The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 80, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 4, 1928 Page: 6 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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T
WEST TURNED
redo.
ve
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Srd and Green
Phone 000
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FEATURING—
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Wichita
. 1a
CORPUS CHRISTI. — Plans mak-
ing
I
oH
$19
4
V
A:
3
3
agai
when he goes to bed.
when he gets
up
jostle the clinkers.
COMMANDER
BYRD
1
selects
<•
»•
associates in their A
tic explorations are Armour’s
or
and Star Bacon.
a
*
A
ybir • ■ N i
)
($
Armour's STAR
HAManaSTAR BACON.
van
to 1.
to
of
OUT TO ACCLAIM SMITH
Yanks
third
or
MRS. FARRADAY DISCOVEERS AMERICA
Th,
mi
whi
FW
n‘
YOUNG
STRA
I ■ -X
I A V
A)
MORT H
DAkoTA
be no.
■ pavent-
mia he
energy pro-
nd and his
THE YEAR POUND FROM -
ORANGE FLORAL co.
PHONE st8.w
1
fl
$
T
c
Ouras Chills and Fever, In
termittemt. Remittent Bilious
Fever due to Malaria.
It KIa The Germa
des were AAmon-
the provosition of
MwaK
PHOXE SI OH SER ToNY
Clarence Saunders’
Market
Munenenpo7
300000
X
ne that he
ertien to he
. Ma only
1 ot equal-
Sturdy Watch
Built for Outdoors
Because Necessity Demands
the Best
HURPY UP AND CALL
BURKHART PLUMEIG
PHONE ITS
HIGHER EDUCATIOX FOR
BOND SALESMEN
WHEN THINKING ELECTRICAL
THINK OF
ORANGE ELECTRIC SnoP
PHONE Mi
EEGIN
-------------
Jtegionnainz
Read the advertisements in this paper
. . they have a message for you of
economy and helpfulness
Cwmaaader KtM E Byrd
deftsandingand
FourofHisaociates
Texas Air Transpor wiu extena
Dallea-Ban antonio str man Um w
Laredo to conneet with Mr mall ber-
vice between Xexleo City and La-
Heat
1
We don’t know how many million | from
Genutne Ford Rubber Case
BATTERIES
One Year Gunrantee
$8.50
ORANGE MOTOR 00.
Seven!
“Mai
Nal
ooySM’H A5
inDan -e=
A°Snen
You can get the same
Ham and Bacon
very easily. Just ask ARMOUR SKI COMPANY
your dedler for “ArCMICAQO
■out’s Star." Insist
on getting it.
W. E. MeCORQUODALE
PHONE 246
DEPENDS ON THE CONDITION
OF YOUR SPINE
DR. BOCK. Chiropractor
PHONE 040
eS0c0
h3hV
Ao si Tw a No MRs sevra
--=—*---
ELECTRA — one of th. new mi-
■nt 80,000-barref tanka of Waseon
W
b)
Star Hata and Star Bacon. He knows Endrcdrck upon them.
k
me of the trouhles with Aronee
V, Stark declared, dated back to
war days and oil boom times.
* people bought properties at
l priees with the natural eonse-
ice that they had tn take lohses
7
F“Se-
%
,MFG. BY
LiTTLE
giaNT
WATER.,
H EATER
co. /
OF TEXAS /A82
r okaxa UUMB
,0
• O'Hara
•opriuht Prm Pubilantns Comvany (New York WorM) 1928
pop dreams
or Renine company Mlns erected
thro* miles weat of here nearing
completion.
NEW YC
death of V
tionnl guard
Pa., yesterd
for the sea
seven. Yo
neck in a i
gahela City,
Previous
4, Fox, Navy,
ton. Holy i
Norman Ma
kicked in a
field. Allento
juries to the
ram. Ohio,
juries during
Leo flood
neck.
In the balanced diet that makes for , vigorous men, Hem
end Bacon ate essential They satisfy and nourish.
They ate served from four to five times a week and because
they are served ao often, to avoid monotony the flavor
must be the superlative—enticing, far beyond the flavor of
sell when
Fourth street from Booty avenue to
Elzabeth street. .
Vital among the health protecting, nourishir
during foods that will sustain ommander
daring aasc *
Star Ham
he",
458382336
"I 1 could hav ordered groceries in shorthand
pL;s Potatoes with a typewriter I would have been
\ So die Hams and Beam must be the best. They
good tothe taste of those men who free the rigors of the
Antarctic They must have keeping qualities, for once in
the Antarctic there is no convenient store at which supplies
can be replenished. ‘
proved the quality of
Armour’s Star Ham
and Star Bacon. With
him they went on hie
history making tape-
dition to the North
“-1" Rapzgon
food of dependable
He dose not fave about the mnfety
of hl. bourbon or ten you In intri.
cate fraction, how much of a head-
ashe.one quart of hl. gin will yield.
He simply aska you if you need any
boot, right, now If you don't he
beata it. If you do (lv* him an
order..vou know “ wil be dellverea
aromedx not when, “ and if
The mecret ot the boot legker,
zaleomanshipis brevtt». In fact,
the bootleggers are such gooa
mn.they 2*1 riehe in their own
omouand make you cau them up
We "ieh bond maleemen wouM t
It would he a good thing, we
firmly believe, if bond salesmen
took a'lesson from the bootlegged
in merchandising their ‘product. Now
bootlegging is the only Industry that
i« more over-crowded than bond
t*Hing. But the bodtleggers are
smarter at putting over sales.
When a bootlegger comes into your
omice, he does not ask what per-
centage of your income ou are de:
voting to systematie savings. He
only wants to know how much
dough you’ve got as a epsit on
five cases of Scotch
Mrs.Farraday:.. ' Mrs.,T Frederick Farraday, if you
please ... has discovered America.
At twenty, with the superb qourage ...or carelesg
for to make ' home
But let her tell it....
..."Honestly! A business woman never knows how
in ecthenrealy understands vegetables til .he sees them
down 2aJ^ theaybng"konduyau, gap «
rederick Farraday I found everything I wanted to
know from tomorrows dinner to the material for the
avng-room curtains, in the newspaper ads.”
She said more . . of course.
: But the point is that you can discover America
through the, advertising columns of your daily paper.
Reliable, helpful products, originating from coast to
coast, are truthfully and intelligently explained here, to
simplify the business of housekeeping.
Because of the success of thin
community meant success to him
and his organizations, Mark declared
NEW
dead.-
ander, I
summer
ning ag
Yankeei
1928 we
old spet
can lea
old nen
Ings wit
that gav
, and the
Pipgr
aent ags
settled
and hel
the rem
Mitchell,
hall pitc
shed out
and stoy
Pipgra
walking
thlt had
He force
the catch
the YanI
Ing. Th
Durst sir
out. But
drove th
Into the
home ru
ahead of
The Ca
their hal
walked s
Wilson's
Wilson I
when La
grounder
ranville t:
short whi
ble play
combinati
A pass
rifice by
ond single
NTELLING THE
young men started going to college
this month. They wil study the
classics, literature and philosophy for
four years and then come out and
be bond salesmen. There is some-
thing wrng with an educational sys-
tem like that.
We spend millions a year on col-
lege gymnasiums and equipment.
Within their walls thee young col-
lege men build up their muscles and
Until they stop graduating bond
salesmen, colleges are wasting their
time. What is the use of loading up
our youth with Ovid, Homer, Pliny,
Cicero and Xenephon when all they
win spout when they start wage
earning are debentures. leasehold
sinking funds. net Income before de-
preciation and federal income tax
and subordinate in Hen to Series A.
The students learn in college to
mix sulphuric acid, to appreciate
Raphael and Rembrandt, to quote
Aristotle and to make sense out of
Chaucer. Then they lope out from
alma mater and start pestering the ।
populace with bonds in $1000 and
$500 denominations, registrable as
to principal only an reeemable.
Even if the bonds were good, the
populace wouldn't like it.
--A-
Today bond salesman are roam-
ing around in droves. You ean’t
drop a marlin spike from a seven-
story window without fracturing a
bond salesman’s skull. The only
trouble la that marlin spikes are so
scarce.
Now we have no personal bigs
against the bond salesman. He has
to live, but we wish he could make
hM livelihood without trying to sell
us bonds. • .
bunching
singles, a
for four r
strolled, i
Rabe Witt
field boxe
zeri’s out.
Pengough
- That was <
gave way
forced in
with a p
-counted 11
center. F
Plate attei
Koenig po
The fins
ed without
and | wo si
in the sev
Orsatti
Mitchell in
Maranville
n pans bu
grounder a
the sertes
The teai
gafe in Mt.
The sco
St. Louis
New York
Battemies
and Wilson
WHEN IN TROUBLE CALL
GUNSTREAM GARAGE
PHONE 1111
for paving of Morgan street
Stapled to 16th atreet, and
when he learned that three of the
11 young men who graduatea from
the Orange high school and entered
Texas A. A M college, had made
nighest grades in that college last
year- it was understood after the
speakine that the three mentioned
were Wilmer MeCorquodale, Jr., non
of Mr. and Mr. W. K. MeCorquo-
dale, Sr: Gordon Qudger, son of
Mr- and Mrs. H. V. Gudger, sr., and
John Walton Simmon., son of W. B.
Simmons.
Eustace sitting on the supreme court
bench or commanding a battleship,
or "howing the Mayo brothers how
to operate on carbuncle.. And what
does he get out of those dreams? He
sets a son that touches him for
11.50 to buy a supply of white col-
Iara: so he can go out and sell a
• ••S bond. It is very discouraging.
< odraeveloner which he nre-
I would become a real item tn
a»r future Summine matter.
i a general way, Stark uhr-4
the peopte awake to p• thetr
IWlte and to strike wne the
• hot.
• Lmumber Mills
■k beceme sllehtiy sentimen-
the subject or the lumber in.
2 because of the fset thst his
'other, the late Hanry Jacob
m. and his father, w. H. Stark.
mE their Uvea in the busfnern
Wb making no de"nite predle-
exarame the lumber indunrtry,
tainted that ft wan necernary
enge people to look to other
on * food product ia
an absolute assucance
they failed
FACE TO FACE WITH A COOK STOVE
‘AAe 15%5
94 e
3882*S.
ge,gu7
‘0.800304
there was every reason in the world
why he should, and would, use every
effort within his power to help.
Stark expressed himselt pleased
FOR CAREFUL MOVING —
WITHERS TRANSFER co.
PHONfC 180
11:30 p. m.,
and 3, a. m.,
The address was cloned with a
plea for cooperation and the wiping
out of the spirit of suspicin among
the people. He quoted his favorite
poem by Edgar Guest, “My Home
Town and Me."
Dr. R. E. Barr, president of the
club, presided over the meeting.
The community service committee
composed of Howard U Cohenour,
Harry Burr and E. B. Stover, was in
charge of the program.
The audience was entertained by
Messrs. Scheid, Noonan, Dykes and
Guidry, who rendered first a trio,
with Noonan at the piano, following
with two quartet numbers, with Miss
Bertie Sims at the piano.
Fish For Friday
Trent, lb.—35c; Sheephead—80c
Houma Oysters, qt. $1.10, pt. 55c
Cat Fish, 1b. ............. s3e
Large Fresh Shrimp with
heads, 1b. ........................ 25
Headless, 1b ................... s5e
$Xa
MEXICO <
froma bullet
after he had
scribed as
Obregon. 11,
General Alva
in a h os pit a
versions of 1
rent. Friend
in gyoung 0
commit sufci
had aeciden
es were fair. He advocated the
i of always selling when there
A profit in sight.
lark impressed himself as de-
ted with the agricultural de-
pment in Orange county, which
warded as little short of mar-
ns. He was pleased with mar-
4 condittens and in this conec-
said that with the development
igriculture, the cattle business
coming back to its own.
harden their sinews. Why? Ho
they can grab you by the arm and
show you what a good buy Consoli-
dated Ash Can 5‘s are.
Mom takes in washings and pop
tends to furnaces on the side so Eus-
tace, their first born, can get a col-
lege education. Each night between
. "L-
■
Veg "
4 to«r
/ LIco*.
WATER HEATER-
W. E. MeCorquodale
PLUMBISG—
J. M. Burkhart
TRANSFER
J. F Withers
ELECTRICAL SHOP
Mrs. P. P. Hodges
CHIROPRACTORS
Dr L. R. Black
FLORIST
Mrs. W. A. Black
GARAGE AND WRECKER
L. C. Gunstream
S ILL I INP
' ----
"s-e-
ec,je-
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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/m1/6/?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.