The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 257, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 30, 1934 Page: 2 of 4
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tar i «H>r4in|
at Qran* , T*** P. O.
Mall Matter, tinder Act
— |
Editor
RH xsu«in<.'«i,, MjuMCat:!
I
;-vi **-
AU8TIN,
Cowi>J«ti«n
Seen As
tyTard Stlck';
T'X., Oct. 30,
oC n *y«li o«erfei
would afford un accurate
"yardstick" by which rate* of prl
j'vatnly owned wpUlfs "tpiti 'h>/;nigiff
d. <'oimr<>Hsninri 4. P. Ilmhanan
ltrpnhHlil be)i«V<M.
niirhunflii, ohnlrinan of the ajtpfo-
pctric pro. i prlutlon* committee in the houao of
■hum^VU/V^'.B n ■;« > " ; t Hjfrn.Uiy I IfyrtfyVl1 ■ I'l"
imse
Mall or Oearrler, 1
JPH.#nf, 1 Year.
M|| wl
n
THE SEASON
AAvwritaiil*
OraOge
bo furnished
yaiw MKMwcm |
Kgf
®|ip
mJm to announce the mBHSE owidiOdlos
suiije«jt: to «ie
at the General Kleetf?*||| *|b
■^i&ss4l5S
J^Es
W. H. PAYNE
For County CXxwBlsshmsr, Pet. Ko.S
|§tp'|f EMUR CAROKV^miSWM
*y County Commissionsr,
N. MERRIU, -
For County Tit* Assessor and Col'
KRIs
a.'.
W'amMUm- CPTTUB ~4
•tor County Trsnsurer
MIIS. J. W. HELTON
WB
For County Attorney
' JAMES 4
ror ' Sheriff ,
[#; W. P. BROWN
county Rehool Sui
J. F. HAMMKKS
flonstaMe, Prtseln
ALVA GRIFFITH■■
For Justice of the Ps.cc, Pet. No. 1
fl. M. DBPWK
For 4Mb Senate
" ALLAN . SHIVERS ■■
For District Cisrk
T. M. DODD
Month
s
authorise (i
m-
l
''f'|V,.V,,i.t v/ ',' w - v
(WO
NEWS ITEM: Taxpayora of Ohio and Michigan will havs a referendum
vota Election tfay qn constitutional amendment^ proposing to reduce
and to fix state gasoillne tax rates and to prevent the use of revenue
from this special additional tax for othsr than highway purposes.
m>."" NOTICE •
Typewriter nnd adding machine
service. Guaranteed. O. H. Rob-
iwtt' Phono ■ 1
We do reftnishittg, upnolsterlng
$ •••nd all kinds of furniture and stove
repairing. King Furnitturo. com-
pany. 1108 Or*4n Avenue. Phono 88.
McimWa' RADIO imRVICB.
I may be ^j)W^!^(fe>4yi W"'-ia
a;fe
WANTED: • To Imy or
lag table
tlllo.
<r
iShwWSS®
• " ■ ■-
m
WANTED
WANTED:: 100 mpro ctiatomera.
Four credit |h good. Lot* of Bar
fains. King Furniture Company,
fe'lttt, Qreen avenue. Phone 8«.
vtemtoft ; I.I i —_—
Wanted to . Bir*3 IlSito •.Coupe
FOR rent: l<l«ht housekeeping
rooms. Modern conveniences. 812
Main street
Two table-top pictures. At left, is * tiny cork-
and-paper ship given a "Flying Dutchman"
aepset by placing it on a pens of glasa and
shooting from underneath. Above, a circus
scene made with familiar delta and toys.
wife
nut SSTJt
* W1V CMUilS
FOR SALE: - Wood and Hay. Phono
WMw:- M
«*.<■ I"'.'"' I. I- .I..*,!. ■■;* « .....
ffK£v*AU6: "Home Enterprise"
cook stove. Phone 41«. 1302
HMnth street.
'mm.,, . . —j
Wnd on
concrete hlghwsy. West Orange, at
sacrifice price. J. E. Pattiiio.
, :\kt\. .vm ...vW.i. 'iwto*\i"*" f.'I■ '
|>||| III ii.1 ii lii^iiiiiii IS in
BREATH OrPENDT
Sift.'
m
Mouy ottroctivo persons ora
not welcomed at socio! flother-
(ngs becousc their breath is
bod. Don't be one of them.
Make sere that your breath Is
tweet and inoffensive by gar-
glino with |i*ts>rine. it combats
infections'in the mouth, checks
infection and instantly destroy*
odors, lambert Pharmacol
Company, St. Louis, Ma
ends halitosis
Kill. 300,000,000 garni
ONE of the most Interesting of
camera stnntg la the making of
"table-top" pictures. As the term in-
dicates. you assemble your picture
material on some convenient table
or bench, and shoot It from any de-
sired angle.
Viable-top" pictures are, usually,
very much like model stage settings.
You may use dolls, toys, statuettes
model airplanes, miniature trains,
boata—anything at all that appeals
to you. The point of tho whole thing
Is to arrange your subjects in an in
torestlng, realistic, or fantastic
fashion, and to light this arm fo-
ment so that It ntakes a good pic
tore.'
Usually, these pictures are talieu
at close range. It your camora can-
not be focused for close-ups. use a
portrait attachment— a simple, in
expensive, and highly useful 111 tie
gadget.
There's no limit to tliie effects you
can achieve. And there's nothing
much more fascinating thau work
Ing them out. Here are some point
era that may save you time And
trouble:
Remember that the only point of
view that matters Is the point of
view of your camera's lens. Your
set-up may appear charming from
above or from the side. But don't let
It mislead you The camera must be
pleased,
\ Working at close range, the depth
of focus of yoqr lens is not likely to
be great. 80 keep the elements
within as short a distance, front to
back, as possible And the most Im-
portant feature should be at the
point of exact focus.
If you want to give an effect of
deep distance, aa In a miniature
landscape set-up, place varioua fig-
ures (trees, hooses, fences, etc.) In
receding planes. The foens wlU be-
come less exact as the distance from
the camera Increases. A piece of'
dark cardboard, cut with an Irregu-
tar edge, laid across the back of the
set, will become a range of distant
hills. And a big piece of light card-
board. set up well back of the rest
of the set-up, gives you a good
"sky."
Remember that the camera's out-
look Is wedge-shaped—narrow close
to the lens and widening out as it
goes Into the distance.
Tho greatest fun In this work Is
playing with light. Sometimes a sin-
gle strong flood of light will give
you what you want. Again, you may
want one figure to stand out brll-
Manti.v. with everything else sub-
dued. To do this, you will have to
block off most of the light with ahlrt
cardboards, books, or whatever you
need. *\
Vou'il get your best effects by
working with the lens at Its small-
est opening. Allow plenty of time-
anywhere from ten seconds to a
minute or two. depending on the
amount or light.
Too. don't forget that moat Dims
register blue as white, and red as
black or dark gray. A white llgure
against a blue background will tend
to be lost; similarly, a red figure
will not stand out against a dark
background.
It's fascinating business, all In all,
and will repay you well for your pa-
tience and Ingenuity.
JOHN VAN OUILDER.
In oocain
«truted a« an InaUIi project, li was
<0 Ppi'llMl .coinplete whtn the gi-
gantic urtlitief^ empire ' collapsed,
The dam wax renamed "Uunliaruin
West, Te.wp will t* B«
cent Khort this winter. It Is esti-
mated, due to« small teed crops and
.few Insects.: , \
Cooperative poultry marketing s-
HoeinttoiiH egpect to mp only nlmut
half the number of birds As last
dam" in honor of the BrMiImm con- : jghipmeiits 'will be made both
gressmait'M effort*. | for the Th«nkngiving and Christmas
"I am stronglf l«r Private eater- ' markets.
prise.^hen^t' wHV ,«wve ^the people
"TABLE-TOP*
PICTURES
in stock.
adequately and economically.'-' I Bneh
anan told a house committee iw-
aldering a bill'to establish O^e (301-
mKm vitJley ' "I % aim* ' for
government action, however, when
private ipitlntlvc fails to give the
public the servk-e to which It is en-
titled economically."• . \"*£k
UuohanSn revealed thafc five addl-
lional dom sites have been surveyed
the. Buchanan
dam, which. Is about 80 milles. up-
stream. The supplemental d«ms are
prlmnrily hydro-electric projects.
Bach would u*e the water released
by the mother dam'.'" government aid
iwill be sought to complete the ,sy«*-
It,
tem
dam
of dome when
has been placed
the BiichjMja.n
iii operation.
WEST TEXAS Tl ttKlCV OBOP
IS 00 PER CENT SHORT
SAN AiNC;EI,<>. Te*., Oct. 30. —
m^outjadK ■■ sTAti6n, TexAsr oet.
10. (AP)—A.1 P< Meador, senior stu-
dent^li. 'llberel art* from Wsco^has
been I; iiacted'' cspUtin and command-
ing otflcern of tho Ros*t Volunteers
compnny, honor military organisation
at' Texss A. aud M :.;eoUege. Mead-
Wffl&Km eiiptaia 't:f;ri.Troop'Oi cav-
alry,, In the cadet cer#s served as
firat sergeant of tbe organisation
the psst yes*. :
other Ross volunteers officers
elected included the following A
. Swank Wills Point, firs* Heut£'rt-
ant; and ncroitd tb command; J. -P
Kleber, Dallas, and W- B. F!tsger-
ald, Hhreveporf, second Hen.
.tenants; .h C. McHaney, San Antok
nnlo, seefftarj' and treasurer. A 'n '
sergeant and Hue sereeant will Ik-
selected from among junior mem-
bers of the compnny to l> . elei'lwd
within a few weeks. ||Mj|jM
S5|'',' V;:Si : . ,
. . ;^;V. :
*
mms
an
If you mint be oc the job EVERY vm
DAY, «|ke Lydia R Pinkham's Tab-
lets. They jtelicvc periodic pain apd
discomfort. If yoo take them regttr
larly ... and if yours is not* surgical
case... you should he able to avoid
periodic upacti, becausc this medi-
cine helps to correct die CAUSE of
youe trouble. |®
•■m
"l am « factory worker, I was wesk j
nervous and my atomadb awl back pal
me aeverefa but since I took Ly«iUa !►'
Pinkham's Tablets the
don't appear anymore'V*-
Mia Htlen Kolatki, 3906 K
Christiana A#**? Chicago, Ift
*3,took your Tablets^ tor
Iieved (he pain immediately.
I am able to- do «ny work
"—Mrs. C C HWW,
" ~ r 71, Maa/fti, Ala.
LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S TABLETS
mmmmm
Inter-natMCartoo* Cos, N.Tr—
SPEAKiN^ 'BOOT
(Jve^coAIS.REMiNbS
MB OF 0iul_ foNE5,
[ SAU/ HltA YESTERTSAY
VdttHOUT A A/
Ov/Et?COAT,'A«t> HC
Towo MB HE'S
^BEEN 60IH' AtVooMD
/\LI- WINTER
WltHOOT OWE,
SAID HE LOST IT
PlaviN' POKER :
HA a) - HAu)
■■il
\ KtiOWl A.COC^OO
V^t40 HAS VT-ALU
ONJER YOUR Frieno
He Plays the-
UU 6APAE ANib
<3oT A FtW^ER
-That vmay •
its a 6rt£at same
f or. uuckY GoVS !
Ho -Ho - HO
m
n
mlB
.1 iiii iif ~mi'^ 'riT ~ii ~
■V"" ,. !J
.xv-'.1 .'-i;.' i".
"Vr'-fn'-;
"THAT LITTLE GAME" - —Quitting With a Bird In the Hole
AFAf€LLo4
■btBb AND!
pwe D Hi Ml
|MoHEYi|
[THE ^HIRTj
■pFFA T«j
|c ORBS El
WELL, SEol?6E WE
<50TTA qoiT SOMETIME-
1 HAFTA &Q To Wor?K
IN TH' MORNW.
1 DOMT bo THIS FOR
g,.™,
0.
< CAH
OUST BECAUSE
HC'& losim'
HE WANTS OS
TO STAY
HERE Acc
utd6K.
atl r16ht. then,
AU RI6Ht, 60
ahead amd aoiT.
I'M uosin' Sot doi^t le
that bother Yoo.
But listed, jost v^ t
TILL I vyiN AND OBX
Yoo Birds in a mole
Them watch me
GEOR6E
15 A 6000
SCOOT,
BOT HE
HATES
To SB
M IE
WAL.KIN
AWAY UJIT
HIS
KAL&
LEAVE U/ITH
«. A CL0AP
ACOHSCiENCE1,
CAUSE- itA
dOST EVEN
AuSO
ArtEAOOf
FEW
U6FT
1
■S
tf';
IW YDI) KNOW WHY - • - The New "Sheep Heir" Kind Cause This Aeon) ?
-tt:
its <crr «<,
|TOO ChiiO*
foa THE
[fMbur OH6S
i<joux. we
\C0T to "$
*^tki««,
ILC TO
|«=sn tctcce W <
PONT Pur tih&h
say
JAMES.wKATr/
ON KAfe T H
€ the
'jHATTER.
oooc-hT
I NAB -RATS ^
are im HIS^-—«*t" ~
|NOOOL6 OH.JAMfeif
-son.vvoet .
iSoH Sorrow!;
nvn
\
«p m^KVyff
■■■■■■§. vnp
Ctiea In tta urn
IAMESTIAM
WouQ. WIFE
SPe^w TO ME
.OH.TELL Her
WHAT ifS THE
t > MArreoii §?
AsW.THiS HEAVY
ONOefiwCAe,
m
wl
mm
I
9m
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McBeath, J. S. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 21, No. 257, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 30, 1934, newspaper, October 30, 1934; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth289814/m1/2/: accessed May 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.