The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 19, Ed. 1 Monday, January 23, 1939 Page: 2 of 4
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LEADER
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' Classified Rates
xlie rates tabulated below
; apply Cb ads origination with-
in the Orange trade territory.
Four, seven and thirty time
rates quoted apply to ads
•cheduled for consecutive dayy
only.
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Ward*
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] The Orange Leader
JK| jPuhllsh'1'! every afternoon exeept
IE. Saturday, ht*<1 Sunday Worninst at
IffSM J-2 Front jrtreet l>y the fIrarjge
l|fe; Trader Publishing Cornrviny.
gPI1', Kntertid sit Ornngp T «*i( I'. O. n«
^.Second Cla*s Mill Matter Under
Act of funirre** Morrh 3, IfllS.
: J. 11. OtHf!I-KY. Bdltor # T-iil.lUher
■Antie Tlrandt Qulirley, City Kdltor
Miss Kula Mi Turner. S<><*. Kdltor
Iftr OFFICE HOURS
K|,' Rdltorlnl Dept. H a. in- to G j>. m.
■ Hu«lnc«s Office* 8 a. m. t" 5 p. m.
KV CH'eiitetlcwi I>p(. s a. m. to « r> m.
KK'X Eicppt Suprlay ft a. m. to ft a rn
suBstmirnox KATKS
BwraRr Mull or Carrier, t. month . $ .5.1
| AdvrrtlMlns Rates'Will he Pnrnlahxd
S ,,r">n Amill^ation
¥.-? AP30.CIATKD T>RKBH MEM I'-Kit
j
IV
- -
lf~2.-SpeciaI Notices
I -
sabine mattress co.
I * VISIT our RHOP and •••
our complete utrck (,f high grade
I homes furnidhinw ItKluding ojr
m;. FAMOUS INNBR-aprilKa mat
■ tr?s . Wf> can also nclcntlflcaily
renovate your old mittmioi In'o
, tnnor-sprlrtij mattreanca. All wor*
ruarar.tccd. One day service.
Phoiwi us at ISO or visit our shop.
90 13. Orfen avenue.
singer machines
1 IBAT.K3 ANI> SRRVlfR. Hlneer
'' Itawinf 'Machine Co. I'honc 41S.
ORANGE FLORAL SHOP
In/IWERS FOR A1.L OCCASION8.
Pot Plant* >nd shrubs. ORAVOB
JfLOftAL SHOP. Pli. ne 71. Crsen
avemie.
hettie's flower shop
tOVBI^T CtTT Kt/OWKRS and pot
Plants" for all occasions. Phone
870. We deliver. Located i:i*htb
v:Mi John.
J. TORRES
•TIM. SRBVmO MY CTTRTO-
MERS and friend*. M4 Fifth
Phone SflS W. . 7.4
shoe repairing
DON'T NROI.kcl TOUR > IIOK8.
Have them repaired at Oood^car
f,_* Shoe Shop. 810 Main street.
f is^vnam'woiTi^
8. C. SIMAR erent ror iweiiionate
p; 10 years exverteriee. Alro cl"an-
K; In* and tr-ai(fhtcnlnf of monu-
mrnits, >01 Eighth street. Phone
>71. AH wri' fiiirniitM>A
WE IUJV, SKf.r. AND TRADE
HOOR and Cntll^. Kr<- h Jersey
m milch cow a to *cli or trade. Claud
Wlngate, A. A P. Market, Real-
dence Phone S*7. 12-10
bus station taxi
H TOON'S JS2 or «*«. *. A PETER.
SON. Eicliiwlrc rlKhts. Driver or.
duty day and night.
H. a. WHEELER, dTcT"
ClilROt'RACTIC ft
KAPY Hadlottierm.
PHTKrOTITE-
§ - Oatva-eine
t^'..*,'ave. Infrared, and • V'ltdet, itiy.
10$' Elcctro Ar Vibratory Maesctite. ? •
I- (end Spinal' Adjustments. 02 Oi-
Hfe-j, un«c Ave.
personal""
IF IN TROURT.K. I/OVK OR flffMI-
ffifi t",'*s, let inc help y«u, Reading*
!& flatly, # n. tn to * p. m. Tour
P&f"? pslronacc e'dldat'd and apprrrl
}?!?, ate'd. Mary B. 1 l«w, ltOJ Ctir-
tls, ft
* - L 1 7
OME LACXORV, West Park A «.
^hpt\(crn icth and 17th. Mra. For-
t, nTliomue 2 20
Opportunities
Vr,T. UC8INi:«H for Man «-r Wo
Wan. ' j) |iKIMI r«*'iul «i1. Wei!
' rj No .Selllii*. W ««
etoria lttHtted|el -ly. Investment
1 "Ifc'l hv (^iipmmi-«iN|. muNlws-
«<• Write t Olre plio'ie, nd-
,'nnrt >tVii# If es«h I* avail*
Id". Box J. Cire l>ader.
2-A-LOST
FOR $19.10 made to John
11 and endorsed by Mm
Joe ffudnatti- Ixwt nn Fifth
SI.. found phonv 'fie,-' I II
FIVE IUUUI. KURXIitflKD !!<.« '
Apt'Ii- Iin,; ,D 1 1 . Itland Addi-
11« o, I'OofMP l-'tl. 1-J1
NICK, CI45AV BKiHlOOM for on;-
or two jentleroeJi. 1*<I1 if tin. t-'SZ
TWO R«*>M nii.MSI! Kr> A I'ART
MK.VT. I'tllltji* i-.n-i. Mr*. W. I.
t?it«-pJ*rrd, 7'i J I •(!!.- ! •*.' 2
oak# Aivwrr.m.vr. :,«i twki.kth
. 'strekt Ko--.l-hed, eIcer'-
frt*en> f(.,«!. lilln p. Id.
4 -FOR SALE
i'U , t" hhIK 1 ! ;i,< X K 1 l>."«r. t""A
n -. • r:ci>s!«. :«<i 12a
I9ia 'ItiN'n.V < f re Terms. *er-
.Sal 8>ilt«. \1 r.ii u;> |! M iln
t jo
8KK I'H f< T I'fXII.
('HICKS': d o" t'r
TlVll I'IK' B l,[VlVi ROOM Suite
vrry r«a .r<:ib|e. !- «i«7, 1 li">
5-Wanted To Buy
SMAI.I, BCKIXKSS fiH l,(>CATIo\.
fji-een A"-'tue ptef^rt d \Vrlt«*
Bo* ' 82. '.if * Tt'-adw. 1-25
6-Help Wanted
MAN' POft HMALL rOKKKK n*uU>
ii|> fo
Wf'fk, rw>r<' |;it#r: s«#t ww «u-
lomolilli' ;m hcrfrtj*. I/t mo mif
)' « full
-rjmouth, t'lm-lnnnti. o.
AIAN AV'i (VIIK ?o run >
A«ent) l'|i It. 115 flret ivi—k. An-
tonioMl* stv^-n tin !«■*!!! * Write
.Mll.IJ*, 1IM1 Mwimoutu, CltHlnrra-
tL II
male instruction
MEN TO TAKE CP AIR CONDI-
lior.iuif and Kiwi rif Reft Iteration
nrd lictln- Uietn«ehon- Tilnat Ih*
mwhiitilrall)' U.cllned. wllilna
tr.:In In spare time <j> «|uallf).
Write ClHItlt* Inc., Bout 2*. <
I^-. <*er. i . \
female help wanted
Ni;\v KIND OF WORK for married
women. V«nr own drease#' FREE
and sip to *"1 utMli. Xo Invest-
tn'rv.i je. ulr<-d, «r !d nnd drtst
>|ye, KA8IIIOX FHOCKs*. Depl
> riyjCINNATI. O.
HOI fcKIIOI.D WKCIAl.TIB*
Ijvurjrttiiw for Ihe Home
BCV on KAHV CREDIT Terms
OVlt: llARMON
H02 John at Thirteenth
fhotie "tYi and We Will Cail
Hollywood Sights
And Sounds
By BOBBIN COONS
Hollywood — this is Urn
story oI an actor's return to
Broadway an actor who learn-
ed to like Hollywood but liked
himself enough to leave Holly-
wood in time. It is, therefore, a
rare story.
The actor is J. Edward Brotn-
. berg, hereinafter to be labeled
Joe. There can be no doubt that
he is an actor. Four years ago New
York critics voted him Broad-
way's outstanding performer—for
his role in "Men in White." He
wasn't making big monev then,
but he finally came to Hollywood,
because few can resist a four-fig-
un4 nffer.
This last Christmas Day he left
He gave a Christmas party, a fare-
well party, and a birthday party in
one. and he hopped off.
"When I first came out," he said,
"1 took a little house and it seemed
like a palace after our New York
apartment. Mrs. Bromberg fol-
lowed me. and she couldn't believe
it—all this luxury. We didn't like
pictures much. But Hollywood
c!i--s something to vou." •
• • •
\T 'HAT Hollywood does is cptto-
f mired in this incident. The
Brombergs went to dine one eve-
ning at the home of a top-flight
star. They saw grandeur on the
colossal scale. And then they went
home, and what had seemed like
a palace looked like a shabby hole.
Somehow, before a month had
passed they figured they'd better
move— to something a little bet-
ter So far, so good. .,.
The Bromberg career didn't ex-
actly boom He kept on giving top-
uolch performances in whatever
roles came his way. The ones I re-
member are in "Suez" and "Four
Men and a Player." and maybe he
ha.5 something good in "Wife, Hus-
band and Friend."
• • •
J AST summer he went back east,
looked around, and decided it
was Hollywood for him. On hk re-
turn the Brombergs went house-
hunting. They are going to settle
down. It was probably the house-
hunting that turned the trick.
I
1
WASHINGTON—l£ei£fm an <
with a flow of fine flowery words edgied with wit and humor.
It would be possible, in fact, to forget the fine and flowery
diction if only a new face would show up with wit and humor.
It is too late to pick one out of thee ——
"W« «rtt* on • Atm-Um Mm«y in
UsawMEr
Tfswfen Asfety Sotles
traffic, and the dope;
"V/e were looking at places,"
"and being
very particular. And then, sud-
said Joe Bromberg.
For
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ORANGE
LEADER
Phone 4
denly. it struck us—what kind of
place did wc want? We knew the
answer. We were looking for a
mansion on the Hollywood scale.
We realized what our tastes had
become—saw the danger signal."
Joe figures they can live for five
years >n New York on his movie
savings, although not in the Holly-
wood-accustomed style. He'd have
had another nicc raise il he'd
signed again for pictures last op-
tion-time. But he's gone back to
Broadway, where he'll work for
much less than pictures give him.
A
m
mi mvnrt romtx
FOK lut mCMAMP i
Wimeit m U90M
ZOOLOGICAL
COOPERATION
AMtonA *o*T n***
! Iff ft IKY
my
Moran/frs h™0"*"!
yomfORr AMP MTfAX
r/UKY UTTU Mrot,
l/tff BOVTOM'S
TxiavifA M*fur.
went TUB HAtf
Of M*/S tut tttSL
electorate. That chance passed last
November. But there are a number
of new and comparatively untried
senatorial fledgling* who could
I k e a public career for them-
fres if they only would barb
quips and at the same time
them with good humor. Of
thi dozen or so/*Yotinf Turks'* of
the' 1932, '34. or '36 vintage, there
were many serious minds but not
a solitary one has blossomed yet
into a worthy ribber.
It is a dang' . oos business ... at
least more dangerous than simply
being a placid senatorial stick-
Senators jabbed by a .prickly wit
will gang up to take mm down a
peg. and be it recorded there is
nothing so flat as a deflated wit
But a man who can take it from
all sides can be the subject of head-
lines and parlor conversation until
the end of time.
• • •
Hurv The Ms lcr
THE law Huey Long was the lat-
est complete master. He once
took on three senators at a time,
backed one after another blushing
into his seat by pointing out their
own political tomfooleries and
then rubbed it in mercilessly by
adding:
"When you want a fight, don't
pick on a porcupine."
He spent hours goading the late
Majority Leader Robinson into a
lather of fury and only once was
taken into camp. Senator AshurU
of Arizona, scholar, wit and gen-
tleman extraordinary, left Huey
fairly jibbering by excoriating him
in exquisite but telling language
to which even the KisdUi could
not reply. He didn't bite another
MMlor tor days.
There see eely two senators new
with a flair for wit and the bravery
to exercise it, and each it proAcient
only in !«■ «*«« fields. Besides Sen-
ator Ashurat. there is Senator Tom
Connally of Texas who wiU boldly
wave aside a telling point in argu-
ment in order to make a wise
crack or point up a good story.
floit laofcrd Promising
Y'OUNO Senator Hoit of West
Virginia came up with a repu-
tation tor sharp wit and telling
punches. But he has spent four
years of his fix-year term in an
unpromising cock-fight with h i s
colleague. Senator Neely.
Senator Reynolds of North Caro-
lina, youngish, widely traveled
and branry as a cornet, has the
makings. Hk ksxne state political
speeches often are a public picnic.
But in the senate, he drown« his
*!t in ari ocean of words. A two-
hour speecn is just a warm up for
him.
Calvin Coolidge once warned
that this bus. nesa of being a po-
litical funny man wzs a profitless
one. In his magazine autobiogra-
phy he told of writing a satirical
and witty piece to deliver at a
banquet white he was sn eollejre.
His barbs hurt several people, he
felt sure, and undermined his own
dignity. He vowed then never to
be so humorous again. It is a mat-
ter of history that he almost never
was
SEARCHERSSEEK
SIX LOST IN N. M.
SNOW STORM
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bti<{u#>r<ftt*, whfro m*/-
w«*rr inhw«>ri*i1 In n hll-xxxft
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IntrlwUil ;
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PVfMx rjT. J!
NEXT TO WIN
CHANCE AT TITLE
COAL OF LEWIS
HCllMIT. N. jr., Jan. ?1. t AJ'i - -
W\ I t r j w.trilhts Cie he«vyw 'lsl t
••h-irr.[■lonxhir'. -l«Bf( llenry Ii f«>p
i Ii/Jij time h.t wanted n elianee
at it.
he tun'l fsfjrh'
when he !►)>« |;)1«, tti - tiny ,-ii Mad-
|*on Hfiuare (!ard«i, N« .v Vrrt. f-.t
him *h«liU«l IS-round rn njfe v«|:li
-I.ye
Hits iriake* him the only- "mire
tblnx" ever in tantjH"- with the
b« mtwr's fun* and If the wh ie pro-
f-eeditijss were a* simple nx ihU <le-
dU<tU n, one and all eotrt<l >fo ho r e
right mow.
A* a matter of eold a:>aly*l«, l^-«
l« I* not a I . inb Iwlnt M to •liinih-
ter, although he may tic led there
anyway.
He in a trapt ifi-< n«-Kro i>h)*lal
*j«e*!rn<i> who at the age of J*. h;>*
h;«/| !«'* i roff*(t| .ria! fight* nd held
the world'* iisht liea,.v)weight title
three >-e« *.
'*1 rure have waited a long while
for ihl« < hahe In lifted.
"I'm in great wha|>e. I'll weigh a-
round l*J and I d« n't thin- the hig
pull Iate>at 20 f ound« > 4<m- will hav<-
ought t« make any differe.ix «■ I've
ler^ leoinK be-avyweiglrtu tmmUy fur
i j <ouj*ie of yeor*."
Wwar college wa« founded in IM
with an endowment by Matthew
, V«*«a r.
January Used Car Clearance Values!
1934 Chevrolet Coach, good condition, tires, etc. J195
1934 Plymouth Coach, extra good condition $195
1933 Ford V-8 Tcdor, exchange motor, good tires,
paint — $195
1933 Chevrolet Master Conpe, fair condition $ 95
1929 Chevrolet Coach, new tires, nms OK ..: $ 65
Dodge Sedan, good tires, runs OK % 45
TRUCKS
1934 Chevrolet Vt ton pick-np $225
1934 Dodge l/2 ton pick-vp $145
1930 Ford Model A % ton panel $ 35
SMALL FIXANVK ('HAfUiKS—PAVMKXTS AS I/>W
AS fciJiO PKB WKKK—ASK OI K SALESMAN' AWU T
THK "PARTNERSHIP PLAN" THAT SAVES YOU
MONEV.
MODERN CHEVROLET COMPANY
Third at Green ;/ ' Telephone 99
lreclar fellers
Jimmy Allowed No Dead Heads
By Gen^ Byrnes';
-l4H kwvH.W V -nts l^trf V
lA ««
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THINK WC CAN _
MAKE GOOD U5CT VE5/ BUT HOW
OF THAt $IRL '1 ARE VOU GOING
WHO CAME MERE / TO SET THAT
SEARCHING FOR J GUN AWAV FROM
DAN DUNN '
NO. 11
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VOU WAjtfM |I5
HOW I WORK
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Quigley, J. B. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 19, Ed. 1 Monday, January 23, 1939, newspaper, January 23, 1939; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth289883/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.