Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 86, Ed. 1 Monday, June 28, 1937 Page: 7 of 10
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Ahenerson Aailu Nets
e
NEWS AND REVIEWS OF PROGRESS AND DEVELOPMENT
TROUBLE SHOOTERS
" SPENDS ms WINTERS
1
ig,
m
T.
I
Tires and Tubes.
"g
(
6-29
94
TRAVEL VIA
2
nerve force or expression.
their oil in the motor to summer
four passengers for trip.
-I
a”
126 South Main Phone 1020
difficult of explanation and occa-
..v?
*e*
South Main
Phone 108
Care Called for and Delivered
1
NOUSI PAINT
Phone 484
8. Mala SL
of
one
619 North High St.
Phone 247
Phone 747
elimination, especially constipation,
In spinal
damentals of government.
I
... demand for good Gasoline is
expected ... that’s one reason
Beacon s
TRANSFER LINE
e
•. sales are upon such a depend-
able volume basis
N
: -N
9
/y62
,407 North Jackson St.
Telephone 619
?
.,2
MUM
08
The new speed record for stock
cars over the Indianapolis Speed-
way is now 82 miles per hour.
UNITED
STATES.
PHONE 100 — 210
“Every Load Insured”
SINCLAIR
Gasoline—Oils
The air system from Berlin to
Moscow, was dscontinued in April,
1837, with the liquidation of the
Dereluft Company.
32
=
FOR?.
ICE
weight, and replace the lubricant
in the differential and transmis-
sion, are reporting far better ser-
vice from their cars. It is almost
surprising to know that many
automobile owners do not realise
the importance of this change in
oils to summer weight," Mr. Bas-
set declared.
' p
motor, transmission and differen-
tial or the various makes of auto-
mobiles, Owners who have al-
COFFEE SHOP
I "The Choice ot East Texas’
IN THE EXTREME
SO•7HEeN PART
om AFRICA.
DUTCH RITHMAN
Service Station 1
’ WE DELIVER ANYWHERE IN RUSK COUNTY
a “Large Enough to Serve You—Sr . 'I Enough to Know You"
THE ENGLISH
BARN SWALLOW
Dr. Holt Queries
About Health 10
Years From Now
“Bert By Tert”
WEBB’S
SANITARY DAIRY
Telephone 419
6Bbgv '
•.633,*68
amqAbb
v THE NEW
LIBERTY
MOVING
Local a Long Distance
JIMERSON
dm .....— । । '« ............ । । .1 ■
4 Marvin Echols Furniture Store
The Desk that Has
Everything
STYLE—distinctive, unusual,
modern. "'
ACTION—fast, inside and out,
planned to give the workers
more efficiency.
Willard Batteries
SALES AND SERVICE
Batteries charged by our Super-
Charger. Each batery tested and
approved before leaving our rack.
MATTHEWS GULF SERVICE
manifest to everyone of us in the
strong, alert, successful, vibrant
EAST TEXAS TRAVEL
BUREAU
THE water surface of the Great Lakes amounts to about 96,000
square miles. Some 33,940 square miles of this lie on the Cana-
dian side, and 60,770 square miles lie on the American side of the
International Boundary.
HENDERSON PIN «
PAPER 0o. 1
Dr. Bert E. Woods
Optometrist
(Eye Sight Specialist)
The Best Equipped Optometric
Office in East Texas
North Marshal Street
Opposite Penney’s
PHONE 817
R, H. BASSETT’S SINCLAIR SERVICE
West Street—Opposite Randolph Hotel
24-Hou Service Phone 611 The Busiest Place in Iown
ABOUT
7W0-7M/RDS
OP THE
WATER SURFACE.
OF THE
GREAT LAKES
BELONGS TO THE
J.L. DOWNING
Architect
Phone 451-W
208 First Natrona) Bank Bldg.
PHONE 874
RAYMOND CRAWFORD’S
Humble Service that you will
remember
300 SOUTH MAIN
Henderson, Texas
STATION
। ---------------------------------------------------------------
ze(enn,, L
“sa—
com. 1037 iv nt SERVICE, iNc.
-A GROWING STORE
PROGRESSIVE TOWN"
DEVINE
HARDWARE COMPANY .
108 N. Jackson Phone
P '
f ..
1
. s3
RED BALL
MOTOR FREIGHT
Phone 640
“The Standard of Service”*
THE VERA
AMERICAN FAMILV
SPENDS ABOUT
$/5
East Texas Motor Freight, Inc.
Office and Warehouse in city limits on
Kilgore Highway—Phone 436
j BONDED— INSURED— FAST FREIGHT SERWCE
JEFF BOLTON District Agent
STATE FARM INSURANCE COMPANIES
ALL FORMS AUTOMOBILE, LIFE, FIRE INSURANCE
Come in and see them today-
Priced within the budget for
~! - ’ any office.
--HARRIS--
PRINTING A STATIONERY
COMPANY
208 East St. Phone Bill
suffering is a serious
good health.
"The remedy lies
HEADQUARTERS
and fhpvtktuqtM.
YOUBMMnng MINIM NB
CANBEcvDDmX
AIUNRB won grow
4-
T
' Information given on this page is gathered from sources believed
W to .be reliable. The Advertising Department of the News will*
readily correct any error or mis-statement of fact Patronage
1 of the firms making possible this page, will facilitate the con-
l; tinance of the service these firms are rendering their customers,
i end they will appreciate your comments
f t s 1
. “Home of Good Coffee”
' PALACE CAFE
ROGERS ELECTRIC COMPANY
L T. ROGERS, Owner-Manager
Light and Power Installations
Located to Teller Machine Shop, Cor. Fordall A Jackson Sts.
TELEPHONE NO. 6
NMMhMMMMEi
why...
abdominal
threat to
1883
men and women who are doing
things ... the leaders.
"One eminent investigator after
another has found that because ot
numerous reasons the openings
through which the spinal nerves
pass become deformed thus caus-
ing irritation or, or unnatural
pressure upon, the spinal nerves.
The flow of nerve energy is ad-
versely affected. The co-ordinat-
ing, stimulating, directing influe-
ence wielded by these branching
nerves cannot function normally,
internal ease is destroyed in pro-
portion to the irrittaion or unnat-
ural pressure; disease is the result.
Disease in that place where the af-
fected nerves lead, whether it be
the lungs, stomach, eyes, reproduc-
tive organs, heart or digestive
tract.
“A great many bodily ills are
traced directly or indirectly to fail-
ure of the digestive tract. Faulty
dividual who thus treat his eyes,
a large bill, and the price must
be paid," declared Dr. Bert E.
Woods, local optometrist with of-
fices in the Hightower Drug
* Building on Nart Marshall Street.
“A short paragraph in my Daily
paper attracted my attention”
continued Dr. Woods. "One solu-
tion of the tax problem would be
to return to the Jungles,’ the para-
graph said. This would be a solu-
tim of the eye troubles of our
modem civilization as well.
"If we elect either from choice
or necesity to continue to live in
this modern near-point world we
must prepare to meet its proD-
DR. LETA RAY HOLY
Chiropractor
Crim Building
Phones 200 and 657-W
HENDERSON, TEXAS
NOTE: The following article by Charles E. Simons
gives an interesting description of the Board of .Con-
trol, telling something of its duties and significance to
the State of Texas and the citizens who are the taxpay-
ers. Mr. Simons’ article appeared in “Texas Parade.”
When a particularly knotty problem in State ad-
ministration arises, the chances are about even that it
will be assigned for solution to the State Board of Con-
trol. And the board has demonstrated its efficiency by
cracking some of the toughest issues that have arisen
since its establishment in 1920, especially during the
recent turbulent years when economic factors exerted
a great influence on governmental operations.
Because the Board of Control has grown from a
small office in 1920 to one of the largest of State de-
partments in 1937, it has been designated as the “trou-
ble shooting” department and the board members as
"troble shooters.” We know of no other department
of State that exceeds this board in administrative ef-
ficiency, in ability to get the job done. In fact, few are
the departments that can approach the sterling record
achieved by this unit that buys everything from papers
and pencils to heavy machinery for power plants, su-
pervises the care of the mentally ill, the crippled, blind
and deaf, that builds and maintains the State’s large
physical plant and does a hundred and one odd jobs
painstakingly and well.
The board is composed of three members, and their
labor in the service of the State deserves the commen-
dation of every thinking citizen, particularly those who
carry the tax load, because through their efforts the
State has been saved hundreds of thousands of dollars
with no impairment of the efficiency of the duties en-
trusted to their care. ~—
The board members are Claude D. Teer, John F. *
Wallace and Henry C. Meyer. Each is quiet and con-
servative and does his particular job with a minimum
of fanfare and publicity.
Mr. Teer is the chairman of the board, but he also
is a member of many other boards and commissions. In
fact so numerous are his duties that some day he ex-
pects to meet himself returning from a meeting. He
also is chairman of the Texas Old Age Assistance Com-
mission, the Texas Relief Commission, the Centennial
Division of the Board of Control, the Budding and Lo-
cating Board for the Kerrville Sanatorium, member of
the executive committee of Texas Rural Communities,
the eleemosynary land leasing board and the board to
locate Texas’ new cotton research laboratory. His mem-
bership on boards will be substantially increased if bills
passed by the legislature at the recent regular session
are signed by the governor.
A resident of Williamson County most of his life,
Mr. Teer has had a varied career in public life. He
graduated from the Denton Teachers College and
taught school at the little town of Moravia for about
one year, when the political bug bit him. He started at
the bottom of the ladder as a justice of the peace and
has preserved a judicial temperament since. For five
terms he served as a member of the House of Repre-
sentatives,- one term as chairman of the appropria-
tions committee, where he obtained valuable insight
into the State’s fiscal operations. He served one year
as secretary of the State Highway Commission on con-
4 elusion of his legislative service and has been a member
of the Board of Control eight years, during seven of
which he has served as chairman.
One often wonders how Mr. Teer manages to main-
tain his genial, affable manner, meet the scores of per-
sons who throng his office daily and still get anything
done. We suspect that somewhere in his makeup is a
genius for organization, for attracting to his side men
who are capable and loyal and for getting at the crux
of a proposition in a direct, commonsense manner and
with consideration for business principles and the fun-
A. W. DUNN TRANSFER CO
Bonded—Insured
LONG DISTANCE MOVING
PHONE 436. Office at
Eant Texas Motor Freight, Ine.
-------------------------------—
"Nature always has her re-
venge for neglect. Misuse is as
mortal a sin as abuse. There are
certain burrowing animals, the
mole for instance, which have
taken to spending their life be-
neath the surface of the ground
and nature has taken her revenge
upon them in a thoroughly natur-
al way. She has closed up their
eyes. If they mean to live in the
darkness, she argues, eyes are
obviously a superfluous function.
By neglecting them, these ani-
mals made it clear that they do
not want their eyes, and as one
of natures fived principles is that
nothing shall exist in vain, the
eyes are presently taken away.
There are fishes also which have
had to pay the same terrible for-
feit for having made their abode
in dark caverns where the eyes
are never required.
“If one neglects his eyes he
must pay the price of such ne-
glect. Optometric science hs pro-
vided a means to keep your eyes
fit even under the strenuous de-
mands of a modern world.” Dr.
Woods concluded.
. DESIGN—a complete line
general office desks, each e
scientifically planned to meet
Pits particular need.
II
elimination, especially consupauon, most complete set of automobile
is a stealthy offender. Sluggish- registration plates of the same
----- — number in Massachusetts.
Dr. Leta Ray Holt, local Chiro-
practor with offices in the Crim
building, asks the question, "What
kind of health will you have 10
years from today?" and makes
this observation, "Whatever you
hope to be or do depends largely
upon good health." Continuing her
discussion. Dr. Holt pointed out:
"Good health is not a relative
term. It is a physical state of
ease and the normal condition in-
tended by Nature. This state is
“Chiropractic adjustments re-
lease impinged nerve flow and the
usual lumbago recovery is mater- ready come in and had us change
“Summerf weight oil in the
motor, the differential and trans-1
mission of any car. wil result in
the owner deriving far greater
satisfaction from the car,": said
R. H. Bassett, manager of the
Bassett Sinclair Service Station
on West Main Street. “Modern
people have learned that in sum-
mer time, lighter foods result in
better health and greater energy.
People have discovered that the
body temperature change in sum-
mer as compared to that of win-
ter, makes it necessary to change
diets, just as we change the kind
of clothes we wear. A man would
look ridiculous to appear on the
streets wsaring an overcoat in
the summer time. Certainly he
would be the source of much com-
ment and attract wide attention,
if he wasn't turned over to the
peace officers for observation.
“If it is common sense that we
must eat lighter foods, wear light-
er clothes in summer than we
Wv
SuupwumWuuuenas
Share the Expense Plan
Daily excursions to the Pan-
American Exposition, Dallas.
Leaves Henerson 6 a. m. Returns
10 p. m. 84 round trip, rate con-
ditioned on having as many as
._____
. - - e y
7 i "2
Mr. Wallace also came to the Board of Control via
the legislature and the highway commission and, like
Mr. Teer, served five terms in the legislature, including
one term as chairman of the appropriations committee.
Mr. Wallace’s business acumen, his straight thinking
and his determination to see that the State gets value
received for its dollar have contributed much to the suc-
cessful operation of the Board of Control since he be-
came a member in 1932. He is the puchasing member
for the board and supervises the buying of hundreds of
commodities each year at a cost of hundreds of thous-
ands of dollars. He has a peculiar ability to judge the
quality of merchandise submitted for State purchase
and has a natural curiosity from which the State has
reaped rich rewards. Frequently he may be found in
the board’s sample room carefully examining anything
from a mattress to a can of beans.
Mr. Wallace will leave the Board of Control next
January 1. It will be with keen regret that State offi-
cialdom says goodbye.
Henry C. Meyer, third member of (he board,
hails from the solid, conservative and thrifty com-
munity of New Braunfels where he was born in 1861.
For many years he was a hardware merchant at
.Rockdale and served that community six years as
alderman and twenty years as mayor. Although fff
is seventy-six years old, his step is spry and has
spring and his bearing is that of a man younger. He
is well liked in capitol has no hobbies but enjoys
hearing about those of other folks.
The act creating the Board of Control automati-
cally abolished four State offices and eighteen boards
Continued Wednesday
G. H. PORTER FEED CO.
Most All Kinds of Feed
PHONE 280
111 S. Calhoun St. Henderson
Business,. , .........
K —-Industry - -
•* ? Commerce
MONDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 28, 1937
Big Price Paid by Owner
.. for Neglecting Eyesight
Henderson’s Only Exclusive
Drug Store
WRIGHTS PHARMACY
Prescriptions a Specialty
Geo. M. Wright, Owner
PHONE 99
and to portray American folk art.
The collection includes thous-
ands of all kinds of lighting an-
tiqucb, including the Dreyfus col-
lection of 1200 lighting fixture*
of 16th century Gothic from
Switzerland, 18th century Eng-
lish furniture, curly maple turn-
iture, 17th century American
furniture, carver chairs, rare
Disbrowe furniture pieces, candle
making implements, chandeliers,
firearms, guns and appurtanances,
Russian icons, wooden ware,
early American red ware pottery,
burl wooden ware, English wood-
en ware, clocks, mirrors, tape-
stries, mouse traps and toys.
-----------------------------o , . .
Auto Plates Saved
31 Years by Driver
g‘"Neglect of eyes is one thing elems in a modern way.
that invariably brings to the in- "*— *—
CREAM/
a"
Summer Weight Oil Qiu
Car Owner Better Seri
4 r ’ ) 4 . e
analysis and scientific adjustment
of the spinal column.
"The late Dr. W. C. Schulze, M.
D., D. C„ said 'We get old,, not in
the face, but in the back.
Nothing is so indicative of vitality
and usefulness as a tillable spine’."
LUMBAGO
(Neuralgia Lumb- Abdominal)
"Among the most painful ail-
ments is Lumbago ... that stab in
the small of the back that brings
the hands to the hips and bends
you over with misery. And the
pain that attends every effort to
confines one to bed.
"The back is sore to touch. Ab-
dominal muscles are raked by
shooting pains and It is all made
worse by fsultv elimination of the
kidneys. Although seldom con-
sidered by the average person, this
all suggests that the minnl nerves
directing and co-ordinating the
kidnev activity are irritated thus
not delivering a normal supply of
-
-.n
mobiles in summer should be a
much lighter weight than used
in winter. The Sinclair .Refining
Co., has produced a special weight
of summer lubricant for the
Shaier, chauffeur for Mrs.
Mary E. Morrill for the past 81
years, has saved the plates 864
and 366 from the two automo-
biles he has driven during that
period. He also has a complete
set of registration plates from
every state in the union.
need in winter, it stands to reason
that automobiles will deliver a
far superlor brand of service, if
winter oils are drained, out and
replaced with fresh, summer
weight oils. Modem engineers
have built high speed motors and
every part of the automobile that
assists the motor in sending it
over our highways at fast speed,
is likewise built to match the
high-speed of the motor. These
same engineers tell us, end prac-
tical experience has long since
THIS BANK
is ready and fully equipped
to serve firms and individ-
uals
FIRST NATIONAL
RUSK COUNTY’S DKNM
OLDEST BANK DANK
proven, that the oil uaed in auto- .
and the result is that everyone is
a real booster for the Sinclairlz:
Ing plan we used," Mr. Basset
said.
Bassett’s Sinclair Service Sta-
tion is on West Main Street, just
one block west of the “circle" on
Public Square. Full Sinclair ser-
vice is available 24 hours each
. day, with road service included.
In addition to offering complete
smelalr products as marketed
; here Mr. Bassett sels Federal
ness, lack of energy,
lally quickened."
Wells Museum Has 42
Rooms of Handicraft
SOUTHBRIDGE,- Mass. (UP)
—It takes 42 rooms to house the
more than 100,000 articles of
the Well’s Historical Museum,
believed the largest and most
valuable antique collection in
America.
The collection was started
more than 15 years ago by Albert
B. Wells, aided by his brothers,
Channing M., and J. Cheney
auxcun ol eapinuuuu auau -oe- Wells, executives of the Amer-
sionally we are misled by phlloso- ican Optical Company.
phical discussion. It is however, 5 It was their idea to preserve
—24 --------“** samples of the arts and crafts of
past domestic and industrial life
1 * t 1 2. . ■ •
HENDERSON DAILY NEWS
NEWS AND REVIEWS OF PROGRESS AND DEVELOPMENT,
' This page is devoted primarily, to the interests of firms whose
) advertising makes it possible. Responsibility for all articles ap-
L pearing on this page is assumed by the Advertising Department
a of the Henderson Dally News. They do not, in any instance,
M i necessarily reflect the editorial opinion of the News. All mater-
% lal-on the page clears throuuguh the Advertising Department
Conducting the cam, _
• national scale, the Sinclair Re-
fining Co., through its dealers and
their station operators, have popu-
larized what is known as the
"Sinclairize" plan. Included in a
"Sinclairize" job, is changing all
oils to summer weight, along with
a thorough lubrication of every
part 6t the car that is specified _
by the manufacturer for lubrica- • •
tion, and a good washing job, Mr.
Bassett pointed out. “Since we m
have been featuring the "Sin:
clalrize for Summer Driving*
। plan, we have serviced a large
l number of crs for our customers.
HORN FURNITURE CO
Complete Home Furnishers
Frigidaire and Leonard
Refrigerdtors
Phone 331 Henderson, Tex.
9
This Curious World Ferguson |
NORWOOD, Mass. (UP).
Fred J. Shrier has perhaps the
PERSONAL aa LUBRICATION
Service Washing
n
(!
<
4 • WB NEVER CLOSE •
1
Beacon Oil & Refining Co.
BEACON ema--z
•m-
^4- 7
)-82
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 86, Ed. 1 Monday, June 28, 1937, newspaper, June 28, 1937; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1559217/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.