Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 117, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 3, 1941 Page: 4 of 24
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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-
Bv Colbraith
SIDE GLANCES
THAT’S DIFFERENT!
IS ARE amro/
T. N. MeCARTY, Business Manager
D. R. HARRIS, President and General Manager
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igreat industries, a course made necessary by
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the fact that Britain in the throes of war
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HOLD EVERYTHING
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merit.
BRITISH DOMINION
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Answer to Previous Puzzle
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blanket.
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FUNNY BUSINESS
10 To embroider. 47 Preposition.
49 Exclamation.
IS Bashful.
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IN TIME OF GRIEF
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By SEGA
— -POPEYE
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Funeral
x POPEYE, I'LL SPANK Vou,
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A Classified Ad in the News .Will Sell it Ouick
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By J. R. WILLIAMS
1 OUT OUR WAY
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
By AHERN
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supply them. India, which
almost unindustrialized, f
the generation
in 1914-1918
production of raw materials for export, have
now begun to industrialize.and produce their
There are no .fores on Canton
I land in the South Seas. An ideal
place to take your wife shopping.
>
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MAJOR WORE IT
WHEN HE CANNON-
BALLED INTO THE
producer of
dairy ----s.
VERTICAL
An atom is the smallest thing
on earth. For Americans, up and
atom is the biggest
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H
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TV
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an African
tribe.
37 Garret.
39 Pertaining
to air.
41 Neither.
42 Girl.
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32 The brute
soul.
33 Invigorating
medicine.
16 To do wrong.
17 Wellington
is its —-
city.
18 Carries.
20 Playing card.
21 Invitation.
22 To harden.
23 Still.’ ,
24 The native
race in this
land.
26 Wandering.
29 Cougar.
Advertising is more truthful today than
at any time in our history.—Robert J. Bauer,
president National Better Business Bureaus.
HORIZONTAL
1. 4 Self-
governing
British
Dominion.
9 issued.
11 To loiter.
12 Adjusted, as s
a watch.
13 Blackbird.
14 Cry of a
crow.
15 To mention.
17 Fond
container.
18 Definite
article.
21 1,ad.
22 To rove
at large.
25 Braid.
26 Born.
27 Networks.
28 Railway
station.
30 Witticism,
31 To make
Ince.
34 Total.
V/?
43 Family or
race.
44 Tn trim.
45 Termites
46 Timber tree.
48 God of war.
49 Blackwood.
50 It lies m the
South ---
Ocean.
meant to today's world?
Because all those things are so intangi-
s,
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rope’s troubles today due to the fact that
the best, healthiest, potentially most able of is taking place throughout the whole British i
9 • gLAm
§
s daughter in London on his broadcasts
let me T M His U I FAT Q>»
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9
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Some folks go around in cir-
ete’s of friends—other* just in
circles.
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u LET'S
7/
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HA,
H(HAM
OH,VA WANNA )
FIGHT? y--
bloody and useless campaigns, "educated"
in a mental straitjacket, fed from babyhood
on a diet of blood-lust and a morality?
Isn't it about time to stop all this once
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carefully studied, and which, so
42 Chinese sedge 1 Wood nymph, 35 Leather Strip.
2 Evergreen 136 Member of
shrubs.
3 Adult female
.4 Letter Z.
5 Winged,
6 Flannel.
7 To excite?
&Arid.
j A
# 1.
8-2 --
children of the generation which grew up
directly after the World War bear today the i
marks of the insufficient nourishment, the I
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far as we American countries, long noted mostly for
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'35 Drunkard.
86 Tribunal. '
38 Wild ox.
nomic and social pioneers, what sheer weight
of human brains were dumped into the could no longer
graves that blossomed from Picardy to Kiev 0,10 thinik of
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know, has never been carefully studied, is
the effect of wars on the next generation.
For instance, to what extent are Eu-
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! own finished goods.
Not so well known is the fact that this
now mature were killed oil ■ Empire, Canada, Australia, South Africa,1
statesmen, j India all of these have developed overnight
IT doesn’t cost a cent more to
laugh at your own expense.
Scotch is going up! Only a
man with money to burn will
be able to buy that kind of fire
footer.
a3ner
7eyee Acwzw-
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THE r. S. IS NOT AMUSED
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How many wise
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BURN HIS
n EARS.’
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trouble, grumbles too much, abus--
es the assistants. So he doesn’t
want her trade. The committee
' has tabled the request.
UKAEAMGHEGs-SEE
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“I don't know how I'll be able to get along without your
help, but I think Mother could use a little assistance- ,
go in and tell her I sent you."
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SLAN
ATHop
-ECRZ///
IM! K HU SUVICL INC T H BIC U S FAT MI.
“That’# Private Gulk’s own idea for a pincer movemenr.
"One. ia good looking buthasnomoney.jhe other is
homely and has oodles of dough — what mkes me love
the homely one best?’'
L *
how many poets and artists, how many eco-
R I! •' 0
M- V , W
SO THEY SAY
The problem for a democracy Is how to
be total without being totalitarian.—Prof.
Ralph Rarton Perry of Harvard University.
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
Entered second class matter P. 0. in. Hen dr.son, Texas, Act Congress, Mar. 3, 1879
2.0
in those years? And what has that
3,7
use of hillbilly music and slogans about pass-
ing biscuits, O’Daniel got himself elected gov-
ernor of Texas, and now seems to have been
elected to the T’. S. Senate.
Whether O'Daniel will try out on the
whole American people the same kind of po-
litical horseplay that tickled Texas remains
to be seen. Rut these are serious times. With
, the world rapidly falling apart around our
ears, we are old-fashioned enough to believe
that a U. S. Senator must seriously buckle
down to national problems.
If O'Daniel tries out the biscuit s-and-
ban io technique in the U. S. Senate, we pre-
dict that the people of the United States will
not be amused.
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My father ... is one of those guileless
men who take people at their face value so
I long as they are pleasant- P. G. Wodo
THAT DILEMMA)
WILL ----
KILL V ’
POPEYE!
Kp--t-r. .uu
T—E FREIGHTEI.
L3
Shortly, every major activity within the
nation will have to be scrutinized to see
whether it adds to, or detracts from, the de-
fense program John I. Yellot t, engineering
defense training director.
HIT ‘IM, 7
DILEMMA) LB
For some reason hard for outsiders to |
. , ,, . ... .. .. fathom, the biscuit-and-ban jo campaign tac-
tense, hopeless times in which they lived? .
.. , 1, I ., . . : l tics of Gov. W. Lee () Daniel seem to amuse
Never forget that that Is the generation, in
: . . , , , ., —. . I the electorate of Texas. By dint of lavish
large part, which made up the Nazi move-
LOOK NOW, BUT WATCH {ASA WHIFF OF X
THAT TRAPDOOR IN • GARLIC ON A "
THE CORNER.'—I JDS f A STREET CAR! K’S]
FOUND THIS MAT ON va HIDING OUT TO X
HEAR WHAT WE X
THINK OF HIM? J
if
03- S
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IM
CHANGING EMPIRE
It has often been noted that South
iaden
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036
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, Oklnhome and Arkansas: 3 months $2.00; 6
months $3.50; one year $6.00. All other S ates: 3 months $2.50; 6 months $4.00; one
rear $7.50.
,(86
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Henderson Daily News
Published Every Afternoon (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning By
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
A *
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H.
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Some of us lose our way
and need the guidance of
some one who can help us.
We extend that help to you
with the respectful, effi-
cient and economical ser-
HEY/ WHO WIPED V PGST.' MACK.' u. DON'T W T GET IT—AB PLAIN)
1 6
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—"$:3
hie, nobody can measure them.; because hey
pertaintothe spirit no one will ever know,
perhaps their accurate weight. How many
Phone 263 - 161
FT
A MONTH WHOSAIO
A MONTHF WHERE CD
•OU GIT THAT IDEA 2
1 SAID JUST FER TODNY
--VEEY PLAINLY I SAIDIT
.GOsH, WHERE’D sou
GiT TWAT MONTH IDEARZ
$ WJATHE ---
MEARS NOW -EFA-
WILL CURL HIS HAR- =ka
AH these factor# no man has measured,
because, perhaps, they cannot be measured.
Yet on* knows they exist. The social loss
is undoubtedly greater than a similar loss
throughout a cross-section of the whole pop-
ulation, because soldiers are selected for phy-
sical and menial fitness.
Now it is all happening over again.
Though almost as many civilians as soldiers
are being killed in this war, the destructive
effect on the coming generation will not be
less that that of the World War if it goes on
as long. Already bi France relief workers
and physicians are reporting that babies
born are markedly undersize, weighing only
two and three pounds at birth. Why? Be-
cause thoir mothers are undernourished.
People recently come from France report
that they dare not look into the faces of chil-
dren.
If that be true in France, what must be
true in Poland’ in Belgium? In Greece? In
Yugoslavia ’
T.'' ...... _ ...
IF YOU LOSE I
Food ( ontrol Irksome
WEMBLEY, Eng. (UP) — A
shopkeeper at Wembley, Middle-
sex. has asked the local food con-
trol committee to remove a wom-
an from his list of registered
customers. He says she causes
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Germany and Italy, decimated by A series of from Germany.
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A OUT ALL OUR
9, GRUB? THE
" FEED BON
IB A% CLEAN yg
AG A BABY’S )3
■ THUMB/
and for all? First, by conclusively beating
those who have espoused a11 of it as a nor-
mal, desirable way of life, and forced it on
the rest of the world? Second, by taking
our part in organizing the world so that it
shall not happen again?
____.
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All these changes mean a changed world
after the war, for international trade andi
inter-dependence will never again be what,
it once was.
3
THE TABLE —THE
What will the next generation be in house’
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We ’ neu ren- a?
______________________8-1
I r DN‘T SA
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1o now producing nearly 90 per cent of its own
| war material.
IMG OUT A N
- • A WHOL E
MOI ITH -- W-
/ a?)
—Anu.
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SHADOWS AGAINST THE FI H RE ।
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 117, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 3, 1941, newspaper, August 3, 1941; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1496962/m1/4/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.