Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Feb. 9, 1946, edition 1 / Page 4
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lipnlurraon Baity Bispatrlf Established August 11. 191* Published l\ei% Alternooli Fvepl Sunday by Establish. I VuiiU.t I ’• '911 IIENIH It >ON l»|s| \ It II tO. IM 10:1 t ouug street hum:Y A >i-:tl K',:: ,\| L I ■ ■ • I I ! 1 I’llOM " Fall SO® Husiiu s UHice 1 h<- 11. :m« i I'-" >' t)i'P-lU’h i , - . d : i. s .mil AI ’ Ft at rev, ' . * ‘ j • j t., , \ • . i •; d : 1t - 1111 i _ i lit 3y t*n all ns nut u1 and . SI HSl Hit* 1'ION H U1> CARRIER l’Htd\ b.vY in City erf Henderson. Payable to Carrier or direct to office at l! * r Calendar Week No month.y or other rate is MAH SI R >N - Payable in advance. 1 ye-r six months $3 , 3 - Plt C ; y nc h: Si May Be The Straw ■: 1— tenef Set . ct try bie Pres id U ' KUwm Pa ile> is u - eeretary of th* thal will bre..k Hie amei i nek tht' quest i n : - Vet M kes .- n tins m the cabinet. He - • ne . t the few ..... ©veil entou ■ rain ing ;n the official fa in i y. and there has beei ittle gin tg as t lung he v. stick. ■ posing Pauley after Mr. Truman hau sent up the >• .munition. That was a bold mu' - i ■ any t a! ut mem ber. ami am -v.t .-eeir. to hav e ee eased 1 >y • > .'ves. . . • . back ing his ■ - - ; ■ '■ v ' 1" draw he- an , by Ins remark that ■ !, T cell < ■ ' . i .. a- weil as the rest of as, as the news Hern ram The . a. a., e Mr T a.• :■ < hist April ha- : , ■. i ■ ■ ■ ■ • 1 c. In ■ everal instance not i. r removed from the cal " boon ©pea ted trivia ’bbaa : iesign atii'H - .:: 'a . I an all: tomary v. ith hi 1 xecuttv.es, anti i ■ Par . a : r .a . that tills time tl'a u been alt lost a clean sween -i r.a intei.'ir p- . has been occupied by it ..nr.- early in the Roost t ." ged along doggedly and may absorb a lot of dnferen •>.'< of viewpoint even . it xeeedingly rare for one in in- p" ilion to challenge his ablet t pa-stly mb ft away with it. Public Should Know • ' ■.111 i <_ Jipe, in ‘do ns is true --f • .'c-i'ythum thm hns to ] (* P. , : : i, ■ i.‘ have an idea there •..'III be ie illusionment for :'!•»•! i. will be more or U■ - a- i ~ witness the fact Hi..: firs’ construction t : C iiill ! ioo' | •. Ili'.rol but pi .... ■ In other wor<is. the o'. . : :;t ■ bent ipon going into tin i uisiness, and dam mi n ' ■ i iters is 1.1 ei oi.o..1,i. ■ ■. ’i: yet that ha been bn- :.■:■•! ■ strongest ap peal t.. iiiany people l:p and dowr the stream. The public dmuld know what is in the c,.rd . In ■ mneetion with thi Roanoke project much has beer said about TVA in Tennessee. Now it so happns that a few weeks ag< there was a considerable floor around Chattanooga, hub of th: TVA development. At the time i was at its worst, two visitors wen in Chattanooga to select a site to a new veterans' hospital to be buil there. They were introduced at Kiwunis luncheon by a former pres ideal of the chamber of commerce who remarked: “We had 33 site under consideration. During the pas two days the flood has eliminate eight of them.” In addition, th Chattanooga News-Free Press sair “These eight sites mentioned by M: Brown are part of a general pictui of hundreds of line factory site under water today and unsalabl With, i.t .. a *’■ fits ’ i ho c ity Ami ! !oi'it i i tied t ;. o' on made nn-i i • a- part . t th • v also ut rv V All we know .1 ut haw ' -fltablo TV A h is i >e< \nd it leatl a t i 1. • that Roanoke proicot won't be anv m >re I itlfltalile, V. :ti)• ' It elm U.t I. 'IT f. taw . th ' I'-.' \ h.i ■ 'H Thi Columbia i s.i State recently . ir : ied an edit' rial oil the; subject, an.i about the . .a i" I- "authoritie pn nosed ail i'iit tile eoimtiy m ; ■ similar eharaeter. "1 be editorial m it* hi be* *•! .ft i'< \ '.'fit.. minds an- ■*• i • b • -::<*>* v subject It w ■■ • . ntitled. * Int > the i !tide, .1 . great *,.y ■: ....ihoi t e n t i re co u n t ry. i i«k to 1 ' ' ' ■ for i enter i woe the i’einit -a V 1 ■ Authority 11a.. the TVa | .-ui\ cut I la. ' .Mine oat I ' a1 !.'■ ‘ i>r has it been a dram n the .*"■ - I eminent e . t tie tax; ■..> e: Its or. wa . we bed.- ■ . • ,c. not venture.* t- ela.m th e it ; nioiiey-ni.ikii . ron.w ta ;; Ik,it e-. - sibly the e>.te t" !• !"■ c x ponses .... figures l.v intc rest :: . Every ye: 11 yea to TVA has .- hi w: i a t ici!. i' ;ins : — ■ cover its eeiat and Olltki.e eM-c-a-e. oy ne.a:;. - I>011.000. In a. die tex-a ' . have paid states t re.. - ■ " ' ■ defied . ‘ kV \ '.a t .. v >U.U0> eight uthe; ... :o a aried anothei threatt ne .: ’. ,....!• wd : must be . a w a . e .' ; i. . a - ploymea' . ■ a. -a a A a ' lai w.i uitiutis .... i i UP '■ the advocates "i bureau rata1 g. -em inent e- : The Uidy V...;. a- sn > -a. a ideologies individual imtiat ve, -. f- - an e. ill del lew u-:av. t in a 11 at. a, a 1 i a ! have gone w tin bu.Unt: country. :s a a the > < « ; -• ttt- w - e A e.', d’a - .go. : aea . ; e . in CongK i alia, tin vain to expect 'ti.it we ■ .u. '. to' ■ >> with eon.'iu a by w;,a:g e.:... -a- : dollars into die Hole. it' ,. t: a -' Wakes Chinese s....lier sin.uld be tue ... • chain: a a. : ashling . ...a. at . a , weight Hhat They Dill In War Breakthrough I I *| VK MOKI I) DIVISION Tin' division which h..inmero«- 1 V,, • ! ‘ | 1 i,V;.'t n! Frank! •« , ,. ,. i • • ,. j m‘,;I i •.. • ,i i r i i ».•!'i>piit i1 ANSWERS TO DAILY V^UIZ DISCHARGED - : nuel ■'>■ ntiie Tillolson. It Pays T> Advertise i no \\ A. i Way. GHAE IK. (.lie*Minnie lest 1 \Vh:.» * ion» in prtnce?' became V a hat i; Uh* K i• -\ t (hi .i I'mi.-i what t-»ft m» tames nr* ji,,. t. .jsci* ij-i ivii »om«ii t. « ».- m or. queen mother '.Vonls nt \\ iMlnm ,\ • .,j, {-nt . tl.ur is neither m the r.nl.i % \ J hn • cape I • lit i , . n.i the weak . j. . 1 • t • . .11 the month i ;, •; >ovvi iti some Stmi> ’. " tioiis. - iiv !*»yal 1a» I. i : 'ant m your ;; \ ,• ] i, : ;;pi'• • mt • ’ :.; of a social ' •u he : m- cany i .ate’ miensiv e Th« •:* ■: (loinin it I 16 p. ill :. , • tie • .ofiant. Hints on l li jin tte ■ < i 1 I , . i \ oi,r ■iii.ior while ■ • l’K ■ . .. wouhl h « llm ope for 'Mintl.i> ■ - . i * ■.. i t ■ i nieen ..vossful. ike . .!>. n | : • , v. y 111i ’ i nllSC Vi ' y ; i . kind. ii.u1 will be ■ ni ir manner. | \ .... exces.-ive , . aniv early 11 v . ' a in< will . • i • ■ Guard your On.- 'diuute list Insnors ■1 :c :• • . • .mil- acred to the llm.in l,' a n c c l - "da wile of the . . ■ : ai.ee .w..i;er is the ■ . . i c -c • .mg. and queen on is the i A Lift For Today ■ ■ i-a rei. •• pudge one an . .!'<■: p. judge this ■ m iiat no n..m put a stumb r. . . .u.y ,, asi.m to fell in ■.... - wav. Hot:.all.- 14:13. Our Kalher, may out thoughts of ethers lie tolerant and gracious. I A Job for Jenny j /'ai/’h Ba/dcOin Copyright. 1944 1945 by Faith Baldwin Cuthrefl * V** # # J # / # ^ NSTRIBTTFP BY KING FRATH-TS SYNTj-jATg__ CHAPTER FOURTEEN “I,'' SAID Stove lt.irt- -n, ' am an ! entirely n< gative ; ers n.” "Mea".."..'.” said Mary, "that you! alv ays s.iy no?" She H- 1 again. Looking up., seeii ' 1 then ! id t en the first I Interest ng thing that Jiad h ip pened t !.er for a long time. She j couldn't u ilyze it. Ht ■ is n t par ticularly unusual in appearance.! Yt • i. re was s m tl ng 1 ud and a; . f about lum whaii attracted and chal! ngt . her imagii ition. Jenny h en that, t o. He had changed, sh tl ht unhappily. Naturally he a ild, after his ex perien ;es, tin i yt' she ha ! nt t ex pect 1 tint he would- toward her. She Hushed, remembering how she had whiffed across the room and flung herself at him. His greeting ha?.'been amused, but hardly im passioned. She could not under stand it. She and Steve . . pepper and salt, ham and eggs, brandy and soda, anything that went together. She felt as if she were back in her gangling days, pursuing a kindly but bored and impatient young man who looked upon her as an irritat ing young sister. He looked at her now across the table. He said, “Jenny, you've grown up.” Mary asked, "Did you expect her to remain 18, or whatever she was? After all, she’s being exposed to an intensive course in—maturity." She looked fleetingly at her brother, who was talking to Ede. Justice sat next to Jenny, but he had turned a little away from her. Jenny's chin went up. She didn't like that remark, nor the tone, nor the thoughtful regard Steve ac corded her. Mary said, “Tell us i something about your experiences, or would you rather not, Dr. Bar ton?” He smiled at her amiably. He said, “I’d much rather not. Suppose you tell me about yours?” Mr. Hathaway cut in. He said, “Mary, you are forgetting your duties as hostess. Have you dined, doctor—and won't you, if you haven't? How about a drink?” Steve said, "I've dined, thanks, , but I could do with a drink.” Almost everyone—Mr. Hatha way, Mary, the Richardses, and ‘ even Howard Morgan—were con t centrating on Steve. Jenny felt as - flat as last night's champagne. She felt out of it. There was the begin ning of a pouf in her mind. This 1 was quite different from what she i had expected when she had learned that Steve would soon be coining home. There was something sharpei s about him, the quick laughter had t gone, the warmth she had known 1 and counted on, all her days. He was very nearly a stranger, this young man, sitting there, hiding ' his right hand. He couldn't hide it all the time. He reached for the e- glass they brought him and she saw s the si iff fingers, the drawn flesh . the sear ruiming up the wrist, hid Jen, eventually, by his cult. Mary looked, too. She spoke and j.-nny 'heard her. She asked care U sslv, "You aren't going to let that throw you?" It was the right thing to say, ap pai( ntly, no sympathy, just a ques- j :;on that was almost a statement.! Steve smiled, lopsidrdiy. He an 3Wi n J, "Mo, I suppose not.” Jenny drank some black coffee. She h< ird Justice say to Ede, "The returned hero seems to have made in impression upon ray exacting sister.” and heard Ede laugh. Then she heard something else. Justice 1< wered his voice, but there was a little cone of silence around Jenny at the moment. The others talked and laughed together, and Justice and Ede conducted their personal conversation. She was alone, and she could hear. Ede asked, "Do you never think of Boston, Justice, and the wind across the Common, and how cold it was, and how afterward we—?” lie said sharply, "I told you it was one of the things we’d forget. A mistake on both sides. Too dan gerous. Too—unrewarding.” It wasn't much. It was enough. They had been in Boston together. They had . . . Jenny’s throat tightened. She thought she must weep or scream. She thought she must rise and leave this room, gee away, by her self, try to think this out. But what was there to think? More impor tant, what was there to know? They might have met by acci dent, walking on the Common in the sharp wind. They might have— afterward—oh, gone somewhere, for a cup of tea, a cocktail. Harm less enough. They knew each other slightly. When you encounter peo ple you know slightly, suddenly and in another setting, you always be lieve you know them better than you do. You cry, "Well, for heaven’s sake!" You say, “Bet’s go and have a drink or something.” But Ede had never mentioned it. Ede hadn't been in Boston. Jenny’s hands grew cold. Ede had gone away—in April, wasn't it?—to visit a friend in Worcester, for a week-end. She had come back, full of stories about Edna and her pretty home and her twins. She could have gone to Edna's, and then to Boston. Jenny's heart grew as cold as her hands. She remembered the girl on the bus, Agnes Simpson, who said she hadn’t seen Ede for a month, at a time when Ede had reported spending an afternoon with her. She remembered the parked car at the empty lot. She remembered Charlotte saying she had seen Jus tice and Ede in Boston and then correcting herself quickly—it might have been someone who looked like Ede, she’d amended. She remem bered Justice asking about Ede very casually. How far had it gone ? How mucii did it mean, to Ede? That it mcanl anything to Justice, Jenny coulc not believe, She forced herself U ook at him. He was still the same, ilmost indecently attractive. But all she had felt for him, the half laughing, half-grave, wholly excit ing appeal he had had for her, was gone. That hadn’t meant anything, .ithor, she told herself stubbornly, hut it had been—oil, fun, an ac •e'.eratcd heartbeat, and something to look forward to when you rose in tlie morning and set about the business of getting ready to go to work. Ede, she thought passionately, how could you ? Ede was married. She was mar ried to a man who was overseas fighting, sweating it out in drip ping jungles, sleeping with fear, waking to it . . . tortured by heat and insects, facing, by day, by night, an implacable, almost sub human enemy. Dick Ainslee was a real nerson. He was a fine man. He was terribly ‘n love with his wife. He merited her love, her fidelity. There was a sudden commotion over toward the bar door, which created a diversion. Even Steve and Mary looked up from their smiling absorption in or.e another. Steve, his drink warming and relaxing him, was having a pretty good time. He was home. And he waa with strangers. That was better. You eased into things that way. Too many friends, commiserating, that was bad. and very hard. Jenny', for instance, her child's face flushed with happiness, her eyes radiant. Just a kid. . . . He’d always been fond of her. But he didn’t want peo ple he was fond of, at tAe moment. Except, of course, his father. And his father’s condition lay like a bur den upon his mind and heart. It quickened him with anger and re bellion. Not for himself . . . but for the older man. Why did that have to happen to a man like Bert Barton, a whole and useful man? As for himself, his duty lay clear. It was distasteful, it wasn’t what he had planned nor wanted, but there it was. He owed it to his father. And he had thought, grim ly, earlier in the evening, and no back talk to myself about sacri fices. I’m sacrificing nothing. My hand sees to that. What else could I do even if Dad were himself? Mary asked, "What In the world is going on?" He liked Mary. He had not met her before, although he had seen her briefly on several occasions be fore he went away. He hadn't seen a woman like her since. . . . You didn't see women like Mary where he'd been. She was all the things— well, some of them—that you thought about, out there. . . . She wasn’t the friendly, warm, close things that meant home, the moth ering things, the consoling. She was the other side of the picture, enter tainment, lightness, and that much overworked word "glamor.” A little hard, as he himself had become hard. That was all right, too. Sex and mentality in a pretty package. (To Ue Coutiuued) DAiLY CROSSWORD AC KOSS 2. Tie same _’l H.i • .mail 1. Dcnotum ' L. > bad the mi i i 'at "if 22. P. ■ -i' 1 ■ part -t.Cuu,:.' 3 W r.ctian 4. Sack koai.-'iy !•! idge 7. Lose It's. 3. Seien'.n 1 C- ■ I ■.i ne.ss m !er nattng 5. Ails, at *’• L sti ..<■ : eonjure tee. 10. L !y...:. ! v 7 I:. - 25 Kuiopean 11. Take givat country ,], | ji.t mi 0 to u dv 27 Enthusiastic 1 cslrrd.ij's Answer 13. C untry V Strange dvv./.oe 52 Part of X Eune'e 1-’ IX u : 20 Idan.iof "to be" 15. Guide's' II S -ak Jla\ S. Central 1 Kind of nut highest r.e•.. U1 Ci it .. a P.a uie <> Either one 16. River .dips 1 Slunilni of the bears (Eng.) l>"tto:n I A round of ds Furnish 17. Affirmative 20. Thirsty applause w ith gear reply IS. Coin (Chin.) 19. A darling 20. Moveable barrier 22. Wide 25. Foiehea ds 2i). Ik eezy 27. Fat. ftO t..e ( S. , e t 2s. Sun g.-d 29. Salt i e!n m. i CO. Tliin silk (Clan, i GO. Antlered animal 25. Sharp coi nered 27. Tempest 29. Got 1 e n s e.f peai e 40. ii 41. Ell'.p'e v . 42 Mauisti.it > i Turk, i 43. Chart DOW N l.N- K: ■ lan l stat ■ CIIYPTOQl O CP—A eryptograin (piotation Q J P Q C P K Z ft E V X J U C W C X F V P Q X U O X Y Y. XV Z L Q X E Z O F Z E X F X 1 ¥ V r X Y Y — I X P V J P. Yesterday's t'ryptoquote: ALL SLANG IS METAPHOR. AND all METAPHOR IS POETRY—CHESTERTON i — nil uted 1. Km.: Filituii.s Syndicate. Inc SALLY'S SALLIES [{<• -istered L'. S. Patent Office. P——" ’ 1 — . I “Joe. dear, you’ll miss that Wanna-Go-Home rally T Tune in Mutual Network System Wednesday night 8: !d to :) for the "Fresh Ip Show." McPIIURSON BROS. B1CVERAGE COMPANY ANP ALL THRU FEBRUARY! <?fotc.-U!cde, l/a£ue4.... ~7bx> Cjaoti to WUM.! B. H. MIXON CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER •‘Builds Better Buildings" Building, Painting, Roofing and General Repairing PHONE 7 TODAY’S Ceiling Prices Ay’} TYPICAL OPA CEILING PRICES FOR MARKET BASKET ITEMS Grade A, large eggs, (Group 1 Stores), doz. aac Grade A, large eggs, (Group 2 Stores), doz. an 2c may be added for carton per dozen. Apples, Western varieties, ^ per pound . 15 1 Tomatoes (except _ hothouse), lb.‘■"c Every cent you pay over ceiling prices helps cause inflation . . . Check ceiling prices every time you shop and don’t pay more. v V
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 9, 1946, edition 1
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