The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 8, 1940 Page: 2 of 4
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1940
Menus of the Day
The Kin* Of Meats
Meals For Sunday
llled Plnaapple and Lemon J
'aides Browned Beoeaf* Cal
IPP* Serialised by •
STEPHEN LORRAlNf
jfirom the Paramount Plctura
matuiino j
DOROTHY RORIRT
■ Dinner
Rib Roast of Best.and Ti
entrant Jelly Hofneradl
Roils Butti
Baked Apple Budding
Spice Cookies
Classified Rates
The rates tabulated below
apply to ads originating with-
in tli« Orange trade territory.
four, seven and thirty time
rates quoted apply to ads
scheduled for consecutive day*
only. '
Umm #*«• One r*«r Sere* 89
Times Time* Timet Timet
t f> to IS .tC .4* .M | M
• II Is IS .94 .79 .S4 S.7S
4 II It N .14 M Ml S.M
• Cl to fS Jtl 1*99 1 to 4.M
• 14 to 9C .44 1.44 1 44 S.4S
T tl to SS .74 I.SS 1.94 4 tt
9 ee M to 44 UN LM l.t« 7JM
1 iBCh J
mb Roast Of Btof
t ribs (1st and K taaapoon |‘|
7Vk' wuu&> I peeled ^carrots |
1 teaspoon aalt I peeled poutoes
Have butcher remove pert of
the bone—ui« it for aoup later.
Place, fat aide up, in roaater.
Roast 20 minutes in hot oven.
Lower heat to 300 and cook 10
minutes a pound for rare, 39 min-
utes for medium end 30 minutes
for well dona Calculate roasting
time when meat goes into oven.
Do not cover, do not baste. The
fat seasons the meat
During last hour place vege-
tables around meat and sprlnlle
meat and vegetables with salt and
paprika. Turn vegetables to allow
even browning. Transfer moat
and vegetables to heated platter.
Bacon And Egg Sandwiches <
’{Maid d
K teaspoon 1 tablespoon W
seised the rope and started down
hand over hand. "Thanks and good-
bye," he called.
Dea frowned and bit her lip as
she watched Johnny nearing the
ground. Then she signalled Koko.
The ape understood. Belslng a cou-
ple of heavy stones, Koko stepped
Into the other basket. As Koko
dropped, Johnny was yanked back
to the tree-house platform. In his
swift ascent a branch of the tree
caught In his clothing and tore a
huge rip through both shirt and
trousers.
Johnny surveyed himself disgust-
edly. “I thought a branch clipped
me in that non-stop flight," ho mut-
tered. "Hey! I can’t go around like
this," he added, clutching his torn
clothing.
_ Dea laughed
and crossed to a
i ji ,|| ’Mm battered sea
chest, salvage
from some long-
f lost vessel. Open-
Ing tile box, the
* !i-: Ctrl selected a bolt
Sr of brightly colored
cloth. ' Watch, I'll
r mako you a pa-
t en." she said. For
a f"w minutes she
Pi worked busily,
r WWJ tearing and sew-
' ing the cloth.
H Johnny sur-
«-■Kflwfl veyed the com-
jjyw pie ted ga rm on t
J® with disgust.
“Can't you make
Rrywjp >unK i>an,s?” he
jgasmy fl demanded.
Ph9^^R
and put It on.
SB l'ou-'ll get used to
CHAW** f SYNOPSIS
different interpretation on Johnny’s
words. “Koko!" the girl called.
"Help me.” . w
As Dea and the chimp started
loosening his bonds, Johnny In-
stinctively drew away, from the big
ape. Dea laughed. “Don’t be afraid.
You’re my friend, so you're Koko's
friend. Show him. Koko.” The cblmp
obediently thrust out a hairy paw.
Johnny looked at the girl's seri-
ous expression and decided he had
better go through with these fool-
ish gestures. Shaking Koko's hand
ceremoniously, Johnny said: “It’s a
pleasure to know you, Koko. And
how Is Mrs. Koko?”
“He’s Mrs. Koko,” Dea giggled.
“1 get It. Just a couple of bache-
lor girls.”
“What does that mean?" i"W
By GEORGE TUCKER
VIEW YORK—The father shocking unemotionalism of New Yotk is
l' frequently manifested In the apathy of crowds toward individual*
who are dead, in distress, or merely drunk or sleeping. Perhaps thi* is
duo to the prevalence of ‘'sleepers” or jerks who, being homeless or at
least witless for the time being,
think nothing of stretching out on
the sidewalk orvm the even colder
pavements of toe subway stations
and dropping o.T to sleep.
The other morning about 8:30 a
man was sitting on the curb at
Chambers street at its intersection
with Seventh avenue. He needed
a shave. His clothes were pretty
shabby. By the thermometer on
the Erie station, just two blocks
away, the temperature was 35, just
three degrees above freezing.
This man suddenly toppled
over in the street. He lay with that
terrible inertness of the very
drunk or the dead. But he wasn’t
drunk, because his breathing was
imperceptible. Chambers street at
nine o’clock in the morning is a
busy street. It is the point of entry
in Manhattan for thousands of
commuters who live on the Jer-
sey side. It would be no exaggera-
tion to say that S00 people passed
this man in the space of fifteen
minutes, yet not a single one
paused to inquire after him, or to
give aid. They accorded him with
that peculiar stare reserved for
freaks or objects that inspire dread
or loathing, but that was all. No
one slackened pace. These people
were hurrying to their offices and
no uniderlifieef body on the red
bricks of Chambers street was go-
ing to delay them.
•sasffi
I to See. The eakawrtii*'* oh
iy is amottd to find that the
I (* inhabited by a beautiful
girl, Dea, who was ship-
tea ten gears before, and her
and told of a contemptible bum
they saw in the gutter. That is New
York’s way. That is the city and
the pity of it: Perhaps no one is t*
blame. Perhaps there are ‘ne
grounds for censure. The awful
immensity of New York precludes
the personal sympathy and
warmth to be found in less popu-
lous localities.
And yet, this peculiar sense of
detachment always startles me
when I come upon it. Why, I can
not truthfully say. Maybe it is sim-
ply the vanity of mortals who
grieve for those who have passed
on. Probably it is some offshoot of
fear, based on the subconsciout
realization that there, but for the
Grace of God. lies George Tucker.
termbei I__ ...
yet chtwganees, Koko.
JOHNNY closed bis aching eyes
J and tried to think. What was he
doing In this jungle pent house?
How had he gotten there? Whero
Was Jos? And how did this beauti-
ful girl happen to be on this other-
wise uninhabited Island?
Noting bis alienee, Dea feared he
liad tainted. Gently she attempted
to roll back an _____
eyelid. At the .
touch Johnny
lumped. "Ouch!"
he bellowed. HV/’
“Tha’s my eye!" ■BSb-JH.I;*
'Tin sorry." Dea
was renlly con-
trite. "I ihonght
you were tick.
Rut you act the WSk’>
sahie as hop " IHEy
Pop! When
Hie Orange Leader
Published every afternoon except
fle'orday, and Sunday morning at
I0S 1-2 Front street by the Orange
Leader Publishing Company.
Entered at Orange Texas P. O. a»
Second Class Mill Matter tJndei
Act of Cengresa March 8, till H.
J. B. qmODEY, Editor A Publisher
Anne Brandi Quigley, t’lty Editor
Utsa Enla Mae Turner, Hoc. Editor
r OFFICE HOURS
Bdltorlal Dept. 8 a. m to 5 p. m.
Business Offices 8 a. m. to 8 p. m.
Circulation Dept. 8 a. m to C p( m.
Except Sunday (I a. in. to a a m
SUBSt ■RIPTION RATES
Ry Mall or Carrier, t mouth . .60
Advertising Rates Will he Kum lab,-,I
from Application
ASSOCIATED PRESS .’ 'MREK
KJEW YORK end its immediate
*■* vicinity has some lovely
names and also some very hideous
ones. There is Corlear’s Hook, an
elbow of land that jabs out from
Manhattan into the East river that
connotes the first gathering of the
Hutch on these wilderness shores
For some peculiar reason this old
Hutch name has always fascinat-
ed me. And so has San Juan Hill,
a rather shabby section of New
York now but replete with much
two-fisted lore. The name that hor-
rifies me is Flushing. It was on
Flushing meadow that the Fair
was held. I do not know-who gave
this locality the name of Flush-
ing, but whoever was responsible
most certainly vent out of their
way to uglify an innocent com-
munity.
Names of places should be mu-
sieal and picturesque .with softly
flowing syllables such as Yellow
Tavern (just say that softly to
yourself) or Stoney Point. Great
Neck I dislike. Weehawkin is a
fine name and one that no one for-
get#
goes he show
UP?”
“He’» gone."
pea explained
sadly. “He put
pie on thlg, raft"
—ehe gestured to-
ward an ancient
rubber life raft—
“It w»» In a ty-
phoon."
Johnny realized
fhat bo hag been
JN A few minutes a cop ran up
s and bent over the man. Right
behind him came an ambulance
and a police doctor. A hasty exam-
ination revealed neither hunger,
nor narcotics, nor foul play. The
man: had .-suffered a heart Attack.
His heart had simply stopped
beating. The hundreds who passed
him and accorded him a glance of
curiosity mingled with loathing do
not know this. In (ill probability
most of them Wen) home that night
POLITICAL
Announcements
it,” the girt insist-
'You’ll tee when the tidal wave comes.” She grinned. “Up here we’ll ed.
_ . be safe and dry." "All right. You
win." Johnny said
as lie rejoined Dea. "Now what?"
Dea spinted to a crack between
two plank# of the floor. "Walk the
line," she ordered.
Johnny stared at her In annoy-
ance. "Games are all right,” ho mut-
tered, then stopped as the truth
dawned on him. "The sobriety test!
Uli-uh. Not me."
"Pop used to do It.”
"Your Pop was a sucker ever In-
put you on that raft,” Johnny mut-
tered angrily. He stared down at
the ground. "Of all the silly things!
A jungle pent house! What’s the
matter? Can’t you stand the noise of
traffic?”
"Traffic? What’s that?” ' ‘
"What are we doing fifty feet In
the air?”
“It's safe,’’ the girl explained. '
"Safe from what? Tigers? Lions?
Elephants?"
"Water." |
“Water! Way up here?” Johnny i
was Incredulous.
"You’ll see when the tidal wave
comes." She grinned. "Up here we'll
be safe and dry."
"Dry is right. Are you sure you
haven't got a drink?”
Dea shook her head and handed
Johnny another freshly opened co-
coanut Johnny regarxled It tn dis-
gust but drank at last.
Dea smiled happily to herself.
(To be continued./
loo fltppatrt.“How
long ago was
that?” he asked
sympathetically.
‘Job, I don’t know—but I was lit-
tle then.” With her band she indi-
cated her height when she had
reached the Island. Looking at her,
johnny suddenly realized that men-
tally she was still that little girl of
tun years before.
"And you've been here all alone,
ever since?" he asked. ,
"Only the flrst year. Then Koko
chine. He and I built this house from
shipwrecked things we found on the
hutch. It took us a long time.” Her
flitbd suddenly 3wung to another
thought “Why were you drunk? It
Witft'l reining.”
A queer little kid, Johnny thought.
Better not be too grown up with her.
"Why was I drunk? It wasn't rain-
Iflg—" Johnny repeated to himself.
"fop always got drunk when it
rtltted—and I tied him up. just as I
tied you np.”
“And When It quit raining and he
got better, you untied him?”
Don nodded. "Well, I’m belter and
yott can see It Isn’t raining," John,
ny pointed out, “so I'm fit to be un-
'?You won’t start breaking things
#Hen you get up?”
ft dawneu on Johnny that "Pop"
fitust have suffered from fighting
1 hlngovers. "Your Pop must have
I been a wonderful guy," he grinned.
’•You bet,” Dea agreed, putting a
PUIIMCATIOX RATES Cash In
S^dvanee.
For hT&(,o or district off lew $17 50
For Courtly Offices $15.00
Encept ufK^ollotYn:
<V;i»tv (V»irmiiN>*k»ner . $10.00
JuHiicr of the Ffaacbt, $10.00
Countable.............$ 7.f>0
For Mayor . . ... $15.00
For City Commitudomr . . $ 5.00
The Orargo Le.nhr W authorized
to announce the following cumin
dales subject to the* action of the
Do moor all rlh ImurloH.
amines sealed envelopes for any-
thing from bonds to a 10-ton truck,
and orders the cargo unloaded if
she thinks it might trickle through
some neutral country into Ger-
many.
And about the only thin* wt
can do is to protest. We our-
selves set the pattern during the
Civil war. The Union navy
seized British cargoes in the
Caribbean on the presumption
they were bound for the Con-
federacy, even though they were
billed for Havana or seme other
non-belligerent port.
'T'HESE -days we ourselves sre
A not being vciy polite—to Ja-
pan. We even rough up her geog-
raphy. On official U. S. maps is.
sued since January 1 we don't list
various mandated islands in the
Pacific as bring under Japanese
domination. That includes all the
islands aroun I Guam, our em-
bryo naval base in (he far western
Pacific.
Japan has repudiated the
League of Nations under which
these former German islands were
mandated to her. So as far as U. S.
maps are concerned, the islands
are orphans.
Bv PRESTON GROVER
TITASHINGTON - The cx-
VV planation her* of Eng-
land’s cavalier manner toward
American mail and commerce
is that she is either dead cer-
tain she is going to win the war
and/or dead certain American
support is “in the bag.”
This nation has always been
disposed to side with England in
any war against Germany. The
impression here is that Britain
feels she cun scrub us around more
than considerable without any
change in our attitude.
Moreover, her experience dur-
ing the last war could convince
England that she can do almost
anything short of raiding our
coasts without encountering any-
thing harsher than a stern note.
With respect to the mail and
ship searches—wo had the same
daily pinic all through the last
war. We got hot under the tollar
For Major
\V. L. BLANCHARD
On* red layer and one greon taytr
hat thi* feetlva Jellied Mlad.
2.-Special Notices
AUTOMOBILE LOANS
your guide. A zpecial salad c«h
leilll a gay note to that tabla, tot).
1 have a jellied one that cornea ip
two layers—one veil and ihu other
green, bright and fefitlve in appear-
ance, delicately pungent of flavor
it Is a real party aaM. Make the
sulad in a large mold, turn It out oh
a round plate, garnish with water-
cress.
Holiday Salad
fled Layer
1 oackcgf lemoti flavored gelatin \
1 cup hollmit water
1 cun .condensed tomato aoup • «
Dissolve the lemon flavored golk-
tln in the boiling water. Then add
the tomato soup and mix well. Pqiir
Into a mold And set in refrigerator
until Arm.
Green Layer
1 can romlerUK-d Scotch broth
I can water (doing aoup can for
measure)
1 package lime flavored gelatin
1 tablespoon lime Jute* .
1 drop peppermint flavor (optional)
Add the can full of water to the
Scotch broth and heat to boiling.
Dissolve the lime flavored gelatin
in tho hot soup, add lime Juice and
1 drop of peppermint flavor, If de-
sired. Pour on the red section of
mold and set In refrigerator until
flrtn. Serves 8-10.
No RED 'IV I'E
I If if;; your lll'e pa pent—It
t. kns you only 1!J minutes,
•VioTon IWESTAIHXT ro.
-1711 f'oJb-Ku 11. ITione lull.
B':it,uioi;t. Tex,i*.
ORANGE FLORAL SHOP
man vs. flea
AM, KINDS OK MIXED CIJT
FLOWERS, Kotted Plants. Flow-
ers for all occasions. Deranges w
epee laity. ORANGE FLORA l
HIIOP, 1201 Green, l»hon« 73.
J T Ml required the resources ot
A science to give man tho statute
of the flea. The most powerful
creature# In the world In propor-
tion to their alze, trained fleas In
flea circuses can pull tiny carts TOO
times their own Weight. Now
tapsred roller bearings reduce
starting resistance of railroad cars
so much thst a man can null a
114,000 pound car—approxh>:ately
700 times hts weight.
The ".noi'h. i- |. -Ig.-s" .-f Hie Ktn l-
iirv-.s an l lelki ui<* i;j .Wv» \yt», city.
y
BUS STATION TAXI
PHONE •/.>•* Of .[. A. PETER
HOY Kxclitidyo rights. Driver ott
duty day or nlghf.
Maybe it doesn’t mean any-
thing, but the conference on the
Cause and Cure of War is mcet-
ing in. the only worthwhile
bombproof quarters we know of
in downtown Washington. It is
a room two stories underground
in the Washington hotel, just
a block from the White House.
The President might like to
know where tc duck.
Of course he could hide in the
mdergroiind tunnels channeled
through Capitol Hill, but that will
WHEN THE
CENSUS TAKER
CALLS
3.-FOR RENT
GREATEST INVENTION
rm**m
A PAH; TMF NTS A VI) Hlp'y;. !, Km-
tiiyhi-fl iilxl rolLlluhshcil. J« M >!.
hrC. phone—* r3 I2-8U'
I f AN'S greatest Invention—the
1 v I wheel—has been changed In
design only once atnee It flrat ap-
peared at the dawn of civilisation.
The perfecting of tapered roller
hearings only 40 ypars ago waa the
first fundamental Improvement on
the wheel In all those years. On
railroad trains today, these bear-
ings reduce atarting resistance
»*&.
Harold Force Loses
ClotheB In Fire
According
FURNISHED APARTMENT. Ition*
672.. i •> 1 - -
A LARGE NOIMK. I'Ulf.N'IHlIED ut
Unfurnished Apirtmenfrent rf-.-i
sdriahle. Private bath 1208
Short Twelfth. Phone »JS J:
(1-4 tfI
fn u'oifl m-« iv«* t
linrolil Fc»ror, of city* i
student of Ham Houston Te*icU
era collofte at flutitavllUs tout r’l of
his clothing lust Saturday afternoon
When the school dormitory which lu*
occupied was destroyed *hy file
Force is a son of Mr* and Mrn. H
1*. Force of jthls city. Fom* uor’is
during ofThmirs at school in the o.
Texas’ present proven oil mserviv
of 10,7iM.Or.r»,Ou« (.Mllions) Imirelw
•itre over live billion bar.eU more
thai|. all U»e oil produced in Texas
during the past fifty years.
,1AM *i:iM I’ 5LS3ION
OKLAHOMA CITY. (/*F) — It
was swing to e?!iag f**: Mrs.
*»«rk. CJiving a piano reudUiou i»f
*h‘t. LouW HlurV' she came down
the Iwrloa do hard sh«* fmctured
'be Index ftojier of her light hi;r. 1.
4-FOR SALE
l*upo Vitelhtuus ordered church
services to be rend in I#atln In the
jenr t»63.
Adultemtion of rood waa pr«»hi->-
ttr*»| In Iv^pl’iM'l oorbr ns Utt^,
POULTRY AND EGOS
By ARTHUR POINTER
JITTER
Two Can Play Tfikt Game
Chicks, scxc.l or uiisfgcd. GW»P
Grain Co., Photic 23.
r—1 A\0ST AMA.2 IMG -. EVERY '
Time I SETTLE DCM'N TO READ
IT RAINS SHUFFLE BOARDS/
Fill GI DA I It E S’X Kxoetlest huh-
ditloij. y4,s* lLitenum, Orango Fur
' ffl^r • , < j ? >
il4 v:
swuFFteflaVRD
riubv# deckX
b(H.II) DARK OAK DRESSER. Per
fret condition,’ J-tlk Phone 35a.
6.-Help Wanted
VF.MALK HET.P WANTED
r*
: ■' .?<
M^<N
RALES LADIES
5 WR^KLy easily e.irnrd. V*»u.r
own i’HKE. Kh<»\v, mp.v
Hi»ring Fashion FrwkH. No can
vadildg. No investMTetif. sk*ml i-igi
and drr**s aixe. Fashion Fr<K*ks,
Dept. T 9901. CINYTNXATl. O
>»><*/'•
(TWO GIRLS WANTED, Joe’a Sand-
wich Shop.
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Quigley, J. B. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 8, 1940, newspaper, February 8, 1940; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth557216/m1/2/?rotate=90: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.