The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 174, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 11, 1930 Page: 2 of 4
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|i|(l i|'Wl|lll| l
hold It
mw*m.
reflection upon the
firm or eotnaw
_ 111 ooIwbm of The
4 " ly corrected apon
m
i
HÍBBS
uasma tbk rat holes
o«£X ■/
By vote of to 6Í the T^xas
house' of representatives declared
j tor the old prison policy oí1 "keep-
ing the rat holes open."
♦That Is, they defeated the admin-
istration measure which called for
MN location of an industrial prison
plant within a radius of 70 miles
of Graves of Williamson
county calling for the rehabilita-
tion of the walls at Huntsviile.
This alter three day* Of debate.
"Keeping: the rat , holes open"
ohould appeal to the thinking ap-
paratus of the voter as it touches
pocket directly every year. Rep.
l«urry N. Gravee ot Williamson
county has bottled against the cen-
lral Texas prisen location plan ear-
gjjgr and late. ..JDHII
Rep. Luké Mankin of Williamson
county has rendered Graves aid
asd encouragement. Sep. Svgone
OUes of Travis county stood at ali
time* with the bitter-ender .
From first until last "keeping the
est holes open" has cost the, -tax-
payer* of Texas million* of dol-
the policy of "keeping the rat
is to prevail tí will,
«ontinoo to coot the tax payers of
TllUO millions Of dOlla>>. ,
Where do w* go from here?
*WBAJUXG
OP
l'KlSU
> FAKM
money in petroleum?
reason for asking the
?g?«
1 Williams shot hi mess*
straight front the shoulder. Hfe
said that unless cotton acreage was
reduced the south would continue
to sutler agricultural depression
and would bs threatened with eco-
nomic catastrophe.
There are i! milords and banker*
and merchante .ill-'powerful tn the
MP
cbtton districts of all the cotton
states.
United tor- the acreage reduction
program the landowners and ,the
banker and 'the merchants 'could
accomplish wonders-- and perhaps
prevent the threatened "economic
catastrophe' predicted by the cot-
Ipn representativo of the federal
farm relief board.
A KOHTH CAUOLUiA FKNCE
% iudku
Gov. - O. Max Gardner of North
Carolina knows his onions—hi* po^
Utical onions. He has announced
that ho wotrid consider it "highly
improper" to take part in the ap-
proaching democratic primary. ¿'
There is a high fence in the po-
of Austin add declared fo^tke^mtfc^, ; ^^
in. other state* and Gov. Gorner
will mount the top rail of the fence
even at the cost of splitting bis
knfekera
8 Senator F, N. Simmons is loadi-
Ing the cause of the Hoover demo-
crats and J. W. Bailey, at one time
an anti-saloon league oracle, is
holding the flag for regulars. A
senatorshlp 1 at stake. Primary
election June 7.
Simmons rode the Hoover ele-
phant in 19%|; Bailey. *aa astride
of the democratic donkey in the
tost ditch fight. i "
A fence rider lsn?t a noble ex.-
periment. He 'is a noble mW]te lig-
are 09 j¿he top rail WhlleiSW furi-
ous processions are passing along.
KiADTBttriMT:
Me wtt*
■I létfhs di
jprooeedtop <0 V,
««ted horse!/ to the
to oktckmm,tolfr "
malee oü teUh the
te/a sahsfltato for
it hoMM*.' „a„ .,... ^
be settled, Pstrtoto «Ommoas her
family doctor to the hope DMtf h*
can expoas the lake tomtose of a. pe-
culiar operation tear. Jimmy Is m
victim ot aphaeto in4uocd I* tkaU
shock. '%■ " — ■ ■ ;
"< 0W GÓ OH WITH TUB 8TORY)
CHAI
ET us hope
; I there
Tjltere'a
question. Mep. Harry N. Graves
MLnr of his colleagues who
lit the prison location bill aré
that under the surtax;e ot
the earth on certsin prison farm
land* there are lakes of oil and
beds of sulphur awaiting the devel-
oping hand of man.
Of course the prison board is
without authority to lease ~ these
lands to prospectors for mineral
wealth. A bill has been introduced J the state, the salary of tKe flpver-
1 ■ ' ' ■ ¿ ■ :¿ ■ t •'
ñauo ofwcíalk and
thkiu pay --
Rep. HeDonaW of Waxahachle Is
"the gentleman from Ellis.' He
has introduced a. Mil slicing the sal-
aries of all Judges from the su-
preme qOprt . to the district one
thousand dollars. this without re-
gard to coi^r or creed' or previous
conditio^ of serviulde.
Lest we forget, the supreme court
Judges receive 18000 annually and
the district judge receives a sal-
ary' of $6000 per year. There's an-
other side to the picture. ' House
lawmakers and isenato lawmaker ;
as we'll are planning to pass a fee
bill where the infaximum salary
will be 112,000 year for a couhty
officials. ■ ' 1 '
To the . «hamo of the people of
clothing tó the board with author
ity. If these legislative ,couta who
know all about oil and sulphur and
«,.■ . and phosphates are men of
it'--' vision— they will push this leasing
right* hill over.
. Prison tanas comprise a total,
aerease, of W.000 or 90,000. If the
prospects for obtaining valuable
minerals aro rosy, why not get suf-
ficient money out ot the earth in
|is. tautng rights or in a gross produc-
tes to make the prison system
upporti ^.1 -'/.;■:' ■
lit othei v.v • , why not give the
money to tu ople and instead of
shipping it i New York and other
financial centers of the northern
Atlantic seaboard.
•• OV IN (XHTXJN acreage
, i'UNNmi
Carl Williams, cotton reproeenta-
tive of the federal farm board, trav-
from Austin to Jáckoon, Miss.,
a conference with the member
of the cotton acreage reduction
of the American Cotton
ive aaaoclatlon.
Wa there .action takent ^ Tes.
nor is >4000 a > year. If a district
judgá lant worth 5000 to the
people and to the cause of Justice,
bo Should, be relegated to-a Job in
tho nearest brick making plant,
and if a high court Judge isn't
worth *8000 a. year there is a rea-
son for Justice being- blindfloded
and choese paring legislative econ-
omists having an existence in this
vale of tears-
Ail business men and all corpor-
ations pay for bruins. Why should
not the people pay for brainoT■
TEXAS has a STATE AUDITOR
Texay has a state auditor, Moore
Lynn of Dallas is the official. He
1* not only the state auditor and
efficiency expert, but those who are
oloae tar him say that ha is not *
rubber stamp servant of the tax-
payer. •
1. He is an expert and Knows ho«
to go about K. His conArmation
was protested. There was a-pro-
tracted hearing. When the smoke
had cleared away «ame the an-
nouncement that the senate had
fox'U be chased
into the clear on this lap I" said
Dal lard. * he stepped ot>t on the
sidewalk and turned to give the girls
the customary assistance He looked
carefully around but could see noth-
ing of the Maxwell car.
The office of the doctor owstofc the
X-ray machino «ras on the
floor of a six-story building. To
r"acfe It one passed through a
lobby to an elevator with ornate fix-
" Inga
Pat and her party shot np
and let out at the fourth floor where
the X-ray doctor's suite was
A good-looking girt roe from a tele-
phone switchboard and received
them. Maxwell's party bad not yet
arrived. A moment later tho X-ray
doctor entered from an inner room
and greeted his old col lei
cordially. ' As they w<
hands Maxwell entered, fallowed by
the ^urse holding closely to tho arm
of her chartffc. A dock on tho «nil
• registered the Ume as 10:49,
"Everything Is ready for you. doc-
tor," said the hut physician, nod-
ding towaid the open door of the
room from which he had Just
emerged. "There's a screen across
the corner where the subject may un
dress." r
"Well, I Suppose we might as weU
get Started." sntd-Dr. Gardner, gtonc-
ing at the young man aad his urns*
■ The latter steered her charge quickly
across the room and through the
open doorway into tho X-ray apart-
ment where they disappeared behind
a large screen drawn across tho op-
posite corner. A moment later Dr.
Gardner; tLe office doctor and the one
Secured by Grierson crossed through
hito the X-nur room and closed th«
r door behind them. Without a word
MaxwtUl stepped over to the door
opening Into tho hall. With a bMd
on the knob ho turned,
"I'll be out la' the corridor
tog a cigar if anyone waate me," be
a perfunctory sort oí. a
doer and paased out, dosing tt softly
after hh. '
Rex Dallard looked at FM.
girt' face had gone a chalky white
and there #as a strained,
'u' light In the too-brlgtit eyes. He
; stepped over close to her, flashing at
the «ft e time a slgn^ glance at
: Margery. The latter moved
husky.
"rotwededl.™ "Just t
that—that rópin* poss ? into"the
next room with her—with that yfm*t
man ske-ehs gave me the
•—*. It was aocft a Strang*
R aw iincomrnisi inoli. so si ntgg
netto. Just Ilk that woman In Paris,
that Ledoro woman) It seemed to
be saying to mo: Ton wicked, un
natural girt—.you are denying your/
owp brother in his 1
need!' Oh, it's afi
knotrl" broke off Pat
interrupting h« own vivid r*olt
"Tjf «0 lt~l just over-wrought
honest b «e# Buu Pat
chid, you have, nevertheless, made a
|MhMMKÉ> 11 rtaws
the gasped out the
word and .Kith, its utterance her
shoulders suddenly sagged In s
trangely pathetic, helpless manner,
ler too-bright eyee looked dp Into'
bose of Re* Dallard. A great throli
•f pity gripped his heart as he redd"
tL. agony written in those brown •
depths; '
y "MlstOke." She whispered It again -
ThenS "What—did you—find, doc-
tori" she asked boarsslyi ,
"Why. I found—" Dr. Gardner be*-
when (hit
to.« Jnst^rS
1 again, pocnsthing |n"
her old natural, winsome smlla
"I'll be all right now, I'm sure,"
She said bra dy. But the too-bright
eye oenfltoMd a llttle too bright and
the aMahtod look around the Hps
that had l«i t sons of their ruddy
coloring; stU remained.
" "" •"ff:i<rti i«-«lr.1lwrn of
no gjrilfW-lh sstt
graduaQy down on the heart of each
Sooo aoand from the next _
woukt com to thsm cm—tonally; an
indistinct murmur of
fijtonrtatlon quickly hushed. The
suspense waa nerve-wracking to the
members of that waiting quartette.
Dallard wondered how the matt out
la the boB waa teldng It Not a
sound had oomo to them to Indicate
hill presence there. In th X-ray
room ah wab stilt What had Dr.
Gardner foundT vrhat would the
x-ray. picture show? What
was being worked by the dd
out in the corridor?
A tow mumbling oaao to their
ear ; a quick little cry from the
woman and the hnm of voices pitched
too low to catch the worda Then
suddenly cam a sound Uks that of
choked sobbing. The next moment
the door Opened and Dr. Gardner
emerged.
Fat, standing suspiciously dose,
glanced through the opening Into the
X-ray room. Her eager gaso fastened
instantly upon the nurse who, with
an arm around the ahouMors of her
charge, was Just opening the door of
tho exit into the hall. The young
man waa saKbtog like a whippet!
child. Then the door dosed, shutting
them from view. But In that fleeting
moment Pat bad caught sight of the
young manPs fheo. Her heart seemed
to jump up Into her threat. She
turned her head and hsr
itatad for Just an instant and then
went on: .,"1 found the same scar-
1: Iter
m
•%2*
*ir-
bÉS¡
-Mí
riv'TTf+t&
• v.. . .S t
•i-Jllf
Wñm
strong-
V Ttaw
I y is no
|g en-
■AéSBflK'
! %'«
i s
with the same peculiar, unmistakable
iparhtogs- from the infection giving it
the look of a double croes I Then in
ths light of the X-ray 1 found the
heart full two inches to«the right of
the sternum. 1 found. In fact. Jimmy
Blair, your twin brother!"
Por thirty seconds followijrtg the1'
announcement of Dr. Gardner no
sqnnd broke the Stillness of the room
save the ticking of the dock It was
Dallard who spoke ftjpit.
\ "There's something very strange
here I" he said, in slow, even tonea
"Something devilishly strange!" '1
**I don't understand, sir, what yoo
mean by that!" rapped out the cas*,
land doctor, a stern look striking out
the former softness from bis rugged
features. "The young man 1 Jum
examined was James K. Blair, the
twin brother of this young womanl
I would stoke my very Ufe on thal!"
,*T am not questioning your state-
ment, doctor!" replied Dallard quick-
ly. "In fact-" 1
"Where is Mister Maxwell-ami
that nurse—and the young
K
m
now?" out in the voice of Pat Btoir.
thoaharp-ten^s ringing out clear and
distinct The nurse hurried him out
through the other doorl, Why?
Where are they now? Bring that
young man back in here again!"
Before anyone else, seemingly, had
grasped the sense of her words. Mar-
gery was at the door dividing the
room from the corridor. Sbe threw
It wide opea . -
Standing some ten feet away was
Maxwell, his right hand in his pocket
his cigar in one comer of his month
Nearty was the nurse and the young
SS-.SJSÍÍÍS &¿2K
The nurse with an arm around bis
shoulder oeemed to be trying to con-
sdo him. She looked up at Pat asid
her friends as they c me near and
smiled a little wearily. On the face
of Pat Blair w a a look of pusslsd'
bewilderment as die studied the fea-,
tur of the sobbing young man.
(to be aovvmtmmi
Som« ,
Japan's Is nearly
Hm-a par with us,
but that is ar|^-
'/fflf':- pS^s°thlrd.Ja
is fourth. Italy is entitled
with Prance, just so we
0> parity f the Brit-
■sh. but efven the Pssdstl have been
«nable to keep up the pace.
' So Itoljr'a IS flfth. fs mm
whose to rixlhT "V
Why, ths United states coast
p* sW|KpPl^i^^H|
nd;,JslHb. «toó .tho
■ si his flserto flgbt mm
running, Jtear Admiral Frederick ¡ft
91!bad has commanded the sixth
strongest navy la the worid. '
Hero snd there one or another of
treasury pta-
■ nufn-
tadiv
which fltes
nabt, Mt to point of 1
■¿hi** oí • yeerta. total
Kind iTinfT"
outfit has them all backed off the
oceoo-v In fact, be codd lick two or
tltfOO Ot most Of-thMA il tHBÍfff.
' >.\• U;
A; A MB iim M link.H it th traite-
to be
Cfrlth ontsntw equal to mak-
ing. quite a few little countries
«nvlous. too. '
'Fen thousand m«n! '
Such us ths fores which congress
Is discussing, to stop smugglers from
crowing our. lard frontiers hither-
wtjrd, even as it Is ths coast guard's
du'y to prevent them from descend-
ing on our shores.
Peop'e who are not yet so-yOryt old
««in remember when our whole stand
m m fM
V:v;
lions are so troublrf in
America that BWIvto I
footing erl«i MM-
w wmm
cab5ae"mrnib!r would
«. «".««■ - ! Wj
otherwise. | cz- . mié
. Secretary Mellon ' to unds^tood to .1 f ;,
'MM
10,000 dumped on- his honfl
ever,'.his cabinet bretH
and more active, have sidestepped
even faster. Indications are that
Mr. Mellon Is stud* with the Job.
A ¡¡¡first it was proposed to place
the new legion, under the war
secretary's Jurisdiction, but ths
Screech which th t department let
<mt rent the air. The navy depart-
ment hastily pointed out that It can
have Tib possible Interest In activities
ashore. Justice department otfldala
plead that this necessarily will be a
military Untt and that soldiering h
out of their legal line. >: £
Secretory df tabor ¡Davis, although
concerned In sboo-tn* off uiyMlW^ -
iced' immigration, also represents
that he 1 unfomRiar -wlth troop
toovdn^nto.
■ Secretary Hyde hod to "put up a
pretty warm argumert in opposition
to Mr. Mellotfs contenUon that tho
agriculture department needs at
least 18i«00 warriors to drfye back
insect pests, trying to; enter the
United SUtes.
• • • ... y
a FTER all, the treasury head to
/A the logical commander-in-chief
bf the proposed cohort, wt of tho
coait (utnL i
In the well-known tost piMlftiM,
It Is a customs patrol.
ButAdmlitd BIQard will hav nona
of It tn hia The ndmlral is a sea-
dog—an admiral, not a general.
-.The conclusion appears V> be that
the landsmen will be organised Into
a hody somewhat ofi the coast gfiard
pattern, modified to suit shore con-
ditions, and with a colonel or maybe
a brigadier1 In command, on the
same basto as Admiral Billord Is In
command afiont
WÍ
i-A :
wmmI
m
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'J'"
i Wmi-r;
i'
a
few
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1
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WASHINGTON, Feb. 11. (AP>—
A thorough-going investigation ot
prohibition conditions will be tin
dertaken tomorrow by the
Judiciary committee.
bouse
ski;
HRp#ar«
'Nature thought of everything when
1 made. Whewi
jSSfrS.'SfeJ
miner irom bdooití
signals to warn us.
about to become ill, nature
Hr"
their 1
. ..
I ........iinw pains, or
abcut the nose and fingere, we should
know that "
have oontracted
bottle of White's Cream Vanmifugc and
safely and surely expel the worms. Thus
we jivoid the dutcsr of very serious
trouble. White's Cream Vermiiun oosts
•nty35cabottl^andámbebou(btlroiii
Rl B. Goree.
SEATTLE, Wash.1 Ed "Strang-
ler'' L.e>yls, forjner w'orld champion
heavyweight wrestler, defeated R.
Cantonwine of -Iowa hero lai«t
night Lewis gained 2 out of 3.
m
mé ¡s
■.affiaeHS
66 Miles on 1 Gallon
New Ford Gas Saver
Walter C'riehlow, '4II00-B Street.
Wheatón. III., hits patented a Vapor
Moisture Gas Wsver and Carbon Elim-
inator for all Autos mid Engines that
beats any ever got out. v
Old Kords repofr '* * high se-, «J
miles on i gallon. New Fords 75. ,.<•
. Otli r makes rejwrt amusing iucretts-
es of 1-4 to 1-2 wore. >>
Mr. Critctilow offers to send 1 to.
lntro«luee. Write liioi tiKíéy.
He also wants County and Sta|e
Agencies everywhere to make $2B0 to
$1,000 per month,
«6 MILUS
con Frmed hi nomination. -
MfcOdy named him and Moody is
i-^sponoible for the legislation that
cnoU th« auditing department jt
the state government. It should
htiVe happened yoars and years age
U didn't hapRej), "but better1 tuis
than never.''
. An educational campaign w
OOSr OP PBODICING COTMN
IN ÜEXA ' r'O
Commissioner of. Agriculture G.
B. Terrell estimates jthe cost of ths
Texas cbtton crop at 2S and i«-10
cent per pound, which 1 six cent
Per pound higher than the prlco
received. Planting time I . coming.
Win tho iwwW's of Texas Out the
acrfeage or will they Increase U.t A
bumper crop fpells poverty; a fair
yield spell money in the pookat
and a contented stomach.
„•
NEW YORK. — In accordance
with his dying wish, the ashes ot
Wtm, H. Langford, actor, hate been
—. ...*r. M*a - •.-•'«.x -msl---- :«trewed on ' Broadwasfe. 'he
made short work of the "harge¥ worked| and played: His widow
b*against "Lynn and
had promptly
hobl
"1
dropped them 300 Ofeet from plane.
n,
t u IS.U 1js 4.1s t4s S I* r
7JS too* tat 4.SS 70S * Lt Martin
r s isjs in m ut is tr *
us lore us ut ta tt b
tos rati i.m ere tm u
a*
SOUTHLAND^ CBBYHOUNB LXNE8
P.m. A M FA
bv 14
A-M. T.U.
11-S4 J .84
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LlTt'it STAJtK'S BOYS. INC.
Yesterday at 10:10 the JunKor di-
vision o the ^oys* band staged- Its
first public concert at the Anderson
sohoof before the entire school body
and a large ttumbero visitors. The
young fellows did'very wei conslld-
erlng the fact that it waa the tlrst
'timo they bad played publicly as a
group. They played a number of
standard marches and waltses>
-Which Were enjoyed by the large
: audtonese Of school children. Next
week tho Senior division at the high
school will entertain the high school
students with a similar program
to expected that these concerts
be continued at regular intervals'
until the close of school. ,;:VV
m ""vr|Kv
The entire Boys' band will give
its flrst public concert of the sea-
son Friday night at the Stark gynv
naslum on First and Froht sttMto.
beginning at T o'clock. Thoy have
a program > of new selections which
they feel yrUI bd enjoyed by the
'dtbtena of Orange. This Is Or-
ange' own group of hoys, who hate
been working hard and without In-
terruption for months nd are anx-
ious' to d'isiptoy their skill to the
homo folks. There will be no charge
for this performance. The band
concert should be concluded in
time for those who desire to at-
tend their Scout meetings.
This concert will be tho ln^odue-
tlon to A full .evening's program
4ionsisting ot •§, gymnaslt
íl'lhg team 4 xhlbltlon and <
Jtet ball games. The entire
ls¡: for ths bsneflt ' ot
people tdm. a* cordial in
extended to everyone to
frtday
This. afternoo
find ths
1 u'nlor Method;
7:Ton*fheJ,Í^Sí
lonfafofhe
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To all the important points in Texas,
conveniently, economically, com-
fortably, and in safety—that's what
uthland Greyhound offers,
ith recent reduction in feres end
re-arran&ement of schednlei msitki
if
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 174, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 11, 1930, newspaper, February 11, 1930; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth142642/m1/2/: accessed April 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.