Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 5, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 25, 1942 Page: 4 of 10
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I ’’DE GLANCES
THE 1942 SPEEDER
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D. R. HARRIS, President and General Manager
T. N. McCARTY, Business Manager
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FUNNY BUSINESS
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OUR BOARDING HOUSE
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30 Trees.
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52 Lincoln’s
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53 Watch.
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HORIZONTAL
1,5 Depicted is
insignia of
U. S. Civilian
Defense ----
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27 Type of
ancient Irish
fortification.
28 Established
value.
29Over (poet.).
32 Cicek letter.
33 Part of "be.”
34 Make plain.
35 Make a slight
bow.
37 Wand.
NEED AUXILIARY
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16 Cylindrical in
transverse
section.
18 Either.
19 Whirlwind
20 Spinning toy
22 Unusual
7 Hasten.
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9 Cereal grain.
The public will not waver in its determi-
nation and it will get production one way or
another.—War Production Chief Donald M.
Nelson.
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The whole outcome of the World War II
may turn on the Soviet Union’s ability to car-
ry on.—George Cressy, American geologist,
recently returned from Russia.
(pl).
VERTICAL
2 Fish,
3 Musical
composition.
4 Abstract being
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oleoresin.
43 Compass point
44 Finales.
45 Pen point.
46 Old Testament
(abbr.).
48 Station
(abbr.).
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“But, madam, the street car is crowded because the Japs
grabbed our rubber! Ain't you the lady who used to tell
me no nation would dare attack us?”
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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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there would be no London, and Great Britain
would not be in the war today.—Thomas F.
McManamon, London fire battalion chief to
U. S. civilian defense group.
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If it were not for our civilian defense, 25 Health resort 40
' 26 Symbol for tin dryi
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Hey. you! Don't you know that bugle calls are copy-
righted?”
“Junior! You’ve been haunting that jam cupboard again!"
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in a thousand communities, and in 30
million kitchens, men and women create the
real sinews of victory—the strength and
vigor of the whole people.—Federal Security
Administrator Paul V. McNutt to the Nutri-
tion Foundation.
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
Entered -econd class matter P. O in Henderson, Texas, Act Congress, Mar. 3, 1879
NOUN 36 Waste matter.
G U N S 38 Many times.
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SO THEY SAY
Don’t feel smug because of the distance
between us and Japan and Germany. We
felt safe too.—Mrs. Harold K. Goler, back
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GRANIITE GUSTI PL 33Sphereof
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The place for the mammoth undevelop-
ed metal resources is not in the western hills
but in bombers over Tokyo.—Interior Secre-
tary Harold Ickes.
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3 ROLE OF DEFENSE E JOB THAT'LL FIT YOU LIK A COP A 1
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WOMAN’S WORK
With agriculture and industry facing a
severe shortage of manpower, women’s part
in our war effort is becoming a role of in-
creasing importance. Already the Depart-
ment of Labor is surveying the possibility of
large-scale recruiting of women workers to
forestall the threatening slowdown.
In many vital war production plants the
goal of round-the-clock machine operation is
not being met because of a lack of skilled
workmen. At the same time the country’s
farmers are seriously concerned with the
continuing shift of farm labor to war indus-
tries.
The Labor Department finds a potential
force of six million women workers available
by the end of 1942. It suggests as a first
source those now unemployed or temporarily
idle because of priorities or factory conver-
sions. Many other workers might be found
among the young women who will complete
their schooling this year. Not until these
sources are utilized does the department ad-
vise calling on the estimated two million
housewives between the gaes of 18 and 44
who could be spared from homes where there
are no small children.
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M 1 NEL R A BB 1 TL । SM 23 Concerning.
EA } A E---A- ? 2 EHY 24 Antelope.
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years ago the British Socialists expelled him.
Tie was consorting with left wingers, said
they, and pushing too strongly for a popular
front with Russia. He insisted then that a
combination between democratic England
and communistic Russia was a natural alli-
ance to stop the dynamic political aggres-
sions of Hitler and his threatened military
conquests.
He is still a misfit politically. But he is
fitting neatly into the fighting mad Britain
of today, the Britain that is demanding an
end to the long series of Dunkirks, the Bri-
tain that is demanding positive offensive ac-
tion to help the Russia that Cripps has been
so right about.
Sir Stafford’s one-time detractors are
jumping in bed with him. Many Britons—
high and low—believe he may replace the
colorful Churchill.
The Colonel Blimps who called Singa-
pore impregnable said Russia would fold up
under the Nazi army’s first pressure. Sir
Stafford didn’t think so. He was in Russia
as ambassador to the Kremlin when Hitler
invaded. He stayed in Moscow when the
Germans were almost within artillery range.
He returned to England after the Red Army
had hurled back the invader. He came back
as a prophet with honor.
He is the man of today in England. And
somehow to the British people—and to other
peoples—his homely face is a shining sym-
bol of better days to come.
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CRIPPS COMES BACK
He looks like an assistant cashier who
has given up all hope of becoming cashier, or
perhaps an undistinguished associate profes-
sor in an undistinguished midwestern col-
lege. He is partly bald. His teeth are partly
had. At his best, he might remind you of
Wood row Wilson.
He is no Churchill as an orator. His
manner of speaking is austere and he does
not bother to leaven the bad news with good
glib generalities.
Yet Sir Stafford Cripps today has total-
ly captured the imagination af the English
masses. In his opening speech as war cabi-
net member and new leader of the House of
Commons he told the English that all ex-
travagances—including popular amusements
—would have to go. naming specifically such
people’s favorites as racing and boxing They
loved it.
He is a political misfit. His father, the
first Baron Parmoor, was a prominent law-
yer. Sir Stafford is a lawyer and a good ong
good enough that he has earned $100,000,
year. In 1927 he was appointed king's coun-
sellor. in 1930 solicitor general.
But he is a "radical” too. Four
W/'
— 58
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to
Henderson Daily News
Published Every Afternoon (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning By
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
80 / • B
y V
: 2 ' ' 'Ft 7
^Ar poVoUnuING,; )
291
Your luncheon party goes off
gayly when you've these doilies to
make a pretty table setting! And
think of the compliments you'll re-
ceive on your- handiwork. Direc-
tions are four sizes 6, 12, 17 and
22 inches. Pattern 291 contains
directions for making doilies; il-
lustrations of them and stitches;
materials required.
(Please Note New York Address.)
Send ten cents l plus one cent to
coyer cost of mailing) for this pat-
tern to Henderson Daily News,
Needlecraft Dept., 82 Eighth Ave-
nue, New York, N. Y.Write plain-
ly pattern number, your name and
address.
ie-----
BE
Ni ( CAREFUL,
y66L:.
71 )c-
II
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YOU NEEDN’T MIND/
I HAVE A BRAIN OF
MV OWN, THANK
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 5, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 25, 1942, newspaper, March 25, 1942; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1497158/m1/4/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.