Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 206, Ed. 1 Friday, November 14, 1941 Page: 4 of 10
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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By Galbraith
SIDE GLANCES
NOW SAVING TWO FACES
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D. R. HARRIS, President and General Manager
T. N. MCCARTY, Business Manager -------
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HOLD EVERYTHING
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SUBMARINE'S WEAPON
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FUNNY BUSINESS
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By SEGAk
POPEYE
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YAS
"Noisy darn place, isn’t it?"
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OUR BOARDING HOUSE
By AHERN
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40 Desire.
41 Plural
4 Eject.
5 Grief.
32 Id est (abbr.).
33 Pronoun-
34 Slope.
39 Pitchers.
‘ WELL, I CAN
GIVE YOU A
PERMIT TO
GO THROUGH
HERE ,TOO!
sa warn
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24 American
Indians.
26 Registered
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LAUGH
AT IT
53 Finish.
VERTICAL
1 A language.
2 Sun god.
38 Robber on the
high seas.
41 To push.
43 Claw.
B 45 Signal belL
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CANFIEU)
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PEDDLE
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HORIZONTAL
1 Weapon
used by
submarines.
7 Transactions.
13 Protective
covering.
14 Fastens.
15 Negative.
17 Lubricates.
18 Refuse.
19 Part of "be.”
20 Pleasant.
22 Workers.
23 Part of the
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A. CRIM
Funeral
Home
Phone 26S * 161
(abbr.).
48 Seed vessels.
49 Beverage.
50 Fruit
nurse (abbr.)
27 Like.
28 Coil into
ringlets.
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pronoun.
■ 42 That thing.
44 Assist.
45 High army
officer.
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BEFORE I
FINISHED,
BUT I KIN
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RIGHT SIZE
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The "New Order" is ready to collapse at
any moment and bury Hitler in its ruins.—
Joseph Stalin.
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29 Composition.
31 Plural of this. 47 North Dakota 3 For.
Five cents per copy. Delivered on established city routes, 15 cents per week, sixty-
cents per month, $6.50 per year. Motor routes fifty cents per month. Mail, Rusk and
adjoining counties, one month 60c; 3 months $1.50; 6 months $2.75; one year $5.00.
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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/ IT’S A SWEATER
/ HE KNITTED UHILE
HOU UERE AUAY.
2 HOU MUSTN’T
FLOAT LIKE A BALLOON
BY DOSING HIM DP WITH
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The trouble with second thought
is that it never arrives until the
morning after.
A.
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SCIENTISTS are working toward
• cracking the atom for prac-
tical use of energy. We’ll have
to keep one or two in the desk for
those Monday mornings.
FAw! BITING wORDS ONI
SPUR ME ON!uwTHE ONE
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THA’S HOw _
MEMBERAUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
Entered second class matter P. O. in Henderson, Texas, Act Congress, Mar. 3, 1879
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KNITTIN’ ME A
PRESINK?
GUE NENER -
KKNOWS WHEN
The Forgotton Man doesn't
seem to have been forgotten by
the congressional tax commit-
tees.
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J "My kid wants to be a sailor in a submarine—he must
inherit his craving for danger from his mother!”
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Henderson Daily News
Published Every Afternoon (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning By
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am
ass hm a as bi
In times of prosperity, they
tell us, we should lay a little
aside for posterity.
. . • • •
The Russians seem to have
read a little Shakespeare. They’re
out to bury Caesar, not to praise
him.
Fire Chief Sets Blazes
AUCKLAND, N. Z. (UP) —
Hurt by sneers at his little brigade
Brian Edwards, superintendent of
the Coroandel Fire Brigade, start-
ed three fires to show what he
could do in putting them out. As
a result hs appeared in court on
three charges of arson and was
placed on probation for three
years.
KENNEDY THE ICONOCLAST
Do not be surprised if you hear Con-
gressman Martin J. Kennedy of New York is
being given the polar stare and that some of
his colleagues make snooty faces or fail to
V
46 Loan.
48 Cooking
6 Shakespeare- utensil.
an character. 50 Greek letter.
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FLAW IN My DOORMAT s 4
A TINY BIT TOO MUCH ,, 3
POWER — HAR-RUMPHZfu I
NONE OF US IS INFALLIBLE ]
> —EDISON CNCE TRIED A
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Small business has a job to do—to as-
sume your proper and essential place in the
mobilization of the industrial might of this
nation for all-out effort.—Floyd R. Odium,
director, contract distribution, OPM.
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By J. R. WILLIAMS
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The action was taken among other rea-
sons because we didn’t have a winning foot-
ball team.—Dr. A. G. Crane, after removal as
president of University of Wyoming.
If union labor is to endure, it must rid
itself of men who stand ready to sell out la-
bdr when it suits their purposes.—Federal
Judge John C. Knox of New York.
• e *
A Communist is a socialist without a
sense of humor.—President George Rarton
Cutten, Colgate University.
The United States is the preachiest na-
tion on earth. We’ve done more talking about
international morality and made as little ef-
fort to further it as any country.—Dr. Wal-
ter Van Kirk, Federal Council of Churches.
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BILITiES ARE OURS
The details that follow in
the wake of the loss of a
loved one are often un-
pleasant and unnecessarily
burdensome. We can light-
en thia load for you if you
will place these matters in
our hands. With judgment
bom of long experience,
sympathetic, yet efficient-
ly, we can perform all the
necessary functions. Please
let us help you when you
need help most
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mass of the people feel that now is no tihe speak when they pass by. He is apt to be a
Tree Seeds Collected
OLYMPIA, Wash. (UP)—CCC
crews and state fire wardens have
harvested 1,300 sacks of Douglas
fir, hemlock, cedar and spruce
cones and seeds from them will be
used to reforest state lands in
western Washington. The sacks
contain about 1,500 pounds of
seed, enough to produce 24,000,-
000 small trees.
2
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Traffic Perils British Youth
LONDON (UP)—Four children
are being killed on the roads of
Britain every day, double the
number killed in peace time. The
Royal Society for Prevention of
Accidents said that most of the
deaths occur in cities—few chil-
dren are killed in evacuation
areas.
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for this sort of thing when everybody is be-
ing asked to make sacrifices of some kind.
Labor is afraid that, under the guise of
national emergency, there may be some re-
actionaries who might seek to take away
what it has gained, to strip it of some of its
protective laws, to make a dead letter of
many statutes.
It might be well to take a leaf out of
Britain’s book. Union labor is more highly
organized there than here and it has a po-
litical party of its own to fight for its objec-
tives. Labor is more united (here. In Brit-
ain there is no division as in this country be-
tween the A. F. of L. and the C. I. O. In
fighting Britain’s war, labor has taken places
in the government and has given up many
things for the time being.
There are few strikes in Britain serious-
ly holding up production of defense materials.
Against its own union rules, British la-
bor is submitting to dilution in the crafts so
that many more hands may be put to work
in the armaments factories.
Against all its principles, labor there is
working longer hours and giving up half-holi-
days.
In Britain, as here, there lurked the fear
that after the war all these concessions might
be taken as precedent and made permanent.
But the government has given its pledge that
when peace comes all that labor had won and
that it voluntarily gave up shall be restored.
The government is even preparing a bill for
Parliament to enact that pledge into law.
It might be a very good idea if Congress
and the administration took similar steps
here to reassure American labor as to the fu-
ture. They-could guaranteed labor “normal-
cy" when the presept emergency ends.
----;--O--
A COUNTRY TO ENVY
A publication devoted to the interests of
the American oil industry recently published
a panegyric on the friendly and mutually
profitable relations existing between the gov-
ernment of Venezuela and the companies that
develop and exploit its great oil resources.
The country, the paper says, has as a
consequence gone from mule-back to airplane
transportation, from ancient wooden plow’s
t tractor farming, from dim trails to modern
highways, from huts to proper housing.
Oil is evidently paying the freight. The
country is getting its share of its own natur-
al wealth. Money from oil is keeping taxes
down, always of interest to Americans. •
I HEARD YOURI
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A PLEDGE TO LABOR?
In America in the present national
emergency there is an undoubted wave of
anger aroused every time a strike is called
or threatened in defense industries. The
Answer to Previous Puzzle 7 To toughen.
8 Agricultural
exhibits.
9 Son (Fr.).
10 Collectively.
11 Exists.
12 Specimen.
16 Grains.
.19 Atmospheres
21 Affirmative.
23 Color.
25 Sanctified
person.
28 Ruminate.
30 Still.
31 Article.
51 Measure of 34 Supple.
weight. 35 Placed.
52 Less aged. 36 Conjunction.
37 Criticize.
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SOIEE’PEA MAS
A PRESENL
FOR VOU, )/4 A "
PCPEHE3(PRESINK 3)
TO
lonely outcast, a veritable pariah with nobody
in the capitol at Washington to give him
even a stingy howdy.
He has done the unheard of.. He has
broken tha unwritten law. He has failed to
be clubby. His dreadful offense is one that i
his nerve-shoeked colleagues will have a hard
time forgiving or forgetting. Even sack cloth
and ashes will not appease them.
This rash brash man has actually intro-
duced a bill in -Congress to pay its members
on the basis of $25 per day for each day they
are in session, instead of the 10,000 lettuce
leaves per annu mthey now enjoy. He esti-
mates this would reduce their salaries to
about $5000 and thereby set the nation a no-
ble example of self-sacrifice.
Here is where we offer to bet our best-
laundered fancy shirt his colleagues will re-
fuse to be noble.
----o - - ■
SO THEY SAY
For most young people, true freedom
will never exist until we establish conditions
which will maintain an abundance of em-
ployment opportunity in a free labor market.
—Owen D. Young, chairman, American
Youth Commission.
Ilf
1 38
At
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EE 132 M
/ EXPERIENCE ? WHY, N
‛ I WORKED FER TH’ \
PUDDLE PUMP COMP’NY. \
TH’ HOOLIN TOOL AN’ DIE, \
TH’ MORGAN ENGINEERIN’,
— THE A.M. COMPNY,
— TH’ TRANSIT DROP FORGE,
-j-A TH’ TWIRLER TWIST DRILL, /
-\ TH’ POCO PLANE PLANT, L®
I TH’ MOSEY MOTOR, /
-—LAN THE M.K.T. SHOPS'/*
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theiti
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AUNT
JOKES
§ S,
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"Beats the bathtub, doesn’t it?"
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 206, Ed. 1 Friday, November 14, 1941, newspaper, November 14, 1941; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1497048/m1/4/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.