Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 129, Ed. 1 Friday, August 16, 1940 Page: 4 of 10
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THE FORMULA THAT PARALYZED EUROPE
By Gelbraith
SIDE GLANCES
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D. R. HARRIS, President and Genera) Manager
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A rising popular movement in Germany
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HOLD EVERYTHING
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FUNNY BUSINESS
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appointed for 56 Afternoon
meal.
office.
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Always On
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FUNERAL HOME
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the News Will Sell it Quick I
“How about a fish-fry, lady?”
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OUT OUR WAY
By J. R. WILLIAMS
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
By AHERN
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ENJOYED THEIR VACATION' youY
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REDRAWN By
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tional part.
9 New York
(abbr.).
13 Persons
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I WISH >
HE'D GET IT
OVER WITH
AND STOP
BOTHERING )
British leader calls Nazi propa-
gandatearets tedious, boring and
balderdash. The American would
streamline it merely as hooey.
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WATCH IK)' TH'
CAT WATCHINJ
. FER. A RAT.'
50 To hoard.
52 Small shield.
54 Varnish
substance.
19 He was a
lover of the
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t- e
an initial.
30 To make lace.
32 Reverence.
34 Accessory.
35 Proposition.
37 To bow.
43 Cultivation.
45 Calyx leaf.
47 Ham.
‘4 <
Dance bands are swinging all
the old ballads and spirituals.
“They're Hanging Danny Dee-
. ver in the Morning" should be
a natural.
SEVEN FIGHTS WITH )j
SEVEN MEN— ——-
HORIZONTAL
1, 5 Most famous
of all anglers.
10 Pleat.
11 Weird.
12 12 o’clock,
daytime.
14 Mocking.
16 Money charge.
17 Note in scale.
18 Peasant
20 Bone.
21 Form of “be.”
Responsible S*ft Members
are on duty at our funeral
home every hour of the day
and night.
APPEALS
TO :
FEAK $
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NO 11
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KAFF-
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21 Form of “a.”
23 You.
25 Epoch.
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ALL RIGHT -
DURINJ’ WORKIN’
HOLRS--PERFECTLY
SANE A NUT IS
A GUY WHO WOULD
WATCH A CAT TAKINJ’
A NAP OK) HIS
OWN TIME, AFTER.
WORKIN: ---------
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SCR£££2
OH. My
GORSH
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THE
profit
NOW tt’s the combination plane-
11 auto that’s being developed. A
parachute as well as roller skates
will be standard equipment for
the gals from now on.
I
WHA6 HAPP'NING TO J
^THE QUEEN ? —\,
EHEVTRROWI-Ay ’
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like it? Offhand we’d say no.
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“Slack suit uothing! Dad’s had those pajamas for over
10 years!”
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corn 1940 BY nia SERVICE, inc r m rig u i PAT off
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APPEALS
PREJUpi€
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T. N. MeCARTY, Business Manager
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OF CIRCULATIONS 1
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HOW TO CONQUER COURTEOUSLY-
Even conquest is not what it was in the
old days.
The world isn't getting any more de-
cent or any more moral, but it is getting a
darned sight slicker.
HEAVENS!
WALLPAPEI I
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APPEAl. THE,
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Headlines report fireworks over
draft bill. The ultra-patriot re-
minds us that fireworks are to
celebrate freedom, not hinder it.
51 Roll of film.
53 Tile setter.
55 Strokes gently
57 Pussy. -------
58 To make a
speech.
59 Farewell!
60 He was also a
writer or--
61 His famous
book, “The
----Angler.”
I VERTICAL
1 Provided.
New Hampshire man gets
jail sentence on old state stat-
ute for tickling minor without
consent. His victim had the
first 'and last laugh.
In the-faee of terrific problems and con-
ditions, ond until the present threats and
dangers have disappeared, we cannot pursue
complacently the course of our customary
normal life.—Secretary Hull.
♦ * *
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Entered second class matter P. O. in Henderson, Texas, Act Congress, Mar. 3, 1879
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MEMBER AUDI! BUREAU
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NON-ALCOHOLIC NAZISM 1
The fellow who said that Nazism was I
just Kaiserism with bad manners. may have-
' to revise his definition. Nazism bids fair to
! become Kaiserism without beer.
We can afford to lose the money better
than we can afford not to take the risk.—
Jesse Jones, federal loan administrator, on
proposed loans to South American nations.
♦ * *
In this decade men have become sensi-
tized to their liabilities and insensitive to
their assets. Magnifying their losses, they
have minimized their gains.—-Rev. Dr. Wel-
don F. Crossland, Rochester, N. Y., pastor.
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Observe the difference between con- is demanding that a new non-alcoholic
_JUNEA through.
W E S| 16 He has many
L adherents or
■s.
Five cents per copy Delivered on established city routes, 15 cents per week, sixty-
cents per month, $6.00 per year. Motor routes fifty cents per month. Mail,
Rusk and adjoining counties, 3 months $1.25; 6 months $2.25; one year $4 25. 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: 3 months $2.50; 6 months $4.00; one
year $7.50.
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SiwpuE AS
SLIPPING OFF
BRASS RAIL «
NEWsE NI
The government will ordain for the
common good the sum of French activities.
—Marshal Petain.
—--------'■--0------------------
And it shall be our righteousness, if we
observe to do all these commandments be-
fore the Lord our God, as he hath command-
ed us.—Deuteronomy 6:25,
Let us pray God that he would root out
of our hearts everything of our own planting
Heg
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Henderson Daily News
Published Every Afternoon (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning By
NEWS PUBLISHING C O.
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f EGAD,TIFFANY, IF SIR CECIL 15 ^N IMPOSTOR, Yue was PLANTED PN RiAtcotw
7A9‘0U CONTEND, 1 MUST GEr REVENGE FORSSUdLE pwEDLESUSEBTo
( THOSE ENDLESS SPEECHES OF HiS ABOUT RARE --- BOYS ‘
> SPECIES OF BIG GAME- ANIMALS I NEVER 5
} HEARD OF!--UNFORTUNATELY, WHEN I TRY’
1 TO CATCH HIM IN A FALSEHOOD, THE ENCYCEO-
I PEDIAS SIDE With HM- HAR-RUMPH! f
i -YONDER SIGN WHETS My THIRST ‘
I -~LETS PAUSE
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22 To cook in fat. ARRLER
24 Chaos. VUKON
25 Blackbird.
26 Money. ; 49 Ballot choicbs. 2 Encircling
29 Encountered. 51 Roll of film. bands.
31 Jailbird. 53 Tile setter. 3 Bitter herb.
33 To recount. _ , .. 4 Trouble
36 Conjunction. 65 Strokes gentry 4 Trouble.
— 38 To be" 57 Pussy-..............-
indebted. 58 To make a 6 Rumanian
39Toreccie. speech. coins.
40 Tea. 59 Farewell! 7 Wigwam. 49 Courtesy title.
41 Also. 60 He was also a 8 Human func* 49 Interdiction.
42 Plural
pronoun.
43 Golf term.
44 Bing
46 To accomplish
47 Hazes.
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comweweasnvicemerumousere
it is we scarcely know. But France, and and set out there, with his own hand, the tree
Norway, and Belgium, and Poland are find-’of life bearing all manner of fruits.— Fene-
ple’s drink” be devised which will be a sub-
stitute for beer. It seems a good enough
idea. The United States, for instance, has
an infinite variety of such soft drinks. A
man can take his choice not only between
beerand a soft drink, but between an infinite
variety of beers and an infinite variety of
soft drinks. The one which, in the long run,
a man comes to like, gets his nickel.
Question: Can a state sit down in cold
blood, devise a new soft drink, decree that
this is the “people’s drink," and make people
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quest, 1940 model, and conquest of the old
bad days.
In the O. B. D. the invading army
marched in, beat the defenders, massacred
everybody in sight, stole everything remov-
able, and went home, leaving behind a suit-
able garrison and an iron-fisted governor.
These matters have been improved upon
in our enlightened ape. Follow the modern
procedure:
The invading army marches in, beats
the defenders. So faritis all the same. But
now it changes. Nobody is massacred. Noth-
ing is stolen. The occupying troops are polite,
not to say courtly. They pay for everything.
Now follow closely. They pay with spe-
cial money, all printed u pin the home coun-
try for the occasion. The shopkeeper who
aells a pair of silk stockings to a trooper is
paid In this special money—let’s call ’em
blitz-dollars.
But the invaded country is still using
its old traditional meney.—Peeple wi4 take
blitz-dollars from the invaders, but not from
each other. So the merchant takes his ac-
cumulated blitz-dollars to the national bank
of his country, and says, here, I want old-
fashioned money for these. The bank obliges,
because it must, at a rate of exchange set by
the conquerors.
Now watch more closely. The silk
stockings, which are goods and therefore
valuable, have gone off to the country of the
invader. All that the invaded country has
to show for them is certain printed slips,
—fast accumulating in the national bank. If
the invaded country is to get anything valu-
able back for the silk stockings, these blitz-
dollars must be capable of being exchanged
for other goods. —•—
But they aren’t except in the invading
country. So, to get anything back at all for
. the goods bought and shipped away for blitz-
dollars, the invaded country must buy some-
thing from the invader with them.
The invader then offers to take back
his blitz-dollars for exactly whatever goods!
he chooses to dump on the invaded country
at exactly whatever prices he chooses to
charge. The invaded victim has no choice.
It isn’t business. It isn’t quite stealing
in the manner of old-time conquerors riding
off with loot at the saddle-bow. Just what
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But some fearful and wonderful things
have been done in Germany of late, and may-
be they can make it stick. When will the
“people’s drink” be along? Oh, probably
about the same time as the “people’s auto”
on which patient Germans have been mak-
ing payments for several years.
------------------0-----------------
SO THEY SAY
The Frenchman has always known how
to revolt.—Genevieve Fabouis, refugee
French Newspaperwoman.
***
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PUSMZEGG
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[EDE NITE 27 Either.
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“This is our new wait paper—designed especially for law 9
x. oilices!”
CMISTERWIMPV,DID YOU SAY 'SOMETHING N.
'IT WAS IN REFERENCE F < ^BOUT "FIGHTS"? )
TO THIS SAILOR'S ,— ---x i __-
BUSINESS HERE -4 IT AIN'T TRUE ) >
UIN YOUR DOMAIN I V ART I KIN . ' f WHAT \
—-PROVE IT , I FIGHTS /
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NAT1ONALIT,
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 129, Ed. 1 Friday, August 16, 1940, newspaper, August 16, 1940; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1469552/m1/4/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.