Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 224, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 5, 1939 Page: 4 of 8
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Z
By Galbraith
SIDE GLANCES
UNCOMFORTABLE EITHER WAY
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T. N. McCarty, Business Manager
D. R HARRIS, President and General Manager
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FOOTBALL CELEBRITY
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Answer to Previous Puzzle
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By Sylvia
FLAPPER FANNY
life and property could not be laughed
being made—
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And while the changes are
can
techno-
while workers are worrying over
45 Compass point college
chemistry
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something new—something that will bring
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By SEGAR
POPEYE
A. CRIM
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HOME
By AHERN
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
By J. R. WILLIAMS
OUT OUR WAY
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SNIFF
NO SIR, WE HAVEN'T A
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'00 NOT CRY DR. BOGtrE ?
P’RAPS IT IS ALL FOR /
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state 1
' I HOPED THE. RAINBIRD V
WOULD MAKE MY WEATHER
FORECASTS 100% PERFECT,
I HOPED NY GUESSIN
■ TELEPHONE-TH’ NEXT
HOUSE? WHY THAT'S
ABOUT THREE MILES.
7 Relating to. 52 Neither.
8 To heel over. 53 Ever.
DAVS WERE
ENDED
was fu
the na
trict 1:
Corr
papers
46 Fills with
longing.
MINUTE--
YOU'LL FIND
ME IN THE.
back room
EATING A
HERRING/ .
MAW AN’ PAW'S IN
TOWN WITH TH' TEAM-
YAS,
A’COURSE
E-Tex
Tax (
> I
9 Bud.
-10 Hangman’s
halter knot.
n Finale.
55 Street.
56 Scottish.
58 Common verb.
59 Transposed.
FO
Prodi
Poi
10; t
Egs
Bui
his day.
60 He was also a
48 Hymn at
praise.
50 Pair.
51 Transgressors.
54 Onto.
55 Observes.
57 Short letters.
58 He was the
---- coach of
61 Sawmill
device.
VERTICAL
1 Parrot,
2 Ordinary.
3 Consumed.
4 Moth.
5 Measure of
type.
J YOU CAM ROLL ME UP
LIKE A RUG IF YOU
WANT TO.PROFESSOR
-THEN NAIL THE
LID ON AND GIVE e
ME EXACTLY ONE E
I
ll
I1
-1
CM
OKT
ROT
NET
off. The cumulative effect of such disasters
would bring the national temperature dan-
gerously close to the boiling point.
A drifting mine has no conscience. The
only certain way for a skipper to avoid hit-
ting one is to steer a wide course around
the waters where such mines have been set
loose.
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2
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4 az.
(BUT NOW? BUT NOW-?
€_
SIP
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E6AD,I FEAR TWIGGS
HAG JESTED HIMSELF
INTO A DILEMMA!
I HOPE WE CAN ‘ >3
RESUSCITATE HIM 3
BEFORE HE /
STRANGLES.’ _
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We
oPR.1939BYNEASERYISL.INGa
That
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A FORMULA FOR LICKING
DEPRESSIONS
New England is fed up with the de-
pression. Co-operating with their state
and municipal governments, the folks living
along the upper Atlantic seaboard took the
ft
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1e
VA-
#a
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gNVBUNOW-
KNOW- -— Y
BAKED INA PIE ’
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stead, h
her info:
lens to
The t
gest ions
might h
gram.
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stories
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known
followi
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second
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“Mv coffee is boiling over—Ute children are screaming-
the dog is barking—the phone is ringing and you adk
if you’ve disturbed mer"
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POOF!W‘E z#.1
GREAT GRIZINK" ‘
FEENISH TIEGO• up
ZE MOUNT VESUV°
1 WEEL NOT v
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MZE KNOTS/ y
DENT
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vance
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1938
unde
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cents
level:
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46
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lolgical improvements—the laboratories plod
on, uncovering new by-products to be manu-
factured.
The invention of the automobile put vir-
tually all blacksmiths and wheelwrights out
of business. But the industries that sprang
up and the jobs created directly and indi-
rectly by the automobile industry are almost
beyond computation.
It requires some pretty radical read-
justment sometimes to put the world aright
New England, for instance, refused to mope
away in its corner. It simply adapted itself
to a new order. People are going back to
work. In three years, not only have most of
the old plants been put back into operation,
but 1600 new factories have been built and
are running under full steam.
Other communities may have to come
around to this system of salvation before
*
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HORIZONTAL
1,6 Pictured
football
cOach.
12 Dyestuff.
13 Maniple.
14 So be it.
16 Crucifix.
17 Notion.
19 Peers through
a crevice.
21 North
Carolina.
22 Form of “a.”
23 Malt drink.
24 Electric term.
26 Trying.
32 Carpet.
33 Contrives.
34 Sloths.
35 Over.
37 Before.
38 Little devil.
40 Preposition.
42 To corrupt.
44 Genus of
grasses.
Wr
• BARBS
PHE British are experimenting
- with smoked mutton as a sub-
stitute for bacon. It will now be
lamb and eggs for breakfast.
» • »
Two girls announced they had
found a turtle marked "A. R.
M. ’96,” and immediately they
received a lot of letters from
people telling how they had
made the marks. Seems as if
a lot of people didn’t have any-
thing better to do in 1896 than
carve their initials on turtles.
trality act which prevents ships of American
registry from entering combat zones the
United States can be thankful. The Athenia
“incident” may have been shrugged aside
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“What’s she divorcing huh for?”
“Mental cruelty—and $109,000."
(D
Responsibility
We know that the major-
ity of people have little
—if any—knowledge of
the problems which arise
when a loved one passes
away.
We accept the responsi-
bility this enforced faith
in us entails, with a con-
fidence founded upon 25
years of satisfactory scr
vice.
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Save
e is nothing sacred about a
^try when jt ceases to sup- in enough cash to cover the payrolls.
74,
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MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
Entered second class matter P. 0. In Hendeison, Texas, Act Congress, Mar. 8, 1879
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cop 8 NEA SERVICE .INC. TM REC. U.S. PAT. OFF.n-S Eh
“Sure the birds here have learned to talk—you’ve been
here 24 hours, haven’t you?”*
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One of Jupiter’s nine moons is I, The London County Council
about 20,000,000 miles from the । Welfare gives shelter nightly to
planet and requires about twomahout 2000 homeless people, who
years for one completeWTVulutmti. ifrave no money-tor a bed.------.—
THE BEST 17-------•
BAKED
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Five cents per copy. Delivered on established city routes, 16 cents per week, sixty-
cents per month, $6.00 per year. Motor routes fifty cents per month. Mail,
Rusk and adjoining counties, 8 months $1.25; 6 months $2.25; one year $4.25. Mail
elsewhere in Texas and in Louisiana, Oklahoma and Arkansas: 8 months $2.00; 6
months $3.50; one year $6.00. All other States: 3 months $2.50; 6 months $4.00;
one year $7.50.
very long. Th
traditional ind
speed up production, cut down the number
of workers needed. Someone must build the
new machines, someone must service thm, and the tragedy ascrobed to the natural re-
run them; others must build parts for them, suits of war. But too many, losses of Ameri-
—5-L(2
ewinttute/(cvi,
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Judges of the Wqrld Court
will continue to hold office with-
out an election this year. It’s
one of the jobs today for which
there is a shortage of applicants.
• • *
Ten minutes after a judge sus-
perdled sentence on a woman for
disturbing the peace, the com-
plaining witness married her.
That’s taking a hair off the cog
that bit him. M
2 ' ‘4 '
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•
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7.632
> g-M
— Hdisifgeere
-
15 Aside.
18 Firedogs.
20 Cutting off of
vowels.
21 He was born
in------.
25 His ----of
coaching is
still in use.
26 Self.
27 Half an em.
28 Hail!
29 Green.
30 Numeral.
31 Aperture.
36 To sin.
39 To entangle.
41 Wigwam. \
43 The banteng)
a wild ox.
44 To analyz.
45 Intelligence,
47 Surface
measure.
49 Dug.
IFGE
$ -
d
-1, 1
m2
matter into their own hands and put into
operation a simple formula for making in-
dustrial smokestacks puff again.
* ' Right after 1929 things looked bleak for
New England. The textile industry took a
pretty severe kick in the stomach and for
a long time people did what they could to
resusciate it. The states helped by trim-
ming business taxes to the bone. Most of
the efforts were like hypodermic injections
with short-lived effects. It looked as if cities
that once sizzled with activity would become
ghost towns.
Then New Englanders began to approach
the problem from a brand new angle. So the
textile business was no longer what it used
to be. So what? Were textile products the
only commodities ingenious Yankee com-
munities could produce? The Massachusetts
Institute of Technology lent a hand. Finan-
ciers transferred idle capital to new enter-
prises. Some communities took over the fac-
tories and leased them to energetic business
men. New England forgot it was a textile
center and began manufacturing articles for
which it knew there was a market.
Neither the most stable industry nor the
most reliable agricultural product can for-
ever hold out against the terrific offensive
of progress. Advancement of science is al-
ways shoving some industrial group out the
back door. The redeeming feature is that
for every industry pushed off the scene, at
least one new one springs up.
Even established industries are hit
whenever a new machine is developed to
24
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—.---——0--------
AVOIDING TROUBLE
The United States can heave a deep
sight of relief that the American merchant
marine is not plying the European side of
the Atlantic these days. From all indications,
mines are as abundant in European waters
as celery roots in a bowl’d of vegetable soup.
If American ghips were crossing the
water, the chances are pretty high that a
least one would have struck a mine by this
time. For that section of the revised neu-
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7 MY WORD, GRIZINI,
DO NOTGARROT THE
MAN-- ALLOW HIM
BREATHING GRACE /
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BACK TO NATURE
Nature is beginning to shed her cocoon
of billboards; and motorists, idling along
highways on a Sunday afternoon may soon
get a chance to see the countryside again.
In six states, billboard advertising along
highways has already been controlled, and
20 other states are seriously considering
steps to return field and stream to the auto-
mobile drivers who have paid $30,000,000,-
000 for their highways. An enticing girl is
al right in her place, but most auto travelers
feel her place is not on a billboard alongside
the road obstructing the view of willow
trees in winter or fields of rhododendron in
season.
But it isn’t the scenery alone that’s be-
ing restored. Property values have frequent-
ly fallen off where billboards made their ap-
pearance, the National Association of Real
Estate Boards reports. The real estate men
figured out that they’d still be ahead if they
paid the outdoor advertising firms a sum
equivalent to the annual revenue from bill-
board advertising. At any rate, motorists
are getting back the scenery they thought
was part of the bargain when they paid for
the roads.
(9, "
3;
, )
port its people. It is much better to find
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EBONmE
TRETEEU
A2dehREs
BSHYL1
(RAWMNeWXFAIR—
(colder and wetter")
(WARMER AND AOTTERJ
B : >. .7_.
(EVERYTHING I SAID WOULD
N-------- HAVE BEEN f
dai •
.Xn) I )y
t_ FOOLING? WE CAN
a-E HARDLY wait/ )
Arst............. ...... - -Vl
---------------------o "
Let the enemy persecute my soul, and
take it; yea, lelt him tread down my life up-
on the earth, and lay mine honour in the
dust.—Psalms 7:5.
-------------0----
You can’t make good drivers by fining
them or putting them in- jail. Teach them
how to drive and then see that they obey.—
Mayor Ah Jenkins of Salt Lake City, former
automobile race driver.
BUT NOBODY lives THERE V ll ll1
NOW: OH, VES,WE HAVE I I II/Tt
ANOTHER HORSE, BUT //i
HES A SHETLAND —
.PONY--TOO LITTLE y _
u FOR YOU.' )
Henderson Daily News
Published Every Afternoon (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning By
NEWS PUB L SHING CO.
PT
5150
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morale
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Police in Springfield, Mass.,
hold the key to a nigh club every
night and give it back to the
proprietor every morning to make
certain the operator won’t violate
the closing laws. And who
watches the cops?
an aw
52
57
Letter)
„cerning
gram w
citizens
vice-pres
ger of 1
of Comr
Harris
believes
cal” to
and gra
control i
said tha
with anc
cials, do
troversit
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well ah
the an
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desk th
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 224, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 5, 1939, newspaper, December 5, 1939; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1425939/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.