Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 58, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 26, 1942 Page: 4 of 8
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
i
I
$
A
T. N. McCARTY, Bustness Manager
D. a HARRIS, President and General Marager
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The task given to General MacArthur
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W. SV Ht* StSVICt, IHC. T. M. »C. U. » Qty.
9- Va--c--*
FUNNY BUSINESS
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were
Those described
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22
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2
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HOLD EVERYTHING
POPULAR AMERICAN SPORT
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13 Expiate.
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UP
AS
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PUREE
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“Cut your grass for two bits, Mister?*
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comg.1
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• BARBS
: prejudice.
Whether we like it or not, America is
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Id
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%
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29
33
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POPEYE
By SEGAR
%
228 !!
1/213
But they are done also by loyal, if
39
40
41
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37
muddleheaded Amreicans.
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43
50
47
48
46
45
151
S
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VER (DELL
54
>
OUT OUR WAY
By J. R. WILLIAMS
622
By AHERN
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
87
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Mow
HIS MOUTH ZIPPED
MAM TO MAM/
OPEN AS WIDE AS
A MANHOLE/
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WET AM' STUFF -IM
TALKIM' TO HIM
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BUY
WAP
BONDS
AID, PIPE
DOUN )
45 Stout cord.
46 Cubic meter.
5,
C’MON, ALLA
MEN (DILL GO
techniques
discussed by
49 Pattern.
51 Presses.
'■ 53 Doctrine.
54 Percentages
of base hits.
VERTICAL
1 Wooden club
used in this
position of
deep-sea
fishing lines.
39 Greek letter.
42 Dispatch.
43 Choke up
with mud.
BEET
Mrs.
Stud
Won
K
TIE A
3AN
“for producing disunity” ’
the eminent psychiatrists.
Ma
Gir
i I
a bag if
caught off
base.
17 Therefore.
18 Male deer.
21 Settled pay
for services.
If you hear a great silence
it’s the children crying because
vacation time is coming.
If you really waht to learn to
swim this summer get some smart
duck to teach you. ’ '
The
rite F
and N
dersoi
Chris'
her pi
The
Febru
be at
(abbr.).
50 Mountain*
(abbr.).
52 Symbol for
silicon.
53 Transpose
(abbr.).
I DON'T
SEE .
ANH
CANARIES
25 Ceremonies.
27 Provided with
panes.
$
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16 This game is
played on four
---- or plates.
"“"‘lVeiIhe
N,
* "
—-42cE
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52
God helps everyone with what is his
own.—Cervantes.
^2
SB
1
17
14 Caravansaty. A
15 Ripped. IE,
E N
TO®
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8
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30
1,,2
,577,
(ya
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EVERY housewife has a calling.
— That’s what gets the kids into
the house at supper time.
19 Corded fabrics
20 European
river.
22 Loose
IE
e
8 X WHAT'S
B2d"moc e
SW)
•-3
26
&
$tff
iks-
S
ez
l
1/117)
3
-1 (YOU CAN’T
/ SEND A
THING LIKE
THAT-WHY,
THAT'S
44
882
I
"The ceiling on prices has spoiled her fun—she used to
call us robbers, but now all she says is ‘humph l‛ "
%
-
-eyaI
,l ud
fG Co ajll
we doina-
TO TELLIN HIM —
ABOUT PUTT IM' HIS /—
SWEATER. ON WHEN N
ITS CHILLY AM' CHANG-)
IM’ SOX WHEN THEY’RE F
2022
h—ae
K€
are said to
----on base..
8 Like.
9 Mingle.
10 Mountain
nymph.
11 Short sleeps.
12 Discount
(abbr.).
epeg
o 9
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547
PROHIBITION
P
The Presbyterian women’s missionary
— ) ° 3
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1
"5"
5-26
Is no more Innocent but misleading fallacy
more universal in mankind.
And finally, for our purposes, the phy-
chiatrists cite one of the most vicious of
present day evils—"magnifying religious or
racial issues by appeals to intolerance or
areizp TtS
270
42
3 More painful.
4 Tedium.
5 Exist.
6 Meadow.
7 Players on
base when a
side is retired
=
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through surrounding details, probably there
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ARM
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The greatest disadvantage to
being terribly fat is you can’t
watch your step.
§
23
American Psychiatric Association recently
were scientifically accurate in their choice
of words, but the summarization given the
public in news reports contains certain im-
plications important enough to demand clar-
unity, helpful to the enemies of this coun-
2
shcee2er5
geterseeie
"nemeam
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L PLAN
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HORIZONTAL
1 Depicted is a
This can not be condemned in too strong j not going back to the "good old days.”—
words. Yet it is not, per se, the test of a Walter D. Fuller, former president of Na-
fifth columnist. There are many narrow, tional Association of Manufacturers.
All people are entitled to
their own opinions—but they so
seldom keep them.
You Cant taka ocalha
a. A 9, d Like C CounCa
£» MamA ou on thia
HentotcA (ov
Ta 2* 2
ezgeu 2-
)
W YOU MISSED TLE A
f FIREWORKS, ALVIN: {
$ 1 HID THE TALKING
k Bird IN BIS OTTO'S
€
I figured it was my duty.—Jay T. Ans-
berry, Cleveland father of 11, enlisting in
Army.
&nato
4eu-a.
222,4
27
9a
hgmt"vj
TERRIBLE’/
—y(
“Pontoons, man! I said pon-
toons!”
•).
/4 3
ADVENTURERS’ REUNION—In a less hazardous atmos-
phere, President Manuel Quezon of the Philippines, left,
shakes hands once again with Lieut, John D. Bulkeley, the
torpedo boat commander who aided his escape from Bataan.
The reunion took place in Washington.
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
Entered -econd class matter P. O in Henderson, Texas, Act Congress, Mar. 8, 1879
garments of •MATE „LAT
ancient Rome. TIDECAPE
' C
EGoLEANDER
)§ IS THE GUILTY ,
2 RASCAL!-AM!,
/ -1‛LL JUST
( LAUGH IT OFF AS
1 a GOOD Towe
? AND DEVISE GOME
% UNIQUE FORM OF
A RETRIBUTION ! an
1 3
!
S404-‛. •
U Y 26—2 A
0 {
Mk e
' N—
as
■’ WJATCH SOUR. 5-26
ST&P, LEftNOER.^ €
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OH, DEAR! PROMISE UE you WiLL)
NOT BE GONE LONG fVijuHAT
__ _ 61)2
Worldrights,ireserved —zaeftf
Copr 1942, King Features Syndicate, Inc., L
The Lord is good to all; and his tender
mercies are over all his works.—Psalms'
145:9.
tiiS
G
FIFTH COLUMNISTS
The layman, who tends to be impress- '
MACARTHUR FOR PRESIDENT?
The Draft MacArthur for President
Clubs, and all others who co-operate with
nique, say the psychiatrists. True enough.
But are we going to smear President Roose-
velt with the epithet "fifth columnist” be-
cause he has spent years in pursuit of the
psychiatrists’ vice versa—inciting labor
against capital? Silly? Certainly. So the
test falls in its first and most n atural trial.
“Extracting irrelevant and long dead is-
ourselves unnecessary indulgence, to main-
tain physicial fitness and to conserve ma-
terial.”
Those motives are powerful. We should
remember, however, that these women and
others are using the exigencies of war to
promote their actual goal of permanent pro-
hibition. Those who are convinced that
mrality can not be legislated should not be
misled by the gentleness of this pressure.
POPEHE,
DO HOL
THINK
IT IS
CAREY-
LAND?
y--
The crown is fallen from our head; woe
unto us, that we have sinned!—Lamenta-
tions 5:16.
„ , , Doolittle carried out the raid against
"sues for current use is a third technique. . . . . . ,
5155 -on aunem, . i Japan from the air base Shangri La, which
Next to the inability to see the main issue
■ -—-emess,;
- ■ ***-* eecar-
- •em"*ap«peo4e.3ju
49 to-oawp es-zgjn
E*., ar!
was not otherwise described by Roosevelt.—
Berlin radio broadcast heard in New York.
Our nation [probably contributed more
to the industrial revolution than any, but
There is no God but God.—Koran.
/4
29
Five cents per copy. Delivered on established city routes, 15 cents per week, sixty;
cent* per month, >6.50 per year. Motor routes, sixty 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: 8 months
months >3.50; one year $6.00. All other States: 3 months >2.50; 6 months $4.00; one
year >7.50. )
MS
,2 ""
Mrs. j
Discu
Auxil
4 1
Wome
Christian
morning
a. m. to
At noon
was ser
During
al perid
presided
gave the
W. W. 1
panel . d
chapter I
“The Fl
Those
L. Sum
Mrs. T
White, I
J. O. W
S. Love
( y’Keefe
Houstor
Mrs. Gil
ed by the presumed exactness of all scient-
ists, would expect Philadelphia psychia- them, are doing an immeasurable disservice
((
Ea=0
ification.
Twenty-five "fifth column”
36 Cloth measure game.
37 Buoy marking 2 Small particle
obscure the main issue,” is one such tech-
nique. We used to call it "not being able to
see the forest for the trees.” Of all mental
weaknesses of the human race, innocent in
origin and intent though often dangerous in
practice, none is more universal than this
inability to see through trimmings to truths.
“Inciting capita) against labor, and vice
versa.” There’s another fifth column tech-
misguided men and women who are ardent-
ly bitterly and vituperatively bigoted in ra-
cial and religious matters, yet who are as
patriotic as President Roosevelt, General
MacArthur or the two Philadelphia psychia-
trists. I
All of which leads to one principal con-
clusion. Fifth columnists are doing these
things. They are dangerous to our nation-
al unity’ and therefore to our national se-
EHea
81488
I
W
1253
trists speaking in Boston to he meticulous both to the cause of democracy and to the
in their terminology. ! hero of the Philippines himself. We hope
Perhaps the two who discussed subver- i he will take strong steps to repudiate the
sive propaganda techniques before the movement.
the plage looks^
DANEEROUSK-TELL
THE UIMMIN TO STAS'
ON THE SHIR UIMP
_ In press reports unquestionably were dan-
gerous, undesirable, disruptive of national
E. ' ' '
is of surpassing importance. Even more
vital is it that he should remain untarnish-
ed as a symbol of American military valor.
But no man can run or be run for the Presi-
dency without having every casual indiscre-
tion of his life broadcast to the winds, and
every real achievement belittled. This must
not happen to MacArthur. The indomitable
spirit of American arms which he personi-
fies is infinitely more valuable than his
candidacy for President possible could be.
1953
S3_
\ /MOW LISTEN .' I
M/ DONJ’T BUTT IN WHEN
YOU WRITE HIM--YOU
WOMEN JUS’STICK
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21
SO THEY SAY
It is generally recognized on the fight-
ing front that war factory workers are doing i
as much as anyone to win the war.— Capt.
Hewitt T. Wheless, Army Air Corps hero.
Ne
in famine he shall redeem thee from
death; and in war from the power of the
sword.—Job 5:20.
try. They were and are types of activity
in which we shouid not indulge while we aie
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organizations have launched the inevitable
drive for wartime prohibitioon, based as
was the similar and successful drive 25
years ago on the pat’ ■ tic desire “to deny
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at war, if ever.
But many if not most were not origi-
nated by the fifth column and are not c *
fined to its operations.
“Magnifying small details until they
DOME -- THE
MAJOR THOUGHT
THE ROBOT WAS
SPEAKING, AND
/—11
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"Sav
Us” W8
progra
of Chr
at the
Ax a Chris
Mrs.
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with d
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church
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Roy d
Mrs. N
Camp,]
C. E. I
Mrs. J
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Nelsor
Morris
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Wayn
Mrs. I
Murrs
A. Al
Mrs. J
Mrs. ■
Sin let loose speaks punishment at
hand.—Cowper. I
SIDE GLANCES
-g kceses
we understood it less.—Prof. George S.
Counts, Columbia University.
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YOU'D BETTER HIT
FOR. THE WEEDS,
LEANDER!- I
HEARD UNCLE
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29 Rough lava.
31 It has nine
regular ----
32 Sloth.
33 Slumber.
34 Sultanic
decree.
35 Symbol for
ethyl.
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3, ^5^' F/OTHERS <3ET GRAY
■
Published Every Afternoon (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning By
NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
L $- 1280834405
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Answer to Previous Puzzle
23 Nine regular
players are
---- each of
the two ■ — — •
24 Player famous
in song for
Al striking out.
~ 26 Tin (symbol).
27 Promissory
note (abbr.).
28 Most action
occurs on the
in------.
30 Altitude
(abbr.).
32 American
humorist
37 Station.
38 About.
40 Ringworm.
41 Coaches stand
----first and
third bases.
42 Bird.
44 Woody plant.
16 A player has 45 Chest bone..
--asleep at 47 Drag.
48 Reverend
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 58, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 26, 1942, newspaper, May 26, 1942; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1497211/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.