Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, March 27, 1942 Page: 4 of 8
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~TDE GLANCES
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D. R. HARRIS, President and General Marager
T. N. McCARTY, Business Manager
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nights and harried days.
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OUT OUR WAY
By J. R. WILLIAMS
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
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THE war sag
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“Sergeant, you will tell your girl friend that the chevrons
on your sleeve are sufficient to denote your rank!”
HE GOT THAT TAN
TAKIN) A VACATION IN
NO SACRIFICE TOO GREAT—BUT!
This is no time for niggling over mat-
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f ME MAVS' AIN'T
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Egypt.
5 Long fish.
6 Symbol lor
aluminum.
7 British Co-
lumbia
(abbr.).
8 High
mountain.
9 Bridle strap.
10 Pertaining to
birth.
11 Not (prefix).
a sideshow
center.
30 Part of a whip
32 Shed tears.
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-OLIVE ALMOS‘ KILT>
AT GAL UDE RESCUED,1
BECAUSE SHE THOUGHT
< 1 WAS IN LOVE )
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13 Bay window.
14 Free from dirt
16 Nickname for
Edward.
18 Sick.
20 Hole.
21 Dad.
22 Clamor.
24 Falsehood.
26 Backs of
necks.
28 Technical
(abbr.).
29 Celestial body
31 Path.
32 Tooth of a
wheel.
33 Article.
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53 ;
We know that only he who accepts sur-
render is beaten.—Queen Wilhelmina of the
Netherlands.
(abbr.).
55 Move sidewise
57 Limb.
58 Becs’ cells.
VERTICAL
2 Stop!
47 Form cf
philosophy
(pl.).
49 Distorted.
51 Pint.(abbr.).
52 End.
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“It says here that we’re gonna have to give up our luxuries
till the war's over.”
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SO THEY SAY
Men of fhe production line dare do no
less than men of the battle line.—War Pro-
duction Board Donald M. Nelson.
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But i HAM NOT
, IM LOVE UDIT' AT
GAL,B‛CAUSE OF
UHAT HAMHOCK
BONES, The
DEFECTIvE,TOL‛
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By Galbraith
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36 Declaration of
truth.
37 Before.
39 Still.
41 Insect.
42 Drink slowly.
43 Young woman
45 Not old.
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"It used to bc we couldn't sleep, waiting for our daughter
to come home but now that her friends can’t have their
cars, we can't sleep until they go home!
191
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Henderson Daily News
Published Every Afternoon (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning By
• 1
3-27
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/
5"",*
...
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ters of definition. President Roosevelt says Golfers, grumble not at the ban on golf balls.
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MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
Entered -econd class matter P. O in Henderson, Texas, Act Congress, Mar. 3, 1879
HE SEZ SHE IS
NOTHIN' BUT A
BLAST ID —r
y-
ISANDSTAYPlEs 34 Devour.
—----------------- ।---------1 3, One of his
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• 25 PLVO-
Don’t worry, compass or no compass,
I'm taking these Army planes the right way
now.—Douglas (Wrong Way) Corrigan, af-
ter joining Army Air Corps.
We d’el’t expect any more because mon-
ey isn’t worth much now because everything]
is so high priced.—Roger Bopenberger and
Fritz Elliott, Milwaukee 12-year-olds, writ-
ing Treasury Secretary Morgenthau for per-
mission to sell defense stamps.
FUNNY BUSINESS
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SOUTH AMERICA!- 7
HOLD it// -OH,BOY!
--—-U TOO LATE/J
)ANK
6y-qnaWhecler
This lovely panel, “The Angel's
Salute To Mary", is needlework
you’ll treasure as an Inspiration
and an heirloom. Embroider ’he
cross-stitch lettering and the
singel and outline stitch motifs
surrounding it, in richly colored
floss. Pattern 284 contains a
transfer pattern of a 10 x 13 inch
panel; illustrations of stitches;
color chart; materials required.
(Please Note New York Address.)
Sent ten cents (plus one cent
to cover cost of mailing) for this
pattern to Henderson Daily News,
Needlecraft Dept., 82 Eighth Av -
nue, New York, N. Y. Write plain-
ly Pattern Number, your Name
and address.
13
/-I MIGHT LOSE ME
( JOB AS ADMIRAL
( OF THE SPINACHOVA
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he does not find the American people com-
placent or apathetic toward our war effort.
Let’s concede that by his definitions of the
adjectives Mr. Roosevelt is correct. Let’s
even accept the definitions.
So what? So the public’s attitude to-
ward the war effort still leaves too much to
be desired. A newspaperman after wander-
ing through almost half of the United States
since Pearl Harbor, and talking with folks
of just about every sort, has had certain
conclusions forced upon him as to the pub-
lic's frame of mind. For whatever they may
be worth, here they are:
Most of our people are demanding that
this nation shall give and work and suffer
to the limit of the other fellow's capacity
for endurance.
On the whole, our people believe that
no sacrifice can be too great to defeat the
axis, as long as it does not interfere with
personal comfort and pleasure.
We concede that, with the Far East cut
off, there isn’t rubber enough for civilian
use after military need has been supplied.
But each feels that he has a peculiar need
which, in his own instance, calls for an ex-
ception. The same is true of most of the
major shortages.
The West Coast has been all upset about
the menace created by huge Japanese popu-
lations living and working close to vital war
plants. It demanded that they be removed.
But when Washington sought a new locale
for the enemy aliens, communities and whole
states clamored loudly against having the
little brown men moved in on them.
Labor unions weer among the earliest
and loudest in expressing their hatred for
the Hitler-Mussolini brand of totalitarian-
ism, and in promising their all to help pre-
serve democracy. But when the showdown
is here, double pay for Sundays, jurisdiction-
al authority, ideological considerations seem
more important than planes.
Capital appreciates that the American
system is doomed unless we defeat the axis.
Yet the unwritten books are filled with spe-
cific instances in which industries have been
and still are delaying all-out production, be-
cause they fear their investments may be
rendered obsolete by new processes and new
sources of supply.
The list could be extended and particu-
larized, and always the story would be the
same. We’re all awake more or less to the
danger. We all concede the war can be lost.
We all insist the war must be won. We all
demand sacrifices, up to the moment when
they ring our own personal door bells and 1
invite themselves into our own homes. I
Before this war is won. stern necessity i
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NOT TOO FOND FAREWELL
Cease complaining, girdle-less ladies.
FAST AS IT _
JWORR•
T UORR-
(THA’S ALL
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38 Uproar.
40 Drag.
41 Some.
44 Roman.
45 Footed vase.
48 Edge.
50 Jewels.
53 Bend.
54 Sphere.
55 Therefore,
56 Out of
(prefix).
. 57 Part of “be."
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AM
I A WOMAN CAN FURNISH
A ROOM OUT OF HER
POCKETBOOK , BUT IT’S
GOIN’ TO BE FUNNIER
STILL TO SEE ’EM ROOTIN’
AMONOST CALIPERS, MI-
CROMETERS AN’ WRENCHES
FER PENNIES TO PAY
TH’ TAX.*
For Quick Results Try a News Classified Ad!
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PROPELLER FACTORY!...
SPUTT-TT’- I‛LL PUT
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Moan not, motorists, that you cannot re-
tire. A far greater blw has been struck at
American civilization. Music may have the
charm to soothe savage beasts, but not the
dogs of war. Production of juke boxes will
be stpped. The government says so. Juke
box materials are needed for planes.
After the present supply runs out, no
more beer hall Brahms and Bach, no filling
station fugues. No more "Rose O’Day” and
"Deep in the Heart of Texas” with your
steak and onions. Once more platters will
be something upon which food is served.
12318
222
23
29
is going to teach us national sacrifice is
made up of the individual give-until-it-hurts-
like-hell sacrifices of each of our more than
130 million men, women and children. Un-
till that lesson is learned, there is going to
be a lot more bad news to cause us sleepless
—-16762
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Read Classified Ada. It Pays. '
W’orld righta reserved
Comr. 1042, Kine FearirerSyndicate, Ine .
NO, I THINK THIS WILL V
CURE ’EM OF TRUCKIN’
-BY TH’TIME SHE GITS
THAT THING PULL OP
BOLTS, WASHERS,NUTS
AN’ WRENCHES SHE’LL /
NEED WHEELS ON IT' /
BOY, A CHISEL AIN’T /
LIKE A LIPSTICK.'
■....... ■
15 Coverings.
17 Female deer.
19 Obscure.
21 Writing tool.
23 Mass cf ice.
24 Haze.
25 Wage,-.
27 Footways,
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Ne' a z
THE NEW MAN OF BATAAN
Americans can never forget the stand
of Gen. Douglas MacArthur on Bataan, but
we may be cheering a new hero of that Phil-
ippine Alamo before we set the Rising Sun.
MacArthur wisely left his friend ami chief
assistant, Maj. Gen. Jonathan H. Wain-
Wainwright, a native, of Walla Walla,
wright, in command.
Wash., won the Distinguished Service Med-
al in the last war and more than once proved
he was no milksop soldier in the Philippines.
MacArthur presented him with the Distin-
guished Service Cross for getting most of
his men to Bataan. Since MacArthur left,
Wainwright has jabbed off Jap attacks, one
on the day MacArthur’s arrival in Australia
was announced. We can do all right with 1
Wainwright.
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, March 27, 1942, newspaper, March 27, 1942; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1497160/m1/4/: accessed June 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.