The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 80, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 4, 1928 Page: 2 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Orange Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Lamar State College – Orange.
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■', •
****
fhrm
She pays ne overcharge
use
la columns of
#
youth even in stenographers, to
say
ntohing of wive*
938
way forever
28. To
2x
*
from the pen of S. E. Monroe,
a Thursday
Whispering Campaigns
By Haenigsen
‘ ‘ (e EfRMAL BACK FENCE
I
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Smam
>«tag.
mu
My.
8. Blemish.
la
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7
z
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76
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is
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corner ot the fan, Rio G
3®w
SEfoce«eptet
is
A chapter to devoted to the histo-
1
3s
97
3,
«eYSATHATHe-
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fl
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L
$
66
70
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4
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Gi
srowers, by virtue of the
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K
Texas
\
laws and have lD
a sense a govern-
3s
{
/
country,
the feeder road
pre gram in Cameron
\
the
United States, the tax
I*
payers having
voted $6,000,000
for pared feeder
t
a
i
$
e
3,
TP,
{
?
Mito Khw < >
l
medh
..
■
{
nkdibv
i feminine
But women
CAMFAIGN W NEVER
RuNs our. OF DPIcS.
Te OFFICE
WHISPERER,
. .1
Use Classified Ads
- rim.
oF couse PoNT
KeT MeNToN IT
eurtFeeLMY-AN-
AND Te SlOcK MARkeT
WISPERER.
Besi
in ]
Fc
I ba gladly corrected
brought to attention
hd
■ ■
MMi
CAMPAI6N OCCASIONED By A NCW
fguy MMMINe INT me NEIGHBORHOOV,
4
tea teeth.
<
5
The b
tne to be
st ocean coast
it has a river
don't have to feel that
—thank heaven!
roada."
Not many years ago the valley
EVERY DAY MOVIES
LEADEa
2
Vt
%ab
—pMem
of the bods is get-
rtant. It wanta to be
Mr* Tri
Pachar, th
Carl Hollis
Mrs. Mam
from Lake
called to ti
who is ser
57.
58.
ning a
Orange
Orange,
* Claes
velopers are in evidence.
Thei current number of the Tex-
aco Star has a very, rellable article
k
The law sine-law’
WMETERWULIKE '
IT or Nor. AND I
BELIEVE IN
ENFORCINQ THe
LAW
nEVITABLE
Inevitably I belong
To the pasaion of your song.
veARTAT$He -
«• A mertpe
eo. To smen th.
26 trukto.
•,7,
CWMAONSPRH
woaoss6Res,
gi HRse .
RacE.1,e.
4 able to be nela.
s. a coloe,
$ #peni“paa.
& A ayatem:
9. That which row be
erected.
to the weer and Raymoi
the north.
.. 11 en 8 Be
——100
will be furnished
reHlectien upon the
MI or reputation of
(AREn‘TYu-pRery>
NHARH ON HIM ?
L!
n
of d
meet
at 1:
Is Ie
Th
of th
at I:
social
Wate
Re
O. F
Oh
It
F
i
so. audosn engnt
4 A wtae.
«• a Seen, as at aplo-
ta. Batuu^S^
M. Japancee Statemamme
60 rnea Seed.
THEWOMA.
and dinner-com-
ground.
70. Resinous gum.
71. Species of duok.
TO. Smooth.
TO. Tear.
74. A cerea?,
75. Lake in Ireland.
DOWN
TN57/60
fT VS 1
T tr
, 2i
tt
What, then, is the alternative™-
allowing oneself to become a wrink-
led hag at frty.? Not at all. The
wise woman of today simply keeps
her senae of proportion along with
her looka. She uses aids to attract-
iveness. but doesn’t allow them to
zpm
lying betwgen
। county the most extensive eve
3 dettaken by any county in
SH-H ) Donr,
RoADCAST THAT ’ <
Do%uWANr MS _
To BE 4RRESrED P
puf cOMPELS - Buzz--
a2-z-1- dONFS,-Buz2-2
BeEN neGLecfin Jog-Buzz---
cen M -ne "822-2 2)
are staggered by the pace of its on-
ward marchan. Should they live
.another twenty years they wi -be
knocked speechleas
———— —
---------- 1
I SKu — y betore he boughe * t, he migbe have
“uAuTO
V 1
82-Loms.ot.memdeye
sgw ”
d Made was given over to the
men and their herd. This to
iter of development from the
of Mexico to the New Mexican
IT lino on the upper Rio
G.
\ . wm >
"w. B
a bu
st.
at th
at a si
OWEB RIO GRANDE VALLEY"
tetans should be interested in
history of Texas—all Texas,
taw was well named the empire
ta. It covers a place on the
• an great as that of all New
fiend and New York and a slice
-wpj-2
e,. 4-1-z-2
d)
1eWHo
uNG IS IN
/*8
5 manager of one of the Texas dis-
tricts of the Texas company. .
¥ He teihs why it was named the
Magic Valleyatid the reader of his
article to given a lot of.valuable in-
formation of 1bjs,very romatie sec-
tion of the Lone Star common-
wealth. ’ " ■ -
to Newspaper wrters speak of the
lower Rio Grande Valley."
Whe Star article tells them that
it comprises the three counties of
I Hidalso, Cameron and Willacy and
part of Star county: that It to the
moat southerty agricultural area of
i the matniand of the Unitea State:
“ thab it is tan shaped and widen,
from a point about 100 miles above
the mouth of the Rio Grande river
to a width of SO miles at the coast,
8 Brownsville being at the southenst
section of Texaa. Coa.
es. qeontemporer, ■
pumr (m.-
i
Next, there in the obvious fact
that the Mrs. Ponce de Leons can-
not nu their own large order, with
the beet face-liftings and ''perma-
nents," they cannot make themselves
the successful facial rivals of Eigh-
teen. Compare real youth and the
synthetic sort, even under the lights
of a night club, and you can't be
fooled. For that reason alone, the'
Horts of the middle-aged beauty-
parlor devotees represent wasted
me* sy. even if we do not consider
---—------ ==-=-----===
There to an upper Rio Grande
inning in Texaa; thepe to a central
to Grande country in Texas; there
i a Magic Valley in Texas and
om‘H Paso to Brownsville the de-
1IS COMES
SRAGHTfeoM
1 INSIDE. .
CoNADeAL,See !
Mev’R GeriN
A RENDY f«A
Q a(r KILLNG,
¥\ 82z-2-2-z
XESTERDAY’S answe 10. Shortena.
11. my took.
11. River ta Asta.
11. To advtoe.
11. Fom.
23. Bdge of e thing.
as. To net.
27. More cunanng.
Twel
Saturda
culating
Public
resent 1
promine
authors.
"The
written
tragic d
axes of
Saul" ai
do not
last boo
closing ■
“Chiv
America
are fam
les, hi*
want to
book.
Booth
bler" in
imaginal
In Its in
parable
Went Ci
her for I
Grandme
new bo
Did you
era? If
copy of
you ha v<
recomme
consin "
Warwi
thor whi
the auth
rei and S
featured
new bool
•'Torch
author, $
introduct
"Jalna,
of the A
Itn autho
Frenchwe
It in a e
a Canadi
gle* whlc
ery mem I
I* a livin
one you
mother o
son, neve
youngest
boy of al
There
story In
" Desert M
Louin Bre
Good Wo
which you
called "Ti
Anna Spra
"The U
for Witch
latent bool
These b
a week to
They are i
tire library
other volui
Ing public.
panions, such a stupid preference is
a fallacious ideal to absorb the ex-
istence of mature women. There are
other and more intelligent men in
the world. And there are other
things in the world for women—poli-
it ice, books, jobs and autumn-colored
sea and hills, to mention four of our
own pet preoccupations- There - in
an age when Nature, for her own
aut of beauty’s phantom on the
breathless matrons, Mrs. Bannnng
sums it up truly: "It does not keep
them happy. It keeps them ill at
ease, nervous, disturbed, competitive
at an age when such things should
have been left behind. It makes
them jealous and selfish. If they
keep on' as they are going it will
make plenty of women crack-brain-
ed."
The basie answer to why they do
it, the reason why we have some-
time, written of them with a certain
sympathy. to that they think gentle-
men not only prefer" blondes but
Youthtul Elondes. Thia age-old wo-
man', passlon to pleane to pathetic,
however perverted. Yet while too
many gentlemen—themaelves over-
weight, wrinkled and bald. do prefer
excellent reasona, make,
life revolve about men. I
a religion and it belong, on the
dremeing table and not on the altar.
It to a very felee god, indeed. and
it keep. thouaenda of it. worshtp-
per, in terror, as talee gods are apt
to do. To see middle age,and even
old a ge,pantins after it to revolting.
The chane to not only unfitting, but
honeke it to shocking to think of
women of forty and ntty spending
long abnorbed hour, doing things to
their faces which noBody will ever
notice."
la a difference hetween the simple
dressing-table practice, which take
only a few minutes and a few cents,
and the elaborate cult of youth and
beauty to which an ever-Inereastng
number of women old enough to
know better give their days and
their dollars.
The Mil for such "beautiscation"
—one can't, without mcornrur quota-
tion marks, apply the word to a
bleancheq or henna'd nrty-year-old
head, or to an enameled miaale-age*
race that looka a, if a real am.:
would crack It—to not aettled mere-
ly with treasury notes. The coat in-
cludes fallactous Ides is, wasted en-
erglee and an appalling amount of
unproductive unhappiness. lent it
too high? Isn't it more than wo-
men can afford to pay?
ACROSS
i 1. Fruit of beach and
oak.
Kinanesa.
29. A boom.
M. One tone.
U. Severaty.
IS. Cover with wax.
IT. To lend.
»S. Without jotnte
. „(boE).
IS. Peruse.
SO. Angara.
= Darker.
. 2- Parts or the body.
M. Masculine nickname.
n. Musical instrumeut.
SB. Vanian.
M. ir not.
IT. River in Persia.
SB. Journalist ana au-
snor born in Eng-
SS es.
GrEftter.
48 Certain trsez.
ST. Cousin at Moham-
med.
•. Pert, to the earliest
epoch otthec-
nosole era.
•1. Revive.
54. Measure of length
RkSU
M. Amgaue,
SB. Rotated.
.-2-2-7-2-22.
* __ m‘ "‘-2.
I TWO BROKEN DIAGONALS !
--------------By Mrs. H. C. Higgins_________
.There are mo two-letter word to aetrnet nrom the good fentures oq
WO-day’s orfering-
. FIT
CARGUERITE MOOERS MARSHALL f
-■’Till ii<^T- -TH - - -T
• 3
—se
eNs
THE BI1X FOR BEAUTI
"Beauty or all kinds, including
cosmetien, racial treatments and Ute
I care or the hair, cost American wo-
J men $1,825,000,00 In 1927, or an av-
I erage or $5,000,000 a day,” says the
weoretary of the American Cosmeu-
clans society. At one counter in one
New York depurtmjent store the an- ■
nual Mil for beauty to $a,d00,000.
That is the grand total paid to nety
clerks by ten, or thounands of wo-
| men for powder—there are 110, air-
I ferent shades, scents and brands;
for perfume—1200 varieties; for cold
cream—too aorta; for rouge, beauty
clay, lipstieks, eyebrow pencils and
sll the other modern paraphernalia
of aynthetie loveliness. And a
thoughtful woman nerd not be a
devotee or the old-fashioned, eola-
water-and-aoep is all anybody needs
school, to wonder—especlally atter
viewing some or the value received
by the beauty buyers—it the bill is
not too high.
That «o many modern women
know how to take adequate care at
complexion, hair and Azure la clear
gain tor all of us—they are ao much
eanler to look at! But surely, there
---
Ute useful things to which they migne as ia—
give their time and money. It up:
As for the inner effect of the pur. there
HYMN or HOMBRES
Men? I don't enjoy, me,
Men—they're a carat f
Men? They annoy me
With their Joke* about the "tetri"
DIMOTOR puncms HEW FILM I Inevitably I must cleave
WITH IOLA NEGRI AT TOP To the pattern that you weave,
"Loves of an actrem," to the mom l ..
diplomatic- and -mpectucular produe-|To the vivia threads that gleam
ten Pole Negri has ever made, de- on the shuttle of a dream;
spite the auccems at "Pamslon" and I__
other big pictures. Women in the vibrant mesh
_ ------ - That to the contention at Row- 1 or your spirit and your flesh.
Or sorporation 'land V. Lee, who directed the Par- Lucia Trent.
-M
t amount Mar in this now achleve-
l meat. >
I Lee has directed several other Ne-
gri starring vehicles, in eluding
"Barbed Wire" and Beggars at
Love," and he considers himself In
a position to make comparisona.
"Loves of an Actress" provides
Miss Negri with a great role, a role
that calls for real acting ability."
Lee says. "When you eonMder that
Rachael was one of the great 0g-
ures of all time on the stage e cl.
ebrsted French tragedienne, whose
life and love, were full of tragedy
and poignant drama, you can realise
the neemity for an able portrayer
in the picture version of her story.
"And Mins Negri 'dove her work
admirably, She dinplaya talent, I
have never before Men in one or I
.her productions. I might even go
,o rar is to say that she is superb—
and that’s a strong word to use."
Lee is credited with the continuity
and Mira Xeri assisted him, pro-
viding data she hermit obtained-
while in Franco M. year. The
picture cornea to the Strand theater
wottem ovee Ms collewe --
me J
Maurice Ketten
mrmrmmar- J
' Serves hih Rkjht. \1
> OLD ENoUoH )
(TOBEyTeLAW<
m Men who have watehea Texas
l on srow or develop nor rorty year
G‘VF
gret it i
Many
nou rishe
Keep the
ishes the
Also w
changes
blespir
low corn]
weak nest
In aud
tonic. I
helps Na
cell—th
the bl<xx
the body
in buil
B.S.S. in
which th
For mi
has been
elders re
* The,
echoi
from
Goa e
Fi
taiRf;
HMuB
SAX >kMRE TM.NI NO- )
PReTV Bl ! ARENr A
%V A LITTLE Bm ur> ) .
70URSELFP
—8 Ehe sfnterds in the first
Dlace it was taken over by the
Mexicans alter attaining their inde-
POadeuco in 162 ana from the time
0 Mexico independence trotn Spain
Texas was a part of Mexico.
Moses Austin, in the year 1821
-"as granted a large tract of land
; IB Texas. In 1812 his colonists re-
volted against Mexico. What fol-
lowed to history.
Writer Monroe points out that,
after Mexico defeated the Mexican
forces in 1836 the Mexicans con-
Hnued to hold the territory Between
the Nueces river and the Rl
t Grande river until the treaty of
1848 between Mexico and the United
States recognised the Rio Grande
as the boundary line "and immedi-
ately thereafter Americans began to
flock to the border and the border
was sarrisoned by American troops."
This in the long ago.
In recent year, the Rio Grande
has been harnessed. There are
now 12 large irrigation projects in
operation in the valley and a num-
ber of smaller ones. And, "the
larzer systems involve 500,000 acres
of which about 430,000 acres are
under cultivation. There are about
3 250,000 acres more which are capa-
ble of cultivation. Ten of these
irrigation systems are owned by the
for beauty—rather, for Ka aynthetie
slmuiaerum—for she knows, as
women before her never had the
chanee to know, that "the word le
so full of a number of thingst" Qr,
ment within a government. The
remaining two projects are privately
9 owned."
This to the auto age. This to the
highway constrnetton ,gp Indeed,
the contributor to the Texaco Star
found it ao. Speaking of the road
2 "utem he says: ‘traversing this
lower Rio Grande valley are 180
mlles of paved roads and $10,000,-
de 000 to 818,000,000 to to be spent
M for road bufiding in the next two
i; year; a wonderful far sighted pro-
2 gram and a credit to the
Men? They are my buzabo."
Men? Pooh, rsheut: "
Men?—Well, tphrs are just a tew ,
I just can't be without! ' W
-- i*l ' '
THORNDALE-— Construetlont of
new, mus statin here > prosrese.
j Can You Beat It! E
XLSEETHERPERTHAT==7
/ BIL BEEN ARRESTED ) qe,
QEleHeEAHTXnESHEV' eu--2-
2 44
These questions are asked, and
answered in the negative, by that
luchd and intelligent novelist and es-
sayist, Margaret •Culkin Banning,
writing in the current Harper's. She
se, an we all see, the beauty par-
lor’s permanent population, the
middle-aged women who focus all
of life on the pursuit of the mirage
of youth-
"They buy flattery," Mrs. Banning
says incisively, "from hatr-dressers
and shopgirls. They make a tre-
mendous fuss over whether the first
wave in their permanent should go
back from the forehead or dip over
the left eye. They lie awake won-
dering whether they will look bet-
ter in the Rodier print or the polka-
dotted chiffon. They experiment
with massages and turkish baths,
face foods, wrinkle elimination. They
have nerve treatments and rest
t^res.________
bundreda of .lira!
■atry that pome day
t the marvela of the
Au Wie
wisPERING
CAMPALGNS
ARENof ‘ t
COsAINE0
f
Poucs. . s
look, and’e srowmu arutmte la
elothes. f|»t ihore la mote than
that in Ilf M you take- out in
packte: • Bvenitormwecmnenme"
Flat teet, *=. AQalajea an
often rv.pookR’V .» aouchy num
bond,. But every woman knows tht
would never -stanat up ou tea .ream
tor grouchy wivemt . '
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 80, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 4, 1928, newspaper, October 4, 1928; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1530069/m1/2/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.