The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 91, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 18, 1928 Page: 2 of 6
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s
BY MARGUERITE MOOERS DIARSHALH
i
t
row wi
YESTERDAYS ANSWER
with the milk of human
overflow*
permit* joy to roll
kindness and
m-m=rs=
By Haenigsen
(! ).
J
4/ 48
70
r
IT
J
#
'7
knows how many cities
Lord omty
23
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84
ar
3
the
Texas, but
There Ie » new
leant, m
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39
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5
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EVERY DAY MOVIES
A
You Beat It!
5;
(
(
S>\CK !
£
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1
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2
610
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Y
P
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Y
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?
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E
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that win boast of a populatton
100,000 ana perhaps 150,000
200,000.
of
and
LeTME IN QICK,
srRfR! r
Posf FR SAFe .
or HERE! y
Gt
id
a
The 1
wws •
8F
HrI
A
:g
6ffa4
$
N
The IDEA ’ Two xiee«;s>
FROM ,
T& DAY!
FY
N
boys down on the farm. at
Fam al
Mo. I
Seventh
Mo. 3
Orange
No. 4
Eighth
67. withered.
M A bar.
59. splendor. ■
BO An American lako.
Bl. Tint (pi.?: ___
82. Shabby looking.
03. Acea.
f
A01
your m•
called I
erable, I
with yl
your all
You I
withou
For I
has heel
of easel
ted led
"I sd
• good
joints I
walk.
Went t
finally i
a coura
rustic P
now in
add th
medicir
' ----
By Maurice Ketten
i
MeSGPEArEAS
JST PHONeD
To GK US FoR
DINNER <
ANeE3
How .
ITUPID!
“AIRSHP CAPABLE OF SPEEDoP
EIGHf/ MILES PER HOUR'
KEEPs IN (coWNICAoN wT#
SHoRe By RADIO*
A-rmlwpsdNshkkiessixfy
PAsseIGERS IN FLGH ACROSS
ATLANKc" 1
! J
v.gg.g.
unszs
/M/F
A .
i/gi
o ■' * eu-.. . ..
4
______
agratowiu b turished
upon application-
Eq-le
taking up pavementsT
Remember the hapless ranks of
ahughters whose lot it has been t
"concentrate on * little plain gew-
Ing and wish they were beys. High
lime the sons were rentrieted to nee-
E.a-
W
i
1
1 cAN'T ENOAOE So
)• Mow Do I
2 KNow WHEW
j I’LL BE 2
AND THIS IS TRXA8
There are corn growers in Texas.
There are hoy corn clubs in Texas.
3 Smith is a Texas county. Tyler is
the county seat. Tyler was at one
time known as the home of the Tyler
gang. James Stephen Hogg was
its head. There are very few sur-
vivors of the Tyler gang, but there
are boys in Smith county who know
how to make dividends on the farm
By growing n bushels of corn
on one acre Cone Beckham, a Smith
Bounty boy, won a trip to the State
Fair of Texas "and is expected to
win a big prise is a county wide
contest." •
There isn’t a practical pohtclat
in Teves including the Hon: Cone
Johnson, who could grow ill bush-
els of corn on an acre of land.
They are not corn growers, they
Hou ix> । know) if I CAN <3ro
TWO weeKS FROM A
AWW 2 I MAY BH A
dlework and to the desire to escape
from their oppresmed seal
Finally, picture, with the slightest
effort of the Imagination, those mil-
lions of wives down the centurin
who. "neat and smning." have wait-
ed ip "greet the weary mate when
he returns In the evening from his
labors"—wives with blinding head-
aches. Wives nerve-racked by the
inmnite petty exactions of little chil-
dren and of housework that's never
done, wives justifiably skeptical both
of the mate’s weariness and of his
labors In comparison with theirs,
wives packing pardonable grouches
under their evening amiles-! In the
name of all fair play, the sex roles
in the home might stand reversing!
EVVegT
y A&KSb us To
/ Fill I, Smewy
( ELbt mt, MllFb
\ 7Me”
ding day of- those whom she loves.
Now what would Pat Morris Nett
have done under like cireumstancen.
Would he have broken up the pro-
gram arranged in advance of the
convletion of Jack by permitting the
lueky Jack to peer through the jail
bars instead of appearing in the
role of bridegroom.
Pat Morris is a merciful man, but
be has little mercy for those who
toy with the beverage that la said
to intoxicate. He believes that it is
a crime and that the punishment
should tit It
Otherwise, he has a heart that
50
(I fTAN’T ACCEPT
2 IMITATION ON &uc <
f SHORT NoTICEIKEED)
( T/FS TDMAVEMY &U/F)
Q PRESSEDA—
(J
d
FROM CALIFORNIA
------------By Dorcas Drown ' ,
___. . course are tana in to-dnys exceme-
Only twe dlagonals of Mart "uere”
en wedding day of her parents. A
ii eamily reunion will be held. It will
Be a joyous tunetion. Jack win be
the cynosure of all eyap—of alt
feminine eyes at least Of course,
the masculiue eye may prefer the
winsome bride on the golden wed-
given. a big .mark in the book
guarded by the recording angel.
Columbus Come* Back for
**Aay'erroweous reflection upon the
ehracter standing or reputation of
#sm
ol publishers._______ '
Kw%
ni
* Plan -ReGLAR TedsoceAN
commggcimL seRage.MAKNG . >
m2 I 1o f Tref OAYs." -
i 1,!
DISCOVERY
I loved you but I chose to go
with proud head still held high,
it hurt but it was wiser no—
My "Goodnighe* was llood-bye.
Hut youth soon tires of bein«. wise
And when hearts long have bled
one finds with hopeful, tear-stained
eyes
y
■
■
tom, men
class and
of theE
yesterday
iden‛ M'E
ford averE
party T
ger to be
bled ear
their sew
After a
the work
and befos
came, hal
of which I
found the
rapidly f|
red and ■
Membei
Ing were
Ila Chul
Mrs Marl
Mr M F
son, Mrs. I
McGlellan:
J. B Wri
‛N
principle of tit for tat.
Consider the generations of wo-
men relegated to what Lord Firk:
enhena himself describes, “ wNC
baser duties of domes,Ie life. Why
shouldn’t men take a turn at them.
Think of the women who no
merely "order the meats and direct
a staf of servants," but to buy. cook,
gerve and clear up after three meals
a day three hundred and Sixty-he
day in the year. (According to a
recent report of the bureau of eco-
nomic research. »5 per cent of Am-
erican wives do their own house-
work. Why not let the men take
rcERi feets G000T Be PACK ON
enar me A rew Houws. J sPPOSE
। te"ee smu TueNe ABof Vovmes:
eort Gwe me
A APER!
IS sEENAVDITNCE
KEw YORK.. 2, pekualo av -
alene ot the udsasua.I, X
urea st Bl.tM.m. <» • "IN(To
the National apzstgun"ana I
".3 eneanumnye
of tamilles owntizeerndn. bsina .
calculated on 3.0en5 “2.85 th. *
this was multiplied a
average number of person
family. ,3 .
--------H----;
But Lord Birkenhead, of course,
aoesn’t think so. "Eiher our fam”
ny relationships wN remain fundan
mentally as they are today, or.the
paradoxical reverse, which I have
tried to picture nbove, meet haP
pen,” he says.
-j do not think the second alter-
native conceivable. There remain*
equality, as between hueband and
wife, and this seems to me "ven
more fantastic."
We were reminded by the lordly
logic. Of an amusing passage In
Rheta Childe Dorr's new and Inter
esting book. "Susan B. ’Anthony:
the Woman Who Changed the Mind
of a Nation." A Mr. Burnett of
Eame, addressing the speaker otthe
are orators, they are lawyers some
of them are servants of the PoPle
but in polinar campaig zeara 28
percent let It be known "they were
born on a tarm."
Sure they were. Large cities have
come to the fore in Texas in the
paast quarter of a century A quar-
ter of a century from this time
there will be dties of 360,000 and
400,000 under Texas skies and the
—w*
m385 —
3--
--W
—-o-a
8 —
5—
j
offering-
Acnoss
1. Perstan sage
S. Volume of mape. |
10. A pouring out. '
14. A crystal astringent-
10. Value.
10. Metallic vein.
17. Rich soil.
11. Undressed bide*.
10. Tart.
30. A house.
22. Teutonic conquerors
of England.
24. A highway-
35. Arraign.
26. Girl’s college-
29. Bet with thorns-
S3. A little isle-
34. An Asiatie country-
35. A malt drink.
s6. A food fish. ,
37. Forepart of le<
(pl).
3S Plot.
39 A number.
40. Unclones.
41. A fish recembins
trout
42. A printer** mark of
reference.
44. A celestia’ body.
45. Rave.
46. Def ft me.
47. A forerunner.
60. Stntes in Hema
54. Egyptinn godden.
55. Lonc.
kCan
AwofAtONK
Wek FROM /
T DAY 4
the ----- . —,— -y- - ..
thetr wages end the EuerlaneniP «
children, tnunderea "Are w. “
gut the stamp of truth upon Ih" li-
bel here wet forth that men and wo
men ta the matrimonial relauon are
to be equaif We knew that. Go
crented man a the representauve
enete,chat after his oreauon th.
reator lack from his side me mA:
tertal for woman's creation: and
that by the instituiton of matrimony
woman was restored to the aide of
man, and that they became one
dlesh and one being, he being the
head.”
, Oh. well, only Mumsolins and lore
Birkenhead talk that way nowadaxs:
And what really la "fantastic ' about
equality between husband and
wife?
Lord Birkenhead finds inequality
fantastie when the husband is the
under dog. Nor does a fair-minded,
loving woman want thing* that way
__except, as we said, in a mood of
momentary reaction from the tradi-
tion-hallowed inequality that eem8
perfectly right to Lord Birkenhead
—with the wife in the role of worm.
What the best type of American
wife wants—and gets—is equality in
the home. Only this and nothing
more.
She neither gives orders to her
husband nor takes them from him.
She doesn't pretend to be his moral
superior or he her mental superior.
.They are partners--EQUAL part-
ners—in the business of running the
home and bringing up the children.
Their labor may be divided, or it
may be shared: If the wife devotes
herself to housework and the family,
the husband understands that her
wise expenditure of the income is.
as important for the joint welfare of
the trm a* his earning of that in-
come. If she, like himself, earns
outside the home, then he, like her-
self, helps inside the home. Either
arrangement is one concluded be-
tween equals.
They share equally in authority
over the children. They share equal-
vaud 7
0,“
H)o
a Day
---s
on unconfined or undisturbed. He
who errs on the side of mercy is
GERRON AND Wis BuL
Elwin Gerron of Ellis County,
wi be the baby of the House of
the Forty-first. He has just passed
Nix list mile-post. He is for an
elective highway commission.
He would divide the state into
four distriets, the commisston to be
composed of five members. One
commiesioner l» to be elected from
each district for a term of two
years and the chairman in to be
elected by the state at large for a
term of four yeara.
| HU bill will be submitted to a
conference of legislators who favor
changing the method of selecting
the commissione. the conference to
be held in Austin some lime in De-
cember.
Publicity is rhe thing. A space
in the big picture p the thing. A
name in the headltes is th. think
There is a way to go about it. The
"baby of the hguse" appears to know
the way. X
P y
k j
q J
equally in the reupect ot mrrou
nity. Their vet*, ore.mummut 6
• meame alwaye. taenuicnhon5ubou
whatever domentie. 429
moving, or th* chotet. o1300w
college, or the purohane. oAu
car—the partnetiNip cmenan05 a
decislon made by two equain on *
dasin ot PeaCon and of compromtse:
That U intelligent marriagenhat
L marriage ea we and Penw «
other amerte an. women .n°w :
What la fantantic about lit *»'
other plan of amocieuon 0nn
tween avuized women contains. 1570
that is rantastie—and more, thet ”
common senee, common jstice, com
moa aftection 7
^•475-3^" ”T
With woman „upreme avh man rele-
gated to the naaer auties of aomestie
rer While the wite, top-hat on
brad Bella .tock on the Exchana,
er. with powdema wia covering her
ahingiea hair, dlapery*" 2ustiee an.
aphorism from the bench: or edit”
. newepaper, or manexes • bank,
or takes up a pavement with drill
and pick? While she is doing these
thtnxa. will he order lhe manta and
direct his statt of male aervente;
will hla gons concentrate on a. little
piin •ewine and wish they wer:
airin; and will he be ready; neat
and Mailing, to greet hie weary mete
when she returns from her labors.
Thus the Engiish anti-feminist.
Lora Birkenhead, indulses in the
current Cosmopolitan, in what he
calls "wild ravings" about the pos-
sible future roles of man and wife.
The modern woman. In a first impa-
tient reaction from the past role at
many wive., feels like telling Lora
Birkenhead that it would nerve
men jolly well right if all these "wid
ravings" turned sober truth—on the
11. A weed which ctaase
horuw.__
12. Myeh10a1 >up«eu*»
Deity (Bcan).
It. Mnrrte.
n. a alte- . ..
n. neient toua of
ezogotamats.c
25 Part of face (Pl.)
24. A vlew.t
37. Cinder*.
samm w
reception of cmn-
jl. xUt the apymb. ;
32. A dootrina I,
sen*
ST. 4.(0?-.. u.
2 Zgheteanorhooa.
4: Ruba out.
«. Abundant.
♦j ram.
OB. 500%, protnev
(B5b.).
BB. A cerernqny-,
W Unoccufieu. ।
»1. Haught.
83: SoMM*.
83 2‛ung pott on •
card.
8
5*—
R--- THE WOMAN OF IT
” Mtoxcated, Hued $250 and sen-
= teneed to 60 4ays in the coun1!
Jan. He U a young man ot «o0d
reputation M the community n>
which he resides and the pronecut-
ing attorney of the county made a
recommendation that executive
clemency shculd be extended to
Jack. He has pald the Hue He
is as happy as » lark at sun Fee
He will kiss dts bride on the gold-
r \
3 1
4
- H.." "
- RHB’S umaromrenron
No womans PMBua a
German n"1-
m-2egn‛
MiMsELF -Md" *
Smith county, know how to grow*
. corn. Their brains are developed
and their hands are trained. Thanka
to the agrieulearal and MeeOaaHwl
College and a few ether institu-
Uons. • •
DowX
e.h to brewing.
- • -at pagt.
'i :'rd.
i i r water.
REKF-Ae (.
iHvireo ow Te Y
SPeR or Twe A
twteur' EbL,
c 8PEZ
' 181
q -o dt-
A. (:
~~(*d°Azde
••Hi there! I ay, do yom mina atoppige the iferal notae ot tant machine for am Hour
or so? I’m about to be martied in the lio me ncroes the street." E
F GRAF ZEPPELIX MADE HiSToHY
Graf Zeppelin made history Her
builder and pilot made history. HI"
crew and bls passengers are on the
> scroll All the German world *
g wild with delight All men and
K women of the family Tuetonte have
hearts throbbing with joy.
Grat Zeppelin set new air record.
E. Grsf Zeppelin saw to it that the en-
durance and distance marks were
k, broken. Grat Zeppelin is the larg-
H out airship built-. Graf Zeppelin is
the first across the Atlantic ocean
on a commercial flight, a 5,400-
R mu* night.
Graf Zeppelln was in the air more
than HIM hours. Grat Zeppelin
broke all previous records for *us-
tatned long distance rlightsby a craft
of this type Commerical aviation
E has been given a big boost.
S This is a new eivilization. This
2^ > is a new epoch. Time will come
E When commerctal flyers will cross
, the brood ocean lost- as the swift
motor cars speed across the high-
B wars of the world.
E ---------------
MooDYS GOLDEN WEDDING DAY
PRESENT
E Gov Moody has a heart He re-
fc milted a Joli sentetce and now Jack
Atexander of Comal conntv will be
E Spermnted to wed the gir ot his
ft R.choice on the Golden Wedding an-
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 91, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 18, 1928, newspaper, October 18, 1928; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1530081/m1/2/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.