The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 70, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 23, 1928 Page: 2 of 6
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ANoTER REwSONAGV4 sareneoe ofGegow
CRAveL. keee me PevestkiA weu ""
ne FuSuADE
H4
land maste
idays, olu
shots of al
1 ■ Ls
erroneous reflectien upon.the
ndiug or reputation of
dirm or cqrporatioz
98g
2
wimiout mauch aricuity; 1a
^row xEsTmD4GS AsWe
*5
o’clock M the cha
Wondman Circle]
o’clock qt the W. 9
Compare qiaM
Cow creek tor * v
Amerlcnm Leddon
meet at 7145 ‘cloci
bee of commerve 1
Rainbow Qirla J
o'clock at the Maso
w. M. a. meeta a
the Fira Baptist e
(wednes
W. M. R. peetn I
the First naptist e
Greens in the
---
sod+-oF-WRmoRe
Aodorcmne .
wurLEeRNSTT
puckse A Ts
comRgafie
sen Ave nF
LiNe OF
FIRE.
planning, marketing and helping to
prepare family meals started up
again—the woman was luckier than
many another since she did not have
a maid, but she was also too con-
scientious and too wise to put the
usanu
medan tribeioT •’
—F
i ' T
9. very high moun-
tain.
L "
-rebssgz ’
——
lege daughter: "he
ent thetr wusamer hqt-
I seetne all the snab.
je Other ottice girls and
I bathing suita out or
work complicated dnd
NnVn
tazy ran
now suit. and new shoes for
business of getting the apartment
straightened out---it was in the usual
mess of mid-September. It had to
be thproughly cleaned—when the
woman hade looked up a new clean-
ing woman—her especial treanure
had moved during the summer with-
out leaving an address.
. Then the woman had to do all the
fall shopping for the children-—she
must by a new evening frock, 3
pairs of pajamas, bedroom niippers,
silk stockinga, a tweed ensemble and
a satin afternoon frock for the col-
< i-r"
l- .1
WINFREE F. T. A. Ri
Organization. I
The Winfree P. TI
meetings for the year!
With a good ttndanc
members were taken I
Un Helton, Mrs. Ju
Tnkersley.
The election of offi
22-8
olate cake every night in the week
and he nked it oftener than once
in di monthe—although dauenter:
tavorite dish was roaat chicken. A!
you know what a pound—although
each boy ate eight mumins api
when he could get them—and al-
though the woman herseic, poor dear
was paritcularly fond of coffee,
jelly, doughnuts and rice puddings
three simple gustatory joys at which
everyone else in the family turned
up his or her nose! Finally, she
has to sign up, once more, with all
her clubs and committees and boards
—the city club, the hospital auxil-
iary, the welfare committee, WO-
man's work which hardly any wife
and mother escapes, nowadays—her
"duty to the community," which a
modern age puts on a par with her
EVERY DAY MOVIES
5858092
s. incetatee.
• 8-JSn.^h'
1 pizport
2wandt
outside shrug shoulders, paste on *
smile and get busy with out* work-a-
office virtues which are consclep-
tiously cultivated by ambitious wo-
men downtown. She even entered,
with lest instead of grim deterrhina-
tien to look out for herself into the
usual autumn melee of office poli-
tics—the false whispering campaign
that rages about downtown donks
Now is the time when new peo-
ple are trying to get jobs—and heads
of departments are trying to use the
i» im pm
---48
T.W.AotTr
•m, to Aatley's c
Leave tbe church
W. S. «. beeie
today to 2130. W
chuerch.
„MdaGMwlenrzetzt.n-ienl.ertmeM":
MAlex arook, an peoplet Fanes humaping'ttorov ater au tee sNrt*
• ■ ■ - t *‘----------- ---a-
SCNTITES BACK I
FROM WENT 8
Mr. and Mr. Fred
turned Tharsday troil
ter many delightful I
been made. Mrs. Sc
tn the west for .evil
viewed the Orang Cad
ed friend, and relatiy
geles, San Francisco, I
and then to weeka|
Mr. Schulte in Salt iJ
where they viaited otM
iiatves before start
Texaa,
harness. Hs has Ml Ito many Im-
portant a wen as Mat placea He
has been glutton for work as well
as a glutton for research.
Dr Oacar Cooper of Simmons
College will be found at the Culver,
•tty of Teana for a year. His his-
tor/ should be worth while. He la
tearlesa, he la able, be la honest
and he la wise.
No man has ever owned him; ne
clique baa ever controlled bls con-
sclence, bis tongue or his pen.
Great historiana, nonest and im-
partial historians, live forever.
Billlonairea die in a day.
Demagogues pass out of sight
and are forgotten.
It is the written word of an hon-
set and able and intelligent pen that
lives on forever.
Ve
tan the mountain,, ape
had nothing to worry about. exedot
whether her nuble would be able
to. get away for the week-end She
had had .the most wonderful time,
lying in Ie hammock and looking
at the flew, playing bridge when she
felt Hke, it—no* when the club held
a schedulea meeting—darning in
the evening,, or if she were tired,
going to bed early with a new novel,
letting the children run wild, as they
were only too happy to do. But,
nevertneless, she was perfectly de-
lighted to return home and go to
work—first, of courne, there was the
a big
For riny years be Aas been in
newcomers to satisfy pld grudges.
Rhe lstened, without flinching, to
the catty criticisms and comments
which seem particularly virulent in
autumn offices—perhaps both men
and women try to work off, in that
fashion, the after-vacation grouch.
In short, there was once an office
woman who exulted 'in being alive
and on the job in mid-September—a
whole year away from the next va-
cation! Or so some one said—we
never met the lady!
You've got the blues, we’ve got
the blues, every woman’s got the af-
ter-vacation blues, and all of us
may as well admit. Nothing is ever
gained by kidding ourselves.
Having made the admission, let's
. 2 n
.f.Tt T
HUKT WALKING
BRECKENRIDGE, TWX., Sept. 21.
—Hob Farmer, 16, member of the
senior clasa 3 of Breckenridge high
school, was in a critical condition at
a hospital here today from injuries
received when he slipped and fell to
the sidewalk yesterday. Hia head
struck the pavement.
the "new Mw" and,
ordinated comt/ex.ot
. oxport—whtoawututohl
(an office, is t wreck |
verybody else with his
aw
commohwealth.
r,n
=f..—
Use Classified Ads whole soboftamilycatering_on
The Gang-War Zone
' A cew sAfeTY <ueee$7o*
■ ma nar ogt ces
uav gecome (e 6UNMS
wo-ers- LAND.
deadhe 2 ar
az=- 5=-
85. Kintow. ..En.in
58. Nomtnates again. N N to. PtoTto emene
51. sleep to. 2
58. Lost -elor.
x MOWN
4° r 9
Ef2ANieLATONR
■
8
Sunday, Sept- 23, 928.___
her! Once upon a time there was
another woman who just loved to
get back to the grind of the office
with all the vacations over, all the
bosses bark—brimful of pep, and ev-
erything hitting on six, to make a
new record. She got a real kick
out of breasting the autumn sub-
way mob, twice a day, out of writ-
ing letters, extra-long and extra-
numerous—to stir up the
tatenins "noweher""lords aay ob, uptown or_downtown_=
h By Haenigsen
__ths omic, sot woman tbariued anew, Ttor, ana Mrs
zgzk- -2-2,22 .........
inamfand hsh "“oa"an wm k™ totofW Ploying « one
abominatasneh they could rat choc- ces on vacation—wearine the anap-
on it al uh’ XS I 2 - plrat sport, elothea, playing tennis
swimming, canoetrig, daheine with
attractive young men, enjoying new
friendships and romances, and
never, for a single moment, having
’ ) be efficient, business like. reli-
able. impersonal and all the other
K11"^011 :Beat It!
mstrmettve emmsm.- Et.bpekomhroubs.neyme “Mobr,‘ithringer
t^u’hrapnu
L/wn “YoGnE."the widow, tenti:
hedrsterdy ai a hAbeas corpus
hearing for robettkathrinzer °n*
of two men charged withhe stay
Ing. In asatetet court sinton. .
Young waa killed neveral weo”
ago as he lay recovering from an
appendicitis operation. Lothrinser
ana Ralph whitenton. both.Eenvile
barbers. are charged with the mur
del- Lothringer was grante ba
of 15.000. The atate not having
contended that wiitenton’ caz2
war non-ballable, his bond was tised
at $7500. Neither made bond. .
Mrs. Young testified she had ask-
S’SSS-a at’£* wXi
1 the Ums of
1 (en,
a e). 7-42 f'f
r
^4'
conr}s cRks*I, Tea . »Pt «
-rmproper "between CaE
3umn, *) 1 / 7(
geg) $
10828
05 TeyK Ci'
(SNAD59
t 1
•--0 —
Kall drganizations backed La-
Follette Lour yeurs in many of the
states of the north and the east
and the west. Now 72,000 west
era trainmea and OoMUore dis-
headed their conference in the city
or Chicago god returhed to their
homes to await action of Presiden
Coolidge as the next move in the
strike situation coutronting 56
western railroads.
There is a federal board of media-
lion. This board has dismally tall-
‘ed,to bring about peace bet=eet
the rail operators of the weel and
their employes Now Jf is up to
the president. What can he dot
He is going out of office la March
1929.
As for the coal miners the offi,
cere of their national organtxation
have reduced their own salaries.
There le o vast army of miners
unemployed, in West Virginia sad
Pennsyivania and Ohio the employ*
era are organising their own unions,
known as company unions and the
future la not inviting for the dig*
gers of cool who believe in the
gospel of collective bargaining and
la maintaining high standards of
living la the colleries of America.
According to an eaateru economist
there are too many farmers, too
many coal miners, too many work-
ers in the textile industry, too many;
labor unions, too many organizai .
tions of wage workers.
It there were no organizations of
wage workers in America, there
would be no high standards of lir
lag, and the purchasing power of
labor wouid be whet It le In lands
.where collective bargaining is us.
known and the worker is a chattel.
gl t
-A
Ee P 9Nsare TReMeH
EEPseN OFFEReO TO
3_5 wag feN crfes FoR
• wa K WoRI
A MAN WITH A MLSTORY
There le a man with a history in
the e of the Violet Crown. This
man with a history is going to
write a real history of Texas.
He has been in harness' fitly
years.
He has been watching Texas grow
more than fifty yean. He has been
on the tiring line of educatiena
, development for half a century. N
He knew Texas as a wildernesst
He knew mwes Texas. Indeed all u
couatty west of Fort Worth as th|
arazine lands of cattie barons and
caw boys." . : '
Evety day a new page in the un-
writtea history ot Texas was placed
before him. He did net give al
hts time for research to the tou-
. catona side of it. He gave all
his leteure hours to poring over
the documenta of the Texas ot the
lone ago.
W Early to life he became kaown as
sone at the ripe scholars of, Texas.
i Barty la lite he became knows as
............-
4 T
2KBsemaQe
(t42ER#Rg
13. i
>
Es4K/24me)
yesterday. J ,
BRADY. — Plans under way for
rstmbuphmana of tas powdered^
humns • New traffic simnals
to be installed on all main highways
in town. v
hoys; even the family baby had to
be outfitted completely, aince she was
going to scholo, ilk ee big girl, for
ths first ime The old business of
-
uzndengarnsonale
«. dft"le-ume;
16 pii way. 1 -
— . •!
28. Stouvs part to
HOWLOAG)________
PAE# \ f
CURE A AV TWELVE <
PATENT 2( TREATTENTS )
— "‘KTHCURS§--
&g
. a e re~. Hge - m- V
14—1
-iVic g
' “ e : -3-1 -
"EME VOIE ov LABOB"
Four years ago organised labor
bached the late Robert M: LaFo-
MMs for the While House prize.
LFonette received a total vote
doses th4 ‘5,000,000 mark
There ip a socialist candidate in
the field this year but the tart
labor people are Fumuing a side-
show sad that is all. Now where
will the 6,000,000 voters who land-
ed tn the LaFollette camp toit
years ago find themselves on No-
vember election day?
, John. U Lewis io the president of
the United Mine Workers assoct4-
don. Lewis Is s Pennsyivania re-
publican. , He declined to support
the Lafollette ticket four years
sco He is supporting the Hoover
ticket this year.
In the labor coalesce of the year
and le recent years for that matter,
Lewis led his organisation to de-
feat time and time azain. HB
anthracite miner in Penmneytvant
went down to defeat
They loot in ohio and Weal Vie-
ginta. They complained of the writ
of injunction process to knock out
• organised labor which was invented
by corporatioa lawyers and federal
judges la l*e mining states of the
east and'the west and the miadie-
3av
TF)‘
2..
room. y. r
HAK..S ^4 n-c.
W Pearce, iocal roaitnn"az
drowned when he "NippeA fPatap
high bank into oteW ■'**_'*.
in ths afroy6 Colorado near here
.............
THE STEEP HILL 1
___________By A. R. Brrt»ag>-‘ i 1 1 1 fy ’
s. rtsen ba* wo ere qutte certam you ha dm to* essotod
ANQFn
qe-
^servant', shortders , Bhetthenei
I again took u|A the .work of womanin
SMir
-prm
"duty to her family "
Once upon a time, so we have
"heard ten," there was a woman
who enjoyed her autumn renssump-
tion of theme various duties—we say
that we've been Informed that such
a woman existed— we never knew
1. Amount for amncastLg
ment. ' S
*, plagiarisen I 2
‘ 12. aeduced in grade. K.
14. Those of low birth •
16. General type. E
IT. landing pises for bk
atreratt LUl
IS. Weary. .. HU
10. Preseives in brine. El
si. Equally at value. •
aa. High priest- f.
1 2,. Europan anrub. E
35. Sandy tract (Kogi #
20. Month of year
(abbr.).
ST. Buddhist priests.
28. Absorb.
20. Exurome:
,1. Laoed bodies.
S3. LAvely aance-
33. Intimhate compan-
ion.
' 34Wenpous.
31. Ateuan birds.
40. Daecea.
e. Bs in agitation.
a. Prunster measure
• ort
M Goa of rar.
igohga , .
«. stut,
, Lsmsnw.
“0, Mank name
I- eny-ppF-
1 ' N8 _ — — —3
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 70, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 23, 1928, newspaper, September 23, 1928; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1530059/m1/2/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.