickness, and there is much
existing valuable knowledge that
should be disseminated to him.
And then there is also the tre-
mendous problem as to what is
to bo done with those hundreds
.£■ si X-
L'TEa^
/fly
the after-effects of this afflic-
tion. To investigate, to study, to
develop every medical possibil-
ity of enabling those so afflicted
to become economically indepen-, vw v active pan m ait mucn
dent in their local communities (broader work that will be carried
SUNBURY, Pa., Jan 27 (UP)
—Herbert Hoover said in reply
to a question by a radio an-
nouncer that he believed G. O. P.
meant "Governor of Pennsyl-
vania.”
Hoover, 12, is the son of Rev.
sev-
representative and out- by its fruits. In Russia, StaTin is
are
BY RODNEY DUTCHER
Henderson Daily News Weshiny-
ton Correspondent
Editor, Journal of the Aurericun
Medical Association, and of
Hygela, the Health Magazine
The mechanism of the ear is not
like anything else in ordinary
human experience. For that rea-
son, persons who are gradually
becoming hard of hearing have
' difficulty in understanding " hat
What • that thia gentleman is having? It doesn’t look
A' i£
that the depression had
stalled and was about to be re-
placed by a new business boom
in which government, business
an'1 labor would pull together.
This time it isn't quite so "ob- outlook
vio’IS."
With Great Flourish
The work of the new organi-
zation must start immediately.
It cannot be delayed. Its activi-
ties will include among many
others those of the Georgia
Warm Springs Foundation, of
which I have been president
of thousands already ruined by since its inception.
I shall continue as president
of that Foundation, But in fair-
ness to my official responsibili-
ties, I cannot at this time take a
very active part in the much
BhfikWW YORK, Jan. 28.- A .M.i.v , , , .• . . ...
LllHcell.r v .Now aboi.i- led and directed, though not
mg la a hobo fraternity to end fyfillrifl
■KftU hobo fraternities They 'al' Viniica,
one the Five A Ten Club and
it charter nucleus is headed by
■pF stack Dempsey and Jim Tully,
both eminent knights of the rods.
F. The eligibility rules are easy. The
p I aaplrant to membership must.
k . prove that he has journeyed 5000
H milea around the country by
r. freight or to have gained the hos- i
ME^PitaUty of at least one hobo
f "jungle.”
■&>!* roster, of course, will in-
clude only distinguished people—
K > writers, boxers, lawyers, bankers
E-. and stage and screen actors Wal-
ff c Japa Ford Is one of the first to be
■ Initiated. The Five 4 Ten Club
IL.. BMNta for its inaugural In Demp-
eey's place and the banquet will
r avoid chi-chl as much as possible.
Piece de resistance: Mulligan
K* Stew. Every course will be serv-
ed bi tin cans and scooped up
L With rudimentary utensils.
L dedge of Music
K:. Every time Justice Leopold
b. Prince steps from a high seat
G on the bench and swaps Justice's
scales for a baton at a symphony
g; , concert, it calls for a recount of
hie musical career.
He haa been at it for 25 years
or more; dispensing justice by
fe day and songs by night. And
r among authoritative musicians he
F‘ is considered quite a figure In the
t musical world. Not only has he
conducted many an orchestra,
tat he composes, also, one of his
F boot known numbers being
E •‘Dulcie," which Is played fre-
qu«tly over the air waves.
K Ho started,. Judge Prince con-
I tides, by playing violin duets
with his son at home. Soon
the neighbors started drifting In
w for fireside concerts. Then word
E’, spread that the judge was equal-
ly at home with a law book and
?, • symphonic score and Invitations
----ed In from many people. The
k began to get out on public
uns shyly, but so great was
success that eventually a
| group got together to endow a
U. permanent musical organization
I under his direction.
' At rehearsals, he Is as earnest,
they say, as Toscanini and brooks
no nonsense from the players. In-
I ddentally. the Justice-conductor
reports that in 25 years on the
> bench he never has had a case
I involving a musician. Ho explains
this by surmising that musicians
- have neither the temperament
nor funds for litigation.
I Amsting Recitals
The judge Is not the only pub-
E lie servant to pursue a must-
K. cal career in off-hours. Titere Is
. . Major John A. Warner, Superln-
I tendent of State Police In New
York, Who Is known as one of the
I finest pianists in the country.
K Once a pupil of such masters as
E Wider, Harold Bauer. Vladimir
I de Pachman and Leopold Godow-
k nkL he became sufficiently skill-
ed to satisfy all his teachers.
Occasionally Warner can be
K,'mjtad into a piano or organ recital
with celebrated orchestras. He
todUlts down and plays a lengthy con-
tarto after a long Interval, with-
.(OUt practice. It's a trick his
TWacher Oodowskl taught him.
• .'H’4* • postsci f': Major Warner
Is hailed as the greatest state pol-
nflb head of all time 1
insur'd (urde) s m-esure ■> . . .
the administration opnosed, but
for nhich it often claims f„„
credit '
It also appears that the »»v
ernment can j
curve up or down by turning the
■ spigot of federal expenditures
c-
turning-on process just ns much
as others object to the turning-
l He Already Has Advice
Wise bets are beine
I more on "natural causes’’
i i'.i cents per copy. Delivered on established city routes, 15 cents per week, sixty-
icnt.s per month, 4>6.OO per year. Motor routes iiilj' cents per month. Mail,
Rusk and adjoining counties, 3 months j'l.ot); 6 months n-.75; one year $3.95. 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; ” months $2.50; 6 months 5L00t
one year $7.50.
a
,r that can materiulNe
right nwav-.not thif year, st any Prison walls were responsible
Roosevelt and some only in a si.iiil way for the record,
if his rdviserc yearn for -i
c rention of "the best things
set-up have been NRA."
„ _,e., ... ' government which But these advisers
huge new construction programs tends to make a different nicture naineo to learn that F.
. . • > C — «•». * 1 . . . • . • .. .
■ ''•'-.-S.I.I I ".-mvu, . ........ ..... ...
Th" income of farmers is being expedient time for it.
HI'
will be one of the chief aims of out by the new foundation, and I
the new foundation. |therefore do not feel that I
Mouse Killed in
system slips Telephone Box
n r
^.ovv.vvv.vo., ., Th.rc are no hani: failure
The American Telephone & Tele- . runs . ’>*>cause bank deposits
graph Company was going to
spend $700,000,000. V. S. Steel !
would spend *250 000,000 *nd 1
some 29 States were reported to
| be planning an aggregate con-
| stmctlon program of $4.700.00J-
■ 000. No end of corporations were
i announcing "programs” involving
expenditures of 10 to 50 millions
Everyone was talking abkiut
"fundamental bases of prosper-'
ity” ''strength of the t>u*ineaa
fabric/* "soundqeea of the ec-
anomic structure” and “numer-
| From Day
|’To Day In
I New York
A Nation of Cripples? The
The modern world takes great
pride in the accomplishments of
science, particularly the new and
improved methods through
which medicine and surgeiy are
saving lives and healing bodies, i
Isn’t it disheartening, then,
when the American Academy of
Orthopedic Surgeons, meeting in
Los Angeles, is told that the au-
tomohile is making cripples fast-
| is wrong.
The outside ear is not really
very important in hearing It is
not always ornamental. It Is hard
to keep clean. It forms a mark
| for the boxer and perhaps in some
future evolution will disappear al-
together.
The child hrj little hair In the
opening of the ear. but in the adult
these hairs multiply considerably.
It has been asserted that, tlie hair
i has value in keeping things out of
the ear. If so. why should there
not be just as many hairs In the
ears of children?
From the external opening there
is a short passage which goes
down to the eardrum, technically
called the tympanic membrane.
This membrane catches up the
sound waves which come from the
air.
Touching the eardrum Is a small
bone known as the hammer. It
touches another small bone known
as the anvil and that, In turn
touches a third small bone known
as the stirrup. The stirrup, in
turn. Is adjacent to an organ
known as the cochlea.
This cochlea Is one of the finest
mechanisms in all of the human
body. It is shaped like the shell
of the snail, and contains delicate
hairs which are like the wires on
a harp, each responding to a' dif-
ferent wave length of sound.
From the ear there Is an open
passage into the throat. When
pounds strike on the eardrum. It
must move back and forth. It
would not do this unless there
was an opening on the other side
which would permit it to vibrate
There are many different causes
of difficulty in hearing. Some
times the bones of the ear become
Inflammed and harden together so
that they cannot make the delicate
movements that are necessary for
the transmission of sound.
Sometimes the nerves which
transmit the sensations from the
cochlea to the brain become af-
fected by disease.
Sometimes the eardrum itself
and the cavity behind the eardrum
become infected so that pus forms
and the eardrum becomes im
mensely thickened.
When a person has an inflam-
mation of the «ar or when he be-
gins to have difficulty tn hear-
ing, the doctor who Investigates
the case must, study the situation
from every possible point of view
Not until the cause Is localized
is it possible to apply specific
treatment
\ A
Henderson Daily News
Published Every Afternoon (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning By
NEWS PUBLISHING CO^
should now hold any official po-
sition in it.
However, because I am whole-
heartedly in this cause. I have
listed the sincere interest of
eral
standing individuals who
willing to initiate and carry on
the work of the new foundation. I
-------------O--
One of the Toronto “baby
derby” contestants just had an-
other child, after the contest is
all over. Maybe the 8500,000 had
nothing to do with it. after all.
’ Why Hie Foundation
1 'reside!/ Roosevelt, in an-
nouncing a new National Foun-!
Infantile Paralysis,!
f A NYON CITY, Colo, Jan 28.
") Wurrfcn J<oy Best of tlie .
rtatn penitentiary has i
found the honor system he eatab- :
hs'.led four years ago for the 1,345 1
felons In the slate prison highly !
successful.
The system aided by lop-sided |
haircuts or bread-and-watcr diets I
for those who refused to cooper-
ate was credited l>y Best with be- J
mg responsible for a record of
™ only four escapes in 40 months.
Before the system was started,
there were 66 to 125 escapes every
year.
Prison
---- or than doctors can cure them?
Dr. Edward L. Compere told
the meeting that crippling due to
nutritional, infectious, or con-
gent ial defects is yielding to the
skill of surgeons, but that crip-
pling from accidents is increas-
ing ywir after year. In 1936,
500,00(1 persons sustained bone
■ fractures and one-third of them
were permanently crippled.
( If wc are to avoid becoming a
(Nation of cripples, either auto-
jmnbile drivers must be more
Jcarefu1 or science must work
;e\en faster. And, from the atti-
tude of most drivers, it appears
i lienee is going to have to
'do the job, if it’s done.
Soviet Democracv
El'■>■
;
... nr(, SCHENECTADY, N . .
which 27 (UP)—A mouse with a smash- the prieoner to serve his maximum '
l,..t cd head was removed from a - -- - —j
full telenhone bov by Repairman Har behavior.
ry Blanchard —-——--o
o„v Blanchard theorized that, the 'nl. 2.Er<‘am' Fit®!
push the business anirinl, sticking its head through ""
• ■ • • a hole on the side of the box, was " Wch chev »d
: beaten to death by the beP (lap- blamed for starting
dation for
mi id:
I firmly believe that the time
Las now arrived when the whole
attack on this plague should be
con-
bv one national body.
And it is for this purpose that a
new national foundation for in-
fantile paralysis is being created.
As I have said, the general
co“ntry by purpose of the new foundation
ne will be to lead, direct, and unify
least
a hole on the side of the box, was
or "off, although many feer the P*r when a cell came through.’
The word booze is an Engllah
ous coH.-trnctive elements brought predion cure rather than on any
into piny by the cra:’h." . I’onvrete result of the
. By early December, I !»29. ’ White House busine.'s
President Hoover believed
confidence in bu.-iness had been R„„. v. vl;V
28. — 1 reeitnblished—and so told Con-; ,.j of advisers—-to "
to di rre. s. The volume of Christmas segments of American die” —
everyone feel good, but it doesn't
Julius Klein. Julius Barnes, appear yet that there's
)'harle.‘ M. Schwab, the Rockefel- : hope in it beyond that.
~. T—, ?7_.r.. is no segment of American life
Stotesbury, Dwight from which Roosevelt already
TT____ aU- 4___I . 1-^*4 _______l 4.1..^
Association spokesman , he or anyone else can digest.
issued state- \lready the President has been
telling earnest callers that his
precious press conference >ro-
po.'.tl that business men get to-
talkino- gether to plan production isn't
• t. . _____at.: ______a-.-:.
_______ . , rre. Th<» volume of Christmnfl >’e^ments of ,Kt<1 __
tret a similarity betwen the ter- buying convinced him that bu ti-1 sounds '.veil and ought to make
h’H u( I ........ ■ v v... . ■ - •. ~
bu. ine..- ’mn-and labor leaders Julius Klein, Julius Barnes. , appear yet that
-and (he Hoover "stabilization ", ;
conferences” in the 1329-30 fall |erili Alfred P. Sloan. Martin In-
and winter. still, E T. Stotesbury, Dwight from which Roosevelt
One of several differences is ■ Morrow. Will Hays, the American : Isn’t receiving more advice ti an
found m the fact that by the end ' Bankers’ Association sy' —-------— J:—*
1930 nearly everyone thought | and nuinv others issued state-
been ! ments of lofty reassurance.
The more you recall .”11 'hat
sort of thing and how little any-
one ’mew what he was
about, t’.r more comforting th®
seems todn'-.
Farm Income Sub'idized
T’’:' "hatsyer they
"in view of what happened in worth, certain changes
1930, 1331 and 1932 it may be economic —• ••- »-•••
a good sign that the ballyhoo of wrought by
in the present recession.
WASHINGTON, Jan.
i Many obset vcis profess
Roosevelt conferences with imrs had been restored to normal.
are
D. R "P L „
doesn't think this is a politically ever worked
i UP). — Mice;
matches were
------j a basement i
fire in the home of Fireman
Frank Ramsey who discovered1
I the blaze when smoke entered his
corruption of the Turkiah word
I buzek, which la used in Syria to
*“1 ■' V“F'
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. 7, No. 270, Ed. 1 Friday, January 28, 1938, newspaper, January 28, 1938; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1331220/m1/4/?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.