Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 169, Ed. 1 Monday, October 2, 1939 Page: 4 of 8
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D4
SIDE GLANCES
BOY AT THE DIKE
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O. R. HARRIS, President and General Manager
T. N. McCARTY, Business Manager
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BOAT BUILDER
BARBS
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Answer to Previous Puzzle
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“Sure, we gottum reservation in Oklahoma!”
FLAPPER FANNY
By Sylvia
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By J R. WILLIAMS
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
OUT OUR WAY
By AHERN
THE IDEA? A SOK) OF MINE \
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YOUR COAT
POCKETS
5
The
meet "
o’clock
man V
An Indiana man says he is
looking for a wife who must
be under 26, good-looking, a
good cook, and have $26,000.
Brother, who isn't!
27
32
36
made now by linking the 21 American re-
publics into a more interdependent economic
system, with the money of all countries sta-
bilized in relation to the dollar. Then there
will be a nucleus of solidity about which a
shattered world may rally after the war.
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5
The
meet 1
Griffin
noon.
The
Churci
nesday
observ
of Pre
COLLECTING CIGARET
CARDS OF SHOW GIRLS
IN TIGHTS! ITS A
GOOD THING I
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al belcc cstm
VERTICAL
1 Chancel
screen.
£
33
State officials who aren’t get-
ting much sleep these nights have
nothing on us, what with the
neighbor’s radio blaring all night
with bulletins on the European
situation.
OAT
E|ME
I WILL TEACH THEM —
BETTER THAN TO LEANE
1
।
The .zoo at Washington, D. C.,
has a collection of 50 rare toads.
When a frost is heavy enough to
blcken growing vegetation, it is
ailed a "black frost.”
|
not, whether we want it or not, the United
States is rapidly becoming the financial cen-
ter of the world.
13 Mountain.
15 This type of
boat is used in
coast --
17 Gull.
19 Acidity.
21 Crucifix.
23 Slave.
25 Tale.
28 Public
speaker.
31 Theater
pathways.
33 So be it.
35 Scalp cover-
ing.
37 Planet.
38 To stick
together. "
The d
the di
Bob 6
leadin
We Render Comprehen-
sive and Personal
Mm
Alle
Wit)
■L
A. CRIM
FUNERAL HOME
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BE DISMAYED IF
- SHE GREETS
YOU WITH AN
ARCTIC EYE-
HAR-RUMPH!,
Hi
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e
/2
5
BE
5.
WE SEEM
ITO HAVE
EVERY-
* THING
3—xr--
(
6 E
*eMa.
RAILROADS can be sure the
-- government will help them
keep running until after 1940, for
as yet there are no observation
platforms on busses from which
candidates can speak.
3 Compass
lpoint.
4 Poem.
5 Plexus.
6 Persia.
7 Mountain
pass.
8 Senior.
9 Jars.
10 To approach.
11 His boat was
named---.
'EM WHEN THEY TORE DOWN THE OLD
5PITLY HOTEL TO BUILD AGAS 2
STATION/ DOES NOISE BOTHER R
YOUR MISSUS ? -
TT-T
SOFTLY,EDDlE/ KAFF-KAFF?
8 - THOSE IMPLEMENTS MAY
M PROVE SOMEWHAT FORMIDABLE FOR
A SUCH PRECISE SCIENTIFIC
QCONSTRUCTION’AS MY EXHAUST
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“I attracted your father, too, with flirting and dancing
but he talks mostly now about my roast beef and apple
nies."
______
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COPW. 1939 BY N£A SERVICE, 10-1
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'/OU BROUGHT VOUR \
TOOTH-BRUSH? y
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(^OUR RAT-O^r^
' AS
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WELLWE A ORF FOR
NE UTOPIA, BUT I STILL
HAVA FEELIN' I FORGOT
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223
c
A federal writers’ project re-
ports there are several precious
metals under Manhattan’s sur-
face. Subway panhandlers will
probably doubt this.
• • »
Now Governor Dickinson tells
us modern dancing is leading our
younger generation to sin. We
just knew there was something
worse than war to worry about
these days.
/
memorial.
41 Stem of
wheat.
4 Wise men.
Bones.
44 Abaft.
46 Had on.
49 Wriggling fish.
51 Sloths.
53 Company.
55 Paid
publicity.
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GU, . -
COPR. i»w RV NEA SERVICE, INO. T. M. REO. U. S. PAT ORE.
“Don’t you think he’s tiresome, always agreeing with every-
thing?”
“Oh, a 'Yes-Man’ always has a negative personality.”
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HORIZONTAL
1,4 Famous
Civil War
boat builder.
11 Drinking cup.
12 Ruler.
14 Conducted.
16 Death notice.
18 Sum.
19 Wings.
20 At no time.
22 Measure.
23 Ascot.
24 God of love.
26 Aurora.
27 Forward.
29 Negative
word.
30 Railroad.
31 indefinite
article.
32 English coin.
34 To suffice.
35 Possessive
pronoun.*
36 Butts.
38 Box.
39 Tearful.
41 Earth.
42 Timber lana.
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BUT MOM, I TOLD YOU \
THEY AIN'T MINE-- |
I’M KEEPIN THEM FER. I
A FELLER SO HIS A
FOLKS WON'T KETCH IN |
HIM WITH 'EM.’ M-—
Woodpeckers do not carry nest-
ing materials, because they lav
their eggs in a soft bed of sawdust
produced as they drill for food in
trees.
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Five cents per copy. Delivered on established city routes, 15 cents per week, sixty-
cents per month, $6.00 pen year. Motor routes fifty cents per month. Mail.
Rusk and adjoining counties, 3 months $1. 25; 6 months 52.25; one year $4.25. Mail
elsewhere in Texas and in Louisiana, Oklahoma and Arkanras: 3 months $2.00; 6
months S3 50: one year $8 00. All other States: 3 months $2.50: 6 months $4.00;
------------—-------------------------......--------------------------------------- - - -
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- Mrs.
Stewa
Thursi
noast
the Ji
were
served
Mr.
Son,
a. a. Mr. a
W 4 Mr. a
Faye
Mrs. I
Stella
Stella
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Angus
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Clave
D. Sti
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MEMBER AUDII BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
Entered second class matter P. 0. in Hendeison, Texas, Aci Congress, Mar. 3, 1879
I
The relationship between the British
pound and the American dollar is a weather-
vane that shows how this wind blows. Brit-
ain did not even try to maintain the pound
sterling, but dumped it without support
even before fighting started. It dropped
immediately from $4.68 to as low as $3.73.
During the four years of the World War it
never fell below $4.51.
The whole financial relationship is dif-
ferent today from that of 1914. Then a sud-
den and unexpected war knocked the props
out from under the American stock market.
In 1939, a long-expected and well-discounted
war saw an immediate advance in U. S.
stocks. In 1914, the United Slates held about
$1,900,000,000 in gold, perhaps 20 per cent
_ of the world’s supply. Today it holds more
than $16,700,000,000 in gold, above 60 per
। cent of the world’s supply.
The trade of South America is literally
being dumped into our lap. Already orders
have begun to come here from Brazilian and
Argentinean, Colombian and Venezuelan
By Geo. Clark
(4
WAR CLOSES IN
In Germany, a “fanatical member” of a
sect of Bible students' (perhaps the Judge
Rutherford organization) is shot as a con-
scientious objector to the war. Another
resident of Halle (once a Red stronghold)
is shot for “arson and sabotage.” In Paris
a Hungarian chambermaid and an Algerian
cook are jailed for speaking sympathetically
of Hitler.
Let us not be critical or Pharisaical. No
nation engaged in a life and death struggle
S
_L IED
COMM
. prospect and figure out what we are going
to do about it. Perhaps a beginning may be
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RESPONSIBILITIES, UNASKED AND
UNWANTED, ARE OURS
-As nearly as can be told at this moment,
this looks like a probable result of the Euro-
pean war, no matter what its result:
World financial power will pass—nay, is
alreadp passing—from London to New York.
A financial world which has been accustom-
ed to look to Threadneedle Street is going to
look to Wall Street and Pennsylvania Ave-
nue.
This tendency has been marked before
the war broke. There no longer seems any would do less,
doubt of the result. Whether we like it or rgz ,
I his, too, is war. It suggests no reflec-
tion on either Germans or French. If we re-
Henderson Daily News
Published Every Afternoon (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning By
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
GAS TRANSFORMER-EGAD!
The
meet
the hi
7b The e
7 postpoi
The
School
Churci
Tuesda
Mrs. F
are ur
let.
I
9
7 Lt.
10-1_______ <55
URCHILL J
NATICWEV
ISMATAVI
T EgT UNEIS
•BUSERC
MATTER SOME THOUGHT
—a-
!
• | The
' ciety
Mrs. J
day at
The
will he
year ii
Citizer
Friday
The
will mi
at the
cey.
PeRAyp
U"
s
RA
1x23
member rightly, some of the Tories were
roughly handled during the American Revo-
lution, and some of the Copperheads during
the Civil War.
It is usual to say that in war, truth is
the first casualty. If so, freedom is a close
second. This must be so, war being war,
and let’s not forget it.
_ ’ --------------------------------------------
WAR BOOMLET
In the matter of a business “boom” for
the United States as a result of the European
war, it will be just as well not to get all
lathered up too quickly.
There is every reason to believe, now
that we can back up and look at the thing
more calmly, that if any such “boom” de-
velops, it will develop slowly, The stock
market, which started up enthusiastically,
has cooled down. Britain announces offi-
cially that her munition supply is so strong
that there will be no shell shortage like that
which caused a cabinet scandal in 1915. Bri-
tain and France, with several years’ warning,
undoubtedly have their needs far better an-
ticipated han in 1914. Trade expansion will
probably be slow, with war losses to balance
off against war gains. And let’s not forget
that production and employment were stead-
ily gaining here for several months before
the war broke. In the industrial, as in every
field, over-excitement does only harm.
•--o------------------------
SUDDEN SOLICITUDE
There is a tinge of madness about war
and everything connected with it. But to-
day’s war in Europe with modern propa-
ganda, is so baffling as to leave cne limp.
The Germans haft the Russians on Tuesday
and love them on Wednesday. Poland is an
aggressive, cocky military dictatorship in
July, but in September it is a martyred re-
public. An arms embargo is neutrality in
July, cash-and-carry is neutrality in October.
To add just one more note to the gener-
al confusion: the Soviet atheist newspaper
Bozboznik, is reported very indignant be-
cause Orthodox churches in Poland were
broken up and turned into Roman Catholic
ones. But Bozboznik, whose name means
in Russian, .“Godless,” made its reputation
by its bitter atcackson the Orthodox Church
in Russia.
individual attention to every
specific detail is our way ol
conducting a more complete
funeral service.
HULLO, MAJOR.' 16 THE ENGINE
// HERE YET? I'M ALL SET TO START
TINKERIN’--- - SHOW ME THE JOB
A AN' I'LL WHALE TH’ TAR OUTA HER/
M1 BRUNG THE ONLY TOOLS I COULD
FIND AROUND----WRECKERS FORGOT
firms supplied from Germany and Britain
whose sources of supply have been cut off
by the war. .
This is not a question of the United
States launching a campaign of financial im-
perialism or dollar domination. It is a fact,
and it is happening today whether we like it
or not, whether we want it or not.
When the war is over, the United States
is going to be in a position which will domi-
nate the financial and economci rebuilding of
a shattered world. The position will be such
that it ill have to exercise this leadership,
not from any wish to dominate, but simply
to protect its own interests. It will be the
world’s great creditor country, the world's
great source of material and facilities for re-
building.
We may well begin now to survey this
\ dll
1939, King Features Syndicate, Inc.,
World rights reserved, |
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) WOULD YOU MIND TARRYING HERE
4 UNTIL I PREPARE MARTHA FOR
/ YOUR ENTRANCE ? SHE HAS NOT
j been IN THE BEST OF FETTLE" •
A LATELY-HMM!-- AND DO NOT
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iE-CiE
774
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WENT THROUGH Ti"
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M “as-zgza?
2,1269
43 Wood sorrel.
45 Hurled.
47 Measure of
area.
48 Rubber trees.
50 To happen.
52 More or less.
53 Yells.
54 Coronet.
56 He built the
first ----war
vessel.
57 He was born
in----, but
lived in
America.
4
26
1848
111
10
5
e-.Er.
it is strange
NOU SHOULD X
HAVE SUCH A
FEELING di
---72*
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 169, Ed. 1 Monday, October 2, 1939, newspaper, October 2, 1939; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1425892/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.