The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 318, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 19, 1937 Page: 2 of 4
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FOR RENT
r Ckmfied Rates
The ratM tabulated below
apply to ada originating with-
in the Onnge trade territory,
•even aad thirty time
quoted apply to ads
for oonnecutive days
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The Orange Leader
Published every Afternoon except
•n4 8un<fay morning at
ont Street by "the (Orange
bllBhlng Company.
Entered at Orarife, Texas P. O. as
Second Class xJWull Matter, Under
Act of Con«i*8 NMarch 8, 187a.
3. B. QDlOMr; Publisher
Jttta FRANK n. HM1TCH ... Kdltor
OFFICE IIOURK
Editorial Dept. jj orr ni. to
Business Offices 8 a. m. to 6
Circulation Dept. 8 a. m. to « p
Except Sunday, C a, -ni. to 9 a. in.
-SOB8CRIPTION KATEH
By Mall or Carrier, 1 month ..f .10
Adtertlelng Rates Will be Furnished
■ Upon Application
ASSOCIATED PRESS MEMBER
FIVE ROOMS, BATH. ELECTRIC
Refrigerator and Ranite. Furnish-
ed or unfurnished.. Phone 9012F12.
S-ROOM^HOITSE. MODERN COS-
vejilences. Furnished or unfur-
nished. AVest Park avenue. Phone
01. ' 9-22
1936 Chev. Master
DeLuxe Town Sedan
AIJ/ OF OUR TYPEWRITERS
have been put in first class oondl-
•tiori.. Special prices for students,
fey week, month or period of achool.
A. F. BURNS. Phones 904 and 452.
J ROOM • FURNISHED APART-
inent. Bills paid. Frlgldaire. 1808
Cherry Street. 8-20tf
FURNISHED APARTMENTS. BOS
Twelfth. AH bills paid. Electric
■ refrigeration. Oarage. Phohe 760.
BIX RO()M.,JHOtXSE, partially fur-
nished, sarsiKe. Western Aire.. West
Orange. See Tom I^andruxn, A.
B. C. No. i.
FURNISHED APARTMENT. Gar-
age. 703 Cherry. Also single
bedroom. 9-24
NICK J, A ROE BEDROOM for gen-
tiemeii. Separate beds, adjoining
bath, large colset. One block from
business district, 103 Water St.
9-24
575
This Weeks Specials
$ri|r
999
1936 Cliev. Master $
Deliixe Coach, radio
1934 Chev. Master Ooupe $345
1930 Ford Ooupe L.;J. $125
1931 Ford Cabriolet
V-8 Wheels $145
1933 Ohev. Stake Truck $195
1931 Chev. iya Ton Truck $95
1934 Chev. Sedan Deliv. $225
1934 Chev. Screen Truck $195
1931 Chev. Stake Truck $195
Modern Chevrolet
Company
/ 1EHB ORANGE LEADER \ SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1937
MRS. WEIL'S SPORT SHOP
'"tA' i 1 '
new arrivals SiflLLlNpRY, in-
cluding Pom po antelopes in
all Fall colors, underwear,
hosiery. silk blouses,
hand bags., stark build-
ing—front street.
SALESMEN WANTED
MAN WANTED for Rawlelgh's
Route of 800 families. Write to-
day, Ravrlefgh's, Dept. TXI-569-
SA, Memphis. Tenn.
FOUND
* .*•; ■, . • '
4 HOOS, Owner may have aame.bjr
paying for damages and this ad. W.
G. Dempsey, off North Sixth. 9-20
FLORIST
FLOWERS FOR ALL occasions, pot
plants in season, ORANGE FLOR-
AL SHOP, Twelfth and Green Ave.,
- Phono 78. f '
Shoe Repairing
HAVE YOUR SUMMER SHOES
mano, Prop. *0-5
dyed fop. fall wear. GOODYEAR
SHOE SHOP. Main St. John Ro-
MARINE SERVICE
HARMES MARINE SERVICE. Ma-
rine contracting — Tugs — B*rges
speedboats-—-Quarter Boats. Fourth
etreet docks. .Phone 90. 8-20
Man About
MANHATTAN
By GEORGE TUCKER
KTEW YORK—There's a sign in a
, V®,' shop near 48th street and
a keen student -of human nature
must have written it. It says:
A Washington Daybook
3rd & Green
Phone 99
FEMALE HELP WANTED
ft * r.
SPECIAL NOTICE
PRVOB FURNITURE STORE
Dealers in new and second-
hand furniture. We hay, trade
and seH Also have Croaley
Weotrk Refrigerators, priced
$104.95 np and Orosley radios,
Frietd I19J9 np. 110 Border
•139.
FOR SALE
teal bargain, wo acre farm,
provements consist of si* room
hotrlK and f^^e.. room home, "All
land uhder good fence. J. e. PAT.
tilLo.
MY HOME lf)cate*D 3 Miles
from Orange cn Newton highway.
Mrs.,. W. P. Xlcown
9-10
8PE0IAL NOTICE
■IONS O* LIFE SiqNB, George Dun-
b*m, Owner. 'removed to 91 EAST
GREEN, next to White Waj> 8er-
trtee Station. 7.J®
TAXI SERVICE"
HERE IS YOUR CHANCE Tor a big
" bargain: An Underwood typewri-
ter practically good as new at
genuine bargain If taken at once."
A. F. Burns, telephoen* 452 and
904.
SPECIAL WORK for married wo-
men. Earn $21 weekly and your
own dresses FREE. No canvass-
ing. Give 0*0 and dress size. Fa-
shion Frocks, Inc., Dept e-4820,
Cincinnati. Ohio.
PERSONAL
FOR COMPLETE CONFIDENTIAL
READINGS, advice on love or bus-
iness, every day,- U a. in. to 8 p. m„
1403 Curtis at Thirteenth. Mary
E- Hess.
NOTICE
we are booking orders now
for Super-Quality Chicks for .Sep-
tember. vinton hatchery,
Vinton, ui. -9-8
FARM AND GARDEN
HELP WANTED MALE
UNDERWOOD PORTABLE TYPE-
wrtter. 122.50 cash. A. F. Burns,
telephones 904 and 452.
1035 '-CHEVROL0T 4-floor 3<*lan-
Privately owned. Cheap tor cash.
Must sell. Albert Mouton, 1708
Weet Park Ave.
BUS STATION TAXI PHONE >S3.
Peterson and White. Peterson's
residence phone, is 62fi: White's
uptown phone 2«. Prpmpt •>- Re-
liable service any. -liiour of day or
night /
TAXI BERVICE.
or night A; A'. (Doc)
7-9
JJAMSON'S CAFE
S4-ri —
WANTED TO BUY
HOUSE TO BE MOVED- Apply
* Mrs. Sam Sweeney. 21 -W Main
St.-
HOME MADE ROLLS
HOME MADE HOT ROLLS. Siin-
day, Wednesday and Friday nights.
Holland Hotel Dining Room. —
MAL3 INSTRUOTioN
lAV DINNKR
s" and DRESSING
: or Fried , Chicken, fruit salad,
creamed cauliflower, potato salad,
fresh; pdas. candled yams," choco-
liite puddlhg, priced 4%?;_J5EGU-
LAR DINNER, choice 3 meats. 3
rcgetables. snlad and dessert, pric-
ed 30c: ALA CARTE order of fl*h
Bf:;
and steak. Cold plate lunch, 30c.
BELILE'S
' FOR G0OO FOOD OF ALL KINDS-
Sea Food, chicken and steak dln-
fter* Owe service is unexcelled
! Visit us this week, 11 r. Fifth St.
Barbecue Sandwiches
9 special sanmwtt "lover's
at r.c. hughes
m tourist camp.
HOT CAKES
JRVERY MORNING. Mother Fuller's
hot cakes With sweet cream butter,
honey, jelly, maple or pure cnr.e
fjrrup. Holland Hotel Dining Room.
to get In totich with mechanically
inclined man with character ref-
erences, ronst be employed, reli-
able with fair educatihlt, who Wish
to iietter themselves by training in
spare-' time for Electric Refrigera-
tion and Air Conditioning indus-
tries. Write fully. Utilities Inst.,
Box E". F„ care Leader.
HOW TO DIRECT YOUR DRAW-
-ING-TALENT into money making
fields in your spare time. Well
worth writing about. Ask for Tal-
ent Tbst. (No Fee) give age and
cnpaHon. Box F.8. 9—21
REMINGTON RAAiNO (Portable Type
Writer Division) will employ reli-
able local representatives. No ex-
perienee unnecessary. Wlte M. N-
Rand, 815 Fourth ^Vve., Dept. 912B,
New York.
325 BULB GIVEN AWAY
Our lnrgc, illustrated catalogue—
a true Gardening Encyclopaedia—
will soon be ready. To compile a list
of appropriate addresses of genuine
gardening friends We will send you
FREE a nice assortment of HYA-
CINTHS. TULIPS, DAFFODILS,
CROCUS, IRIS, ANEMONES, OLAD-
XOIjIr etc.. 325 bulbs in nil, which is
sufficient for a wonderful display. It
suffices to send us for packing, carr-
iage, etc., a ONE dollar note by reg-
istered letter, and to mention your
namp and full uddress in block let-
ters. Do not send coins or stamps.
Please mention also the name of this
paper. Dispatch, carriage paid, all
over the world, without Increase in
price.
KWEEKERY TULPENBURG
Postbus C 307, AMBTERbAM—C.
.HOLLAND, EUROPE.
boiy(>anjr ,dog in thi« window-for
Louis Bramfleld is a Successful
novelist, a Pulitzer prize winner,
y®t his neatest ambition is to
write a play. Of half a dozen pre-
vious _ attempts, none has been
anything to cause Eugene O'Neill
concern. Perhaps he is one of those
novelists who can't write plays.
Darned few playwrights could
write an acceptable novel.
• • • "V" 11
. Entertains Entertainers
•JPHE most beautiful women in
. * New York are not on Broad-
way. They are in the model agen-
cies. Anyway, we think so.
Doris Duke Cromwell likes to
give parties for entertainers who
seldom get to attend parties in the
role of guests. Recently she en-
gaged an orchestra and a dancet
and they were amazed to realize
that the party was really for them,
Her limousines brought them to
her New Jersey estate and while
they dined and enjoyed them-
selves she danced, played the pi-
ano and banged the trap drums.
Emil Ludwig has had 13 biog-
raphies published in this country.
They ihclude several kings, an ad-
venturess, and a river. His last
book was a biography of the Nile.
Dennis King is expert at steeple-
chase riding. He detests new hats.
Miriam Hopkins is five ft>et tall
and weighs 100 pounds. She stud-
ied art at the Chicago Art Insti-
tute.
• • •
Fast One On Louis
DILL ROBINSON pulled a fast
® one. on Joe Louis, who is crazy
about baseball. . . . "How could
this happen, Joe?" the tap dancer
queried. "Two baseball teams play
a nine inning game, and the score
is four to two, yet not a man
reaches first base?"
"How?" puzzled Joe, scratching
his head.
"Two bjapmer girl teams play,"
yelled Robinson gleefully — and
ducked.
By PRESTON GROVER
WASHINGTON—It may not b.
news to the watchful Japr
nese, but this government.^ ind
rectly financing the Philippin
government in its afmament pre
gram.
Here's how:
In 1934 congress imposed an c:
cise tax of 3 cents a pound on in
ports of Philippine coconut o
That was part of the plan, to kec
out oil competing with Americc
sources.
Revenue from the tax araoun'
ed to about $1,500,000 a mont!
and congress provided it should t
paid to the Philippine governmen
Suit was brought by soap mam
facturers, users of most of the coct
nut oil, to annul the tax, but it wr
upheld by the Supreme Court lc
spring. By then' $50,000,000 i
taxes had accumulated and tl
treasury credited the whole sum I
the Philippine government.
• • *
A Big Help
SUCH a sum is a mere trifle ii
the United States these day-
but it was* enough to finance the
whole Philippine government for
a year and a hair. Moreover, it
continues to pour into the treasury
for the credit of the Philippines at
the rate of $1,500,000 a month. That
makes $18,000,000 a year, more
than half of the regular Philippine
government budget.
But that is not all. Congress pro-
vided in the new sugar bill that
the tax of 50 cents a hundred
jpounds on Philippine sugar im-
jrted into this country be re-
•ii'ned to the Philippine govern-
sent. That will amount to $12,-
JO.OOO or $15,000,000 a year. Thai
x seems likely to stay regard'esi1
£ how the sugar bill is rewritten
2xt session.
The total is close to the full
;nount of the annual Philippin*
adget, and far more than Is re-
Jired in General M^cArthur'l V
„rogram for building up the de
:nse of the Philippines to a point
here even a first class powei
ould consider it too expensive tc
mquer them. The total Philip-
ne budget-for 1937 is roughly
13,000,000, of which about $8,000,- ,
)0 is for defense. , ~ - ;;
• • • ._
t May Not Last
"O^ONE would go so far as to
* say the United States govern-
ment was deliberately subsidizing
io island'defense system. After
11, under the Philippine inde-
endenee act, the islunds won't be-
?ng to this country after a few
-"oars. —
Also as independence nears, it is
, ikely the benefits the Philippines
,;2t will dwindle frogi year'fb year.
I'hey enjoy preferential trade
tatus at present; but American
farmers don't like the low tariff
on Philippine sugar and' vegetable
oil, SO the pressure will be on in-
creasingly to shut the islands out.
But the fact remains that dur-
ing the costly job of setting up the
defense system and organizing-the f
government, a steady flow of
money from the United States is
helping the islands.
Sabine Mattress Co.
Ua Hl>M(arSC IE NTIFIC A LLT
ITiaiUCSBC? RENOVATED
WE RENOVATE EVERY KlJfD OP
MATTRESS. Latest equipment,
work guaranteed. One day Service.
Phone us at 190 or visit our shop
at 90 E. Green Avenue.
JAPS LAUNCH
TRIPLE THRUST
INTO CHINA
PEIPIXO.j Sept. 18. (AP) — Jap-
anese military authorities announced
a triple-headed thrust deep Into the
Chinese central Hopeh province
lines today pushed the defenders
hack toward a fortified line," which
neutral observers believed would see
the decisive battle of the Sino-Jap-
anese conflict.
Despite fierce resistance, thp Jap-
anese ■'declared their forces had
swept on past Chochow, the walled
city 40 miles so-uth of Pelplnjr which
fell late yesterday, and taken new
positions a Ions the railway lines
south.
The right wing was said to |>e 20
mile's west of Chuchow and the cen-
ter wHitf at. KuanllcbtjnnB, eljtht miles
southwest of the safe city, after
lieatlti),' Cliiiiese troops tiacU toward
Luifihui on the railway spur between
Kaopeltlen toward the hills.
The .lupane.siv left, wing had slow-
er Koln;:, howevsu-, and failed "to
keej) pace beeausesf deep mud caus-
ed by the autumn rains. The east-
ern forces pushed to k Tioint 13 miles
from Tinghning, the in;xt railway
station below Knopeitien.\ intending
to cut off the Chinese retreat, to heir
base a 'Paologfu. 80 miles \belqw
Pelping.
Japanese aerial scouts report
an armored car flying the Rising
Sun l'lag had entered Kaopeltlen as
advance guard for the (!<l.*)00-iaan
Japanese war machine rolling south
on this front- I
The Japanese rl, or unit of dis-
tance, is equtil to 2.44 nJlleH.
" J
Standard gauge railways
feet, 8 1-2 inches wide.
j;
REGXAR FELLERS
l"he Worm That Didn't Turn
By GENE BYRNES
* Sccrct Operative 48
ba.bs.-1 have av problem
were tm<kt vou maf/
MELP ME -SOLVE
would vou ltke to
go BA.ck to the home
or would vou
rather stav with
owolf avnd me?
*' 11 — JJ"——
ow,
mr. dan,
i'd rather
STAV
with
vou—
MUCH,
rather/
SO LOMO
UERS 1 acfTT,
A VERV
TANT
EPRAND!
T KtNOA
THOUGHT VT
VMOUUD. SO
THAT'S VJHV
X DIDM' GET
TAFFY
jsm
AirMTu-Rii Ftfiittivi*. Ino.
'BUT THEN I CAN'T OBJECT IF
vou 5end me ba.ck—
vou've done a.n awful lot
for me a.n' mavbe i'd be
just tk terrible bother to
vou—but vou t\re just
like i always hoped mv
father would be—
if i havd
well, babs, i'm glad vou
like me but there's
another angle too '
one twat's more
important than what _
either of us would LIKE
to oo — that is, wwat
would be best for vou/
J
i-'Y
s3eantime
IM A,
little
cotfage,
the
officer
of twe
home"
who had
BEEN
FIRED BV
THE
CRAFTV
MISS EFFIE,
SORROWFULLV
TELLS HJS.1
devoted'
WIFE/V*
TWAT WE
HAS LOST
Wlgi JOB/
[NOW NOW,tim,
|JU5T VOU BUCK
UP,--that
5CWEMIN'
A BUT T BEEN
THERE TWENTv
YEARSi BRIDGET AN'
STOOD FOR ALL
effie'll getf her graftln'
WERS—
A^J' TWERE
ARE
JOBS/^
V
SHE WUZ PUTTIE'
OVER ON TH'
PUBLIC-
BY HITT
in
il!
; ■
HITT Al^D RUNN—to No Use Bull—This Guy Is a Fixture for Another Six Months At the Very Least!
'■ ' ■■ -t j ii i j _ — —- - ■ - - i i t- '-■■■■ • —.^.i— ■ ■ ■-
IDOtfT CAW ir uc iSVOO^. O1 ^
bwthtt- almt gon^/a
kakt this wis" wot£l. DE C«MK
SOVOU KtfflMTAS.VtVUltl.l UIM
ITS TX3WM \H THE CELL
LlSTtki 6U&— I KNOW HOW |T FKLSi
TO BC BROKt- aS TOlKoH - W PACT
IUCWE'AWO I ARC 1K3MN ON OUR.
l ST S00PB6NE:NOW VXEVt ONtV feOT
o'mv LUN6S is WmH6 ok
CYLINDERS IVEOUlSGOT
amcttwer eM0Q.TiisTbi.rve
TUATs ALWeHTBUl
BRING T UP—
OMECOT BeSlOES TME owe Wt SUtP tN-AMO
ICOUtONT
THINK ClUTONfe MX) FtQP ONTWt
&
ii i—J—
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Smith, Mrs. Frank R. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 24, No. 318, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 19, 1937, newspaper, September 19, 1937; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth303104/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.