The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 233, Ed. 1 Monday, October 2, 1939 Page: 2 of 4
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ORANGE
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By RORBIN COONS
i UOLLYWOQD - Here's the
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and quarter# and
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MONDAY, OCTOBER % $939
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5*pply *o ads
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seven and #i|*y time
rates quoted apply to ads
scheduled for consecutive dayvi
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The Orange Leader
Published evur* afternoon exempt
Raturdiiy. mid Sunday mnrnlnc at
SOS 1-2 Front *tre«t by ithe Orange
Lender l'uti|t htn* Ontipntiy.
Entered at (lnnt« Texas P. Q. as
Second t'tana Mall Mutter ITntW
(A«t' of CVnttrem March 3, lOlK.
4. n. QtilJI.Er, WI'OI * l'uMl.iher
Ann* HmmU Outplay, ,Ctty Editor
Hb> Eula M*r> Turner. Sor. Edltur-
ntTirt ho<;rx
Editorial pept. •. a m- to . p. ,m.
Business Office* 8 «. m. to 5 p. ,W.
Circulation D pt. * a. ,m. to I p- ,m-
Siuept Sunday'« a. m. to J a m
SOUS' 'ItU'TJON JtATEX
Rjr Mall or Carrier. t moeth . .
Advertbln It.ilea Will be FunilshvJ
"•win Application
ASSOCIATED PRESS ' "At HER
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2.-Special Notices
PRUGF. FURNITURE STOKE
Dealers ir now and second-
hand furniture, fe buv, trade
and sell. Also have Crosley
Electric Refrigerators, priced
$104Ld5 up and Orosley radios,
priced $19.99 .up. 119 Border
Btreet. Phope 439. ,
ORANGE FLORAL 9H0P
aw, kinds of mixed cot
FbOWJCRS, rvittml 1'tont*. ^low-
«r« tor all occasions. Corsaneii a
specialty. ORANGE FI.OUAI,
8u01\ t20l Green, Phono TS.
BUSSTATioHTAXI
PBONY Jit or •>«. J. A PETER-
BOS. Kictu*l e rights. Driver on
duty day and night
57 A. WHEELER, 0. C~
OBIBapJtAC'tyC A< PltTXIOTHB-
RAPT Rnillpthrrm.- Galva-alne
wuv , Infrared an.I Violet Ray,
Electro A Vibratory Maaenge. F"ooJ
and Spinal Adjustment*. 03 Or-
a nee An
PERSONAL
r.M.MtSTUY. rHAVtACTER REA1>-
INO. Future prftpbecy In 1(11*1110**,
trouble or love. Rimilni:* £lt>« or
j&fgl .00. Private unit cnnfMcntlul
Mary K. It ok*, hus Curtis. Fur
appointment* phone
TIRES AUD TUpES
RAO HKUVH'E STATION', tVed*
ttros apd tnlK-*. A" aUe*. to-2
3.-FOR RENT
BE^.
tiATtOfe NTJVV Xf'.VP.TMF!NTS. PH
"rati* Iwtll, hot VittoiY iititltioi* [for
nliihcd. Sis nt>d $7 per xvook. Ow>
IllOCK from >}niit|^in P.-ii-ifto D <-
i>«t. mi Main. jo«
~ . THREE ROOM.APARTMENT. EI<5?""
trt^ Refrljtcriitlon. liiaht* and \vi -
tor furnished:, fo'nWmiih.
jio-T
FIVE ROOM HOf'SE. !ii. l.-in con-
vmiIwiw*. a pactrncmt. nos and
not Main.
• 1 " 1 ■ .u.'.'.i., ..
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m
1MPHOVED KltWr.lKR STft.WV.
Ham <*l«rl<
I n r.
l.lSTKX HE \'"TH"!"I,
liomcHliti* • fitalHA fiM>i Mr,ft
f|<* J. E. PaliillK
ion eisy p-vm*.
"MEW YORK—One of little old New York's most picturesque eus-
toms hos been victimized by the war, and henceforth no foroion
flags will fly from the mastheads when viaiii
distinguished dignitaries are guesfa
New York has been a metropolis < -
of any consequence whatever, it
has been an interesting ceremony
x to honor foreign representatives
by raising their ngtive flags above
the hotels w-here they were
guests. I have often seen the
Union Jack floating Ifizi'ly by the
side of the Stars and Stripes
above one of the m^jor hotels in
Manhattan, and that was as sure
an indication as word from the
Embassy at Washington that Sir
Ronald, the former British Am-
bassador, was in town. Indeed you
had only to drive through the
avenue and note the colors above
the hotels to guess fairly accu-
rately who the day's visiting dip-
lomats were.
A number of hotels in discon-
tinuing this time honored cour-
.tesy.flive as their reason: neutral-
ity. In keeping with the Presi-
dent's request that everyone re-
frain from making statements, or
in making display, of words, and
deeds, these hotels believe the in-
terests of American peace will
best be served if. the flag custom
is suspended, temporarily any-
way. And so from now on the
only waving colors you will see
will be the American flag. And
the only national anthem you
will hear in the dining rooms and
dance halls of Uiese hotels will be
your own. Because Foreign Na-
tional Anthems have gone the
way of all flags.
It may be interesting to you to
consider that this flag ceremony,
while ctAu-teous and a very flat-
tering, is also an expensive pne.
There are, literally, hundreds of
nations. The large type of flag
used in this ceremony Is extraor-
dinarily expensive. So that when
you consider that hundreds of
these flags must be purchased,
you may appreciate that here is
an investment running into thou-
sands of dollars.
• • *
ANOTHER gesture in behalf of
^ neutrality is particularly note-
worthy and calls for a hats o® to
Fredric March and the producers
of his play, "The American Way."
which is anti-Nazi in every line
and castigates the German-Amer-
ican Bunds. The producers an-
nounced the play was being closed
bec^ue it inflamed public opin-
ion and, therefore, worked against
the interests of peace. An unfor-
tunate consequence of this, how-
ever, will be unemployment for a
cast of actors and actresses which
totals more than one hundred
people. Thus they take their place
with others who arc the unfortu-
nate victims of war.
I WAS thinking the other day
when I read this notice in the
newspapers what a marvelous
time O. Henry would have, and
what wonderful opportunities it
would suggest to Jimmy Valen-
tine, if he were around.
The notice I refer to was the
paid advertisement of The Bank
For Savings, and it stated si.nply
that 356 persons had at one time
or another opened savings ac-
counts and forgotten to call about
them. This must have happened a
long time ago, for the bank sug-
gests that the people who opened
these accounts, or their "heirs,"
put in their claims.
Now under state law these
funds will revert to the state un-
less petitions arc put through and
authenticated. So if you have any
long lost uncle who went to Aus-
tralia a long time ago and disap-
peared, you'd better ascertain
whether or not his name is on this
list. It just might be that here in
New York a tidy fortune is wait-
ing for you.
If you live out of the city and
would like a list of the names
published in connection with this
affair, I presume Uie Bank For
Savings, New York, N. Y., would
be glad to send you one.
a sick headache because of it. do
hear about war, and then—for re-
laxation and entertainment—no to
,Ulilt two to flve hours ^depending
on whether yoitr theater serves
double or triple features) to get
aw&y (from it' all, to forget?
Hollywood would give more
than a couple of plugged nickels
for the answer, served not and cer-
tain. at /the moment. Hollywood
doesn't know, and it has to guess1.
• • •
' • i \ ; fy-.- ■ ■
INHERE are going to be war pic-
•I tures, certainly. Red-hot, from
the news angle, is "Thunder-
Afloat." story of submarine War-
fare in the last war. Metro finished
it just before the new fracas start-
ed. Red-hot, too, is Warner's "Es-
pionage Agent," finished just be-
fore President Roosevelt turned
over anti-spy activities to the
F.B.I. First new tpresent) war
story bought is "Battalion of
Death," by John Monk Saunters,
dealing with a "suicide organiza-
tion" of Frenchmen who know
they'd die soon regardless and de-
cide to die for France instead.
Paramount got it, Warners' "Fight-
ing 69th," dealing with the New
York regiment, la still under
way, and Twentieth has
pounced "The ^
^ploit," story ofi
But the ml
I school of thoi
iweth has an-
gaiety
t has its follow-
■ and ■
ers too. Audiences—especially In
war countries; it their theaters
are opened—will want to forget.
They'll want music and comedy
and pretty girls—and Hollywood
is going to give them all three.
It would not be surprising to see
the happy ending even more the
rule than it is In "normal" times,
nor to see a concentration on "hu-
man interest" and "heart" stories
of the type of "Boys Town," "Four
<2StiZfi£&'%SSSgS
Side as well as h's bfu^barlc.
jggygr. •
tnelpffcjuna seems set
too. .Violence
sterns fj
•like the projected "Virginia City"
(sequel to ^Dod*e City") to the
heroic sagas like "The Real Glory"
and "Four Feathers" and "The
Light That Failed"—all of which
are war although not THIS war.
C. B. DeMille says he's going ahead
with his elaborate ^Northwest
Canadian Royal Mounted" epic,
with locations in at-war Canada,
just as though nothing had hap-
pened.
But in the end, it's you with
your coins who will decide which
guesses were right.
And it wouldn't do any good to
poll you now, because the movie-
makers have to work two to six
months in advance with their con
mm
- 1
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HALLOWEEN PICTURES > >
m j . * 1 ■■ w 1
jecturing.
And besii
ides, what you think '
about it now may be just the op-
'U be
y it
office—half a year from now
Aft U..4 .
posite of what you
—with your mone;
thinking
box-
At best you re not
and in a war - conscious world
you're a formidable sphinx.
at .the
>m nov
predictable,
cious
A box-camera could flat this, with hl§h apaad film, one small "Bioif bulb
Inside pumpkin, snapshot exposure. Try some like It this Hallowe'en!
Interior of the pumpkin, nor shine
H
s a11 IM i.
I HH tUl
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L'« J.
-ST"
Youpg - Man - Not - Afraid -of - Llama
of Mr. and Mr*.
\V. ,"ital;<'. .
Mr. and Mr*. J. \V.
Sunday in' Pi,tut .yvUl'
.Hi ev<*.
Mnoiv sprnt
Mi'."* \>iiW
FinnU llubt'H and .1 . <•'< Ulit Um
ntti-niUNl thf TOXu* I'l lve.fli.v Fin.-
Ida PnlU-ridt.v limit,all fTum' In
Austin Jxiiui'ilny.
W. T. Ilarif 11 alU'ftdi'.t " I'ittet
Farmer* meeting In Hunl<<vill<< «l..i-
MS lint |ia*t Week end.
{.eoiuird MiiMi-Hsy of VI<iU*t«m P'.-IM
the [«i:t w ei'keitil lu*t < vvlHi lii«
mother. Jli'ii. Sue M >neley.
I>^- AleKnscne l?1 *lnriii
ilny* lien1 .villi lit< sinndtptr^wpv
MV. and Mr*. J. \V. IUirillne.
THE Jl'll f |iiv;.;irt>'? ,s" V-'"
VnrU World'* Fair wa* eiiulvulent lo
hulldlnir an en lively ni'tv vii.v i
Sliil.niltl putiulutii'li nn an uiili:!viblt-
Cll H) Ml I.
——rrrr"
Among the
In the famous St Louis Zoo are trained
llamas, one of wnich is shown here apparently clowning with a
young visitor. The scene U from RKO Pathe's Reelism, "Zoo."
ALLOWE'EN, with Its parties,
decorations, and grotesque mas-
querades. offers fine opportunity for
vreird, unusual pictures. And these
are easy—it's mostly just a matter
of placing your photo bulbs, to ob-
tain a novel lighting effect.
Ordinarily, photo bulbs are placed
at the subject's aye level, or above.
Ilut for weird effects, you place
them low—so that the light shines
upward into the subject's face. It'e a
aim pie trick, but it produces ur-
pcistng results.
Try this idea In a jack-o'-lantern
shot, such as the one shove. Use
just one small No. 1 Sood bulb in-
side the pumpkin, at a distance of
two teet (run the subject's face. For
bojt cameras load with high speed
fllm. of coarse, and open to the larg-
est lens spertnre. For liner cameras
and high speed Sim, aet the shatter
tor 1/tS second and lens aperture
at f/11. Incidentally,' see that the
photo bulb doee not touch the wet
fHItOI*IJH a pritvlidiin tn tin- wl'l
of Hnuiuul Hciillrn, vviiu n'.eil In l.sl-v
Inure* of hrisid sire given t.'.u needy
Philadelphia f.'vnitlle* nn each unnl-
veraar.v of hi* Idrth.
PERMAI'm the
rate In the world
directly into the camera lens (via
Jack's nose or eyes).
Use the same idea for a picture
of the "witch's cauldron',' at (he Hal-
lowe'en party. Simply place tbe
light down in the ketUe—allowing
It to shine up in the "witch's" face.
Also, get a shot o( s group listening
to a ghost story. For this one, place
photo lights at floor level, or conceal
them back in the flreplace, to imitate
11 relight You'll need two bulbs (or
thla shot, and exposure data will be
found In any anapahots-et-nlght leaf-
let, which you can get without
charge from your photographic
dealer.
It's tun to play with these effects,
bat don't overtook other Hallowe'en
activities. Get shots of the games
... ducking for apples ... costume,
and maaks . . . serving of refresh-
ments. Mske the party record com-
plete, and then you can enjoy It
over and over again.
John ran Onlldar
KEGTAR FELLERS
The Price
Mr*. Will A tiUeliitcy
nrdiiy front Khiywsntri,
Visit wltll lie:' I on, W.
Jr., and family.
nl'f.lveil *!at
I.,l. ,(/■!•
A. XuljlJ.
I>r. a: <1 Mr*. M. INHtvillinn.
Or I, "ii. Tltimiiwon. all n< t.r.iii^^
and Ml** Gertie GuiUnry nf (,■«):<
Oiutile*, l.-.v,, alli-iltllfil (M it( :.->• V.t t
(■.ei 'dlr fimi! aII •. 11 iv lii mIm >ii
Sotui-day,
All'*. UnliMl* and t\vn unlitt
of (Virnim fltrMti ave vWttin«. hi;•••
With l<eliitlvts. '"T"
x Mae ooiw mv
■VtOMG VMORK AT .
^uodihhead'S
WOUSE AN" rr WAG
DARK WWEN 1 STARTED
6ECOMO STBP FROM 1«E
TOP OF PORCH WAS/
MISSIS' AM'
|i';'■"
— *♦>
Ml** Myrtle .Vianet* of AnnhnAe
•la t.l*itlUJ! I>«;l;« ij> ;rt)ie Ivftr;" «(, h'ti*
Winter nlid In'iitheMiMaW. Jtev. nnd
'.Mr*, Snn.|l|:!.fS: :ibf, Wlm
Mr* l/n Ctnn^.H finil lit 11.'
daiiRWr ^tjt^ne^te .hftve
to IJwjif JKnW- l..i.. nf^v
hnvlnp st.^f.1 the .few wet^4
liere with Mrs?- Gr;" rd> mother.
1* T. iffi^jr. 'fT'vy •Were (*'4?
jvnpMl: u i, i l^elr ;}T C4^n .trip, by
t'oeliitm who will make
< '« V1""
Mr#, WI!«-> It jrn* «f Pnri
w.rtb Sj|r.
Uvnil. where only one;tenth of one
|ier cent ot the poptilution I* llllter
ute. Till* ainaidns i.h|i lngi uaa n
ehlevi I without eotiipulanry e«luea
Hon hhh did rnt Wilt* utit.ll t)!«.
Nn mnn As ptior that .t|i|e* not
think htin«e|f mi. — Jereiny Tnylor.
|i,\ve*t lllltern
I* found In t'lo
I
By GENE BYRNES
WoilT!
THAT
v—-r
Vrnr, i, Mil .\f« • r-Mtuw. 1 •.<•
«*—««
The Liitlcli: Whifitlo Blew Too Ltit<
By ARTHUR POINTER
WHO'5
EBN IN
lunch BOX?
PUT ON THE
"y0
TOOK AMT
SANDWICHES
f- A
,ini11 jiwm11 ,n u ■i! i[>.ein"iww
mm
w|-.
}■ • ¥. I'M
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hbbi
Sha!U Nuver Know
wwn
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Quigley, J. B. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 233, Ed. 1 Monday, October 2, 1939, newspaper, October 2, 1939; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth290097/m1/2/: accessed July 4, 2022), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.