The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 67, Ed. 2 Friday, August 4, 1939 Page: 4 of 14
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‘. PAGE FOUR
Tune In On KRBC
THE ABILENE REPORTER NEWS
Friday Evening August 4, 1939
And ye shall do no work in that same day: for it is a day of atonement, to make an atonement for you before the Lord your God.-Leviticus 24:28. . . . Man owes not only
his services, but himself to God.-Secker. / . 1 1
Leave the Anthem Alone.
Not long ago a Metropolitan Opera tenor
was called on to sing the national anthem.
Imagine his chagrin when he discovered he
did not know the words. So he got a copy of
governor ate peas with his knife.
Ever since then we have wondered whether
good table manners were necessary for success
I in life... -
I Why be fussy when it is not considered un-
civilized to eat corn on the cob?
WHAT GOES ON INSIDE THERE?
Meet Mr. Lochinvar
----------------------- By Marie Blizard -------------------------
Friday Eve
WITH L
Tex
Mobilized
Nation
the song and began to study it. He found prac-
tically everything wrong with it, including the 1
swashbuckling words and the music to which
they are set. Why, the tune comes from an
ancient alehouse drinking song!
: Immediately the tenor became the 1,486,-
987th-person to start a campaign to revise or
junk the national anthem. Nobody knows the
words. The music is extremely difficult, espe- |
cially for tenors Away with it!
• All of which makes the average American |
pretty tired The Star-Spangled Banner has j
seen over 124 years of service It has weathered
Other Viewpoints
Up to Tourist Cabin Owners.’
From the St. Louis Globe-Democrat
The discreet approach of the Missouri State
Health Department to its problem of adminis-
tering new regulations authorized by the last
session of the legislature, by which tourist
mar su atta ks, and will weather a great camps and cabins are to be corrected of some
many more.
1. For the national anthem is a grand piece of
music, words and all. It has what it takes.
What American can hear the welling notes of
the grand old song without a thrill ? What
American can be unmoved when a good army
I 'band or a fine chorus of voices tears into the
a piece If it is based on a drinking song, that
: is because there have been only three or four
roriginal pieces of music invented, and every
L song is just a variation of some other
■ They ought to quit kicking our national an-
them around If they don't like it let ’em go
off in a corner somewhere and invent a bet-
ter. Might as well pick flaws in Old Glory or
ship Miss Liberty back to France.
Oh. say can you see----—.
of their obvious ills, is to be commended. All
tourist cabins will be licensed under the new
Why Not Teach Love?
A r ignant little sidelight on human frailty
is afforded in a dispatch from London, re-
count rg defense measures being taken by a
thoroughly aroused—and frightened—nation.
It sa i the government had placed contracts
for 2,50 .000bomb shelters to be distributed
among those too poor to buy them.
-Theneed for these shelters is painfully ap-
.parent. No. Englishman knows what tune a
hostile air fleet may begin dropping bombs on
Chis head.
• But why should these things be? Simply be-
cause the human family has failed miserably
: in the most important piece of work imagin-
s able—the development and fostering of am-
Nicable relations with one’s neighbors
• It isn’t the fault of the people who one day
may dive into those bomb shelters to escape
the raining death Or is it • Are they after all
resp nsible because - through ignorance or
prejudice they have backed the wrong people
“for high political office* That would be a hard
question to answer with any degree of certi-
:tude So many’fact HI are involved in interna-
- tional enmities, chiefly distrust and fear
One wonders what could have been achieved
•in the promotion of peace if the money that
will be spent on those bomb shelters were spent
in the spreading of the knowledge of the glory
of living amicably with one’s neighbors One
wonders h w far that m nef would go in car-
trying out a campaign the world needs more
today than it needs anything—a moral re-
awakening
law for the period running from June 1 of this
year to the same day next year, and owners
who do not conform to orders attending im-
minent inspections will be denied licensere-
newal. This gradual method of bringing the
worst tourist accommodations within reason-
able reach of the best, coupled with the power
of the department under general health laws 1
to correct immediately dangerous situations
out of hand or close the places, should result i
in marked improvements where they are, need- |
ed the most, even during the present tourist
season. And certainly make the accommoda-
tions fit for next year.
This is in step with Missouri’s growing im-
portance as a vacation and tourist center and
is designed for the protection of residents as
well as visitors who follow its attractive travel
1 paths When the new law is in full effect trav-
elers will have assurance other than that of
sight and smell in determining the worthiness
of roadside accommodations. The law says it
shall be unlawful for persons to operate tour-
ist camps without permit from the state board
of health and when the law is in effective
stride authoritative officials will withhold li-
cense from amps which are below established
standards Which will mean that cabin and
camp owners must conform to regulations now
being established or close their places. Of chief
concern in regulations which are now being
considered by the state board is the matter
of sanitation in kitchens, bedclothes, toilets
and lavatories, with special emphasis on avail- •
able supplies of water. General cleanliness will
have high place in the general program.
The state health department asked for the
broader regulations and the licensing of the
cabins and camps as a very proper public
health safeguard. Dr. Harry F. Parker, state
health commissioner, says 100,000 tourists visit
the resorts each year and that every year
tourists are stricken with water-borne diseases
they pick up in camps from unsafe drinking
and bathing water. A very proper start in ad-
ministering the new regulations consists of
taking down many if not all of the signs sig-
nifying health department approval. New
signs will be issued only after formal reinspec-
tion and will mean something.
Washington Daybook
WASHINGTON—At this point we in America, he said it was not or-
might as well confess that we have ‘ ganized on the handsome scale of
lost our principal battle, of the ses- the African hunt Who ever heard
sion and that is to have Represen-
(
Hergioce,
• Old-fashioned morality, the live and let live
policy, the giving ar l’keeping of one’s w rd,
the upholding of the doctrine that right is 1
I might—•■ • would make b mb-shelters un-
TT KT SOT 7S By Edgar
, U3I PULAO A. Guest
necessary.
The world is exerting itself in the preaching
of hate, and not in the preaching of love
: Bombs are the natural concomitants of the.
I gospel of hate ,
Elbow-Leaners.
• A fell w-hedonist wishes we would say some-
this elbows on the table a: mealtime, in defiance
-of some of the rules laid down by writers on I
Detiquet. In spite of repeated warnings and a !
guilty St t- nsciousness he finds himself more
often the
ton the table edge, even at meetings of his lun-
cheon club and at similar public gatherings
: This department never read a book on eti-
GROWNUP S DUTY
The little fellow doesn't know
The miles are sometimes far to go
And rare is oft a heavy load
To bear along life ‘s dusty road
He plaints thinks ‘tis clear as day
T - v is a place wherein to play
He thinks, and very well he may, .
This life- is just one round of play
And young and old and one and all
on whom his glances chance to fall
Have nothing else all day to do
But stop and play at peek-a-boo.
Tis just as well he cannot see
tative Tinkham Congress’ most fa-i
mous big game hunter, hunt lions in 1
America.
He is forever going off to Africa I
to shoot lions. It is conceded at once
that very superior lions grow in
Africa perhaps better than the
. American breed, but a home prod-
uct should not be sniffed at. -
Senator Bone of Washington
broached the subject. He had beer,
reading statistics He was surprised
that in Pennsylvania there were
thousands and thousands of deer in
spite of its being a densely populat-
ed eastern seaboard state with an
eager quota of hunters. He decided
it was largely the lack of mountain
lions that permitted the state to
of a safari trudging out of an out*
lying post like Seattle to hunt lions
in the deep interior of a spruce for-
est with the automobiles roaring
along beside you and newspaper
photographers waiting for you at
every lion’s den’
NOT SO TOUGH
Mountain lions are a fair enough
size, ranging in length between eight
and eleven feet from tip to tip, in-
cluding tail assembly. We never
heard of one which would charge
the camera to make good news reels
And it doesn’t take such a big gun
to kill them. We have read f
that
good African hunters use a 450 ex-
press. which shoots a bullet the size
of a football. Mountain Lions will
.settle for less.
Moreover, for 550 a good woods-
man will rope one of them single
handed and turn him over to a 200
alive and well. We know a hunter.
Torn Koski, out in Salmon City, Ida-
ho whose dogs once chased a
quiet, s can I. - speak authoritatively • an- I
diers but this department has seen some
mighty prominent people place their elbows on
the table So far as,we could see they never
felt the least bit self-conscious about It. e ther
•They astially seemed to revel in their sinful-
| How patient we are asked to be
i And doesn’t know the heavy care
I Which how and then we’re forced to.bear.
He hears ur merry bits of song
And thinks’ we're singing all day long.
: The only personal rule we observe in this
matter is to avoid a too-showy practice of el-
• bew-learng. For instance we try—sometimes
Ail indifferent success it - true—to avoid
holding food in a rigid right hand elbow on
the-table. and snapping it off by leaning for-
ward with out-stretehed neek B it our object
He s sure we are a merry lot
Forever laughing near his cot:
So far we’ve never let him know
That there is such a .thing as woe.
And that, as it appears to me
It just the way it ought to be.
(Copyright, 1939, Edgar A Guest)
BARBS
FROM A
POINTED WIT
preserve the deer for the fall hunt-
ing season
Out in the Olympic Peninsula,
which is a sizeable strip of territory
along Puget Sound in Washington,
there are also thousands of deer But
also there are hundreds of moun-
• tain lions, each of which knocks off
• 50 10,200 risk. He got a sis dollar boun-
QU/C DCCA4L 4 WALL WdALC, UOWIL CO It . U .13 1
nomic and statistical, for mountain I t for it And besides, the dogs
-xr.... so many., ven-i "AeVertaventhe tnonlagt presen-
I ison steaks. , ’ 5
LEGISLATIVE LION HUNT
Senator Bone being of a legisla-
. tive mind and no lion hunter, sug-
gested that the biological survey
ought to shove a band of profession-
Ial lion hunters into the Olympic
forest and track the rascals down.
Perhaps it was lack of cooperation
that failed to bring us success,” for
Senator Bone didn’t offer to help
much when we suggested that Rep-
‘ resen tative Tinkham would do very
He is truly a first rate big game
hunter He holds an award of some
sort for having killed six leopards in
one day, which is practically the
tops in leopard killing He also has
- killed lions, many of them. He even
mountain lion into a cave. Koski
went in with a pistol and brought
him out. .He thought it was worth
tative Tinkham might take a flinger
at it, come autumn But when we
put it up to him, he just said no
The Family
%
« Ta it - • ° - a I In reply to John L. Lewis’s seathing attack
Paste . on Vice Preside ent Garner just said: "No
wrist motion in The a : ’ * T of j comment.” It was pretty hard to think of a
16 the month and this cannot ie done with stronger statement for retaliation. *
the elbow firmly planted on the 1 card
s:We once sat at meat with seven millionaire,
agovernor and a United States senator. Every
last man of them was an elbow-leaner Six
alefried chicken with their fingers, and the
The Duke of Windsor is perturbed
about "snoopers" who peer through field
glasses at his private swimming pool.
Which immediately makes us want to see
what’s in the pool.
brought down an elephant. He
showed us a picture of it
But he would not get excited
about hunting mountain lions. We
argued that Theodore Roosevelt, al-
so a famous "Ton hunter, had con-
sidered mountain lion hunting a
fair sport and also good politics.
That was no argument for Tink-
ham, that political business.’ The
Republican colony he represents up
in Massachusetts elects him to the
House without his even campaign-
ing Several times he has been in
Africa hunting lions at election
time
As to the business of hunting lions
DOCTOR
By DR. MOERS FINHBEIN
Editor, Journal of the American Medical
Association, and of Hygeia,
the Health Magazine
A long large nerve passes from
the lower part of the spinal column,
out of the spinal canal, through
some openings between the bones
then down through the pelvis or
lowest part of the abdominal cavity,
and finally down the back of the
thigh This nerve occasionally be-
comes inflamed because of various
reasons, and serious pain- follows
Obviously irritations, new growths,
inflammations, or swellings around
the nerve wherever it passes
through a tight place can stimulate
pain Any injury to the bones of the
back or to the cartilages between
these bones may cause a reflected
pain in this great nerve Any in-
flammations or infections in the tis
sue around the nerve in the pelvis
may extend to the nerve and set up
pain %
The strain of the body due to bad
MR AND MRS -
Who's Who In Hats
Look 1 r T4 inK Tuars
MEST GADDERS DAUGHTER
OVER AT THAT TA BLE
YEAH 2 r
So WHAT2 L
T
NOTING JUST INTERESTED.
SHES A Lovely GIL,
JUST OUT or COLLEGE
HOW CAM You TELL,
WITA THOSE HATS 2
OH-Is MRS. GADDERS
MOTHER Lr
YESTERDAY: Cecily gives a
party in her shop hoping the
strange young man will come
to it. He doesn’t show up—but
she sees him a few days later.
Chapter 13
MR. LOCKE
He had come up without her see-
ing him He leaned companionably
against the fat sides of the com-
placent Bess. "Hello, Lady Bounti-
ful," he said. "What do you thins
of my charger?” ,
“Is this the pony on which you
fled the sheriff?"
“Three thousand miles, and see
how she flourished under it?" He
stroked the hefty head.
“You must have been good to
her.".
"I am Nothing but hand-picked
oats for my faithful steed. But then
Im naturally kind-hearted Many
a supper I’ve shared with Careless
Grace I call her Careless Grace
because of her laconic poses. Did I
ever tell you how she came to win
the Kentucky Derby?”
Cecily shook her head. She
thought: It looks as though you
had shared many a meal and got-
ten the short end of it yourself His
throat exposed by the open shirt
loked thin to her.
"It was back in 29 Pappy hadn't
been doing well with the still . Did
I tell you we were mountainers?
Yessir, a long line of ’em. Why, the
famous feud of . . ,”
"Lochinvar from Kentucky?”
“That's right. I’d forgotten ”
They both laughed.
Then Cecily said sternly, "You
forgot to tell me anything. And I'm
a little bit aurious."
"Let’s sit this one out ” He took
her hand, and, un protesting, Cecily
sat down on a tuft of grass by the
roadside. Her companion joined her.
breaking off a long blade and blow-
ing into it to make a shrill whistle.
He's like a little boy, she thought.
“I always do that,” he said con-
fidentially, “to let my henchmen
AbileneReporter-News
MORNING. EVENING- SUNDAI
Published twice daily except once on
Sunday and Monday
REPORTER PUBLISHING COMPANY
151 Cypress St........Abileue. Texas
Entered as Second Class Matter Oct 14.
1908 at the postoffice, Abilene, Texas. .
ander the Act of M arch 2nd, 1879.
tissue, the doctor is able to deter-
mine the nerve that is giving trou-
ble.
As with any nerve pain, the doc-
tor first prescribes rest, and fixes
the bed of the patient so that there
is relief from tension and support
to the inflamed tissues. Heat is
usually applied *
Then after the pain has subsided,
the patient must continue to avoid
exercise which may lead to twinges
in the nerve, and assume his bodily
activities gradually.
(union A-LABEE
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ocal news published herein
There are surgical methods of
treating this condition, involving in-
jection of an anesthetic substance
directly into the nerve or its sheath.
In the more serious cases, surgical
procedures involving direct action
on the bones, the muscles or the
nerve, may be necessary.
YOUR
CHILDREN
know when I’m in danger so that
they'll be about in case I need
help."
■You're not in any danger now.
are you?” she asked and waited
with undue excitement for the an-
swer to such a trivial question.
He looked at her and there were
no crinkles of humor about the
corners of his eyes. "I might be.”
he said briefly.
"Well, go on." .
Oh, about the things you want
to know? Well, ma’am, I’m now a
resident of Vickersport. In a man-
ner of speaking, of course. I’ve
taken Lem Soderson’s palatial cot-
tage at the end of the North road.
I’ve also borrowed Lem's imposing
carriage"—he made a broad ges-
ture to include the broken-down
wagon and Bess—"to transport a
few belongings to my new home.”
Rapidly, Cecily was remembering
the "cottage" at the end of the
North road. It was a good five
miles out of the village. It was a
ramshackle shark which had fal-
len into sad need of repair.
“Of course. It’s not much, but
when I’ve got my vines and roses
climbing over the porch it will
have charm," he finished.
"Why didn't you come to my
party?" she said abruptly.
He didn't answer her at once He
chewed thoughtfully on the blade
of grass.
‘YOU DIDN’T FORGET
"Did you know I had a party?"
she urged.
"Yes."
"Oh"'
"I didn't know that the Invitation
included me "
"It did."
He grinned then. "Then you didn't
forget me?"
“Of course not " She spoke light-
ly with a bright little edge on her
voice. "It isn't every night I find
transient guests in my shop.”
“I thought it might have been
the sprig of rosemary.” he said.
"My memory is very good. I
don't need rosemary, ” she answered
not ungraciously.
“Look here," he said suddenly.
"I wonder if you would forget a
memory?"
“Which one?"
He looked away from her, to-
ward the water. "Will you forget
that I told you my name was . . .
let me see, what did I say it was?"
"Philip Callen," she supplied.
"That’s It.” he said, his eyes still
away from her. “That was dumb!
Fancy my picking a name like that
and then discovering that, you are
entertaining a man with that
name." *
“How did you know that I was?”
The question rushed at him.
He smiled at her again. “Opera-
tive 64 told me. Cecily." •
He knew her name He' knew
who she was. He knew that she
lived at Darelea. He knew Phillip
Callen was staying at Darelea. He
must have inquired about her.
"About your name,” she said.
"Or do you prefer to be called “Hey,
Tom ’ ” •
“Call me Locke” hi
“L-o-c-k-e.
said.
It’s really my name.
posture or long continued standing
av OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON
Copyright 1937 NEA Service
Dear Mrs H C :
You poor dear, worrying about
your baby refusing to go to bed with-I
out one of his shoes in his hand,
I think you must have been read-
ing some of that old advice to young
mothers warning them not to allow
any fixation on any toy:
Of course,a shoe is not a toy. But
actually it would not matter if
Johnny took a stove lifter to bed:
What he wants to cuddle his cheek
against is something that ties him
to daylight
Think about yourself. What do
you take to bed with you? Habits,
of course Maybe you want a par-
ticular kind of night gown. Maybe,
you like a book just within reach,
whether you use it or not Per-
haps you have a way of draping
the corner of the’ sheet over one
shoulder
PRAYERS OUGHT
TO BE CHEERFUL
It may be that little children fear
the. loneliness of sleep They are
alone in that dreamland where no-
body can follow They say, "Now I
lay me," and talk of dying What
a pity that little plea cannot be
changed to something more cheer-1
ful
A shoe is significant, to get down
in one place may result in sciatic
pain For example, waitresses and into the depths of psychology. It
clerks who have long hours of means readiness. So stop worrying,
standing often adopt a posture in Maybe Johnny just loves those shoes,
which they throw the weight on one I They probably represent some very
leg and throw out the hip This happy experience he has had in
puts strain on te large muscles of j them. . . .
the buttocks, which is reflected on 1 would not let him get too fixed"
the nerve Sciatica may result sun 0n you. That is natural, too But
me nerve Sciatica may result Sim-the truth is that a child too depend-
ent on mother the token of com-
fort. may take it on to adolescence
ilar effects follow flat feet
Sometimes sciatica is associated
with chronic constipation, either
from pressure of the loaded bowels,
or from absorption of toxic mate-
rials which affect the nerve.
and maturity He should be able
to see you share four affection and
your time with others.
Mother fixation, more likely to
Serious exposure to cold or to | happen to boys than girls, is a source
wet may set up inflammation of the.°f real trouble I have known of i
cases where grown boys refused to
dress themselves and depended on
their mothers to do IL Not com-
tissue surrounding the nerve This
will spread to the covering of the
nerve, and the result is sciatic pain
The doctor who understands this
condition whl examine the patient,
making a number of interesting
tests which will prove to him wheth-
er the pain is due to the sciatic
nerve. He will also examine the
back for any extraordinary curving |
of the spine, or any pressure that
might result from bones in t’h e
wrong position He will study the
legs for any signs of spasms of the
muscles or of wasting, and he will
test the effect of raising the leg in
a straight position while the patient i
is lying flat on his back This nat- I
urally puts streess on the large |
hamstring muscles and they, in
turn, refer it to the nerve.
This sign is also used to find out
whether or not there is any trou-
ble in the sacro-iliac joint By map-
ping out areas of tenderness in the
mon. but not uncommon either.
But a shoe—just forget it. Johnny |
is all right
Yours sincerely,
OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON,
A COMPLETE STOCK
OF FANCY & STAPLE
GROCERIES & MEATS
GIVE GLASSMANN’S YOUR
NEXT ORDER A DELIGHT-
FUL PLACE TO TRADE.
Glasmann’s
Cro. & Mkt.
1011 so. Ttb St.
IT’S CHOI. AT GLASMANN’S
(Continued On Page 14)
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 67, Ed. 2 Friday, August 4, 1939, newspaper, August 4, 1939; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1631225/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Public Library.