Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 135, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 24, 1941 Page: 2 of 24
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THE IIENDERSON DAILY NEWS, SUNDAY, Arn. *4. 1941
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Miss Josephine Camp returned
Mrs. Henry Roberts
PIANO
Dunning System
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Mrs. Qarland Hedge
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DRAMATIC SCHOOL
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PHONE 99
BEGINNER’S DANCING
Wright's Pharmacy
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808 Laylon
Phone 528-W
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BY AUSTIN CALLAN
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Lion Trainer In Peril
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pig-tails, chalked
Dirt Farmers
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Urge Session
ceeded in pulling
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1104 Collins St.
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informat ion
383
Mrs. Hans Wright
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Styles
Excitn8
Leads Again This Fall!
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Ninte"
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had been
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Radio
Service
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Odd Shapes and Fresh Shades Are
Featured In New Felt Hats for Fall
Disabled War Veteran
Has His Little Joke
Mrs. W. E. Rush of Beeville, Miss
Fannie and Ton. Cook of Lawson-
ville visited in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. G. R. Wood last week.
Prof. G. I Watkins of Indian
FACTS, FOOLISHNESS
AND PHILOSOPHY
Prof, and Mia. P. B. Bittie and ;
children spent last week with rela-
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man
shot
uptu
of ;
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hr met and thri iten to < anse with-
draw al of feder a l ' upport.
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inr stores
back all
shoot ing
zohne ev
Furred
KINDERQARTEN
WILL OPEN MONDAY, SEPT. 8th
1
Second House South of Montgomery School
Phone 932-W
Studio 300 No. High St.
HENDERSON, TEXAS
itv in r
oll from
on over my head
only after
they find only the broken pillars
.! m. of A temple . . . only crumbling
reins amidst the shadow. All that
Ke, a.l
I.
HANDRAGS
to Match!
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ad
EP
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Strangely
was sweet
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WILL OPEN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9th
Morning Classes for Children, 2% to 5 Year*
EXPRESSION AND SINGING
Combined With Other Systems
FALL TERM BEGINS SEPTEMBER b»
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I‘m sure that all of us enjoy
Hrem-
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hn
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a desperate struggle.
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1 stand on
Rim
LDEpT. STORE ==
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2 g
d harrel with the
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tives in Grand Cane, La.
Mrs. ’ . O. Ellington, after a
pleasant visit in the city with
home folks returned Tuesday to
her home in Big Springs.
Mrs. Rella Cobb and son Clifton
of Houston were called to the
bedside o. Mr. Jim Cobb, who is
seriously ill at the home of his
brother in the Mt. Hope commun-
ity.
I said het e too y that
Patrick
on nn
j stump
\ hiey ement is commendable
Hut as one labors to bring down
the great lumber-trees in the for-
the guest of her
D. Stroud, and
I Iio Gay Nineties’ are a precious memory to many of I
us. I got my first barber-shop shave during that colorful
era of organ mu ic ami Merry Widow hats. Advancing from
home-made jeans to store-bought searsucker, I jumped on
TREVORTON, Pa (UP) - . . - - • ......n* •
Prof. George Keller, widely-known Ine social PlEboard and plunged i
they struggled for through the
years proved to be worth less than
one baby smile or the memory of ,
ene sweet day.
Mr Tom Norvell of Del Rio is
spending a few days in the city on
his return home from the north-
ern markets.
Mrs. Leia Miller left Tuesday
for St. Louis and Chicago where
she goes .o purchase her fall and
winter line of millinery.
Misses Ida Chamberlain and
i Imogene Meyer are spending a
few days with friends and rela-
there; fingers thrum-
upon young heart-
little dudish yankee came do vn
e=s
/32.
109
—me
2
"*
animal trainer, almost stopped
performing that stunt where he
put his head in a lion's mouth in
a show here. The professor suf-
fered a bad gash under'the left
eye before hr extricated himself.
their homes after a pleasant visit
at the home of Mr. John R. Arnold
L. H. Evans, son of Mr. Luther
Evans, came near being seriously
injured Sunday mrning near the
Presbyterial church, being thrown
from a buggy in which he and an
older brother were riding.
i Mrs. J. L. Roquemore of Long-
branch, Mr. ano Mrs. W. Rin-
j bolt and son, Eugene of Houston, be higher.
ml
21/6
I M. (College, and M. j >. Lewis of
[Taylor are as isting the directors
of the Dirt Farmers Congress in
preparing a bill to present to the
Legislature it Governor Stevenson
in amidst the beauty of
noses and goid-plated breast pins.
The splash didn't make any
particularly wide circles, but it 1
t
L
I received by lie Congress showed
Miss Katia Dickerson has re-
turned from a visit with relatives
in Alice.
Mrs. J. H. Barham and daugh-
ter, Miss Ruth, of Nacogdoches
and Mr. R. H. Barham of Mt. En-
terprise returned las* week 0
. A
A
k ft £
-
Looking Backward
--30 Year» Ago-------------
(Local and personal paragraphs
from the September 23, 1911, issue
/ W
. -
)a,2
Forrest Ross of Gary passed
through Henderson Friday on his
way to Kilgore.
Miss Essie Vaughn of Garrison
is the guest of Miss Bonnie
Young.
Mrs. W. O. W. Maddox and son,
I Ross, are the guests of relatives
. in Malone.
Miss Sarah Maddux is spending
a few days with friends and rela-
tives .n Pinehill.
and went forth all cologned and
spiced to help makethe Gay 'Nine-
ties' gay. They were sweet and
cheering days. The income tax had
been declared unc onstitutional and
the people still had the sovereign
right to choose their state flower.
We had wiped out the Indians
and everybody was happy.
It was in the Gay 'Nineties’ that
celluloid collars made their last
the Texas frontier. A
Springs, Ga., has been the guest
of i is brother. Dr. J. E. Watkins 4
for several days. No man ever )
lived in Rusk County who has
more friends th; n P-of. Watkins,
and who are glad to see him al-
ways. He was present at the re-
union at Minden last week.
—-------o------—
Last year American plane pro-
peller and engine manufacturers
spent more than $15,000,000 in
research, and this year’s bill will
a,
ddddb
Mrs F. H Spharler returned
Saturday from a three weeks
stay in Mineral Wells.
Miss Gladys Rainbolt of Hous-
ton was the guest of Miss Frank
Haltom the past week.
Mr. A. Fields of Los Angeles,
Cal., is in the city the guest of his
son, M. S. Fields.
As \
eV,
da2ngl, '
298
becoming shapr
of the Rusk County News -Hen-
derson’s oldest business institution
—Rusk County's oldest newspaper.
—D. R. H.)
The Henderson Creamery is
running on full time. The equip-
ment is of the latest designs in
machinery; the company being
capitalized at $30 000, is proving
a substantial investment to the
, front of him
Sure, and Tat’ leg had been
rhot off d ' ng the World War
I 23 years ngo,
—.. -n --------
a federally paid division but Chair-
man Claude Williams said de- mei softly
mauds are h inp made by the
federal government that cannot
rtf
y *.uo
RIEV
LDEPT. STORE
'b ' ike a camp fire ieft behind
n tie Winds, I recollect a itile
: ‘assy | ool whore checker.’ 1 son-
beams played upon the waters like
a swarm of golden butterflies. It
silvet
perhiniarnbi
DyedF,*
Beaver•
est, he should pause occasionally '
to admire the plumes that crown j
their splendor and sweep against
the stars. it is better to have
loved, to have been kind, to have
stored up treasured memories, 1
than to have battled greedily for
possessions that neither sweeten
the heart nor strengthen the soul.
—............. ...............
Within 16 months the Army
d Navy will be turning out pi-
lots at the rate of 40 000 yearly.
tivea in .shing.
Misses Fisher of Weatherford
and Reynolds of Longview are
the guests of Miss Mattie Stroud.
Mrs. J. E. Crooms of Moorings
-
220 888
2
A( I —a
.lat tuxur?
to buy 1 “siwer fow
, yortuni, lw-furred laccoon,
womderfult want Fw ayed foutars top
(urred coal-muskr ; "Sther mdified
.lock mink-lan lamb: see the ne* deepet
armhoe emartest
newest
M,„. colors
Jewelry Store
HATCHES- Cash or Terms
‘.ca
. Del. ilTi
.nd ambulaner
the waterfront
port, La., is
father, Dr. A
family.
0. ... from Boston, with a nasal whang
‘at.)while, farmei ares pon...... gen- । and. a linen collar and put on "
I , ; ' state to " cam- dress-up" campaign. We cla
5 it ' , erops, partic- timers fought valiantly, but were
larly, Co tton, insects, that out-moc..... and out-numared.
A " . m '' sold inscet Neck by neck the new-ranglcd
J poisons that were no ........ "This contraptions gained grouna and
indiscournginz them from follow- Lecame the prevailing stvD.
inginsec, itrol practices and celluloid collars went out of
threa ening o.destroy much "I fnshion with muzzle-loading snet.
h", ? been done . states rights and Kiger-
teiX'^r"yeara ad made by
1114 m;odle molisSes with wevely
flerr
Thus t)e Gay "ireties' died and
. “June Maches On.”
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53*3
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3,3
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I ’r. b. 1. Thoma .. chief <>f the
division of Entomology at A. &
SI EDF Leader of all footwear fabrics
a d leathers! Softer than ever before,
elastic ized for smooth fit. Its a "must''
for your wardrobe;
Guaranteed Radio Repairs *
DELCO RADIOS—Sales and Service «A=y-y
ARNOLD BLOC. Phone lUfl
and peacock hues are important
hat news in the fall, 1941, pre
views, and these four felts
make the most of those two
trends. The model nt the left
in the photo above Is vivid
green. It has red yes, red!
coq feathers, cord and brim
Ma; oe you rreall a swimming’
I le of the lonr, long sgo, that
pleasant memories that come
tl ding back like the breath of ,
ithered mses cast out of a vase. '
We can never forget the dreamy ]
hours that made youth a happy
vacation season in Paradise. A
record of them hangs in a silver
frame on the walls of the heart.
There are those who battle in- ;
cessantly for riches along life's I
highway. They give their souls
to fragile things. Kindness, ser-
vice mid love all fall stricken at
their feet like dewy blossoms clip-
ped in the field where the reaper
runs. But at the end of the road
ft. e . .
L
E L ‘ ’ ■
IB
I AUSTIN. Tex (UP) Texas
1 dirt farmet s have asked <hw,
( oke Steven Oli to submit to '
an expected special session ot the
Texas lav make r: a proposed hill
s the
W ii MING n )
Police . ad
. crews combed
section of the
tn nn emei Ei 1
who said h ,
' off.
A ft nr la'
ing houi e a i d
men found the
945
nection with the unemployment
compensation commission. Re-
employment now is handled thru
leg stuck out in
stockholders. to her home in Longview Sunday
Rev. C. A. Tower is spending accompanied by Miss Ethel Har-
a few days in Atlanta. ris.
Nearly half of the dairy
cattle in tin l it, d States are
Holsteins
[ to regulate the manufacture and
sale of insect idea.
Railey B l . dale, president I
of the Dilt Farmers Congre
Owl
17
/ I
/ <
i
I' ’
$7.75
Tn hrilliant colors! New
styles! Flattering lineal
Twendie’s \lluring
Fooower
calls a session and .submits th"
' topic.
Another possible topic for the
session is authority to set up a
state employment i Vice in con
Ours is a
Dual Duty!
Filling your prescriptions with f
speed and accuracy ia our pro- |
fession . . . supplying your drug “
store needs is our businss. We
apply to both of these functions
a conscientiousness and a desire
to serve you in a friendly and
efficient manner. Your Wright
pharmacist is dependable you
can rely on him whatever your
needs.
, I
"G
was an off year and no time to
start Beau Brummelling.
However, I harnessed up in a
stiff-bosomed shirt, which I suc-
THE FAI’TT 03 A MG’IORV
Me st <>! us hav memories git-
d'd in pearls.
S2.S5 ,
in soft sup. if, diraped and
tucked. Colorful.
57 /A
titchiw g. Next is radio actress '
Ann Eden in Sally Victor’s big
bonnet that reminds you of the
curious figures in a geometry
textbook. This also is a two-
color hat. The triangularly
turned brim, of brushed wool,
black; the crown and top of
bum are powder blue suede.
Black is used tn accent grey in
the bumper-brimmed felt, up
per right The wavk-blocked
crown is circled by a black
grosgrain hand. There’s a fresh
detail in the classic tan swagger
hat, lower right. Its rust-col-
ored band is of cowhide. —
MARGUERITE YOUNG.
77748
r
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 135, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 24, 1941, newspaper, August 24, 1941; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1496980/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1&rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.