Honey Grove Signal-Citizen (Honey Grove, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, January 29, 1943 Page: 4 of 8
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ning the war.
.........-.....
THANKS
TO
you
<C
SSlllORLO
PRCLIGIOR
v UJ.UJ.R CIO
Our sincere thanks go to you, our friends, for
the piiicitCc auu understanding you have given
us this past year of traveling under wartime
conditions.
\‘
MWMt,
Thanks for your kindness in postponing unnec-
essary trips during the Holidays. Your unselfish-
ness enabled thousands of Uncle Sam’s boys to
visit their loved ones.
Church iHwrdu and agencies
interested in sending religious
workers among the men and
women in various defense and
industrial areas in New York
State have l>een moved to in-
crease their activity by re-
ports of increased delinquency
of juveniles made public by a
special committee rejiorting
to the New York State Social
Welfare Board. This commit-
tee pointed ot that during the
first six months of> 1942, in
thirteen war and industrial
counties in northern New
York, juvenile delinquency in-
creased by 22 per cent; child
neglect by 39 per cent; and
the first admission of chil-
tumt) for rnb»xati«*n and
pleuftant MMt’tal activities, you
buy UmmiC *a;d the
lion Charles I*. Taft, assis-
tant director, IVfense Health
and Welfare Service, in
shaking to church leaders
recently. "Without them, you
get bad morale for the I toys
in service who have to live in
discomfort and Unredom, and
you get Industrial turnover
and less war production. May -
be they should pay no atten-
tion and keep going, hut they
don’t, and they are patriotic,
too. That situation created
the need for our Itecreation
Section. The nation on the
whole has met the need lor
soldier recreation through the
USO and the remarkably fine
job hundreds of communities
have done in open-hand hos-
* * . *, ■
that ttu iaIAc t* ..
hi. in h', rare* •
approves. Its Itwsie psincipic
4*q*r-' • *
The I’rcRtcT Vi*» York
KntrraUiin otrhurrhw. thru ** of Irr
Hocretary Uolart W. Searln,
Is canvassing the churches of
New York s live Imroughs to
see what institutions are clos-
ing or limiting their service
tiecRUae of luck of oil or other
fuel this winter. Where such
a situation exists, the Feder-
ation expects to find other
parishes in the same ffcr.crr,!
neighl>oriioods where congre-
gations and organizations can
temporarily" double up” by
staggering hours of services.
It has been suggested that in
many other communities,
large and small, eongieg«i-
tions and their service groups
can similarly "double up” for
the remainder of the winter
pitality. Off tne comment jn the best equipped and best
we haven’t done too well.
These constructive activities
help reduce the menaces to
health and moral fibre which
every war produces.”
heated of r group of churches.
Fellowship among races and
equality of racial opportunity,
such as was expressed in the
early Christian church and is
all Common sense sanclionn
It teaches us that the color of
the skin, the slant of the eyf,
or the sha|H* of the head arc
absurd and precarious ivwtei.
for claims of racial sujm ri
orfty..... Man must be
treated as man, ajwirt from
race and birth and color."
"Ministers w h o operate
‘marriage millr' for pecuniary
gain prostitute their holy call-'
ing and merit severe rebuke,”
says the Board of Social Mis-
sions of the Lutheran Church
in advising against haat> and
mixed marriages due to the
emotional strain and stress of
the war. Such marriages, the
Board liedarrs, "promise a
new’ wave of domestic diffi-
culties and divorces. . . . The
church can render a singular
service to couples contemplat-
ing matrimony by providing
wise counsel and wholesome
1116 TirSt aUIIliiSSlUIl Ui villi®* | ‘ <U IV vlli i^iiaii vii ui tii caiiij *,rv v /uu* vi aim
jdren to foster care by 33 per| The Methodist Federation again aiqiearing as an essen-jChristian influence.”
is
We are aware of the annoyances you may have had in traveling this
.
past year. Reservations may have been hard to make. You may have
had to stand and wait for a seat in the dining car... and other
inconveniences. Thanks for taking it all like good Americans.
JOB
We promise you in 1943 to try and make your essential wartime
travel as near normal as possible.
m1'
"Btof 0?Hon£ *20ax 2IW&
and Sta*Hfc4-
PRINTING
i PACIFIC
m
. d , v
■.iiJF,
THE TEXAS AND PACIFIC RY,
The Air You Breathe
By Dr. Victor G. Heiser.
Today we can usually tak*
it for granted*that the water
and milk we drink and the
food we eat are protected
against the presence of harm-
ful bacteria.
Our public water supplies
____ _i i _•„ J! a. . i a. i.;ii l____
ait; uiiuiiiiatcu iu ivm naim-
l*ul bacteria. Our milk is pas-
teurized in order to destroy
all disease-causing bacteria
which might find their way
into "nature’s most perfect
food.”
And our solid foods, be they
frozen, or fresh, arc
prepared for public consump-
tion under the most cleanly
conditions to keep out the
“germs.”
But how about the air we
breathe ?
Air-Borne Enemies
It is now known that some
disease-causing bacteria and
viruses can remain suspended
in the air for an indefinite
period.
It is possible to catch a
IS M - «•- «> 0* A amI «*
CilKIr *UI !«1»UM1CC# UMI Vfil/ uy
direct contact with a person
who has one, but by breath-
ling in the infection fittm the
air into which told-causing
.Hrganlsms lujve been dis-
charged.
Experiments have shown
gSpMMMS other Hum the
rornroon coid (hid toil tie
jillWMIlit I 1 via the §k mile
etfr such infwcliens as --o*ali-
pox, influenza, and pneu-
monia, and some of the mala-
dies of childhood such as
measles, mumps and chicken-
pox.
Defense Against Infection
If disease-causing infection
floats through the air and
may at any time be present in
the air we breathe, what de-
fenses can we put- up to pro-
tect ourselves against it?
First, keep up your bodily
resistance by keeping fit. Eat
enough of the right kinds of
food, get plenty of sleep in
order to keep rested, get a
little exercise each day, take
cold baths or showers follow-
ing your regular bath to
toughen you up, and get as
much sunshine and fresh air
as you can.
Air the rooms you live in
frequently and thoroughly in
order to replace air that
might be germ-laden with
new, fresh air from outdoors.
Keep your skin scrupu-
lously clean. Infection can en-
ter the blood-stream through
the smallest imaginable cut
and attack you from within.
Pay particular attention to
your hands. Always wash
them before eating.
But perhaps- a new defense
we have today Mgauiat infec-
tion in Mm air may be found
in a discovery mad* recently
by iiudinU acknca and now
feaiflf dnMiliMWM by induct r>
Injection I m Ail
Si hai <»• <i< ii now i rat«»i
that a lamp which is similar j
in many respects to the fa-
miliar “sunlamp,” but which
gives out ultraviolet rays of j
shorter length, will kill or in- j
hibit harmful bacteria and
viruses that may be in the
air. It is installed above reg-
ular light fixtures in a room. I
j Hospitals have for somej
i time been using germicidal i
] lamps in operating rooms toj
kill infectious agents in the
air. But not until recently
has wide success been re-
ported in the use of such
lamps in purifying the air in
places where people gather,
work, and live.
Conquering the
Common Cold
One department store in-
stalled germicidal lamps and
recently reported that, “after
the installation, no new colds
developed among our office
employes.”
Experiments have been
made in dormitories of an
Eastern school which show
that students who were ex-
posed to the air-borne germs
in classes all day, but who
breathed air protected by
germicidal lamps all night,
contracted lower colds. Other
equally interesting tests have
been made.
The eradication of the com
rnofieold may eventually com*
frown t ufitbii.sLon of PIevan
tivi ms—nr—, inninding pn§»!
sad) Mm irlditfrimif sn nf |
mmmkMm lamps in tnmma,
We specialize in job printing
of any kind. It will be to
your advantage to figure
with us on your next order,
whether it is large or small,
before you buy. Special at'
tent ion is given every job
that comes into our office.
Give us a trial on your next
order and you will be pleased
with our prompt service.
SIGNAL-
CITIZEN
f,. ■
____
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Thompson, Harry. Honey Grove Signal-Citizen (Honey Grove, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, January 29, 1943, newspaper, January 29, 1943; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth699801/m1/4/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Honey Grove Preservation League.