Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 21, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 12, 1939 Page: 4 of 10
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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COMMENT
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SO! PULLING A KNIFE ON ME, HUH?
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OUT OUR WAY
By AHERN
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say nothing of those working in
the department at Washington,
If'their pets bark after 9 p. tn.,
do? owners In one Balkan village
are fined, with the fine being dou-
bled for each new offense.
We Render Comprehen-
sive and Personal
A. CRIM
FUNERAL HOME
Crickets on the Hearth
Like to Be Hand Fed
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11 MESH
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Has:
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SWHY MOTHERS GET GRAV
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45 And.
46 Marshy.
48 South
Carolina
(abbr.).
49 Pair.
ir
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' VEH, T
REV1EMBER-
EVEM TH'
NJIOHTS he
RAN AROUND
WITH <3ERTlE
HE TRAMPLED
ONJ ‘YOUR
— HEART//
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“GO H “61 “
By .1. R. WILLIAMS
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tap
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by NtA*Sribi<;<. inc.' ;
wonderful about that? I did it the first time
I ever rode a horse!"
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CLEVELAND, O. (UP)—Hand-
fed crickets are the hobby of Mrs.
James H. Scroggie, ever since a
pair of the small Bingers made the
Scroggie furnace-corner their win-
ter home.
"Early in the fall two of the lit-
tle fellows came into our cellar
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6 Gypsy.
7 Persia.
8 Cole plants.
9 Beer.
What’s so
Skip
van
WINKLE
Remember the
Friend of Freedom
More than at any time in re-
cent years, the United States has
reason to turn eagerly this spring
to observance of the birth of Tho-
mas Jefferson.
This American colossus, whose
fit '
jfel
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• MOVIE
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T, M. RES. U. S. PAT. OFF.
DEBUT in * BI2O4PWAV
6&G£NAce'J».$T)4Ge OE3uT IN
'XliCE IN WONPERL.4NP
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121
al
to every
way oi
oomplet?
Tightening I p
The War Department is now j
reported finger-printing . all its
employes. Already 30,000 of
70,000 civilian employes of the
department have recorded their
prints, and all but temporary un-
skilled help will soonLbe includ- .
a
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MEMBER AUDI! BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
Entered second class matter P. O. in Hende»son, Texas, Act Congress, Mar. 3, 1879
D. R. Harris, President Geo. W. Bowman, General Manager '
13 Intellectual.
15 Espouses.
19 This land's
king.
20 Lava.
22 You and I.
24 Its monetary
unit.
25 Check in
growth.
26 Ell.
27 Guitar stop.
28 Yielded.
29 Retards.
31 Basket twig,
33 Hand. '
35 Upright ,
37 Paid pubMcMg
40 Company "
42 Brains.
43 Big.
46 Horseback
game.
47 Field.
49 Logger’s booL
50 By.
52 Hole.
4 Issued value. 54 Eye.
fr Workman.—--—55 Musical note. •
56 Type measure
57 Indian
mulberry
58 Nay
6 I
.■h.-
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Side Qlances—By Qeo. Clark
I a
I
04
ffil
42 Photograph
size.
31
Fy .
/J OH GERALD/ p
7^ 1 CAMT
[BEL'E'.E ITS
Ireally ycu/
? YES, COVE
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tsruAYS Goes of Tfcs •
•Mb TO u-HTUH D|ET.,,,„4.KWTeuR
PriOT<?GR4CUfiQc.£?eeT4„ ■
VDtlGHS 110/1
f
Individual attention
specific detail is our
conducUng a mors
funeral service.
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OUR BOARDING HOUSE
■' H-HELLO, <3ERTiE
I IT'S me~~gerald/ I
\ IM B-BACn INI
/ TOWN A^iAINJ I
J H- HAS AVRS.
HDOPlE oOT a
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ROOM 2 I
32 Sustenance.
34 European
coin.
36 Customary.
38 Small child.
'9 Derision.
11 Species. ‘
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> — is BAGK«
giant shadow still falls across the
whole democratic world, was
born April 13, 1743, almost 200
years ago.
It is the custom on such occa-
sions to search the works of such
a 1
that seems to bear out the partic-
ular course the writer himself fa- _________
vors, and thus give the great desirables,
man’s benediction on his natal
day to some course of modern
conduct
• In the writings of his 83 years,_______ _ ______ ______ _
his speeches, letters, and books, bases, and coast fortifications, to
apparent Jeffersonian authority
can be found for almost any-
.74h
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FLAPPER FANNY By Sylvia
' COPR. 1939 BY NCA SERVICE. INC. T. M REC U S. PAT OFF.-.
Y,
Five cents per copy. Delivered on established city routes, 15 cents per week, sixty-
cents per month, $6.00 pei year. Motor routes fifty cents per month. Mail.
Rusk and adjoining counties,7 3 months $1. 25; 6 months $2.25; one year $4.25. Mail
elsewhere in Texas and in Louisiana, Oklahoma and Arkantas;. 3 months $2.00;
months $3 50; one vear $8 00 All other States: 3 month.* $2.50: 6 months $4.00;
one year $7.50. Reduced yearly rates effective October 15, 193Sto Feb. 1, 1939.
FI a!f4 EvArvthi
K ft W S" WI fa V w i 1 I i I
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There have been in the1 past
many instances where, employes
of the War and Navy Depart-
ments turned out to be not only
aliens, but even men definitely
------ . unfriendly to the government
worthy, find an apt quotation they were “serving.” . t - ~J
The business of finger-print-
ing them will not weed out all un-
, but it ough to get
some, and should help in locating
others in the-future.
Even civilian workers about
arsenals, the Canal Zone, air
to quote him thus. Nobody can
say with much certainty what
Jefferson or any long-deadTnan
would do if confronted by to-
day’s world.
What we can do, and what we
ought to do on an occasion like
this birth anniversary, is to read
the whole life of the man,’try to
understand its spirit.
And this we can know for cer-
tain about Jefferson if he were
here today: he would stand for
freedom and against tyranny.
Typical of his matured views
was this flaming sentence, writ-
ten 26 years before his death: “I
have sworn upon the altar of God
eternal hostility against every
form of tyranny over the mind of
man.”
We know that he lived his life
in a continual running fight for
freedom, of creed, of govern-
ment, of speech, and of thought.
And when he came to die, we
„ know that he wrote the words to
be*graven on his own tombstone.
Though he had been lawyer, in-
ventor, writer, governor of his
state, congressman, minister to
France, secretary of state, and
twice the choice of his people to
be their President, Jefferson set
down these words as his own me-
morial:
’ “Here was buried Thomas Jef-
ferson, author of the Declaration
of American Independence, of
the statute of Virginia for relig-
ious freedom, and Father of the
University of Virginia.”
These things of his long, var-
ied. fruitful career, Thomas Jef-
ferson valued most; that he had
fought and won in battles for
lw
anil started singing by the fur-
nace.’’ she said. “We hadn’t th«
slightest idea as to what they re-
quired in the way of food. We tried A
bits of lettuce, potato peelings, and
bread crumbs.”
Mrs. Scroggie said the diet must
be satisfactory, because “their
chirping is lively and cheerful.”
---------o-------
An ingerrtnfts resident of Venice
first made sugar loaves 500 year/
ago. •
riifX
'/ka
x 15 -THAT BIS CHOP
! STABBED INI A3AINI ? I T
i th1 last time he ^\'i
\ D'W A STRETCH HERE H
A HS USED ME I (
- j pos a cinder /
X CY -j i
' EVERY rZ.ll
/ DASH -O X >
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60 River in-
this land.
20 Form of “a.” 44 Was indebted 61 Its pyramids
were ---s
for kings.
VERTICAL
1 Organ of
hearing.
2 Eminent.
3 12 months.
freedom, politica1 freedom for
his country, freedom of religious
belief in his state, and freedom of
the mind as represented by the
founding of a great university.-
He1 knew that freedom is never
static, never kept, even when
once gained, without never-end-
ing struggle
That struggle, no loss than his
own victories in it. Thomas Jef-
ferson bequeathed to us.
• s J
;---------4
EDITORIAL Henderson Daily News
Pubnsherl Every Afternoon (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning By
NEW S P U BUSHING CO.
wfsisviet. me. t, m. me. v. *■ fat, off.
“1 finally found a place to plant th« radisbea.’
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II 1 ** s-1bj, thuvx; Yie’H just An oiu tnciAi oi any
I mother’s—she knew him before I was born.”
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thing. It is a dangerous practice ought to be of unquestioned loy-
alty. Any government which
permits any other condition is not
being liberal, but stupid.
The Distaff Side
“Isn’t that stupid?” asked
Amy Johnson. Frankly, yes,
we’re inclined to answer after
reading of her complaint that
British defense officials, allot-
ting emergency jobs in war time,
assigned her to drive a truck.
Amy Johnson is a crackajack
flyer. She thinks women thus
qualified should fly in case of
war.
Let’s not be shocked too quick-
ly. Why not. pray?-
Is it any worse to put a quali-
fied woman pilot in a plane
where she may be shot down, but
at least has a chance to defend
herself, than it is to bomb her in
her home without a chance to
raise a finger?
Yet there are people scarcely
mdved by the latter, now an ex-
pected incident of any war, who
will get very indignant at the
thought of a woman flyer in war
time.
Isn’t that stupid, we ask, echo-
ing Miss Johnson. ' r
i • Ad
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—...........
HORIZONTAL
1 Pictured is
the map of
5 This kingdom
is in ------,
10 Surface
measure.
11 Spoken.
12 To furnish
with new
arms.
14 Mexican dish.
16 Measure.
IMdant.
18 Compass
pomt.
19 Foot (abbr.).
21 To plant.
23 Spanish
(abbr.).
25 Surfeited.
28 Sleeveless
clocks
30 Plant disease. 50 Kettle.
51 Corded cloth.
53 Toward.
55 Skinpish.
57 Once more.
59 This
kingdom's
capital.
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IZ1WS MUHI3IS1IIW HfflM
oijiu s iiiaiH raci
a L-jniMWH isiaium a
SMiaisiH aiaM*
a uraifii-----
wi HMIS
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10
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 21, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 12, 1939, newspaper, April 12, 1939; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1331593/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.