The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 244, Ed. 1 Monday, October 16, 1939 Page: 2 of 4
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•rnto
tn His Orange trade territory.
Four, seven and thirty Hbm
rates quoted apply to ads
scheduled for consecutive dayu
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The Orange Leader
PaMlahed every ' afternoon axeepi
fta'arday, and Monday amnio* * at
,\ PI 1-1 Front kr tie Orange
.•\t4Mer Publishing Oei^*jhA* >1"
! " Entered • Or ante Tenia P. O. u
Seeoad Claaa Mall Matter tTnder
. f Onjcrmm March 3. I#lfc' i >
*: a OtnOI3 V. fcdiiOl * PaWlahar
as n ^ .JCitrAfHpiMt' -
,Wm Eula Me* Turner. Bar. Kditor
orric v onRs
Editorial w to t p. an) .
Buetneae ORIrm S4. W. Ml eftfe* m
Circulation n* t. I a. m. te « r- ai ^
aunt hUPday e .n. W. tli,'*'!:' '
r •CWHUrPTION nATBN> 7;:i:
Br Mali Carrier, 1 month ,.f SO
Advertising Rata* WW be Pwrnlebfrd
AfaOClATKD WtllfT 1MRKR
to mail bombardments
has (grown surprisingly
the present American
ANOP!
Ft .on At
r tA Ai*infcn rr.m>.
i.. L..-I .. ..
W w* "pi'lij lU OHKI RI OP,
Or k W. Readings Mk: or
TXTASHINGTON - The ex-
WV cited flood of mail jpro-
testing repeal of the arms em-
bargo has shifted much of the
tension from the Senate to the
House where public reaction tra-
;'ffiBBnal,y causes more political
heartburns.
Since two-thirds of the Senate
la largely immune at any one
time to immediate political.pres-
sure, there is a greater rone of re-
sistance
such as
out of
"crisis."
In the House it is different
Members come up en masse every
two years. They are coming up
next year, each in his own Dalf-
wick. Don't discount, any reports
as to how responsive they are to
mail attacks.
In the Senate; two-thirds cf the
members cjm risk being "states-
men" even to the extent Of Voting
against a flood of protests of their
tymstituents. -Many things may
arise to rescue these senators from
an irate constituency before their
, own clectionTieriods come around, ,
two or four years honce. But in
the House members must come
face to face with their neighbors
and explain their acts almost as
yaOhrt as they >erfotoh; them. ; > J.
TUe Mail Or A Poll ? ' V; .
tlie repeal of the arms embargo.
But the congressional mail runs so
overwhelmingly in the. opposite
dim nun that OHmbetf^«Eayf
House are truly worried about
what to da If thousands of their
constituents, including grange
^Kionnalr® Jfterart,
Ml Platt'*«k cd
Write in to prote* Ofi
I , Jiey hav*«ot to think a
long time before they convince
■■Bjnather the mail or
members.
public reaction polls are right.
^We Jui ve run into several who
eyen It ; he begirt kept us out of
war, his wofd was good.
• Yet within a half-dozen months
sentiment had changed consider-
ably. The two or three newspapers
that had stood outfrom the
and opposed Wilson were ...
by hundreds more. The League
went down. Its critics contended
that the following election, in
which the Democrats went down
to defeat with the League as an
issue, was final proof of U. 8. re-
pudiation. Cool historians are not
so sure, hut the politicians remem-
ber the change of sentiment, re-
gardless of what it represented.
To a puzzled congressman, there
is no sure way to guess which way
the change may come. The polls
say sentiment is one way and the
mail says another.
It is true that the House passed
a neutrality bill last session con-
taining the arms embargo repeal,
but the newly written hill must
come back to it in some form, as
it is vastly changed from the shape
in which the House passed it.
■ y* * * * \
More Woblily Now
H is
TpHfiRB is really nj spo
I about the mail. We stood Ir
■ofing
one
Isenator's office while a new batch
was counted. Of 34 letters opened
—it was only a fraction of a stack-
only two favored repeal. There
were odds and ends of sizes of
envelopes, ao it was a fair repre-
sentation, coming from^^HM
states.
In almost every bundle of mail
delivered to the members are
stacks of uniform-sized H
indicating thai some etfl
club president has swungj
bers into a rniiM
Nevertheless, mostl
have seen comes in!
odd handwritings ■
the general protestH
tic term*. It mar be ■
hut it certainly looks like I
|>ourings of troubled souls, i
Whether it come* from
nation's mental frothX ;^v■sil
^fbllifying nahtee of
bill seems ul
Public
By GCORGS ItOKEB
?yjEW YORK-—The machine aga
K ilea*. HOJ Gmtls.
appoint*** tfftxme a*. Q
mti
stg
ha* been overtaken IL I
t* far as New York la concerned
*-i>y the slot machine age. About
the only thingnahe machines
haven't been able to give you is
a Bhave. You can drop nickels
(dimes and IB cents too) in slots
alttig our boulevards and obtain
coflee. sandwiches, cigarettes,
handkerchiefs, chocolatea, beauti-
ful music, peanuts, mints, perfume
sprays, and even booka. Or
haps they shouW
phlets. These, to
should be called
> me, are thenew-
••fWW VTA
■■>i*ard. Mrs. A. Correct, «J3, Pmk
1 ^Lw:es w ■ -
est .thing in slot machines. There
is a huge one in the Chambers
! ; Bluer .Jtontoct; O) Do
^ouUae Your Temper?; (3) and.
Tlie Truth About Mussolini. There
were perhaps a dozen other titles.
You drop in a dime, select the tl-
^I riFTr '*p*B Win
house.--eleotrirHr. Sea Anilite Muu
S i^l;: o t fhm, tQ
'.it Hhdl
ipSlf K.vt^
~7 ^ i:mq • ;tentb
THHKPinooM Al'AltTMKXT %■
> • 'J"- | trs HireiS" fiiniKilie.l, l'rtviite tuith.
708 (Ireoii Ave. l rt.iltf
KURlXtftHHD A'f'Ain MKN'T Itown
"talra. I'llvnto enar.niee. All M)|k
J ald. 506 Ornnge. 10-iii
%
€
NEW CLEAN
sons. Phonp
APARTMF.NTS. Nel-
S6S or 417. 10-H
riVK TtOOM
HtllTHR, 151"
1R07 John:
rxmtxiswiso
John Ht. AmOv'Ht
do-'ia)
T1TRE'-: ltoOM trxrtrn.N'iSHRT)
AI'ARTMnNT. and water
fumlehed. Phone 41 fi or tall after
7 p. m, nt SO!) Cherry. (lO S T.P.)
fjUR waterfront has changed ita
W «poU. It doesn't look the same.
The big German-American Ham-
burg hae docks are as silent and
empty & a churchyard at night
Whan you pass there you get ech-
oes back if you even think-
Near at hand the Wg Norman-
<, $#• French marine
] Service, is snug .at her pier. But
she is a deserted ship. Her crew
has .fled back to Trance, leaving
only "the Watch* No one is in
evidence as you nose by, but if you
attempted to get too close, or board
her. there would be plenty of gen-
darmes to pounce on you.
The other day I talked for near-
ly an hour with the captain of a
low-lying black and yellow
freighter. She was black and yel-
low then. But aa we talked dozena
-PERSONALS-
Mi's. Will Iti I'llt'ld "if Inline (tort.
I.H., uml Mr«. Wue lliirftelit of linn-
klo, Iji., weiv wm-Uend sueati" hei'u
in the home «f Mr. nnd .Mr«
flUp
her into
of
A . ghost ship of grajr-
sides and decks and funneb
tr mmlngt^i||W|tff|Mi
beat calculated to become
in clouds and in fojj
mlaL She waa the ship og a
beiilgeram nation.
■ -/*SHow lone are you going to «e-
rc^RBK
swer, and when I got one J waa
: But next day aalarove put ahe
was gone. She moved out under
cover of night on the long trek
that will ena—she devou
—in her home port.
gwy "• "i ■ " ■ ^ *-■ "
COMETtllt ago this column re-
° layed the anguish of a young
man who wanted to transfer his
attentions from one ybung woman
10 another. To achtev* thia he told
Young Lady No. 1 that he was
going to return to South America.
Heart-broken she arranged a fare
well dinner for him and inaisted
en accompanying him to the ahip
"nally bid her a iawful fare-
and wen . aboard. Of course,
he sneaked ashore again by way of
crew's passageway.
t next day the ship sank, and
hundreds lost their lives. To this
day the girl believes her lover was
drowned, and it ia understood she
burns a candle in her room and
praya for him every day. The
young man haa lived in terror ever
since, in fear that he will come
face to face with her on the street
There have been requests for
the climax of the story. People
want to know what happened. I'm
sorry to disappoint these people
but that's all—they never met. in
fact, last month this fellow really
left for Chile. He's editing a news-
paper down there.
£jKgfef -0
MONDATr OCTO
I.""*1" f,'Wiiii
Spi
SURPRISE CAKE
' rn ?■ ■ r—• ■ - - «r A y?
for Hazards
Highway, l%es
iSPwi
mmmm
V. ' «,
mmm
telling
Surprise
both happy.
r^uau •
e^lioweYer,
cuko itnlC
ttfer
•nd farmafa with a ehaok Hat at
la fairi whan makHig
Tap right: point** ahaart in tha
••low right: moat homi aeel-
ad apriaklea
ed ant meats. The
mooth
lulekeaed with
to «BHa. 'aarfoaaee^ mafa awi ahaaM ba anchored
«n of wan atrtd lining aa ahawn
to aaaiat honseholders to dla-
eover and eliminate hMarda liable to
Membera
J malar Bad Croai and
aohaslaiatea will dtotrttuta check
Uata to -pamata aod aaatat la esamlalng
la Temovlnx baa-
This Had Croaa wars lnz reaehai
than *.eea,aee bomea and fame
yaar
.The Bad Or pas atsaaaaa the need of
may eauac
aa thia tyye ef acetdeat reaalted
halt of laat rur a homo
chief canaaa
ly llahlod atalaa, loose ralltazm,
and
a wn Mt ahaat. Roma and
vteet
hilled la m> by thia
or
•df-dack ltat potaia to the danger of
matehaa left
Bill hays kill or
'mere peraoaa than
iftpaH
loe^oo |M
lolthhi reaeh of children, and arealere*
by proper creantas. CHber
|of aeHdeotal d^eth arc^
|k«niiVocatle«J
aad draarraa, H«d Croat oSrtala aatd.
|Aretdent prvventloa ta a port of the
NtUMhi Red Croaa paagvanL Alii
I Croaa aerrleea are aeppei ted by
Boh pt the thoa of
|tke aonaai BaTcail. thU year trewl
Noveeiher
■twr HMtn, aaH aar^
< ra*e* (uv amt V*vV (Or Tla 1<"'
Hat. Thr, liarr Ibo fwltai thai
inee l«w Tla r* diabla't ktup Ha>.iu
i. K r i uc*hi tholr attauMara
i<i >ll|i the .Mehrri Imiii In or«l*r
«■>!• an,i irtay IdinvI
•<!« iniur The t .-asnan arx
■plannlac <m wtttilufl nut) , aamr->
ihw nun* anit nail) oOkoUi fr«r
ul/ wir mm In thaap -pari4. That
lap la ia# Unr la IVitiW llna nf
gat Aitbar. If She |m mcumm unl
Ual> P&nia a-jtaaia. ItW roirh
HI *•( apn#\ (it -Ik* tam av mh r«
aaiw llnaaUthakar
h mt alaalea.
Vreh. If r«i ai In the nl'MP of
una ef U«i i— 'Waa M a in> ' aed
bant Ui fu«sri >(*ir
■ iM loan |M> iwixm- «l«arn
Ru U ll««fl^UX|M^gU
Llot.ui i'H I.J
the DAY
By
Frank Maxwell
Iau
ihey mU> owl
The h«yn «M at
rarrylac <att lh
ah r«'
Broil the atiape 10
In the
ihe
, CKKS.'d:' ;
-••• ■—
hastily convertini
Ave minntes. H
transfer to a heated platter
Pour into
rest of the
L'Bake
^^thahaat
i. in a
oven. Cool ahd serve.
TbomftM A. ami Brute* Deptve.
Hpent Jjtumlay In itcaumont.
; • .
Mi'i tuiti JUix X. VV. 'UtU!tiir<t
Huuda.v,i.lbi -J>ke ChaiJer., La .
anft jktra. l owe>I .Milliard.
apenl
with.
Alra. llenry Coehrah of Xlounton
Kjiciit tho pam weekend h<trr With
relative^
MIhh Iris Saxon and MIsh Jjowell
tRteomaa npent tb<- imtt -wet^iemi In
Ttonaton wtih friends. >
Romter <*«lhown of Houston vM*-
pd here ilurinR the ^iaHt .weetienct With
friendH. ' .?; >V"'
l« :^aa
ka w
Ui.- tlr-
n*i
tn fiiraat lhi> nkoP thlaa
tflaramn aad so eat l
Htadtuai p'haia two fla
fnothoU' taaaia are gntn* aa rlaah.
In edae you doo'l. hn.i* ataai li. iom-
4'<Uapeil hlah aehant, Mnam trill mix {
With H^rt Ulab ul Iteaa- <
la the aSuu *1 harm hrealilnt
jPTn*. ^ '• |
Theo* h \* | to>- hard lh ->
f r haapa. Une frar f all- ,
tiesaed a pm In nirieh ihf Ot-mw
arrrv aloe In j: 4mn au theli !
htocktna. At the half the ooaeh I
crablKil oor of Ma half kneka ami
irnJd: t "I don't ar oi to km *n«
I amm in kfn - you
amek •am." \\je no eoi knnix a-ltac
h« ir maka tip tlie Jl ae i#im ihla
hot we Oara any ihat to f
she aalbe irmup tint haa ptny
a pnat few aeaanoa.
a Moton Ilrnpona have no V -
iweeti tho helvaa praaram Uat dstr-
Inc the same their choarta* aectloo
never lata down, and would „.,i'lvnl
the Tokna Asxiaa for aplelt -Their
favorite yeb Ui "la we atrona? Yonh.
apeht . tbe ipant- waekfeif In AnaU^'
end Dalian. While In Dalla* «wf
attended the Tesaa IJnlvoralty Oklif-
honia football game. |
Mlaaea Oeorcln and Beaelo *Iorh
Ml". Will Ooyle and Mlea ('onatanc--
Coylo vlalted In Oalveaton durlnc
the pant weekend.
; ..... t., r* '".'.z!r
L. E. Chapman who haa been In
the ft P. hospital <ln Ilouaton, la re-
ported much Improved nod wlH be
able to return to his home he.-e
some time thia week.
P t«gg"
Mr Jind Mrs. C. B. Root. Werle
nrfit Revn Root, and Miss Oeoraln
Helen MefJtll, all of Port Arthur,
ardte auaats hero Himday In the
HOUYVOOD SHB jU SOUNDS
OOLL.YWOOI>—Two career, in
*1 the saaae lasully. Florrnoe
Rveraon aad Colin Ossnenta.
She waa a mov ie
man who had
writing aad
short-story
He was
down reUc when they m
modeling. Now it's a show -place,
comfortable, room*, 4ho«io41k .
not too large, bat faoge enough tn
maniagc.
Thiffdi
slaga-crazy fellow who bad been
to the war and waa hack again in
the theater, directing playa and
staging them. He waa doing it at
Santa Barbara. *
A well-meaning relative wanted
to bring them together.They hatpd
each Other Mta *poi*<m wMhlMt
ever meeting—for tint mwrt.
Once they met at the WJI.1L*
accident, and thejr didn't
h. They got
Secretary." Thia waa Uyears ago.
It waa to be a ailent movie abMl
careen for women. They argued ao
-^"groisss
about careara *er wo-
men. The scenario .was shelved,
tnc engflgemem revivea.
• - fm&Ms •• •>' • h'\
mm mi
r-and
design for writing:
ding to Colin: "She write;
According te
I'm the
editor. We thresh
over
everything out first, talking it avr
at length, befori' wo «n tft wori. "
■ According-to Florence Rycmen
"Vfm light -like mad *ver every
" then are put it ftev.
She'agj Ji .
According totfj
io one thii
Hm '
and 1 wan<
nr*jfnsy keep fairly regular \
1. ing hours. Their one*dril:
("as good aa $1,000 invest?
ted in
per cenl
enacted
one of
Ivhchoolvtl
tsssm?
work-
•
saidi ai^e
theaters.
1\
W:
churches all over the country
practically "retttftr
jod. Onee a Week. on
—^ have open hoaae tar
friends/They don't try to mo:gad-.
nfRXISHET) .\rARTMK\T
COT'Pl.K Also furnlalie.t
rooms, iftftn fireen. l'hnoe
TO
i>ed*
10 lit
I'lVK ROfiM ilt t;«K~In Pinahurat
Addition. IClectrle llaht-i. Apply
M. THirtifnn. ia.«7
love with thett
to tell tbe legend,
in gold supposedly , ^
of the
buried
holdup in
fenced
adven
bene-
and
Baei
Mcoifl.
of airs.
>:
son toy
bona
home
r?v. „ , .,...
Mr. and Mrs. ArcljJe Ivindow amt
*4,. Aioide dr.. of Weaumwnt visited
bare Sunday With Mr. and Mrs. For-
McDonald. 3
Charles -Qulun and ,AV.
attended the 1. a. i;.-«lee
name In Raton Itouae, U,u..
Mix Fred t'oiulrey itnd Mra. Hal
vey ltlmer anil children df OratUW,
spent Sunday
house, to which they've jtist
Beautbem.
DM«i;
Did He 1m W If i
mm
-
."'11 1 1 1
AM-THATfe A
n.¥0U€M^r
^FYOUfELLOWS
ia^lllMi
UPON YOUR
KICKING-'
mm
• "ir'SfUS
i
1
m
^ QBH
r.vn
IJKTJWtOMS
Xaar town.
S«l>.
A NO Al'AltTMRXT.
OOP Rim «t. Phone
j ■&' .;,v, ■■ io is
4.-FOR SALE
"P.> ■ 'i,i. n
OrfcltNKF.Y MI.1,V PUVWRRB
t|l<- tw denen. !"I2 Third B -
■% lp-*9
Einiir Tiomf-i*'"*(iv 'pr-RXITIlRR.
.R*C*""oni fr>e;.'S ropiplnx
hnio-" riaaarn.
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Quigley, J. B. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 244, Ed. 1 Monday, October 16, 1939, newspaper, October 16, 1939; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth290109/m1/2/: accessed May 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.